Health British Columbia

Coffee May Protect the Liver in More Ways Than Scientists Realized

Coffee’s apparent liver benefits may extend beyond caffeine. Liver disease often develops quietly, with fat buildup, inflammation, and scarring progressing for years before symptoms appear. A new Cedars-Sinai Health Sci…

Coffee May Protect the Liver in More Ways Than Scientists Realized
Text to audio Audio version available

Coffee’s apparent liver benefits may extend beyond caffeine. Liver disease often develops quietly, with fat buildup, inflammation, and scarring progressing for years before symptoms appear. A new Cedars-Sinai Health Sciences University study suggests that one of the world’s most common beverages may be linked to a lower risk of that damage: people who drank more [...]

Coffee’s apparent liver benefits may extend beyond caffeine. Liver disease often develops quietly, with fat buildup, inflammation, and scarring progressing for years before symptoms appear. A new Cedars-Sinai Health Sciences University study suggests that one of the world’s most common beverages may be linked to a lower risk of that damage: people who drank more coffee had fewer cases of cirrhosis, liver cancer, and liver-related death.

Published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology, the research went beyond tracking coffee intake and diagnoses. Investigators combined more than a decade of health records with liver MRI scans and blood protein analyses, uncovering biological clues that may help explain how coffee is associated with healthier liver tissue and reduced disease risk. “Previous studies suggested that coffee might benefit the liver, but most were smaller or looked at only one piece of the puzzle,” said hepatologist Hyunseok Kim, MD, MPH, PhD, assistant professor of Medicine at Cedars-Sinai and corresponding

Source and reference

author of the study. “We followed hundreds of thousands of people for more than a decade and looked at their health outcomes along with liver MRI scans and blood protein analyses. Together, those findings help explain the biological mechanisms behind coffee’s association with better liver health.” Large cohort strengthens the link The researchers analyzed 354,957 adults in the UK Biobank who did not have cirrhosis or liver cancer when the study began. They then followed participants for a median of 13 years, using linked health records to track new cases of cirrhosis, liver cancer and liver-related death. That long follow-up mattered because serious liver disease often develops gradually. Cirrhosis is advanced scarring that makes it harder for the liver to work, while liver cancer and liver-related death represent later and more severe outcomes. By following hundreds of thousands of...

Read original source
Published
Jul 12, 2026
Updated
Jul 12, 2026
Source
Scitechdaily
Category
Health
Read time
4 min
Key facts

Key facts

SectionHealth
Open
SourceScitechdaily
Open
PublishedJul 12, 2026
UpdatedJul 12, 2026

Why this matters locally

This health story matters locally because it may affect readers, businesses, commuters, families, or public services in British Columbia.

Local impact

BC Post links this item to British Columbia coverage so readers can follow related city updates, weather, traffic, events, and category news in one place.

Timeline

PublishedJul 12, 2026, 3:49 AMThis story was published by BC Post.
ImportedJul 12, 2026, 10:15 AMThe item entered the BC Post source pipeline.
Transparency

Source and credit

BC Post may summarize, organize, and add local context for reader clarity. Original reporting remains with the listed publisher.

Scitechdaily Published Jul 12, 2026 Imported Jul 12, 2026
Read Original Source
Scitechdaily Jul 12, 2026
Read Original Source