Abstract
The effectiveness of linking people from short-term in-patient managed withdrawal programs ('detoxification') to long-term, primary care-based buprenorphine is unknown. We tested whether buprenorphine initiation during an opioid withdrawal program and linkage to office-based buprenorphine (LINK) after discharge would increase engagement with office-based buprenorphine and decrease illicit opioid use during the ensuing 6months compared with standard withdrawal management (WM). Single-site randomized controlled trial. Short-term in-patient detoxification program in Massachusetts, USA. People with opioid use disorder (n=115) who averaged 32.4years of age, 68.2% male, 79.1% white, using illicit opioids on 27.3 of the last 30days, were randomly assigned to WM (n=59) versus LINK (n=56). Intervention was buprenorphine induction, in-patient dose stabilization and post-discharge transition to maintenance buprenorphine at an affiliated primary care clinic (LINK). Comparator was 5-day buprenorphine managed withdrawal protocol (WM). Mean 30-day rate of use of illicit opioids (primary aim) and prescribed buprenorphine (secondary aim) at 1, 3 and 6months. Compared with WM, participants in the LINK condition had lower illicit opioid use rates at days 12 [b=-6.81, 95% confidence interval (CI)=-9.69; -3.92, P<0.001], 35 (b=-8.55, 95% CI-11.63; -5.47, P<0.001), 95 (b=-7.34, 95% CI=-10.59; -4.11, P<0.001) and 185 (b=-3.52, 95% CI=-7.07; 0.27, P=0.052). The LINK arm had higher prescription buprenorphine use rates (P<0.001) at all assessments. Among people with opioid use disorder, initiation of, and linkage to, office-based buprenorphine treatment post-discharge reduced illicit opioid use and increased days of buprenorphine treatment for up to 6months post-discharge compared with an in-patient detoxification protocol.
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