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1 Use of Buprenorphine in the Pharmacological Management of Opioid Dependence Sponsored jointly by: American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry and the American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine and Center for Substance Abuse Treatment/Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 2 Physician Clinical Support System for Buprenorphine (PCSS-B) A national mentoring network for physicians treating opioid dependence with buprenorphine Offered by American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry American Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine American Psychiatric Association To get involved or get assistance Go to the website: www.pcssb.org Sponsored by CSAT/SAMHSA 3 Overview to the Course Lectures Small groups with case discussions 4 Overview to the Course Legislation: Overview of the Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000 Epidemiology 5 Amended Controlled Substances Act • Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000: “Waiver Authority for Physicians Who Dispense or Prescribe Certain Narcotic Drugs for Maintenance Treatment or Detoxification Treatment” (H.R. 4365, Children’s Health Act of 2000) • Revision in legislation allows a physician to prescribe narcotic drugs in schedules III, IV, V, or combinations of such drugs, for the treatment of opioid dependence • Drugs and practitioner must meet certain requirements 6 Amended Controlled Substances Act “Qualifying physician”: A licensed physician who meets one or more of the following: 1. ABPN Added Qualification in Addiction Psychiatry 2. Certified in Addiction Medicine by ASAM 3. Certified in Addiction Medicine by AOA 4. Investigator in buprenorphine clinical trials 7 Amended Controlled Substances Act “Qualifying physician” (continued): Meets one or more of the following: 5. Has completed 8 hours training provided by ASAM, AAAP, AMA, AOA, APA (or other organizations which may be designated by HHS) 6. Training/experience as determined by state medical licensing board 7. Other criteria established through regulation by the Secretary of Health and Human Services 8 Amended Controlled Substances Act Practitioner requirements: “Qualifying physician” Has capacity to refer patients for appropriate counseling and ancillary services No more than 30 patients (individual) The limit on the number of patients that can be treated by an individual physician has been increased to 100 patients as part of the Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 2006 (P.L 109-469. ONDCPRA). Physicians who meet the following criteria may notify the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) of their need and intent to treat up to 100 patients at any one time: 1. the physician must currently be qualified under DATA 2000 2. at least one year must have elapsed since the physician submitted the initial notification for authorization 3. the physician must certify their capacity to refer patients for appropriate counseling and other appropriate ancillary services 4. the physician must certify that the total number of patients at any one time will not exceed the applicable number No limit for group practices (August 2005) 9 Amended Controlled Substances Act Practitioner: Must notify the Secretary of HHS in writing: - His/her name - DEA registration - If in a group practice, names of others in the practice and DEA registrations - Practice Location - Criteria under which practitioner qualifies - Certification of capacity to refer to appropriate ancillary services 10 Amended Controlled Substances Act • Submit required information on form provided by Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (SAMHSA) • “Notification of Intent to Use Schedule III, IV, or V Opioid Drugs for the Maintenance and Detoxification Treatment of Opiate Addiction Under 21 USC 823(g)(2)” • Notifications can be submitted by mail, fax, online (www.buprenorphine.samhsa.gov) 11 Amended Controlled Substances Act Practitioner: - DHHS has 45 days to determine if the physician meets all the requirements - The DEA will assign an identification (DEA) number (the “x” number) to the practitioner; this number is assigned after 45 days if DHHS does not act - Violations will put the physician’s DEA registration at risk 12 Amended Controlled Substances Act Narcotic drug: Approved by the FDA for use in maintenance or detoxification treatment of opioid dependence Schedule III, IV, or V Drugs or combinations of drugs 13 Amended Controlled Substances Act Methadone treatment programs: - Practitioner can also prescribe these drugs (i.e., Schedule III, IV, or V; approved for maintenance or detoxification treatment) under a methadone program registration - No limit on number of patients when used in the methadone treatment program setting according to methadone regulations 14 Amended Controlled Substances Act State legislation: - A state may not preclude a practitioner from dispensing or prescribing buprenorphine for opioid dependence treatment unless the state enacts a law prohibiting the practitioner from doing so 15 Amended Controlled Substances Act Evaluation period: - During the first three years, DHHS and DEA evaluated safety and efficacy - Safety includes protection of the public health against diversion of the drug 16 Amended Controlled Substances Act DHHS evaluated: - Whether the treatment is effective in the office setting - Whether access to treatment has been increased - Whether there have been adverse consequences for the public health 17 Amended Controlled Substances Act • DEA evaluated: - The extent of violations of the 30 patient limit - The extent of diversion of the medication - Physician record keeping and security measures related to on-site buprenorphine storage - OBOT audit - DEA to visit two buprenorphine prescribers in each DEA District every 18 months 18 Amended Controlled Substances Act • Evaluation period: - Very little diversion (this is changing) - Few toxicity reports from DAWN (toxicity reports in young children increasing) - Access to treatment has improved, but needs further expansion - Buprenorphine will continue to be available (but physicians need to be aware of the potential problems and give careful thought to each treatment plan) 19 Overview to the Course Legislation Epidemiology 20 Opioid Abuse: Epidemiology Prevalence: Heroin - In 2006, 560,000 Americans age 12 and older reported use of heroin at least once - www.samhsa.gov - 0.8% of 8th graders, 0.8% of 10th graders, and 0.9% of 12th graders had abused heroin at least once in the year prior to being surveyed - www.monitoringthefuture.org 21 Past Year: Dependence or Abuse By Drug Class (NSDUH, 2002) 22 Abuse of Prescription Opioids In 2006, 16.2 million Americans age 12 and older took a prescription pain reliever, tranquilizer, stimulant, or sedative for nonmedical purposes at least once in the year prior to being surveyed. 1.64 million prescription narcotic users meet diagnostic criteria for opioid abuse or dependence (second only to marijuana (4.17 million) ) New users of prescription opioids now exceeds that of marijuana use 2.15 million vs. 2.06 million (2006) National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2006 23 Number of New Non-medical Users of Therapeutics 24 Past Month Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs (Psychotherapeutics) among Persons 12+:2002-2006 Percent Using in Past Month 3 2 1.9 + 2.0 1.9 2002 2005 2.1 2003 2006 2004 1.8+ 2 1 0.8 0.8 0.5 0.5 0.5 1 0.4 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0 Pain Relievers + Stimulants Sedatives Tranquilizers Difference between this estimate and the 2006 estimate is statistically significant at the .05 level. 25 Rates of Prescription Narcotic Abuse Prescription Narcotic Abuse Prevalence: 12th graders: 1992: 3.3% 2007: 9.2% 179% increase over 15 years OxyContin Vicodin 8th 1.8% 8th 2.7% 10th 3.9% 10th 7.2% 12th 5.2% 12th 9.6% Source: Monitoring the Future, 2007. 26 Highest Prevalence in Young Adults Lifetime Nonmedical Use of Prescription Opioids (2006): Pain Relievers: Age 12-17 10.4% Age 18-25 25.5% Age 26 + 12% OxyContin: Age 12-17 1.3% Age 18-25 Age 26 + 5.1% 1.1% Between 2004 and 2005, the proportion of teens who thought there was a great risk in trying prescription pain relievers fell from 48% to 44% 27 Fatal Drug Poisoning Between 1999 and 2002, the number of opioid analgesic poisonings on death certificates rose 91.2% During this time period, poisoning from opioid analgesics surpassed both cocaine and heroin poisoning as the most frequent type of drug poisoning found on death certificates in the U.S. Source: Paulozzi, L.J., Budnitz, D.S., Xi, Y, 2006. Increasing deaths from opioid analgesics in the United States. Pharmacoedidemiology and Drug Safety 15, 613-7. 28 Distribution of first-listed specified drugs among unintentional drug overdose deaths, US, 2005 100% Methadone, 16.2% 80% 60% 40% Other opioid painkillers, 22.0% Benzo./antidepress, 6.5% Cocaine, 25.1% Heroin, 7.7% 20% 0% Meth / amphet., 6.4% Other specified drugs, 16.1% 29 Unintentional drug overdose deaths by specific drug type, United States, 1999-2004 8000 Number of deaths 7000 6000 5000 prescription opioid cocaine heroin 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 '99 '00 '01 '02 Year '03 '04 30 Source Where Pain Relievers Were Obtained for Most Recent Nonmedical Use among Past Year Users Aged 12 or Older: 2006 Source Where Respondent Obtained Bought on Drug Dealer/ Internet 0.1% Stranger More than 3.9% One Doctor 1.6% Other 1 4.9% Free from Friend/Relative 55.7% One Doctor 19.1% Bought/Took from Friend/Relative 14.8% Source Where Friend/Relative Obtained More than One Doctor 3.3% Free from Friend/Relative 7.3% One Doctor 80.7% Bought/Took from Friend/Relative 4.9% Drug Dealer/ Stranger 1.6% Other 1 2.2% Note: Totals may not sum to 100% because of rounding or because suppressed estimates are not shown. 1 The Other category includes the sources: “Wrote Fake Prescription,” “Stole from Doctor’s Office/Clinic/Hospital/Pharmacy,” and “Some Other Way.” 31 Gaps in current treatment of opioid dependence • Approx. 600,000 heroin users • At least 6.4 million abuse prescription narcotics (2003) • Increasing prevalence in those under age 25 • 260,000± patients receiving methadone maintenance • Restrictions on OTPs • Detoxification of limited long-term effectiveness • Access to treatment restricted 32 Summary – Epidemiology • Prevalence of opioid dependence is increasing • The need for opioid dependence treatment far exceeds what is currently available • Office-based buprenorphine is intended to: • address unmet treatment needs • to place the treatment of opioid dependence in the mainstream of medical care 33 Review of Opioids and Treatment of Opioid Dependence 34 Opioid Dependence – Goals of Review • Historical Information • Neurobiology • Types of opioids and their effects • Pharmacology of opioids • Treatment modalities • Pregnancy and other special groups 35 Opioids • Opioids: opium and opium-derived compounds as well as semisynthetic and synthetic compounds that resemble the structure and/or function of the naturally occurring forms • Opioids are medically used for relief of pain and cough suppression, and many have an abuse potential 36 Historical Perspective of Opioid Abuse Late 19th and early 20th century: Women/high income Americans: high rates of morphine addiction. Most introduced to the drugs by their physicians for menstrual pain and menopausal symptoms. 