Abstract

ObjectivePrevious research reported cognitive and psychomotor impairments in long‐term users of benzodiazepine receptor agonists (BZRAs). This article explores the role of acute intoxication and clinical complaints.MethodsNeurocognitive and on‐road driving performance of 19 long‐term (≥6 months) regular (≥twice weekly) BZRA users with estimated plasma concentrations, based on self‐reported use, exceeding the therapeutic threshold (CBZRA+), and 31 long‐term regular BZRA users below (CBZRA−), was compared to that of 76 controls.ResultsBZRA users performed worse on tasks of response speed, processing speed, and sustained attention. Age, but not CBZRA or self‐reported clinical complaints, was a significant covariate. Road‐tracking performance was explained by CBZRA only. The CBZRA + group exhibited increased mean standard deviation of lateral position comparable to that at blood‐alcohol concentrations of 0.5 g/L.ConclusionsFunctional impairments in long‐term BZRA users are not attributable to self‐reported clinical complaints or estimated BZRA concentrations, except for road‐tracking, which was impaired in CBZRA + users. Limitations to address are the lack of assessment of objective clinical complaints, acute task related stress, and actual BZRA plasma concentrations. In conclusion, the results confirm previous findings that demonstrate inferior performance across several psychomotor and neurocognitive domains in long‐term BZRA users.

Highlights

  • Benzodiazepine receptor agonists (BZRAs) are a class of drugs prescribed mainly for the symptomatic treatment of insomnia and anxiety

  • Long‐term regular BZRA users are impaired on various tasks of psychomotor functioning

  • It was found that response latency, processing speed during more complex psychomotor tasks, and sustained attention are impaired as compared to healthy controls

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Summary

Introduction

Benzodiazepine receptor agonists (BZRAs) are a class of drugs prescribed mainly for the symptomatic treatment of insomnia and anxiety. CNS suppression is the intended therapeutic effect, psychomotor and cognitive side‐effects such as unsteady gait, slowed response speed, impaired sustained attention and anterograde amnesia occur (Jongen, Vuurman, Ramaekers, & Vermeeren, 2018; Uzun, Kozumplik, Jakovljević, & Sedić, 2010). These side‐effects can negatively impact daily functioning. In the context of traffic safety, the use of BZRAs has been linked to increased crash risk and has been observed to impair road tracking during standardized on‐the‐road driving testing (Jongen et al, 2018; Leufkens & Vermeeren, 2014; Roth, Eklov, Drake, & Verster, 2014; Vermeeren, 2004; Verster, Veldhuijzen, & Volkerts, 2005)

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