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Medication Assisted Treatment and CJS Populations Joshua D Lee, M.D. M.Sc. New York University [email protected] @DrJoshuaDLee Disclosures and Grant Support, LeeJD • NIH (NIDA, NIAAA) • NYU School of Medicine • Alkermes • Investigator-Initiated Trial (IIT) • Study Drug Support • Alkermes (Vivitrol) • Reckitt Benkiser (Suboxone) • No paid roles non-NYU Outline • Scope of the problem and ‘state of the state’ • Studies and data for CJS-opioid MAT treatment • MAT = Medication Assisted Treatment • CJS-MAT and XR-NTX (Vivitrol) implementation issues • Summary CJS Reform 2015: Heading in the right direction? ACA + Parity Pro-MAT Regs (HHS, ONDCP) MH-AddictionPrimary Care Integration Punishment ‘Right on Crime’ Budget Reform The opioid epidemic and Criminal Justice Systems (CJS) Opioid misuse has increased in US, 1995-2015 • Prevalence of prescription opioid misuse • ‘modernization’ of heroin markets • Increase in opioid-related overdose deaths • Now a public health and political crisis CJS systems need to deal with: • • • • Detox at arrest/incarceration Treatment during incarceration Treatment during community supervision Recidivism, OD death, drop outs Model Approaches vs. Usual Care • Community care replaces correctional care • ‘Warm’ CJS referrals to community programs • NYC jail methadone program an example • Prioritizing chronic care and panel management • Medical homes, chronic disease management • Not a model approach: no treatment while incarcerated, resumption of chaos at release Are opioids an increasing CJS issue? Overall heroin and prescription opioid misuse has stayed flat or declined, 2005-2015…Current impact on CJS is unclear: • US heroin seizures are not increasing (DEA.gov) • ADAM II arrestee urine data (NY, ATL, WDC, CHI, SAC, DEN) shows overall flat or decreased heroin or oxycodone use across these US cities since 2000 (whitehouse.gov) • US incarceration rates are flat or declining (doj.gov) And yet…opioid-related overdose deaths are increasing…we have a crisis or epidemic…regional growth of heroin and opioid addiction Opioids and CJS: Jails, Prisons, Community Supervision Jails • Opportunity: detox and/or treatment • Problem: most do not offer either of the two Prisons • • Opportunity: long-term or pre-release treatment Problem: most do not offer any form of opioid-specific rx. Drug Courts, Diversion, Parole, Probation • • May better reflect community treatment standards Problem: often discourage the use of opioid MAT (medications) Why do CJS populations lack evidence-based treatment? CJS’ Mission • Misuse of narcotics is illegal and drives punishment • CJS facilities and authorities are not treatment providers • Budgets prioritize safety, not health care Stigma • • Methadone and buprenorphine may have a bad reputation Drug treatment is neglected in the community, anyway Treatment preferences • Many patients and providers favor ‘drug-free’ recovery vs. the use of medications (MAT) Review: Why use Methadone, Buprenorphine, or Naltrexone vs. ‘drug-free’ counseling alone? STUDY #2 WeissRD et al, Arch Gen Psyche, 2011 • Methadone • Buprenorphine • Buprenorphine/Naloxone • Oral Naltrexone • Extended-release Naltrexone Detox Relapse In this outpatient study, relapse after brief detox w buprenorphine was 90% Review: very high rates of relapse (50-90%) occurred after typical detox episodes, despite on-going counseling STUDY #2 KrupitskyE et al, Lancet, 2011 Following inpatient detox, persons not on a medication were again using opioids on average 65% of the time CJS: Opioid users leaving jail XRNTX vs. TAU: OPIATE URINE TOXICOLOGY RESULTS PER VISIT XRNTX-GROUP: OPIATE UTOX RESULTS ONLY Pt ID Week 0/1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 TAU: OPIATE UTOX RESULTS ONLY Week 8 Pt ID Week 0/1 Week 2 Week 3 #008 N/A #001 N/A #009 N/A #013 N/A #010 N/A #015 N/A #017 N/A #016 N/A #019 N/A #021 N/A #020 N/A #023 N/A #024 N/A #025 #026 #028 #027 #030 #029 #032 #031 #036 #033 #037 #034 #039 #035 #040 #041 #043 #044 #047 #045 #048 About to leave jail, urine is ‘clean’ = BLUE Week 4 Week 8 After jail, using