CANNABIS AND ROAD SAFETY: AN OUTLINE OF THE RESEARCH STUDIES TO EXAMINE THE EFFECTS OF CANNABIS ON DRIVING SKILLS AND ON ACTUAL DRIVING PERFORMANCE
Dr G.B. Chesher
Department of Pharmacology University of Sydney and National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre University of New South Wales.
Dr Chesher provides an extensive coverage of the latest Australian and overseas research on the impairing effects on driving of cannabis, particularly relative to those of alcohol.
Contents:
1.Executive summary
2.Introduction
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2.1 Pharmacology and pharmacokinetics
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2.2 Behavioural pharmacology and psychology
3.Studies using the techniques of epidemiology
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3.1 Pharmacology and pharmacokinetics
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3.2 Pharmacokinetics
4.
A comparison of the effects of alcohol and cannabis on skill performance
and driving skills
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4.1 Laboratory tests
-
4.2 Duration of
cannabis-induced impairment in laboratory tests
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4.3 The effect on
laboratory tasks of alcohol and cannabis in combination
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4.4 Driving
simulators
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4.5 On-road driving
5.
Epidemiology
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5.1 Questionnaire
based surveys
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5.2 Incidence of
drug detection in crash involved drivers
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5.3 Attempts to
assess whether or not the driver who has detectable drugs in the blood
stream was culpable in the accident
6.
The use of 'Responsibility Analysis' or estimation of 'culpability' to
determine the role of drugs in crashes
7.
Alcohol and cannabis in epidemiological studies
8.
Summary (of the evidence presented above)
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
There is no doubt that
cannabis, smoked or taken by mouth produces a dose-related deficit in
tests of performance skills as conducted in a laboratory.
Using driving
simulators and on-road real vehicles, cannabis has been shown to affect
driving performance. However, the effects are less severe than would be
anticipated from the evidence obtained from the laboratory studies of
individual tests of skills performance.
A description is given
of epidemiological studies to determine the role of cannabis in road
crashes. The pharmacological problems associated with these studies are
described. The results of studies within the last 10 years have failed to
present clear evidence for a role of cannabis in road crashes. The role of
alcohol in all studies has proved to be dominant.
The evidence indicates
that there is a clear difference in the mode of action of cannabis and
alcohol, both pharmacological and behavioural and this is presented and
the implications described.
The most recent of
studies of cannabis and driving (Robbe & O'Hanlon, 1993), which was
sponsored by the U.S. National Highway Safety Traffic Administration
included a review of the literature. The authors' comments in summary of
their literature review and of their own results include the following:
The foremost impression one gains from reviewing the literature is that no
clear relationship has ever been demonstrated between marijuana smoking
and either seriously impaired driving performance or the risk of accident
involvement. The epidemiological evidence, as limited as it is, shows that
the combination of THC and alcohol is over-represented in injured and dead
drivers and more so in those who actually caused the accidents to occur.
Yet there is little if any evidence to indicate that drivers who have used
marijuana alone are any more likely to cause serious accidents than drug
free drivers.
Of
the many psychotropic drugs, licit and illicit, that are available and
used by people who subsequently drive, marijuana may well be among the
least harmful. Campaigns to discourage the use of marijuana by drivers are
certainly warranted. But concentrating a campaign on marijuana alone may
not be in proportion to the safety problem it causes.
2. INTRODUCTION
In this paper I will
examine briefly the studies which have sought an understanding of the
effect of cannabis and of alcohol on driving skills and their role in road
crashes. This information has been based upon scientific data which have
been collected from several scientific disciplines. I have outlined these
in earlier papers and will only mention them briefly here.
The major purpose of
this paper is to compare the two drugs, alcohol and cannabis and the
status of the evidence as to their role in road crashes.
The determination of
the legal limit for alcohol has been achieved in a scientific manner.
There are pharmacological reasons why it has not been possible to follow
these same techniques with drugs other than alcohol, including cannabis.
This paper will draw attention to these problems.
First, we might
briefly outline the nature of the evidence which has been generated to
examine the effects of cannabis on driving skills and as a causative
factor in road crashes. This information has been derived from the
employment of three scientific disciplines:
2.1 Pharmacology
and pharmacokinetics
Pharmacology is the
study of the way a drug exerts its action in the body. This involves an
understanding of the sites and the body systems where the drug acts and
the consequences of this drug-system interaction. Information obtained
from these studies can help to formulate an hypothesis as to how the drug
may influence driving behaviour.
The pharmacological
discipline known as pharmacokinetics studies the fate of the drug after it
has been taken. It provides information as to the rate of absorption from
the site of administration; the manner of its distribution in the body up
to the delivery to its site of action (eg. the brain). Pharmacokinetics
also studies the way the body eliminates the drug from the body and
includes the understanding of the metabolism and excretion of the drug.
2..2 Behavioural
pharmacology and psychology
These involve studies
of the effects of the drug on human behaviour. The behaviour of relevance
to this discussion concerns those skills which are (or are related to)
those necessary for the safe control of a motor vehicle or other items of
machinery. Psychological studies also involve the effects of the drug on
mood and cognition.
The three
classifications of these studies are:
(i) Those performed on
specific tests of behaviour or psychological functioning (for example,
tests of reaction times of various degrees of complexity; tracking;
divided attention or vigilance);
(ii) Those performed
in a driving simulator; and
(iii) Those performed
in a real car, either in a closed course or in real traffic.
3. STUDIES USING THE TECHNIQUES OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
These studies aim to
determine whether or not a causal relationship between drug use and a
motor vehicle crash exists.
I shall look at each
of the above factors and will compare the two drugs alcohol and cannabis
in the light of current evidence. In interests of time and space I have in
this summary referred to reviews of the literature and have made only a
brief description of the studies themselves. A fuller description of these
can of course be sourced from the original literature of the cited
reviews.
