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MEDICATION ASSISTED ADDICTION TREATMENT: “APPROPRIATE USE” DAS Quarterly Provider Meeting Louis E. Baxter, Sr., M.D., FASAM Medical Director-DAS President Elect American Society Addiction Medicine GOALS & OBJECTIVES • • • • • • Review comprehensive evaluation components DSM-IV-TR diagnosing Review full treatment planning Patient Placement – ASAM PPC-2 Treatment of Co-occurring Disorders Medication Assisted Therapy for detoxification, maintenance, and pain management ADDITIONAL RESOURCES • CSAT TIP # 43 Buprenorphine Therapy • CSAT TIP # 45 Detoxification and Substance • • Abuse Treatment *** National Quality Forum – “Evidence Based Treatment Practices for Substance Use Disorders” ASAM’s Monograph – “Achieving Treatment Success in Alcohol Dependence” COMPREHENSIVE EVALUATION COMPONENTS • • • • • • • • • • “Chief Complaint” …why are you here? Alcohol Use History … Screening Tool (CAGE) Drug Use History … Rx, Illicit, and OTC Previous Treatment History … include Clergy Previous Psych History … admissions and OP Legal History Past Medical / Surgical History / Medications Family History … Psychiatric and Substance Use Marital History Psychosocial History … Employment / Clubs/ Hobbies DIAGNOSES • DSM-IV-TR Criteria for Substance Use Disorders – Use disorder; Abuse; Dependence (Addiction) • DSM-IV-TR Criteria for Psychiatric Disorders – Depression; Bipolar; Anxiety • Laboratory Data Documentation of Medical Disorders – Chronic pain; Seizure; Migraines; HIV/AIDS; Liver disease • National Quality Forum Guidelines (2005) – Evidence-based Best Practices for SUD FULL TREATMENT PLANNING • • • • • • • Assessment – Diagnosis Detoxification – Medical Maintenance Rehabilitation – Counseling After / Continuing Care – Twelve Step Program Co-occurring Illness Care Pain Management Care General Medical Care APPROPRIATE LEVEL OF CARE • ASAM Patient Placement Criteria-2 – Only peer reviewed beta tested tool for patient placement • Level 0.5 … Brief Intervention (3-6 sessions) • Level I … Traditional Outpatient (Individual) • Level II … Intensive Outpatient (group therapy) • • three to five 90 minute sessions weekly Level III … Residential (Medically supervised) Level IV … Hospital based (Medically managed) TREATMENT WORKS • Full Treatment Experience (Detoxification; Rehabilitation; Maintenance) – General Population recovers @ 77% @ 1yr – Detoxification & Rehab Only @ 33% @ 1yr – Detoxification Alone @ < 10% @ 1 yr TREATMENT OUTCOME COMPARISONS • Alcoholism … 50-70% abstinent • Opioid Dependence … 50-80% abstinent • Cocaine Dependence … 50-60% abstinent • Nicotine Dependence … 20-40% abstinent • Diabetes (relapse) … 30-50% stable • Hypertension (poor control) … 50-60% • Asthma (multiple ER visits) … 60-80% (Gaber, Davidson, 1992; McLellan 2002) MEDICATION ASSISTED THERAPIES • Medications for detoxification • Medications for maintenance • Medications for psychiatric illnesses • Medical management of pain MEDICATIONS FOR DETOXIFICATION • Librium … Alcohol and Benzodiazepine detoxification • Benzodiazepine & Phenobarbital … Benzodiazepine • • • • detoxification Suboxone (Subutex) & Methadone …Opiate detoxification Clonidine & Naltrexone … Opiate detoxification Bromocryptine & Amantadine … Stimulant detoxification Wellbutrin … Cannabis detoxification MEDICATIONS FOR MAINTENENCE • • • • • • • Buprenorphine ….Opiate dependence Methadone … Opiate dependence Acamprosate … Alcohol dependence Naltrexone … Alcohol and Opiate dependence Vivitrol .......... Alcohol dependence Disulfram … Alcohol dependence Nicotine Replacement …Nicotine dependence STATUS OF ALCOHOL TREAMENT • More Treatment Options than ever before • New medications and psychosocial approaches • Guidelines for use of medications in “actively using” • • • alcohol patients and “patients in recovery” Treatment in outpatient and primary care settings ASAM Levels I and II Medications help promote and sustain recovery Problem … Less than 1/5 of facilities are using new pharmacotherapy (barriers?) • Need to engage physicians to move forward in pace with the new developments in alcohol treatment MEDICATIONS FOR ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE FDA APPROVED • Disulfiram … aversion therapy • Oral Naltrexone … reduction in craving • Injectable Naltrexone … compliance • Acamprosate … reduction in cravings and prolonged withdrawal syndromes DISADVANTAGES OF MEDICATION THERAPY • “Use in lieu of” full treatment experience • Burdensome regimes and side-effects may undermine commitment to recovery • Poor medication selection … must meet patient needs • Premature discontinuation of medications (need to match with patient’s recovery status) ADJUNCTIVE MEDICATIONS • SSRIs ………… Affective Depressant Disorders • Buspar ……… Anxiety Disorders • Benzodiazepines (Oxazepam, Librium, Klonopin) … in special psychiatric cases (GAD, Panic Disorder, Agoraphobia) • Phenothiazines ... Affective Disorders (Schizophrenia) • Lithium ……… Major Depression • Trazadone … Insomnia • Other Medications for Medical Problems under medical supervision MEDICATIONS FOR PAIN MANAGEMENT • • • • • • • • • NSAIDs … at maximum dosages ATC Methadone … in combination with NSAIDs Buprenorphine in combination with NSAIDs Neuroleptics … in combination with other meds SSRIs … have been shown to be useful Clonidine … for neuropathic pain Clonazepam … for lancinating pain Baclofen …for central nervous system pain LONG Acting Narcotics …. medical supervision SPECIFIC PROTOCOLS • PREGNANT OPIOID DEPENDENT PATIENTS SHOULD NOT BE DETOXIFIED – The treatment of choice is METHADONE MAINTENANCE – BUPRENORPHINE … 2,4,6,8 OR 16 MG FOR Detox and Maintenance (postpartum) TREATMENT ISSUES • Mobile Medication Van … multiple communities • Needle Exchange Program • Mobile Methadone and Buprenorphine • New Drug Protocols … Peer Review-Control Group Studies SUMMARY … THE BEGINNING • Addiction treatment is growing up • Pharmacotherapy has arrived • Pharmacotherapy is not in lieu of traditional therapy • Pharmacotherapy is an integral part of a “full treatment experience” • Pharmacotherapy is not for everyone • The need for pharmacotherapy should not lead to exclusion from treatment programs