The article, “High Interest in Injectable Opioid Agonist Treatment With Hydromorphone Among Urban Syringe Service Program Participants,” has been published in SAj.
The authors state that injectable opioid agonist treatment with hydromorphone (iOAT-H) is effective for persons who inject drugs (PWID) with opioid use disorder (OUD) but remains unavailable in the United States. Their objective was to determine interest in iOAT-H among syringe services program (SSP) participants.
In the AUTHORS’ OWN WORDS, they relate the importance of their work:
“In a sample of 108 SSP participants with OUD and a history of injecting opioids, we found that most were interested in receiving iOAT-H. More than 40% of participants reported that iOAT-H would be preferable to other forms of OUD treatment. Participants who were interested in iOAT-H injected heroin on more days per month, injected in public more frequently, and were more likely to participate in an illegal activity (other than drug possession) than participants who were not interested, suggesting that those who could most benefit from iOAT were also those who were most interested in the treatment. Though interest in iOAT-H was not universal, we identified a highly interested group of treatment-experienced PWID with severe OUD who were at high risk for OUD-related harms.”
“First-line MOUDs, such as methadone and buprenorphine, work well for many persons with OUD; however, even when these conventional treatments are available, important groups of PWID remain out of treatment and at high risk for opioid-related harms. iOAT-H provides a promising option to engage treatment-experienced individuals who continue to inject opioids after trying first-line OUD treatments. Our study demonstrates interest in iOAT-H, especially among persons at high risk for overdose—those with severe OUD who frequently use non-prescribed opioids and inject in public places. Broadening the spectrum of MOUDs available in the United States could help address the unacceptably high rates of opioid-involved overdose death.”