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Buprenorphine: A Slide Set With Teaching Notes

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Title: Buprenorphine: A Slide Set With Teaching Notes


1
BuprenorphineA Slide Set With Teaching Notes
  • Sharon Stancliff, MD
  • New York State Department of Health
  • AIDS Institute
  • May 2004

2
Heroin Use 2000
  • 160,000 injection drug users in New York 200,000
    heroin users (estimates)- believed to be
    increasing in 2003
  • Among those admitted into treatment over half are
    sniffing but transition to injection occurs for
    some
  • Transition to injection one study found 12 over
    18 months
  • Frank MSJM 2000, Neaigus

3
Opioids Heroin
  • Use nasal, injected, smoked and oral
  • Why Euphoria, sedation, reduce pain
  • Negative Dependence, overdose, injection related
    illnesses
  • Withdrawal severe, not life threatening
  • Pregnancy Withdrawal dangerous to fetus,
    maintain on methadone

4
Comments
  • Overdose most common when mixing drugs or after
    period of abstinence
  • Interactions with HAART
  • In theory ritonavir may increase potency
  • Analgesics are mixed with HAART
  • Sporer 1999, Faragon, 2003

5
History of Maintenance
  • Prior to 1914 opiates freely available
  • 1914 Harrison Act led to the end of physician
    ability to maintain an addiction
  • 1960s redevelopment of maintenance model
  • 1972 FDA approval and strict regulation of
    methadone
  • Joseph, 2000

6
(No Transcript)
7
2000 Drug Addiction Treatment Act
  • Allows for office based maintenance with schedule
    III, IV or V medications
  • Buprenorphine is the only approved medication

8
Why was this legislation passed?
  • Methadone maintenance has been shown to be highly
    effective in reducing heroin use and the
    incidence of co-morbidities such as HIV
  • Access to methadone is limited by regulation and
    stigma

9
Methadone and HIV Prevention
  • Methadone patients report less needle and syringe
    sharing
  • Methadone patients are 3-6 times less likely to
    become HIV positive when compared to
    out-of-treatment heroin users, including the
    population who continues to use drugs
  • Buprenorphine maintenance is hoped to have a
    similar impact
  • De Castro S, 2003, Drucker 1998

10
Methadone and the HIV User
  • Among HIV patients maintenance is associated
    with more consistent use of antiretrovirals and
    less hospitalizations
  • Sambamoorthi 2000, Weber 1990, Laine 1998

11
Further Benefits
  • Reductions in lethal overdose- decrease use and
    high tolerance
  • Reductions in sex work
  • Reductions in crime and presumably in
    incarceration
  • Sporer 1999, Metzger 1993, Drucker 1998, NIH
    Consensus Panel 1998

12
Goals of Maintenance
  • Prevent drug withdrawal
  • Block the effects of heroin if taken
  • Prevent the powerful craving that characterizes
    protracted withdrawal
  • Joseph, 2000

13
Protracted Abstinence Syndrome
  • Heroin craving persists long after withdrawal is
    over
  • 80-90 of serious heroin users relapse after
    detox
  • Hypothesis opioid addiction is a metabolic
    illness
  • Joseph 2000

14
Development of Protracted Abstinence Syndrome
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Environmental factors may bring it out use of
    the drug, perhaps stress or other influences
  • Physiological changes possibly in the receptors
    for endogenous opiates which are long term and
    probably permanent
  • Nestler 1998

15
Maintenance Treatment
  • Substitution therapy
  • may be compared to the treatment of diabetes
    with insulin

16
How Can Methadone Help?
  • Abstinence given a sufficient dose virtually all
    heroin users will stop using heroin
  • Harm reduction at lesser doses heroin use is
    under more control

17
Side Effects
  • No known long term detrimental effects
  • Side effects constipation, sweating
  • Longer acute withdrawal than heroin
  • Safe during pregnancy
  • Novick, Kandell

18
Methadone Dose
  • Usual effective dose 80-120 mg is required to
    prevent craving
  • Range 5mg- gt1000mg
  • Affected by individual differences in metabolism
    and by medication interactions
  • Leavitt, MSJM 2000

19
Length of Treatment
  • 80-90 of those stopping MMT will return to
    heroin use - a treatment, not a cure
  • Not predictable by life stability
  • Magura MSJM 2000

20
Methadone Restricted Access
  • Available only in methadone clinics
  • Many areas lack sufficient methadone treatment
    slots
  • Many users do not enter methadone programs,
    probably because of the restrictions
  • Government Accounting Office 1990, NIH Consensus
    Statement 1998, Institute of Medicine 1995

21
New Federal Regulations
  • For those who meet strict criteria
  • 1st 3 months 5 days a week
  • 2nd 3 months 4 days a week
  • 3rd 3 months 3 days a week
  • 4th 3 months 1 day a week
  • After 1 year Every 2 weeks
  • 2 years monthly

22
Buprenorphine
  • Will be available by prescription from qualified
    physician offices
  • higher safety profile
  • lower anticipated street value

