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Reserchers Link Tea Drinking to
Prostate Cancer

Yet, researchers don't know whether tea itself
is risk factor
Men who drink several cups of
tea a day for decades have a higher risk of prostate cancer,
researchers in Scotland say.
Dr. Kashif Shafique of the Institute of Health & Wellbeing at
the University of Glasgow and colleagues found those who drank
more than seven cups of tea per day for years had a 50 percent
higher risk of developing prostate cancer compared with non-tea
drinkers or those drinking less than four cups per day.
"Most previous research has shown either no relationship with
prostate cancer for black tea or some preventive effect of green
tea," Shafique, the study leader, said in a statement.
"We don't know whether tea itself is a risk factor or if tea
drinkers are generally healthier and live to an older age when
prostate cancer is more common anyway."
Shafique and colleagues used data from a study began in Scotland
in 1970 that gathered data from more than 6,016 male volunteers
-- ages 21-75 years -- who were asked to complete a
questionnaire about their usual consumption of tea, coffee,
alcohol, smoking habits and general health.
About one-quarter of the men were heavy tea drinkers and of
these, 6.4 percent developed prostate cancer during a follow-up
of up to 37 years.
"We found that heavy tea drinkers were more likely not to be
overweight, be non-alcohol-drinkers and have healthy cholesterol
levels," Shafique said.
The findings were published in the journal Nutrition and Cancer.
-Agencies- |
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