Literature Collection

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Opioids & SU

The Literature Collection contains over 10,000 references for published and grey literature on the integration of behavioral health and primary care. Learn More

Use the Search feature below to find references for your terms across the entire Literature Collection, or limit your searches by Authors, Keywords, or Titles and by Year, Type, or Topic. View your search results as displayed, or use the options to: Show more references per page; Sort references by Title or Date; and Refine your search criteria. Expand an individual reference to View Details. Full-text access to the literature may be available through a link to PubMed, a DOI, or a URL. References may also be exported for use in bibliographic software (e.g., EndNote, RefWorks, Zotero).

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181
Buprenorphine shared medical appointments for the treatment of opioid dependence in a homeless clinic
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Sara L. Doorley, Cheryl J. Ho, Elizabeth Echeverria, Charles Preston, Huy Ngo, Ahmad Kamal, Chinazo O. Cunningham
Year: 2017
Publication Place: United States
Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Opioid misuse and dependence are prevalent and rising problems in the United States. Treatment with buprenorphine is a successful treatment option for individuals with opioid dependence. This study describes and preliminarily evaluates a unique delivery system that provides buprenorphine treatment via a shared medical appointment. METHODS: A retrospective medical record review on all 77 opioid-dependent patients referred for a buprenorphine shared medical appointment in a homeless clinic from 2010 to 2012. RESULTS: Most patients were currently homeless (61%), unemployed (92%), had an Axis I psychiatric diagnosis (81%), and had recent polysubstance use (53%). Of the 77 patients, 95% attended at least 1 shared medical appointment. Treatment retention at 12 and 24 weeks was 86% and 70%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: In a patient population with complex social and mental health histories, buprenorphine treatment via a shared medical appointment had high retention rates. Findings can help guide the development of unique delivery systems to serve real-world complex patients with opioid dependence.

Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
182
Buprenorphine tapering schedule and illicit opioid use.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Walter Ling, Maureen Hillhouse, Catherine Domier, Geetha Doraimani, Jeremy Hunter, Christie Thomas, Jessica Jenkins, Albert Hasson, Jeffrey Annon, Andrew Saxon, Jeffrey Selzer, Joshua Boverman, Richard Bilangi
Year: 2009
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
183
Buprenorphine therapy for opioid addiction in rural Washington: The experience of the early adopters
Type: Journal Article
Authors: T. L. Quest, J. O. Merrill, J. Roll, A. J. Saxon, R. A. Rosenblatt
Year: 2012
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The introduction of buprenorphine as office-based treatment for opioid dependence was designed to expand treatment capacity, but virtually there are no data about use of this medication in rural areas. METHODS: The survey of the first cohort of physicians in rural Washington State who obtained buprenorphine waivers (2002-2010) to determine the volume of treated patients, physician appraisal of the efficacy of this treatment, and perceived barriers to treatment was conducted. Twenty-four (73 percent) of the 33 rural buprenorphine-certified physicians practicing in the state were interviewed in 2010. RESULTS: Twenty physicians (83 percent) were actively prescribing buprenorphine/naloxone for treatment of addiction. Those currently prescribing averaged 23 active patients and had treated 125 patients since certification. All respondents reported that buprenorphine was efficacious in the treatment of addiction and 95 percent recommended that other rural colleagues adopt buprenorphine treatment. The following four major barriers were cited: 1) lack of adequate financial support from Medicaid, the largest source of third-party coverage for these patients; 2) unavailability of local mental health and behavioral addiction treatment services; 3) difficulty in finding consultants to assist in managing complex patients; and 4) shortages of other rural physicians providing this service. CONCLUSIONS: Buprenorphine is viewed as a highly effective treatment of opioid addiction by early adopters in rural Washington State, but relatively few rural physicians currently provide this service. Inadequate insurance coverage, a shortage of effective links with consultants and colleagues, and the lack of mental health services are persistent barriers to the use of this modality in rural Washington State.
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
184
Buprenorphine Therapy for Opioid Use Disorder
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Roger Zoorob, Alicia Kowalchuk, Maria Mejia de Grubb
Year: 2018
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: Opioid misuse, including the use of heroin and the overprescribing, misuse, and diversion of opioid pain medications, has reached epidemic proportions in the United States. As a result, there has been a dramatic increase in opioid use disorder and associated overdoses and deaths. Addiction is a chronic brain disease with a genetic component that affects motivation, inhibition, and cognition. Patient characteristics associated with successful buprenorphine maintenance treatment include stable or controlled medical or psychiatric comorbidities and a safe, substance-free environment. As a partial opioid agonist, buprenorphine has a ceiling effect that limits respiratory depression and adds to its safety in accidental or intentional overdose. Buprenorphine and combinations of buprenorphine and naloxone are generally well tolerated; adverse effects include anxiety, constipation, dizziness, drowsiness, headache, nausea, and sedation. Family physicians who meet specific requirements can obtain a Drug Addiction Treatment Act of 2000 waiver by notifying the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of their intent to begin dispensing and/or prescribing buprenorphine. Medication-assisted treatment with buprenorphine is as effective as methadone in terms of treatment retention and decreased opioid use when prescribed at fixed dosages of at least 7 mg per day; dosages of 16 mg per day are clearly superior to placebo. Sporadic opioid use is not uncommon in the first few months of medication-assisted treatment and should be addressed by increased visit frequency and more intensive engagement with behavioral therapies. Follow-up visits should include documentation of any relapses, reemergence of cravings or withdrawal, random urine drug testing, pill or wrapper counts, and checks of state prescription drug database records.
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
185
Buprenorphine to treat opioid use disorder: A practical guide
Type: Journal Article
Authors: T. Nissly, R. Levy
Year: 2018
Publication Place: United States
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
186
Buprenorphine training for physicians
Type: Web Resource
Authors: Providers Clinical Support System
Year: 2016
Topic(s):
Grey Literature See topic collection
,
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
Disclaimer:

