ASAM Pocket Guidelines and Patient Guide

Benzodiazepine Tapering

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8 Recommendations Partnering With Patients 4. Clinicians should develop the BZD tapering strategy in coordination with patients and their care partners in a shared decision-making process whenever possible (CC-S). Level of Care Considerations 5. BZD tapering can typically be managed in outpatient settings. However, clinicians should consider inpatient care for BZD tapering when: a. Patient presentation indicates an imminent risk for significant harm related to continued use of the BZD medication (e.g., medication interaction, overdose, accidents, falls, suicidality or other self-harm) that is unlikely to be rapidly mitigated by the initial dose reduction of the BZD taper (CC-S); b. Patient symptoms and/or co-occurring physical or mental health conditions are anticipated to complicate BZD tapering in a way that cannot be safely managed in an outpatient setting (CC-S); c. The patient is experiencing or imminently anticipated to experience severe or complicated BZD withdrawal (See Table 3) (CC-S). Tapering Process 6. Clinicians should generally consider dose reductions of 5% to 10% when determining the initial pace of the BZD taper. The pace of the taper should typically not exceed 25% every 2 weeks (CC-S). 7. Clinicians can consider transitioning patients without contraindications to a comparable dose of a longer-acting BZD medication for the taper (CC-C). 8. Clinicians should tailor tapering strategies to each individual patient and adjust the taper based on a patient's response (CC-S). 9. Clinicians should evaluate patients undergoing tapering for signs and symptoms related to the BZD taper with each dose reduction (CC-S). Adjunctive Interventions 10. Clinicians should offer patients undergoing BZD tapering behavioral interventions tailored to their underlying conditions (e.g., CBT, CBT-I) or provide them with referrals to access these interventions (L-S). 11. Clinicians should first consider pausing or slowing the pace of the BZD taper when patients experience symptoms that significantly interfere with the taper (e.g., sleep difficulty, anxiety). However, clinicians can also consider use of adjunctive medications (See Tables 10 and 11) (CC-C).

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