Norwegian Centre for Addiction Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Kirkevegen 166, Building 45, NO-0407, Oslo, Norway.
Section for Clinical Addiction Research, Oslo University Hospital, P.b 4950 Nydalen, NO-0424, Oslo, Norway.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Mar 29;24(1):398. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10767-w.
Opioid agonist treatment (OAT) for patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) has a convincing evidence base, although variable retention rates suggest that it may not be beneficial for all. One of the options to include more patients is the introduction of heroin-assisted treatment (HAT), which involves the prescribing of pharmaceutical heroin in a clinical supervised setting. Clinical trials suggest that HAT positively affects illicit drug use, criminal behavior, quality of life, and health. The results are less clear for longer-term outcomes such as mortality, level of function and social integration. This protocol describes a longitudinal evaluation of the introduction of HAT into the OAT services in Norway over a 5-year period. The main aim of the project is to study the individual, organizational and societal effects of implementing HAT in the specialized healthcare services for OUD.
The project adopts a multidisciplinary approach, where the primary cohort for analysis will consist of approximately 250 patients in Norway, observed during the period of 2022-2026. Cohorts for comparative analysis will include all HAT-patients in Denmark from 2010 to 2022 (N = 500) and all Norwegian patients in conventional OAT (N = 8300). Data comes from individual in-depth and semi-structured interviews, self-report questionnaires, clinical records, and national registries, collected at several time points throughout patients' courses of treatment. Qualitative analyses will use a flexible inductive thematic approach. Quantitative analyses will employ a wide array of methods including bi-variate parametric and non-parametric tests, and various forms of multivariate modeling.
The project's primary strength lies in its comprehensive and longitudinal approach. It has the potential to reveal new insights on whether pharmaceutical heroin should be an integral part of integrated conventional OAT services to individually tailor treatments for patients with OUD. This could affect considerations about drug treatment even beyond HAT-specific topics, where an expanded understanding of why some do not succeed with conventional OAT will strengthen the knowledge base for drug treatment in general. Results will be disseminated to the scientific community, clinicians, and policy makers.
The study was approved by the Norwegian Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics (REK), ref.nr.:195733.
阿片类药物成瘾患者的阿片类激动剂治疗(OAT)具有令人信服的证据基础,尽管可变的保留率表明它可能对所有人都没有好处。纳入更多患者的一种选择是引入海洛因辅助治疗(HAT),这涉及在临床监督环境下开处海洛因处方。临床试验表明,HAT 对非法药物使用、犯罪行为、生活质量和健康有积极影响。对于死亡率、功能水平和社会融合等长期结果,结果则不太明确。本方案描述了一项在挪威的 OAT 服务中引入 HAT 的 5 年纵向评估。该项目的主要目的是研究在专门的 OUD 医疗保健服务中实施 HAT 的个体、组织和社会影响。
该项目采用多学科方法,主要分析队列将由挪威约 250 名患者组成,观察时间为 2022-2026 年。比较分析队列将包括丹麦所有 HAT 患者(2010-2022 年,N=500)和挪威所有常规 OAT 患者(N=8300)。数据来自于个体深入和半结构化访谈、自我报告问卷、临床记录和国家登记处,在患者治疗过程中的多个时间点收集。定性分析将使用灵活的归纳主题方法。定量分析将采用广泛的方法,包括双变量参数和非参数检验以及各种形式的多变量建模。
该项目的主要优势在于其全面和纵向的方法。它有可能揭示新的见解,即是否应将药用海洛因作为综合常规 OAT 服务的一个组成部分,以便针对 OUD 患者的个体定制治疗。这可能会影响到对药物治疗的考虑,甚至超出 HAT 特定主题,对为什么有些人不能成功接受常规 OAT 的更深入了解将加强一般药物治疗的知识库。结果将分发给科学界、临床医生和决策者。
该研究获得了挪威地区医学和健康研究伦理委员会(REK)的批准,注册号:195733。