20th century: U.S. adopted severe policies toward addiction; criminalized addiction Harrison Act (1914): prohibition on prescription of narcotics (opiates) to addicts. Many physicians prosecuted physicians fear opioid prescribing increased drug trafficking and crime associated with opiate and cocaine addiction 37 Historical Perspective • 1974: first methadone maintenance programs for opioid addiction; serve approximately 260,000 patients • Large increases in prescription opioid addiction starting in late 1990s to present • DATA 2000: Office-based treatment of opioid dependence; requirement for physician training to engage in OBOT 38 Opioid Pharmacology Types of opioid receptors: Mu Kappa Delta • Addictive effects of opioids occur through activation of mu receptors • Role of kappa and delta receptors in addictive process not well defined 39 Opioid Receptors Drugs and medications that activate mu receptors: morphine heroin methadone LAAM hydromorphone buprenorphine codeine oxycodone fentanyl hydrocodone 40 Function at Receptors: Full Opioid Agonists Mu receptor Full agonist binding … activates the mu receptor is highly reinforcing is the most abused opioid type includes heroin, oxycodone, methadone, & others 41 Function at Receptors: Partial Agonists Mu receptor Partial agonist binding … activates the receptor at lower levels is relatively less reinforcing is a less abused opioid type includes buprenorphine 42 Function at Receptors: Opioid Antagonists Mu receptor Antagonist binding … occupies without activating is not reinforcing blocks abused agonist opioid types includes naloxone and naltrexone 43 Comparison of Activity Levels 100 90 Full Agonist (e.g. heroin) 80 70 60 % Mu Receptor Intrinsic Activity Partial Agonist (e.g. buprenorphine) 50 40 Maximum opioid agonist effect is never achieved Even when all mu receptors occupied 30 20 10 Antagonist (e.g. naloxone) 0 no drug low dose DRUG DOSE high dose 44 Pharmacology of Opioids • First pass after oral ingestion varies: morphine only 15% orally available, but methadone 80-90% • Duration of analgesia 3-6 hours but constipation or respiratory depression may last longer in drugs such as methadone • Metabolized by liver (glucuronidation or P450 CYP 2D6, 2B6, 3A4) • Opioids are excreted in urine and bile • Impaired hepatic function could increase bioavailability and impaired renal function could cause accumulation of metabolites 45 Repeated Dosing: Opioid Tolerance and Withdrawal • Tolerance: – Need more for same effect – Less effect with same amount – Occurs for euphoria, sedation, respiratory depression, vomiting, analgesia – Minimal tolerance to constipation, miosis, sweating – Can attain high levels of tolerance with gradual increases to doses that would otherwise be lethal • Withdrawal – upon reduction or cessation of opioid use/administration 46 Opiate Withdrawal Physical dependence is typically shown through the signs and symptoms of opioid withdrawal - Dysphoric mood Pupillary dilation - Nausea or vomiting Sweating - Muscle aches/cramps - Lacrimation Gooseflesh - Rhinorrhea Diarrhea - Insomnia Yawning - Hypertension Tachycardia - Can use standardized scales to measure: - e.g.: COWS, OOWS 47 Repeated Administration and Withdrawal • Physical dependence and syndrome of dependence (as in DSM-IV) are importantly different: - Physical dependence indicates physiological change or adaptation in an organism in response to repeated administration of a drug - A “syndrome of dependence” is a group of signs and symptoms indicating a pattern of pathologic use or “addiction” 48 Repeated Administration and Withdrawal • Spontaneous Withdrawal - Occurs when a person physically dependent on mu agonist opioids suddenly stops or markedly decreases the amount of use - For short-acting opioids (e.g., heroin, hydrocodone, oxycodone): usually begins 6-12 hours after last dose, peaks at 36-72 hours, and lasts about 5 days (with possible protracted withdrawal?) 49 Repeated Administration and Withdrawal • Spontaneous Withdrawal (continued) - For opioids with longer half-lives (e.g., methadone), there is a longer period before onset (methadone: 36-72 hours), longer period before peak effects occur - Medications with longer half-lives generally have less severe spontaneous withdrawal syndrome-but longer withdrawal syndrome 50 Opioid Overdose • Respiratory depression - usual cause of death • Coma, hypotension, pinpoint pupils (may dilate with hypoxia) • Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema • High-dose meperidine (Demerol) or propoxyphene (Darvon) can cause seizures –Note: FDA Advisory Panel recently voted to recommend removal of propoxyphene from market • Antidote for heroin overdose: naloxone (i.m. or i.n. work equally well); note: naloxone does not work well for buprenorphine 51 Etiology of Opioid Abuse: Neurobiology of Addiction Cortex Prefrontal Cortex Thalamus VTA NAc Mu opioid receptors are distributed widely in the brain. While binding in the thalamus produces analgesia, binding in the cortex produces impaired thinking/balance; binding in prefrontal cortex contributes to an individual’s decision about how important use of the drug is to him/her (salient value of the cue) and ventral tegmental area (VTA)/nucleus accumbens (NAc) is associated with 52 Clinical Treatment of Opioid Use Disorders DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Abuse A maladaptive pattern of substance use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by one (or more) of the following occurring within a 12-month period: Recurrent substance use resulting in a failure to fulfill major role obligations at work, school, or home Recurrent substance use in situations in which it is physically hazardous Recurrent substance-related legal problems Continued substance use despite having persistent or recurrent social or interpersonal problems caused or exacerbated by the effects 53 DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Dependence Three (or more) of the following occurring at any time in the same 12month period: Tolerance, as defined by either of the following: • A need for markedly increased amounts of the substance to achieve intoxication or the desired effect, or • Markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same amount of the substance Withdrawal, as manifested by either of the following: • The characteristic withdrawal syndrome for the substance, or • The same (or closely related) substance is taken to relieve or avoid withdrawal symptoms The substance is often taken in larger amounts or over a longer period than was intended 54 DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Dependence • There is a persistent desire or unsuccessful efforts to cut down or control substance use • A great deal of time is spent in activities necessary to obtain the substance, use the substance, or recover from its effects • Important social, occupational, or recreational activities are given up or reduced because of substance use • The substance use is continued despite knowledge of having a persistent or recurrent physical or psychological problem that is likely to have been caused or exacerbated by the substance 55 Pharmacological Treatments for Opioid Dependence • Short-Term: –Medical Withdrawal (Detoxification) • Opioid and non-opioid • Long-Term –Opioid antagonist –Opioid agonist or partial agonist 56 Opioid Detoxification - Efficacy • 1988, Ball: methadone tapered, but 82% relapsed within 12 months –45% in first 3 months • Minimal follow-up data for ultra-rapid detox • Overall, HIGH RELAPSE RATE for medical withdrawal procedures • Risk of overdose 57 Detoxification Using Opioids • Stabilize on methadone (e.g.: 40 mg/d) and taper • Stabilize on buprenorphine (variable doses have been reported to be effective) and taper – May have less withdrawal – Short vs. prolonged taper 58 Non-Opioid Detoxification • Clonidine or Lofexidine (not available U.S.) • Alpha-2 adrenergic agonists suppress increased noradrenergic activity from locus ceruleus caused by withdrawal of opioid • Clonidine – FDA approved for hypertension; limiting side effect is hypotension – Helps autonomic symptoms – Reduces withdrawal symptoms better than placebo – Most commonly used non-opioid approach over past 20 years • Sedation, dry mouth, hypotension • Sometimes accelerated with naltrexone 59 Ultra-Rapid Opioid Withdrawal • Deep sedation and administer opioid antagonists to provoke W/D – Inpatient advised • Manage emergent symptoms with: – Clonidine – Benzodiazepines – Antiemetics – Antidiarrheals • W/D reportedly resolved in 2-3 days with patient on full dose of antagonist (naltrexone) if patient completes treatment. Withdrawal has been reported 1 week out from procedure. High drop-out rate • Risk of SAEs: aspiration pneumonia, renal failure 60 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy Naltrexone (antagonist therapy) Why antagonist therapy? • • • • • • • • Block effects of a dose of opiate Prevent impulsive use of drug Relapse rates high (90%) following detoxification with no medication treatment Dose (oral): 50 mg daily, 100 mg every 2 days, 150 mg every third day Blocks agonist effects Side effects: hepatotoxicity, monitor liver function tests every 3 months Biggest issue is lack of compliance –works well in motivated patients Injectable naltrexone not currently approved for opioid dependence, but likely to also be effective 61 Long-Acting Opioid Treatment Options • Methadone – Schedule II – Highly regulated – Narcotic Treatment Program settings – Approved for pregnancy • LAAM (l-alpha acetyl methadol) – taken off market after problems with arrhythmias • Buprenorphine – Schedule III – Can be prescribed from physician offices – Safer in overdose 62 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy: Agonist Treatment What is agonist therapy? Use of a long acting medication in the same class as the abused drug (once daily dosing) • Prevention of Withdrawal Syndrome • Induction of Tolerance – What agonist therapy is not: • Substitution of “one addiction for another” Who is appropriate for opioid agonist therapy? • > 18 years (for methadone ; exceptions for 16-17 y.o. with parental consent and special methadone treatment programs) • Greater than 1 year of opioid dependence • Medical compromise • Infectious disease • Pregnant women 63 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy Determine opiate dependence • • • • • History (including previous records) Signs of dependence (withdrawal symptoms, tracks) Urine toxicology Naloxone challenge can be given if unsure of opioid dependence Prior to starting methadone: ECG: determine if pre-existing prolonged QT interval, ECG after 30 days to compare to baseline; methadone prolongs QT in approx. 2%; 500 msec or greater—reduce dose *Risk appears greater with doses over 100 mg/d 64 Methadone Dosing • Once daily • Start low, go slow • Look for signs of withdrawal prior to Dose 1 • Regulation:1st dose <30 mg; 1st day NTE 40 mg; for person with low tolerance: 10-15 mg Day 1 • If no evidence of opiate withdrawal; given no more than 10-15 mg Day 1 • Usual starting dose 20-30 mg • Watch in clinic after first dose approximately 2 h • Dose increases: every 5-7 days • If in withdrawal at peak; increase dose by 5-10 mg • If comfortable at peak; maintain dose • If intoxicated at peak; reduce next day dose by 5-10 mg and evaluate at time of peak daily to determine if intoxication continues/increases 65 Methadone Dosing • Target range 60-100 mg – Stop withdrawal, avoid sedation/euphoria – Doses should be individualized but higher doses generally more effective • Beware accumulation in first 5-10 days; do not make rapid dose changes • Methadone 40 mg will block withdrawal in everyone—won’t address craving, but will block withdrawal; therefore no need to rapidly increase the dose 66 Methadone Side Effects • Minimal sedation once tolerance achieved • Constipation - talk to patients about a bowel program • Increased Appetite/Weight Gain • Lowered Libido; May decrease gonadal hormone levels • Exhaustively studied in all other organ systems with no evidence of harm with long-term use 67 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy Methadone Benefits: • Lifestyle stabilization • Improved health and nutritional status • Decrease in criminal behavior • Employment • Decrease in injection drug use/shared needles 68 Drug Interactions: Methadone Decreased methadone concentrations: • Pentazocine • Phenytoin • Carbamazepine • Rifampin • Efavirenz • Nevirapine • Lopinavir (Kaletra) • Opiate withdrawal syndrome • Increased methadone concentrations: • Ciprofloxacin • Fluvoxamine • Drugs that inhibit 2D6, 3A4, 2B6 (some SSRIs) • Or Discontinuation of inducing drugs • Cognitive impairment • Respiratory depression • QTc prolongation; Torsade de Pointes 69 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy Buprenorphine • • • • • • Partial agonist Binds opioid receptors; slow to dissociate Dosing may be daily, every other day or three times weekly Average dose 8/2-16/4 mg daily Little effect on respiration or cardiovascular responses at high doses Induct upon observation of withdrawal symptoms 70 Opioid Dependence Maintenance Therapy Buprenorphine • • • • • • • Mild withdrawal syndrome Maintenance form: buprenorphine/naloxone combination; except pregnant women: use mono-formulation Primary care physicians are expected to be providers of this treatment as well as addiction specialists Abuse by injection may be problem Deaths reported when buprenorphine injected with BZDs Drug Interactions: Atazanavir/ritonavir: increases buprenorphine concentrations; rifampin: decreases buprenorphine concentrations; opiate withdrawal possible Buprenorphine certification (CSAT/DEA) required to prescribe 71 Buprenorphine – methadone: treatment retention 100 90 80 Percent 70 60 50 40 30 Buprenorphine 20 Methadone 10 0 1 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Week (Strain et al., 1994) Buprenorphine vs. Withdrawal and Drug-Free Treatment for Heroin Dependence Kakko, Lancet 2003 Remaining in treatment 72 20 15 4 Subjects in Control Group Died 10 5 0 Detoxification Maintenance 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 Treatment duration (days) 73 Zubieta et al., 2000 74 Opioid Dependence: Additional Treatment Components • Psychosocial Services – Individual and group therapy – Family therapy – 12 Step – Higher psychiatric severity patients more responsive to increased services • Contingency treatments very useful – E.g.: Take-home medication 75 Opioid Dependence: Additional Treatment