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The main ideas from the information are: - When inducing patients onto buprenorphine, it is important to monitor for signs of precipitated opioid withdrawal. - The baseline symptom should not be prolonged by waiting too long before increasing the dose. - Increase the dose by four milligrams until the patient reports feeling better. - See the patient the next day to check if they are stable and adjust their dose if needed. - On day two, the dose should not exceed 16 milligrams. - On day three, split the total dose from day two for three times a day dosing. - On day four, start dosing once daily for the next week. - Most patients are stable by the second or third day and can have weekly follow-up visits. - Patients on higher buprenorphine doses are more likely to adhere to treatment. - Combination buprenorphine products like Suboxone should be used for patients on long-acting opioids. - Missed doses during induction Do you permit me? And You need to make sure And monitor her and signs and if the precipitated opioid withdrawal is occurring by most will abort the induction at that point So hardly a simply wait doesn't prolong the baseline symptom Only by less than 15 milliseconds before the first is a very minimal effect for the dose Interval keep increasing doses by four milligrams until the patient reports feeling better before sending the patient home See the patient the next day to see if they are clinically stable. If not further adjust their dose Note that on day two the dose should not exceed 16 milligrams for the FDA and CTC policy If you do so, please document your thinking in the progress notes Continue the same process on day three with day two's total dose split for TID dosing on Day four begin dosing as a daily dose for the next week Most patients are stable by the second or third day and can assume a weekly follow-up visit schedule interestingly pizzicato et al in 2020 showed that patients on buprenorphine doses greater than or equal to 24 milligrams were five times more likely to adhere to Treatment relative to those who received less than or equal to 16 milligrams per day Also note that combination buprenorphine product or suboxone has not been adequately evaluated in controlled studies of induction for patients using long-acting opioids such as methadone It is recommended in such patients that buprenorphine model product be used when inducting them onto buprenorphine Since naloxone in the combination product is absorbed in small amounts and can cause precipitated withdrawal Following induction the patient can be transitioned to the combination product or suboxone Also regarding missed doses during induction CTC policy states that if the patient misses three consecutive days They will be discharged and during maintenance CTC policy states if the patient misses five consecutive days. They will be discharged