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SUBOXONE Film: What Patients Are Saying

Listen to patients share, in their own words, how treatment with SUBOXONE Film has helped them work to manage their disease.

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SUBOXONE film
Evolving treatment,
transforming lives

Fact Sheet

An experience you can live with

When you have opioid dependence (addiction to opioid prescription painkillers or heroin), treatment is part of every day—and every day in treatment matters. The more easily a medication fits into your routine, the more you can focus on your treatment plan—and your life.

Individually packaged for safety, SUBOXONE film is easy to carry, quick to dissolve, and preferred by patients—for an experience you can live with, every day.*

SUBOXONE film represents an evolution in treatment experience, convenience, and confidence.

Experience

  • Quick to dissolve
  • Patients rate the taste above average
  • Patients prefer SUBOXONE film

Convenience

  • Easy to carry—comes in thin, individual medication pouches
  • Developed to last a full day—with one dose
  • Costs the same—covered under most health plans

Confidence

  • SUBOXONE film is as safe and effective as SUBOXONE tablets
  • Highest level of child-resistant packaging
  • Discreet—smaller, thinner, faster to take
  • Comes with exclusive access to Here to Help™, a free support program only for patients in treatment with SUBOXONE film, designed to support you as you work to make your treatment a success
  • An easy transition for SUBOXONE tablet patients

Improve your daily experience: ask your doctor about switching to SUBOXONE film.

Make it part of your treatment, part of your every day

SUBOXONE film brings you an evolution in treatment that includes built-in support designed to help you connect with counseling, stay on track, and face challenges as they arise, day by day.

Get everyday support from Here to Help

Here to Help, the free support program for patients in treatment with SUBOXONE film, includes exclusive access to powerful online tools, and e-mail support—all designed to increase your opportunity for treatment success.

Keep the whole picture in mind

The goal of treatment is to help opioid dependent people stop misusing opioids and regain control over their lives. Medication is only one part of the treatment picture. Talk with your doctor about how counseling can increase the likelihood of treatment success—and about the difference the right support can make.

TREATMENT: SUBOXONE film and Counseling - SUPPORT: Here to Help - COMMUNITY: Your family and friends

Comparisons are between SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual tablets CIII and SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine and naloxone sublingual film).

*Individually packaged for safety: The SUBOXONE Film foil pouch exceeds the child resistance standards set by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (90% pass rate) and the British-adopted European standard: BS:EN 1437:2003 (100% pass rate), for a combined success rate of 93.7%.

Easy to carry: Because each unit of SUBOXONE Film is individually packaged in a compact, convenient foil pouch, it's already protected and ready to carry with you—make sure to take your prescription label along, too. You're free to bring no more than the amount you need, without having to take a child-resistant multiple-dose bottle with you. Remember to keep this medication out of the sight and reach of children at all times.

Quick to dissolve: SUBOXONE Film dissolved up to twice as fast as SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual tablets CIII in clinical trials. Dissolve time is dependent upon the individual person and the dose and strength taken.

Preferred by patients: Clinical trial participants preferred SUBOXONE Film over the SUBOXONE tablet.

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Please see full Product Information and Medication Guide for SUBOXONE Film

For more about SUBOXONE Tablet, please see full Product Information and Medication Guide.

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SUBOXONE® and Here to Help® are registered trademarks of Reckitt Benckiser Healthcare (UK) Ltd.
SUBOXONE Film is manufactured for Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals Inc.,
Richmond, VA 23235 by MonoSol Rx LLC, Warren, NJ 07059.
Copyright © 2012 Reckitt Benckiser Pharmaceuticals Inc.

Important Safety Information

SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine and naloxone) Sublingual Film (CIII) is indicated for maintenance treatment of opioid dependence as part of a complete treatment plan to include counseling and psychosocial support. Treatment should be initiated under the direction of physicians qualified under the Drug Addiction Treatment Act.

SUBOXONE® (buprenorphine HCl/naloxone HCl dihydrate sublingual tablets) (CIII) is indicated for the treatment of opioid dependence.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets should not be used by patients hypersensitive to buprenorphine or naloxone.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can be abused in a manner similar to other opioids, legal or illicit. Clinical monitoring appropriate to the patient’s level of stability is essential.

Chronic use of buprenorphine can cause physical dependence. A sudden or rapid decrease in dose may result in an opioid withdrawal syndrome that is typically milder than seen with full agonists and may be delayed in onset.

SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can cause serious life-threatening respiratory depression and death, particularly when taken by the intravenous (IV) route in combination with benzodiazepines or other central nervous system (CNS) depressants (ie, sedatives, tranquilizers, or alcohol). It is extremely dangerous to self-administer nonprescribed benzodiazepines or other CNS depressants while taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets. Dose reduction of CNS depressants, SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets, or both when both are being taken should be considered.

Liver function should be monitored before and during treatment.

Death has been reported in nontolerant, nondependent individuals, especially in the presence of CNS depressants.

Children who take SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets can have severe, possibly fatal, respiratory depression. Emergency medical care is critical. Keep SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets out of the sight and reach of children.

Intravenous misuse or taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets before the effects of full-agonist opioids (eg, heroin, hydrocodone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone) have subsided is highly likely to cause opioid withdrawal symptoms.

Neonatal withdrawal has been reported. Use of SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets in pregnant women or during breast-feeding should only be considered if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk. Caution should be exercised when driving vehicles or operating hazardous machinery, especially during dose adjustment.

Adverse events commonly observed during clinical trials and postmarketing experience for SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets are headache, nausea, vomiting, sweating, constipation, signs and symptoms of withdrawal, insomnia, pain, and swelling of the limbs.

Adverse events commonly observed with the sublingual administration of SUBOXONE Sublingual Film are numb mouth, sore tongue, redness of the mouth, headache, nausea, vomiting, sweating, constipation, signs and symptoms of withdrawal, insomnia, pain, swelling of the limbs, disturbance of attention, palpitations, and blurred vision.

Cytolytic hepatitis, jaundice, and allergic reactions, including anaphylactic shock, have been reported.

This is not a complete list of potential adverse events associated with SUBOXONE Sublingual Film and SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets. Please see full Product Information for a complete list.

To report an adverse event associated with taking SUBOXONE Sublingual Film or SUBOXONE Sublingual Tablets, please call 1-877-782-6966. You are encouraged to report adverse events of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

 

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