23
Higher Safety Profile
  • Difficult to overdose on buprenorphine alone
  • Partial agonist- a ceiling effect above which
    higher doses do not increase activity-
    respiratory depression unlikely
  • Sublingual medication- low activity if swallowed,
    therefore safer around children
  • Ling 2002

24
  • From Danyalearningcenter.com

25
Lower Street Value
  • Effects on a person who is
  • Dependent on opioid high or straight -severe
    withdrawal whether taken under tongue or injected
  • Dependent on opioid in withdrawal- relief
  • An occasional user- gets high especially if
    injecting but mixed with naloxone (full
    antagonist) which is activated if injected so
    reduced high
  • Ling 2002

26
To Prescribe Buprenorphine
  • Be a qualified physician
  • Complete an 8 hour training
  • Or have
  • Certifications
  • Boarded in addiction psychiatry
  • ASAM certified
  • Boarded in addiction medicine by AOA
  • (Or participation in buprenorphine trials)

27
Other Physician Requirements
  • Register with the DEA
  • Register with NYS DOH (NY only)
  • Required to have access to appropriate
    psychosocial services
  • Limited to 30 patients per doctor (or tax ID)

28
Induction
  • Patient presents in mild to moderate withdrawal
  • Test dose
  • Follow up q1-3 days to titrate up to maintenance
  • In-person is recommended but circumstances may
    vary, telephone or e-mail contact may be
    sufficient

29
Maintenance
  • Most patients can be stabilized on 12-24mg.
    Because of a ceiling effect few will be on gt32mg.
  • Some patients can dose q 2-3 days
  • Frequency of visits determined by MD/patient
  • Training encourages urine testing but it is not
    required by law

30
Detoxification
  • 4-8 days
  • 4- 16mg/day example 6-8-10-8-4
  • Additional medications are usually not necessary
  • No particular detoxification regime has been
    shown to be more likely to lead to long term
    abstinence

31
Side effects
  • Similar to other opioids constipation, nausea,
    vomiting
  • Precipitated withdrawal in agonist dependent
    patient
  • Pregnancy category C- studies are in progress

32
Potential medication interactions between
buprenorphine and other medications
  • Cytochrome P450 3A4 inhibitors include
  • Azoles, Macrolides, Nonnucleosides and protease
    inhibitors
  • Cytochrome P450 3A4 inducers include
  • Phenobarbital, carbemazepine, phenytoin,
    rifampicin

33
Drug Interactions
  • Chronic pain management Chronic opiate agonists
    contraindicated- may necessitate transfer to
    methadone
  • Benzodiazepines Increase potential for fatal
    overdose

34
Which Patients?
  • Those in areas with limited or no access to
    methadone
  • May draw in users earlier in drug use career
  • Some studies suggest that buprenorphine is most
    useful in those who are comfortable on lower
    doses of methadone
  • Barnett 2001

35
Study Buprenorphine vs. Placebo
  • 40 heroin users 20 buprenophine, 20 placebo

Kakko, 2003
36
Study Buprenorphine vs. Methadone
  • 400 Pts. Randomized to flexible dose of
    buprenorphine (2-32 mg) or methadone(10-150mg)
  • Morphine positive urine no difference
  • Self reported drug use no difference
  • Retention methadone somewhat greater
  • Mattick 2003

37
The French Experience
  • Licensed in 1995 by 2000 80,000 patients
    receiving in primary care
  • Dramatic decrease in heroin overdose
  • Physicians report significant improvement in
    health and social function
  • Misuse- some injected but double enrollment for
    prescription appears rare
  • Deveaux 2002, Vignau 1998

38
HAART-Buprenorphine Interactions
  • Few formal studies to date
  • No effect of buprenorphine on zidovudine
  • CYP450 3A4 Metabolism of buprenorphine would
    suggest possible interactions with PIs and
    non-nucleosides
  • In vitro ritonavir is potent inhibitor of BUP
    metabolism (ritonavir gt indinavir gt saquinavir).
  • Clinicians need to be alert for potential
    interactions

39
Buprenorphine use in HIV-infected persons
additional considerations
  • One study found increases in AST, ALT among pts.
    with hepatitis (MediansALT 8.5 (-12 to 54)AST
    9.5 (-8 to 32)
  • 4 cases of severe hepatitis reported after
    injection of Buprenorphine
  • Possible relationship of buprenorphine to
    hyperlactatemia in HIV-infected persons on HAART-
    but small study, did not control for HCV
  • Petry 2000, Berson 2001, Marceau 2003

40
Summary
  • Buprenorphine
  • Moves addiction treatment into primary care
  • May bring patients into care before various
    co-morbidities have an impact
  • May increase use of and response to HIV treatment

41
On-line Resources
  • http//www.dhs.vic.gov.au/phd/buprenorphine/
  • http//www.samhsa.gov/news/click_bupe.html

42
For more HIV-related resources, please visit
www.hivguidelines.org
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