Affiliation:
1. University of Nebraska Medical Center and VA Nebraska‐Western Iowa Health Care System Omaha Nebraska
2. University of Nebraska Medical Center Omaha
3. University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, and FORWARD, The National Databank for Rheumatic Diseases Wichita, Kansas
Abstract
ObjectiveTo quantify vehicle control as a metric of automobile driving performance in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA).MethodsNaturalistic driving assessments were completed in patients with active RA and controls without disease. Data were collected using in‐car, sensor‐based instrumentation installed in the participants’ own vehicles to observe typical driving habits. RA disease status, disease activity, and functional status were associated with vehicle control (lateral [steering] and longitudinal [braking/accelerating] acceleration variability) using mixed‐effect linear regression models stratified by road type (defined by roadway speed limit).ResultsAcross 1,292 driving hours, RA drivers (n = 33) demonstrated differences in vehicle control compared to controls (n = 23), with evidence of significant statistical interaction between disease status and road type (P < 0.001). On residential roads, participants with RA demonstrated overall lower braking/accelerating variability than controls (P ≤ 0.004) and, when disease activity was low, lower steering variability (P = 0.03). On interstates/highways, RA was associated with increased steering variability among those with moderate/high Clinical Disease Activity Index scores (P = 0.04). In models limited to RA, increases in disease activity and physical disability over 12 weeks of observation were associated with a significant increase in braking/accelerating variability on interstate/highways (both P < 0.05).ConclusionUsing novel naturalistic assessments, we linked RA and worsening RA disease severity with aberrant vehicle control. These findings support the need for further research to map these observed patterns in vehicle control to metrics of driver risk and, in turn, to link patterns of real‐world driving behavior to diagnosis and disease activity.
Funder
Rheumatology Research Foundation
Department of Veterans Affairs
NIH
The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Cited by
3 articles.
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