The Balog-Szemerédi-Gowers theorem can be stated in the following form: let $A,B$ be subsets of $\mathbb{Z}/n\mathbb{Z}$ (say) with equal cardinality, such that
$$
\|1_A*1_B\|_2 \ge K^{-1} \|1_A\|_1 \|1_B\|_2. 
$$
Then there exist $A'\subset A$, $B'\subset B$ with $|A'|\ge K^{-C}|A|$, $|B'|\ge K^{-C}|B|$ such that $|A'+B'|\le K^C |B'|$.

Here $C$ is an absolute constant.

My questions is: what happens if the $2$-norm is replaced by a $q$-norm? If $q\in (1,2)$, then it follows from Hölder that
$$
\|1_A*1_B\|_q \ge K^{-1} \|1_A\|_1 \|1_B\|_q 
$$
implies
$$
\|1_A*1_B\|_2 \ge K^{-\frac{q}{2(q-1)}} \|1_A\|_1 \|1_B\|_2,
$$
so the conclusion still holds, with a constant $C$ that depends on $q$ (blowing up as $q\downarrow 1$).

What about $q>2$? More precisely:

> Is there any $q>2$ such that the conclusion of the B-S-G Theorem continues to hold if one assumes that $\|1_A*1_B\|_q \ge K^{-1} \|1_A\|_1 \|1_B\|_q $ (possibly with a constant $C$ that depends on $q$)?