heroin = RED In a recent NYC jail study, 88% of persons not on a medication relapsed to heroin use post-release (LeeJD, 2014, in review) Relapse leads to very high rates of Overdose Death following incarceration SOURCE: Binswanger et al, NEJM 2007;356:157-165 Addiction: ‘A Brain Disease’ Addiction Treatment: Healing ‘A Brain Disease’ Highest concentration of Dopamine receptors •Do we do something directly to the brain? • Medications •Do we isolate the patient away from drugs/alcohol? • Residential treatment settings, incarceration •Can the patient re-learn healthy, avoid unhealthy behaviors? • Behavioral therapy 1. Scope of the problem Opioid disorders in around 10-15% of US CJS populations Treatment outcomes are better with medications • lower rates of heroin and other drug use Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) • MAT: buprenorphine, methadone, XR-naltrexone CJS outcomes of interest, will they improve w MAT?: • • relapse, OD, crime recidivism, costs? 2. Data: CJS and Opioid Treatment What drives the best opioid outcomes? Detox and counseling only? No Medications? Correct answer 1) Methadone 2) Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine-naloxone (Suboxone film, Zubsolv tablets) 3) Naltrexone (oral) 4) Extended-release Naltrexone (injection) Reminder: What is the Difference between Opioid Agonists & Antagonists? Opioid Effect 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Methadone Buprenorphine Naltrexone Dose of Opioid Methadone prior to prison or jail release is effective Figure 2 Probability of attending a methadone clinic in (A) the intention-totreat and (B) the as-treated populations Data are for 1 month follow-up after particpants' release from incarceration. Josiah D Rich , Michelle McKenzie , Sarah Larney , John B Wong , Liem Tran , Jennifer Clarke , Amanda Noska , Man... Methadone continuation versus forced withdrawal on incarceration in a combined US prison and jail: a randomised, open-label trial The Lancet, 2015 Methadone outcomes across multiple studies • • • • • • • Less heroin use Less IV use Less HIV transmission Less overdose death Less criminal behavior Saves taxpayers money Longer lifespan *Cochrane Reviews Problems: Methadone Clinics and Stigma • Federally-licensed clinics treating opioid dependence only • limited locations • limited number of treatment slots • may only take insurance • daily directly observed therapy (DOT) • Patients have negative views (sedating, DOT, benzos, ‘rotting’) • Providers have negative views of methadone patients and clinics Reminder: Buprenorphine Office-based Treatment • Medical office visit • Retail pharmacy • Chronic treatment NYC Jail BUP. vs Methadone RCT, 2006-2008 • Methadone MTP standard of care • N=116, 1:1 assignment at arrest – Higher rate on BUP at release – Higher rate of post-release retention if BUP • 48% vs. 23% (p<0.005) – BUP appeared a feasible and effective • Methadone f/u rates were quite low – Trial may have recruited more BUP-preferring participants *Magura, LeeJD, Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2008 NYC Jail-to-Community buprenorphine (Magura, 2008; LeeJD, 2009) 1. More randomized participants continued bup-nx at jail re-entry vs. methadone • 48% vs. 23% (p<0.005) 2. Once in office-based bup-nx treatment, no differences vs. non-jail patients Same retention vs. non-jail Same rates of urine results and self-report of heroin use Reminder: buprenorphine-naloxone (Suboxone) maintenance produces better opioid treatment outcomes vs. detox and counseling only WeissRD et al, Arch Gen Psyche, 2011 Detox Relapse In this outpatient study, relapse after brief detox w buprenorphine was 90% Buprenorphine Treatment and CJS Many Pros! • The most common and available MAT medication in US • Any ‘X’ trained medical provider • General office-based or specialty treatment • Can be combined with all forms of counseling • Any jail or prison can prescribe and provide buprenorphine A few Cons… • Relatively expensive out-of-pocket • Lack of uninsured and Medicaid prescribers • Controlled substance with diversion issues Summary of CJS methadone and buprenorphine: impact