Continuous compulsion to use opioids despite physical, psychological or social harm due to the use
Aetiology
- Opioids are a class of drugs that include the illegal drug heroin, synthetic opioids such as fentanyl, and pain relievers available legally by prescription such as codeine
Pathophysiology
- Opiods are either a natural derivative of opium or a synthetic substance with agonist, partial agonist, or mixed agonist and antagonist activity at opioid receptors
- A natural high or a drug induced high is mediated by the mesolimbic dopamine pathway - sometimes referred to as the pleasure centre of the brain, with dopamine as the pleasure neurotransmitter
Investigations
Meet ICD-10 criteria of dependence:
- 3 or more present have been present together at some time during the use of previous year:
- Strong desire or sense of compulsion to take drug
- Difficulty in controlling use of substance in terms of onset, termination, or level of use
- Physiological withdrawal state
- Evidence of tolerance
- Progressive neglect of other pleasures/interests because of use/effects of substance
- Persistence with use despite clear evidence of harmful consequences
Management
Pharmacological management
- Opioid replacement with Mu receptor agonists - methodone (full agonist) , buprenorphine (partial agonist)
- Choice of opiate substitute depends on patient factors e.g. overdose risk (buprenorphine may have a lower risk of overdose)
- NICE recommends that, if both drugs are equally suitable, methadone should be prescribed as first choice
- Stages of opiod replacement:
- Induction
- Optimisation
- Maintenance
- Reduction
Additional features of management
- Psycho-social intervention
- Counselling
- Input from other agencies