The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study.

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The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study. / Verthein, Uwe; Ullmann, Rainer; Lachmann, Anke; Düring, Andreas; Koch, Barbara; Meyer-Thompson, Hans-Günter; Schmidt, Rolf; Reimer, Jens; Haasen, Christian.

In: DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN, Vol. 80, No. 2, 2, 2005, p. 267-271.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Verthein, U, Ullmann, R, Lachmann, A, Düring, A, Koch, B, Meyer-Thompson, H-G, Schmidt, R, Reimer, J & Haasen, C 2005, 'The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study.', DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN, vol. 80, no. 2, 2, pp. 267-271. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15916866?dopt=Citation>

APA

Verthein, U., Ullmann, R., Lachmann, A., Düring, A., Koch, B., Meyer-Thompson, H-G., Schmidt, R., Reimer, J., & Haasen, C. (2005). The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study. DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN, 80(2), 267-271. [2]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15916866?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Verthein U, Ullmann R, Lachmann A, Düring A, Koch B, Meyer-Thompson H-G et al. The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study. DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN. 2005;80(2):267-271. 2.

Bibtex

@article{1b343206184041dc86fa22bb8d419ecc,
title = "The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study.",
abstract = "AIMS: To test the hypothesis that switching from L-methadone to D,L-methadone is associated with more frequent withdrawal symptoms and side-effects than switching from D,L-methadone to L-methadone. DESIGN: Stratified, randomized 2 x 2 crossover study design over a time-period of 8 weeks. At study entry, every second patient was switched from the pre-study substance to the other medication, after 4 weeks all patients were subject to a (re-)switch. SETTING: The study was conducted as a multi-centre trial in three methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) clinics. PARTICIPANTS: Seventy-five patients previously treated with either D,L-methadone or L-methadone for at least 1 year took part in the study. MEASUREMENTS: Intra-individual changes in withdrawal symptoms (Short Opiate Withdrawal Scale, SOWS) and side-effects were defined as primary outcome criteria. Secondary outcome measures included necessity for methadone dose adjustment. FINDINGS: Complete data were available for 68 patients (91%). Sample strata were unbalanced at baseline: 15 patients (22%) were treated with L-methadone and 43 with D,L-methadone (78%). Thirty-five patients were randomized into the group treated with L-methadone and 33 into the group treated with D,L-methadone during the first 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in intra-individual change of withdrawal symptoms and side-effects between groups after crossover. However, patients treated with levomethadone tended to feel less withdrawal symptoms than patients treated with d,l-methadone. CONCLUSIONS: D,L-methadone and L-methadone can safely be replaced by each other on a 2:1 ratio. Withdrawal symptoms or side-effects due to conversion are of transient nature only.",
author = "Uwe Verthein and Rainer Ullmann and Anke Lachmann and Andreas D{\"u}ring and Barbara Koch and Hans-G{\"u}nter Meyer-Thompson and Rolf Schmidt and Jens Reimer and Christian Haasen",
year = "2005",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "80",
pages = "267--271",
journal = "DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN",
issn = "0376-8716",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The effects of racemic D,L-methadone and L-methadone in substituted patients--a randomized controlled study.

AU - Verthein, Uwe

AU - Ullmann, Rainer

AU - Lachmann, Anke

AU - Düring, Andreas

AU - Koch, Barbara

AU - Meyer-Thompson, Hans-Günter

AU - Schmidt, Rolf

AU - Reimer, Jens

AU - Haasen, Christian

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - AIMS: To test the hypothesis that switching from L-methadone to D,L-methadone is associated with more frequent withdrawal symptoms and side-effects than switching from D,L-methadone to L-methadone. DESIGN: Stratified, randomized 2 x 2 crossover study design over a time-period of 8 weeks. At study entry, every second patient was switched from the pre-study substance to the other medication, after 4 weeks all patients were subject to a (re-)switch. SETTING: The study was conducted as a multi-centre trial in three methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) clinics. PARTICIPANTS: Seventy-five patients previously treated with either D,L-methadone or L-methadone for at least 1 year took part in the study. MEASUREMENTS: Intra-individual changes in withdrawal symptoms (Short Opiate Withdrawal Scale, SOWS) and side-effects were defined as primary outcome criteria. Secondary outcome measures included necessity for methadone dose adjustment. FINDINGS: Complete data were available for 68 patients (91%). Sample strata were unbalanced at baseline: 15 patients (22%) were treated with L-methadone and 43 with D,L-methadone (78%). Thirty-five patients were randomized into the group treated with L-methadone and 33 into the group treated with D,L-methadone during the first 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in intra-individual change of withdrawal symptoms and side-effects between groups after crossover. However, patients treated with levomethadone tended to feel less withdrawal symptoms than patients treated with d,l-methadone. CONCLUSIONS: D,L-methadone and L-methadone can safely be replaced by each other on a 2:1 ratio. Withdrawal symptoms or side-effects due to conversion are of transient nature only.

AB - AIMS: To test the hypothesis that switching from L-methadone to D,L-methadone is associated with more frequent withdrawal symptoms and side-effects than switching from D,L-methadone to L-methadone. DESIGN: Stratified, randomized 2 x 2 crossover study design over a time-period of 8 weeks. At study entry, every second patient was switched from the pre-study substance to the other medication, after 4 weeks all patients were subject to a (re-)switch. SETTING: The study was conducted as a multi-centre trial in three methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) clinics. PARTICIPANTS: Seventy-five patients previously treated with either D,L-methadone or L-methadone for at least 1 year took part in the study. MEASUREMENTS: Intra-individual changes in withdrawal symptoms (Short Opiate Withdrawal Scale, SOWS) and side-effects were defined as primary outcome criteria. Secondary outcome measures included necessity for methadone dose adjustment. FINDINGS: Complete data were available for 68 patients (91%). Sample strata were unbalanced at baseline: 15 patients (22%) were treated with L-methadone and 43 with D,L-methadone (78%). Thirty-five patients were randomized into the group treated with L-methadone and 33 into the group treated with D,L-methadone during the first 4 weeks. There were no significant differences in intra-individual change of withdrawal symptoms and side-effects between groups after crossover. However, patients treated with levomethadone tended to feel less withdrawal symptoms than patients treated with d,l-methadone. CONCLUSIONS: D,L-methadone and L-methadone can safely be replaced by each other on a 2:1 ratio. Withdrawal symptoms or side-effects due to conversion are of transient nature only.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 80

SP - 267

EP - 271

JO - DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN

JF - DRUG ALCOHOL DEPEN

SN - 0376-8716

IS - 2

M1 - 2

ER -