Lit review
by
Banergee, Srabani & Mary-Doug Wright
Release Date
2020
Geography
Canada
Language of Resource
English
Full Text Available
Yes
Open Access / OK to Reproduce
Yes
Peer Reviewed
Unknown
Objective
What is the clinical effectiveness of injectable opioid agonist treatment for patients with opioid dependence? What is the cost-effectiveness of injectable opioid agonist treatment for patients with opioid dependence?
Findings/Key points
One systematic review found that compared to patients treated with other treatments (i.e., methadone, or any other treatment program) those treated with injectable diacetylmorphine (DAM) (with or without the addition of methadone) had statistically significantly greater retention in treatment, reduction in illicit drug use, reduction in criminal activities, and fewer convictions and imprisonments, but no statistically significant difference in mortality and greater occurrence of adverse events.One RCT showed that injectable hydromorphone (HDM) was not inferior to injectable DAM with respect to days of street opioid use, and proportions of urinalysis positives for street heroin metabolites in urine samples. There were no statistically significant between-group differences with respect to retention to treatment, criminal activity, and physical health and psychological health, however there was statistically significantly higher risk of adverse events related to the intervention in the DAM group compared to the HDM group. One crossover RCT with 28 patients showed that there was statistically significant improvement after injectable DAM treatment compared to before treatment with respect to anxiety, anger, emotional excitement and well-being, and statistically significantly less heroin craving with injectable DAM compared to injectable placebo.
Design/methods
Looked at 1 systematic review, 2 RCTs, 2 economic evaluations
Keywords
Mortality
Evidence base
Outcomes
Social benefits