Components • Opioids detected in blood, urine, saliva, and hair • Random Urine Toxicology Screening: Gold standard • Heroin is excreted in urine as morphine • 6-monoacetyl morphine (6-MAM) detected for 12 hours – evidence of recent heroin use • Routine screens may not detect meperidine, oxycodone, fentanyl, tramadol, buprenorphine • Poppy seeds contain trace amounts of codeine and morphine. Even small amounts of poppy seeds can give positive morphine in urine 76 Opioid Replacement Therapy In Pregnancy and in the Neonatal Period • Methadone maintenance is considered the gold standard and strongly advised – Removes mother from drug-using environment – More likely to get prenatal obstetrical care – Reduces obstetrical complications – Improves maternal/fetal nutrition – Increases birth weight • Need structure and psychosocial support • Opioids not shown to be teratogenic 77 Opioid Dependence and Pregnancy • Methadone Dosing during Pregnancy – High enough dose to stop use and block craving – Detoxification safest weeks 14-32 – Withdrawal may precipitate miscarriage in 1st trimester or premature labor in 3rd – Methadone: may need split dose or higher dose as pregnancy progresses – Convert buprenorphine/naloxone to buprenorphine if woman wants to continue buprenorphine treatment • Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome often occurs (in up to 90% and 50% will need treatment): – Irritability, fever, diarrhea, hyperreflexia, seizure – Treatment: Tincture of opium 78 Opioid Dependence and Pregnancy • NAS in buprenorphine-maintained women: offspring show signs of NAS earlier and symptoms milder than for methadone • Infants of methadone maintained women more likely to experience NAS than for buprenophine maintained women (78% vs. 40% with 53% vs 15% requiring treatment) • Buprenorphine: higher birth weights, fewer hospital days • Methadone and buprenorphine are excreted into breastmilk • Breastfeeding should be encouraged unless there are other conditions that would be a contraindication • Methadone in breast milk may help with NAS • Buprenorphine in breast milk not well absorbed; not likely to help with NAS 79 HIV and Opioid Dependence • Opioid replacement therapy obvious harm reduction – Reduced high risk behavior: reduced needle use, less chaotic life style • Treatment of HIV pain may become issue: neuropathy: anticonvulsants, avoid CBZ • Buprenorphine interactions with antiretroviral medications have not been clinically significant, except for significant increase in buprenorphine and metabolite with atazanavir/ritonovir, may be associated with sedation, possibly cognitive impairment See PCSSmentor.org Guideline on Opioid Therapies, HIV disease, and Drug Interactions by McCance-Katz 80 Opioid Dependence and Acute Pain • Acute pain in methadone patients – Usual methadone dose will not provide analgesia – Increasing methadone dose acts too slowly – Give regular dose of methadone for addiction plus short-acting medication for pain • Acute pain in buprenorphine patients • Blocks most mu agonists - may depend on dose • Challenge to provide adequate analgesia • Consider non opioid alternatives first line • For severe pain: regional anesthetic, high potency opioid such as fentanyl, or switching to full agonist and then re-induce when pain condition stops • Watch for relapse risk. Use short term prescriptions and coordination of care 81 Opioid Dependence and Chronic Pain Limited evidence of usefulness of long term opioid therapy for chronic, non-malignant pain • Treatment Agreement /Informed Consent (documentation of risk/benefit) advised • Treatment Agreement to stipulate: – One physician/one pharmacy – UDS when requested – Agreement to return for pill count when asked to do so – Medication Levels – Number/frequency of all refills – Reason for discontinuation (violation of agreement, misuse of medication, abuse of other substances) • Chronic pain with opioid addiction may do better with methadone maintenance 82 Opioid Dependence and Adolescents • Increasing problem, but limited data • Experiment with prescription analgesics but may progress to heroin • Usual treatment is non-pharmacologic following medical withdrawal • Office buprenorphine may be better than methadone clinic • Extended medication-assisted (buprenorphine/naloxone) treatment shown to be better than detoxification Woody, G et al. JAMA 2008; 300(17):2003-2011 83 Conclusions • Opioid addiction is a growing problem in the US mainly due to large increases in prescription opioid dependence • Chronic opioid abuse produces physical dependence –Medication treatment needed: • Medical withdrawal (but not usually best treatment if addiction has been present for extended period or patient has failed previous detoxification attempts) • Maintenance therapy (for as long as patient benefits and wishes to continue • Psychosocial treatments are necessary with medication treatments 84 Patient Assessment & Selection 85 Commonly Abused Opioids Diacetylmorphine (Heroin) Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) Oxycodone (OxyContin, Percodan, Percocet, Tylox) Meperidine (Demerol) Hydrocodone (Lortab, Vicodin) 86 Commonly Abused Opioids (continued) Morphine (MS Contin, Oramorph) Fentanyl (Sublimaze) Propoxyphene (Darvon) Methadone (Dolophine) Codeine Opium 87 Commonly Abused Opioids Opioids are abused by all routes of administration including oral, inhalation, smoking, and injection. Heroin is most commonly used intravenously, but can be inhaled, smoked, or injected intramuscularly or subcutaneously. Opium is usually smoked. The pharmaceutical opioids are usually taken orally (but may also be injected). 88 Evaluation of the Patient Attitude of the interviewer: Matter-of-fact, non-judgmental, curious, respectful Acknowledge that some information is difficult to talk about Assure the patient that you are asking because of concern for his/her health Try to avoid using labels or diagnoses Follow up on “qualified” answers Assure confidentiality (as long as no risk of harm to self/others) 89 Evaluation of the Patient History of drug use: Start with first substance used Ask about all substances (including licit and illicit) Determine changes in use over time (frequency, amount, route) Assess recent use (past several weeks) No slang Try to get collateral information when possible 90 Evaluation of the Patient Tolerance, intoxication, withdrawal: Explain what is meant by tolerance Determine the patient’s tolerance and withdrawal history Ask about complications associated with intoxication and withdrawal 91 Evaluation of the Patient Relapse/attempts to abstain: Determine if the patient has tried to abstain, and what happened Ask what was the longest period of abstinence Identify triggers to relapse 92 Evaluation of the Patient Consequences of use: Determine current and past levels of functioning Identify consequences to drug/alcohol use (such as): Medical Family Employment Legal Other 93 Evaluation of the Patient Craving and control: Ask if the patient experiences craving to use and/or a compulsive need to use Determine if patient sees loss of control over use 94 Evaluation of the Patient Substance use disorder treatment history: Treatment episodes (detoxifications – medically and non-medically supervised; maintenance; counseling) Response following each treatment intervention Attendance at 12 step (or other self-help) meetings 95 Evaluation of the Patient Psychiatric history: Inpatient and/or outpatient treatment episodes Untreated episodes of psychiatric illness Treatment with psychiatric medications Ask about treatment delivered by nonpsychiatrists (e.g., an antidepressant prescribed by a family physician, psychotherapy provided by a psychologist) 96 Evaluation of the Patient Medical history: Past and/or present: Significant medical illnesses Hospitalizations Operations Accidents/injuries Drug allergies Current medications: Prescription and OTC 97 Evaluating the Patient Physical examination: Needle marks Sclerosed veins (track marks) Cellulitis/Abscess Evidence of hepatitis or HIV 98 Evaluation of the Patient Personal (or social) history: Birth and early development Education Employment and occupations Marital status and children Living situation Legal status Family history of psychiatric or substance use d/o 99 DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Dependence A maladaptive pattern of substance use, leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by three (or more) of the following, occurring at any time in the same 12-month period: 1. Tolerance, as defined by either of the following: a) a need for markedly increased amounts of the substance to achieve intoxication or the desired effect, or b) markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same amount of the substance 2. Withdrawal, as manifested by either of the following: a) the characteristic withdrawal syndrome for the substance, or b) the same (or closely related) substance is taken to relieve or avoid withdrawal symptoms 100 DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Dependence 3. The substance is often taken in larger amounts or over a longer period than was intended 4. There is a persistent desire or unsuccessful efforts to cut down or control substance use 5. A great deal of time is spent in activities necessary to obtain the substance, use the substance, or recover from its effects 6. Important social, occupational, or recreational activities are given up or reduced because of substance use 7. The substance use is continued despite knowledge of having a persistent or recurrent physical or psychological problem that is likely to have been caused or exacerbated by the substance 101 DSM-IV Criteria for Opioid Dependence Diagnosis can include modifiers indicating if the patient is physiologically (or physically) dependent on the substance (i.e., has evidence of tolerance or withdrawal), is in various stages of remission, is on agonist treatment, or is in a controlled environment 102 Opioid Physical Dependence Important Clinical Features of Opioid Physical Dependence Physical dependence can occur after relatively short periods of daily use (e.g., 2 weeks) Opioid physical dependence is characterized by regular administration to avoid withdrawal 103 Other Substance Use, Abuse, Dependence Reason to assess for other substance use Co-morbid substance use disorders are common in patients with opioid dependence Important to assess when initially evaluating the patient, as their presence/absence can guide whether or not office-based treatment is appropriate 104 Types of Other Substance Use Alcohol Sedative-hypnotics Cocaine Methamphetamine Cannabis PCP Nicotine “Club Drugs” (Ecstasy, Ketamine, GHB) Non-controlled (clonidine, etc.) 105 Detecting Other Substance Use Self-report of use, reason Multiple trauma Hospitalization Infections Body fluid testing (e.g., urine) 106 Detecting Other Substance Use Examination: Track or puncture marks Infection (abscesses, cellulitis) Constricted pupils (opioid intoxication) Dilated pupils (opioid withdrawal) Confusion, disorientation 107 Detecting Other Substance Use Laboratory methods: - Blood - Urine testing for presence of drugs of abuse - Hair, saliva, sweat – limited and primarily experimental liver function test abnormalities elevated mean corpuscular volume on CBC 108 Types of Other Substance Use In a study of opioid dependent people (n=716) seeking methadone treatment : lifetime cocaine dependence 64.7 cocaine abuse 12.4 cannabis dependence 50.8 cannabis abuse 14.9 alcohol dependence 50.3 alcohol abuse 13.0 sedative-hypnotic abuse 13.0 current 40.2 3.4 16.2 2.4 24.7 1.8 1.5 109 Co-morbid Medical Disorders Important to assess for such, since (like other comorbid disorders), their presence can influence the decision to provide office-based treatment of opioid dependence Advantage: One-stop treatment for opioid dependence and other medical needs Disadvantage: Management of co-morbidity can be complicated and require specialized services Separate section on this topic 110 Co-morbid Psychiatric Disorders Most common to find depression, anxiety and personality disorders Presence of comorbid mental illness can influence the decision to provide office-based treatment of opioid dependence Poor BUP candidates: Active psychosis Suicidal or homicidal Cognitive impairment or dementia 111 Psychiatric Assessment – Induced, Independent Distinguish between substance-induced disorders versus independent psychiatric disorders Substance-induced: Disorders related to the use of psychoactive substance; typically resolve with sustained abstinence Independent: Disorders which present during times of abstinence; symptoms not related to use of psychoactive substance 112 Psychiatric Assessment – Induced Substance-induced disorders - Patient’s history suggests symptoms occur only when he/she is actively abusing drugs - Symptoms are related to intoxication, withdrawal, or other aspects of active use - Onset and/or offset of symptoms are preceded by increases or decreases in substance use - Goal should be sustained abstinence followed by re-evaluation of symptoms 113 Psychiatric Assessment – Independent Independent disorders - Patient’s history suggests symptoms occur during periods when not using or abusing psychoactive substances, or during periods of steady use without change in amount or type - May also find a family history of the disorder Goal of substance abuse treatment should still be cessation of substance use, but treatment may also address psychiatric symptoms simultaneously 114 Psychiatric Assessment – Areas to Assess Depressive and anxiety symptoms Common for opioid dependent patients to report high rates of depressive and anxiety symptoms at time of treatment entry Symptoms often resolve within few days after entry (i.e., substance-induced) 115 Treatment Principles – Depression, Anxiety Patients with opioid dependence and independent depressive and anxiety disorders can respond to medication treatments for depressive and anxiety conditions (similar to the general population) Generally avoid use of benzodiazepines, since risk of abuse and possibility of interactions with buprenorphine 116 Treatment Principles – Depression, Anxiety Don’t overlook importance of nonpharmacological approaches to treatment (e.g., cognitive-behavioral therapy), especially in patients with mild/moderate anxiety 117 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Consider these factors 1. Does the patient have a diagnosis of opioid dependence? 