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Adolescent Opiate Addiction

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New England has the highest per capita rate of opiate ... The Caribou experience. Pervasive risk of the drug subculture. The value of parental involvement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adolescent Opiate Addiction


1
Adolescent Opiate Addiction
  • Mark Publicker, MD FASAM
  • Medical Director,
  • Mercy Recovery Center

2
Adolescent opiate addiction
  • New England has the highest per capita rate of
    opiate addiction in the nation
  • Opiate addiction in New England is a pediatric
    epidemic
  • No area, rural, suburban or urban is spared
  • All socioeconomic groups are affected
  • These facts remain a surprise to most

3
Adolescent opiate addiction
  • Prescription opioids increasingly the gateway
    drug for young teens
  • Increasing progression to intravenous abuse
  • Quantities used often very great
  • Concurrent abuse of cocaine, benzodiazepines and
    increasingly methamphetamine
  • High overdose rates

4
Importance of age of first use
  • 2006 DASIS REPORT average age of first use has
    decreased
  • The earlier the exposure, the greater the risk of
    life-time diagnosis of dependence
  • The earlier the use, the greater the exposure to
    other risky behaviors

5

Maine opioid problem
Maine and U.S. Adolescents (Grades 9 - 12) Who
Used Heroin One or More Times During Their Life,
2001
6
Maine opioid problem - young adults
7
Maine adolescent 30-day prescription drug abuse
2003
  • 7th Grade 3.7
  • 8th Grade 6.1
  • 9th Grade 8.9
  • 10th Grade 11.0
  • 11th Grade 11.6
  • 12th Grade 10.3

8
Adolescent opiate abuse
9
Why the increased female risk?
  • High rates of physical and sexual abuse
  • High rates of depression, risky sexual activity
    (especially with older partners)
  • Subculture acceptability and increased
    susceptibility to peer pressure than boys
  • Studies show correlation between low self-esteem
    and body image and drug abuse

10
Why the increased female risk?
  • PTSD Harvard meta-analysis 59 of women in
    treatment
  • Three times greater incidence than male patients
  • Trauma independent of PTSD
  • 55-99 female patients report physical or sexual
    trauma before age 18
  • Women victims of both types of abuse twice as
    likely to abuse drugs as those with one type

11
Pregnancy and addiction
  • Increased rates of opiate-dependent pregnant
    women presenting for treatment
  • Limited access to care, limited medical community
    knowledge of standards of care for management
    with maintenance medication

12
Medication options
  • Methadone maintenance
  • Buprenorphine
  • Naltrexone
  • Oral
  • Vivitrol

13
Adolescent treatment literature
  • Adult literature, including the 1997 NIH
    Consensus Conference, confirms the dramatic
    improvement in outcomes for patients who receive
    maintenance medication, including methadone and
    buprenorphine
  • Little adolescent literature

14
Adolescent treatment literature
  • Highest retention in treatment of
    methadone-maintained youths
  • As good or better outcomes for long-term
    therapeutic community participants but much lower
    retention rates
  • Challenges of providing care to rural youth with
    limited treatment access

15
Buprenorphine
  • New treatment for opioid dependence
  • Alternative to methadone maintenance therapy
  • Can be prescribed by office-based physicians
  • Increases access to effective treatment
  • Mainstreams treatment of addictive disorders

16
Buprenorphine and adolescents
  • Safety
  • Less physical dependence
  • In theory, easier access to care for teens
  • No requirement for year-long dependence as with
    methadone
  • Patients can and should participate in
    abstinence-based treatment and 12 step recovery

17
Buprenorphine therapeutic effects
  • Blocks opiate withdrawal
  • Blocks opiate craving
  • Blocks all opiate effects
  • Suboxone formulation of buprenorphine plus
    naloxone
  • DATA 2000 limits

18
Adolescent treatment research
  • Lisa A. Marsch, University of Vermont
  • Archives Gen Psychiatry, 10/05
  • Outcomes 36 adolescents treated either with
    buprenorphine or clonidine plus 3x/week
    counseling
  • 72 buprenorphine vs 39 stayed in treatment
  • Double the negative UDS rate

19
NIDAs Clinical Trial Network
  • Conducting studies of behavioral,
    pharmacological, and integrated behavioral and
    pharmacological treatment interventions
  • Rigorous, multi-site clinical trials to determine
    effectiveness across a broad range of
    community-based treatment settings and
    diversified patient populations
  • Ensure the transfer of research results to
    physicians, clinicians, providers, and patients.

20
NIDAs Clinical Trial Network
  • 17 Nodes academic centers nationwide
  • Northern New England Node Harvard/McClean plus
    CTPs in five states

21
CTN 0010 George Woody, PI
  • Buprenorphine/Naloxone-Facilitated Rehabilitation
    for Opioid-Addicted Adolescents/Young Adults
  • Compares two three-month treatment protocols
  • 14-day Suboxone stabilization/detoxification
  • 3-month Suboxone

22
CTN 0010
  • 30 patient/site trial
  • Ages 14-21
  • Real world population with few exclusions
    (repeat UDS positive for methadone and/or
    benzodiazepines)
  • Patients received extensive evaluations before,
    during and after the trial

23
CTN 0010
  • Dispensing trial Monday-Saturday with Sunday
    take-home
  • Both groups received weekly manualized individual
    and group therapy plus family psychoeducational
    workshops
  • Delinda Mercer, Dennis Daley and George Woody

24
Mercy Recovery Center
  • 26 bed inpatient detoxification unit
  • Partial hospital program plus day and evening
    Intensive Outpatient Programs and Level I groups
  • Adult program
  • What will the kids do?

25
CTN 0010
  • Human subjects training
  • Extensive IRB review
  • Penn, Harvard, Mercy Hospital
  • Site investigator quality assurance function plus
    FDA, Harvard and NIDA oversight
  • Parental consent for minors (plus patient assent)

26
CTN 0010
  • Six sites with enrollment since 2002
  • Two sites unable to enroll adequate numbers
  • Mercy began enrollment February, 2005 and
    completed randomization and primary treatment
    within 10 months
  • 100 retention in both primary treatment and at
    all follow up research appointments

27
CTN 0010
  • Mercy enrollment
  • Youngest 16 years old
  • Median age 19 year old
  • 16/14 F/M
  • Average duration of opioid dependence
  • Five years (vs 6 months to 1 year at other sites)

28
What we found
  • The kids were better citizens than most of our
    adult patients
  • We loved the kids
  • The model of frequent, one-on-one contacts seemed
    to work better than our more intensive program
    models for the patients who had experience with
    both

29
What we found
  • Everyone did better after reaching a stable,
    effective dose
  • Everyone relapsed when Suboxone was withdrawn,
    whether after a week or two months

30
What we found
  • Three pregnancies (two during the trial)
  • One incidental diagnosis of thyroid cancer
  • High rates of HCV at trial entry

31
What we found
  • Excitement of participation in research
  • The Caribou experience
  • Pervasive risk of the drug subculture
  • The value of parental involvement
  • The value of community involvement
  • Suboxone important but not sufficient
  • Need for sober housing, age-specific therapy,
    fundamental changes in peer network and 12 step
    involvement

32
Conclusions
  • The epidemic continues to grow
  • Treatment availability, including medication, is
    very limited
  • HCV is highly prevalent
  • Federal funds for research and treatment are
    shrinking
  • The time for wishful thinking is long past
  • Treatment works and the kids want it
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