Drinking caffeinated coffee
was found to reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes
by as much as 60 percent in a newly published study that
included people at high risk for the disease.
Even those who used to
drink coffee but quit were less likely to develop diabetes
than those who never drank it.
The new study was published
in the November issue of the journal Diabetes Care.
"Our findings were
very strong," researcher Besa Smith, MPH, tells WebMD.
"The next step is to pinpoint the compounds in coffee
responsible for this protective effect."
The new research is not
the first to find that coffee drinkers have an edge in
terms of protection from diabetes.
A Finnish study, reported
in 2004, suggested a 30 percent reduction in type 2 diabetes
risk among people who drank three or four cups of coffee
a day. Women in the study who drank 10 or more cups a
day showed a 79 percent reduction in risk.
And combined results from
15 studies involving more than 200,000 participants suggested
a similar protective effect. People who drank the most
coffee had the lowest diabetes risk in the review, conducted
by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health.
A Unique Study
The study by Smith and
colleagues from the University of California San Diego
was unique because it included people at high risk for
type 2 diabetes whose blood sugar levels were higher than
normal.
The condition, known as
impaired glucose tolerance, is considered a strong predictor
of diabetes.
A total of 910 adults
were followed for an average of eight years after an assessment
of their coffee drinking habits was conducted. The average
age of the participants was 66; 41 percent were men.
After adjusting for other
known diabetes risk factors, the researchers concluded
that both past and current drinkers of caffeinated coffee
had about a 60 percent reduction in diabetes risk, compared
with study participants who never drank coffee.
A similar reduction in
risk was seen among the roughly one-third of study participants
with impaired glucose tolerance.
The researchers did not
exclude people who drank decaffeinated coffee from the
study, but too few participated to draw conclusions.
Searching for
a Reason
It is not clear how coffee
affects diabetes risk, but Smith says the benefits are
probably not due to caffeine.
"It appears that
there are other compounds in coffee responsible for this,"
she says.
Studies are needed to
isolate the component or components responsible for the
protective effect against diabetes, Smith says.
She adds that it is premature
to recommend coffee drinking as a public health strategy
for lowering the risk of diabetes.
American Diabetes Association
spokesman Larry Deeb, MD, agrees. But he says there is
little evidence that drinking coffee is bad for people
with diabetes.
Deeb directs the diabetes
center at Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare hospital; he
is president of medicine and science for the American
Diabetes Association.
"People with diabetes
and those at risk for developing diabetes have enough
to worry about," Deeb tells WebMD. "It is nice
to know that coffee isn't one of them, and it may actually
help lower risk."
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