Applied Evidence

Medication-assisted recovery for opioid use disorder: A guide

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Overall, the cost-effectiveness of intramuscular naltrexone is unclear. State-administered insurance programs vary in their requirements for coverage of naltrexone treatment.31

Comprehensive medication reconciliation is vital

Overall fragmentation of care within OTPs places patients at risk for adverse events, such as drug interactions.32 Under Title 42 of the US Code,33 patients must provide written consent for an OTP provider to disclose their history of a substance use disorder. Allowing the patient to decide which medical providers can access their treatment records for an OUD benefits patient confidentiality but poses­ numerous issues worth exploring.

All prescribed controlled substances are recorded in the prescription drug monitoring program, or PDMP, a state-level electronic database accessible to health care professionals to inform prescribing decisions and identify drug interactions. The PDMP has substantially reduced opioid overprescribing and improved identification of patients at risk for overdose or misuse of opioids.

Buprenorphine, available for office-based treatment, has a so-called ceiling effect that reduces the adverse effect profile, including respiratory depression and euphoria.

Unlike all other controlled substances, however, prescriptions ordered by an OTP are not recorded in the PDMP (although there are recent exceptions to this scenario). Without such information, a physician might not have important information about the patient when making medical decisions—placing the patient at risk for harmful outcomes, such as drug–drug and drug–disease interactions.

For example: Methadone is associated with a prolonged QT interval,34 increasing the risk for a fatal arrhythmia. Concurrent QT-prolonging medications, such as azithromycin and citalopram, further increase this risk.35 Because methadone dispensing is isolated from the patient’s medical record, the clinician who prescribes MOUD has an incomplete patient history and could make a potentially fatal treatment decision.

Continue to: Diversion is unlikely

Pages

Recommended Reading

When a patient with chronic alcohol use abruptly stops drinking
Federal Practitioner
Tranq-contaminated fentanyl now in 48 states, DEA warns
Federal Practitioner
Is vaping a gateway to cigarettes for kids?
Federal Practitioner
New guidelines for cannabis in chronic pain management released
Federal Practitioner
New insight into the growing problem of gaming disorder
Federal Practitioner
Battlefield Acupuncture vs Ketorolac for Treating Pain in the Emergency Department
Federal Practitioner
Evaluation of Gabapentin and Baclofen Combination for Inpatient Management of Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome
Federal Practitioner
Why is buprenorphine use flatlining?
Federal Practitioner
Survey reveals room for improvement in teen substance use screening
Federal Practitioner
Young men at highest schizophrenia risk from cannabis abuse
Federal Practitioner