opioid pharmacotherapy: an introduction

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Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction Walter Ling, MD Integrated Substance Abuse Programs (ISAP) UCLA International Symposium on Drug Abuse and Addictive Behavior Chongqing; P.R. China September 10, 2009 [email protected] www.uclaisap.org

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Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction. Walter Ling, MD Integrated Substance Abuse Programs (ISAP) UCLA International Symposium on Drug Abuse and Addictive Behavior Chongqing; P.R. China September 10, 2009 [email protected] www.uclaisap.org. Scope of the Talk. Effective medications - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Opioid Pharmacotherapy:An Introduction

Walter Ling, MDIntegrated Substance Abuse Programs (ISAP)

UCLAInternational Symposium on Drug Abuse

and Addictive Behavior Chongqing; P.R. China

September 10, [email protected]

www.uclaisap.org

Page 2: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Scope of the Talk

• Effective medications

• Implementation: knowledge, skills and philosophy; what have we learn, so far

Page 3: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Medications for Opioid Addiction

• Methadone: agonist• Morphine

• Tincture of opium

• Naltrexone:antagonist• Depo-naltrexone

• Buprenorphine: partial agonist– Subutex, Suboxone, Probuphine

• Clonidine: non-opioid

• Lofexidine

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Page 4: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Methadone

• Long acting• Orally active opiate agonist capable of reducing

or eliminating withdrawal signs and symptoms • Reducing drug craving• Normalizing physiological function

0

100

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0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Page 5: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Methadone Treatment

• Reduce illicit heroin use

• Reduce death related to heroin addiction

• Reduce HIV and other infectious diseases

• Improve health and well being

• Improve gainful employment and other pro-social activities

• Reduce crime

2127

35 3636

39 39 42 48 49 51

13 15 16 17 17 18 18 19 19 20 21

HIV infection rates in and out of methadone treatment (Metzger et al. 1993)

0

2

4

6

8

MatchedCohort

Methadone VoluntaryDischarge

InvoluntaryDischarge

Untreated

0.150.85

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6.91 7.20

Death Rates in Treated and Untreated Heroin Addicts

Annu

al R

ate

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

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25,000

Untreated Incarceration Adolescent Adult Methadone Drug Free

Residential Outpatient

$1,575$1,750

$8,250$9,825

$20,000$21,500No Treatment

In Treatment Program

Compare the CostsCosts are for a 6 month

period, per person

Page 6: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Cochrane Review

• Methadone maintenance therapy vs no opioid replacement therapy for opioid dependence

• Richard Mattick, Courtney Breen, Jo Kimber, Marina Davoli, Rosie Breen

– Methadone maintenance is better at retaining patients in treatment and reducing heroin use, but not statistically superior in reducing criminal activities

Comment: Proximal vs distal treatment outcomes

Page 7: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Adequate Dose and Duration

Page 8: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Naltrexone: The Perfect Drug• Orally Effective• Rapid onset of action• Long duration of action• Safe• Few side effects• Completely blocks effects of heroin• Non-addicting• No tolerance• No dependence• No withdrawal

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OH

Page 9: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Naltrexone: “Victimless Cure”

• One reason not to take naltrexone:

• Can’t get high!• “It’s like taking nothing”

• Limited Success:• Coercion or Bribery

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OH

Page 10: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Cochrane Review

• Oral naltrexone treatment for opioid dependence

• Silvia Minozzi, Laura amato, Simona Vecchi, Marina Davoli, Ursula Kirchmayer, Annette Verster; Rome, Italy

– Only 2/10 studies with adequate blinding; naltrexone better than placebo in limiting heroin use during treatment, but did not reach statistical significance; less incarceration vs psychosocial treatment alone. No statistical significant benefit in treatment retention, side effects or relapse at follow up

Comment by reviewers: Studies did not provide adequate data for evaluation of naltrexone treatment for opioid dependence.

