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

Authors

Robert L. Fitzgerald , * Anya Umlauf, Jacqueline A. Hubbard, Melissa A. Hoffman , Philip M. Sobolesky, Shannon E. Ellis, David J. Grelotti, Raymond T. Suhandynata, Marilyn A. Huestis , Igor Grant, and Thomas D. Marcotteb


Published

August 13,  2023

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 li- bitum 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 simula- tor (standard deviation of lateral position [SDLP] and car following [coherence]) over a 5-hour period. Law enforce- ment officers performed field sobriety tests (FSTs) to de- termine 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 re- ceived 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 percent- age of controls classified as impaired.


DOI: 10.1093/clinchem/hvad054

Citations

Fitzgerald, R. L., Umlauf, A., Hubbard, J. A., Hoffman, M. A., Sobolesky, P. M., Ellis, S. E., … & Marcotte, T. D. (2023). Driving Under the Influence of Cannabis: Impact of Combining Toxicology Testing with Field Sobriety Tests.