Vancouver Sun

Blending opioid treatment with meds is risky: agency

Combining drugs has potential to cause breathing issues, death

- LINDA A. JOHNSON

The U.S. Food and TRENTON, N.J. Drug Administra­tion issued new warnings this week about the dangers of combining medication for opioid addiction with anti-anxiety medicines and other drugs that also slow breathing and brain activity.

The FDA warned that mixing such drugs can cause difficulty breathing, coma or death, so it should be done with caution.

The agency said a growing number of people fighting opioid addiction with methadone or buprenorph­ine also take other prescripti­on drugs that slow action of the central nervous system. The warning lists several dozen brand-name and generic drugs that could be risky, including Ambien and Lunesta for insomnia, Valium and Xanax for anxiety, muscle relaxers Soma and Zanaflex and antipsycho­tic drugs Abilify, Invega, Saphris and others.

The agency stressed that treating opioid addiction with medication can outweigh those risks and is crucial to curbing the U.S. opioid epidemic, along with counsellin­g, rehabilita­tion and other support.

“Careful management of the patient and co-ordination of care is recommende­d,” rather than denying use of methadone or buprenorph­ine, FDA commission­er Scott Gottlieb wrote in a statement issued with the warning.

The FDA recommends that doctors develop detailed treatment plans, warn patients on addiction treatments about the dangers of taking multiple drugs that depress brain activity, try tapering them off those other drugs and monitor them with blood and urine testing.

Buprenorph­ine and methadone work by binding to the same brain areas as opioids, reducing cravings and withdrawal without producing a high.

 ?? KEVIN D. LILES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES ?? The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion says a growing number of people fighting opioid addiction with methadone or buprenorph­ine also take other prescripti­on drugs.
KEVIN D. LILES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion says a growing number of people fighting opioid addiction with methadone or buprenorph­ine also take other prescripti­on drugs.

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