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      Case Series: Limited Opioid Withdrawal With Use of Transdermal Buprenorphine to Bridge to Sublingual Buprenorphine in Hospitalized Patients

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          Abstract

          Prerequisite opioid withdrawal symptoms prior to buprenorphine induction are unacceptable to many patients. We assessed whether transdermal buprenorphine minimized withdrawal while bridging to sublingual therapy among hospital inpatients. Retrospective chart review of (n = 23) inpatients with opioid use disorder or opioid dependence due to chronic pain. Of 23 inpatients, 65% transitioned without symptoms, while 35% experienced mild withdrawal. Ninety-six percent completed planned hospitalizations, with 83% engaged in treatment 4 weeks post-discharge. Bridging to sublingual therapy with transdermal buprenorphine patches was feasible without withdrawal symptoms. This strategy may facilitate buprenorphine therapy in hospital inpatients.

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          Addiction Medicine Consultations Reduce Readmission Rates for Patients With Serious Infections From Opioid Use Disorder

          The opioid epidemic has increased hospital admissions for serious infections related to opioid abuse. Our findings demonstrate that addiction medicine consultation is associated with increased treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD), greater likelihood of completing antimicrobial therapy, and reduced readmission rates among patients with OUD and serious infections requiring hospitalization.
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            Is Open Access

            Use of microdoses for induction of buprenorphine treatment with overlapping full opioid agonist use: the Bernese method

            Background Buprenorphine is a partial µ-opioid receptor agonist used for maintenance treatment of opioid dependence. Because of the partial agonism and high receptor affinity, it may precipitate withdrawal symptoms during induction in persons on full µ-opioid receptor agonists. Therefore, current guidelines and drug labels recommend leaving a sufficient time period since the last full agonist use, waiting for clear and objective withdrawal symptoms, and reducing pre-existing full agonist therapies before administering buprenorphine. However, even with these precautions, for many patients the induction of buprenorphine is a difficult experience, due to withdrawal symptoms. Furthermore, tapering of the full agonist bears the risk of relapse to illicit opioid use. Cases We present two cases of successful initiation of buprenorphine treatment with the Bernese method, ie, gradual induction overlapping with full agonist use. The first patient began buprenorphine with overlapping street heroin use after repeatedly experiencing relapse, withdrawal, and trauma reactivation symptoms during conventional induction. The second patient was maintained on high doses of diacetylmorphine (ie, pharmaceutical heroin) and methadone during induction. Both patients tolerated the induction procedure well and reported only mild withdrawal symptoms. Discussion Overlapping induction of buprenorphine maintenance treatment with full µ-opioid receptor agonist use is feasible and may be associated with better tolerability and acceptability in some patients compared to the conventional method of induction.
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              Leaving the Hospital Against Medical Advice Among People Who Use Illicit Drugs: A Systematic Review.

              Leaving the hospital against medical advice is an increasing problem in acute care settings and is associated with an array of negative health consequences that may lead to readmission for a worsened health outcome or mortality. Leaving the hospital against medical advice is particularly common among people who use illicit drugs (PWUD) and has been linked to a number of complex issues; however, few studies have focused specifically on this population beyond identifying them as being at an increased risk of leaving the hospital prematurely. Furthermore, programs and interventions for reducing the rate of leaving the hospital against medical advice among PWUD in acute care settings have not been well studied.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The American Journal on Addictions
                Am J Addict
                Wiley
                1055-0496
                1521-0391
                October 18 2019
                October 18 2019
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Mental Health and Addictions ServiceSt. Michael's Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada
                [2 ]Temerty Centre for Therapeutic Brain InterventionCentre for Addiction and Mental Health Toronto Ontario Canada
                [3 ]Department of Medicine, Clinical Pharmacology and ToxicologyUniversity of Toronto Ontario Canada
                [4 ]Department of MedicineDalhousie University Halifax Nova Scotia Canada
                Article
                10.1111/ajad.12964
                7134509
                31626394
                58b45883-5197-4d72-b013-6bc15efe870c
                © 2019

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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