Why Methadone Dosage Guidelines Are Too Low

February 16, 2024
Posted by Dr. Robert Sherrick

Opioid Withdrawal

For years, Community Medical Services has encountered a common problem at all of our clinics: The required starting dose of methadone (30 mg) to treat opioid withdrawal just isn’t enough for many patients.

Methadone is a powerful part of medication-assisted treatment programs (MATs). It blocks receptors in the brain that opioids typically latch onto, easing withdrawal symptoms and preventing cravings. This crucial medicine allows people to resume everyday life while focusing on their treatment. But if patients don’t receive enough methadone, withdrawal can set in, and the whole process of addiction starts over again.

Even worse, patients who don’t get enough methadone to halt withdrawal may continue to use illicit opioids to reduce their symptoms. This significantly puts patients at risk of overdosing.

At Community Medical Services, our main goals are to help patients “stay alive – and thrive.” To do so, we must decrease barriers to getting into and staying in treatment. Most clients need doses much higher than 30 mg – so why do we always start so low?

In this case study, we explore the current landscape of methadone dosing and how it impacts the patient recovery process, share our findings on what higher initial methadone increases achieve, and recommend a better way forward for the healthcare professionals striving to help patients conquer their addiction and reclaim their lives.

Why is the Initial Methadone Dose 30 Mg?

We’ll start with the big question: How did we get here?

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA) regulations specifically require that the initial dose on the first day of treatment not exceed 30 mg. Another dose of 10 mg may be given after 2 hours if the patient still has withdrawal symptoms. In no case is a care provider allowed to provide more than 40 mg on the first day. In our experience, few patients want to wait around for 2 hours for only 10 mg more methadone, and the total dose on day 1 is usually 30 mg.

This regulation has been in place for decades, and SAMHSA has been clear that it is serious about this limit. SAMHSA likely chose 30 mg because it is safe for people with no opioid tolerance and unlikely to cause an overdose, no matter what the patient has been using lately.

People who use opioids every day will develop tolerance for them.  This means that they will need higher doses to experience the same effects and can tolerate higher doses without becoming sedated or overdosing.  It is important to establish a dose of methadone for each patient that matches their own tolerance.  However, it is possible to overdose on methadone alone.  A dose of methadone that may be too low for one person could be enough to cause an overdose in another.

The Problem with 30 Mg Doses

Some people may do fine at 30 mg or even lower doses; however, some patients need five to 10 times this dose to make it to their next dose with no withdrawal symptoms. If a patient needs 100 mg or more to stave off withdrawals, 30 mg is only going to help them a little. They will still have withdrawal symptoms, especially later in the evening when the methadone is wearing off. When patients continue to have withdrawal symptoms day after day while still coming to the clinic for treatment, they may continue to use other opioids to stave off withdrawal or even get discouraged and give up.

The problem is that we can’t initially tell how much someone will need. One reason for the difference in dose is that people have different tolerance levels when admitted. Their tolerance can depend on several factors, such as what they have been using, how much they have been using, how long they’ve been using, and the route of administration. People also absorb, distribute, and metabolize methadone at widely different rates.

For example, the average dose among all our clinics is currently around 112 mg, but we also have some patients on less than 10 mg and a few on more than 400 mg per day. No two patients are the same, and their treatment needs to be personalized to fit their unique needs. By locking the initial methadone dose at 30 mg, some patients are unable to get the amount of medication they desperately need in a timely manner.

Current Dosage Schedules Are Too Slow

It’s clear why limiting initial methadone doses to 30 mg can be a problem for many patients. But what about after the first day of treatment?

Unfortunately, there is little data to inform us about how fast methadone should be increased. Some studies show that for the first two weeks after starting methadone, the risk of an overdose goes up above what existed before the patient began. After the first two weeks, this increased risk rapidly drops, and as long as patients stay in treatment, their risk of overdosing is 50-70% less than before. However, due to concerns over the possibility of methadone causing an overdose, expert panels and SAMHSA guidelines recommend not only starting at no more than 30 mg but also being careful about dose increases in the first weeks of treatment. According to their advice, the maximum dose for a patient after two weeks of treatment would be 50 mg.

