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Marijuana Impairment clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05115513 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Marijuana Impairment

Standardized Field Test for Marijuana Impairment II

NHTSA-II
Start date: August 25, 2022
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This research responds to NHTSA's request with a proposal to increase our understanding of smoked cannabis' (CNB's) acute effects on driving-relevant cognition and simulated driving performance, the persistence of these deficits over the hours after use, and the influence of prior experience with CNB on these effects. This extension study will aim to further investigate marijuana impaired behavior, using a similar design to our previous NHTSA Examine the Feasibility of a Standardized Field Test for Marijuana Impairment and the prior NIDA Neuroscience of Marijuana-Impaired Driving award, that used similar techniques and measures to quantify marijuana impaired automobile driving. We will be utilizing tasks and assessments that were shown to be strong indicators for cognitive and driving impairment in our NHTSA study.

NCT ID: NCT04856566 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Marijuana Impairment

Examine the Feasibility of a Standardized Field Test for Marijuana and Alcohol Impairment: Laboratory Evaluations

Alc-NHTSA
Start date: July 28, 2021
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Alcohol and Cannabis (CNB) are two of the most widely used intoxicants. The effects of driving while intoxicated on alcohol are well documented, resulting in numerous drunken driving laws and regulations. As CNB begins to be decriminalized, medical CNB use allowed in multiple U.S. states, and perception of harmfulness falls, CNB use is predicted to rise and it will become increasingly common to publicly encounter persons who recently used the drug. An area of potentially high concern is if ever-greater numbers of CNB users and its legalization will increase the risk of driving while intoxicated from recent CNB use, thereby increasing the risks to public safety. This study aims to examine the combined effects of smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol on simulated driving.