AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients on chronic opioids are vulnerable to serious breathing issues during sleep, like central and obstructive apneas, hypopneas, and hypoxaemia.
  • Buprenorphine, a medication used for treating opioid dependency and chronic pain, has not been extensively studied for its effects on sleep-related breathing disorders.
  • In a study of 70 patients using buprenorphine/naloxone, 63% showed signs of at least mild sleep disordered breathing, with notable cases of moderate and severe sleep apnea present in 33% of participants.

Article Abstract

Patients using chronic opioids are at risk for exceptionally complex and potentially lethal disorders of breathing during sleep, including central and obstructive apnoeas, hypopnoeas, ataxic breathing and nonapnoeic hypoxaemia. Buprenorphine, a partial μ-opioid agonist with limited respiratory toxicity, is widely used for the treatment of opioid dependency and chronic nonmalignant pain. However, its potential for causing sleep disordered breathing has not been studied. 70 consecutive patients admitted for therapy with buprenorphine/naloxone were routinely evaluated with sleep medicine consultation and attended polysomnography. The majority of patients were young (mean±sd age 31.8±12.3 years), nonobese (mean±sd body mass index 24.9±5.9 kg·m(-2)) and female (60%). Based upon the apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI), at least mild sleep disordered breathing (AHI ≥5 events·h(-1)) was present in 63% of the group. Moderate (AHI ≥15- <30 events·h(-1)) and severe (AHI ≥30 events·h(-1)) sleep apnoea was present in 16% and 17%, respectively. Hypoxaemia, defined as an arterial oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry, of <90% for ≥10% of sleep time, was present in 27 (38.6%) patients. Despite the putative protective ceiling effect regarding ventilatory suppression observed during wakefulness, buprenorphine may induce significant alterations of breathing during sleep at routine therapeutic doses.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/09031936.00120012DOI Listing

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