Association of road-traffic accidents with benzodiazepine use

被引:395
作者
Barbone, F
McMahon, AD
Davey, PG
Morris, AD
Reid, IC
McDevitt, DG
MacDonald, TM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Dundee, Ninewells Hosp & Med Sch, Dept Clin Pharmacol & Therapeut, Med Monitoring Unit, Dundee DD1 9SY, Scotland
[2] Univ Dundee, Ninewells Hosp & Med Sch, Dept Psychiat, Dundee DD1 9SY, Scotland
[3] Univ Udine, Dipartimento Patol & Med Sperimentale & Clin, Unit Hyg & Epidemiol, I-33100 Udine, Italy
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0140-6736(98)04087-2
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Psychomotor studies suggest that commonly prescribed psychoactive drugs impair driving skills. We have examined the association between the use of psychoactive drugs and road-traffic accidents. Methods We used dispensed prescribing as a measure of exposure in a within-person case-crossover study of drivers aged 18 years and over, resident in Tayside, UK, who experienced a first road-traffic accident between Aug 1, 1992, and June 30, 1995, and had used a psychoactive drug (tricyclic antidepressant, benzodiazepine, selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitor, or other psychoactive drug [mainly major tranquillisers]) between Aug 1, 1992, and the date of the accident. For each driver, the risks of having a road-traffic accident while exposed and not exposed to a drug were compared. Findings 19 386 drivers were involved in a first road-traffic accident during the study period. 1731 were users of any study drug. On the day of the accident, 189 individuals were taking tricyclic antidepressants (within-patient exposure odds ratio for an accident 0.93 [95% CI 0.72-1.21]), 84 selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors (0.85 [0.55-1.33]), 235 benzodiazepines (1.62 [1.24-2.12]), and 47 other psychoactive drugs (0.88 [0.62-1.25]). The risk associated with benzodiazepine use decreased with increasing driver's age and was greater when the breath test for alcohol was positive. A dose-response relation was evident with benzodiazepines. The increased risk with benzodiazepines was significant for long-half-life drugs, used as anxiolytics, and for short-half-life hypnotics (all zopiclone). Interpretation Users of anxiolytic benzodiazepines and zopiclone were at increased risk of experiencing a road-traffic accident. Users of anxiolytic benzodiazepines and zopiclone should be advised not to drive.
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页码:1331 / 1336
页数:6
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