This is not nearly enough for many patients.

SAMHSA assumed that slow titration of the methadone dose would decrease the risk of an overdose in the first one to two weeks. However, this has never been proven.

Why Getting the Dosage Right is Important

We want everyone’s dose of methadone to keep them out of withdrawal until they get their next dose while not causing excess drowsiness. When at the correct dose, people on methadone are ordinary in all respects. If you passed them on the street, you wouldn’t even be able to tell they were on methadone.

However, if the dose is too high, it can cause people to be sedated, slur words, nod off, or be unsteady on their feet. If this starts to happen and the dose isn’t lowered, eventually, people can overdose on methadone.

If the dose is too low, withdrawal symptoms and cravings will return quickly. Patients may seek opioids elsewhere to relieve their symptoms. Or patients may feel like they’re making no progress in their treatment and stop going to the clinic.

There’s a happy medium to be found in correctly dosing a patient with methadone. Community Medical Services believes every patient deserves the chance to overcome their addiction. Delivering the proper medication for every patient is crucial to treatment success.

The Effect of Higher Titration on Treatment Retention Rate

The doctors and care staff at Community Medical Services firmly believe that increased flexibility with the dosage and titration schedule of patients will lead to better outcomes.

To test this, we gathered treatment data from our clinics from the past six years. We wanted to analyze the retention rate of patients in our treatment programs based on how quickly we increased the dosage of methadone to meet their needs.

We reported the average dosage level after a patient successfully completes a seven-day course of dose titration relative to the average percentage of patients who remained in our treatment program for a full 30 days (denoted by Treatment Continuance 30, or TC30).

The graph below includes only patients who started on methadone at 30 mg or less (to exclude transfers from outside programs) and covers the period from 2017 until Q3 of 2023. This analysis uses the 30-day Treatment Continuance (TC30, requiring three out of four doses and at least one dose in the last week of the first 30 days) as the retention measure. The graph shows how the TC30 is affected by the 7-day dose, only including those patients who dosed daily for the first week.

As the graph shows, our hypothesis was correct. Our patients who increased their dosage faster during a 7-day treatment period stayed in the treatment program for 30 days at higher rates than patients who remained at lower dosages.

What Does This Mean?

Community Medical Services is committed to providing the most effective care for our patients, which means doing what we can to improve overall retention.

Medical providers need to be aware that faster titration of methadone to meet a patient’s needs can be the difference between a patient receiving the care they need or dropping out of treatment and continuing illicit drug use. Safely increasing doses faster is a better way to meet patients’ immediate treatment needs and help keep them on the road to recovery longer, increasing the chances of overcoming opioid use disorder (OUD).

As members of the medical community, we also all need to make sure patients are seen after the first week in case they need more dosage increases. Patients who miss dosing during the first week are at high risk of dropping out. We should help them with any barriers they may have (transportation, housing, etc.) and encourage them to keep coming, as the longer they stay in treatment, the more benefits they will get. For example, we’ve witnessed patients who stay in treatment are  more likely to be employed, have stable housing and family relationships, and are less likely to overdose.

How We Propose Changing Dosage Guidelines

As this study has shown, current dosage guidelines advocated by SAMHSA and other experts may be more harmful to patient treatment than helpful. They impose barriers that may leave patients suffering the most from OUD to fall through the cracks. When done safely through careful triage and monitoring, giving a larger initial dose of methadone to patients suffering from severe dependency and titrating to higher dosages more quickly could decrease the chances of overdoses, reduce the chances of a relapse, and increase the chances that a patient will continue seeking treatment for their condition.

At present, we cannot do anything about initial dosage rates until SAMHSA revises the 30 mg requirement. Fortunately, they have indicated they may be willing to increase initial dosage allowances later this year.

What we, as providers, can control is the rate of increase after the initial methadone dosage. At Community Medical Services, we suggest increasing the dose of methadone much faster than the SAMHSA panel recommendations. We always comply with regulatory requirements – our initial dose is never more than 30 mg for patients starting newly on methadone.  However, our guidelines allow for titrating the dose as high as 60-70 mg by day 7 in patients who need higher doses.

