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Articles

Can real-life driving ability be predicted by the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test?

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Pages 601-606 | Received 20 Nov 2018, Accepted 07 Jun 2019, Published online: 22 Jul 2019
 

Abstract

Objective: Drowsy driving is a profound road safety issue. In patients with excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS), the Maintenance of Wakefulness Test (MWT) is commonly used to evaluate driving ability. However, there is little evidence that MWT predicts driving performance, and several sleep latency cutoffs have been suggested.

Methods: Based on a retrospective chart analysis of patients with an MWT and a driving ability assessment between January 2006 and November 2014, we identified 63 studies in 60 patients. The driving ability assessment judged the patients as qualified or disqualified for commercial driving. MWT latencies to 3 s of alpha activity, 3 s of drowsiness (microsleep), and sleep onset were compared between qualified and disqualified patients and their validity to identify driving qualification was evaluated.

Results: Disqualified patients had shorter alpha, microsleep, and sleep latencies, but the latency distributions were widely overlapping. MWT accuracy to predict driving performance was poor: two thirds of short sleep latencies were false positives. Adding information from alpha and microsleep latencies added little extra accuracy.

Conclusions: MWT results correlate poorly with driving performance in a 2-h test irrespective of sleep latency cutoff or added alpha/microsleep latency data. Better diagnostic tools are needed to evaluate driving performance in patients with EDS.

Acknowledgments

We are indebted to Jouni Koli, certified driving instructor, driving health inspector, for valuable comments and data on the performance of the driving ability assessments and Tero Vahlberg, MSc, for statistical advice.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by grants from TYKS-Sapa (IV, JJ, and UA), the Finnish government (IV), and the Finnish Traffic Medicine Foundation (JJ). The funding sources were not involved in the design or reporting of the study.

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