3.1 Pharmacology
First, the drugs
themselves. With the increase in pharmacological knowledge it is known
that most drugs act upon specific receptors. A receptor is a specific site
in tissues, frequently on the cell membrane, which has a specific
structural affinity (shape) for a naturally occurring molecule. The
interaction between receptor and the endogenous molecule is part of the
body's normal, physiological functioning. Most drugs exert their activity
by acting upon these receptors. Examples of such drug-receptor
interactions are the opioids (morphine etc) and the opioid receptors; the
antihistamines and the histamine receptors and the benzodiazepines which
act on the benzodiazepine receptors. The endogenous substances that
physiologically act on these receptors are, respectively, the endorphins
and enkephalins on the opioid receptors; histamine on the histamine
receptors; however the identification of the physiological substance for
the benzodiazepine receptor has yet to be identified.
Research within the
last five years has revealed that the cannabinoids, such as
delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) from the cannabis plant exert their
effects on specific receptors known as the cannabinoid receptors. To date
two cannabinoid receptors have been described and an endogenous
(physiological) substance has been identified. This has been given the
name 'anandamide'. It is very likely that in the near future more
cannabinoid receptors will be described and more endogenous substances
that act on these receptors will be identified. An historical overview of
these findings has recently been published.
In contrast, the
evidence strongly indicates that the drug alcohol does not act on a
specific receptor, but acts more widely in a non-specific manner on the
cell membranes themselves. This understanding is supported by the evidence
that alcohol exerts effects on most of the tissues of the body and in
excess is toxic to most tissues. The reader is referred to a recent review
on this subject by Dufor and Caces.
Drugs which act upon a
specific receptor produce their effects in doses measured usually as
nanograms or micrograms per kilogram of body weight. Alcohol doses are
measured in grams per kilogram - many hundreds of thousands times greater
than those of most other drugs. Alcohol is a very non-specific drug.
Another important
factor is that receptor-specific drugs exert their activity only on those
cells which bear the specific receptor. In the case of the cannabinoids
these receptors are found only in the brain in the basal ganglia, the
cerebellum, the brain stem, thalamic nuclei, hypothalamus and corpus
callosum. On the other hand alcohol affects all nerve cells to which it is
delivered by the circulating blood.
Consequently it is not
surprising that differences in the action of alcohol and the cannabinoids
have been described in their effects on mood and behaviour. These will be
discussed below.
3.2 Pharmacokinetics
The pharmacokinetics
of alcohol and the cannabinoids could hardly be more different.
The apparent volume of
distribution of alcohol (the volume of fluid in which the drug seems to be
dissolved throughout the body) is quite low, consisting of the 41 litres
of body water, providing a value of about 0.59 litres/kg. Cannabinoids, on
the other hand, are very fat soluble and have a high volume of
distribution which has been estimated to be about 10 litres/kg.
The meaning of these
values is that the concentration of alcohol in the blood provides a
reliable estimate of the concentration of the drug in the brain. This in
turn provides a reliable estimate of the degree of impairment of the
drinker. In addition to this, alcohol is excreted via the lungs to the
breath and the blood : breath ratio is such that the determination
of the alcohol in breath provides a reliable estimate of the blood alcohol
concentration. It is because of these pharmacokinetic properties of
alcohol that it has been possible to accumulate the epidemiological data
upon which our drink-driving laws have been based.
Cannabinoids, on the
other hand are lipophilic (fat loving) and are distributed in the fatty
tissues of the body. When smoked, which is the most common route of
administration, the cannabinoids are rapidly absorbed from the lungs into
the bloodstream. Being so fat soluble the cannabinoids readily cross
membranes, leave the circulation and are rapidly 'dumped' into various
tissues of the body, including the brain. In this way the concentration of
cannabinoid in the blood declines very rapidly as indicated in Fig 1.
As indicated in the
Figure, we can describe the concentration of cannabinoid across time in
the blood in the three phases: absorption, re-distribution and
elimination. The steep upward curve of THC represents the inhaled THC
being absorbed into the blood through the lungs; the equally sudden drop
in the concentration of THC represents the drug being 'dumped' from the
bloodstream into fatty tissues. This redistribution phase 'flattens' out
as the 'dumped' THC re-enters the blood and is then metabolised in the
liver-the
elimination phase. It is important to note that the sudden decline in the
concentration of THC (the psychologically active cannabinoid) in the blood
does not represent drug metabolism but rather the rapid re-distribution of
the drug from the blood into other tissues. The metabolism of the
cannabinoids takes place when these 'dumped' cannabinoids are released
back into the bloodstream whence they pass through the liver and are very
rapidly metabolised and subsequently excreted.
Figure 1.
The blood
concentration of THC (squares) and its inactive metabolite, carboxy THC
(THC Acid; diamonds) after the smoking of a marijuana cigarette. Each
point is the mean of results from six volunteers, all of whom were free
from cannabinoids before smoking the drug. [The 925±7mg refers to
the average weight of the cigarettes and the 1.32% refers to the dry
weight concentration of THC]
Figure 1 also shows
the blood picture of the inactive metabolite, carboxy THC (or THC acid).
It is important to note several points about the pharmacokinetics of this
substance. First, in the study indicated here (Fig 1) all of the
volunteers had no cannabinoids in their blood before they began smoking.
Second, the THC acid is formed in the liver from the metabolism of THC,
therefore its appearance in blood follows that of the parent, THC. Third,
the THC acid concentration then increases and surpasses that of the parent
molecule in the blood. At a time when the parent THC is in the blood at
only a very low concentration, that of the metabolite is higher and exists
in the blood for a longer time. Therefore, should the smoker smoke again
before the parent molecule and its metabolite have been eliminated, the
ratio of the concentrations of THC and of the THC acid will be different
from that shown in Figure 1. This is because there will exist a higher
concentration of the metabolite than of the THC in blood at the time when
the next dose of cannabis is smoked.
For this reason,
analytical data that provides a value only for the metabolite can
only be validly interpreted as indicating recent consumption of cannabis;
however the time of this consumption could be a matter of hours or days.
For this reason the quantitative determination of only the metabolite is
of no value to determine possible impairment.