on mortality post‐release • Ex-prisoners die immediately (Week 1, Day 2) after release • Most deaths are drug overdoses Addiction Volume 109, Issue 8, pages 1306-1317, 14 APR 2014 DOI: 10.1111/add.12536 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/add.12536/full#add12536-fig-0001 Summary of CJS methadone and buprenorphine: impact on mortality post‐release • • Pre- and post-release MAT lowered mortality (“Full OST” – Opioid Substitution Therapy) Pre-release MAT only still lowered mortality by reducing overdose in Week 1 Addiction Volume 109, Issue 8, pages 1306-1317, 14 APR 2014 DOI: 10.1111/add.12536 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/add.12536/full#add12536-fig-0002 Extended-Release Naltrexone (Vivitrol): the opioid antagonist approach • Monthly intramuscular injection • Given by nurse, PA, MD, pharmacist • Non-narcotic, not a controlled substance • Must detox off opioids first!! • Jail, prison, detox, rehab, other • Not for use if: • • Pregnancy Chronic pain requiring opioids Study Design 1. Adults w Opioid Dependence (current or lifetime) 2. CJS + (recent parole, probation, jail/prison/arrest) 3. Not seeking agonist rx (methadone, buprenorphine) 4. Opioid negative (urine, self-report) at randomization Randomization XR-NTX TAU FU every 2 weeks End of Treatment Phase, 6 months (week 27) 1° outcome: opioid relapse, rates of opioid misuse Long-term FU @ 12, 18 months RESULTS: STUDY FLOW 437 Screened for eligibility 308 Randomized 129 Excluded 57 Screening incomplete 25 No opioid abstinence 19 Medical or psychiatric 3 Recent drug overdose 2 BMI>35 23 Other 153 Randomized to XR-NTX 146 Received XR-NTX as randomized 7 refused XR-NTX 155 Randomized to TAU 155 Received TAU intervention 119 Completed 6-mos treatment phase follow-up 7 Lost 8 Withdrew consent 1 Adverse events 0 Death 1 Moved residence 13 Incarcerated 4 Other 126 Completed 6-mos treatment phase follow-up 4 Lost to follow-up 1 Withdrew consent 0 Adverse events 2 Death 5 Moved residence 15 Incarcerated 2 Other 153 included in primary analysis 155 included in primary analysis Baseline characteristics XR-NTX 84%, 44yo 37% TAU 85%, 43yo 34% 36% 20% 40% 20% Heroin use, every Other opioid use, ever Injection drug use, ever Opioid use, current* 88.8% 50.7% 42.1% 20.4% 88.4% 47.7% 40.0% 16.8% Cocaine use, current 19.7% 18.7% Heavy drinking, current 11.8% 12.3% Male, Age (mean) Parole Probation No CJS supervision *Current = last 30 days Less heroin relapse among parolees and probationers: XR-NTX vs. Treatment as Usual, N=308 across 5 US Sites LeeJD et al, 2014, Poster Primary Opioid Outcome: No relapse, weeks abstinent, urines negative 100 90 80 p<0.001 p<0.001 p<0.001 70 XRNTX TAU 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 % No relapse % weeks abstinent % urines negative Long-term Follow-Up (18 Months) Urines, 12 & 18 mos XR-NTX TAU p % opioid negative urine, 12 months 49% 45% ns % opioid negative urine, 18 months 46% 43% ns Overdose, any 0 7 0.02 Overdose, fatal 0 3 0.25 All-case mortality 2 5 0.45 SAEs, 1-18 mos Opioid Use at 12 and 18 Months Opioid urines: missing|positive Self-report: any opioid use XR-NTX prior to release: Less heroin use after jail XRNTX vs. TAU: OPIATE URINE TOXICOLOGY RESULTS PER VISIT XRNTX-GROUP: OPIATE UTOX RESULTS ONLY Pt ID Week 0/1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 TAU: OPIATE UTOX RESULTS ONLY Week 8 Pt ID Week 0/1 Week 2 Week 3 #008 N/A #001 N/A #009 N/A #013 N/A #010 N/A #015 N/A #017 N/A #016 N/A #019 N/A #021 N/A #020 N/A #023 N/A #024 N/A #025 #026 #028 #027 #030 #029 #032 #031 #036 #033 #037 #034 #039 #035 #040 #041 #043 #044 #047 #045 #048 About to leave jail, urine is ‘clean’ = BLUE Week 4 Week 8 After jail, using heroin = RED In a recent NYC jail study, 88% of persons not on a medication relapsed to heroin use post-release (LeeJD, 2014, in review) Stone County MO Drug Court Vivitrol Project MAT Referral Substance Type N=21 Demographic Profile (1/1/2009 – 8/1/2013) Male 14/21 (67%) Female 7/21 (23%) Alcohol Dependence 11/21 (52%) Opiate Dependence 8/21 (38%) Alcohol & Opiate Dependence 2/21 (10%) MAT – Extended-Release