Counseling Adds Nothing to Buprenorphine Alone for Opioid Addiction

In a surprising new study, David Fiellin and his colleagues at Yale found that adding cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) to buprenorphine plus medical management along did not change outcomes. That's right, folks, nothing. This adds to the growing evidence that the primary reason people get better with Suboxone (buprenorphine is the primary ingredient) is the drug not the counseling. In another recent study, Roger Weiss and colleagues with the NIDA Clinical Trials Network found that the intensity of counseling made no difference in outcomes. Of course, they also found that after 11 weeks of Suboxone maintenance, when subjects were tapered off, the relapse rate within 8 weeks was more than 90%.

Here's a graph showing the final comparative outcomes. Note that in the first 12 week, pharmacotherapy management along (PM) actually had better outcomes, although not significantly so.





This will be hard to hear for many who are deeply committed to and believe passionately that it's the other way around, that counseling is the primary ingredient of treatment. That's why SAMHSA and others have tip-toed around this issue, calling treatment with Suboxone or methadone (another drug used to treat opioid addiction) Medication Assisted Treatment. Well, guess what? With opioid addiction it's the other way around: Counseling Assisted Medication. Or maybe: medical treatment with counseling as needed for problems other than opioid addiction. Hhhhmmmm. Sound familier? Let's see now, isn't that how we treat diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, stroke, allergies, whatever?

So for all you flat-earthers out there who cling to 12-Step or other counseling as the Holy Grail, I suggest you consult The Farmers Almanac, your horoscope, the I Ching, tea leaves, Tarot cards and the Mayan Calendar for guidance. Because you certainly don't seek any from science.

MW

References:


David A. Fiellin, MD, Declan T. Barry,  et al., A Randomized Trial of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Primary Care-based Buprenorphine. The American Journal of Medicine, Volume 126, Issue 1, January 2013, Pages 74.e11–74.e17

Weiss, R. D., J. S. Potter, et al. (2011). "Adjunctive Counseling During Brief and Extended Buprenorphine-Naloxone Treatment for Prescription Opioid Dependence: A 2-Phase Randomized Controlled Trial." Arch Gen Psychiatry: 68: 2011-2121.





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