GP & PHC Research Conference Abstracts 2006

Pharmacotherapy for heroin dependence, translation of healthcare service provision to research.

Author(s)

Diane Arnold-Reed, Robert Tait, Hanh Ngo, George O'Neil

Organisation

University of Notre Dame Australia

Aims & rationale/Objectives

A novel example of healthcare service provision translation into a research framework within a community based drug and alcohol treatment facility.

Methods

Retrospective patient clinical file examination was used.
Curves modelled to routinely collected blood samples were used to ascertain the time it took blood levels to fall below therapeutic levels following naltrexone implant treatment.
Linkage of patient information to the Western Australian Data Linkage System (DLS) at the Department of Health enabled follow-up of overdose presentations in patients after treatment.
Patient case studies were used to delineate treatment of special cases (eg drug impaired physicians).

Principal findings

Results of modelled data showed that naltrexone implants are capable of maintaining low blood naltrexone levels within the ascribed therapeutic range. Coverage can be extended by use of sequential implants. Case studies supported this, in that following sequential implant treatment blood naltrexone was maintained at levels required for antagonism of opioid based drugs for significant periods of time. Longer term follow-up of a cohort of treated patients through the DLS showed that there was a reduction in the number of opioid overdose deaths during the period of implant coverage.

Discussion

Routinely collected patient data from a treatment clinic together with mathematical modelling has been used to identify a major advantage of a pharmacotherapy (naltrexone implant), ie maintenance of low therapeutic blood naltrexone levels for extended periods. This suggests that successive implantation can be opportunistic with any subsequent clinical contact during the initial implant coverage period taken advantage of to perform a subsequent implant without fear of unduly elevating blood naltrexone levels.

Implications

For treatment of the long term heroin dependent person continuity of treatment is an important consideration. Naltrexone implants offer a level of continuous protection not achieved with any previous treatment.

Presentation

Open document.  PDF 63.2 Kb

Citation

Diane A, Robert T, Hanh N, George O. (2006). Pharmacotherapy for heroin dependence, translation of healthcare service provision to research.. In: 2006 General Practice and Primary Health Care Research Conference: Program & Abstracts. Primary Health Care Research and Information Service, Australia.