Updated
Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 2
Quetiapine Slows Next-Day Driving in 15 Sleep Apnea Patients After 50mg Trial
Updated
Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 2

Quetiapine Slows Next-Day Driving in 15 Sleep Apnea Patients After 50mg Trial

3 articles · Updated · studyfinds.com · Jun 2
  • A randomized crossover trial in 15 adults found 50mg quetiapine worsened next-morning driving-simulator performance and reaction times versus placebo, despite an overnight sleep benefit.
  • Sleep measures improved on quetiapine: breathing interruptions fell to 20 an hour from 27, total sleep rose by more than 40 minutes, and wake time during the night dropped about 45%.
  • Morning impairment was substantial: attention lapses more than tripled, lane swerving increased, and simulated crashes were more frequent, though the study was too small to confirm crash risk statistically.
  • Four of 15 participants did not feel sleepier the next morning—and two felt more alert—even as objective tests showed worse performance, raising concern that some users may not recognize impairment.
  • Researchers advised avoiding driving or other safety-critical tasks for at least 9.5 hours after dosing; the warning matters because quetiapine was prescribed 10.7 million times in the U.S. in 2023, mostly at off-label low doses.
A new drug for sleep apnea is nearing approval. Could this be the safe alternative to risky off-label sleeping pills?
Doctors often prescribe pills for insomnia. Why is a safer, drug-free therapy so rarely used?
A popular insomnia pill impairs driving even if you feel alert. Are you taking a hidden risk every morning?

Next-Day Driving Impairment from Low-Dose Quetiapine: New Clinical Evidence, Off-Label Risks, and Policy Gaps Revealed by the 2026 Flinders Trial

Overview

A groundbreaking clinical trial led by Flinders University researchers, published in April 2026, revealed that low-dose quetiapine modestly improves sleep and breathing for people with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) who have trouble maintaining sleep. However, the study found that this benefit comes with a significant downside: quetiapine impairs next-day performance, raising serious concerns about driving safety. In response, the research team recommends better screening for sleep apnoea before prescribing sedating medications and urges clear warnings about next-day impairment, highlighting the need for safer, evidence-based alternatives to protect patient safety.

...