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A Case of Opioid Overdose and Subsequent Death After Medically Supervised Withdrawal: The Problematic Role of Rapid Tapers for Opioid Use Disorder
Alternative Title
A case of fatal overdose following inpatient detoxification: The problematic role of rapid opioid agonist tapers for opioid use disorder
Date Issued
January 2018
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Relapse to opioid use is common after rapid opioid withdrawal. As a result, short-term tapers of opioid agonist/partial agonist medications, such as methadone and buprenorphine/naloxone, are no longer recommended by recent clinical care guidelines for the management of opioid use disorder. Nonetheless, rapid tapers are still commonplace in medically supervised withdrawal settings.CASE SUMMARY: We report a case of an individual with opioid use disorder who was prescribed a rapid buprenorphine/naloxone taper in a medically supervised withdrawal facility and who had a subsequent opioid overdose and death after discharge. DISCUSSION:The fatal outcome in this case study underscores the potential severe harms associated with use of rapid tapers. Given the increased overdose risk, tapers should be avoided and continuing care strategies, such as maintenance pharmacotherapy, should be initiated in medically supervised withdrawal settings.
Sponsorship
European Commission
Irish Research Council
Other Sponsorship
US National Institutes of Health
Canada Research Chairs
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Wolters Klumer
Journal
Journal of Addiction Medicine
Volume
12
Issue
1
Start Page
80
End Page
83
Copyright (Published Version)
2018 Wolters Kluwer
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Scopus© citations
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