Two‐Phase Inpatient Withdrawal Programme for Long‐Term Opioid Use in Non‐Cancer Pain
Konrad Streitberger, Michael A. Harnik, Anna Saliba, Nina Bischoff, Larissa T. Blättler, Kyrill Schwegler, Christine Baumgartner, Nora Sutter, Maria M. Wertli

TL;DR
A two-phase inpatient program helped most chronic non-cancer pain patients stop long-term opioid use without increased pain, with many remaining opioid-free after three months.
Contribution
A structured inpatient opioid withdrawal model for CNCP patients with high cessation rates and stable pain outcomes is introduced.
Findings
84% of patients were opioid-free after completing the two-phase program.
61% remained opioid-free at 3 months post-withdrawal.
Pain intensity remained stable after discharge for most patients.
Abstract
High‐dose long‐term opioid treatment for chronic non‐cancer pain (CNCP) has become an increasing burden in industrialised countries. Opioid tapering and withdrawal in patients with CNCP remain challenging. This study evaluated a two‐phase inpatient opioid withdrawal (OW) programme aimed at safely discontinuing opioid use in CNCP patients. This prospective observational study was conducted from 2018 to 2023 at a Swiss tertiary care centre, involving CNCP patients on long‐term opioid therapy (≥ 6 months, ≥ 100 mg morphine equivalent daily dose) who had failed outpatient withdrawal attempts. The programme consisted of a withdrawal phase (Phase 1) followed by multimodal pain rehabilitation (Phase 2). Outcomes included the proportion of patients opioid‐free after Phase 2 (primary) and at 3 months, pain intensity changes, and adverse events (secondary). Among the 38 enrolled patients (58%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpioid Use Disorder Treatment · Musculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Pain Management and Opioid Use
