Sociodemographic and prescribing characteristics that impact long-term retention in buprenorphine treatment for opioid use disorder among a statewide population

Original research
by
Hallowell, Benjamin D. et al

Release Date

2022

Geography

USA

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

No

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

No

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

The objective of this study was to identify patient and prescription characteristics associated with long-term buprenorphine treatment retention.

Findings/Key points

37.8% were retained in treatment at 12-months. Demographic factors associated with a higher odds of long-term buprenorphine retention included older age, female sex, Medicaid insurance (vs private), and living closer to the pharmacy where the prescription was filled. Individuals who were prescribed the tablet formulation or received a non-buprenorphine opioid during the follow-up window had lower odds of long-term treatment at 12-months. Individuals who received at least one day of overlapping benzodiazepine and buprenorphine prescriptions  and those given a longer days supply had higher odds of long-term treatment at 12-months.

Design/methods

Data from the Rhode Island prescription drug monitoring program (n=4898)

Keywords

Substitution/OAT
About PWUD
Barriers and enablers
Outcomes