Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Seattle, WA 98195-6420, USA.
Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Seattle, WA 98195-6420, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2023 Sep 1;250:110911. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2023.110911. Epub 2023 Aug 2.
Methamphetamine use is common among persons with opioid use disorder. This study evaluated associations between methamphetamine use and treatment with agonist medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD, specifically buprenorphine, and/or methadone) in U.S. rural communities.
The Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI) is a consortium spanning 10 states and 65 rural counties that included persons who reported past 30-day use of opioids and/or injection drug use between 1/2018 and 3/2020. Analyses were restricted to participants who had ever used opioids and had data on past 30-day methamphetamine use. Multivariable models examined the relationship between methamphetamine use and utilization of agonist MOUD.
Among 2899 participants, 2179 (75.2%) also reported recent methamphetamine use. Persons with methamphetamine use compared to those without were younger, more likely to have injected drugs, be unhoused, criminal justice involved, and less likely to have health insurance. Adjusted for age, sex, race, and study site, recent methamphetamine use was associated with lower relative odds of past 30-day methadone treatment (aOR=0.66; 95% CI: 0.45-0.99) and fewer methadone treatment days (aIRR=0.76; 0.57-0.99), but not past 30-day buprenorphine receipt (aOR=0.90; 0.67-1.20), buprenorphine treatment days in past 6 months: aIRR=0.88; 0.69-1.12) or perceived inability to access buprenorphine (aOR=1.12; 0.87-1.44) or methadone (aOR=1.06; 0.76-1.48).
Methamphetamine use is common among persons who use opioids in rural U.S. areas and negatively associated with current treatment and retention on methadone but not buprenorphine. Future studies should examine reasons for this disparity and reduce barriers to methadone for persons who use opioids and methamphetamine.
美沙酮使用在阿片类药物使用障碍患者中很常见。本研究评估了美国农村社区中美沙酮使用与阿片类药物使用障碍(MOUD,特别是丁丙诺啡和/或美沙酮)治疗药物的关联。
农村阿片倡议(ROI)是一个由 10 个州和 65 个农村县组成的联盟,该联盟包括在 2018 年 1 月至 2020 年 3 月期间报告过去 30 天内使用过阿片类药物和/或注射药物的人。分析仅限于曾使用过阿片类药物且有过去 30 天内美沙酮使用数据的参与者。多变量模型检查了美沙酮使用与阿片类药物使用障碍激动剂 MOUD 利用之间的关系。
在 2899 名参与者中,2179 名(75.2%)也报告了最近使用美沙酮。与未使用者相比,使用美沙酮者年龄较小,更有可能注射毒品、无家可归、涉及刑事司法,且更不可能有医疗保险。调整年龄、性别、种族和研究地点后,最近使用美沙酮与过去 30 天内美沙酮治疗的相对几率较低相关(aOR=0.66;95%CI:0.45-0.99)和更少的美沙酮治疗天数(aIRR=0.76;0.57-0.99),但与过去 30 天内丁丙诺啡的使用无关(aOR=0.90;0.67-1.20)、过去 6 个月内丁丙诺啡治疗天数:aIRR=0.88;0.69-1.12)或认为无法获得丁丙诺啡(aOR=1.12;0.87-1.44)或美沙酮(aOR=1.06;0.76-1.48)。
在美国农村地区,美沙酮的使用在阿片类药物使用者中很常见,与当前的美沙酮治疗和保留呈负相关,但与丁丙诺啡无关。未来的研究应研究这种差异的原因,并减少阿片类药物和美沙酮使用者获得美沙酮的障碍。