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Alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) is on the rise among adolescents and young adults, but long-term liver-related outcomes for affected individuals vary by sex. According to alcohol-associated liver disease practice guidance from the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, women have a greater risk of liver injury compared with men for any level of drinking. Additionally, while rates of alcohol use disorder and high-risk drinking have grown in recent years, some of the greatest increases have been observed among women. “Myself, in addition to many others, noticed this switch in the demographic of individuals who were coming in with acute alcohol-associated hepatitis,” Jennifer Flemming, MD, an associate professor of medicine and public health sciences at Queen's University, told HCPLive, explaining how AH has historically been known to affect middle-aged men but has recently been observed more frequently in younger individuals, especially females. “What we found, concerningly, is that rates of [AH] were going up in all ages in this young group,” Flemming said. “When we stratified it based on sex, kind of similar to what we were seeing clinically, we saw that the rates were going up much higher among females.” Read more: LINK #Hepatology #Addiction #Alcohol #Liver #LiverDisease