Our clinical experience suggests that the SAMHSA recommendations are too conservative. Our medical providers assess each patient, considering their use patterns, and individualize their dosing regimen. In addition, our nurses assess each patient at the dosing window before any dose increase. We believe our patients tell the truth and will be open about what they are using and how much if we approach them with a nonjudgmental attitude, and they will let us know if they are experiencing drowsiness or their dose is too high.  By working together and listening to our patients, we can be more successful in helping them recover from their addiction.

Over years of using our dose titration protocols, we have not had any significant problems, and we feel we have achieved a better balance between the risk of an overdose and the risk of dropping out of treatment.

Mitigating Risks

The concerns about increasing methadone dosages too rapidly are not unfounded. Methadone, like any major medication, can result in overdosing if not used correctly. However, Community Medical Services has established strategies to ensure the safety of patients while giving them the treatment that best meets their needs.

It is important that we talk with our patients at intake about overdosing, the risks of using other opioids on top of methadone, and how to decrease their overdose risk (not using alone, using a test dose, having a naloxone kit around, etc.). Our nurses assess each patient at the window. If the patient is sedated or reports that their dose is too strong, the medical provider is notified, and the dose is adjusted accordingly. Patients who have not been using a lot of opioids recently (coming out of incarceration or an abstinence-based treatment program or a self-imposed taper at home) are started and induced on lower doses. However, in our experience, the majority of the patients that come to us require higher doses.

Making Methadone Treatments Safer Together

At Community Medical Services, the safety and health of the patient is our biggest concern. We firmly believe that with the proper ability to match methadone doses to a patient’s unique needs, we can safely and effectively set them on the right course for recovery from their substance use disorder.

We’ve built safety standards to ensure patients are accurately matched to the correct initial dose when they visit our clinic for the first time. Then, we monitor them as they’re titrated to the proper dosage at the beginning of their treatment to give them the best chance of success for recovery.

As healthcare professionals, we have an opportunity to significantly improve the lives of our patients struggling with opioid addiction. The data shown above suggests that the current dosage guidelines from SAMHSA don’t work for many patients. Low initial doses and titration scales put patients who have severe OUD at risk of leaving treatment.

Some groups are working on improving the current methadone induction standards – providing research data or developing new technologies (such as point-of-care methadone levels or wearable devices to detect impending overdoses).  Our hope is that these efforts, working together with the regulators at SAMHSA, will move our treatment forward and help more people who are suffering from opioid addiction.

New regulations were released by SAMHSA that will take effect on April 1, 2024. These regulations implement some of the changes recommended in this blog, including increasing the initial allowed methadone dose from 30 to 50 mg. It is still a challenge to get patients to a therapeutic dose as rapidly and safely as possible, and more needs to be done to make this a possibility for all patients.

About the Author

Dr. Robert Sherrick was appointed CMS’s first Chief Science Officer in 2023, transitioning from Chief Medical Officer, a role he served for years.

Before serving CMS, he had experience working at an inpatient addiction treatment facility in Montana, Pathways Treatment Center, treating all forms of Substance Use Disorders and dual-diagnosis patients. Dr. Sherrick has been providing medication-assisted treatment for Opioid Use Disorder since 2003, initially in an office setting using buprenorphine and subsequently with methadone in Opioid Treatment Programs.

He established a state-wide buprenorphine treatment program for VA Montana with an extensive focus on telemedicine. He is board-certified in Addiction Medicine through the American Board of Preventative Medicine. He is the Immediate Past President of the Northwest Chapter of the American Society of Addiction Medicine.

Dr. Sherrick received his MS and BS in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his MD from George Washington University Medical Center.

