Coffee Drinking
From an article published by the Townsend Letter, Some
Real Causes of Heart Disease & Cancer, by Wayne Martin
When coffee is roasted, the carcinogen 3,4 benzopyrene
is formed. There have also been identified two other possible
carcinogens found in coffee.
In 1981 I had an exchange with Professor Brian MacMahon
of the Harvard School of Public Health. He had done a study
in the Boston area and had found that the drinking of three
cups of coffee a day increased the risk of pancreatic cancer
by a factor of 2.7. He felt that coffee drinking was the
cause of 50% of all pancreatic cancers. He stopped drinking
coffee and replaced coffee with tea in his office. Yet MacMahon
was not all that certain that carcinogens in coffee were
the cause of pancreatic cancer.
In England prior to 1948 people there drank tea and very
little coffee. However, after 1948, there was a vast increase
in coffee drinking in England, Dr. Tim Spencer of the St.
Bartholomew's Hospital in London in 1981 cast much light
on the MacMahon study. He plotted the importation of coffee
into England between 1948 and 1973. During that time, the
importation of coffee increased by 120%. Also during that
time the death rate from pancreatic cancer in England increased
by 50%.
Dr. A.J. McMichael in Australia reviewed the MacMahon and
Spencer reports and had this to add. He gave reference that
coffee drinking increased the production of the intestinal
hormone, gastrin. He said that with minor animals, coffee
stimulates the production of gastrin, and gastrin stimulates
pancreatic hyperplasia and neoplasia.
In 1985 Ana Marie Comary Schally of Tulane University reported
that pancreatic cancer seems to be hormone induced. She
gave a reference that treatment of pancreatic cancer with
tamoxifen had shown some benefit. She and others in Mexico
then treated a few far-advanced patients with pancreatic
cancer with liver metastases, with the LH-RH agonist D-Trp-6-LH-RH.
A few long lasting remissions were obtained.
Coffee drinking in the USA has remained much the same over
the past 100 years but during that time there has been a
vast increase in deaths from pancreatic cancer. It is suggested
that the same thing is happening with pancreatic cancer
as has happened with lung cancer and that this increase
in pancreatic cancer has been the result of the combination
of coffee drinking and the three-fold increase of immuno-
suppressive polyunsaturated fats in the diet. There is a
reference to support this concept. D.F. Brik of our National
Cancer Institute had reported in 1981 that pancreatic cancer
increased when corn oil was added to the diet of golden
hamsters.
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