MEDICAL NEWS:
CONSUMPTION OF GREEN TEA ASSOCIATED WITH REDUCED MORTALITY IN JAPANESE ADULTS
Sept. 14, 2006 — Adults in Japan who consumed higher amounts of green tea had
a lower risk of death due to all causes and due to cardiovascular disease,
according to a study in the September 13 issue of the Journal of the American
Medical Association. But there was no link between green tea consumption and
a reduced risk of death due to cancer.
Tea is the most consumed beverage in the world aside from water. Three
billion kilograms of tea are produced each year worldwide, according to
background information in the article. Because of the high rates of tea
consumption in the global population, even small effects in humans could have
large implications for public health. Among teas, green tea polyphenols have
been extensively studied as cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer
chemopreventive agents. Although substantial evidence from in vitro and animal
studies indicates that green tea preparations may impede CVD and carcinogenic
processes, the possible protective role of green tea consumption against these
diseases in humans remains unclear.
Shinichi Kuriyama, M.D., Ph.D., of the Tohoku University School of Public
Policy, Sendai, Japan, and colleagues examined the association between green tea
consumption and mortality (death rate) due to all causes, CVD, and cancer within
a large population. The study, initiated in 1994, included 40,530 adults (age 40
to 79 years) in northeastern Japan, where green tea is widely consumed. Within
this region, 80 percent of the population drinks green tea and more than half of
them consume three or more cups and day. The participants, who had no history of
stroke, coronary heart disease, or cancer at baseline, were followed for up to
11 years (1995-2005) for all-cause death and for up to seven years (1995-2001)
for cause-specific death.
Over 11 years of follow-up, 4,209 participants died, and over seven years of
follow-up, 892 participants died of cardiovascular disease and 1,134
participants died of cancer. The researchers found that green tea consumption
was inversely associated with death due to all causes and due to cardiovascular
disease. Compared with participants who consumed less than one cup/d of green
tea, those who consumed five or more cups/d had a risk of all-cause mortality
and CVD mortality that was 16 percent lower (during 11 years of follow-up) and
26 percent lower (during seven years of follow-up), respectively.
These inverse associations of all-cause and CVD mortality were stronger among
women, although the inverse association for green tea consumption was observed
in both sexes. In women, compared with those who consumed less than one cup/d of
green tea, those who consumed five or more cups/d had a 31 percent lower risk of
CVD death.
The researchers found there no significant association between green tea
consumption and death from cancer. There were weak or neutral relationships
between black tea or oolong tea and mortality.
"Clinical trials are ultimately necessary to confirm the protective effect of
green tea on mortality," the authors write.
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