Abstract

BackgroundTo address the US opioid epidemic, there is an urgent clinical need to provide persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) with effective medication treatments for OUD (MOUD). Formulations of sublingual buprenorphine/naloxone (SL-BUP/NLX) are considered the standard of care for OUD including within the Veterans Healthcare Administration (VHA). However, poor retention on MOUD undermines its effectiveness. Long-acting injectable monthly buprenorphine (INJ-BUP) (e.g., Sublocade®) has the potential to improve retention and therefore reduce opioid use and overdose. Designing and conducting studies for OUD pose unique challenges. The strategies and solutions to some of these considerations in designing Cooperative Studies Program (CSP) 2014, Buprenorphine for Treating Opioid Use Disorder in Veterans (VA-BRAVE), a randomized, 20-site, clinical effectiveness trial comparing INJ-BUP to SL-BUP/NLX conducted within the VHA may provide valuable guidance for others confronted with similar investigation challenges.MethodsThis 52-week, parallel group, open-label, randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluates the comparative effectiveness of two current FDA-approved formulations of buprenorphine: (1) daily SL-BUP/NLX vs. (2) monthly (28-day) INJ-BUP for Veterans with moderate to severe OUD (n = 952). The primary outcomes are (1) retention in MOUD and (2) opioid abstinence. Secondary outcomes include measures of other drug use, psychiatric symptoms, medical outcomes including prevalence rates of HIV, hepatitis B and C as well as social outcomes (housing instability, criminal justice involvement), service utilization and cost-effectiveness. Special considerations in conducting a comparative effectiveness trial with this population and during COVID-19 pandemic were also included.DiscussionThe evaluation of the extended-release formulation of buprenorphine compared to the standard sublingual formulation in real-world VHA settings is of paramount importance in addressing the opioid epidemic. The extent to which this new treatment facilitates retention, decreases opioid use, and prevents severe sequelae of OUD has not been studied in any long-term trial to date. Positive findings in this trial could lead to widespread adoption of MOUD, and, if proven superior INJ-BUP, by clinicians throughout the VHA and beyond. This treatment has the potential to reduce opioid use among Veterans, improve medical, psychological, and social outcomes, and save lives at justifiable cost.Trial registration Registered at Clinicaltrials.gov NCT04375033

Highlights

  • To address the US opioid epidemic, there is an urgent clinical need to provide persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) with effective medication treatments for OUD (MOUD)

  • VA Cooperative Studies Program #2014 (CSP #2014) is the first long-term, direct effectiveness comparison trial of monthly injectable formulation of buprenorphine (INJ-BUP) to daily formulation of buprenorphine + naloxone (SL-BUP/NLX) and the first to be conducted in the Veterans Healthcare Administration (VHA) system among Veterans with OUD

  • Data emerging in 2020 suggest that overdose deaths continue to climb during the COVID-19 pandemic [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Long-acting injectable monthly buprenorphine (INJ-BUP) (e.g., Sublocade®) has the potential to improve retention and reduce opioid use and overdose. The strategies and solutions to some of these considerations in designing Cooperative Studies Program (CSP) 2014, Buprenorphine for Treating Opioid Use Disorder in Veterans (VA-BRAVE), a randomized, 20-site, clinical effectiveness trial comparing INJ-BUP to SLBUP/NLX conducted within the VHA may provide valuable guidance for others confronted with similar investigation challenges. The strategies and solutions to some of these considerations in the design of a multi-site, national comparative effectiveness trial may provide valuable guidance for others confronted with similar challenges. VA Cooperative Studies Program #2014 (CSP #2014) is the first long-term, direct effectiveness comparison trial of monthly injectable formulation of buprenorphine (INJ-BUP) to daily formulation of buprenorphine + naloxone (SL-BUP/NLX) and the first to be conducted in the Veterans Healthcare Administration (VHA) system among Veterans with OUD. Data emerging in 2020 suggest that overdose deaths continue to climb during the COVID-19 pandemic [9]

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