Use of heroin in the treatment of heroin dependence over the past 60 years
In this issue Strang and colleagues Reference Strang, Groshkova, Uchtenhagen, van den Brink, Haasen and Schechter1 report a meta-analysis of six trials of heroin-assisted treatment of heroin dependence in six different countries. Their results indicate that this controversial form of treatment has a role when responding to heroin dependence. Heroin was prescribed as a treatment for heroin dependence in the UK in the 1950s and early 1960s as part of a large-scale uncontrolled and minimally unevaluated social experiment. It fell into disrepute because of the cavalier prescribing practices of a small number of private practitioners Reference Spear, Strang and Gossop2 and a single small controlled study that suggested that oral methadone treatment produced equivalent outcomes. Reference Hartnoll, Mitcheson, Battersby, Brown, Ellis and Fleming3
In the 1980s and 1990s, there was renewed advocacy of heroin prescribing by a UK psychiatrist. Reference Marks4 His advocacy inspired Swiss clinicians and the government to trial heroin-assisted treatment as part of their response to an epidemic of heroin dependence in the 1990s. Reference Rihs-Middel, Hämmig, Rihs-Middel, Hämmig and Jacobshagen5 The Swiss undertook a series of medical and social experiments on heroin-assisted treatment in the early 1990s. They converted the English model of minimally supervised prescribing into a tightly regulated form of clinic-based treatment that involved directly supervising heroin administration multiple times per daily up to 7 days a week. Reference Rehm, Gschwend, Steffen, Gutzwiller, Dobler-Mikola and Uchtenhagen6 This highly structured form of heroin-assisted treatment became the standard way of delivering heroin treatment in subsequent treatment trials in Holland, Germany, Spain, Canada and England. It has recently been implemented as an addiction treatment service in Denmark.
Current practice
Strang and colleagues, who have participated in these various trials, have undertaken a meta-analysis of the trials evaluating this form of supervised injectable heroin maintenance. Reference Strang, Groshkova, Uchtenhagen, van den Brink, Haasen and Schechter1 They conclude that prescribing heroin as part of a highly regulated regimen is an effective treatment for heroin dependence in patients who have failed to respond to other forms of opioid agonist maintenance treatment. When the initial results of the Swiss trials were published we suggested that there was probably a niche role for heroin-assisted treatment, namely, as treatment for the minority of patients with severely intractable heroin dependence that failed to respond to other forms of agonist treatment. Reference Farrell and Hall7 The trials summarised by Strang and colleagues confirm that this is the case. The review of the evidence undertaken by the Cochrane Group also concluded that, on the basis of the expanded current evidence, ‘heroin prescription should be indicated to people who [are] currently or have previously failed maintenance treatment, and it should be provided in clinical settings where proper follow-up is ensured’. Reference Ferri, Davoli and Perucci8
The current paper also noted that adverse events were more frequent in the heroin-treated groups, with several trials reporting cases of sudden-onset respiratory depression in people receiving injectable diamorphine, at a rate of about 1 in every 6000 injections. Strang et al note that these risks are best managed in highly structured and supervised treatment programmes. Reference Strang, Groshkova, Uchtenhagen, van den Brink, Haasen and Schechter1
Another critical question that we posed in 1998 was whether heroin-assisted treatment was a cost-effective way of treating heroin dependence. The studies summarised in this review report a significant cost–benefit of the treatment, largely as a result of the very substantial law enforcement savings from reduced crime among treated patients. Evidence of effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of heroin-assisted treatment have not been sufficient to persuade many governments to implement it in addiction treatment services. Reference Berridge9 Despite the positive evaluations heroin-assisted treatment remains unavailable in the USA, Australia, Ireland, France and many other countries. Even countries that allow heroin-assisted treatment, have only implemented it on a small scale.
The failure to implement heroin-assisted treatment probably reflects a number of factors. One is a renewed questioning in some countries of the role of oral opioid maintenance treatment because of beliefs that abstinence from all opioids should be the goal of all heroin dependence treatment. Reference McKeganey10 Another is the effort by governments (post the global financial crisis) to cut public expenditure. When governments are cutting health services funding it may be more difficult politically to allocate scarce funds to the long-term treatment of heroin dependence. The latter reluctance is no doubt assisted by unstated beliefs among some politicians and policy makers (and vocal members of the general public) that heroin dependence is not a disorder that is ‘deserving’ of treatment.
Conclusion
We find ourselves in the addictions field in the position that there is good evidence that heroin-assisted treatment works for a small group of patients with refractory heroin dependence. But governments remain reluctant to invest in it because it requires higher levels of supervision and administration and hence is more expensive than oral forms of opioid maintenance treatment. It is not clear in the current economic and political climate what additional evidence, or arguments, would persuade policy makers to overcome their reluctance to implement this treatment.
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