0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes) 41 views4 pagesMGH Claims Breakthrough in Detecting Marijuana Impairment
MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment
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1. MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment; Study also highlights
flaws of existing "drug recognition expert” system
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MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment; Study also highlights flaws of existing "drug
recognition expert” system
MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment; Study also
highlights flaws of existing “drug recognition expert" system
bostonglobe.com
February 4, 2022 Friday 08:55 PM EST
Copyright 2022 Globe Newspaper Company All Rights Reserved
‘Section: MARIJUANA,
Length: 1410 words
Byline: Dan Adams
Body
ABSTRACT
Convinced that existing tests are unfair, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital say they've found a better
way to detect marijuana impairment.
FULL TEXT
Link to Image
Boston researchers say they've developed a new, noninvasive technique for detecting marijuana highs that can
reliably tell the difference between people who are truly impaired by the drug and those who merely used it recently.
‘The claimed breakthrough by scientists at Massachusetts General Hospital comes amid intensified debate in the
state over how to police stoned driving in the wake of cannabis legalization, with Governor Chatlie Baker recently
calling for a crackdown even as critics question the extent of the problem and warn that existing impairment tests
are flawed,
‘The MGH researchers eschewed older methods that attempt to infer functional impairment from the amount of
marijuana compounds in someone's blood or saliva in favor of a more direct approach: Peering into the brain itself
with ight-based imaging
While further development and validation is needed, the team behind the work is hopeful it could lead to a roadside
device that would allow police to catch dangerously stoned drivers without sweeping up law-abiding cannabis
‘consumers and medical marijuana patients who have THC in their system but are not actively impaired.
“For so long, our model has been alcohol, so there's been a lot of focus on breath and blood levels,” Dr. Jodi
Gilman, who led the research, said. "Our thought was, ‘What about looking directly at the brain?! "
In their study, published in January in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology, the MGH researchers first measured
levels of oxygenated hemoglobin in the brains of 169 sober volunteers using functional near-infrared spectroscopy,
or fNIRS,Page 2 of 3
MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment; Study also highlights flaws of existing "drug
recognition expert” system
ink to Image
Unlike the massive, electricity-hungry MRI scanning machines employed by hospitals, {NIRS is relatively portable;
measures the photon reflections from low-power LED bulbs mounted on a skulleap and shined into the skull. Similar
technology is already widely used in smartwatches and other fitness gadgets to measure users’ heart rates and
blood oxygenation.
‘After giving some of their volunteers THC capsules and others a placebo, the MGH team classified each person as
impaired or not impaired based on self-reporting by the study subjects and the consensus of multiple clinicians who
were unaware of which subjects had eaten the "real" edible and had made thorough before-and-after observations
of their behavior (an impossibility on the roadside).
‘The researchers then conducted a second round of brain scans and found that the people classified as impaired
had significantly higher levels of oxygenated hemoglobin than subjects who ate the placebo or didn't get too high
from the THC-infused edible.
“Essentially, the [impaired] brain becomes more active but less efficient at processing, so the body gives it priority
and sends more oxygen," said Dr. A. Eden Evins, who directs the MGH Center for Addiction Medicine and helped
oversee the research.
Next, the scientists trained a computer algorithm to spot the differences in oxygenated hemoglobin between those
who were deemed high and those who were not. Later, analyzing only the "after" scans, the software yielded false
positives in just 10 percent of subjects and correctly guessed which were impaired about 76 percent of the time, 2
significant improvement over existing techniques and a figure the researchers believe they can boost substantially
with further refinements.
Crucially, the system rarely indicated impairment in test subjects who consumed the THC- infused edibles yet were
not deemed functionally impaired. That puts it far ahead of older methods that automatically designate anyone with
a high enough level of marijuana metabolites in their system as impaired, regardless of how well they're actually
functioning.
‘The scan results lend further credence to a wave of recent studies indicating (as marijuana consumers have long
insisted) that there is litle if any connection between a given dose of THC, the level of marijuana metabolites in
blood or saliva at a given time after use, and a particular level or even likelihood of impairment. Reactions to the
drug simply vary too drastically between individuals, as do methods of ingesting cannabis and the rates at which
people metabolize it, Meanwhile, heavy consumers appear to at least partially adapt, and some medical marijuana
patients even show cognitive improvements following use.
‘Taken together, those confounding factors mean traditional blood and saliva tests are barely more accurate than a
coin toss at detecting impairment, according to Dr. Thomas Arkell of the University of Sydney's Lambert Initiative
cannabis research center.
"People wanted an easy cutoff like the blood alcohol limit, but it turns out cannabis doesn't really work that way at
all” said Arkell, who conducted a simulated driving study last year in which common limits on THC concentrations
in blood failed to accurately sort out which test subjects were actually stoned. "There is a need for a new model.”
‘The MGH study also raises troubling questions about the validity of another existing technique for measuring pot
impairment: examinations by so-called drug recognition experts, police officers who are trained to detect impairment
through a series of observations and simple physical tests like those used to assess suspected drunk drivers,
‘The researchers had initially planned to compare their experimental results to verdicts rendered by DREs, which
proponents hail as the gold standard for assessing drug impairment. Officers across the country, including dozens
in Massachusetts, have been using the system for years to evaluate suspected drugged drivers and present
‘evidence against them in court.Page 3 of 3
MGH claims breakthrough in detecting marijuana impairment; Study also highlights flaws of existing "drug
recognition expert” system
But the MGH scientists quickly discarded the DRE protocol as a reference after their experiments showed it
produced false positives in a staggering 34 percent of the subjects who were not deemed impaired by the clinical
and self-assessments. The DRE-trained observers even incorrectly flagged 20 percent of the volunteers who had
eaten the placebo and were verifiably sober as stoned,
Baker last year proposed a bill that would significantly expand the deployment of DRE-trained officers in
Massachusetts and require courts to accept their testimony as experts. Critics have warned the proposed law,
under which drivers who refuse a biood test for cannabis metabolites would lose their licenses, is subjective, prone
to officer bias, and would result in the arrests of innocent marijuana consumers, Earlier this week, a key State
House committee sent the proposal to study, likely ending its hopes of passage during the current legislative
session
Evins and Gilman hope their novel, more objective approach will prove it can sidestep those limitations, though they
stressed it isn't ready to be deployed. One ertical next step will be testing the system on a larger group of
volunteers, in part to ensure that other drugs or health conditions don't produce scan results that mimic those of
stoned people. Researchers will also need to develop a slightly smaller and more rugged fNIRS device suitable for
roadside use, perhaps one that sends its readings over the cellphone data network to a remote computer for
analysis,
“Officers need a better tool," Evins sald. “A big part of what got us going was the potential for bias in the system
that exists now. There's a real urgency to develop a reliable and objective way to identify marijuana impairment and
make our roads safer, and we're delighted to contribute to that.”
Other researchers in the field praised MGH's innovation as intriguing and worthy of further study, but also pointed to
potential limitations.
"A lot of factors can potentially influence blood flow in that part of the brain,” Arkell said. "Without having an
individual baseline, I'm not sure how effective this would be as a roadside strategy.”
Dr. Timothy Naimi, a Boston Medical Center physician and public health researcher at the Boston University
‘Schools of Medicine and Public Health, said MGH's approach was promising but would need to be extensively
validated in future studies that included driving simulations instead of leaning on self-assessments of impairment.
“There could be a host of legal issues about using this in practice," he said, “The reliability would have to be really
{900d to use as the basis of a [court] proceeding.”
Graphic
Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, seen here in a 2019 file photo, say they have developed a novel
approach for detecting cannabis impairment.
Load-Date: February 9, 2022
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