Injectable Naltrexone (Vivitrol) Outcomes *Average number of months Graduated 12/13 (92%) 6 months Terminated 1/13 (8%) 1 month Active 8/8 (100%) Data were obtained from Clarity Recovery Center via NADCP Web Module (in dvlp) *Average number of months that participant received MAT – Vivitrol injections Other Drug Court XR-NTX publications • 9% of US Drug Courts use Naltrexone (Oral of XR-) (Matuso 2013) • Missouri / Michigan Drug Courts (Finigan 2011) • N=32 Alcohol Dependent clients • Improved attendance, fewer arrests, reduce alcohol use • New Mexico (Lapham 2011) • N=12 Alcohol Dependent DUI clients • 3 mos. XR-NTX • Fewer interlock ignition fails Implementation: Data is strong, onto logistics • All medications now have good evidence supporting effectiveness • Choice depends on patient, provider, environment • Is the patient using and in community? Is detox already complete? • Is there a provider accepting CJS referrals? Medicaid? Uninsured patients? • How far away is the treatment provider? • Insurance status? Reimbursement in your state? • What are the patient’s preferences? Implementation: current treatment realities Buprenorphine, Buprenorphine-Naloxone (Suboxone, Zubsolv) • any provider with an ‘X’ DEA#...only 100 patients per MD • office- or program-based prescribing • the most common form of opioid medication treatment in US Methadone • only available at an licensed Opioid Treatment Program (OTPs) • more stigma XR-Naltrexone (Vivitrol) • only recently FDA approved • most expensive costs per month • antagonist requires patient to detox first…the ‘detox hurdle’ Implementation: Which medications to use? For which patient? So… Is there a methadone provider in the county? Is there a buprenorphine provider? Reimbursement? Is there coverage/reimbursement for XR-NTX? What is the patient motivated for? …any type or choice of MAT will be effective vs. none There are no well defined criteria dictating which med for which patient beyond availability and patient preference Implementation: How to improve XR-NTX re-entry outcomes? Patient education, patient preference • • Does the patient really want this treatment? Adherence boosters • • negative CJS consequences? • • parole violation, increased monitoring… positive consequences? • money, prizes, privileges, etc? • social support? • counseling? Implementation: How to improve XR-NTX re-entry outcomes? Patient matching • • We don’t yet know which patients do best Adherence boosters • • CJS mandated treatment is an acceptable approach • Incentive Management works with other conditions • Case Management and Patient Navigation under study • Psychosocial treatment, meetings, are usual rec’s XR-NTX (Vivitrol) for ALCOHOL USE DISORDERS GarbuttJC, JAMA 2006 XR-NTX Alcohol Treatment In Bellevue Primary Care • XR-NTX appears effective for Primary Care medical management of alcohol dependence Treatment Retention 1 1 0.9 0.89 0.8 0.69 0.6 Drinking rates in treatment 0.56 0.5 30 0.4 0.3 25 0.2 0.1 20 0 Baseline 1st Injection 2nd Injection 3rd Injection # Proportion 0.7 20 Drinking Days / Month 15 # Drinks / Drinking Day 12 10 56% of patient stayed in treatment 90 days Daily drinking reductions were robust and seen within the first month 6 5 7 5 6 4 0 Baseline Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 1st 2nd 3rd Injecti on Injecti on Injecti on LeeJD, GrossmanE, GourevitchMN, et al, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2010 Prologue: MAT and CJS Community bup-nx and methadone should be continued during incarceration • • Similar to HIV or MH meds • Use of MAT (bup-nx, methadone, XR-NTX) is a long-term strategy (“maintenance”) • Any ‘dose’ of counseling goes with MAT • All MAT implies significant counseling from a provider Summary • Scope of the problem and ‘state of the state’ • Opioid disorders are poorly treated and CJS and health outcomes are poor • Studies and data for CJS-opioid MAT treatment • Good data supporting use of methadone, buprenorphine, XR-NTX in CJS populations (jails, prisons, parole, probation) • CJS-MAT implementation issues • Availability varies. Patient enthusiasm and preference is likely a key.