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Buprenorphine Maintenance Treatment

Information for Patients

General overview information geared for methadone maintenance patients, but useful for anyone

NEW Treatment for Heroin Addiction

We would like to inform our patients about new treatment for heroin addition, which has recently become legal, but is not yet available, (The Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000, signed by President Clinton on October 17). This law has several “firsts.” For the first time, a physician in the office setting will be able to prescribe a narcotic for treatment of addiction – following certain guidelines and restrictions. For the first time a patient who is addicted to heroin will be able to receive opioid medication for detoxification or for maintenance – again with certain restrictions – in a regular office setting, outside of the methadone treatment program. The only medication allowed is Buprenorphine. Methadone and LAAM still may not be prescribed in California in an office setting for the treatment of addiction .

THE NEW LAW: The Drug Addition Treatment Act of 2000 (DATA)

The new law has the following restrictions:

THE NEW MEDICATION: BUPRENORPHINE

Buprenorphine is an opioid medication, which has been used as an injection for treatment of pain while patients are hospitalized, for example for surgical patients. It is a long acting medication, and binds for a long time to the “ mu ” endorphin receptor. This means most patients don't have to take medication every day. It is not absorbed very well orally (by swallowing) – so a sublingual (dissolve under the tongue) table has been developed for treatment of addiction. One form of this sublingual tablet also contains a small amount of Naloxone (Narcan), which is an opioid antagonist and will cause withdrawal if injected. Buprenorphine without naloxone has been available in other countries, and has been used illicitly by addicted persons, but so far it hasn't been abused when combined with Naloxone.

Aside from being mixed with naloxone to discourage needle use, buprenorphine itself has a “ceiling” of narcotic effects (it is considered a “partial agonist”), which makes it safer in case of overdose. This means that by itself, even in large doses, it doesn't suppress breathing to the point of death in the same way that heroin, methadone and LAAM could do in huge doses. If a child swallowed a whole bottle of buprenorphine tablets (remember they are not absorbed very well by swallowing) it would probably not be lethal, whereas a single dose of methadone might be lethal to a child. These are some of the unusual qualities of this medication which make it safer to use outside of the usual strict methadone regulations at clinic and, after stabilization, most patients would be able to take home as much as four weeks' worth of buprenorphine at a time.



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