Appropriateness of methadone maintenance treatment for opiate addiction: evaluation by an expert panel
Tóm tắt
With some 30 000 dependent persons, opiate addiction constitutes
a major public health problem in Switzerland. The Swiss
Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH) has long played a leading
role in the prevention and treatment of opiate addiction
and in research on effective means of containing the epidemic
of opiate addiction and its consequences. Major milestones on
that path have been the successive “Methadone reports” published
by that Office and providing guidance on the care of opiate
addiction with substitution treatment. In view of updating
the recommendations for the appropriateness of substitution
treatment for opiate addiction, in particular for the prescription
of methadone, the FOPH commissioned a multi-component
project involving the following elements.
The present report documents the process and summarises the
results of the latter element above.
The RAND appropriateness method (RAM) was used to distil
from literature-based evidence and systematically formulated
expert opinion, areas where consensus exist on the appropriateness
(or inappropriateness) of methadone maintenance
treatment (MMT) and areas where disagreement or uncertainty
persist and which should be further pursued. The major areas which were addressed by this report are
Summary statements for each of the above categories are derived
from the panel meeting and presented in the report.
In the “first round”, agreement was observed for 31% of the
553 theoretical scenarios evaluated. The “second round” rating,
following discussion of divergent ratings, resulted in a much
higher agreement among panellists, reaching 53% of the 537
scenarios. Frank disagreement was encountered for 7% of all
scenarios. Overall 49% of the clinical situations (scenarios) presented
were considered appropriate. The areas where at least
50% of the situations were considered appropriate were “initial
assessment of candidates for MMT”, the “appropriate settings
for initiation of MMT”, the “appropriate settings for
methadone supportive treatment” and “Appropriateness of
other (non-methadone) substitution treatment”. The area
where there was the least consensus on appropriateness concerned
”appropriateness of withdrawal from MMT” (6%). The report discusses the implications and limitations of the
panel results and provides recommendations for the dissemination,
application, and future use of the criteria for the appropriateness
of MMT. The RAND Appropriateness Method proved to be an accepted
and appreciated method to assess the appropriateness of methadone maintenance treatment for opiate addicts. In the
next step, the results of the expert panel process must now be
combined with those of the Swiss and international literature reviews
and the survey of current attitudes and practices in Switzerland,
to be synthesized into formal practice guidelines. Such
guidelines should be disseminated to all concerned, promoted,
used and rigorously evaluated for compliance and outcome.