ASAM Pocket Guidelines and Patient Guide

ASAM Opioid Use Disorder Patient Guide 2025

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© 2025 American Society of Addiction Medicine. All rights reserved. ASAM.org 14 Pain • Pain can and should be effectively treated in patients with opioid addiction. • Methadone or buprenorphine can be effective for treating both opioid addiction and pain. • The clinician may temporarily increase the patient's dose, or the frequency of dosing, of methadone or buprenorphine to effectively manage pain. • The clinician may also prescribe additional pain-relieving medications or other treatments (such as physical therapy). • Methadone or buprenorphine does not need to be stopped before surgery. • If methadone or buprenorphine is stopped due to pain treatment, it should be restarted as quickly as possible. • Naltrexone blocks the action of opioid pain medications. When needed, this blocking effect can often be overcome. In these instances, patients should be closely monitored in an emergency department or hospital setting. • It is important that patients talk to their clinicians about their opioid addiction and work together to develop a pain management plan that both addresses the pain and minimizes their risk of relapse.

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