NYMC Faculty Publications
A History of Opioid Abuse: Why Buprenorphine is Superior for the Management of Opioid Use Disorder and Pain
Author Type(s)
Faculty
DOI
10.5055/jom.2021.0641
Journal Title
Journal of Opioid Management
First Page
43
Last Page
50
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-2021
Department
Anesthesiology
Abstract
Opioid abuse represents a public health crisis that has significant associated morbidity and mortality. Since beginning in the early 1990's, the opioid abuse epidemic has been difficult to control due to regulatory, economic, and psychosocial factors that have perpetuated its existence. This era of opioid abuse has been punctuated by three distinct rises in mortality, precipitated by unique public health problems that needed to be addressed. Patients affected by opioid abuse have been historically treated with either methadone or naltrexone. While these agents have clinical utility supported by robust literature, we the authors posit that buprenorphine is a superior therapy for both opioid use disorder (OUD) as well as pain. This primacy is due to the pharmacological properties of buprenorphine which render it unique among other opioid medications. One such property is buprenorphine's ceiling effect of respiratory depression, a common side effect and complicating factor in the administration of many classical opioid medications. This profile renders buprenorphine safer, while simultaneously retaining therapeutic utility in the medical practitioner's pharmacopeia for the treatment of opioid use disorder and pain.
Recommended Citation
Komrowski, M. D., & Sekhri, N. K. (2021). A History of Opioid Abuse: Why Buprenorphine is Superior for the Management of Opioid Use Disorder and Pain. Journal of Opioid Management, 17 (7), 43-50. https://doi.org/10.5055/jom.2021.0641