4.6 Article

Factors Associated with Long-Term Retention in Buprenorphine-Based Addiction Treatment Programs: a Systematic Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 332-340

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-06448-z

Keywords

systematic review; buprenorphine; opioid use disorder; retention; long-term

Funding

  1. HRSA T32 [T32HP22240]

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A systematic review was conducted to determine factors associated with longer retention in buprenorphine treatment, with findings suggesting that initiating treatment in certain settings and higher buprenorphine doses were linked to better long-term retention. However, more objective data on buprenorphine treatment programs is needed, including a standardized approach to defining retention in such programs.
Background The average length of buprenorphine treatment for opioid use disorder is less than 6 months. Objective We conducted a systematic review to determine what factors were associated with longer retention in buprenorphine treatment. Design We searched Medline, Embase, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews in February 2018. Articles were restricted to randomized controlled trials on human subjects, written in English, which contained >= 24 weeks of objective data on retention in buprenorphine treatment. Main Measures We assessed whether dose of buprenorphine, treatment setting, or co-administration of behavioral therapy was associated with retention rates. Key Results Over 14,000 articles were identified. Thirteen articles (describing 9 studies) met inclusion criteria. Measures of retention varied widely. Three studies compared doses of buprenorphine between 1 and 8 mg and showed significantly higher rates of retention with higher doses (p values < 0.01). All other studies utilized buprenorphine doses between 8 and 24 mg daily, without comparison. No study found a significant difference in retention between buprenorphine alone and buprenorphine plus behavioral therapy (p values > 0.05). Initiating buprenorphine while hospitalized or within criminal justice settings prior to outpatient treatment programs was significantly associated with retention in buprenorphine treatment (p values < 0.01 respectively). Conclusions Setting of treatment initiation and a higher buprenorphine dose are associated with improved long-term treatment retention. More objective data on buprenorphine treatment programs are needed, including a standardized approach to defining retention in buprenorphine treatment programs. Registration This review was registered with PROSPERO (#CRD42019120336) in March 2019.

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