What a Tobacco Treatment Course Taught Me About Opioid Abuse

After spending five days in a course about tobacco cessation, I was forced to confront some of my presumptions regarding opioid treatment.

What a Tobacco Treatment Course Taught Me About Opioid Abuse

Today concluded over 35 hours of training in the Mayo Clinic Tobacco Treatment Specialist Certification (Oh, yeah, these thoughts are my own and in no way reflective of the course). While in this course, my peers (including a variety of professionals: dentists, pharmacists, PhDs, RNs, etc.) and I learned everything we needed to assist clients in the cessation of tobacco. This course included everything from the neurobiology of nicotine dependence to the use of motivational interviewing.

There were two, overarching themes, however, that remained constant throughout the course: nicotine addiction is a chronic disease and success is largely dependent on the use of nicotine replacement therapy and counseling. Sure, there is stigma associated with any addiction; but, at least in the medical community, most would advocate for the use of a patch, gum, Chantix, or any other medication that would allow the patient to quit his or her smoking habit. That is to say, healthcare professionals aren't entirely surprised when you say that medication-assisted treatment can double or, even, triple patient outcomes. So, why is it that these same professionals cringe at the thought of medication-assisted treatment for opioid addiction? Is it because opioid addiction is fundamentally different, as a chronic illness, or that this kind of treatment has been shown to be ineffective?

Chronic disease is a disease state that persists for a long time. Most definitions seem to indicate that chronic disease is something lasting 3 or more months and unable to be cured with medication. Drug addiction is a brain disease resulting in the compulsion to seek drugs. This occurs despite knowledge of the health effects. As with other chronic diseases, relapsing in nature (such as: diabetes, asthma, etc), cure is not the goal, management is. We know that alterations occur in the brain, primarily in the reward pathway. We also know that brain scans reveal alterations in those areas implicated in judgment and decision-making. If you were to explain this to many healthcare providers, they'd likely get annoyed with telling them something they already know. You see, like with tobacco, many of us are coming around to the idea that addiction (in all forms) is a type of disease. There is still work to be done, but where a breakdown in logic seems to occur is in the management of that disease. See, giving insulin to the diabetic or nicotine patches to the smoker are without controversy. Why is it that, with the same understanding of the chronic disease model, the illness of opioid addiction is viewed as something entirely different? You often hear the patient on buprenorphine/naloxone (Suboxone) described as someone that "isn't clean, just addicted to something else instead of heroin". (American Society of Addiction Medicine, 2011) Is medication-based treatment fundamentally different or less effective in opioid addiction? In short: no. The rate of relapse in this population is about the same as other chronic diseases, and even lower than something like hypertension (McLellan, O'Brian, Lewis, et al., 2000). Pharmacologically, the treatment isn't so different from tobacco cessation. Suboxone, for instance, has a similar mixed agonist-antagonist mechanism of action as Chantix does in nicotine dependence. Adverse effects in Suboxone treatment are similar to placebo, so arguments against its safety don't much hold. Maybe, then, it is merely ineffective in treatment? Guess again. Double-blind studies show buprenorphine and naloxone in combination and buprenorphine alone reduce cravings and opioid use. In one study, 17.8% in buprenorphine monotherapy tested negative for opiates, combination therapy indicated 20.8%, while placebo resulted in only about 6% testing negative (Fudala, Bridge, Herbert, et al, 2003).

Tobacco use in the United States has largely declined year-to-year. This is largely credited to a number of initiatives (like education and taxation), including a shift in treatment philosophy. Compare this with retail purchases (per capita) of methadone, hydrocodone, and oxycodone increasing 13-fold, 4-fold, and 9-fold, respectively in 2007 (Keyes, Cerda, Brady, Havens, & Galea, 2014). Or consider that in 2010, the sale of prescription opioids had peaked and, at this time, enough had been sold to medicate every adult in America with five milligrams of hydrocodone, every four hours, for one month (Keyes, Cerda, Brady, Havens, & Galea, 2014).

Until we remove the stigma associated with opioid addiction, view it from the chronic disease lens, and treat it accordingly; then we will continue to see the death toll rise and relapse rates remaining constant. A disease in which 2 million Americans struggle with, kills 29,000, and costs nearly $56 billion yearly is one that demands intervention. Action begins with open-mindedness and the admission that we, as a country, are failing.


References

American Society of Addiction Medicine. (2011). Public Policy Statement: Definition of Addiction. Retrieved from: policy-statement/public-policy-statements/2011/12/15/the- definition-of-addiction

McLellan AT, O'Brien CP, Lewis D et al. (2000). Drug addiction as a chronic medical illness: Implications for treatment, insurance and evaluation. Journal of the American Medical Association 284:1689- 1695.

