Comparative Effectiveness Associated With Buprenorphine and Naltrexone in Opioid Use Disorder and Cooccurring Polysubstance Use

May 10, 2022JAMA network open

Comparing Buprenorphine and Naltrexone for Opioid Addiction with Other Drug Use

AI simplified

Abstract

Among 179,280 individuals with opioid use disorder, 57.4% received psychosocial treatment without medication for opioid use disorder.

  • Cooccurring substance use disorders (SUD) were present in 47,488 individuals, with 70.4% not receiving medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD).
  • Individuals with cooccurring SUD had decreased odds of initiating buprenorphine (risk ratio 0.55) but increased odds of initiating naltrexone, with extended-release naltrexone odds at 1.12 and oral naltrexone at 1.95.
  • Among 12,485 individuals who experienced drug-related poisonings, buprenorphine treatment days were associated with decreased poisonings for both those with and without cooccurring SUD (odds ratios of 0.56 and 0.57, respectively).
  • No protective association was found for oral naltrexone regarding drug-related poisonings.

AI simplified

Full Text

We can’t show the full text here under this license. Use the link below to read it at the source.

what lands in your inbox each week:

  • πŸ“š7 fresh studies
  • πŸ“plain-language summaries
  • βœ…direct links to original studies
  • πŸ…top journal indicators
  • πŸ“…weekly delivery
  • πŸ§˜β€β™‚οΈalways free