| Literature DB >> 28122579 |
Alexandra M Franklyn1,2, Joseph K Eibl1,2, Graham Gauthier1, David Pellegrini1, Nancy E Lightfoot2, David C Marsh3,4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Benzodiazepine use is common among patients in opioid agonist therapy; this puts patients at an increased risk of overdose and death. In this study, we examine the impact of baseline and ongoing benzodiazepine use, and whether patients are more likely to terminate treatment with increasing proportion of benzodiazepine positive urine samples. We also study whether benzodiazepine use differs by geographic location.Entities:
Keywords: Benzodiazepines; Concurrent drug use; Northern Ontario; Opioid agonist therapy; Treatment retention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28122579 PMCID: PMC5267412 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-017-0134-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Characteristics of baseline BZD users and non-users
| Initially negative ( | Initially positive ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Male/female | 1975 (60.1%)/1313 (39.9%) | 316 (56.2%)/246 (43.8%) | |
| North/South | 1239 (37.7%)/2048 (62.3%) | 166 (29.5%)/396 (70.5%) | |
| Urban/rural | 2753 (83.8%)/543 (16.2%) | 499 (88.8%)/63 (11.2%) | |
| Median age ( | 30.8 (25.3, 39.4; SD = 10.2) | 34.3 (28.1, 45.3; SD = 10.9) | |
| Median peak methadone dose ( | 75 (50, 100; SD = 33) | 85 (55, 115; SD = 36) | |
| Median peak suboxone dose ( | 8 (8, 16; SD = 7) | 12 (8, 20; SD = 8) | |
| Median days retained ( | 265 (56, 526; SD = 272) | 215 (53, 519; SD = 270) | |
| Median percent positive results ( | 0.0 (0.0, 0.0; SD = 4.9) | 21.4 (6.8, 55.1; SD = 32.1) | |
| Percent positive results | [0, 25) | 3252 (98.9%) | 302 (53.7%) |
| [25, 50) | 31 (0.9%) | 96 (17.1%) | |
| [50, 75) | 4 (0.1%) | 68 (12.1%) | |
| [75, 100] | 1 (<0.1%) | 96 (17.1%) | |
| At month 3 | Positive/negative | 144 (6.0%)/2276 (94.0%) | 204 (50.5%)/200 (49.5%) |
| Retained | 2420 (73.6%) | 404 (71.9%) | |
| At Month 6 | Positive/negative | 109 (5.6%)/1850 (94.4%) | 128 (40.9%)/185 (59.1%) |
| Retained | 1959 (59.6%) | 313 (55.7%) | |
| At Month 9 | Positive/negative | 88 (5.2%)/1601 (94.8%) | 104 (39.0%)/163 (61.0%) |
| Retained | 1689 (51.4%) | 267 (47.5%) | |
| At Month 12 | Positive/negative | 80 (5.3%)/1443 (94.7%) | 74 (31.2%)/163 (68.8%) |
| Retained | 1523 (46.3%) | 237 (42.2%) | |
| Retained/not retained 365 Days | 1447 (44.0%)/1841 (56.0%) | 224 (39.9%)/338 (60.1%) | |
Descriptive statistics were summarized for baseline characteristics of patients, and standardized differences were used to compare patient groups. Patients were considered baseline BZD users if they had any BZD positive urine samples in the first month of treatment
Fig. 1Treatment retention by baseline BZD use. A Cox proportional hazard analysis was used to characterize the time to treatment discontinuation between the patient groups. Log-rank comparison of these curves yielded a chi-square value of 2.883 with a non-significant p value of 0.0895. Baseline BZD users were 14.9% more likely to drop out of treatment than baseline non-users [aHR = 1.15(95% CI 1.02–1.29)]
Fig. 2Treatment retention by proportion of BZD-positive urine samples. A Cox proportional hazard analysis was used to characterize the time to treatment discontinuation across the four patient groups. Patients with 25–50% of urines BZD-positive were 26.6% more likely to drop out of treatment than patients in the 0–25% reference group [aHR = 1.26 (95% CI 1.02–1.57)]. Patients with 50–75% of urines BZD-positive were 37.4% more likely to drop out of treatment than patients in the 0–25% reference group [aHR = 1.37(95% CI 1.03–1.832)]. Patients with 75–100% of urines BZD positive were 174.4% more likely to drop out of treatment than patients in the 0–25% reference group [aHR = 2.74(95% CI 2.19–3.43)]
Fig. 3Proportion of patients retained in treatment for one year, by frequency of BZD use, comparing North vs. South. The pattern of decreased retention with increased proportion of BZD-positive urine samples is not seen in the Southern population, as it is in the Northern population. However, Southern patients with a high proportion of BZD-positive urine samples (≥75%) experienced decreased retention rates