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Cardiovascular health

J Kaluza et al, 2025. High coffee consumption may increase aortic diameter and risk of abdominal aortic aneurysm in smokers, Scientific Reports.

High coffee consumption may increase aortic diameter and risk of abdominal aortic aneurysm in smokers

J Kaluza
Scientific Reports
August 19, 2025

ABSTRACT

An association of coffee consumption with a risk of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is unknown. We hypothesized that coffee consumption influences aortic diameter and AAA risk, with smoking status as a modifier. The study included 42,723 Swedish men and 34,921 women (age 45-83 years) with infrarenal aortic diameter (IAD) measured in 8,109 men. Over 18.7 years, 1863 AAA cases (1585 non-ruptured, 278 ruptured) were identified. Among participants with coffee consumption ≤ 5 cups/day, current smokers versus never smokers had a 3-fold higher risk of non-ruptured and ruptured AAA (HR = 3.12, 95%CI = 2.62-3.71 and HR = 2.90, 95%CI = 1.95-4.31, respectively); the risk increased with coffee consumption > 5 cups/day and was a 4-fold higher (HR = 3.89, 95%CI = 3.12-4.85) for non-ruptured and a 4.6-fold higher (HR = 4.61, 95%CI = 2.72-7.86) for ruptured AAA (P-value- multiplicative-interaction = 0.009). 160 (2.0%) screened men had an IAD ≥ 30 mm. In men drinking daily ≤ 3 cups of coffee, current smokers versus never smokers had a 4-fold (OR = 4.09, 95%CI = 1.81-9.22) higher risk of IAD ≥ 30 mm; in men with higher coffee consumption (> 3 cups/day), the risk increased 6.6-fold (OR = 6.58, 95%CI = 2.98-14.6). In ex-smokers, the corresponding ORs were 1.67 (95%CI = 0.62-4.49) and 3.27 (95%CI = 1.27-8.40), respectively. In conclusion, high coffee consumption may increase risk of AAA and infrarenal aortic diameter in smokers.

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