2. Is the patient interested in office-based buprenorphine treatment? 3. Does the patient understand the risks/benefits of buprenorphine treatment? 118 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Consider these factors (continued) 4. Is he/she expected to be reasonably compliant? 5. Is he/she expected to follow safety procedures? 6. Is the patient psychiatrically stable? 119 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Consider these factors (continued) 7. Are the psychosocial circumstances of the patient stable and supportive? 8. Can the office provide the needed resources for the patient (either on or off site)? 9. Is the patient taking other medications that may interact with buprenorphine (naltrexone, benzodiazepines, other sedative-hypnotics? 120 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Patient is less likely to be an appropriate candidate for office-based buprenorphine treatment 1. Dependence on high doses of benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other CNS depressants 2. Significant psychiatric co-morbidity 3. Active or chronic suicidal or homicidal ideation or attempts 121 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Patient is less likely to be an appropriate candidate for office-based buprenorphine treatment (continued) 4. Multiple previous treatments and relapses 5. Non-response to buprenorphine in the past 6. High level of physical dependence (risk for severe withdrawal) 7. Patient needs cannot be addressed with existing office-based resources 122 Appropriateness for Office-based Buprenorphine Patient is less likely to be an appropriate candidate for office-based buprenorphine treatment (continued) 8. Pregnancy 9. Current medical condition(s) that could complicate treatment 10. Poor support systems 123 Matching the Treatment Plan and Resources The decision to provide treatment from the office should be based upon the suitability of the patient for this level of service and the availability of other resources in case complications in the office-based treatment arise. 124 Summary Determination of suitability for office-based buprenorphine treatment begins with the presence of a diagnosis of opioid dependence In addition, many patient factors (such as comorbid conditions) will guide the decision of whether or not to treat in the office with buprenorphine Final decision is whether the patient’s needs can be addressed by the resources available through the office 125 Clinical Use of Buprenorphine: Induction Stabilization Maintenance Withdrawal 126 Buprenorphine Induction Overview: Goal of induction To find the dose of buprenorphine at which the patient: - discontinues or markedly reduces use of other opioids, - experiences no cravings, - has no opioid withdrawal symptoms, and - has minimal/no side effects 127 Buprenorphine Induction Overview: Practical Issues with Induction Buprenorphine/naloxone supply options: - keep a supply of medication in the office for induction administration - have the patient fill a prescription for the induction doses and bring the medication to the office where it will be administered 128 Buprenorphine Induction Office medication supply: • physician must keep the records required by federal and state law for maintaining supplies of controlled substances for administration or dispensing • Records may be audited by the DEA 129 Buprenorphine Induction: Giving a Prescription for the Induction Doses Prescription for the first/second day’s doses (e.g.: eight 2/0.5 mg tablets and one 8/2 mg tablet): Day 1: 2 doses of two 2/0.5 mg tablets Day 2: Depending on symptoms: up to 16/4 mg (up to four 2/0.5 mg tablets and 1 8/2 mg tablet) After induction Day 2 write scrip for daily dose until next visit • Risk that a patient might not return with the filled prescription 130 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids No opioid use for 12-24 hours (must be in mildmoderate withdrawal at time of first buprenorphine dose) Can use an opioid withdrawal scale to assess severity of withdrawal when the patient arrives at the office and to track the patient's response to first day’s dose For withdrawal scales, see Appendix B of CSAT Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Buprenorphine in the Treatment of Opioid Addiction 2004 CLINICAL OPIATE WITHDRAWAL SCALE (COWS) Buprenorphine/naloxone induction: Enter scores at time zero, 1-2 h after first dose, and at additional times that medication is given over the induction period. 131 DATE: Resting Pulse Rate: (record beats per minute) Measured after patient is sitting/lying for one minute. 0 pulse rate 80 or below 1 pulse rate 81-100 2 pulse rate 101-120 4 pulse rate greater than 120 Sweating: Over past ½ hour not accounted for by room temperature or patient activity. 0 no report of chills of flushing 1 one subjective report of chills or flushing 2 flushed or observable moistness on face 3 beads of sweat on brow or face 4 sweat streaming off face Restlessness: Observation during assessment. 0 able to sit still 1 report difficulty sitting still, but is able to do so 3 frequent shifting or extraneous movements of legs/arms 5 unable to sit still for more than a few seconds Pupil Size: 0 pupils pinned or normal size for room light 1 pupils possibly larger than normal for room light 2 pupils moderately dilated 5 pupils so dilated that only rim of the iris is visible Bone or Joint aches: If patient was having pains previously, only the additional component attributed to opiate withdrawal is scored. 0 not present 1 mild diffuse discomfort 2 patient reports severe diffuse aching of joints/muscles 4 patient is rubbing joints or muscles and is unable to sit still because of discomfort TIME: TIME: TIME: 132 Runny nose or tearing: Not accounted for by cold symptoms or allergies. 0 not present 1 nasal stuffiness or unusually moist eyes 2 nose running or tearing 4 nose constantly running or tears streaming down cheeks GI Upset: Over last ½ hour 0 no GI symptoms 1 stomach cramps 2 nausea or loose stools vomiting or diarrhea 5 multiple episodes of diarrhea or vomiting Tremor: Observation of outstretched hands 0 no tremor 1 tremor can be felt, but not observed observable 4 gross tremor or muscle twitching 3 2 slight tremor Yawning: Observation during assessment 0 no yawning 1 yawning once or twice during assessment 2 yawning three or more times during assessment 4 yawning several times/minute Anxiety or Irritability 0 none 1 patient reports increasing irritability or anxiousness 2 patient obviously irritable, anxious 4 patient so irritable or anxious that participation in the assessment is difficult Gooseflesh skin 0 skin is smooth 3 piloerection of skin can be felt or hairs standing up on arms 5 prominent piloerection Total Score Observers Initials Dose of Buprenorphine/naloxone given 133 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids - If patient is not in opioid withdrawal : - assess time of last use - consider either having him/her return another day or wait in the office until evidence of withdrawal is seen 134 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids First dose: 2/0.5-4/1 mg sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone Monitor in office for 1-2 hours after first dose The length of time the patient is monitored in the office can vary depending upon the clinician’s familiarity with the patient, and the clinician’s familiarity with using buprenorphine. 135 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids If opioid withdrawal appears (worsens) shortly after the first dose: consider precipitated withdrawal Greatest severity of buprenorphine-related precipitated withdrawal occurs in the first few hours (1-4) after a dose, with a decreasing (but still present) set of withdrawal symptoms over subsequent hours 136 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 If a patient has precipitated withdrawal consider: -giving another dose of buprenorphine attempting to provide enough agonist effect from buprenorphine to suppress the withdrawal or -stopping the induction, provide symptomatic treatments for the withdrawal symptoms, and have patient return the next day. 137 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids - Can re-dose if needed (every 1-4 hours, if opioid withdrawal subsides then reappears) - Maximum first day dose of 8/2 mg buprenorphine/naloxone 138 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on short-acting opioids Can initiate therapy starting with buprenorphine/naloxone combination tablets 139 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on long-acting opioids Patients should have dose decreases until they are down to ≤40 mg/d of methadone or the equivalent Begin induction 24- 48 hours after last dose of methadone: Key is to see objective withdrawal signs Give no further methadone once buprenorphine induction is started; confirm with MMP/prescriber 140 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 1 Patients dependent on long-acting opioids Use similar procedure as that described for short acting opioids Expect total first day dose of up to 8/2 mg sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone 141 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 2+ Patients dependent on short- or long-acting opioids After the first day of buprenorphine induction for patients who are dependent on either short-acting or long acting opioids, the procedures are essentially the same 142 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 2 Patients dependent on short- or long-acting opioids On Day 2, have the patient return to the office, if possible, for assessment and Day 2 dosing Adjust dose according to the patient’s experiences on first day 143 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 2 Patients dependent on short- or long-acting opioids Adjust dose according to the patient’s experiences: lower dose if patient was over-medicated at end of Day 1 (rare) higher dose if there were withdrawal symptoms after leaving your office and/or if patient used opioid agonists Don’t assume abstinence after the first day’s dose 144 Buprenorphine Induction – Day 2 Patients dependent on short- or long-acting opioids Continue adjusting dose by 2/0.5-4/1 mg increments until an initial target dose of 12/3-16/4 mg is achieved for the second day Increasing dose after achieving 12/3-16/4 dose should be following steady state which can take about 10 days; 24/6 mg/d is max. daily recommended dose according to FDA approved package insert Note: 16/4 is most used maintenance dose; rarely are much higher doses needed 145 Buprenorphine Induction Patients not physically dependent on opioids Examples: - A patient at high risk for relapse to opioid use, such as a person who had been incarcerated and was recently released - A patient with history of opioid dependence documented in medical records who is at high risk for relapse 146 Buprenorphine Induction Patients not physically dependent on opioids First dose: 2/0.5 mg sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone Monitor in office after first dose The length of time the patient is monitored in the office can vary depending upon the clinician’s familiarity with the patient, and the clinician’s familiarity with using buprenorphine Gradually increase dose over days; increase in increments of 2/0.5 mg 147 Buprenorphine Induction Conversion to buprenorphine/naloxone In virtually all circumstances, induction can (and should) begin with the combination tablet For pregnant patients for whom buprenorphine is being used, induction and maintenance should be with monotherapy