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          National Institute on Drug Abuse | 
         
         
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          | NIDA News Release | 
          Contact: Beverly Jackson 
            Michelle Muth 
            301-443-6245 | 
         
         
          | FOR RELEASE, Tuesday, March 7, 2000 | 
         
        
       
       
      New Study Underscores 
        Effectiveness of Methadone Maintenance as Treatment for Heroin Addiction 
       
      New research clearly shows that longer-term methadone maintenance therapy 
        (MMT), combined with some psychosocial counseling, is a far more effective 
        treatment for heroin addiction than is simply the temporary use of methadone 
        to detoxify patients and reduce drug craving, even when the detoxification 
        is coupled with much more intensive psychosocial therapy. The study is 
        published in this week's Journal of the American Medical Association, 
        by a research team from the University of California, San Francisco, and 
        the San Francisco Veteran Affairs Medical Center. The National Institute 
        on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutes of Health, provided funding 
        for the research.  
      "The findings from this study clearly indicate that methadone maintenance 
        is an effective treatment for heroin addiction," says Dr. Alan I. Leshner, 
        NIDA Director. "This is yet another indication that MMT should be used 
        more widely as a treatment option for heroin addicts. Currently, only 
        about 20 percent of the 810,000* diagnosed heroin addicts in the U.S. 
        receive this treatment."  
      Study director Dr. Sharon Hall says, "The goal of this study was to determine 
        whether short-term methadone-assisted detoxification, when enriched with 
        intensive psychosocial services and aftercare, could provide an effective 
        alternative to MMT. Our results show that no matter how ideologically 
        attractive the notion of a time-limited methadone treatment for heroin 
        abusers, longer-term methadone maintenance treatment is far more effective." 
       
      The researchers interviewed 179 heroin- or cocaine-dependent volunteers 
        monthly, for 12 months after their admission to the study. The volunteers 
        were randomly divided into two groupsÑa methadone maintenance treatment 
        group and a methadone detoxification group. The MMT group was eligible 
        for 14 months of methadone maintenance, followed by a 2-month detoxification. 
        Participants in this group were required to attend substance abuse group 
        therapy 1 hour per week for the first 6 months of maintenance, and 1 hour 
        per month of individual therapy.  
      Patients in the detoxification group received methadone only for the 
        first 180 days of their treatment. During their first 6 months of treatment, 
        the detoxification group was required to attend 2 hours per week of substance 
        abuse group therapy; 1 hour per week of cocaine group therapy (if they 
        had tested positive for cocaine when admitted to the study); a series 
        of 14 1-hour, weekly substance abuse education classes; and 4 weekly individual 
        therapy sessions. This group also received 6 months of aftercare services 
        that included weekly individual and group psychotherapy and liaison services 
        with the criminal justice system, medical clinics, and social service 
        agencies, but no additional methadone after the first 180 days of their 
        treatment.  
      Study results showed that more patients in the MMT group remained in 
        treatment for longer periods of time (438.5 days vs. 174 days) and had 
        lower heroin use rates than did shorter-term methadone detoxification 
        patients. Of the MMT group, 77 out of 91 patients were still in the study 
        at the 12-month mark, while only 57 of 88 methadone detoxification patients 
        were still in the study. MMT also resulted in a lower rate of drug use-related 
        HIV-risk behaviors and a lower level of criminal activity.  
      Note to Reporters: The full text of the article, "Methadone Maintenance 
        versus 180-day Psychosocially-Enriched Detoxification for Treatment of 
        Opioid Dependence: A Randomized, Controlled Trial," can be found in the 
        March 8, 2000, issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association 
        (JAMA.2000;283:1303-1310). The article is available on JAMA's website 
        at: http://www.jama.com/ or by calling the Science 
        News Department at 312-464-5374.  
      *Figure from The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. 
         
       
       
      The National Institute on Drug Abuse is a component of the National Institutes 
        of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIDA supports 
        more than 85 percent of the world's research on the health aspects of 
        drug abuse and addiction. The Institute carries out a large variety of 
        programs to ensure the rapid dissemination of research information and 
        its implementation in policy and practice. Fact sheets on the health effects 
        of drugs of abuse and other topics can be ordered free of charge in English 
        and Spanish by calling NIDA Infofax 
        at 1-888-NIH-NIDA (644-6432) or 1-888-TTY-NIDA (889-6432) for the deaf. 
        These fact sheets and further information on NIDA research and other activities 
        can be found on the NIDA home page at http://www.drugabuse.gov/.  
       
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