Buprenorphine Injection

Important Safety Information And Indication

What is the most important information I should know about Buprenorphine Injection?

Because of the serious risk of potential harm or death from self-injecting Buprenorphine Injection into a vein (intravenously), it is only available through a restricted program called the Buprenorphine Injection REMS Program.

  • Buprenorphine Injection is not available in retail pharmacies.
  • Your Buprenorphine injection will only be given to you by a certified healthcare provider.

Buprenorphine Injection contains an opioid medicine called buprenorphine that can cause serious and life-threatening breathing problems, especially if you take or use certain other medicines or drugs.

Talk to your healthcare provider about naloxone, a medicine available to patients for emergency treatment of an opioid overdose. If naloxone is given, you must call 911 or get emergency medical help right away to treat overdose or accidental use of an opioid.

Buprenorphine Injection may cause serious and life‐threatening breathing problems. Get emergency help right away if you:

  • feel faint
  • feel dizzy
  • are confused
  • feel sleepy or uncoordinated
  • have blurred vision
  • have slurred speech
  • are breathing slower than normal
  • cannot think well or clearly

Do not take certain medicines during treatment with Buprenorphine Injection. Taking other opioid medicines, benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other central nervous system depressants (including street drugs) while on Buprenorphine Injection can cause severe drowsiness, decreased awareness, breathing problems, coma, and death.

  • In an emergency, have family members tell emergency department staff that you are physically dependent on an opioid and are being treated with Buprenorphine Injection.
  • You may have detectable levels of Buprenorphine Injection in your body for a long period after stopping treatment with Buprenorphine Injection.

Death has been reported in those who are not opioid dependent who received buprenorphine sublingually.

Who should not take Buprenorphine Injection?

who should not take sublocade

Do not use Buprenorphine Injection if you are allergic to buprenorphine or any ingredient in the prefilled syringe (ATRIGEL® Delivery System, a biodegradable 50:50 poly(DL-lactide-co-glycolide) polymer and a biocompatible solvent, N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP)).

Before starting Buprenorphine Injection, tell your healthcare provider about all of your medical conditions, including if you have:

  • trouble breathing or lung problems
  • a curve in your spine that affects your breathing
  • Addison’s disease
  • an enlarged prostate gland (men)
  • problems urinating
  • liver, kidney, or gallbladder problems
  • alcoholism
  • a head injury or brain problem
  • mental health problems
  • adrenal gland or thyroid gland problems

Tell your Healthcare Provider If You Are:

  • pregnant or plan to become pregnant. Opioid-dependent women on buprenorphine maintenance therapy may require additional analgesia during labor. If you receive Buprenorphine Injection while pregnant, your baby may have symptoms of opioid withdrawal at birth that could be life-threatening if not recognized and treated.
  • breastfeeding or plan to breastfeed. Buprenorphine Injection can pass into your breast milk and harm your baby. Talk with your healthcare provider about the best way to feed your baby during treatment with Buprenorphine Injection. Monitor your baby for increased drowsiness and breathing problems.

Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins and herbal supplements.

What should I avoid while being treated with Buprenorphine Injection?

  • Do not drive, operate heavy machinery, or perform any other dangerous activities until you know how Buprenorphine Injection affects you. Buprenorphine can cause drowsiness and slow reaction times. Buprenorphine Injection can make you sleepy, dizzy, or lightheaded. This may happen more often in the first few days after your injection and when your dose is changed.
  • You should not drink alcohol or take prescription or over‐the‐counter medicines that contain alcohol during treatment with Buprenorphine Injection, because this can lead to loss of consciousness or even death.

What are the possible side effects of Buprenorphine Injection?

Buprenorphine Injection can cause serious side effects, including:

  • Trouble breathing: Taking other opioid medicines, benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other central nervous system depressants during treatment with Buprenorphine Injection can cause breathing problems that can lead to coma and death.
  • Sleepiness, dizziness, and problems with coordination.
  • Physical dependence.
  • Liver problems: Call your healthcare provider right away if you notice any of these symptoms:
  • your skin or the white part of your eyes turns yellow (jaundice)
  • dark or “tea-colored” urine
  • light colored stools (bowel movements)
  • loss of appetite
  • pain, aching, or tenderness on the right side of your stomach area
  • nausea
  • Your healthcare provider should do blood tests to check your liver before you start and during treatment with Buprenorphine Injection.
  • Allergic reaction: You may have a rash, hives, swelling of your face, wheezing, low blood pressure, or loss of consciousness. Call your healthcare provider or get emergency help right away.
  • Opioid withdrawal: Call your healthcare provider right away if you get any of these symptoms: 
  • shaking
  • sweating more than normal
  • feeling hot or cold more than normal
  • runny nose
  • watery eyes
  • goose bumps
  • diarrhea
  • vomiting
  • muscle aches
  • Decrease in blood pressure: You may feel dizzy when you get up from sitting or lying down.

The most common side effects of Buprenorphine Injection include:

  • constipation
  • headache
  • nausea
  • injection site itching
  • vomiting
  • increase in liver enzymes
  • tiredness
  • injection site pain

Buprenorphine Injection may affect fertility in males and females. Talk to your healthcare provider if this is a concern for you.

These are not all the possible side effects. Call your healthcare provider for medical advice about side effects.

These are not all the possible side effects. Call your healthcare provider for medical advice about side effects.

To report pregnancy or side effects associated with taking Buprenorphine Injection, please call 1-877-782-6966.
You are encouraged to report the negative side effects of drugs to the FDA.
Visit: www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

Indication

Buprenorphine Injection, for subcutaneous use (CIII) is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with moderate to severe addiction (dependence) to opioid drugs (prescription or illegal) who have received an oral transmucosal (used under the tongue or inside the cheek) buprenorphine-containing medicine at a dose that controls withdrawal symptoms for at least 7 days. Buprenorphine Injection is part of a complete treatment plan that should include counseling.

For more information about Buprenorphine Injection, see the full Prescribing Information including BOXED WARNING, and Medication Guide or talk to your healthcare provider. For REMS information.