EDITORIALS

 

Opioid substitution therapy in resource-poor settings

 

 

Michelle KermodeI,*; Nick CroftsI; M Suresh KumarII; Jimmy DorabjeeIII

INossal Institute for Global Health, University of Melbourne, 161 Barry Street, Carlton, Vic., 3010, Australia
IIChennai, India
IIIAsian Network of People Who Use Drugs, Centre for Harm Reduction, Melbourne, Australia

 

 

Approximately 10% of new HIV infections worldwide are attributable to injecting drug use, often of an opiate such as heroin.1 Opioid substitution therapy supplies illicit drug users with a replacement drug, a prescribed medicine such as methadone or buprenorphine, which is usually administered orally in a supervised clinical setting. The effectiveness of this therapy is recognized in developed countries, where the provision of opioid substitutes to opiate-dependent people is a fundamental component of the response to the dual public health problems of injecting drug use and HIV transmission.2 However, better prevention of HIV transmission among and from injecting drug users is still needed, especially in resource-poor settings.3

Opioid substitution therapy programmes are effective in substantially reducing illicit opiate use, HIV risk behaviours, death from overdose and criminal activity, and financial and other stresses on drug users and their families.4-6 These programmes also improve adherence to antiretroviral therapy and the physical and mental health of injecting drug users.4-6 Many injecting drug users who would otherwise have no contact with any health services are attracted by these programmes, which then act as gateways to other services including primary health care, HIV testing, antiretroviral therapy and services for tuberculosis, hepatitis C and sexually transmitted infections.7 Additionally, a critical ingredient of the HIV-prevention response is mobilization of affected communities, which is only possible for injecting drug users when they are not fully occupied with obtaining an ongoing supply of illicit drugs.

Despite the evidence of effectiveness, it is estimated that only 8% of injecting drug users globally currently receive opioid substitution therapy - even less in developing countries.1 There is substantial global inequity in access - for example, 90% of injecting drug users in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and 69% in Australia are receiving such therapy; compared with 3% in China and India, and none in the Russian Federation, where opioid substitution therapy is not available.1 Opioid substitution therapy is endorsed by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the World Health Organization2 - methadone and buprenorphine are on its Essential Medicines list.8 Yet doubts about the wisdom of providing opioid substitution therapy to injecting drug users are widespread in developing countries, where abstinence is often seen as the only legitimate treatment goal, and human rights are frequently violated in attempts to achieve this.9 Barriers to effective implementation of opioid substitution therapy programmes in these settings include: a lack of political will to act; the need to change relevant laws; entrenched social and structural discrimination against injecting drug users; the cost of providing the therapy (despite the ample evidence of cost-effectiveness);10 and the relative lack of local evidence for effectiveness in resource-poor settings.

Even among those involved in HIV prevention and care there is often limited understanding of addiction and of the role of opioid substitution therapy as treatment. Opiate dependence is a chronic relapsing condition with sometimes catastrophic effects for individuals, families and communities. This is only amplified in resource-poor settings. Opioid substitution therapy is not a cure for drug dependence - it is a therapy for management of a chronic condition. Some clients may need therapy for years and some for their entire life. One of the most consistent findings in both high-income and resource-poor settings is that the more time injecting drug users spend on opioid substitution therapy, the better the outcomes and the less they are likely to engage in high risk behaviours.11

India is a good example of a developing country that is gradually integrating the provision of opioid substitution therapy into public health policies and programmes. Following two successful pilots in 1999-200212 and 2006-07,11 the National AIDS Control Organization has included opioid substitution therapy in its third five-year plan, proposing to scale-up the programme to reach 40 000 injecting drug users by 2011.13 However, coverage remains inadequate at this time and challenges to the scale-up include: current unavailability of methadone (but not of buprenorphine, a more costly alternative); ineffective health services in some areas, necessitating government accreditation and monitoring of many existing opioid substitution therapy programmes run by nongovernmental organizations; and residual scepticism about its value in India.

Governments of countries in which injecting drug use and HIV transmission are recognized public health problems now face several questions. What is the most effective model for implementing opioid substitution therapy? How can opioid substitution therapy become a fundamental component of integrated HIV prevention and how can the quality of the programmes be ensured and evaluated?

 

References

1. Mathers BM, Degenhardt L, Ali H, Wiessing L, Hickman M, Mattick RP et al. HIV prevention, treatment, and care services for people who inject drugs. Lancet 2010;375:1014-28.         

2. Technical guide for countries to set targets for universal access to HIV prevention, treatment and care for injecting drug users. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2009.         

3. Horton R, Das P. Rescuing people with HIV who use drugs. Lancet 2010;376:207-8.         

4. Lawrinson P, Ali R, Buavirat A, Chiamwongpaet S, Dvoryak S, Habrat B et al. Key findings from the WHO collaborative study on substitution therapy for opioid dependence and HIV/AIDS. Addiction 2008;103:1484-92.         

5. Gowing L, Farrell M, Bornemann R, Sullivan LE, Ali R. Substitution treatment of injecting opioid users for prevention of HIV infection. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2008;2:CD004145.         

6. Weber R, Huber M, Rickenbach M, Furrer H, Elzi L, Hirschel B et al. Uptake and virological response to antiretroviral therapy among HIV infected former and current injecting drug users and persons in an opiate substitution treatment program: the Swiss HIV Cohort Study. HIV Med 2009;10:407-16.         

7. Effectiveness of drug dependence treatment in preventing HIV among injecting drug users. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2005.         

8. 16th WHO model list of essential medicines. Geneva: World Health Organization; 2009.         

9. Jürgens R, Csete J, Amon JJ, Baral S, Beyrer C. People who use drugs, HIV, and human rights. Lancet 2010;376:475-85.         

10. Connock M, Juarez-Garcia A, Jowett S, Frew E, Lui Z, Taylor RJ et al. Methadone and buprenorphine for management of opioid dependence. Health Technol Assess 2007;11:1-171 [iii-iv]          .

11. Armstrong G, Kermode M, Sharma C, Langkham B, Crofts C. Opioid substitution therapy in Manipur and Nagaland, northeast India. Harm Reduct J 2010;7:29.         

12. Kumar MS, Natale RD, Langkham B, Sharma C, Kabi R, Mortimore G. Opioid substitution treatment with sublingual buprenorphine in Manipur and Nagaland in northeast India. Harm Reduct J 2009;6:4.         

13. National AIDS Control Organization. National AIDS Control Programme Phase III. New Delhi: Ministry of Health & Family Welfare; 2006.         

 

 

* Correspondence to Michelle Kermode (e-mail: mkermode@unimelb.edu.au).

World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
E-mail: bulletin@who.int