Cost-Effectiveness and Guidelines for Opioid Substitution Treatment

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Project Status:
Completed
Project Line:
Health Technology Review
Project Sub Line:
Rapid Review
Project Number:
RC1401-000

Question

  1. What is the cost-effectiveness of sustained-release oral morphine in opioid use disorder?
  2. What is the cost-effectiveness of oral hydromorphone in opioid use disorder?
  3. What is the cost-effectiveness of injectable hydromorphone or prescription diacetylmorphine in opioid use disorder?
  4. What is the cost-effectiveness of fentanyl patches or fentanyl buccal tablets in opioid use disorder?
  5. What are the evidence-based guidelines regarding the use of sustained-release oral morphine, oral hydromorphone, injectable hydromorphone, injectable prescription diacetylmorphine, fentanyl patches or fentanyl buccal tablets for opioid abuse treatment?

Key Message

There was evidence indicating that in the treatment of opioid use disorder, injectable hydromorphone or injectable methadone provided more benefit at less cost compared with injectable diacetylmorphine over a six-month time horizon.

Evidence suggests that in the treatment of opioid use disorder, both injectable hydromorphone and injectable diacetylmorphine are likely to provide more benefit at less cost than methadone maintenance treatment. Treatment with injectable hydromorphone was more cost-effective than injectable diacetylmorphine in opioid use disorder patients who do not respond to or relapse from drug treatments.

The evidence is limited because observed data was collected during a short-term follow-up, and long-term cost-effectiveness outcomes were based on extrapolations beyond data from the actual studies.

One guideline provided a weak recommendation, supported by low-quality evidence, for using slow-release oral morphine in older adults with adequate renal function in whom buprenorphine and methadone maintenance have been ineffective to treat opioid use disorder or could not be tolerated. Another guideline recommends using injectable hydromorphone or injectable diacetylmorphine for individuals with severe opioid use disorders who relapsed previous treatments failed.

No relevant cost-effectiveness evidence or guidelines with recommendations regarding the use of oral hydromorphone, fentanyl patches, or fentanyl buccal tablets for OUD treatment were identified; therefore, no summary can be provided.