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Drink your coffee, cadets!

by "Cactus Jammies" <cactusjammies@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 28, 2008 at 02:42 PM

Lower Liver Cancer Risk Associated With Higher Coffee Consumption
27 Jun 2008

A new large, prospective population-based study confirms an inverse 
relation****p between coffee consumption and liver cancer risk. The study 
also found that higher levels of gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) in the 
blood were associated with an increased risk of developing the disease. 
These findings are published in the July issue of Hepatology, a journal 
published by John Wiley & Sons on behalf of the American Association for
the 
Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD). The article and an accompanying editorial

are also available online at Wiley Interscience 
(http://www.interscience.wiley.com/).

Researchers led by Gang Hu at the University of Helsinki set out to
examine 
the associations between coffee consumption and serum GGT with the risk of

liver cancer in a large prospective cohort. Residents of Finland drink
more 
coffee per capita than the Japanese, Americans, Italians, and other 
Europeans, so Hu and colleagues studied 60,323 Finnish participants ages
25 
to 74 who were cancer-free at baseline. The Finns were included in seven 
independent cross-sectional population surveys conducted between 1972 and 
2002 and followed up through June 2006.

The participants completed a mail-in questionnaire about their medical 
history, socioeconomic factors and dietary and lifestyle habits. For a 
subset of participants, clinical data was available, including serum
levels 
of GGT. Data on subsequent cancer diagnoses was collected from the 
country-wide Finnish Cancer Registry.

Based on their answers to the question: "How many cups of coffee do you 
drink daily?" the participants were divided into five categories: 0-1 cup,

2-3 cups, 4-5 cups, 6-7 cups, and 8 or more cups per day. After a median 
follow-up period of 19.3 years, 128 participants were diagnosed with liver

cancer.

The researchers noted a significant inverse association between coffee 
drinking and the risk of primary liver cancer. They found that the 
multivariable hazards ratio of liver cancer dropped for each group that 
drank more coffee. It fell from 1.00, to .66, to .44, to .38 to .32 
respectively. "The biological mechanisms behind the association of coffee 
consumption with the risk of liver cancer are not known," the authors
point 
out.

They also found that high levels of serum GGT were associated with an 
increased risk of liver cancer. The hazard ratio of liver cancer for the 
highest vs. lowest quartile of serum GGT was 3.13. "Nevertheless," they 
re****t, "the inverse association between coffee consumption and the risk
of 
liver cancer was consistent in the subjects at any level of serum GGT."

An accompanying editorial by Carlo La Vecchia of Milan says that Hu's new 
study solidly confirms the inverse relation****p between coffee drinking
and 
liver cancer risk, though we still don't know if it is causal.
"Furthermore, 
the study by Hu et al. provides original and im****tant quantitative
evidence 
that the levels of GGT are related to subsequent incidence of liver
cancer, 
with an overall relative risk of 2.3," he says.

La Vecchia notes, however, that, "It remains difficult, however, to 
translate the inverse relation between coffee drinking and liver cancer
risk 
observed in epidemiological studies into potential implications for 
prevention of liver cancer by increasing coffee consumption."

----------------------------
Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
---------------------------- 

Article: "Joint effects of coffee consumption and serum 
gamma-glutamyltransferase on the risk of liver cancer." Hu, Gang; 
Tuomilehto, Jaakko; Pukkala, Eero; Hakulinen, Timo; Antikainen, Riitta; 
Vartiainen, Erkki; Jousilahti, Pekka. Hepatology; July 2008; 
10.1002/hep.22320; Published online 3/18/08.

Editorial: "Cancer and liver cancer prevention: is it a fact or just a 
potential?" La Vecchia, Carlo. Hepatology; July 2008; 10.1002/hep.22309; 
Published online 6/20/08.

Wiley-Blackwell was formed in February 2007 as a result of the acquisition

of Blackwell Publi****ng Ltd. by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., and its merger
with 
Wiley's Scientific, Technical, and Medical business. Together, the
companies 
have created a global publi****ng business with deep strength in every
major 
academic and professional field. Wiley-Blackwell publishes approximately 
1,400 scholarly peer-reviewed journals and an extensive collection of
books 
with global appeal. For more information on Wiley-Blackwell, please visit 
http://www.blackwellpubli****ng.com/
or http://interscience.wiley.com/.

Source: Sean Wagner
Wiley-Blackwell
Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/113004.php

.......... - 30 - .............

swiped from Delphiforums *Hep-C Heppers for Awareness* (subscription 
required, free, on-line chat real time) Posted June 28



-cactus jammies
 




 2 Posts in Topic:
Drink your coffee, cadets!
"Cactus Jammies"  2008-06-28 14:42:24 
Re: Drink your coffee, cadets!
"Jamffer" <j  2008-06-28 13:26:09 

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