There are hardly any data from longitudinal studies on the prevalence of mental health disorders in patients in opioid agonist therapy (OAT). Here we report prevalence rates of mental health disorders in a 6-year naturalistic noninterventional follow-up study of patients in OAT (N = 2694 at baseline). The number of participants without any psychiatric diagnosis only modestly increased from 36.7% to 42.2% (males 42.6%, females 47.6%) over a 6-year period. Depression (42%), anxiety disorders (19.3%), sleep disorders (21.3%), and posttraumatic stress disorder (13%) were most frequent. The rates for patients in psychiatric or psychological/psychotherapeutic treatment at baseline were rather low (8% resp. 8-12%) and declined over time (3.6% resp. 5.4%-6.8% after 6 years). Data from this long-term study indicate an overall high persisting prevalence of mental health disorders in patients in OAT and a rather low number of patients in psychiatric/psychological treatment. Hence, this study indicates a substantial need for specific psychosocial and psychopharmacological interventions in patients in opioid agonist therapy.
Soyka et al. (Sun,) studied this question.