Page 11: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Buprenorphine: Pharmacological Characteristics

Partial Agonist (ceiling effect)

• high safety profile

• low dependence

Tight Receptor Binding• long duration of action

• slow onset mild abstinence

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p 1 2 4 8 16 32

Buprenorphine (mg)

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ath

s/m

inu

te

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p 0.5 2 8 16 32

Buprenorphine (mg)

Peak

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Methadone (mg)

Page 12: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Opiate Agonist Measures VAS Good Drug Effect (0-100)

0

25

50

0 15 30 45 60Minutes

buprenorphine (2mg)buprenorphine (2mg) and naloxone (1 mg)buprenorphine (2 mg) and naloxone (0.5 mg)buprenorphine (2 mg) and nalxone (0.25 mg)morphine (15 mg)placebo

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Bup

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Adding Naloxone to Buprenorphine

Value of a Dose in Dollars

Dol

lars

Minutes

• Naloxone not absorbed sufficiently to interfere with buprenorphine when the combination is taken sublingually

• Sublingual absorption of buprenorphine @ 70%; naloxone @ 10%

• If injected, BUP/NX will precipitate withdrawal in a moderately to severely dependent addict

Page 13: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Buprenorphine :Cochrane Review• Buprenorphine maintenance vs

placebo or methadone maintenance for opioid dependence

• Richard Mattick, Jo Kimber, Courtney Breen, Marina Davoli; National Drug and Alcohol Research Center, Sydney, Australia

• Buprenorphine is an effective maintenance treatment for heroin dependence, but less effective than methadone delivered at adequate dosages

• Note: Data from early trials; slow induction, high withdrawal symptoms and low retention, (next slide)

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8MG 12MG 16MG 24MG

Dose of Suboxone (Days 1-4)

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Symptoms Craving

• Treatment of HIV/AIDS: drug/drug interactions

• Flexibility in delivery• Role in treatment of pain

Page 14: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

• Reduced heroin use• Reduced criminal activities• Increased gainful employment• Improved general health

– Dole VP & Nyswander ME (1965) A Medical Treatment for

Diacetylmorphine (Heroin) Addiction JAMA 193: 646-650

Opiate Addiction Treatment: In the Beginning

Page 15: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Treatment of Opiate Addiction:Goals and Strategies

• Treatment goals: whose?– Clinician: reduce mortality and morbidity,

improve health – Patient: feel better or feel good; free from hassles – Family: relief from stress, loss and shame – Society: from resource eaters to contributors

• Treatment goals determine treatment strategies and defining treatment success or failure

Page 16: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Pharmacotherapy of Opiate Addiction: What Can We Expect?

• Proximal goals: (pharmacological effects)– Alleviation of withdrawal symptoms– Reduced craving and drug use– Improved health

• Intermediate goals: (intervening events)– Improved employment– Taking personal responsibilities

• Distal goals: (changed life)– Assuming societal responsibilities– Contributing to society

Page 17: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

France – Role of Political Interventions• 1994: Acceptance of Harm Reduction Policy

– Rapid Approval of Buprenorphine & Methadone– 1996 BMT for GP use; MMT reserved for clinics– 2008: 90-100,000 BMT and 10-15,000 MMT Patients

Overdose deaths ↓80%; Associated crime ↓ 80%; HIV among IDU’s ↓ 40% to 11%; ~ 3500 lives saved since 2004. Carrieri, Lancet 2008

Lavignasse et al, 2002Heroin death: five fold reductionPremature birth: 3-fold reduction

Page 18: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Summary:Successful Pharmacotherapy

• Clinical efficacy and safety

• Patient and provider acceptance

• Public health significance

• Powerful advocacy and strong leadership

• Regulatory and political support

• Favorable societal attitude– The role of the clinicians; we must change

before our patients’ lives can change.

Page 19: Opioid Pharmacotherapy: An Introduction

Thank youthank you

thank you