To assess possible
impairment the analyst must provide data for the active molecule, THC. And
when this occurs, the only interpretation possible on present knowledge is
to infer the recent consumption of the drug by smoking. To date no
meaningful correlation between blood concentration of THC and impairment
in laboratory tasks has been established. This point will be clarified
when the results of the recent epidemiological studies are discussed
below.
Yet another problem
arises in the interpretation of blood concentrations of cannabinoids. The
pharmacokinetics of the cannabinoids are quite different when the drug is
taken by mouth. Space in this discussion precludes further discussion of
the pharmacokinetics after oral administration, but suffice to say the
absorption of cannabinoids taken orally is slow and erratic. The absorbed
THC passes through the liver and is rapidly metabolised. This results in a
different proportion of THC to the metabolite, THC acid than encountered
after smoking. There is a greater amount of entero-hepatic 'recycling' as
some of the cannabinoids are stored in the bile in the gall bladder. These
cannabinoids can later be 'recycled' and reabsorbed into the bloodstream
when the gall bladder empties. In this country, most who use cannabis,
smoke it.
It is also important
to note that the detection of cannabinoids in a urine sample provide
evidence only that the donor of that urine has been exposed to cannabis at
some time in the past. It gives no indication at all of impairment or of
intoxication. A frequent, heavy cannabis user may be excreting
cannabinoids in urine for some weeks or in some cases, for more than a
month. Those who take the drug by mouth also will be excreting the drug
for a longer period.
4. A COMPARISON OF THE EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL AND
CANNABIS ON SKILLS PERFORMANCE AND DRIVING SKILLS
4.1 Laboratory
tests
Laboratory tests
isolate specific psychological functions and determine the skill of the
test subject on that function. Most studies test each volunteer on each
test before and after taking the drug. For testing alcohol and cannabis,
the choice of these tests rests upon an assessment of their relationship
to the task of driving a motor vehicle. However, the fact is that no
battery of separate tests comprehensively defines the actual task of
driving. In fact, Joscelyn and others (Joscelyn et al., 1980)
examined the plethora of methods employed in these studies and commented:
... many tests routinely employed have limited validity or no demonstrable
relation to real-world driving. Measuring the 'same' behaviors often
differ, raising questions about the comparability of experimental
findings.
Laboratory tests,
nevertheless do provide a 'screening' of the potential for drugs to impair
specific behaviours. However, results from such laboratory testing should
not form the sole basis for any judgement of the potential of a drug to
impair actual driving skills or to increase the probability of an
accident. For this reason, evidence for the traffic hazard associated with
any drug should be confirmed by studies of actual driving (either using
driving simulators or a real car) and by studies using epidemiological
methods.
The data from
laboratory testing of alcohol has been reviewed by Moskowitz and Austin
and of the effects of cannabis by Klonoff, Moskowitz, and by Chesher. It
is clear that both alcohol and cannabis cause dose-dependent deficits in
the performance of specific laboratory tasks.
It is to be noted that
the doses of cannabinoids in these tests are lower than those in use by
many smokers of cannabis today. However, they may have been appropriate to
the cannabis experience of the volunteers when these studies were
conducted. In many of these studies, the volunteers were asked to rate the
effect of the dose given with that of their general experience with the
drug. In many (but not all) cases the doses given produced subjective
effects which were as great as those generally experienced by the
volunteers in their social use of the drug.
Looking at the
Australian studies across time, from the 1970s to the 1990s these
observations are in accord with the results expressed in a recent
publication concerning the patterns of cannabis use in Australia. The
earlier studies produced deficits in testing which were greater than those
in the later studies. The data presented by Donnelly and Hall (1994)
indicate that:
The prevalence of cannabis use seems to have been very low by contemporary
standards in the early 1970s. It increased substantially throughout the
1970s and 1980s, levelled off in the late 1980s, and has probably shown a
small increase in the early 1990s.
The phenomenon of
tolerance to cannabis is well established and this in turn is a serious
confounding variable in the studies with this drug. Tolerance develops
with the regular and frequent use. This in turn depends upon the pattern
of use of those in the study sample. The correlation of performance : dose
: and tolerance requires further study. There is very little information
available as to the change in doses used across the years since the 1970s
as most data refer only to frequency of use. Studies involving high doses
of cannabis should be undertaken, but with due consideration given to the
degree of tolerance of the volunteers to be studied.
The Australian data
presented by Donnelly and Hall indicate that:
Most cannabis use is infrequent and intermittent, with about
three-quarters of adult women and two-thirds of adult men having
discontinued their use, or continued to use less often than weekly. The
proportion of users who are weekly users is highest in the younger age
groups. Rates of weekly and lifetime use are highest among those aged 20
to 24 years, and decline markedly with increasing age.
4.2 Duration of
cannabis-induced impairment in laboratory tests.
Most studies have
reported a duration of cannabis-induced impairment of the order of 4
hours. On the other hand there have been three studies which have reported
a longer duration of cannabis effects of between 10 to 24 hours. However,
these reports have been questioned for methodological or reasons of
interpretation. That of Yesavage et al. did not include a control
group. Subsequently the study was repeated by Leirer et al. in an
attempt to replicate this effect using a control group but was only able
to show an effect up to four hours after smoking (ie. that described in
the many other studies of this effect). A third study, also with a control
group, did demonstrate an effect at 24 hours after smoking. The
statistical significance of the effect required a statistical procedure
(one tail 't' test) which is of questionable validity when there was no
previous statistical proof that the effect was expected. This means that
the effect was at best, only marginally significant. The study by
Moskowitz et al, as described in Moskowitz's 1985 review (Moskowitz,
1985) was of a:
.... compensatory tracking task performed while simultaneously executing a
visual search task as well as a critical tracking task. Performance was
significantly impaired on the compensatory tracking task for more than 2
hours and upon the critical tracking task for up to 10 hours, albeit, intermittently during the period from 4 hours on.
[emphasis added]
At present I think it
is fair to conclude that the evidence for the long duration of cannabis
induced impairment requires more study to confirm its validity.
