TY - JOUR AU - Maxwell, Andrea M. AU - Harrison, Katherine AU - Rawls, Eric AU - Zilverstand, Anna PY - 2022 M3 - Perspective TI - Gender Differences in the Psychosocial Determinants Underlying the Onset and Maintenance of Alcohol Use Disorder JO - Frontiers in Neuroscience UR - https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnins.2022.808776 VL - 16 SN - 1662-453X N2 - A large number of different mechanisms have been linked to Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD), including psychosocial, neurocognitive, affective, and neurobiological factors. Gender has been shown to impact the presentation and progression of AUD; yet, little work has been done to parse the different mechanisms underlying AUD within the lens of gender differences. A review of the literature on adolescence revealed that psychosocial factors, in particular lack of family social support and interactions with peers, drive the onset of alcohol use more strongly in girls relative to boys. However, research done on gender differences in disease progression in adults remains limited. Our gender-specific analysis of the mechanisms underlying AUD in adults revealed that lack of social support was causally linked to negative affect, mental health symptoms, and AUD symptom severity in women, but not men. These novel results suggest that psychosocial factors may play a gender-specific role not only in the onset of use in adolescence, but also in the maintenance of addiction in adults. If confirmed, this suggests the need for investigating gender-specific recovery trajectories. In this perspective piece, we review the literature regarding gender differences in the onset and maintenance of AUD and present original data that support unique risk factors in women. ER -