Does a coffee a day keep the doctor away? Investigating the impact of coffee on cardiometabolic health

Lead Research Organisation: University of Reading
Department Name: Food and Nutritional Sciences

Abstract

Coffee is an extremely popular beverage worldwide; 95 million cups per day are consumed in the UK alone. Historically, there has been debate about the health impacts of consuming coffee, however recent findings from observational studies has provided evidence that drinking 3-5 cups of coffee per day is protective against cardiometabolic diseases. These studies, however, do not prove causality; randomised controlled trials are needed.
Coffee is a chemically complex beverage and contains many different bioactive component (e.g. polyphenols, alkaloids, melanoidins, diterpenes), which are likely to differ depending on how the coffee is consumed; this makes it hard to fully understand what is driving these health effects. Identifying biomarkers of different coffee consumption would contribute towards understanding the health effects. This complexity is exacerbated by the observation of large inter-individual variation in response to coffee; some individuals seem to have marked health responses, whereas others do not. It is not clear what is driving this, although it is possible that it is a combination of genetic polymorphisms and gut microbiota composition.
The objective of this project is to understand the impact of coffee consumption on cardiometabolic health.
In this project the student will:
1) Analyse a variety of coffee prepared by different methods for bioactive compound content
2) Perform a randomised controlled trial to test the impact of coffee on cardiometabolic health
3) Investigate the inter-individual variation in response to coffee on cardiometabolic health
4) Identify biomarkers of coffee consumption and to predict cardiometabolic disease risk

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
BB/T008776/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2028
2604569 Studentship BB/T008776/1 24/09/2021 23/09/2025 Ashley Hookings