News Release

Opioid use disorder: Flexible treatment at home proves effective

A pan-Canadian team announces initial results of the national OPTIMA study comparing the efficacy of two models of care for treating opioid use disorder.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM)

Dr. Didier Jutras-Aswad, a CRCHUM researcher and professor at Université de Montréal

image: Dr. Didier Jutras-Aswad, a CRCHUM researcher and professor at Université de Montréal view more 

Credit: CHUM

Did you know that more than 26,500 Canadians died from opioid intoxication between January 2016 and September 2021? Or that more than 350,000 people who used drugs containing opioids to relieve their pain did so problematically?

In Quebec alone, 339 people died from opioid intoxication between January and September 2021, according to the latest data from the Public Health Agency of Canada.

Today, Canada is among the world’s top consumers of opioids, whether they’re medically prescribed or obtained illegally from illicit producers of very powerful substances such as fentanyl.

Now there’s new evidence that a more flexible model of care than methadone can be as effective in treating opioid use disorder, according to research led by Université de Montréal psychiatry and addictology professor Didier Jutras-Aswad.

Working with other colleagues involved in the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse, the CHUM Research Centre clinical scientist has published the results of a randomized controlled study in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

Rather than methadone, which has to be taken under close supervision at a pharmacy, their model of care is based on prescribing buprenorphine-naloxone, known commercially as Suboxone.

 

Taken at home

Participants in the study were allowed to take Suboxone at home starting in their first weeks of treatment. The approach proved just as effective as that using methadone, without the need for close supervision.

Up until now, studies comparing the efficacy of these two opioid-agonist therapies (OATs) were conducted under strict medical surveillance, deemed essential to ensure the safety and efficacy of the therapies.

Those receiving such treatment often find this approach restrictive—and many others simply don’t get it, as the requirement to be under supervision limits easy access to it.

“The approach proposed with buprenorphine-naloxone, more flexible in many regards than the usual model of care with methadone, allows us to simplify and facilitate access to OATs nationally,” said Jutras-Aswad.

“It’s an additional option, to better take the treatment preferences of people with opioid use disorder into account, and to be more respectful of their autonomy,” he said.

 

More than 270 participants

For the OPTIMA study, between October 2017 and March 2020, the research team recruited more than 270 adult volunteers in seven hospitals and clinics in Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia.

With an average age of 39, and with one in three a woman, all presented problematic opioid use from either prescribed or illegally produced opioids. Among the opioids inventoried were hydromorphone, morphine, oxycodone and fentanyl.

Participants were randomly assigned to two groups: half received methadone under close supervision in a pharmacy, and the other half received Suboxone, which could most often be taken at home.

They were followed for 24 weeks to notably compare the efficacy of each of the treatments in reducing their opioid use.

 

A latent stigma

Despite appeals in recent years for greater awareness of substance use disorders, the stigma surrounding people with such problems still hampers access to safe, suitable and evidence-based treatment, said Jutras-Aswad.

“With the health restrictions and limitations on follow-up visits in healthcare settings we’ve seen during the COVID-19 pandemic, I think we’ve come to realize more and more that Canadians need more flexible treatment options,” he said.

“We should be providing models that better suit their needs and situations. This is essential to not only reduce people’s exposure to unsafe opioids, but also to help them improve their health and quality of life.”

And while the solution supported by the data from the OPTIMA study is an important component of the response to the opioid and overdose crisis, it must absolutely be part of a broader range of harm reduction strategies to deal with these problems, he added.

 

 

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About this study

Flexible buprenorphine/naloxone model of care for reducing opioid use in individuals with prescription-type opioid use disorder: an open-label, pragmatic, non-Inferiority randomized controlled trial,” by Drs. Didier Jutras-Aswad, Bernard Le Foll, Eugenia Socias, Keith Ahamad and Ronald Lim from the OPTIMA research group of the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse, was published June 15, 2022 in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (FRN359787). Dr. Jutras-Aswad also receives financial support from the Fonds de recherche du Québec ‒ Santé.

 

About the CRCHUM

The University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM) is one of North America’s leading hospital research centres. It strives to improve adult health through a research continuum covering such disciplines as the fundamental sciences, clinical research and public health. Over 2,300 people work at the CRCHUM, including more than 500 researchers and more than 520 graduate students. chumontreal.qc.ca/crchum  

@CRCHUM  

 

About Université de Montréal

Deeply rooted in Montreal and dedicated to its international mission, Université de Montréal is one of the top universities in the French-speaking world. Founded in 1878, Université de Montréal today has 13 faculties and schools, and together with its two affiliated schools, HEC Montréal and Polytechnique Montréal, constitutes the largest centre of higher education and research in Québec and one of the major centres in North America. It brings together 2,400 professors and researchers and has more than 67,000 students. umontreal.ca 


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