Increased Risk For Alcohol Problems In Adulthood When Alcohol Consumed Before 15 Years Of Age
It may seem like a minor point, but it matters when someone takes their first drink of alcohol relative to later development of alcohol problems.
A new study of the relationship between age at first drink (AFD) and the risk of developing alcohol-use disorders (AUDs) during adulthood has found that the risk is greatest when AFD occurs before the age of 15. Results will be published in the December issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research and are currently available at Early View.
“Some early drinkers become alcohol dependent while still in their teens, a time when those who have not yet started drinking are not even at risk of becoming dependent.” explained Deborah A. Dawson, staff scientist at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) and corresponding author for the study. “By looking at adult-onset dependence, we can see for the first time that the association between early AFD and increased AUD risk … is not time limited, but rather persists into adulthood.”
“In addition,” said Howard B. Moss, associate director for Clinical and Translational Research at NIAAA, “this study controls for a variety of individual risk factors that could contribute to both early drinking behavior and later alcohol problems.”
“The key finding of this study was that people who started drinking before age 15, and to a lesser extent those who started drinking at ages 15 to 17, were more likely to become alcohol dependent as adults than people who waited until 18 or older to start drinking,” said Dawson. “Past studies have often suggested that this association might result from common risk factors predisposing people to both early drinking and AUDs. Although the current study does not provide conclusive evidence that early drinking directly increases AUD risk, it suggests that it is premature to rule out the possibility of such a direct effect.”
“By controlling for a variety of confounding risk factors in their analysis, Dawson and colleagues were able to demonstrate that … early alcohol consumption itself, as a misguided choice or decision, is driving the relationship between early drinking and risk for development of later alcohol problems,” observed Moss.
“We believe that impaired executive cognitive function (EGF) may lead to choices that favor the immediate pleasures of heavy drinking over avoiding the long-term risks of developing an AUD,” said Dawson. “Impaired EGF would likely result from frequent and/or extremely heavy drinking at early ages, not from the simple fact of having initiated drinking at early ages. The big question is whether the impaired EGF preceded and led to the early drinking (and the increased risk of AUD), or whether the early drinking caused the impaired EGF.” These findings, she added, help build a body of research that will eventually help scientists deduce whether early drinking is a marker of high risk for AUD or a direct risk factor for AUD. “If the latter is true, it adds to the importance of preventing early drinking,” she said. “Especially in light of the finding that the likelihood of developing these AUDs in adulthood is about 50 percent higher for persons who start drinking before 15 as for those who did not drink until 18 or older.”
Moss agrees. “The data support the notion of delaying the onset of drinking behavior as late as possible as an important principle for the prevention of AUDs later in life,” he said. “More specifically, these findings provide the scientific basis of those prevention programs that focus on decreasing underage drinking, as well as supporting those public-health policies that are geared towards the prevention of underage drinking.”
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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research (ACER) is the official journal of the Research Society on Alcoholism and the International Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism. Co-authors of the ACER paper, “Age at First Drink and the First Incidence of Adult-Onset DSM-IV Alcohol Use Disorders,” were: Risë B. Goldstein, S. Patricia Chou, W. June Ruan, and Bridget F. Grant of the Laboratory of Epidemiology and Biometry in the Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. The study was funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
Source: NIAAA Press Office
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
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{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }
Nice post. Thanks for this one.
I’m curious – did the study make any comparisons at all with say, Europe’s treatment of alcohol?
I think people who start drinking earlier in life have a stronger chance of becoming addicted. I think a lot depends on your family history as well.
The study could be very reliable caused most people who are into drinking eventually become alcohol dependent individual. But, personal mind set can still affect your discipline in alcohol intake.
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I think they need to take a closer look, anyone who did much drinking before age 21 years old is at a real risk, not to hard to figure out consider what the legal drinking age is.
This post can serve as an eye opener that drinking alcohol especially at an early age will not do any good. Thanks for this.
Sure is a great problem. We can hear this lots of problem not only in one country but a lot of places really. Its really hard especially those who started with their young age. better be careful and guide your kids.
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Great post! Alcohol is the bad thing to drink. We should avoid this. Thanks.
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I started drinking at a very young age, yet I don’t feel that I have a problem with alcohol. However, I feel that way about smoking. I am still friends with a few people that I was friends with when I was 13, and everyone who smoked then still smokes. Obviously, it made an impression.
Finding a positive correlation between the onset of drinking with future abuse seems a bit far fetched. Does the later abuse occur if the person tastes a drink, drinks at parties, everyday or what? i do believe that the addiction in any form is mult faceted, complicated and must be treated and looked at in that way. Simplification of issues seems a bit understated.
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