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Journal Article

Citation

Spindle TR, Martin EL, Grabenauer M, Woodward T, Milburn MA, Vandrey R. J. Psychopharmacol. 2021; 35(7): 786-803.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/02698811211021583

PMID

34049452

PMCID

PMC9361180

Abstract

BACKGROUND:
Cannabis legalization is expanding, but there are no established methods for detecting cannabis impairment.

Aim:
Characterize the acute impairing effects of oral and vaporized cannabis using various performance tests.

Methods:
Participants (N = 20, 10 men/10 women) who were infrequent cannabis users ingested cannabis brownies (0, 10, and 25 mg Δ−9-tetrahydrocannabinol, THC) and inhaled vaporized cannabis (0, 5, and 20 mg THC) in six double-blind outpatient sessions. Cognitive/psychomotor impairment was assessed with a battery of computerized tasks sensitive to cannabis effects, a novel test (the DRiving Under the Influence of Drugs, DRUID®), and field sobriety tests. Blood THC concentrations and subjective drug effects were evaluated.

Results:
Low oral/vaporized doses did not impair cognitive/psychomotor performance relative to placebo but produced positive subjective effects. High oral/vaporized doses impaired cognitive/psychomotor performance and increased positive and negative subjective effects. The DRUID® was the most sensitive test to cannabis impairment, as it detected significant differences between placebo and active doses within both routes of administration. Women displayed more impairment on the DRUID® than men at the high vaporized dose only. Field sobriety tests showed little sensitivity to cannabis-induced impairment. Blood THC concentrations were far lower after cannabis ingestion versus inhalation. After inhalation, blood THC concentrations typically returned to baseline well before pharmacodynamic effects subsided.

Conclusions:
Standard approaches for identifying impairment due to cannabis exposure (i.e. blood THC and field sobriety tests) have severe limitations. There is a need to identify novel biomarkers of cannabis exposure and/or behavioral tests like the DRUID® that can reliably and accurately detect cannabis impairment at the roadside and in the workplace.

Keywords: Cannabis impaired driving


Language: en

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