Health
Coffee shields you against breast cancer recurrence
London, April 22
Drinking just two cups of
coffee a day can help inhibit the growth of tumours and reduce the risk
of recurrence in women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer, a new
research suggests.
The researchers combined information about
the patients' lifestyle and clinical data from 1,090 breast cancer
patients with studies on breast cancer cells.
"The study shows
that among the over 500 women treated with (the drug) tamoxifen, those
who had drunk at least two cups of coffee a day had only half the risk
of recurrence of those who drank less coffee or none at all," explained
Ann Rosendahl, one of the researchers from Lund University in Sweden.
"The
study also shows that those who drank at least two cups of coffee a day
had smaller tumours and a lower proportion of hormone-dependent
tumours. We saw that this was already the case at the time of
diagnosis," Rosendahl noted.
In the cell study, the researchers looked more closely at two substances found in coffee -- caffeine and caffeic acid.
"The
breast cancer cells reacted to these substances, especially caffeine,
with reduced cell division and increased cell death, especially in
combination with tamoxifen," Rosendahl noted.
"This shows that
these substances have an effect on the breast cancer cells and turn off
signalling pathways that the cancer cells require to grow," Rosendahl
said.
The study appeared in the journal Clinical Cancer Research.