Literature DB >> 34145188

Supervised Tablet Injectable Opioid Agonist Therapy (TiOAT): A Strategy to Address Safer Supply for Individuals With an Opioid Use Disorder?

Jian Weng1, Nadia Fairbairn, Christy Sutherland, Cheyenne Johnson, Seonaid Nolan.   

Abstract

North America is in the midst of an overdose crisis, with up to 130 Americans dying daily from a preventable drug overdose. Opioids account for 70% of overdose deaths. Despite government efforts to improve access to opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment and the implementation of various harm reduction initiatives, overdose mortality remains unacceptably high. Although effective treatments exist for OUD (eg, opioid agonist therapies like buprenorphine/naloxone and methadone), many individuals do not achieve stabilization with these medications. Tablet injectable opioid agonist therapy (TiOAT) is an initiative being piloted in British Columbia to provide witnessed access to a safer opioid supply for individuals with treatment-refractory OUD. The program offers participants a safer opioid supply through physician-prescribed pharmaceutical-grade hydromorphone tablets. TiOAT is suitable for individuals with severe OUD who are actively injecting opioids and are refractory to conventional OUD treatment. As such, a scale-up of the TiOAT program may be a feasible alternative to address persistent opioid-related deaths in North America, while minimizing potential harms associated with unwitnessed safer supply opioid prescribing (eg, diversion and overdose). Although a comprehensive evaluation of TiOAT is of critical importance (including an assessment of the program's adverse events), completion of the evaluation should not preclude scale-up of the program in the interim as a strategy to reduce opioid-related harms.
Copyright © 2021 American Society of Addiction Medicine.

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Year:  2022        PMID: 34145188     DOI: 10.1097/ADM.0000000000000887

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Addict Med        ISSN: 1932-0620            Impact factor:   4.647


  1 in total

1.  The changing landscape of pharmaceutical alternatives to the unregulated drug supply during COVID-19.

Authors:  Karen McCrae; Stephanie Glegg; Marie-Éve Goyer; Bernard Le Foll; Rupi Brar; Christy Sutherland; Nadia Fairbairn
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2022-07-14
  1 in total

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