Safety and tolerability of slow-release oral morphine versus methadone in the treatment of opioid dependence

  • Robert Hämmig
  • Wilfried Köhler
  • Karin Bonorden-Kleij
  • Bernd Weber
  • Karin Lebentrau
  • Toni Berthel
  • Lucija Babic-Hohnjec
  • Christian Vollmert
  • Doris Höpner
  • Najibulah Gholami
  • Uwe Verthein
  • Christian Haasen
  • Jens Reimer
  • Christian Ruckes

Abstract

Opioid substitution treatment (OST) for opioid dependence may be limited by adverse events (AEs). Increasing the range of therapeutic options optimizes outcomes and facilitates patient management. An international, multi-center, two-phase study investigated the efficacy and safety of slow-release oral morphine (SROM) versus methadone in patients receiving methadone therapy for opioid dependence. In phase 1 (two way cross-over, 11 weeks each period) patients were randomized to SROM or methadone oral solution. In phase 2 (25 weeks), patients continued treatment with SROM (group A) or switched from methadone to SROM (group B). In total, 211 out of 276 completed phase 1 and 198 entered phase 2 (n=95 group A, n=103 group B). Treatment with both SROM and methadone was well tolerated. However, the mean QTc-interval associated with methadone was significantly longer than that under SROM. Higher treatment satisfaction, fewer cravings for heroin, and lower mental stress were reported with SROM. This study adds a significant further weight of evidence that SROM is an effective and well tolerated long-term maintenance treatment for opioid dependence with a beneficial risk profile compared to methadone regarding cardiac effects and supports its clinical utility.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0740-5472
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.10.2014
PubMed 25064422