Establishing a research agenda for the study and assessment of opioid withdrawal
- PMID: 38521089
- DOI: 10.1016/S2215-0366(24)00068-3
Establishing a research agenda for the study and assessment of opioid withdrawal
Abstract
The opioid crisis is an international public health concern. Treatments for opioid use disorder centre largely on the management of opioid withdrawal, an aversive collection of signs and symptoms that contribute to opioid use disorder. Whereas in the past 50 years more than 90 medications have been developed for depression, only five medications have been developed for opioid use disorder during this period. We posit that underinvestment has occurred in part due to an underdeveloped understanding of opioid withdrawal syndrome. This Personal View summarises substantial gaps in our understanding of opioid withdrawal that are likely to continue to limit major advancements in its treatment. There is no firm consensus in the field as to how withdrawal should be precisely defined; 10-550 symptoms of withdrawal can be measured on 18 scales. The imprecise understanding of withdrawal is likely to result in overestimating or underestimating the severity of an individual's withdrawal syndrome or potential therapeutic effects of different candidate medications. The severity of the opioid crisis is not remitting, and an international research agenda for the study and assessment of opioid withdrawal is necessary to support transformational changes in withdrawal management and treatment of opioid use disorder. Nine actionable targets are delineated here: develop a consensus definition of opioid withdrawal; understand withdrawal symptomatology after exposure to different opioids (particularly fentanyl); understand precipitated opioid withdrawal; understand how co-exposure of other drugs (eg, xylazine and stimulants) influences withdrawal expression; examine individual variation in withdrawal phenotypes; precisely characterise the protracted withdrawal syndrome; identify biomarkers of opioid withdrawal severity; identify predictors of opioid withdrawal severity; and understand which symptoms are most closely associated with treatment attrition or relapse. The US Food and Drug Administration recently established a formal indication for opioid withdrawal that has invigorated interest in drug development for opioid withdrawal management. Action is now needed to support these interests and help industry identify new classes of medications so that real change can be achieved for people with opioid use disorder.
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Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests. In the past 3 years, KED has received grants through her university from the National Institutes of Health National Institute on Drug Abuse and Cure Addiction Now. She has received consulting fees related to study protocol development for DemeRx, Cessation Therapeutics, and MindMed, and has received fees for participating on a study steering committee from Indivior. She has served in unpaid leadership roles for the Society on Psychopharmacology and Substance Use and the College on Problems of Drug Dependence, has received travel support to attend Cure Addiction Now biannual research meetings, and has received an honorarium for work as a data safety and monitoring board member for the IMPOWR Network TreeTop Research Center. In the past 3 years, ECS has received grants through his university from the National Institutes of Health National Institute on Drug Abuse and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, book royalties from Johns Hopkins University Press and Wolters Kluwer, and honoraria for UpToDate chapters from Wolters Kluwer. He also serves as an unpaid member of the Board of Directors for Ashley Addiction Treatment and receives equipment from Masimo for a National Institutes of Health funded research study.
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