| Literature DB >> 35669100 |
Nitika Sanger1, Balpreet Panesar2, Michael Dennis3, Tea Rosic4, Myanca Rodrigues4, Elizabeth Lovell5, Shuling Yang3, Mehreen Butt6, Lehana Thabane4,7, Zainab Samaan4,5.
Abstract
Introduction: Patient centred care is needed now more than ever in the treatment of opioid use disorder. Trials, policy makers, and service providers have most often used treatment retention and opioid urine screens as measures of treatment effectiveness. However, patients receiving medication for opioid use disorder treatment (MOUD) may prioritise the use of different ways to assess treatment success. Objective: The aim of this review is to synthesize literature examining the self-reported goals patients would like to achieve in MOUD for opioid use disorder.Entities:
Keywords: medication for opioid use disorder; opioid use disorder; patient reported outcomes; patient-centred care
Year: 2022 PMID: 35669100 PMCID: PMC9165704 DOI: 10.2147/PROM.S297699
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Relat Outcome Meas ISSN: 1179-271X
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram for Study Selection Process.
Summary of Included Study Characteristics
| Cross Sectional | N=248 | United Kingdom | Methadone, buprenorphine, and buprenorphine-naloxone | Participants currently receiving MOUD | Patients of MOUD were asked about “goals of therapy”. | Presented most reported response. Treatment goal was to become drug-free (56%). | |
| Qualitative | Specific population: heroin street users | United States | Methadone | Participants were 18 years of age or older, able to communicate in English and/or Spanish, currently used heroin, enrolled in methadone treatment, and provided proof of enrollment. | Participants went through a detailed semi-structured interview which was analyzed into themes | Goals were to avoid the “morning sickness”, desire to quit heroin and observe social norms (licit work and family) | |
| Secondary analyses of a trial | N=127 | United Kingdom | Optimized oral methadone, supervised injectable heroin, and supervised injectable methadone | Participants were chronic heroin users who were on MOUD for at least 6 months but continued to use heroin for 50% of the time in the past 3 months | Asked the open-ended question at baseline: what areas of your life would you most like help with? | Deduce substance misuse (80.5%) | |
| Qualitative | N=30 | Canada | Injectable diacetylmorphine and hydromorphone treatments | Participants receiving injectable opioid agonist treatment | In-depth interviews that used open-ended questions relating to various domains of patient-centred care | Theme of self-reported outcomes emerged (outcomes that participants prioritized). Outcomes were reduced street opioid use, reduced involvement in illegal activities, reduced worry and stress related to street opioid use and illegal activities, increased sense of stability and routine, and improved health | |
| Qualitative | N=6 | United States | Methadone | Participants who were discharged from initial methadone program but re-entered a new one within 12 months | Semi-structured interview with questions relating to treatment attitude and experiences | Theme of initial goals of treatment emerged which included getting a decent place to live, having a job, going back to school raising children, forging meaningful relationships with others, staying off illicit drugs and being abstinent. | |
| Mixed Methods | N=41 | Ireland | Methadone | Patients receiving methadone treatment | Questionnaire with open and closed-ended questions including long-term treatment goals | Continue methadone treatment into the future (17%) | |
| Mixed methods | n=2031 | Canada | Methadone and buprenorphine-naloxone | Participants diagnosed with OUD, receiving MOUD, 16 years of age or older and provided written consent | Asked the open-ended question: What are your goals from treatment? | Themes emerged from the responses which were: stop MOUD, avoid illicit drugs, live a “normal” life, manage pain, avoid OUD symptoms, taper off MOUD, and no changes in treatment wanted. | |
| Cross-sectional | n=200 | Germany | Methadone, buprenorphine, and buprenorphine-naloxone | For patients, it was people who are opioid dependent and currently receiving treatment) | Participants were asked a questionnaire on various domains related to their treatment including reasons for starting treatment | Desire to improve their health (71%) |
Critical Appraisal Skills Program of Included Qualitative Studies
| Was There a Clear Statement of the Aims of Research | Is a Qualitative Methodology Appropriate | Was the Recruitment Strategy Appropriate to the Aims of the Research | Was Data Collected in a Way That Addresses the Research Issue | Has the Relationship Between Researcher and Participant Been Adequately Considered | Have Ethical Issues Been Taken into Considerations | Was the Data Analysis Sufficiently Rigorous | Is There a Clear Statement of Findings | How Valuable is the Research | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Marchand 2020 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Sanger 2021 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | no | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Mitchell 2011 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes |
| Gelpi-Acosta 2015 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | yes | no | yes | yes | yes |
| O’Reilly 2011 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | no | no | yes | yes | yes |
Newcastle-Ottawa Scale Risk of Bias of Included Observational Studies
| Representativeness of the Sample | Sample Size | Non-Respondents | Ascertainment of the Exposure (Risk Factor) | Comparability: | Assessment of the Outcome | Statistical Test | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dale-Perera 2015 | * | 0 | * | 0 | * | * | * | 5 | |
| Stover 2010 | * | 0 | 0 | ** | * | * | * | 6 | |
| Representativeness of the exposed cohort | Selection of the non-exposed cohort | Ascertainment of the exposure (risk factor) | Demonstration that the outcome of interest was not present at beginning of study | Comparability: | Assessment of the outcome | Was the follow-up long enough for outcomes to occur | Adequacy of follow-up of cohorts | Total | |
| Groshkova 2013 | * | * | * | * | * | 0 | * | 0 | 6 |
Notes: *Indicates one star in the NOS scale. **Indicates two stars in the NOS.
Themes Generated from Patient Reported Outcomes of MOUD
| THEME GENERATED | REPORTED OUTCOME 1 | REPORTED OUTCOME 2 | REPORTED OUTCOME 3 | REPORTED OUTCOME 4 | REPORTED OUTCOME 5 | REPORTED OUTCOME 6 | REPORTED OUTCOME 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No change from current treatment | Continue methadone treatment into the future | ||||||
| Reduced street opioid use | Become drug-free | Avoid illicit drugs | Staying off illicit drugs | Desire to quit heroin | Reduce substance misuse | Reduce illicit drug use | |
| Prevent OUD symptoms | Avoid the “morning sickness” | ||||||
| Reduced involvement in illegal activities | Reduce criminal activity | Cease committing crimes to support their opioid dependence | |||||
| Reduced worry and stress related to street opioid use and illegal activities | Improve psychological wellbeing | Good mental health | |||||
| Increased sense of stability and routine | Normal life | Achieve stability, normality, routine, and structure | |||||
| Improved health | Improve physical health | Desire to improve their health | Pain Management | ||||
| Stop treatment | Stop taking methadone, either in the immediate future | ||||||
| Taper off treatment | Stop taking methadone, eventually | ||||||
| Getting a decent place to live | Improve housing situation | ||||||
| Having a job | Going back to school | Have licit work | Improve education and work opportunities | Improve finances | Improve employment status | Get education, job, and wanting to support their family | |
| Raising children | Family | Improve relationships with family and friends | Forging meaningful relationships with others. | Increase non-drug scene socialisation | Change social networks |