1 typical quantity were still significant predictors of the AUD occurrence in adulthood, while the effects of family history (b=.39, p=.076) and age of onset (b=−.09, p=.058) were reduced to marginal significance. Body mass index remained non-significant and the effects of T1 age on the AUD hazard function remained significant in 20–24 and 45–49 age range, and became significant in the 50+ age range. The parameter estimates listed for the age intervals represent the negative logits of the hazard probability for each age interval and the corresponding percentages listed under odds ratios are the probability of AUD onset for those probands with zero scores on all covariates (i.e. FHN probands with an average score on all centered continuous covariates) not considered missing at each age interval.