| Buprenorphine | |
|---|---|
| Brand Names | Subutex®, Suboxone®, Butrans®, Sublocade® |
| Drug Class | Opioid (Partial μ-agonist) |
| Primary Indication | Opioid Use Disorder, Chronic Pain |
| Receptor Activity | Partial μ agonist; κ antagonist |
| Ceiling Effect | Yes (respiratory depression) |
| Relative Potency | High receptor affinity |
| Controlled Substance | Schedule III |
| FDA Approval | 1985 (analgesic), 2002 (OUD) |
Buprenorphine is a partial μ-opioid receptor agonist with very high receptor affinity and slow dissociation.
It is used for both chronic pain and treatment of opioid use disorder (MOUD).
Because it is a partial agonist, it produces a ceiling effect on respiratory depression and euphoria, making it safer than full μ agonists.
However, its high receptor affinity can displace full agonists and precipitate withdrawal.
Receptor Activity
Clinical Consequences
High receptor affinity explains precipitated withdrawal risk.
Common formulations:
Suboxone® = buprenorphine + naloxone (to deter misuse).
Absolute:
Relative / Caution:
Opioid Use Disorder (sublingual):
Chronic pain (transdermal):
Initiation requires mild withdrawal state to avoid precipitated withdrawal.
Absorption:
Metabolism:
Half-life:
Elimination:
Long half-life supports once-daily dosing in OUD.
Common:
Serious:
Lower abuse potential compared to full agonists.
CNS depressants:
CYP3A4 inhibitors:
Risk:
Clinical:
Laboratory:
Overdose:
Treatment:
Compared to Morphine:
Compared to Methadone:
Compared to Naltrexone: