| Literature DB >> 24188398 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A Drug Influence Evaluation (DIE) is a formal assessment of an impaired driving suspect, performed by a trained law enforcement officer who uses circumstantial facts, questioning, searching, and a physical exam to form an unstandardized opinion as to whether a suspect's driving was impaired by drugs. This paper first identifies the scientific studies commonly cited in American criminal trials as evidence of DIE accuracy, and second, uses the QUADAS tool to investigate whether the methodologies used by these studies allow them to correctly quantify the diagnostic accuracy of the DIEs currently administered by US law enforcement.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24188398 PMCID: PMC3828623 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5751-12-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Negat Results Biomed ISSN: 1477-5751
Figure 1US law enforcement Drug Influence Evaluation theory. 1 Driver fails a Standardized Field Sobriety Test (SFST). 2 A failed SFST always proves impairment. 3 Breath alcohol test finds a low alcohol level, ruling out alcohol as the cause of impairment proven by SFST. 4 Medical evaluation by the DRE officer rules out a medical cause of impairment proven by the SFST. 5 DRE exam involving circumstantial facts, questioning, a physical search (if done), and a physical exam, is used to identify the presence in the subject’s body of a drug belonging to one of several categories. 6 A trained Drug Recognition Expert opines that the driver is, or is not, impaired by a drug belonging to a particular category. 7 Blood or urine is tested for drugs. 8 Toxicology revealing a drug in the predicted category circles back to confirm the SFST’s proof of impairment. The person must have been impaired—How else could the officer have made this very specific drug category prediction? Alternatively, when a drug in the predicted category is not found, some validation study accuracy calculations consider any drug in any other category as proving impairment—After all the officer predicted a drug, and a drug was found.
QUADAS results
| 1. Was the spectrum of patients representative of the patients who will receive the test in practice? | No | No | No |
| 2. Were selection criteria clearly described? | No | No | No |
| 3. Is the reference standard likely to correctly classify the target condition? | No | No | No |
| 4. Is the time period between reference standard and index test short enough to be reasonably sure that the target condition did not change between the two tests? | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 5. Did the whole sample or a random selection of the sample, receive verification using a reference standard of diagnosis? | Yes | No | No |
| 6. Did patients receive the same reference standard regardless of the index test result? | Yes | No | No |
| 7. Was the reference standard independent of the index test (i.e. the index test did not form part of the reference standard)? | No | No | No |
| 8. Was the execution of the index test described in sufficient detail to permit replication of the test? | No | No | No |
| 9. Was the execution of the reference standard described in sufficient detail to permit its replication? | Yes | No | No |
| 10. Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? | No | No | No |
| 11. Were the reference standard results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index test? | Yes | No | No |
| 12. Were the same clinical data available when test results were interpreted as would be available when the test is used in practice? | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 13. Were uninterpretable/ intermediate test results reported? | No | No | No |
| 14. Were withdrawals from the study explained? | No | No | No |
DIE drug category lists
| 1 CNS Depressants | 1 d-Amphetamine = CNS Stimulant | [1 Amphetamines (no subjects with amphetamines were tested.)] | 1 Stimulants |
| 2 PCP | |||
| 2 CNS Stimulants | 3 Hallucinogen | ||
| 2 Diazepam & Secobarbital = CNS Depressant | 4 Cannabis | ||
| 3 Hallucinogens | 2 Barbiturates | 5 Inhalants | |
| 3 Cocaine | 5 Depressants | ||
| 4 Dissociative Anesthetics | 3 Marijuana | 4 Cannabis | 6 Narcotics |
| 7 Other | |||
| 5 Opiates | 1 PCP | ||
| 5 Narcotic Analgesics | [4 Narcotics (no subjects with narcotics were tested)] | 6 PCP | |
| 2 Morphine | |||
| 6 Inhalants | 7 Benzodiazepines | 3 Cocaine | |
| 8 Alcohol | 4 Marijuana | ||
| 7 Cannabis | 5 Barbiturate | ||
| 6 Benzodiazepine | |||
| 7 Methamphetamine/Amphetamine |
As reflected by NHTSA’s DRE Student Manual, the list of DIE drug categories used in US law enforcement DIE practice differs from the lists validated by Bigelow, Compton and Adler, whose lists differ from each other. Adler used two different lists. CNS = Central Nervous System. DRE Student Manual, page 2–3; Bigelow, page 9; Compton, page 7; Adler pages 26, 47.