tablets If induction was begun with monotherapy tablets, switch to combination tablets after 23 days 148 Buprenorphine Stabilization / Maintenance Stabilize on once daily sublingual dose (no divided doses) Expect average daily dose will be somewhere between 8/2 and 16/4 mg of buprenorphine/naloxone Higher daily doses more tolerable if tablets are taken sequentially rather than all at once 149 Buprenorphine Stabilization / Maintenance Most patients will be dosed daily Alternative: Once stabilized, the patient can be shifted to alternate day dosing (e.g., every other day, MWF, or every third day, MTh) (for IOP/monitored dosing) Increase dose on dosing day by amount not received on other days (e.g., if on 8 mg/d, switch to 16/16/24 mg MWF) (note: daily dosing is recommended, alternate day dosing may be useful for those attending treatment programs where medication is administered or for those not wanting to take medication daily) 150 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine WITHDRAWAL IN </= 3 DAYS (rapid) Withdrawal over 4 to 30 days (moderate period) Withdrawal over more than 30 days (long term) 151 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal in </= 3 days (rapid) Reports show buprenorphine suppresses opioid withdrawal signs and symptoms (better than clonidine) 152 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal in </= 3 days Using sublingual tablets: First day: 8/2-12/3 mg sl Second day: 8/2-12/3 mg sl Third (last) day: 6/1.5 mg sl 153 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal in </= 3 days Buprenorphine is effective in suppressing opioid withdrawal symptoms Long-term efficacy is not known, and is likely limited Studies of other withdrawal modalities have shown that such brief withdrawal periods are unlikely to result in long-term abstinence 154 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal in </= 3 days (rapid) WITHDRAWAL OVER 4 TO 30 DAYS (MODERATE PERIOD) Withdrawal over more than 30 days (long term) 155 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal over 4-30 days Although there are few studies of buprenorphine for such time periods, buprenorphine has been shown more effective than clonidine over this time period However, outcomes not as good as for longer periods of buprenorphine withdrawal treatment (longer than 30 days) 156 CTN Buprenorphine Withdrawal Protocol Study Day Buprenorphine-Naloxone Dose (mg) 1 4 + additional 4 as needed 2 8 3 16 4 14 5 12 6 10 7 8 8 6 9 6 10 4 11 4 12 2 13 2 157 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal in </= 3 days (rapid) Withdrawal over 4 to 30 days (moderate period) WITHDRAWAL OVER MORE THAN 30 DAYS (LONG TERM) 158 Withdrawal Using Buprenorphine Withdrawal over >30 day (long term) Not a well studied topic Literature on opioid withdrawal can provide guidance; suggests longer, gradual withdrawal more effective than shorter withdrawal Tapering schedule: 50% daily to 8 mg; then slower taper depending on clinical judgment Many iterations of above are effective Medical withdrawal from buprenorphine associated with much milder withdrawal than for full mu agonists 159 Summary Buprenorphine is effective and safe when used for maintenance treatment of opioid dependence Monitor patient during induction with buprenorphine; best to keep patient at office after first dose to gauge effectiveness and tolerability Efficacy of buprenorphine in management of withdrawal not well determined, but withdrawal from buprenorphine may be milder than withdrawal from other opioids; probably best if conducted over longer periods 160 Clinical Management 161 Problem Behaviors importance of preparation and anticipation, so that the clinician is not making sudden decisions about how to handle these situations. Occur rarely, especially in stable patients, and can occur in patients being treatment for any condition (not only opioid dependence) 162 Prior to the Initial Visit In a phone call with the patient: Briefly discuss your office’s general treatment philosophy Determine insurance coverage Find out the pharmacy he/she uses Explain cost of medication (if uninsured), urine testing, etc. Explain amount of time that may be required for the initial visit 163 The Initial Visit with the Patient Goal: Establish a relationship in which patient can be open and confident that he/she can report difficulties Be prepared for defensiveness Address concerns about disclosure, confidentiality 164 The Initial Visit with the Patient Major Task to be Completed: Part of the initial visit is to review rules and expectations with the patient, making sure that the patient understands them before buprenorphine treatment is initiated Part of the patient assessment is to form a judgment about whether the person can comply with the rules – whether the medication will be taken as prescribed and will be kept safe. 165 Information for the Patient Provide written information to your patients: Information about buprenorphine (e.g., brochure) Copy of rules/expectations to be signed by patient Physician’s name, address, phone number, office hours Emergency contact information Payment procedures 166 Rules and Expectations for the Patient General principles for rules and expectations Provide clear guidelines and expectations for patients Must clearly outline consequences of infractions Lay the groundwork for confronting patients about problematic behaviors Must be clear to all involved with patient’s care Must be flexible, when necessary If you are uncertain, ask a colleague and/or lawyer 167 Rules and Expectations For Staff Address staff concerns and preconceptions Help staff understand relevant issues before the patient’s first visit As a group, determine reasonable and realistic consequences of unacceptable behavior Assure that everyone is on board 168 Rules and Expectations for Office Staff Inform your staff members about: How to maintain patient confidentiality Treatment philosophy (particularly the goals of treatment) Providing medication (particularly storage and administration procedures) Role of non-pharmacological treatments 169 Examples of Rules and Expectations for the Patient Prescription procedures How many day’s medication is provided in a prescription How you respond to lost buprenorphine prescriptions How to store the medication safely Need for full and prompt disclosure of use of nonprescriptive psychoactive substances Urine testing procedures Illicit drug, problematic alcohol use If the patient cancels an appointment 170 Rules and Expectations for the Patient Conveying rules and expectations Do both in writing and verbally Give the patient a copy Convey that failure to comply will result in consequences Review periodically (as needed) with patients Review (and revise as needed) periodically with staff 171 Boundaries in Patient-Staff Interactions Boundaries are important for the physician and the physician’s office staff to consider Maintain professional relationship Acknowledge away from office only if patient does so Careful avoidance of excessive familiarity with patients Do not accept gifts from patients 172 Problematic Behavior: General Principles Preparation and anticipation are crucial, as are consistency and flexibility in responding to problems Evaluate the problem Consider the length of time in treatment; history of patient’s treatment success, patient’s motivation, options available Be aware of impact on staff and other patients if it is perceived that there is no consequence to the patient 173 General Principles Consider a range of options tailored to the specific problematic behaviors: Increased office visits, to physician and/or counselor Referral to more intensive level of service such as counseling or intensive outpatient program Change in dosing schedule Transfer to opioid treatment program (OTP) 174 General Principles Negotiating skills and problematic behaviors Negotiate from strength Defend the integrity of treatment Consider violations in the context of the patient’s condition and situation Be aware of your own feelings 175 Examples of Problematic Behaviors Intoxication at the office Loitering Diversion of medication Drug dealing Aggressive acts Such actions occur rarely – but if they do occur, it is important that the office be prepared to respond in a therapeutically appropriate and consistent way 176 Office-Based Practice Necessary Resources: Urine Testing Why conduct urine drug testing? Drug abuse a chronic disorder – relapse can occur Patients may deny or minimize use Urine testing an integral part of on-going evaluation and treatment planning Purpose is not to punish the patient, but to provide a therapeutically appropriate response 177 Office-Based Practice Necessary Resources: Urine Testing Capacity to get valid urine test results Collection procedures (in office or off-site) If off-site testing, system for shipment of specimens Procedures if you will do on-site testing Sending specimens out for testing versus quick test in office Random versus scheduled collection Observed versus non-observed 178 Urine Testing Different laboratory methods for drug screening and testing Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC) positive result on this screening test should be confirmed using another method Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry Enzyme immunoassay (EIA) 179 Urine Testing Detection time limits for drugs of abuse using urine testing Amphetamine/methamphetamine: 2-4 days Benzodiazepines: up to 30 days Cocaine: 1-3 days Heroin/morphine: 1-3 days; Methadone: 2-4 days Marijuana: chronic use, up to 30 days; occasional use, 1-3 days Alcohol: 2-4 days 180Office-Based Practice Necessary Resources: Medication Storage Medication availability, security and storage - You can keep buprenorphine in the office and administer it to patients if you comply with the DEA (and any State) rules for keeping and administering a supply of it - Check with your state on dispensing laws - These strict requirements may be a disincentive to keeping buprenorphine in the office - May be easier to write a prescription for first doses of buprenorphine (for induction) - In advance, confirm that a local pharmacy stocks buprenorphine Medication may be delivered to your office; or patient can fill prescription and bring it to your office for initial supervised dosing 181 Office-Based Practice Necessary Resources Coverage Be realistic – one person providing 24 hour coverage, 7 days per week is not sustainable Covering physician should be knowledge and experienced in using buprenorphine, and be familiar with your office policies and procedures; if will prescribe buprenorphine, then needs a DATA waiver 182 Office-Based Practice Necessary Resources Referral resources - Different levels of substance abuse treatment services: - group counseling programs - methadone treatment programs - partial hospitalization - intensive outpatient - Psychiatric or medical services - Self-help groups such as AA, NA in your community 183 Financial Issues Financing of methadone treatment To understand potential payment sources, it may be helpful to look at how payment for methadone treatment is provided. There are several different payment sources: Out-of-pocket payments by the patient The patient’s insurance providing reimbursement Medicaid (in some states) State treatment grants (in some states) 184Financial Issues Fees for office-based treatment Consider these services, among others, when determining the fees: Routine office visits of varying lengths Record-keeping and billing Medications Counseling Urine testing Physical examinations Laboratory work 185 Financial Issues Fees for office-based treatment (continued) Physicians use CPT codes they are accustomed to using for outpatient ‘evaluation and management’: Outpatient new patient (99201) Outpatient consultation (99241) Outpatient: established patient revisit (99211) 186 Financial Issues Fees for office-based treatment (continued) Psychiatrists usually choose regular psychiatric CPT codes Outpatient New Patient (90801) Outpatient Consultation (99251) Outpatient Medication Management (90862) Outpatient Psychotherapy (90804) Outpatient Group Psychotherapy (90853) 187 Financial Issues Fees for office-based treatment Psychiatrists’ CPT codes are time-based Other physicians’ CPT codes are complexity-of-service based Services provided within the context of Intensive Outpatient Services can use Group Therapy codes, but most physicians will submit an MD/DO-specific charge vs. having charges wrapped into IOP charges 188 Financial Issues Determining how the patient plans to pay for treatment It is important for the office staff to determine how the patient plans to pay for treatment, and arrange to bill the patient directly or to bill a third party payer, or both. If patient has insurance, make sure buprenorphine is covered (on the formulary) 189Financial Issues Determining how the patient plans to pay for treatment Note that the patient may have insurance that covers some but not all aspects of treatment For example, an initial office visit with history and physical examination, regular office visits to monitor medications for chronic conditions, associated laboratory tests, etc., but not on-site counseling 190 Clinical Tools for Office-Based Practice See CD ROM in course materials 1. Informing patients/families 2. Office staff Intake Questionnaire 3. Releases of Information 4. Buprenorphine Treatment Agreement 5. Medical History/PE form 6. Progress Note Example 7. Billing Information 8. Ongoing Treatment: Protocol for Follow Up Appointments, Signs of Relapsive Behavior or Relapse 9. Drug Inventories (for office dispensing) 191 Summary Most patients treated in an office-based setting will be cooperative, stable Having rules helps patients and office staff prepare responses to problematic acts The physician should have options in how to respond – not every infraction should result in discharge from treatment 192 Confidentiality and Medical Record Keeping 193 Specific Federal regulations govern disclosure of a patient’s identity and treatment information, and states may have further such regulations. Title 42, Part 2, Code of Federal Regulations [42 CFR Part 2] Knowledge of these statutes is important for those providing substance abuse treatment as the rules may apply to their practice. 