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Caffeine Tied to Lower Mortality in Women With Diabetes

Women who consumed caffeine from coffee had reduced risk of all-cause, cardiovascular deaths

THURSDAY, Sept. 14, 2017 (HealthDay News) — For women with diabetes, caffeine consumption is associated with reduced mortality, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, held from Sept. 11 to 15 in Lisbon, Portugal.

João Sérgio Neves, M.D., from the São João Hospital Center in Porto, Portugal, and colleagues examined the correlation of caffeine consumption and mortality among 1,568 women and 1,484 men with diabetes.

The researchers found that in women with diabetes there was a dose-dependent inverse correlation between caffeine consumption and total mortality (P = 0.002). Compared with women who did not consume caffeine, women who consumed caffeine had an adjusted hazard ratio for death of 0.49 for <100 mg caffeine/day, 0.43 for 100 to <200 mg/day, and 0.34 for ≥200 mg caffeine/day (P = 0.007). No correlation was seen for men with diabetes (P = 0.887). Women who consumed more caffeine from coffee had reduced risk of all-cause and cardiovascular death (P = 0.007 and 0.041, respectively), while women who consumed more caffeine from tea had reduced mortality from cancer (P = 0.009).

“Our study showed a dose-dependent protective effect of caffeine consumption on all- cause mortality among women,” the authors write. “The effect on mortality appears to depend on the source of caffeine.”

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