This grey literature reference is included in the Academy's Literature Collection in keeping with our mission to gather all sources of information on integration. Grey literature is comprised of materials that are not made available through traditional publishing avenues. Often, the information from unpublished resources can be limited and the risk of bias cannot be determined.

187
Buprenorphine treatment and 12-step meeting attendance: Conflicts, compatibilities, and patient outcomes.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Laura B. Monico, Jan Gryczynski, Shannon Gwin Mitchell, Robert P. Schwartz, Kevin E. O'Grady, Jerome H. Jaffe
Year: 2015
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
188
Buprenorphine Treatment and Patient Use of Health Services after the Affordable Care Act in an Integrated Health Care System
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Cynthia I. Campbell, Sujaya Parthasarathy, Kelly C. Young-Wolff, Derek D. Satre
Year: 2017
Publication Place: United States
Abstract:

The Affordable Care Act (ACA) was expected to benefit patients with substance use disorders, including opioid use disorders (OUDs). This study examined buprenorphine use and health services utilization by patients with OUDs pre- and post-ACA in a large health care system. Using electronic health record data, we examined demographic and clinical characteristics (substance use, psychiatric and medical conditions) of two patient cohorts using buprenorphine: those newly enrolled in 2012 ("pre-ACA," N = 204) and in 2014 ("post-ACA," N = 258). Logistic and negative binomial regressions were used to model persistent buprenorphine use, and to examine whether persistent use was related to health services utilization. Buprenorphine patients were largely similar pre- and post-ACA, although more post-ACA patients had a marijuana use disorder (p < .01). Post-ACA patients were more likely to have high-deductible benefit plans (p < .01). Use of psychiatry services was lower post-ACA (IRR: 0.56, p < .01), and high-deductible plans were also related to lower use of psychiatry services (IRR: 0.30, p < .01). The relationship between marijuana use disorder and prescription opioid use is complex, and deserves further study, particularly with increasingly widespread marijuana legalization. Access to psychiatry services may be more challenging for buprenorphine patients post-ACA, especially for patients with deductible plans.

Topic(s):
Financing & Sustainability See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Healthcare Policy See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
189
Buprenorphine Treatment By Primary Care Providers, Psychiatrists, Addiction Specialists, And Others
Type: Journal Article
Authors: M. Olfson, V. Zhang, M. Schoenbaum, M. King
Year: 2020
Publication Place: United States
Abstract:

Substantial increases in opioid-related morbidity and mortality have motivated the implementation of federal policies to expand the buprenorphine prescribing capacity of primary care providers and other clinicians. Using a national prescription database that covered 72-92 percent of the US population during 2010-18, we analyzed trends in buprenorphine treatment by prescriber specialty. Buprenorphine treatment rates by primary care providers increased from 12.9 people per 10,000 population in 2010 to 27.4 in 2018. The numbers for psychiatrists and addiction medicine specialists increased from 8.7 to 12.0 per 10,000 and those for other prescribers from 5.8 to 16.3 per 10,000. However, treatment of people ages 15-24 by primary care providers and by psychiatrists and addiction medicine specialists declined significantly. Across all patient age and provider groups, most patients were not retained on buprenorphine for the benchmark period of at least 180 days. Despite a recent national increase in buprenorphine treatment fueled primarily by nonspecialists, challenges persist with buprenorphine access-especially for younger people-and with retaining patients in long-term treatment.

Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Healthcare Policy See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
190
Buprenorphine Treatment for Adolescents and Young Adults With Opioid Use Disorders: A Narrative Review
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Jacob T. Borodovsky, Sharon Levy, Marc Fishman, Lisa A. Marsch
Year: 2018
Publication Place: United States
Abstract:

: In the past decade, a new cohort of adolescents and young adults with opioid use disorders (OUD) has emerged. While medications and psychosocial treatments are available, few adolescents and young adults with OUD can access and remain in treatment. Effective, practical, and scalable treatment paradigms for this young population are needed. Buprenorphine is a medication with unique pharmacological and regulatory characteristics that make it a promising component of adolescent and young adult OUD treatment models. Three randomized controlled trials and multiple observational studies have evaluated the use of buprenorphine to treat this population. However, data from these studies have not been consolidated into an up-to-date summary that may be useful to clinicians. The objective of this narrative review is to inform clinical practice by summarizing results of primary and secondary analyses from randomized controlled clinical trials and observational studies that have evaluated the use of buprenorphine to treat adolescents and young adults with OUD. Based on results from these studies, we encourage the conceptualization of OUD among youth as a chronic medical condition requiring a long-term management strategy. This includes treatment with buprenorphine in conjunction with medication-prescribing protocols that do not necessarily require daily clinic attendance for observed medication adherence. However, more study of treatment delivery models, addressing such issues as medication adherence and intensity requirements, is needed to determine practices that optimize outcomes for youth.

Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
191
Buprenorphine treatment for narcotic addiction: not without risks
Type: Journal Article
Authors: R. A. Sansone, L. A. Sansone
Year: 2015
Publication Place: United States
Abstract: While most clinicians will never prescribe buprenorphine or combined buprenorphine/naloxone, familiarity with the risks of these pharmacological approaches to the treatment of narcotic addiction remains relevant. Overall, medication-assisted treatment has clearly resulted in meaningful gains for a number of individuals who are addicted to narcotics (i.e., opiates and opioids). However, a certain level of risk is inherent with these approaches. For example, both buprenorphine and buprenorphine/naloxone may be diverted and misused (e.g., intravenously injected, intranasally administered), particularly buprenorphine. Likewise, when illicitly injected, both can cause infectious complications as well as result in death from overdose. The risk of death with buprenorphine overdose appears to be heightened with the coadministration of either benzodiazepines or sedative/hypnotics. To conclude, as with all interventions in medicine, buprenorphine treatment for narcotic addiction has a clinically fluctuating risk/benefit equation that must be continually monitored.
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
192
Buprenorphine treatment for opioid dependence: The relative efficacy of daily, twice and thrice weekly dosing.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Lisa A. Marsch, Warren K. Bickel, Gary J. Badger, Eric A. Jacobs
Year: 2005
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
193
Buprenorphine treatment for probationers and parolees
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Michael S. Gordon, Timothy W. Kinlock, Robert P. Schwartz, Kathryn A. Couvillion, Laura J. Sudec, Kevin E. O'Grady, Frank J. Vocci, Hamin Shabazz
Year: 2015
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
194
Buprenorphine treatment for young adults. Factsheet
Type: Government Report
Authors: National Institute on Drug Abuse, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Year: 2012
Topic(s):
Grey Literature See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
Disclaimer:

This grey literature reference is included in the Academy's Literature Collection in keeping with our mission to gather all sources of information on integration. Grey literature is comprised of materials that are not made available through traditional publishing avenues. Often, the information from unpublished resources can be limited and the risk of bias cannot be determined.

195
Buprenorphine treatment formulations: Preferences among persons in opioid withdrawal management
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Shannon R. Kenney, Bradley J. Anderson, Genie L. Bailey, Michael D. Stein
Year: 2018
Topic(s):
Education & Workforce See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
196
Buprenorphine treatment of opioid-dependent pregnant women: a comprehensive review
Type: Journal Article
Authors: H. E. Jones, S. H. Heil, A. Baewert, A. M. Arria, K. Kaltenbach, P. R. Martin, M. G. Coyle, P. Selby, S. M. Stine, G. Fischer
Year: 2012
Publication Place: England
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection
,
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
197
Buprenorphine treatment outcome in dually diagnosed heroin dependent patients: A retrospective study.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Gilberto Gerra, Claudio Leonardi, Antonio D'Amore, Giovanni Strepparola, Roberto Fagetti, Cinzia Assi, Amir Zaimovic, Alfio Lucchini
Year: 2006
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
198
Buprenorphine treatment outcomes among opioid-?ependent cocaine users and non-users.
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Chinazo O. Cunningham, Angela Giovanniello, Hillary V. Kunins, Robert J. Roose, Aaron D. Fox, Nancy L. Sohler
Year: 2013
Topic(s):
Opioids & Substance Use See topic collection
,
Education & Workforce See topic collection
200
Buprenorphine treatment retention and comorbidities among patients with opioid use disorder in a primary care setting
Type: Journal Article
Authors: Mary M. Sweeney, Laura Prichett, Michael I. Fingerhood, Denis Antoine, Annie Umbricht, Kelly E. Dunn, Megan E. Buresh
Year: 2022
Topic(s):
Healthcare Disparities See topic collection