194 Rationale for Development of Confidentiality Statutes Specific to Those Seeking Substance Abuse Treatment The logic behind these regulations is that persons with substance abuse problems are more likely to seek and succeed at treatment if they know their need for treatment will not be disclosed unnecessarily 195 Scope of the Law Strictness of Regulations Federal confidentiality regulations more strict than most other confidentiality rules They apply whether the individual: - Seeking the information already has it - Is seeking it for judicial or administrative proceedings - Is a law enforcement or other government official - Has a subpoena or a search warrant - Is the spouse, parent, relative, employer, or friend 196 Scope of the Law Consequences of Violating or Disregarding Criminal penalty For a program, could lose license or certification Patients may sue 197 General Rules: Definitions of Terms in Statutes Patient Anyone who has applied for or received a diagnostic examination or interview, treatment, or referral for treatment at a drug or alcohol program Applicants for services are covered even if they fail to show for their initial appointment, or elect to not follow up with treatment Includes current, former, and deceased patients 198 General Rules: Definition of Terms in Statutes Programs Definition of a program: federally assisted organizations and individual practitioners (MDs, psychologists, others) Specialize in providing, in whole or in part, individualized alcohol or drug abuse diagnosis, treatment, or referral for treatment Receive Federal support or operated by gov’t 199 General Rules Disclosure Communication that directly or indirectly identifies someone as being, having been in, or having applied for substance abuse treatment Occurs when a program or practitioner: discloses patient’s record; allows an employee to testify about a patient’s treatment; allows a receptionist to confirm that a person is a patient in the program; uses identifying stationery; discloses anecdotal information 200 Disclosure: Exceptions • Internal communications • Consent • Anonymous or non-patient identifying information • Qualified service organization agreement • Crimes on premises or against personnel • Medical emergencies • Mandated reports • Research • Audit and evaluation • Court orders 201 HIPAA and Substance Abuse Treatment HIPAA: Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (1996) became effective on April 14, 2003, providing national standards for protecting health information. It is important to be aware of HIPPA for all patients in treatment (not just those with a substance abuse disorder) 202 HIPAA and Substance Abuse Treatment HIPAA shifts control of health information from providers to patients (to a great degree) Covers providers who transmit health information electronically (essentially everyone) Key feature of HIPAA is the definition of “Protected Health Information” (PHI) – individually identifiable information (e.g., name, date of birth, Social Security Number) 203 Medical Record Keeping The medical record is the ongoing narrative of a patient’s healthcare and memorializes the past history for purposes of continuity of current and future treatment. Remember: if it isn’t written down, it didn’t happen. 204 Overview to the Medical Record The medical record should document - Initial diagnosis and treatment plan information - Complete history - Physical examination results - On-going history and physical examination - Assessment of pharmacological efficacy Comparisons with initial presentation for progress or regression (with corresponding modifications, if needed, in the treatment plan) Lab tests and results Consults Compliance with treatment plan Urine and blood drug screening: Collection and results Medications prescribed Inventory and dispensing of controlled substances 205Documentation and Buprenorphine When planning to prescribe buprenorphine for opioid dependence treatment, it is important to document: - Evidence showing patient is opioid dependent (including physical signs/symptoms, urine toxicology results) - Length and severity of patient’s opioid dependence - Number, type, and intensity of previous treatments for opioid dependence - Any legal consequences to the patient because of opioid use 206 Storage of Records Must keep available for at least 2 years Can be kept at a central location (but must notify DEA) Must be kept in a locked, secure place when not in use 207 Storage of Buprenorphine • Buprenorphine must be stored in the physician’s office • Buprenorphine must be stored under locked conditions • Tracking record must be maintained that provides information on who received buprenorphine and quantity of drug dispensed 208 Summary Documentation and immaculate record keeping are extremely important – for the well being of both the patient and the physician. The record is a legal document that may be reviewed by outside agencies. 209 Medical Co-Morbidity 210 Addiction and health behavior Opioid dependence frequently associated with other medical conditions Consequences of injection drug use/shared needles Direct toxic effect of opioids and/or inert substances mixed with heroin Consequences of risky sexual behavior Lack of attention to preventive health care Need to screen for comorbid medical illness and provide treatment or make referral when needed 211 Outline for This Talk I. Hepatitis B II. Hepatitis C III. HIV/AIDS IV. Tuberculosis V. Preventive health care for opioid dependent patients VI. Summary 212 Hepatitis B Epidemiology Blood borne viral pathogen Estimated 1.25 million chronically infected in U.S. Approximately 300,000 new cases per year; 15,00030,000 chronic infection Transmission by blood borne (parenteral), sexual, or perinatal routes Approximately 50% of active injection drug users have serological evidence of prior exposure to HBV 213 Hepatitis B Clinical course Early and mild viral hepatitis manifests with symptoms of hepatic inflammation and damage with elevated serum transaminases (can rise to 10-20x normal) Chronic viral hepatitis manifests as chronic liver disease with portal hypertension and poor hepatic synthetic function 214 Acute Hepatitis B Infection with Recovery Symptoms anti-HBe HBeAg Total anti-HBc Titer 0 4 anti-HBs IgM anti-HBc HBsAg 8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 Weeks after Exposure 52 100 215 Hepatitis B Clinical course (continued) Likelihood of developing chronic infection is related to age: 80 to 90% of infants infected develop chronic disease only 2 to 10% of infected adults progress to chronic disease 216 Progression to Chronic Hepatitis B Infection Acute (6 months) Chronic (Years) HBeAg anti-HBe HBsAg Total anti-HBc Titer IgM anti-HBc 0 4 8 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 Weeks after Exposure 52 Years 217 Hepatitis B Treatment Interferon is administered subcutaneously daily three times per week, for 16 weeks Metaanalysis of 16 randomized controlled trials found loss of HBeAg and HBV DNA in 33 to 37% of interferon treated patients compared with 12 to 17% of controls Lamivudine: oral, resistance develops, seroconversion response in nearly 33% of patients after one year 218 Hepatitis B Treatment (continued) Famciclovir less effective than lamivudine and is also limited by the development of resistance Adefovir possesses added benefit of exhibiting no resistant mutations Vaccination is crucial – a three part series over 6 months 219 Hepatitis C Definition Hepatitis C (HCV) is the most common bloodborne infection in the U.S. The viral pathogen established as the major cause of hepatitis previously called nonA, nonB hepatitis 220 Hepatitis C Epidemiology: United States New infections (cases) per year: 1985 to 1989: 242,000 (42,000) 1998: 40,000 (6,500) Seroprevalence studies reveal that approximately 1.8% of the U.S. population are infected with HCV Deaths from acute liver failure are rare 221 Hepatitis C Epidemiology: United States (continued) Of the estimated 3.9 million people in the U.S. who are HCV antibody positive, 2.7 million are chronically infected with detectable RNA levels Chronic liver disease – HCV-related: 40% - 60% Deaths from HCV chronic disease/year: 8,00010,000 Most common cause (~40%) of liver transplant in U.S. 222 Hepatitis C Epidemiology (continued) HCV is more prevalent and more infectious than HIV with 170 million people infected with HCV worldwide Greater than 90% of injection drug users have antibodies to HCV In injection drug users, infection results from contact with contaminated needles, syringes, paraphernalia Blood and blood products are more infectious than saliva, vaginal secretions, or semen 223 Hepatitis C: Prevalence by Selected Groups (U.S.) Hemophilia Injecting drug users Hemodialysis STD clients Gen population adults Surgeons, PSWs Pregnant women Military personnel 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Average Percent Anti-HCV Positive 80 90 224 Hepatitis C Clinical course: Acute hepatitis C Incubation period averages 6 to 8 weeks during which time antibodies are undetectable Symptoms develop in only 25% to 35% patients: Nonspecific Jaundice in only 20% to 30% Diagnosis rarely established during acute phase 85% develop persistent infection Majority develop chronic hepatitis with persistent viremia and intermittently elevated liver function tests 225 Hepatitis C: Acute Infection with Recovery anti-HCV Symptoms +/- Titer HCV RNA ALT Normal 0 1 2 3 4 Months 5 6 1 Time after Exposure 2 3 Years 4 226 Hepatitis C Clinical course: Chronic hepatitis C Symptoms: 50% of patients report chronic fatigue and right upper quadrant abdominal discomfort Serum transaminases: Persistently elevated in 43%, intermittently elevated in 42%, normal in 15% Risk factors for disease progression include: Alcohol use Co-infection with Hepatitis B virus and/or HIV Early onset infection (<40 years old) Male sex 227 Hepatitis C: Progression to Chronic Infection anti-HCV Symptoms +/- Titer HCV RNA ALT Normal 0 1 2 3 4 Months 5 6 Time after Exposure 1 2 3 Years 4 228 30 Year Progression of Chronic Hepatitis C Acute hepatitis C >85% (10 years) Chronic hepatitis C 20% - >50% (20 years) Cirrhosis < 20% < 20% Hepatic failure HCC (30 years) 229 Hepatitis C Clinical course: HCV and HIV co-infection (continued) HIV has a significant effect on progression of liver disease in HCV-infected patients Must balance hepatotoxicity of HIV therapy with need to treat HIV in HCV-infected patients, while HIV therapy can worsen the symptoms of HCV 230 Hepatitis C Treatment: Pretreatment assessment HCV RNA: Lower viral RNA levels (viral load) appear to predict better treatment response HCV genotyping: Has impact on response to treatment 70% of HCV-infected in U.S. have genotype 1, rest are genotypes 2, 3, and 4 Genotype 1 has less favorable prognosis and decreased likelihood for treatment response – requires longer duration of therapy 231 Hepatitis C Treatment: Pretreatment assessment (continued) Liver biopsy: Provides information regarding degree of inflammation, fibrosis, or cirrhosis Rules out other causes of liver disease Sustained virological response (SVR)=absence of detectable RNA at end of treatment and 24 weeks after end of treatment Interferon plus ribavirin produced SVR=38 to 43% after 48 weeks of therapy Pegylated interferon plus ribavirin produced SVR=54-56% after 48 weeks of therapy (82% in genotypes 2 and 3, 42% in genotype 1) 232 Hepatitis C Treatment: Drug users and treatment for HCV Standard recommendation: > 6 months “clean” Arguments for not treating: poor adherence, side effects, re-infection, non-urgent treatment – but data supporting these arguments are lacking, some drug users may do well Treatment should be based on individual riskbenefit assessments 233 Hepatitis C Treatment: