Un mail diffusé par le Flyer. Je pense que cela peut s'appliquer ausdsi à la
codeine et au
TramadolAmicalement
Cher(e)s correspondant(e)s
Ci-dessous, les résultats d'une Cochrane Review publiée il y a quelques jours, visant à évaluer l'efficacité des médicaments de
substitution opiacée dans le cadre du traitement de la dépendance aux
opioïdes analgésiques.
En résumé les auteurs concluent que le niveau de preuve sur l'utilisation des traitements de
substitution opiacée est faible à modéré pour les patients dépendants des
opioïdes analgésiques. Et, qu'il n'y pas de différence entre
méthadone et
buprénorphine.
En comparant un traitement de
substitution par la
buprénorphine à une pratique de
sevrage ('detoxification' dans le texte) ou un suivi psychologique, les résultats sont en faveur de la burpénophine.
Les auteurs ajoutent que des études plus robustes à venir pourraient changer ces conclusions.
Opioid maintenance medicines for the treatment of dependence on opioid pain medicines
Background
Use of pharmaceutical opioids (medicines that are used to treat pain) has increased dramatically in some parts of the world since the mid-1990s. With the increased use, there has been increasing numbers of people seeking treatment for dependence (addiction) on pharmaceutical opioids. Currently, most treatment guidelines are based on research that was conducted in people who were dependent on heroin (a highly addictive opioid). This review sought to compare different opioid agonist maintenance treatments (i.e. treatments such as
methadone or
buprenorphine that are given for at least 30 days to help the person to reduce their unsanctioned drug use) for the treatment of pharmaceutical opioid dependence. We also compared results from maintenance treatment to short term treatments such as detoxification (removal of the drug from the body) or psychological treatments (e.g. talkingtherapy, counselling).
Study characteristics
We examined the scientific literature up to May 2015. We identified six randomised controlled trials (studies where people were allocated at random to one of two or more treatment or control conditions) involving 607 people who were dependent on pharmaceutical opioids. The people in the study were 77% male and had an average age of 31.6 years. The average duration of the studies comparing different opioidmaintenance treatments (three studies that compared
methadone to
buprenorphine) was 24 weeks, and the average duration of studies comparing a maintenance treatment (three studies with
buprenorphine maintenance) to detoxification or psychological treatment was 10 weeks. Five of the six studies were conducted in the US, with one study from Iran.
We looked at opioid use and leaving treatment early.
Five of the studies were funded by the National Institute of Health (USA), with onestudy not reporting the funding source. Four studies reported that a drug company provided the medicine.
Key results
We found that there is probably little or no difference between how well
methadone and
buprenorphine worked to keep people in treatment, to reduce opioid use, or side effects. We found that
buprenorphine probably keeps more people in treatment, may reduce use of opioids, and has fewer side effects compared to detoxification or psychological treatment alone.
Quality of the evidence
Overall, the evidence was of low to moderate quality. All studies put people into treatment groups randomly, but the participants and researchers knew which medication the participants were taking, which could bias the results and lower the quality of the evidence. Some of the studies had reasonable numbers of people who did not finish the study in both treatment groups, which means there are some missing results, but the number of people with missing results was similar in both treatment groups of the study for most studies. Most of the studies were similar in design and results were collected in a way that allowed them to compare opioid use and number of people completing the study.
Authors' conclusions:
There was low to moderate quality evidence supporting the use of maintenance agonist pharmacotherapy for pharmaceutical opioiddependence.
Methadone or
buprenorphine appeared equally effective. Maintenance treatment with
buprenorphine appeared more effective than detoxification or psychological treatments.
Due to the overall low to moderate quality of the evidence and small sample sizes, there is the possibility that the further research may change these findings.