Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · Jul 12
Cedars-Sinai Study Links 5 Cups of Coffee to 47% Lower Liver Cancer Risk
Updated
Updated · SciTechDaily · Jul 12

Cedars-Sinai Study Links 5 Cups of Coffee to 47% Lower Liver Cancer Risk

2 articles · Updated · SciTechDaily · Jul 12

Summary

  • 354,957 UK Biobank adults followed for a median 13 years showed lower rates of cirrhosis, liver cancer and liver-related death among heavier coffee drinkers.
  • Five or more cups a day was associated with 32% lower cirrhosis risk, 47% lower liver cancer risk and 42% lower liver-related death versus no coffee.
  • MRI scans and blood-protein analyses pointed to possible mechanisms: coffee drinkers had less liver fat, iron, fibrosis and inflammation, with protein patterns tied to healthier liver function.
  • Benefits appeared even at 1 to 2 cups and were strongest around 3 to 4 cups; similar results for caffeinated and decaf suggest compounds beyond caffeine may matter.
  • Cedars-Sinai said the observational study cannot prove cause and does not justify starting coffee solely for liver protection, with prevention still centered on weight, alcohol, exercise and metabolic health.

Insights

Does coffee's liver protection outweigh the cholesterol risk from unfiltered brews like espresso?
Could the key compounds in coffee be turned into a targeted pill for liver protection?