2018-02-15T17:03:53Z
2018-02-15T17:03:53Z
2012-10
2018-02-15T17:03:53Z
The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of conducting double-blind controlled randomized clinical trials using twice-a-day immediate-release oral diacetylmorphine (DAM) in heroin-dependent patients, by means of measuring the capacity of oral DAM to block opiate withdrawal and clinicians' ability to distinguish it from morphine and methadone. This was a randomized, phase II, double-blind, multicenter pilot study comparing immediate-release oral DAM, slow-release oral morphine and oral methadone administered twice a day during 10 days. Forty-five heroin-dependent patients were randomly assigned to these three treatment groups in an inpatient regime. Patients were stabilized with a mean of 350 mg (SD = 193) of immediate-release oral DAM, 108 mg (SD = 46.2) of slow-release oral morphine and 40 mg (SD = 17.9) of methadone. No statistically significant differences were found between any studied medication in clinical outcome. Neither patients nor clinicians were able to identify the administered medication. This study shows the feasibility of double-blind clinical trials using b.i.d. immediate-release oral DAM allowing further phase III clinical trials in the process of introducing oral DAM as a medication for heroin-dependent patients not responding to standard maintenance treatments.
Article
Accepted version
English
Drogoaddicció; Opi; Desintoxicació de les drogues; Drug addiction; Opium; Drug detoxification
Karger
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1159/000336849
European Addiction Research, 2012, vol. 18, num. 6, p. 279-287
https://doi.org/10.1159/000336849
(c) Karger, 2012