
By Dr. Fletcher
Addiction Medicine Doctor & Owner of Arrow Medical
Published
Updated
Family physicians often care for patients on high-dose or complex chronic opioid regimens who want to reduce but are limited by dependence and withdrawal. Rapid tapering frequently fails and can increase destabilization and illicit use. Lateral transfer to long-acting OAT such as methadone or buprenorphine is an evidence-based deprescribing strategy that simplifies dosing, stabilizes patients, and shifts care to specialized clinics.
As a family physician, you may have patients who have been on chronic opioid therapy for years, often for chronic non-cancer pain. You may have inherited these patients, or their opioid requirements may have escalated over time. Now, you find yourself in a difficult clinical situation:
This is a common and stressful scenario. You want to practice good opioid stewardship, but you also don’t want to abandon your patient or precipitate a crisis. There is an effective and compassionate solution: using Opioid Agonist Treatment (OAT) as a deprescribing tool.
For a patient who has developed significant physiological dependence, a forced or rapid taper of their opioids is often intolerable. The withdrawal symptoms are severe, and their pain may feel unmanageable.
The risks of a failed taper are significant:
Instead of a difficult vertical taper, a safer and more effective strategy is a “lateral transfer.” This involves transitioning the patient from their complex regimen of short-acting opioids to a single, once-daily dose of a long-acting OAT medication.
OAT as Deprescribing: The process of converting a patient from a regimen of short-acting opioids (e.g., hydromorphone, oxycodone) to a stable, once-daily dose of a long-acting opioid agonist (methadone or buprenorphine) under the care of a specialized addiction clinic.
How it Works:
You refer the patient to a clinic like Arrow Medical.
Our physicians will conduct an assessment and start the patient on methadone or buprenorphine.
We will carefully titrate their OAT dose until it effectively manages their withdrawal and cravings, allowing them to stop their other opioids.
The result is a simplified, more stable regimen managed by specialists.
The patient can either be sent back to yourself for ongoing management of their OAT, or continued to be followed at an OAT clinic like Arrow Medical
This isn’t about starting a new opioid; it’s about replacing a chaotic regimen with a structured, stable one. It is a fundamental deprescribing strategy.
This approach offers significant benefits for everyone involved.
Making this transition is simple with our walk-in model.
You don’t have to manage complex chronic opioid therapy alone. By partnering with Arrow Medical, you can use OAT as a powerful deprescribing tool that is safer for your patients and supportive of your practice. Let us be your partners in opioid stewardship.