Mellar P. Davis, MD, FCCP, FAAHPM
Mary Lynn McPherson, MA, MDE, BCPS, CPE
Description
Description
This is a talk that highlights the specific ways in which buprenorphine is different from other opioids used to treat pain. It will specifically discuss analgesia, tolerance, respiratory depression and the unique role buprenorphine can play in patients who suffer from both pain and depression.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
A detailed review and update on Buprenorphine as well as a detailed look at the intra-cellular nuances of buprenorphine that makes this molecule so special.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
This symposium will review new in vitro research to understand the complexity of buprenorphine pharmacologic effects as it relates to both
analgesia and adverse events. Evidence will also be presented to further support buprenorphine’s use as an analgesic.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
The continued escalation of patients treated for opioid use disorder (OUD) has called for an increase in access to OUD therapies. Pharmacists have previously demonstrated value in collaborative treatment of various disease states and have recently begun to address gaps in OUD care by facilitating buprenorphine therapy. This presentation will review current literature describing the pharmacist’s role in facilitating buprenorphine as part of the OUD care team. Studies were included in the review if a pharmacist was part of a care model in which buprenorphine was prescribed for OUD and excluded if there was a pain management indication for therapy, a limited pharmacist role, or a survey methodology used. Key characteristics identified include: 1) Pharmacist Role 2) Collaborating Prescriber Type 3) Clinic Setting 4) Pharmacist Practice Type and 5) Outcomes. Findings revealed that pharmacists are a valued member of buprenorphine care teams across a variety of settings and have a positive impact on important patient outcomes such as treatment retention and relapse. Few published collaborative care models exist, suggesting pharmacists may be underutilized in caring for this expanding patient population. Pharmacists are well prepared to take a more active role in buprenorphine management to help address the enduring opioid crisis.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
We report a case in which sublingual buprenorphine was used to help transition a patient off intravenous (IV) opioid analgesics medications post-multiple abdominal procedures. Intravenous opioids are commonly used in inpatient surgical pain management for patients with severe pain who are unable to take oral medications. Typically, a short course of IV analgesics is used, followed by transition to oral analgesic regimen. However, in patients with poor gastrointestinal absorption, pain control can be challenging. We present this case to highlight how sublingual buprenorphine can be a useful agent for acute pain management, especially when conventional strategies provide sub-optimal responses.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
There is limited evidence and no clear consensus suggesting best practices for perioperative buprenorphine management in patients with opioid use disorder. As such, we aimed to develop a standardized perioperative management approach with the goals of (1) optimizing perioperative analgesia, (2) minimizing relapse risk, (3) setting expectations for patients and clinicians, (4) achieving prescribing consistency and mitigating risk among clinicians not familiar with perioperative buprenorphine management, and (5) maintaining continuity throughout care transitions. An interprofessional expert focus group convened to develop a consensus algorithm based upon buprenorphine’s unique pharmacologic features and published perioperative management recommendations. The resulting consensus algorithm continues the patient’s home buprenorphine dose in order to minimize relapse risk, but utilizes a divided dose approach starting the day of surgery if moderate to severe post-operative pain is expected. This strategy leverages the analgesic effects of buprenorphine while allowing for additional opioid binding to optimize analgesia. A patient-centered multimodal perioperative approach including local and/or regional anesthetics and nonopioid adjuncts is employed. Post-operative care is optimized by preoperative planning, including standardized patient assessment, perioperative communication with the buprenorphine prescriber, and education for patients and clinicians. Overall, integrating an understanding of pharmacology and clinical impact through the use of a readily adaptable algorithm
such as the divided dose approach is key to optimizing patient care in this high-risk population.
1. Larochelle MR, Bernson D, Land T, et al.: Medication for opioid use disorder after nonfatal opioid overdose and association
with mortality: A cohort study. Ann Intern Med. 2018; 169: 137-145. DOI: 10.7326/M17-3107.
2. Mattick RP, Breen C, Kimber J, et al.: Buprenorphine maintenance versus placebo or methadone maintenance for opioid
dependence. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014; 2: CD002207.
3. Atluri S, Sudarshan G, Manchikanti L: Assessment of the trends in medical use and misuse of opioid analgesics from
2004 to 2011. Pain Phys. 2014; 2(17): E119-E128.
4. Moore DJ: Nurse practitioners’ pivotal role in ending the opioid epidemic. J Nurs Pract. 2019; 15: 323-327.
5. HHS.gov: HHS expands access to treatment for opioid use disorder. 2021. Available at https://www.hhs.gov/about/
news/2021/01/14/hhs-expands-access-to-treatment-for-opioiduse-disorder.html. Accessed January 19, 2021.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
DOI: 10-5055-bupe-21-rp-0055
The chronic use of full opioid agonists presents risks to aging adults, especially since the longstanding use of opioids for chronic pain is associated with tolerance, along with opioid misuse, opioid use disorder (OUD), and inadvertent respiratory depression. Older adults are particularly at a high risk of complications given a higher prevalence of physical and mental health co-morbidities. Buprenorphine, used off-label for pain management, as a safer option, likely requires additional therapeutic resources to assist geriatric patients in this transition.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
Buprenorphine is emerging as a valuable tool in palliative care, in addressing safety concerns for patients on long term opioid therapy with serious illness, in reducing harm of unhealthy prescribed opioid use, and in the treatment of opioid use disorder. Managing the Complexities of Treating Older Adults with Longstanding Chronic Pain or Opioid Use Disorder with Buprenorphine and Integrative Health.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts
Opioid abuse represents a public health crisis that has significant associated morbidity and mortality. Since beginning in the early 1990’s, the opioid abuse epidemic has been difficult to control due to regulatory, economic, and psychosocial factors that have perpetuated its existence. This era of opioid abuse has been punctuated by three distinct rises in mortality, precipitated by unique public health problems that needed to be addressed. Patients affected by opioid abuse have been historically treated with either methadone or naltrexone. While these agents have clinical utility supported by robust literature, we the authors posit that buprenorphine is a superior therapy for both opioid use disorder (OUD) as well as pain. This primacy is due to the pharmacological properties of buprenorphine which render it unique among other opioid medications. One such property is buprenorphine’s ceiling effect of respiratory depression, a common side effect and complicating factor in the administration of many classical opioid medications. This profile renders buprenorphine safer, while simultaneously retaining therapeutic utility in the medical practitioner’s pharmacopeia for the treatment of opioid use disorder and pain.
Presentation Slide Handouts: Presentation Handouts