Furthermore, both tasks in which it was described are very difficult
tasks. It has been argued that the use of cannabis by pilots in the 24
hours preceding flying may be more an indicator of poor judgement rather
than a cause for concern about the residual psychomotor effects of
cannabis.
4.3 The effect on
laboratory tasks of alcohol and cannabis in combination
The effect of this
drug combination has been reviewed and only an outline will be given here.
There is very clear
evidence from numerous studies of the effect of alcohol and of cannabis on
the performance of specific tasks in the laboratory. Both drugs produce a
dose related impairment on these tasks and the effect of the drugs when
given in combination is essentially additive. Although of more academic
than practical interest is the evidence as to the nature of this
additivity. Several studies have observed a trend that the effect of
cannabis plus alcohol is less than additive, meaning that 1 + 1 is less
than 2. In the most recent study, Dauncey et al. reported this
effect, found to be statistically significant, and termed it to be a
'de-intensification'. In the light of the present knowledge of the quite
different mode of action of cannabis and alcohol such an interaction is
not necessarily surprising.
What is quite
surprising and important however, is the result of a study by Perez-Reyes.
For pharmacological reasons the researchers studying the alcohol-cannabis
interaction administered the drugs such that the peak of blood
concentration of both drugs occurred as near as possible at the same time.
Such is the thinking of the pharmacologist! Indeed Perez-Reyes and his
colleagues had reported such a study showing an additive decremental
effect of the drug combination. Interestingly, in their later study they
had the volunteers smoke marijuana (placebo; 1.7% and 3.58% THC) before
they commenced drinking alcohol (0.85g/kg) over a period of 30 mins. This
would have produced a BAC of the order of 0.1g%. Their results showed a
dose-dependent effect for cannabis and the characteristic effects expected
for the one dose of alcohol. However, no significant interaction between
the two drugs was recorded. The authors concluded:
The lack of interactive effects, particularly on psychomotor performance,
highlights the influence that the order of administration of the companion
drug has on its interaction with the reference drug.
4.4 Driving
simulators
A driving simulator is
also a laboratory based apparatus. It is important to realise that it is
only a simulation of real life driving and driving simulators vary greatly
in the degree to which they can simulate the real event. It is fair to say
that all but the most sophisticated and extremely expensive simulators are
to the test subject, still a laboratory piece of equipment. They lack
realism both in the dynamics of car driving and in the visual presentation
of the road and other traffic. Nevertheless they are able to present
simulated dangerous presentations to which the driver must respond. The
effects of cannabis on performance in a driving simulator have been
reviewed and a summary only is given here.
The early driving
simulator studies, for the driver, were not interactive with the 'driving
scenery' which was generally a film of the road to be covered and the
driver had little or no control over the presented imagery.ÊÊ These
studies showed no significant effects of marijuana on car control. However
marijuana did produce the following effects, namely:
(a) An increase in
decision latency before starting, stopping or overtaking;
(b) Impaired
monitoring of a speedometer; and
(c) Reduced
risk-taking behaviour in tasks requiring a decision to overtake a vehicle
in the presence of an oncoming car.
Later simulator
studies with apparatus with a more realistic driving dynamics and an
interaction between 'scenery' and the driving manoeuvres did show
marijuana effects on car control. The study by Smiley et al. found
that cannabis increased lateral position variability, headway variability,
and caused the 'driver' to miss more signs that indicated the need to
follow another route. On the other hand, cannabis caused the subjects to
drive in a more conservative manner inasmuch as they maintained a longer
headway when car following, refused more opportunities to overtake a
vehicle in front and when they accepted this opportunity, they began to do
so at a greater distance from the approaching vehicle. The effects of
alcohol (at about 0.08g% BAC) in this study were surprisingly small.
Another and very
similar study by Stein et al. showed alcohol effects were as one
would expect and significantly affected practically every performance
parameter. Alcohol (at about 0.1g% BAC) was associated with significantly
increased 'accidents' (hitting obstacles or exceeding road edges by a full
car width) and 'traffic tickets' (exceeding speed limit by 32 'radar
checks'). Alcohol was also associated with increased lane deviations,
speed variability, response times to signs, and errors in sign
recognition. In contrast, cannabis was associated with few changes. The
mean speed travelled was lower and two measures of steering control
changed significantly. Alcohol and cannabis in combination were associated
with more adverse reactions than alcohol alone. Alcohol was consumed first
and the performance testing was begun 15 minutes after the end of cannabis
smoking.
4.5 On-road driving
Driving studies with a
real car, conducted in an open field, of course present a more realistic
experience of a motor vehicle than do simulators. However they usually
require the driver to undertake manoeuvres that are not necessarily part
of normal driving - such as
weaving between cones. Those studies undertaken in on-road traffic
naturally require great care on the part of the experimenter to avoid
dangerous driving. Therefore these studies are restricted in the measures
that can be realistically taken. They are somewhat akin, for both the
experimenter and the test driver, to a driver undertaking a test for a
driving licence. Indeed, experimental studies of the effects of drugs
using in-car performance have been described by Smiley as being really a
simulation of real driving.
On-road driving
studies vary considerably in their experimental design and in the tests of
driving employed. In this paper, only the broadest outline of the results
is given in the interests of brevity. Reviews of these studies have been
presented and published. The reader is referred to the original studies or
to the cited reviews for more information.
There have been to
date, seven on-road studies to examine the effects of cannabis on driving
performance. Each of these is outlined below:
1. Klonoff studied
volunteers in a closed course as well as in-traffic on a city road. The
closed course study comprised eight tests and the response scores rested
essentially on the number of cones struck. Testing was conducted in 4
blocks, each of 5 trials. The first three were taken as practice and the
fourth, after drug treatment, were the test trials. The anticipated scores
in the fourth block were determined by regression analysis on the
assumption that the rate of learning or performance would continue at the
same rate. Using this technique the author concluded that there was an
impairment under cannabis. While the mean of the impairment was not large,
the trend was clear.