Management of HCV-infected injecting drug users is enhanced by linkage to drug treatment programs Promotion of collaboration between HCV experts and providers specializing in substance abuse treatment HCV treatment of active injecting drug users should be considered on a case-by-case basis Active injecting drug use should not exclude patients from HCV treatment 234 Prescribing Buprenorphine in Hepatitis Mechanism of hepatitis associated with buprenorphine: Buprenorphine inhibits hepatic mitochondrial function at high concentrations May cause elevation of transaminases No documented cases of fulminant liver failure due solely to buprenorphine 235 Studies of Buprenorphine in Hepatitis 120 patients treated with buprenorphine > 40 days: HCV: ALT and AST increased by 8-9 times upper limit of normal non-HCV: no change in ALT or AST Case reports (5): Transaminase increases, 30-50 times normal, with intravenous buprenorphine in patients infected with Hepatitis C 236 Prescribing Buprenorphine in Hepatitis Buprenorphine may elevate transaminases especially in patients with HCV especially when administered IV but less likely when administered sublingually Monitor liver enzyme levels in patients with hepatitis, especially those on Buprenorphine/Naloxone Warn patients not to use Buprenorphine intravenously 237 HIV/AIDS Definition A blood-borne retroviral infection caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) AIDS diagnosis made using 1993 CDC classification and case definition system: CD4 < 200 % CD4 <14% AIDS defining diagnoses (indicator conditions) 238 HIV/AIDS Epidemiology Worldwide 58 million people infected with HIV (15,000 new cases/d) HIV-1 predominates in the U.S.; HIV-2 found in West Africa 1.1 million cases in the US (45,000 new cases per year) 1993-1999 the number of injecting drug users living with AIDS increased from 48,244 to 88,540 15-20% long-term injecting drug users infected 0.7-34% (median 15%) seroprevalence entering substance abuse treatment 43% AIDS in women secondary to injection drug use 239 HIV/AIDS Clinical course Primary HIV infection can be asymptomatic or result in an acute “viral” syndrome: fever 96%, adenopathy 74%, pharyngitis 70%, rash 70%, myalgia/arthralgia 54%, diarrhea 32%, headache 32%, nausea/vomiting 27%, H/Smegaly 14%, thrush 12% Initial infection is followed by active viral replication primarily in lymphoid tissue Course followed clinically with CD4 lymphocyte counts and viral RNA (viral load) 240 HIV/AIDS: Natural History of HIV-1 Infection 241 HIV/AIDS Clinical course: Risk of disease progression Low CD4 is the strongest predictor of the development of opportunistic infections (OIs) Most OIs occur at CD4<50 (at least for patients receiving PCP prophylaxis) HIV RNA >20,000 confer greater OI risk for any given CD4 count High HIV RNA is an independent predictor of disease progression 242 Indications for Treatment (www.hivatis.org) New data suggests offering treatment to all regardless of disease status (2010) Clinical Category CD4 HVL Recommend Symptomatic AIDS Any value Any value Treat Asymptomatic AIDS <200 Any value Treat Asymptomatic <350 Any value Offer treatment Asymptomatic >350 >55,000 Offer treatment Asymptomatic >350 <55,000 Defer therapy 3 yr risk <15% 243 HIV/AIDS Treatment Standard is at least a three-drug regimen (called highly active antiretroviral therapy – HAART) Three classes of medications are effective in helping to decrease retroviral replication: a) Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (e.g., zidovudine) b) non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (e.g., efavirenz) c) protease inhibitors (e.g., indinavir) 244 HIV/AIDS Treatment (continued) Adherence to HAART can be difficult Complications of HAART can include nephrolithiasis, anemia, pancreatitis, neuropathy, lipid abnormalities, and fat redistribution Poor adherence to HAART predicts treatment failure and can lead to development of viral resistance Clinical trials have demonstrated non-detectable viral loads in 80% of patients receiving HAART Patients with good adherence to HAART regimens have decreased morbidity, mortality, hospitalization rates, and viral replication 245 HIV/AIDS Treatment: HIV and injecting drug users High risk for non-receipt of antiretrovirals: 2-3 times as likely not to be on antiretroviral treatment if not in SA treatment High risk for non-adherence: 1998 CDC guidelines recommend delaying HAART until active opioid use has been addressed However, drug interactions between methadone and antiretrovirals can decrease adherence! 246 HIV/AIDS Treatment: Buprenorphine in HIV+ injecting drug users; MANIF 2000 cohort (France): Risk for HAART non-adherence: Non-adherent Adherent OR (adjusted) Buprenorphine 7 (21%) 25 (78%) 1.00 No current IDU 39 (35%) 74 (65%) 2.32 (0.8-6.5) Active IDU 8 (42%) 5.1 (1.3-20.1) 11 (58%) 247 HIV/AIDS Treatment: Buprenorphine in HIV+ injecting drug users; MANIF 2000 cohort (France): 6 month follow-up (median values): Buprenorphine(n=20) Ex-IDU(n=83) P Age 32 34 .04 CD4 (pre) 287 347 .16 CD4 (post) 344 457 .17 Viral Load (pre) 4.8 4.4 .17 Viral Load (post) 2.7 3.3 .91 Mos. on HAART 3.7 4.0 .34 Mos. Buprenorphine 10 NA NA 248 Tuberculosis Epidemiology Worldwide, approximately 2 billion people (1/3 of world population) are infected with M. tuberculosis Since the HIV pandemic began in the U.S. in the mid1980s, there has been increased concern about TB since it is more common in this population Tuberculosis is also more common in injection drug users in general and in patients with alcohol use disorders 249 Tuberculosis Clinical presentation Tuberculosis infection without disease: PPD+ Tuberculosis infection with disease: most commonly this involves pulmonary infection, although other sites can be involved as well. This is referred to as extra-pulmonary tuberculosis (and can involve sites such as bone, lymph node, kidneys, and other intraabdominal organs) 250 Tuberculosis Screening for tuberculosis infection Should be performed annually on all patients with a history of a substance use disorder who have previously been PPD negative and have no prior history of tuberculosis Patients who have had a previously positive PPD should not receive repeat PPD testing, but should be followed with annual chest x-rays 251 Tuberculosis Interpretation of PPD results PPD read as positive if: 5 mm of induration: Patients with HIV infection, those with close contact to documented cases, and those who have chest x-rays suggestive of tuberculosis 10 mm of induration: Individuals from population groups with a high prevalence of tuberculosis infection including immigrants, injection drug users, homeless persons, immigrants from endemic areas 15 mm of induration: Individuals with no known risk factors for tuberculosis 252 Tuberculosis Assessment of patients with a positive PPD History and physical exam focusing on risk factors for tuberculosis Chest x-ray Sputum studies (AFB smear and culture in individuals with chest x-ray evidence of possible tuberculosis) 253 Tuberculosis Treatment: No evidence of active disease (continued) Isoniazid (INH) 300 mg po qd (plus daily vitamin B6) for nine mos. is the standard therapy in immunocompetent patients Isoniazid (INH) 300 mg po qd (plus daily vitamin B6) for 9 mos. is the standard therapy for HIV+ patients INH hepatotoxicity is a concern, especially in patients with other reasons to have liver disease. Regular monitoring of liver enzymes (e.g., monthly) 254 Tuberculosis Treatment: Evidence of active disease Most common presentation is pulmonary tuberculosis Multidrug regimens utilized: may include isoniazid (INH), rifampin, pyrazinamide, ethambutol, and other agents Note: Rifampin induces opiate withdrawal in both methadone and buprenorphine maintained patients; will need to use rifabutin as alternative medication Directly observed therapy may be particularly important when treating substance users who have active tuberculosis and Potential for drug resistant strains of M. tuberculosis may require additional treatment as appropriate 255 Summary Patients with opioid dependence frequently have comorbid medical conditions, especially infectious diseases Important to screen for these disorders, and to provide treatment and prevention, or to be aware of and familiar with screening, treatment, and prevention services if they are done elsewhere Linkage of substance abuse treatment with medical treatments and prevention for comorbid disorders can enhance medical treatment outcomes 256 Risk Evaluation and Mitigation • Buprenorphine has been diverted to the community • The DEA is monitoring OBOT practices • Buprenorphine appears to be abused by non-medical use for treatment of withdrawal • The generic form of buprenorphine is currently only available in mono formulation • Use wth Benzodiazepines, alcohol and other sedatives is associated with complications 257 2004 DAWN REPORT • 2004 the Drug Abuse Warning Network data estimated 495,732 emergency department visits for nonmedical use of prescription medications, of which 236 (0.05%) were reports of nonmedical use of buprenorphine and or the buprenorphine/naloxone combination. • During this same time, there were no reports of buprenorphine associated with suicide attempts. 258 DIVERSION ISSUES OF BUPRENORPHINE • T Cicero, JAMA, 2006, provided information demonstrating low levels of buprenorphine diversion. • Finland report of the street value of buprenorphine/naloxone, compared to buprenorphine mono in Finland, once buprenorphine/naloxone was introduced due to buprenorphine mono formulation abuse. • 80% of Finnish IV users said that the IV buprenorphine/naloxone experience was "bad". The street value of buprenorphine/naloxone was less than 50% of buprenorphine mono formulation. 259 Buprenorphine 2001-7 John Renner MD Feb 2008 Buprenorphine Summit • 4.1 million prescriptions • 585,000 patients treated • 30% Detox • 70% Maintenance • 16,232 Physicians trained • 13,318 Waivered 260 Emerging Issues • ED visits 2003 (1) vs 2007 (Q1-3) 368 • Compared to methadone (6000) and oxycodone (9000) • Toxic exposures higher in children BUP 2% vs methadone, oxycodone or heroin 0.5% • 27% of all reported toxic exposures to BUP were under the age of 6 vs methadone 7% and oxycodone 8% • Six deaths in 2006-7 all with EtOH or sed hypnotics 261 Baltimore Sun Articles • 1-17-08 …October, its consultants found that half the doctors they surveyed were aware of an illegal trade in Buprenorphine and their numbers have been climbing” • 1-25-08 “..addicts using the drug on the street mostly say they do so to avoid withdrawal, not to get high.” 262 RADARS Dasgupta Feb 2008 Bup Summit • Governmental non-profit operation • Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center • Reckitt Benckiser did support the Pediatric data analysis in an educational grant • 11 of 60 US Centers (18%) 2003 Q1 • 43 of 60 US Centers (72%) 2007 Q2 263 RADARS BUPRENORPHINE ABUSE • 125 cases were reviewed for abuse per methodology • Mean age 27 • Male 65% • 7% chronic buprenorphine abuse • 34% ingestion, 28% parenteral, 18% inhalation 264 RADARS Mortality Data • “associated medical outcome” • 2003 to 2007Q3 data set • Not causally linked to death • 5 deaths related to BUP with intentional use/abuse No PEDS Deaths • Methadone has 126 deaths in the same time frame • 3/5, 60% were intentional self harm 265 RADARS Peds Data 2003-6 BUP Hydrocodone Fentanyl Oxycodone N=176 N=6003 N=123 N=2036 Age (SD) 2.1 (0.9) 2.3 (1.2) 2.0 (1.2) 2.1 (1.1) Male (%) 99 (56.3) 3232 (53.9) 64 (52.5) 1081 (53.5) Site Home % 169 (96) 5581 (93) 111 (90.2) 1821 (89.4) Ingest % 174 (99.4) 5993 (99.8) 77 (62.6) 2020 (99.1) 266 Ceiling effect on respiratory depression 17 Breaths/Minute 16 Human respiratory rate 15 14 13 12 11 10 0 PL 1 2 4 8 16 32 Buprenorphine (mg, sl) Adapted from Walsh et al., 1994 267 Buprenorphine-Benzodiazepine Relative Contraindication CNS depressants and sedatives (eg, benzodiazepines): All opioids have additive sedative effects when used in combination with other sedatives Increased potential for respiratory depression, heavy sedation, coma, and death (France, IV aprazolam and buprenorphine) Despite favorable safety, use caution with concomitant psychotropics (eg, benzodiazepines) 268 Special Treatment Populations 269 Outline for This Talk Adolescents Pregnant patients Geriatric patients HIV positive patients Acute and chronic pain patients Summary 270 Prevalence of any illicit drug use In 2002, for 12-17 year olds: Ever used any illicit drugs: 30.9% Used illicit drugs in past year: 11.6% In 2002, for 18-25 year olds: Ever used illicit drugs: 59.8% Used illicit drugs in past year: 20.2% 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) 271 Prevalence of non-medical use of an Rx pain reliever In 2002, for 12-17 year olds: Ever used: 11.2% Used in past year: 3.2% In 2002, for 18-25 year olds: Ever used: 22.1% Used in past year: 4.1% 2002 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) 272 Special diagnostic and treatment considerations Length of time illicit opioids used Relatively short? Route of administration Injecting? Nasal? Oral? At risk for HIV or other infections? 