Increased Caffeinated Coffee Consumption
associated with decreased risk of
Depression in Women
Newswise, September 28, 2011 — The risk of
depression appears to decrease for women
with increasing consumption of caffeinated
coffee, according to a report in the
September 26 issue of Archives of
Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Caffeine is the most frequently used central
nervous system stimulant in the world, and
approximately 80 percent of consumption is
in the form of coffee, according to
background information in the article.
Previous research, including one prospective
study among men, has suggested an
association between coffee consumption and
depression risk.
Because depression is a
chronic and recurrent condition that affects
twice as many women as men, including
approximately one of every five U.S. women
during their lifetime, “identification of
risk factors for depression among women and
the development of new preventive strategies
are, therefore, a public health priority,”
write the authors. They sought to examine
whether, in women, consumption of caffeine
or certain caffeinated beverages is
associated with the risk of depression.
Michel Lucas, Ph.D., R.D., from the Harvard
School of Public Health, Boston, and
colleagues studied 50,739 U.S. women who
participated in the Nurses’ Health Study.
Participants, who had a mean (average) age
of 63, had no depression at the start of the
study in 1996 and were prospectively
followed up with through June 2006.
Researchers measured caffeine consumption
through questionnaires completed from May
1980 through April 2004, including the
frequency that caffeinated and noncaffeinated coffee, nonherbal tea,
caffeinated soft drinks (sugared or
low-calorie colas), caffeine-free soft
drinks (sugared or low-calorie caffeine-free
colas or other carbonated beverages) and
chocolate were usually consumed in the
previous 12 months.
The authors defined
depression as reporting a new diagnosis of
clinical depression and beginning regular
use of antidepressants in the previous two
years.
Analysis of the cumulative mean consumption
included a two-year latency period; for
example, data on caffeine consumption from
1980 through 1994 were used to predict
episodes of clinical depression from 1996
through 1998; consumption from 1980 through
1998 were used for the 1998 through 2000
follow-up period; and so on.
During the
10-year follow-up period from 1996 to 2006,
researchers identified 2,607 incident
(new-onset) cases of depression. When
compared with women who consumed one cup of
caffeinated coffee or less per week, those
who consumed two to three cups per day had a
15 percent decrease in relative risk for
depression, and those consuming four cups or
more per day had a 20 percent decrease in
relative risk.
Compared with women in the
lowest (less than 100 milligrams [mg] per
day) categories of caffeine consumption,
those in the highest category (550 mg per
day or more) had a 20 percent decrease in
relative risk of depression. No association
was found between intake of decaffeinated
coffee and depression risk.
“In this large prospective cohort of older
women free of clinical depression or severe
depressive symptoms at baseline, risk of
depression decreased in a dose-dependent
manner with increasing consumption of
caffeinated coffee,” write the authors.
They
note that this observational study “cannot
prove that caffeine or caffeinated coffee
reduces the risk of depression but only
suggests the possibility of such a
protective effect.” The authors call for
further investigations to confirm their
results and to determine whether usual
caffeinated coffee consumption could
contribute to prevention or treatment of
depression.