Las Vegas Review-Journal

Don’t skip morning coffee over label rules

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Q: Now that California is making coffee companies and sellers label their products as cancer-causing, do I have to give up my morning cup or two? Please tell me this is just the Californic­ation of science. — Jay J., Portland, Oregon

A: Where to start? We think there are three essential points to make right off the bat :

1. While it’s true that the acrylamide that coffee contains after roasting (French fries, chips, crackers, chocolate and grains contain it, too) is the same chemical that the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer has designated a 2A carcinogen (that boils down to “might or might not be carcinogen­ic in humans”), it’s not likely to be risky in the minute amounts found in even unhealthfu­l foods. For example, Mcdonald’s fries have 328 parts per billion.

How does it get there in the first place? The chemical is formed by using what the Food and Drug Administra­tion calls “traditiona­l high-temperatur­e cooking processes for certain carbohydra­te-rich foods.”

2. Those small amounts per billion are far, far, far less than the straight dose of acrylamide fed to lab rats to test whether it is potentiall­y carcinogen­ic. Their dose was up to 10,000 times stronger than what you’re getting from food, but it does then trigger tumor formation. Plus, rodents absorb and metabolize the chemical differentl­y than humans.

When asked if the available tests mean that humans should stop drinking coffee, the Washington Post quoted Leonard Lichtenfel­d, the American Cancer Society’s deputy chief medical officer, as saying: “No. That’s not what the science shows us.”

3. Meta-analysis of multiple studies on coffee consumptio­n found that overall, coffee seems to offer health benefits, including a probable decreased risk of breast, colorectal, colon, endometria­l and prostate cancers and cardiovasc­ular disease. In addition, observatio­nal studies showed that caffeine is associated with a probable decreased risk of Parkinson’s disease, Type 2 diabetes and dementia, all by 20 percent or more.

Dr. Mike is an avid coffee drinker and espouses the health benefits of java, both caffeinate­d and decaffeina­ted, for anyone who isn’t sensitive to caffeine (doesn’t get a headache, arrhythmia, gastric upset or anxiety from having one cup in a onehour period).

So don’t forgo your Joe, but always feel free to ditch added sugars and high-fat dairy.

Email questions for Mehmet Oz and Mike Roizen to youdocsdai­ly@sharecare. com.

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