Exclusive: Scientists say people with disease who drink two to four cups a day are less likely to see it return

People with bowel cancer who drink two to four cups of coffee a day are much less likely to see their disease come back, research has found.

People with the illness who consume that amount are also much less likely to die from any cause, the study shows, which suggests coffee helps those diagnosed with the UK’s second biggest cancer killer.

Experts said the findings were “promising” and speculated that, if other studies show the same effect, the 43,000 Britons a year diagnosed with bowel cancer may be encouraged to drink coffee. The disease claims about 16,500 lives a year – 45 a day.

A study of 1,719 bowel cancer patients in the Netherlands by Dutch and British researchers found that those who drank at least two cups of coffee had a lower risk of the disease recurring. The effect was dose dependent – those who drank the most saw their risk fall the most.

Patients who had at least five cups a day were 32% less likely than those who drank fewer than two cups to see their bowel cancer return, according to the paper, which was funded by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) and has been published in the International Journal of Cancer.

  • @Pretzilla
    link
    33 months ago

    There is plenty of bad in coffee. Benzene for example.

    The study only looks at a particular cancer.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      7
      edit-2
      3 months ago

      Benzene is used to decaffeinate coffee… but it’s not in regular coffee is it?

      Edit: looking into it, just in trace amounts just like many other foods, which is perfectly safe.

      • @Pretzilla
        link
        1
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        IIRC fun fact there are 400 toxic compounds in coffee, 4000 in cigarettes.

        Perrier had a huge recall of bottled water for benzene, though there was less than in a cup of coffee.

        Trace amounts are tolerable, but IMO not for something that is consumed often.

    • @sramder
      link
      English
      63 months ago

      They do actually mention a reduction in all cause mortality which seems pretty wild.