273 Special diagnostic and treatment considerations Use versus abuse versus dependence Severity of use? Evidence of physical dependence? Evidence or indication that use will become dependence despite other interventions? Goals of treatment intervention Withdrawal off opioids? Maintenance? 274 Use of Buprenorphine with Adolescents While extensive use of buprenorphine in adults, limited use in adolescents Guidelines for dose induction and withdrawal recommended for adults should, in general, be used with adolescents Assess level of physical dependence, adjust dose accordingly for adolescents, just as for adults 275 Use of Buprenorphine with Adolescents Buprenorphine may be a good match for patients with lower levels of physical dependence (such as adolescents) A history of multiple relapses (e.g., after medically supervised opioid withdrawals) is an indicator for a trial of buprenorphine maintenance treatment Buprenorphine’s possible mild withdrawal syndrome may also make it particularly useful in adolescents 276 Use of Buprenorphine with Adolescents Buprenorphine may have a mild withdrawal syndrome (this has been frequently hypothesized, but not tested by well-controlled studies) If buprenorphine does have a mild withdrawal syndrome, this may be an advantage for its use with adolescents (especially if the goal is eventual withdrawal off the medication) 277 Use of Buprenorphine with Adolescents Supervision of take home doses of medication Watch for risk of diversion, abuse Regular assessment for pregnancy Provide or refer for other psychosocial treatment; medication will not be enough 278 The Opioid Dependent Pregnant Patient 1997: 5,000-10,000 infants born to opioid dependent mothers Important to know about specialized treatment services in your community available for pregnant, opioid dependent patients Management of the patient will depend on the availability of such services 279 Initial Management of the Pregnant Patient It is important to know about specialized treatment services available for pregnant, opioid dependent patients in your community. Management of the patient will depend on the availability of such services. 280 Initial Management of the Pregnant Patient If specialized treatment program is available: New patient – refer to the program Buprenorphine/naloxone-maintained patient who is now pregnant: switch to buprenorphine alone vs. change to methadone consider referral to the program 281 Initial Management of the Pregnant Patient If no specialized treatment program is available and it is a new patient – consider referral to methadone treatment (even if there is no program specifically for pregnant women) and it is a buprenorphine/naloxone maintained patient who is now pregnant – switch to buprenorphine monotherapy and consider referral to methadone treatment (standard of care for pregnant opioid dependent patients) 282 Evaluation of the Pregnant Patient Factors to consider in the evaluation: Is the patient dependent on opioids? Is there other drug use? Medical problems? Psychiatric problems? Family and social situation? 283 Buprenorphine versus Methadone Methadone approved for use in pregnancy, and substantial experience with it Not a similar amount of experience with buprenorphine use in pregnancy 284 Buprenorphine versus Methadone Minimal information about need for dose adjustments of buprenorphine during pregnancy Pregnant women treated with buprenorphine have had good withdrawal suppression with once daily dosing Maintain clinical flexibility during pregnancy – consider dose adjustments, split dosing, if indicated 285 Use of Buprenorphine versus Methadone Buprenorphine may have milder withdrawal syndrome for infant Plasma to breast milk ratio is approximately 1 (limited data on this) Poor oral bioavailability when buprenorphine swallowed Should not use buprenorphine/naloxone 286 Use of Buprenorphine versus Methadone Like methadone, some evidence of a neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) for infants born of mothers maintained on buprenorphine (not all infants, and not systematically studied) Buprenorphine NAS starts in first two days, peaks in 3-4 days, lasts up to one week Buprenorphine via breast milk will probably not suppress neonatal abstinence syndrome 287 In Utero Exposure to Buprenorphine Limited experience with buprenorphine in pregnancy (primarily case reports and small series of patients) At least 21 published reports (case reports, prospective studies, open-labeled controlled studies) of 15 cohorts of infants exposed to buprenorphine in utero No significant adverse effects on fetus noted In general, full term births, normal birth weights Neonate is dependent on opioids if mother is maintained on buprenorphine 288 In Utero Exposure to Buprenorphine Of approximately 300 infants exposed, 62% experienced a neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS), with 48% requiring treatment However, neonatal abstinent syndrome (NAS) minimal and short lived in buprenorphine-exposed infants Buprenorphine appears to be at least equivalent to methadone for treatment of pregnant , opioid dependent women (Jones et al, 2010 pending pub) 289 Geriatric (Over age 60) Population: Prevalence of Opioid Misuse There is no good epidemiological information available about rates of opioid misuse in the elderly National Household Survey/National Survey of Drug Use and Health generally does not specify data for older persons Drug Abuse Warning Network classifies as 55+ years old There are anecdotal reports of older patients in methadone treatment Dependence on psychoactive substances can certainly be present in this age group 290 Special Diagnostic Considerations Our index of suspicion may be too low; we don’t usually think of drug use in the elderly Effects of drug use may be mistakenly attributed to aging The usual diagnostic criteria may be less appropriate for the elderly (for example, those related to violations of social norms) 291 Use of buprenorphine with geriatric patients No data on buprenorphine for opioid dependence in the elderly Consider more gradual dose induction and closer monitoring (versus routine practice in non-elderly) Watch for medication interactions (elderly may have comorbid medical conditions and be taking other prescribed medications) 292 Pain Treatment in Patients with an Addiction These patients suffer thrice: 1. from the painful disease 2. from the addiction, which makes pain management difficult 3. from the health care provider’s ignorance 293 Pain Treatment in Patients with an Addiction Must consider: 1. High tolerance to medications 2. Low pain threshold 3. High risk for relapse 294 Pain Treatment in Patients with an Addiction 1. Explain potential for relapse 2. Explain the rationale for the medication 3. Educate the patient and the support system 4. Encourage family/support system involvement 5. Frequent follow-ups 6. Consultations and multidisciplinary approach 295Acute and Chronic Pain Patients General Points Regarding Pain Treatment Buprenorphine is an effective parenteral analgesic, but its duration of analgesia is relatively short (necessitating multiple dosing daily) Buprenorphine’s analgesic potency is approximately 30x that of morphine A bell-shaped dose response curve has been reported for buprenorphine’s analgesic effects 296 General Points Regarding Pain Treatment Usual analgesic dose regimens are 0.3-0.6 mg q 6-8 hrs (parenteral) Duration of analgesia is about 6-8 hours Ceiling analgesic dose is approximately 1.5-5 mg Onset of analgesia is approximately 30 minutes Peak analgesia occurs at approximately 3 hours In U.S., sublingual form has not been developed for analgesic purposes and not FDA approved for analgesic indication Use of full opioid agonists to treat pain in patients maintained on buprenorphine may be complicated 297 Acute Pain in Buprenorphine Maintained Patients Make sure some form of opioid maintenance medication is continued The patient’s acute pain will not be treated by their once daily maintenance dose of buprenorphine – other management of pain will be required Initially try non-opioid analgesics (ketorolac, NSAIDs, or Cox-II inhibitors) If opioid analgesics required, consider switching off buprenorphine (e.g., to methadone) 298 Acute Pain in Buprenorphine Maintained Patients Alternately, could try to obtain analgesic effect with an increased dose of buprenorphine – that is, small supplemental doses of sublingual buprenorphine periodically throughout the day in addition to their once daily dose of maintenance buprenorphine 299 Acute Pain in Buprenorphine Maintained Patients Additional strategies to consider: Titrate down buprenorphine dose and transfer patient to full opioid agonist temporarily, then return to buprenorphine Use of regional anesthesia such as epidural blockade Use of other methods of pain control such as TENS (Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulator) 300 Chronic Pain Patients In general, when treating a patient with chronic pain: Consider consulting a pain medicine specialist Consider multidisciplinary team approach Try non-opioids and adjuvant analgesics Begin with non-pharmacologic therapies 301 Chronic Pain Patients If chronic opioid analgesics are required for pain control: Buprenorphine may cause precipitated withdrawal Buprenorphine maintenance may need to be discontinued Patient’s opioid dependence may be better treated with methadone maintenance (avoids complications of possible precipitated withdrawal by buprenorphine) Buprenorphine: Considerations for Pain Management 302 Rolley E Johnson et al. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, Vol 29, No 3, March 2005, pp297-326 303 Parental Morphine Equivalency Morphine Buprenorphine 10mg 0.3mg Methadone 10mg Oxycodone 10-15mg Pentazocine 30mg Codiene 120mg 304 Non Pharmacologic Interventions 1. Behavioral Interventions-ie guided imagery, biofeedback 2. Meditation 3. Osteopathic Manipulation, Chiropractic, Body work, etc 4. Acupuncture with or without stimulation 5. Physical Therapy modalities 6. Regional anesthetic blocks- epidural injections 7. Tran-cutaneous Nerve Stimulation 8. Hypnosis 305 Treatment of Chronic Pain in Patients with an Addiction 1. Search for physical causes 2. Identify and address possible non-pain sustaining factors 3. Address and improve functional status 4. Treat associated symptoms, if indicated 5. Case management 306 Buprenorphine maintained patients 1.If non-opioids are ineffective, may need to increase the BUP or stop buprenorphine and add a pure Mu agonist for pain (OR-fentanyl) 2.May need to switch to pure Mu agonist for maintenance (baseline requirements) 3.Care needed if/when buprenorphine is restarted for maintenance 307 Chronic Pain Patients Goals of treatment 1. Pain reduction 2. Functional improvement 3. Safe and Tolerable side effects 4. Prevention of addiction or relapse 308 Patients with Renal Failure Few studies of buprenorphine in patients with renal failure; ones available are primarily single dose or short duration of treatment (for example, for analgesia) No significant difference in kinetics of buprenorphine in patients with renal failure versus healthy controls No significant side effects in patients with renal failure It should be suitable to use buprenorphine in patients with renal failure – consistent with buprenorphine’s metabolism being hepatic (not renal) 309 Summary Limited information about the use of buprenorphine for the treatment of opioid dependence in special populations of patients This reflects, in part, the lack of studies with these groups (for any treatment intervention, not just buprenorphine) While caution should be exercised in the use of buprenorphine with any of these groups, buprenorphine’s safety profile is an advantage to its use in these populations 310 Waiver Notification Process 311 Submitting Notification of Intent www.buprenorphine.samhsa.gov/bwns/howto.html • Printable HTML Notification of Intent Form • Printable PDF Notification of Intent Form • Submit Notification of Intent Form Online A Notification of Intent Form is also included in the Additional Reprints/Resources section of your notebook. Record of your completion of this training kept by AOAAM who will notify SAMHSA of qualification for waiver 312 Notification of Intent The complete form is 2 pages. 313 Waiver Notification Process 314 For More Information For more information about DATA 2000, buprenorphine, or about how to submit a waiver notification, call the CSAT Buprenorphine Information Center at 866-BUP-CSAT (866-287-2728), or e-mail [email protected]. Live operators are available to answer calls Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. EST. View the approval announcement and other information about Suboxone® and Subutex® on the FDA Web site (www.fda.gov/cder/drug/infopage/subutex_suboxone/default.htm) or call the FDA at 888-INFO-FDA for consumer inquiries and 301827-6242 for media inquiries.