Driving Under the Influence of Cannabis: Impact of Combining Toxicology Testing with Field Sobriety Tests

Author:

Fitzgerald Robert L1ORCID,Umlauf Anya2,Hubbard Jacqueline A3,Hoffman Melissa A4ORCID,Sobolesky Philip M5,Ellis Shannon E6,Grelotti David J2,Suhandynata Raymond T1,Huestis Marilyn A7ORCID,Grant Igor2,Marcotte Thomas D2

Affiliation:

1. Center for Advanced Laboratory Medicine , San Diego, CA , United States

2. Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research , San Diego, CA , United States

3. Qualitox Labs , McKees Rocks, PA , United States

4. Vividion Therapeutics , San Diego, CA , United States

5. Santa Clara Valley Medical Center , San Jose, CA , United States

6. Department of Cognitive Sciences, University of California San Diego , La Jolla, CA , United States

7. Institute for Emerging Health Professions, Thomas Jefferson University , Philadelphia, PA , United States

Abstract

Abstract Background Cannabis is increasingly used both medically and recreationally. With widespread use, there is growing concern about how to identify cannabis-impaired drivers. Methods A placebo-controlled randomized double-blinded protocol was conducted to study the effects of cannabis on driving performance. One hundred ninety-one participants were randomized to smoke ad libitum a cannabis cigarette containing placebo or delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (5.9% or 13.4%). Blood, oral fluid (OF), and breath samples were collected along with longitudinal driving performance on a simulator (standard deviation of lateral position [SDLP] and car following [coherence]) over a 5-hour period. Law enforcement officers performed field sobriety tests (FSTs) to determine if participants were impaired. Results There was no relationship between THC concentrations measured in blood, OF, or breath and SDLP or coherence at any of the timepoints studied (P > 0.05). FSTs were significant (P < 0.05) for classifying participants into the THC group vs the placebo group up to 188 minutes after smoking. Seventy-one minutes after smoking, FSTs classified 81% of the participants who received active drug as being impaired. However, 49% of participants who smoked placebo (controls) were also deemed impaired at this same timepoint. Combining a 2 ng/mL THC cutoff in OF with positive findings on FSTs reduced the number of controls classified as impaired to zero, 86 minutes after smoking the placebo. Conclusions Requiring a positive toxicology result in addition to the FST observations substantially improved the classification accuracy regarding possible driving under the influence of THC by decreasing the percentage of controls classified as impaired.

Funder

State of California award to the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research via Assembly Bill 266

National Institutes of Health

American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry

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