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Getting Patients With Opioid Use Disorder Started on Buprenorphine in Primary Care


 


Dr. Garment offered three reasons for buprenorphine’s safety:

  • The drug is a partial, as opposed to full, opioid agonist, so as the dose increases, the patient experiences less withdrawal and fewer opioid cravings. As a result, they will hit a ceiling effect that avoids euphoria, respiratory depression, or overdose.
  • Buprenorphine is “stickier” than other OUD medications: “If I’m taking buprenorphine and I decide to use some [oxycodone], what’s going to happen is that very little of that, if any, is going to get bound to my opioid receptors because buprenorphine is so sticky and adherent, it’s not going to let other opioids on.”
  • Most buprenorphine is co-formulated with naloxone, an opioid antagonist. If a patient tries to get high from buprenorphine and tries to snort or inject it, naloxone will kick in and cancel out the buprenorphine.

Dr. Garment said she obtains urine screens ideally twice a year. If other drugs show up on the test, she said, she speaks with the patient about their drug use. “It’s never a reason to discharge someone from a practice,” she said.

Dr. Garment reported no relevant financial conflicts of interest.

*This story was updated on April 29, 2024.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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