The city traffic
study was conducted rather in the manner of a driving test by a driving
examiner. The subjects drove for about 45 minutes on a course of 16.8
miles after being given their dose of cannabis. A strong trend towards
impaired performance was indicated by the lower scores given by the
examiner on judgement and concentration after the higher dose of cannabis.
2. Hansteen et al.
conducted a closed course study in which subjects were required to
drive six times around a 1.1 mile course set out on an airfield. The
course was set out with cones and poles and the number of these hit were
counted. The course involved curves and straight sections and drivers were
required to undertake various manoeuvres. The mean number of struck
objects per lap increased from a mean of 13.2 in the placebo condition,
13.4 in the low cannabis dose, 16.8 for the high cannabis and 17.4 for the
alcohol dose (BAC 0.07g%). The effects for the high cannabis dose and the
alcohol dose achieved significance.
3. Casswell conducted
a closed course study in which the behaviours sampled were more typical of
those for real driving, than for the studies outlined above. Driving
behaviours recorded included overtaking, responding to road signs, making
a hairpin turn and driving through a narrow gap. A subsidiary reaction
time task was also included to monitor attention. Driving behaviour under
cannabis, alcohol and the combination was tested. After alcohol, and
alcohol plus cannabis, the subjects showed poorer tracking performance and
drove at increased speed over various segments of the course, including
the hairpin bend, and the straight section. Under alcohol alone, the speed
through the narrow gap was also increased.
On the other hand,
marijuana alone was not accompanied by steering or tracking errors. The
mean speed dropped significantly after cannabis, both on the hairpin bend
and on the straight section of the course.
Casswell suggested
that drivers under the influence of cannabis appeared to compensate for
what they perceived as being an adverse effect on driving. Compensation
was exhibited by driving more slowly. This contrasted with the effects of
alcohol. The increased reaction times to the subsidiary task under
cannabis suggests an effect on attention. The extent of this effect was of
the same order as that measured by the author in another study after 8
hours of continuous driving.
4. Attwood conducted a
study on a closed course constructed on an airfield and, like Casswell,
used measures appropriate to real driving including acceleration,
following a lead car which varied its speed and responding to 'traffic
signals'. The drug effects (alcohol, and two doses of cannabis alone and
together with alcohol) recorded were not particularly robust, even with a
complicated multivariate analysis which did distinguish the treatment
conditions from each other.
5. The study by Peck
and colleagues (Peck et al., 1986) from the California Department
of Motor Vehicles, is best summarised by the authors' own summary.
Approximately 80 volunteer male marijuana and alcohol users received one
of four experimental treatments: (1) marijuana, (2) alcohol, (3) marijuana
and alcohol, or (4) double placebo.
After consumption, each subject drove a vehicle over a test course which
simulated a number of real-world driving conditions.
Four post-drug runs were involved, separated by one hour intervals. The
subject's performance was rated by an in-car examiner, outside observers,
and computerised vehicle measurements.
Blood and urine specimens were extracted after each run to establish
levels of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), serum carboxy, and alcohol. A
variety of multivariate statistical techniques were applied in evaluating
treatment effects.
Both marijuana and alcohol had significant effects on driving performance,
and the effects were particularly detrimental under the both-drugs
treatment. The effects of marijuana were more rapid than those of alcohol
and somewhat less severe for most tasks.
In this study
cannabis was smoked after the consumption of the alcohol dose. In
discussing their results and comparing them with other studies, they had
this to say:
There is a vast amount of empirical evidence documenting the effects of
marijuana on a wide array of human performance measures-cognitive,
psychomotor and affective. Although the literature has clearly established
that marijuana affects all three domains and results in detriments in the
ability to perform many psychomotor and cognitive tasks, the evidence is
somewhat more equivocal on the question of actual driving skill and even
more equivocal on the question of those aspects of driving skill that are
related to safety and accident avoidance.
[Emphasis that of Peck et al.]
6. Smiley et al.
tested the effects of cannabis (placebo and two doses) and alcohol
(placebo and BAC of 0.05 g%) in combination and the effect of alcohol
alone (BAC 0.08g%) on driving in a closed course study using an
instrumented car.
The high dose of
cannabis significantly increased headway and headway variability (ie
distance from a car in front). Alcohol alone at the BAC 0.05g% produced an
increase in speed, both in the straight sections of the road and in
curves. In her review of her own study, and those of others, Smiley
(Smiley, 1986) concluded:
In
conclusion, marijuana does appear to impair driving behaviour. However,
this impairment is mediated in that subjects under marijuana treatment
appear to perceive that they are indeed impaired. When they can
compensate, they do, for example, by not overtaking, by slowing down and
by focussing their attention when they know a response will be required.
Unfortunately, such compensation is not possible where events are
unexpected or where continuous attention is required. Effects on driving
behaviour are present shortly after smoking but do not continue for extended periods.
[emphasis added]
7. The most recent and
most comprehensive study of the effect of cannabis on driving on city
roads and a public highway is that conducted in The Netherlands and was
sponsored by the U.S. National Highway Safety Traffic Administration. An
intelligent departure in methodology in this study from the others
reviewed here is that the dose of cannabis used was determined in a pilot
study using the volunteers who were to take part in the main study. The
aim was to estimate the dose these volunteers generally use on a social
occasion. Accordingly socially appropriate doses (for these subjects) were
chosen for the driving study. Three driving studies were then performed.
The first was conducted on a closed section of a public highway with no
traffic; the second on a highway with traffic and the third in city
traffic. The measure they have found to be of significance is the standard
deviation of lateral position on the roadway (SDLP). It is a measure of
the 'automatic' function of information processing in the driving task.
Cannabis, in all tests produced a dose-related increase in the SDLP. Mean
speed was somewhat reduced under cannabis as was the headway distance from
the lead vehicle in the test in highway traffic.
The test under city
driving conditions was conducted under one dose of cannabis and as a
comparison, subjects were also tested under alcohol at a BAC of 0.04g%.
