BACKGROUND:Buprenorphine-naloxone sublingual film was introduced in 2011 in Australia as an alternative to tablets. This study compared the two formulations on subjective dose effects and equivalence, trough plasma levels, adverse events, patient satisfaction, supervised dosing time, and impact upon treatment outcomes (substance use, psychosocial function). METHODS: 92 buprenorphine-naloxone tablet patients were recruited to this outpatient multi-site double-blind double-dummy parallel group trial. Patients were randomised to either tablets or film, without dose changes, over a 31 day period. RESULTS: No significant group differences were observed for subjective dose effects, trough plasma buprenorphine or norbuprenorphine levels, adverse events and treatment outcomes. Buprenorphine-naloxone film took significantly less time to dissolve than tablets (173±71 versus 242±141s, p=0.007, F=7.67). CONCLUSIONS: The study demonstrated dose equivalence and comparable clinical outcomes between the buprenorphine-naloxone film and tablet preparations, whilst showing improved dispensing times and patient ratings of satisfaction with the film.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND:Buprenorphine-naloxone sublingual film was introduced in 2011 in Australia as an alternative to tablets. This study compared the two formulations on subjective dose effects and equivalence, trough plasma levels, adverse events, patient satisfaction, supervised dosing time, and impact upon treatment outcomes (substance use, psychosocial function). METHODS: 92 buprenorphine-naloxone tablet patients were recruited to this outpatient multi-site double-blind double-dummy parallel group trial. Patients were randomised to either tablets or film, without dose changes, over a 31 day period. RESULTS: No significant group differences were observed for subjective dose effects, trough plasma buprenorphine or norbuprenorphine levels, adverse events and treatment outcomes. Buprenorphine-naloxone film took significantly less time to dissolve than tablets (173±71 versus 242±141s, p=0.007, F=7.67). CONCLUSIONS: The study demonstrated dose equivalence and comparable clinical outcomes between the buprenorphine-naloxone film and tablet preparations, whilst showing improved dispensing times and patient ratings of satisfaction with the film.
Authors: Javier O Morales; Kristin R Fathe; Ashlee Brunaugh; Silvia Ferrati; Song Li; Miguel Montenegro-Nicolini; Zeynab Mousavikhamene; Jason T McConville; Mark R Prausnitz; Hugh D C Smyth Journal: AAPS J Date: 2017-02-13 Impact factor: 4.009
Authors: Salomon Poliwoda; Nazir Noor; Jack S Jenkins; Cain W Stark; Mattie Steib; Jamal Hasoon; Giustino Varrassi; Ivan Urits; Omar Viswanath; Adam M Kaye; Alan D Kaye Journal: Health Psychol Res Date: 2022-08-20
Authors: Jake R Morgan; Alexander Y Walley; Sean M Murphy; Avik Chatterjee; Scott E Hadland; Joshua Barocas; Benjamin P Linas; Sabrina A Assoumou Journal: Drug Alcohol Depend Date: 2021-05-21 Impact factor: 4.852