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Beth M
Beth M
7 months ago

I appreciate the article about starting with higher doses, it’s very important. I am presently advocating for clinics to allow patients to get to a therapeutic dose rather than a dose that the clinic has decided is enough. In addition to that issue having patients get EKG’s and/or peak and trough tests for 10 milligram increases

Robbie W
Robbie W
1 month ago
Reply to  Beth M

The peak and trough just for 10 milligrams is taking it to the extreme I get it if you get to 120 milligrams and need to go up then do a peak and trough and then put them on the dose it shows they should be on not every time just for 10 mg you have to be at the clinic at like 5 am and either sit there or come back in 3 hours to do the the bloodwork again that is to much. The patients for the most part know what they can handle and what they can’t.

charles
charles
6 months ago

Community medical services is displaying False pretense with regards to call backs, so that they can strip you of your privileges. IN doing so they call your number with a name of “Larkspur medical services” I do not know that name never heard of it. However I have been inclined to believe that is the name of a previous owner, and apparently the new owner is too greedy to pay to up date the phone system. Not many people today answer calls from a number or name that they do not have in their contacts. That is simply a point of fact. Community medical services called me for a call back with the name” Larkspur” Therefore I missing my callback day. Had it posted C.M.S. Community Medical Services, I would of known exactly who and what it was regarding. I have not missed a call back or had a dirty test in the last 3 1/2 years, yet I have to be punished for their lackadaisical approach to up dating their phone system

Jessica Klein
Admin
6 months ago
Reply to  charles

Hi Charles, I’m so sorry you’ve had an issue with our phone system. Sounds like good feedback we should look into in more detail so we can fix it for you and anyone else at your clinic who may be experiencing the same thing. I will send an email to the address you listed here separately requesting more information so we can get it taken care of – thank you for the input!

Whitney C
Whitney C
5 months ago

I agree with this 1000 % I have been using methadone on and off for 15 years. I have always failed in my recovery because of not being able to get on a stable dose . I have been in treatment for this time sinve 2018 and been clean since 2020 but in spite of my being clean the whole time taking nothing but methadone my withdrawal from not being stable has gotten worse and worse. The clinic I attend no longer do peak amd trolfs for stability. I am currently on 165 miligrams a day but still.not stable I start withdrawing about 5 or 6 hours after I dose. I just tried a split dose for two weeks which had me so sick I felt like I did not have the energy to even breathe. And mind you through all this I have stayed sober .it’s just so sad that clinics have what they call a norm dose of 120 miligrams and act like they don’t want to take you any higher .to go past 120 I had to pay for a peak a trolf everytime i went up five miligrams.Now they no longer do peak and trolfs they make me go to the hospital and pay for an ekg every time I increase. Then when I got to 155 they made me try a split dose would not increase me until I tried the split dose for two weeks mind you I had to wait two months for the state to spprove the split dose.Its just ridiculous every single day I cry because I don’t want to use but my clinic is making it so hard not to from the withdrawal idk what to do .

Jessica Klein
Admin
5 months ago
Reply to  Whitney C

Yes, working within the regulations that can vary by state can make it difficult. We always encourage patients to speak with their medical provider and care team and openly discuss how adjustments can be made within the regulations we must abide by. If you feel you want to share more we hope you contact our client Ombudsman anytime by either calling 480-977-1444 or emailing CMSombudsman@cmsgiveshope.com.

E B
E B
4 months ago
Reply to  Whitney C

Totally feel your pain… I know ppl that have been getting take homes for months (so clean for 9+months)but now are using again because of the difficulty of going up 10mg or so to reach stable dose. You are 1 tough cookie still not using after going thru withdrawals like that!! Godspeed for you the right dose

E B
E B
4 months ago

This article is spot on. Not only is the initial med rates too low, they also now make it almost impossible to get past 150mg for high long term users. You have to see counselor, see doc, get a cardiogram and lose your take home privileges every time u ask for a 10mg increase. So obviously ppl just stay on a dose that’s not currently working for them because to get those things done in short period of time in a mclinic is impossible…SMH

Anonymous
Anonymous
4 months ago

The dose is far to low and can take months to increase to proper level. I quit the first day I was accepted into a clinic after two months on the wait list. The withdrawal on 30mg was so intense I checked into a hospital but because I had already started treatment all they could give me was something for my blood pressure. After several days and realizing it would take almost two months of increases to reach a stable dose I just went back to using.

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