Results in this test showed that this modest dose of alcohol, but not
cannabis, produced a significant impairment of driving performance
relative to placebo. Alcohol impaired driving performance but subjects did
not perceive it. Cannabis did not impair driving performance yet the
subjects thought it had. After alcohol, there was a tendency towards
faster driving and after cannabis, slower.
This research group
has conducted many studies with the same methodology and has accumulated
much data on the effects of other drugs. They therefore were able to
indicate the extent of the impairment on the measure of SDLP. The greatest
effects of cannabis in this study were 3.7 and 2.9cm. In other studies
drugs, for example diazepam (Valium), or lorazepam (Ativan), produced
increases of 7 and 10cm respectively. The authors commented:
In
so far as its effects on SDLP are concerned THC was just another
moderately impairing drug.
The authors go on to
say that the effects of cannabis differ qualitatively from those of other
depressant drugs, especially alcohol:
Very importantly our city driving study showed that drivers who drank
alcohol overestimated their performance quality whereas those who smoked
marijuana underestimated it. Perhaps as a consequence, the former invested
no special effort for accomplishing the task whereas the latter did, and
successfully. This evidence strongly suggests that alcohol encourages
risky driving whereas THC encourages greater caution, at least in
experiments.
Finally, Robbe
contrasted the effects of cannabis when measured with laboratory based,
individual tests in the laboratory, with those conducted in an on-road
vehicle:
The results of these studies corroborate those of previous driving
simulator and closed-course tests by indicating that THC in single inhaled
doses up to 300 µg/kg has significant, yet not dramatic, dose-related
impairing effects on driving performance. They contrast with results from
many laboratory tests, reviewed by Moskowitz (1985), which show that even
low doses of THC impair skills deemed to be important for driving, such as
perception, coordination, tracking and vigilance. The present studies also
demonstrated that marijuana can have greater effects in laboratory than
driving tests. The last study, for example showed a highly significant
effect of THC on hand unsteadiness but not on driving in urban traffic.
5. EPIDEMIOLOGY
The studies outlined
above indicate that cannabis does cause dose-dependent effects on
laboratory based tests of human skills. Furthermore, studies utilising
driving simulators and on-road driving also indicate a degree of cannabis
induced impairment of driving skills. However in these cases the extent of
the impairment indicated from laboratory studies is not replicated in the
simulator or in-car studies.
The effects of alcohol
on the other hand can be demonstrated both in laboratory studies and in
simulated or on-road driving at very much the same dose levels.
Explanations for these differences between alcohol and cannabis have been
suggested and rest essentially upon the difference in the awareness by the
drug taker of the presence of drug impairment. This in turn may be
explained by the present understanding of the quite different ways alcohol
and cannabis are known to act on the brain.
Also mentioned above
and in other publications our present laws on alcohol and driving have
been based upon the scientific principles outlined here and in particular
on the results of epidemiological studies. It is pertinent therefore to
discuss briefly the nature of the epidemiological studies undertaken to
date with cannabis and road crashes.
Epidemiological
studies with alcohol are greatly facilitated by the pharmacokinetics of
that drug. Alcohol is excreted in the breath and the ratio of the
concentration on the breath and in the blood is relatively constant.
Therefore the determination of the concentration of alcohol in the breath
(by a 'breathalyser') provides a reasonably and acceptably accurate
indication of the blood concentration. It is unfortunate therefore that
cannabinoids are not excreted on the breath and the concentration of
cannabinoids that can be detected on breath represent only that contained
in the 'dead-space air' in the upper respiratory tract. The cannabinoids
so detected do not correlate in any way with the blood concentration. In
addition to this the blood concentration of cannabinoids do not show any
useful relationship to the degree of impairment or the degree of
subjective effects of the drug. The blood concentration of alcohol on the
other hand does exhibit a reasonable correlation with the degree of
impairment.
These properties of
cannabis mean that the determination of the role of cannabis in road
crashes by the same techniques of the case-control study as used for
alcohol, is not an easy task. The pharmacokinetics of cannabis make this
an exceedingly difficult task. The difficulty is not only related to the
poor correlation between blood concentration and impairment, but also
because it requires the collection of a blood sample-from both the crash
case and the controls. The collection of the latter sample is likely to
involve a high refusal rate, and this alone would almost certainly
invalidate the study. One does not know the reason for the refusal!
The studies that have
been undertaken to date can be described within three groups and these
are:
(i) Questionnaire
based surveys;
(ii) Incidence of drug
detection in accident involved drivers; and
(iii) Attempts to
assess whether or not the driver who has detectable drug in bloodstream
was culpable in the accident.
Studies along the
lines outlined above have been reviewed by Simpson.
5.1 Questionnaire
based surveys
Questionnaire based
surveys by definition depend upon self report data and their reliability
is questionable. Furthermore, the incidence of cannabis use and the
likelihood of a driver admitting to such use is likely to change across
time.
5.2 Incidence of
drug detection in crash involved drivers
This technique
involves the analysis of blood or urine samples taken from crash involved
drivers. The detection of cannabinoids in urine provides information only
that the drug has been consumed within the last day or even month. It
provides no indication at all of impairment. Therefore only the analysis
of a blood sample is likely to be helpful. However, the detection of
cannabis in a blood sample does not itself prove impairment or crash
culpability. This fact has been well expressed by Compton as follows:
Knowing only the frequency with which crash-involved drivers use drugs
does not allow one to know the danger posed by the drugs. It may simply
reflect the general drug usage pattern in the driving public at large. For
example, finding that 30% of crash-involved drivers have nicotine in their
blood does not imply that nicotine was involved in the occurrence of their
crashes. It may be that 30% of the general driving population smokes
cigarettes and the smoking of cigarettes is unrelated to crash occurrence.
Finding that a drug was overrepresented in crash-involved drivers (as
compared to non-crash involved drivers) would strongly suggest it played a
role in increasing crash risk. However, this approach requires knowing the
drug usage rate of the general driving public, something we do not know
and can not easily determine.
Furthermore, any
comparisons of the incidence of cannabis detections in crash-involved
drivers with those of non-crash involved drivers should be collected from
a comparable population and at the same time. The patterns of cannabis use
vary not only across time but also across populations.
