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Original Article

Clinical Use of Methadone

(Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine) (Associate Professor of Pharmacy) (Assistant Professor) (Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine) (Associate Professor of Pharmacy) (Assistant Professor) (Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine) (Associate Professor of Pharmacy) (Assistant Professor) , &
Pages 29-59 | Received 20 Jun 2001, Accepted 15 Aug 2001, Published online: 17 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

Methadone hydrochloride is a mu-opioid agonist that has been used for the treatment of pain and for the management and maintenance of opioid withdrawal for over 50 years. Several characteristics make methadone a useful drug. However, these same characteristics and wide interpatient variability can make methadone difficult to use safely. A MEDLINE search was conducted on publications between January 1996 and May 2001 to identify literature relevant to this subject. Those publications were reviewed, and from them, other literature was identified and reviewed. Published studies demonstrate methadone's efficacy in pain management and in opioid withdrawal. However, interpatient variability in pharmacokinetic variables of methadone produces difficulties in developing guidelines for methadone use. Clinicians should not be deterred from use of this drug which has been shown to benefit patients in both pain management and methadone maintenance, but an individualized patient approach must be taken to use methadone safely.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Ralph E. Small

Cherokee Layson-Wolf, PharmD, is Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. At the time that this review was conducted, she was a Community Care Pharmacy Practice Resident at Virginia Commonwealth University.

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