In a true experiment, roughly 300 volunteer participants will smoke active cannabis, a corresponding placebo, or no substance at all (control). Next, participants will complete a drive test and then be observed by actual California Highway Patrol (CHP) officers who will attempt to classify participants as impaired or unimpaired. CHP Officers will evaluate participants in the context of driving (i.e., while following participants in an actual patrol car), as part of a roadside behavioral assessment (i.e., the Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving Enforcement, or ARIDE, battery, which includes Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, or SFSTs), and as part of a Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) evaluation conducted indoors.
The easing of restrictions on the use of cannabis for recreational purposes presents a new challenge for policing of impaired driving, which is to say Driving Under the Influence of Drugs (DUI-D), specifically cannabis. In particular, it is not entirely clear how well the tools used by law enforcement officers to detect driving impairment (e.g., behavioral instruments such as the SFSTs, as included in the ARIDE battery) work for identifying cannabis-induced driving impairment specifically. While these instruments are designed to help officers identify driving impairment in general (irrespective of cause), prior empirical validation work has almost exclusively involved alcohol-induced impairment. This study will be conducted within a realistic, closed-course driving environment and it seeks to validate the same instruments currently used by law enforcement to detect cannabis-induced driving impairment against a second, independent, behavioral standard for driving impairment: a comprehensive driver evaluation adapted from the same set of driver tests that Californians must pass upon application for an original license, or (in certain instances) when referred to the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) for evaluation of their ability to safely operate a non-commercial class of motor vehicle (here referred to as the Modified Driver Performance Evaluation or MDPE). This study seeks to answer the following research questions: I. How accurately do behavioral assessments used by officers distinguish between drivers impaired by cannabis and drivers not impaired by cannabis? II. How does cannabis affect real-world (as opposed to simulated) driving performance?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
300
Assessment of active cannabis smoking and driving impairment
Assessment of placebo cannabis smoking and driving impairment
California Department of Motor Vehicles Headquarters
Sacramento, California, United States
RECRUITINGModified Driving Performance Examination (MDPE)
The MDPE driving test, developed for this study, is administered once per participant per experimental session. It occurs after the assigned intervention (i.e., drug administration) and it is primarily scored dichotomously (pass versus fail).
Time frame: Conducted an average of 35 minutes after the assigned intervention is completed.
Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving Enforcement (ARIDE) battery
The ARIDE battery is not a scale but a series of roadside behavioral assessments used by law enforcement officers to help them detect impaired driving: (1) pulse check, (2) Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus or HGN, (3) a test of distinct and sustained nystagmus, (4) vertical nystagmus, (5) lack of convergence test, (6) a check to see if eyes are bloodshot or watery, (7) Modified Romberg Balance Test, (8) Walk and Turn Test or WAT, (9) One Leg Stand Test or OLS, and some additional observations. The ARIDE battery occurs once per participant following the Modified Driving Performance Examination. The ARIDE battery is scored overall as pass versus fail by the officer conducting the test (in real-time).
Time frame: Conducted an average of 65 minutes after the assigned intervention is completed.
Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) evaluation
The DRE evaluation is designed to help law enforcement officers identify whether an individual is generally impaired and, if so, which class of substance caused the impairment. The DRE evaluation occurs once per participant, following the ARIDE battery. It is scored by the officer conducting it in real-time as a judgment about state of impairment (impaired versus unimpaired), and, in the case of impairment, a judgment about the class of substance.
Time frame: Conducted an average of 90 minutes after the assigned intervention is completed.
First blood draw (baseline)
The first blood sample is collected at baseline (after consent procedures and a medical checkup), roughly 25 minutes into the experimental session. This is before the assigned intervention (i.e., drug administration) and before any of the primary outcome measures occurs. All samples will undergo toxicological analyses to assess blood concentrations (in nanograms per milliliter) of cannabinoids, as well as the presence of other drugs (opioids, benzodiazepines, and stimulants).
Time frame: Conducted 15 minutes before the assigned intervention.
Second blood draw (change from baseline)
The second blood sample is collected immediately after the assigned intervention (i.e., drug administration), around the time that THC concentration is expected to be at its peak. Most samples will undergo toxicological analyses to assess blood concentrations (in nanograms per milliliter) of cannabinoids and these results will be compared to those of the first blood draw. In the case of control participants whose first sample did not reveal the presence of cannabinoids, no further analyses will be conducted.
Time frame: Conducted immediately after the assigned intervention is completed.
Third blood draw (change from baseline and second blood draw)
The third blood sample is collected after the Advanced Roadside Impaired Driving Enforcement (ARIDE) battery and immediately before the Drug Recognition Expert (DRE) evaluation. Most samples will undergo toxicological analyses to assess blood concentrations (in nanograms per milliliter) of cannabinoids and these results will be compared to those of the first and second blood draws. In the case of control participants whose first sample did not reveal the presence of cannabinoids, no further analyses will be conducted.
Time frame: Conducted an average of 85 minutes after the assigned intervention is completed.
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