Physician Resources

Opioid use disorder is a chronic condition that needs ongoing therapy


 

Think of opioid use disorder as a chronic condition that requires continuous treatment.

This advice comes from Mitra Ahadpour, MD, who is the deputy director of the Office of Translational Sciences at the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research and an addiction medicine specialist.

In an interview, Dr. Ahadpour discusses prescribing requirements and the administration of drugs for medication-assisted treatment, which is associated with improved social functioning and reduced risks for death from overdoses and by contracting HIV.

These treatments – which include various formulations of methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone – need to reach more people with opioid use disorder. The interview includes her recommendations for recognizing at-risk patients and avoiding potential drug-drug interactions associated with using these drugs.

Click here to read the article at the FDA website.

Recommended Reading

Disparities found in access to medication treatment for OUDs
MDedge Internal Medicine
Fentanyl fears drive many opioid users, interviews suggest
MDedge Internal Medicine
Zolpidem does not boost cannabis abstinence during treatment
MDedge Internal Medicine
For some opioid overdose survivors, stigma from clinicians hinders recovery
MDedge Internal Medicine
Fentanyl analogs nearly double their overdose death toll
MDedge Internal Medicine
Assessing adverse events tied to outpatient opioid use in children
MDedge Internal Medicine
Malpractice and pain management
MDedge Internal Medicine
Prolonged opioid use among U.S. IBD patients doubled during 2002-2016
MDedge Internal Medicine
Nearly one-quarter of presurgery patients already using opioids
MDedge Internal Medicine
National Academies issues 5-step plan to address infections linked to opioid use disorder
MDedge Internal Medicine