%0 Journal Article %A González Saiz, Francisco Manuel %A Vergara Moragues, Esperanza %A Trujols, Joan %A Alcaraz, Saul %A Siñol, Núria %A Pérez de los Cobos, José %A Buprenorphine/Naloxone Survey %T Assessing predictors of adequate individual buprenorphine maintenance dosage for the treatment of opioid use disorder: Listening to the patient %D 2024 %@ 0955-3959 %U http://hdl.handle.net/10498/33108 %X Objective: Dose optimization plays a key role in determining clinical outcomes in patients on opioid agonist treatment (OAT). The objective of this study was to identify the variables independently associated with buprenorphine/naloxone (B/N) dose adequacy in patients with opiate use disorder (OUD). Method: Cross-sectional study of a convenience sample of patients with OUD treated with B/N (n = 315) in four regions in Spain. The Opiate Dosage Adequacy Scale (ODAS) was used to determine B/N dose adequacy. The ODAS evaluate the six components of the “dose adequacy” construct, as follows: continued use of heroin; narcotic blockade or crossed tolerance; objective opioid withdrawal symptoms (OWS); subjective OWS; craving for heroin; and overmedication. A binomial logistic regression analysis was performed to identify the variables associated with the condition “ODAS Adequate B/N dose”. Participants completed a battery of instruments to assess sociodemographic, substance use, clinical, and treatment variables. Results: The B/N dose was considered adequate in 231 of the 315 participants (73.3 %). Two variables, satisfaction with B/N as a medication (OR=5.764, 95 % CI=2.211-15.030) and patient-perceived participation in B/N dose decisions (OR=1.790, 95 % CI=1221-2623), were independently, significantly, and positively associated with the “ODAS Adequate B/N dose” condition. While the severity of heroin dependence was significantly associated with buprenorphine dose adequacy in the bivariate analyses, significance was lost in the full regression model. %K Opioid dependence %K Opioid agonist treatment %K Buprenorphine %K Dosing %K Outcomes %K Shared decision making %~ Universidad de Cádiz