| Literature DB >> 33436476 |
Tea Rosic1,2, Leen Naji2,3, Balpreet Panesar4, Darren B Chai5, Nitika Sanger6, Brittany B Dennis7, David C Marsh8,9,10,11, Launette Rieb12, Andrew Worster2,7, Lehana Thabane2,13, Zainab Samaan14,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Existing methods of measuring effectiveness of pharmacological treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) are highly variable. Therefore, understanding patients' treatment goals is an integral part of patient-centred care. Our objective is to explore whether patients' treatment goals align with a frequently used clinical outcome, opioid abstinence.Entities:
Keywords: adult psychiatry; qualitative research; substance misuse
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33436476 PMCID: PMC7805377 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow diagram. POST, Pharmacogenetics of Opioid Substitution Treatment Response.
Characteristics of participants at study entry (n=2030)
| Characteristic | Statistic |
|
| |
| Age in years; mean (SD) | 39.2 (10.7) |
| Female sex;* | 894 (44.1) |
| Type of treatment; | |
| Methadone | 1601 (78.9) |
| Buprenorphine-naloxone | 429 (21.1) |
| Dose in mg/day; mean (SD) | |
| Methadone | 70.5 (41.4) |
| Buprenorphine-naloxone | 12.0 (6.7) |
| Years in treatment;* median (IQR) | 2.6 (5.2) |
| Abstinence from opioid use at baseline;† | 646 (31.9) |
| Number of opioid urine drug screens at 3 months;‡ mean (SD) | 12.6 (5.3) |
| Median percentage of opioid-positive urine drug screens at 3 months;‡ median (Q1, Q3) | 0 (0 to 20) |
| Abstinence from opioid use at 3 months;‡ | 1127 (56.5) |
|
| |
| Number of goals reported; | |
| One | 1222 (60.2%) |
| Two | 643 (31.7%) |
| Three | 150 (7.4%) |
| Four | 13 (0.64%) |
| Five | 2 (0.1%) |
| Control cravings/withdrawal | 247 (12.17%) |
| Maintain or stabilise medication dose | 122 (6.01%) |
| ‘Live a normal life’ | 283 (13.94%) |
| Manage pain | 240 (11.82%) |
| ‘Stay or get clean’ | 742 (36.55%) |
| Stop or taper off treatment | 1386 (68.28%) |
*Data available for 2029 participants.
†Data available for 2028 participants.
‡Data available for 1996 participants (missing for 34 participants).
§Percentages sum to more than 100% as patients could report multiple goals in treatment.
Q1, 25th percentile; Q3, 75th percentile.
Multivariable model of the association between patient goals and abstinence from opioid use for 3 months following study entry
| Covariate | Complete case analysis* (n=1994)† | Sensitivity analysis excluding outliers (n=1980)*‡ | ||||
| ( | ||||||
| OR | 95% CI | p value | OR | 95% CI | p value | |
| Control cravings/withdrawal | 0.76 | 0.56 to 1.03 | 0.078 | 0.73 | 0.54 to 0.99 | 0.044 |
| Maintain or stabilise medication dose | 1.15 | 0.74 to 1.79 | 0.523 | 1.24 | 0.79 to 1.95 | 0.354 |
| ‘Live a normal life’ | 1.02 | 0.77 to 1.35 | 0.879 | 0.98 | 0.74 to 1.31 | 0.902 |
| Manage pain | 1.0 | 0.73 to 1.36 | 0.976 | 0.96 | 0.70 to 1.32 | 0.806 |
| ‘Stay or get clean’ | 0.73 | 0.59 to 0.91 | 0.005 | 0.70 | 0.56 to 0.87 | 0.001 |
| Stop or taper off treatment | 1.0 | 0.80 to 1.27 | 0.974 | 1.01 | 0.80 to 1.27 | 0.954 |
Variance inflation factor=1.19.
Hosmer-Lemeshow 2 5.93, p=0.656.
*Model is adjusted for age, sex, type of treatment (methadone or buprenorphine-naloxone), dose, length of time in treatment and opioid abstinence at baseline.
†Participants with missing data in any of the included covariates are excluded due to complete case analysis (missing urine drug screen data: n=36, missing sex: n=1, missing length of time in treatment: n=1).
‡Excluding 14 outliers detected using deviance residuals less than −2 from the analysis