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Community Pharmacy-Based Injectable Opioid Agonist Treatment: Findings From a Canadian Pilot Program

Drug Alcohol Rev. 2025 Nov 4. doi: 10.1111/dar.70062. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Access to evidence-based treatment for opioid use disorder remains limited, particularly for individuals who have not responded to oral opioid agonist treatment (OAT). A community pharmacy-based model of injectable OAT (iOAT) was piloted in Vancouver, Canada from March 2017 to December 2018. This brief report describes the program structure, participant sociodemographics, reported outcomes, and strengths and areas for improvement of the program.

METHODS: A retrospective review of cross-sectional, interviewer-led questionnaire data from participants who accessed iOAT at the pharmacy site (n = 176) and provided informed consent was conducted. Outcomes include participant-reported changes in symptomatology, function and satisfaction, analysed through descriptive statistics. Open-ended responses were analysed using content analysis to identify strengths and areas for improvement of the program.

RESULTS: Fifty-one participants (29%) completed the questionnaire, and most had multiple previous overdoses and trials of oral OAT. The most commonly reported outcomes were reduction in illicit opioid use (76%), opioid cravings (45%) and illicit substance use (45%). Participants identified key strengths of the program as positive experiences with staff and efficiency of the pharmacy model including flexible dosing time and the ability to pick up other medications at the same time. Suggested improvements focused on medication options (e.g., access to diacetylmorphine, alternate routes of administration), expanded hours and flexibility, additional support services, and increased capacity and space.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Community pharmacy-based iOAT represents a novel strategy to expand access to evidence-based opioid use disorder treatment among individuals who inject opioids and have not responded to or do not prefer oral OAT.

PMID:41186078 | DOI:10.1111/dar.70062

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