Fudala P J, Bridge T P, Herbert S, Williford W O, Chiang C N, Jones K, Collins J, Raisch D, Casadonte P, Goldsmith R J, Ling W, Malkerneker U, McNicholas L, Renner J, Stine S, Tusel D. Office-based treatment of opiate addiction with a sublingual-tablet formulation of buprenorphine and naloxone. New England Journal of Medicine. 2003;349(10):949-958

Psychiatric nurse and PMHNP student.

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Specializes in ICU.

I went to an NA meeting a few years ago and my eyes were opened to what causes aloud abuse. Sadly, the way our country approaches it is shameful. We need to treat the patient and their problems. Instead, we throw blame around. It's the patient, no, it's the crooked doctors, no, it's the patient's family, no, it's healthcare as a whole. It saddens me. We don't get to the root of the problem. Our country does everything possible these days to place blame. They want to never shoulder any responsibility. Thus, our citizens turn into constant victims.

There is no blame. The brain of an addict is different. It just is. Until the medical community realizes this, there will be no progress in treating addiction.

Thanks for your reply! I agree completely! All too often, we want to look for causation but confuse it for blame. It's a brain disease and we have to see it as such.

Thank you for the article.

Question, opioid addiction really costs $56 billion annually?

Thank you for the article.

Question, opioid addiction really costs $56 billion annually?

I have not read his reference but $56 billion seems very low to me, if one counted all healthcare related costs and social costs such an incarceration (50% are drug related) etc I would imagine that number would skyrocket.

I have not read his reference but $56 billion seems very low to me, if one counted all healthcare related costs and social costs such an incarceration (50% are drug related) etc I would imagine that number would skyrocket.

Societal costs are difficult to quantify many times, however that figure seems to be the consensus. I'm sure it's a conservative one, but it's important to note that it references prescription opioid abuse specifically. I've seen others that go over $400 billion annually when you look at illicit drug abuse, generally.

I wasn't thinking beyond healthcare costs, and am clearly naive about this topic.

I agree completely. We gave these people the medications knowing they were addictive and now we are just stopping them? What do we do with the people who are still seriously in pain? When I had herniated discs in my lumbar spine, the pain was so bad I told my husband if I had to live with it I would commit suicide. Luckily surgery helped and I have been pain free for 6 years. I know people that are addicted to opioids and have been using them for years. I am sure they are panicking and wondering how they will get them. Illegal drugs or stolen meds will probably be their next move. We will be seeing more and more problems related to this issue. There has to be a better way to deal with this. And with the new strict prescription guidelines, people in extreme pain will just have to live with it. Unless you have had this kind of pain you probably don't understand how bad it can be.

Specializes in Critical Care, Education.

Thank you so much for this really enlightening article. As a nurse, this is a confusing area for me. I understand the logical parallels with tobacco addiction, but it's the precipitating factors I have trouble with. As mentioned by PP, opioids are prescribed/indicated for relief of intractable pain - this is certainly not the case for tobacco. So, how can we (or should we) differentiate treatment for 'medicinal' as opposed to 'recreational' opioid addiction? At what point is the cure worse than the disease? Should we simply accept addiction as a consequence of treatment for intractable pain?

I'm an AHA BLS instructor. When I read your article, I was reminded of the the mention of suspected opioid overdose in the 2015 AHA guidelines for the BLS curriculum. This is covered under "Special Conditions" along with things like breaths with an advanced airway in place. The fact that it's mentioned supports your comments about how common this has become.

Thanks for your reply and you raise some interesting points.

I would disagree in a semantic way, but not in a normative way. Here's what I mean: by definition, mental health issues generally are seen as disease states, in that they are dysfunctions in the body. Schizophrenic patients, for example, can show profound brain damage as a consequence of lacking treatment (This is due to alterations in the dopamine pathways, leading to atrophy in some areas). What we know about addiction is that there are genetic, physiologic factors at play long before the introduction of a substance, which shows a predisposition. We also know that, following that introduction and addiction, the brain will undergo tremendous alterations in structure and function. This includes epigenetic change. So, if you take tobacco for example: nicotine causes epigenetic changes of the FosB gene, predisposing one for cross-addictions to other substances, especially cocaine. So, if one is predisposed to these addictive disorders, because of and causing pathologic changes, and if they're chronic, then I would call that chronic disease.

Now, I think you raise a good point about putting the person before the disease. We should not define anyone by their medical history. For instance, I will say "addicted people/patients/individuals" and rarely say "addicts". I think it is very important to utilize a noun that reminds them and us of their humanity, rather than merely their disorder. But, I think that part of putting the person first (even if one thinks that this isn't a disease) is to, first and foremost, maximize safety. As someone that lives in the opioid overdose capital of the US (West Virginia) and has lost many friends, full recovery without any medication is a long, tough road. So, if Suboxone can, in the meantime, prevent their overdose, then I think it's the best option.

The best article I have found on this subject:

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