Therefore studies
reporting the incidence of drugs in the blood of crash-involved drivers is
essentially meaningless without some control of the incidence of drug use
in non-crash involved drivers. Nevertheless, such studies have been
reported and are reviewed by Simpson who summarised that:
-
Marijuana users are
certainly among drivers who are injured in road crashes (suggested by
the presence of cannabinoids in urine);
-
More importantly,
recent use, as indexed by the presence of THC in blood, is evident in
perhaps less than 10% of injured drivers; and
-
When cannabis is
detected, there is an 80% chance that alcohol will also be found.
5.3 Attempts to
assess whether or not the driver who has detectable drugs in the
bloodstream was culpable in the accident
Of the first attempts
to assess culpability has been an ongoing series of data collected by
McBay of fatal, single vehicle crashes. Culpability in single vehicle
crashes is assumed to be that of the driver (assuming no mechanical fault
can be found) and the choice of fatal crashes assumes that death occurred
shortly after the accident; meaning that drug metabolism ceased at death
and therefore the blood sample from the dead body will represent the blood
picture at the time of the crash. Cannabis was detected in 7.8% of 600
such cases, but 88% of these also contained alcohol in concentrations
which of themselves could have accounted for the crash.
6. THE USE OF 'RESPONSIBILITY ANALYSIS' OR ESTIMATION OF 'CULPABILITY' TO
DETERMINE THE ROLE OF DRUGS IN) CRASHES
In the absence of a
separate control group (as used in the assessment of crash probability
with alcohol as described above) an alternative of a 'culpability index'
is currently being employed in drug studies. The basic construct is first
to formulate a means of determining the responsibility or culpability of a
driver involved in a crash. There have been several means of constructing
this 'culpability index' and this must be done with each of the accident
cases by observers who have no information as to the drug status of each
driver. The responsibility (or culpability) ratio is then determined as
the proportion of drug-bearing drivers who were determined to be culpable,
to the non-drug bearing drivers who were deemed to be culpable. The null
hypothesis predicts a culpability ratio of 1.00 (ie, the drug has had no
causal relationship with crashes).
To date there have
been six studies employing this technique (two of which have involved the
re-analysis of earlier generated data). These are briefly outlined below:
1. Warren and others
re-analysed the data of Cimbura and found a culpability index for cannabis
of 1.7, the same as that found for alcohol. However, the original data
comprised a total of 484 drivers and pedestrians, 3.7% of whom were
positive for cannabis. However, 88% of these people were also positive for
alcohol. This left a very small number from which to assess a culpability
ratio for cannabis alone.
2. Terhune also has
previously collected data independently re-analysed to estimate a
culpability ratio. All BACs over 0.10% were judged significantly more
culpable than the drug-free group. The cannabis group also had a higher
culpability ratio than the drug-free group, but this was only marginally
significant (58.8% vs 34.4%). This estimation was also compromised by the
small sample size for cannabis only (n=17). The cannabis plus alcohol
group was analysed separately.
3. Donelson began a
very ambitious project but was unfortunately thwarted by funding problems
which precluded the complete analysis of the collected data. However, a
random sample of 415 cases was analysed. The results cautiously suggested
a finding consistent with those of Warren et al. and Terhune above.
4. Williams et al.
in a study involving 440 cases, demonstrated as in the above studies that
alcohol had a higher culpability ratio compared with culpable drug-free
drivers (92% vs 71%). However, those drivers in whom only cannabis was
detected were less likely to be responsible for the crashes (53% vs 71%).
5. Terhune et al.
reported a very comprehensive study involving 1 882 cases. They found that
alcohol was the dominant drug in fatal crashes, although the basic focus
of their research was to describe the effect of drugs other than alcohol.
They reported that fully 40% of the drivers had only alcohol in their
systems and another 11% had alcohol combined with drugs. Among the drivers
with BACs at or above 0.10% (n=625) their responsibility rate:
... was an extraordinary 94%, well above that found for any other single
substance.
Of cannabis, the
authors stated that while cannabinoids were detected in 7% of the drivers,
the psychoactive agent THC was found in only 4%. Of the drivers with only
one substance in their system, only 1.1% had cannabis alone, either as the
THC the psychoactive compound or had the inactive metabolite carboxy THC.
The presence of the inactive metabolite and the absence of detectable THC
infers less recent ingestion of cannabisÑassuming an efficient analysis.
The THC only drivers
had a responsibility rate below that of the drug-free driversÑie. as with
the study by Williams et al. (1985) they were considered to be less
likely to have been a cause of the crash than the drug-free drivers.
The report also
indicated the range of THC concentrations found in the blood. There were
109 cases of THC alone; of these, 22.9% contained what the authors called
a 'trace' ie. 1 to 2 nanograms THC per millilitre of blood (ng/ml); 69.7%
contained 'low' concentrations between 3 to 19 ng/ml; and 7.3% contained a
'high' concentration of equal to or greater than 20 ng/ml.
6. Drummer reported a
study of 1 045 fatalities in New South Wales, Victoria and Western
Australia and used the technique of responsibility analysis (culpability
index).
As with other
studies, the dominant drug was alcohol, being found overall in 36% of all
driver fatalities, 33% of which were over the legal limit of 0.05g%.
Cannabis was found in 11% of cases of which 56% (n= 63) also contained
alcohol (mean BAC 0.16 g% ± 0.08g%). There was no significant difference
in the BAC of the alcohol only drivers and those with alcohol plus
cannabis.
Assessment of the
culpability ratio by Drummer provided the same result as those of Williams
et al. and Terhune et al; there was a trend to a decrease in
relative risk when either THC or the metabolite carboxy THC was measured
in blood or urine. The relative risk was 0.6 relative to drug-free
drivers, although this was not significant statistically.
7. ALCOHOL AND CANNABIS IN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES
The relative risk for
drivers with alcohol plus cannabis was also greater than that for the
control group, but this culpability ratio was no different from the
alcohol only group. Also in this study (as indicated above), there was no
significant difference in the BAC of the alcohol-only drivers and those
with alcohol plus cannabis.
