Albuquerque Journal

Youths drinking spurs sharp increase in liver disease

- MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU

From 1999 to 2016, liver disease deaths rose 65 percent, a study by two University of Michigan professors found.

Young Americans who drink are bearing the brunt of that trend, said Elliot Tapper and Neehar Parikh, the study’s authors.

Young people seem to be drinking themselves to death at a higher rate than ever before. For adults ages 25 to 34, the increase in deaths in those years has been driven entirely by alcohol-related liver disease.

“We thought we would see improvemen­ts, but these data make it clear: even after hepatitis C, we will still have our work cut out for us,” Tapper, a member of the University of Michigan Division of Gastroente­rology and Hepatology and health services researcher at the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, told Science Daily.

Deaths of young adults due to liver failure rose by an average of 10.5 percent per year from 20092016, according to the study. Tapper and Parikh examined death certificat­es for nearly 600,000 adults from the Vital Statistics Cooperativ­e and population data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

Tapper called the trend “disturbing” in a news release.

Deaths from cirrhosis rose from 20,661 in 1999 to 34,174 in 2016. Cirrhosis is defined by scarring of the liver, caused by longterm damage, from prolonged drinking, hepatitis C or what’s known as fatty liver disease.

Prolonged, heavy drinking is a known cause of liver cancer.

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