Implementing programs to initiate buprenorphine for opioid use disorder treatment in high-need, low-resource emergency departments: A nonrandomized controlled trial.

This is the primary outcomes paper for CTN-0079.

For this study, CTN-0079 (Emergency Department Connection to Care with Buprenorphine for Opioid Use Disorder (ED-CONNECT)), researchers hypothesized that implementation facilitation would enable them to rapidly and effectively implement emergency department (ED)-initiated buprenorphine programs in rural and urban settings with high-need, limited resources and dissimilar staffing structures.

This multicenter implementation study employed implementation facilitation using a participatory action research approach to develop, introduce, and refine site-specific clinical protocols for ED-initiated buprenorphine and referral in 3 EDs not previously initiating buprenorphine. Researchers assessed feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness by triangulating mixed-methods formative evaluation data (focus groups/interviews and pre/post surveys involving staff, patients, and stakeholders), patients’ medical records, and 30-day outcomes from a purposive sample of 40 buprenorphine-receiving patient-participants who met research eligibility criteria (English-speaking, medically stable, locator information, nonprisoners). They estimated the primary implementation outcome (proportion receiving ED-initiated buprenorphine among candidates) and the main secondary outcome (30-day treatment engagement) using Bayesian methods.

Within 3 months of initiating the implementation facilitation activities, each site implemented buprenorphine programs. During the 6-month programmatic evaluation, there were 134 ED-buprenorphine candidates among 2,522 encounters involving opioid use. A total of 52 (41.6%) practitioners initiated buprenorphine administration to 112 (85.1%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 79.7% to 90.4%) unique patients. Among 40 enrolled patient-participants, 49.0% (35.6% to 62.5%) were engaged in addiction treatment 30 days later (confirmed); 26 (68.4%) reported attending one or more treatment visits; there was a 4-fold decrease in self-reported overdose events (odds ratio [OR] 4.03; 95% CI 1.27 to 12.75). The ED clinician readiness increased by a median of 5.02 (95% CI: 3.56 to 6.47) from 1.92/10 to 6.95/10 (n(pre)=80, n(post)=83).

Conclusions: The implementation facilitation enabled researchers to effectively implement ED-based buprenorphine programs across heterogeneous ED settings rapidly, which was associated with promising implementation and exploratory patient-level outcomes.

Related protocols: CTN-0079

Categories: Buprenorphine, CTN primary outcomes, Emergency departments, Opioid use disorder, Pharmacological therapy
Tags: Article (Peer-Reviewed)
Authors: McCormack, Ryan; Rotrosen, John; Gauthier, Phoebe; D'Onofrio, Gail; Fiellin, David A.; Marsch, Lisa A.; Novo, Patricia; Liu, David; Edelman, E. Jennifer; Farkas, Sarah; Matthews, Abigail G.; Mulatya, Caroline; Salazar, Dagmar; Wolff, Jeremy; Knight, Randolph; Goodman, William; Williams, Joseph; Hawk, Kathryn
PMCID: PMC10524047
PMID: 37140493
Source: Annals of Emergency Medicine 2023;82(3):272-287. [doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2023.02.013]