The same finding was
reported by Terhune who also suggested that the high levels of alcohol are
primarily responsible for the increased crash risk.
Therefore the effects
of alcohol in road crashes are really profound. The studies reviewed here
using the method of 'responsibility analysis' have confirmed the
information already established by the case-control methods-that alcohol
is the dominant drug associated with risky and dangerous driving and road
crashes.
There have been
suggestions throughout the studies reviewed here that the crash
responsibility rates associated with the low BAC plus other drug, might be
higher than in the low alcohol-only groups. The interaction of other drugs
and alcohol (including cannabis) require further study using
epidemiological techniques. One must remember the description by
Perez-Reyes of the effect of the order of administration of alcohol and
cannabis in these interaction studies.
8. SUMMARY (OF THE EVIDENCE PRESENTED ABOVE)
The most recent of the
reports of studies of the effects of cannabis on actual driving
performance included a summary of the published literature on marijuana
and driving. They concluded this review with the following paragraph:
The foremost impression one gains from reviewing the literature is that no
clear relationship has ever been demonstrated between marijuana smoking
and either seriously impaired driving performance or the risk of accident
involvement. The epidemiological evidence, as limited as it is, shows that
the combination of THC and alcohol is over-represented in injured and dead
drivers and more so in those who actually caused the accidents to occur.
Yet there is little if any evidence to indicate that drivers who have used
marijuana alone are any more likely to cause serious accidents than drug
free drivers. To a large extent, the results from driving simulator and
closed-course tests corroborate the epidemiological findings by indicating
that THC in single inhaled doses up to 250 µg/kg has relatively minor
effects on driving performance, certainly less than BACs in the range of
0.08E-E0.10g%.
Apart from the above,
a very important finding in the reviewed studies is the difference in the
drug users' awareness of the effect of the drugs alcohol and cannabis.
Alcohol use is accompanied by increased confidence, an impairment of
judgement to the extent that driving behaviour becomes more risky, with
faster speeds and a greater willingness to take risks. Cannabis use on the
other hand, is accompanied by compensatory driving behaviour, including a
reduced willingness to take risks and slower driving speeds. Indeed the
compensation was described by Robbe and O'Hanlon in the following manner:
Very importantly our city driving study showed that drivers who drank
alcohol overestimated their performance quality whereas those who smoked
marijuana underestimated it. Perhaps as a consequence, the former invested
no special effort for accomplishing the task whereas the latter did, and
successfully. This evidence strongly suggests that alcohol encourages
risky driving whereas THC encourages greater caution, at least in
experiments.
The task of driving
has been described as a 'self-paced' task. That is, drivers choose their
own levels of task difficulty. There is a difference therefore between a
driver's skills performance, as measured in individual laboratory
tasks and driver behaviour. Driver performance, or skills
performance is what a driver can do. Driver behaviour
is what a driver actually does. Driving skills (or driver
skills performance) differ very widely within a community. Some of us may
be extremely cautious and others much less so. The correlation between
driver skills and crash probability is not as great as many may imagine.
For example, it is held by many that superior driver skills lead to
reduced crashes and this led to the concept of 'advanced driver training'.
Indeed, an editor of a road magazine claimed: 'I have for many years
claimed that the licensed racer is far safer than ordinary chaps, on the
grounds of practised skills, mental ability, cognisance of hazards in
driving, keen interest in driving as well, and so on.'
In order to examine
the possibility that unusually skilled drivers really did have different
on-the-road driving records from the average driver, a comparison was made
of the on-the-road driving records of a group of licensed racing drivers
with those of other drivers matched for such characteristics as sex and
age, etc. What they found was that in all measures of traffic violations
including crashes, speeding violations, other moving violations as well as
non-moving violations, the rates for the racing drivers exceed those of
the comparison drivers, in most cases by a considerable margin.
In the light of the
above, Terhune et al. asked the following questions:
A
nagging question which qualifies conclusions from epidemiological studies
of drugs in crashes is: If certain drugs are linked to elevated crash
risks, how much of the elevation is due to characteristics of the people
who use these drugs?
For example, Terhune
in a literature review remarked that research revealed a striking
similarity between the personal correlates of marijuana use and the
correlates of crash involvement. Rebellious, deviant, youthful males were
prominent among marijuana users and among those in crashes. Jessor et
al. also addresses these issues.
A general conclusion
made by Robbe and O'Hanlon when discussing the results of their study and
of their review of the literature is worth citing here as a general
conclusion to this review:
In
summary, this program of research has shown that marijuana, when taken
alone, produces a moderate degree of driving impairment which is related
to the consumed THC dose.
The impairment manifests itself mainly in the ability to maintain a steady
lateral position on the road, but its magnitude is not exceptional in
comparison with changes produced by many medicinal drugs and alcohol.
Drivers under the influence of marijuana retain insight in their
performance and will compensate where they can, for example, by slowing
down or increasing effort. As a consequence THC's adverse effects on
driving performance appear relatively small. Still we can easily imagine
situations where the influence of marijuana smoking might have an
exceedingly dangerous effect ie, emergency situations which put high
demands on the driver's information processing capacity, prolonged
monotonous driving, and after THC has been taken with other drugs
especially alcohol.
We
therefore agree with Moskowitz's conclusion that 'any situation in which
safety both for self and others depends on alertness and capability of
control of man-machine interaction precludes the use of marijuana'.
However, the magnitude of marijuana's relative to many other drugs'
effects also justify Geringer's (1988) conclusion that 'marijuana
impairment presents a real, but secondary, safety risk; and that alcohol
is the leading drug-related risk factor'. Of the many psychotropic drugs,
licit and illicit, that are available and used by people who subsequently
drive, marijuana may well be among the least harmful.
Campaigns to discourage the use of marijuana by drivers are certainly
warranted. But concentrating a campaign on marijuana alone may not be in
proportion to the safety problem it caused. |