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Outcomes associated with once‐daily versus multiple‐daily dosing of buprenorphine/naloxone for opioid use disorder

Abstract

Background and Objectives

Clinical studies examining once-daily versus multiple-daily dosing of buprenorphine/naloxone in patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) in the absence of comorbid pain are lacking.

Methods

This retrospective chart review aimed to compare 100 patients prescribed single-daily buprenorphine/naloxone (n = 50) to those prescribed multiple-daily buprenorphine/naloxone (n = 50) to elucidate the impact that dosing frequency has on negative urine drug screens (UDS) and the number of relapses in OUD.

Results

The once-daily cohort produced 84% negative UDSs compared with 74% in the multiple-daily cohort which was statistically significant (p = .034). There were a total of 43 relapses reported in the once-daily cohort, compared with 141 relapses in the multiple-daily cohort (p < .001). The average number of relapses per patient in the single-daily cohort was 0.68 compared with the multiple-daily cohort average of 2.16 (p < .001). In the once-daily cohort, 14% of patients experienced at least one relapse throughout the study, compared with 31% in the multiple-daily cohort (p < .002). There were no significant differences between time to relapse, adherence to treatment, or treatment retention. Statistically significantly more patients in the multiple-daily cohort were using methamphetamines (p = .005); there were no significant differences between groups with the use of any other illicit or non-prescribed substances.

Discussion and Conclusions

Once-daily dosing was associated with more negative UDSs and fewer opioid relapses compared with multiple-daily dosing.

Scientific Significance

This was the first study to evaluate buprenorphine/naloxone dosing frequency for opioid use disorder, in the absence of chronic pain. Additional studies evaluating optimal dosing schedules for relapse prevention are warranted.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 03/29/2022 | Link to this post on IFP |
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