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Not a life sentence: Heroin study challenges assumptions about long-term outcomes

4 October 2019
Australian study dismantling stigma around heroin addiction

Australia's longest study of heroin addiction by the Australian Treatment Outcome 高清福利片 (ATOS) is challenging common misconceptions, indicating dependency may not necessarily be a lifelong sentence.

, Australia鈥檚 longest naturalistic study of heroin dependence, indicate that heroin dependence is not necessarily a life sentence, with three in four participants not using heroin at 11-years following study entry. Moreover, a considerable proportion maintained long-term abstinence without the need for ongoing treatment. Researchers from the University of Sydney鈥檚 (the Matilda Centre) and the (NDARC) at UNSW Sydney, say further research is needed to understand what factors made these participants so successful.

Increases in heroin use are contributing to dramatic rises in opioid dependence and opioid-related deaths worldwide, and heroin remains a significant public health issue in Australia.聽While research has consistently shown that long-term stable treatment is key to achieving positive outcomes, relatively little is known about treatment pathways over the long-term, and which factors are vital for long-term improvement. 聽

To better understand these relationships over the long-term, the 11-year follow up of ATOS involved re-establishing contact with a cohort of 615 Australians with heroin dependence and reinterviewing them about their substance use and treatment utilisation. The cohort was initially recruited into the study in 2001-02, and were interviewed on six occasions. Findings showed five distinct groups of heroin use and treatment utilisation:

  • A group who reduced heroin use over time while in long-term treatment (17%);
  • A group who achieved long-term abstinence alongside a reduction in treatment utilisation (13%);
  • A group who demonstrated no decrease in heroin use alongside high rates of treatment utilisation (12%);
  • A group who gradually reduced their heroin use alongside a late increase in treatment utilisation (9%); and
  • A group who experienced relapses in heroin use alongside fluctuations (increases or decreases) in treatment utilisation (9%).

Although treatment responses varied, the finding that 1 in 8 participants demonstrated decreasing heroin use alongside reductions in treatment utilisation, until there was long-term abstinence without the need for ongoing treatment, challenges previous assumptions that long-term abstinence is not possible without ongoing treatment.

鈥淭his is exciting, because it shows that heroin dependence is not necessarily the long-term, chronic relapsing condition that we have always considered it to be,鈥 explains from the Matilda Centre, who coordinates the ATOS project. 鈥淢any people experiencing heroin dependence can feel as though it鈥檚 a 鈥榣ife sentence鈥, which is not only unhelpful and highly stigmatising, but also inaccurate.鈥

鈥淭here are many factors that can influence which pathway a person can take in terms of their heroin use, and we are just beginning to understand how complex the long-term relationships between some of these factors are in a person鈥檚 life,鈥 says the Matilda Centre鈥檚 . 鈥淭here were few factors that were able to distinguish between those who would do really well, and those who might not have such long-term positive outcomes. Further research is needed to untangle these relationships, but this is a great start.鈥

With further funding from the NHMRC, the ATOS team has recently started the 18-20-year follow-up of the ATOS cohort which will provide vital information on the longer term impact of heroin use and treatment on physical and mental health. The study is being coordinated by and her fellow investigators, including the study鈥檚 Chief Investigator, . Other investigators at the Matilda Centre include , , as well as NDARC鈥檚 and . 聽

Interested in learning more about ATOS? Read the latest research findings or contact the Matilda Centre at matilda.centre@sydney.edu.au

  1. Marel C, Mills KL, Slade T, Darke S, Ross J, Teesson M. Modelling Long-Term Joint Trajectories of Heroin Use and Treatment Utilisation: Findings from the Australian Treatment Outcome 高清福利片. EClinicalMedicine [Internet]. 2019 Aug [cited 2019 Sep 13]. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2019.07.013
  2. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Overdose death rates National Institute of Health. Updated September 2017. Available from: Martins SS, Sarvet A, Santaella-Tenorio J, Saha T, Grant BF, Hasin DS. Changes in US lifetime heroin use and heroin use disorder: prevalence from the 2001鈥2002 to 2012鈥2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on alcohol and related conditions. JAMA Psychiat 2017;74:445鈥55.
  3. Addiction EMCfDaD. European drug report 2017: Trends and developments. Luxembourg: Publications Office of the European Union; 2017.
  4. Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS). Drug Induced Deaths in Australia. Updated September 2018. Available from:https://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/Lookup/by%20Subject/
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