Medicare Program: Changes to Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality Reporting Programs; Revisions of Organ Procurement Organizations Conditions of Coverage; Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for Certain Covered Outpatient Department Services; Potential Changes to the Laboratory Date of Service Policy; Changes to Grandfathered Children's Hospitals-Within-Hospitals; Notice of Closure of Two Teaching Hospitals and Opportunity To Apply for Available Slots, 61142-61492 [2019-24138]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
DATES:
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, 412, 414, 416,
419, and 486
[CMS–1717–FC]
RIN 0938–AT74
Medicare Program: Changes to
Hospital Outpatient Prospective
Payment and Ambulatory Surgical
Center Payment Systems and Quality
Reporting Programs; Revisions of
Organ Procurement Organizations
Conditions of Coverage; Prior
Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Covered
Outpatient Department Services;
Potential Changes to the Laboratory
Date of Service Policy; Changes to
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals; Notice of Closure of
Two Teaching Hospitals and
Opportunity To Apply for Available
Slots
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule with comment period.
AGENCY:
This final rule with comment
period revises the Medicare hospital
outpatient prospective payment system
(OPPS) and the Medicare ambulatory
surgical center (ASC) payment system
for Calendar Year 2020 based on our
continuing experience with these
systems. In this final rule with comment
period, we describe the changes to the
amounts and factors used to determine
the payment rates for Medicare services
paid under the OPPS and those paid
under the ASC payment system. Also,
this final rule with comment period
updates and refines the requirements for
the Hospital Outpatient Quality
Reporting (OQR) Program and the ASC
Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program. In
addition, this final rule with comment
period establishes a process and
requirements for prior authorization for
certain covered outpatient department
services; revise the conditions for
coverage of organ procurement
organizations; and revise the regulations
to allow grandfathered children’s
hospitals-within-hospitals to increase
the number of beds without resulting in
the loss of grandfathered status; and
provides notice of the closure of two
teaching hospitals and the opportunity
to apply for available slots for purposes
of indirect medical education (IME) and
direct graduate medical education
(DGME) payments.
SUMMARY:
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Effective date: This final rule is
effective on January 1, 2020.
Comment period: To be assured
consideration, comments on the
payment classifications assigned to the
interim APC assignments and/or status
indicators of new or replacement Level
II HCPCS codes in this final rule with
comment period must be received at one
of the addresses provided in the
ADDRESSES section no later than 5 p.m.
EST on December 2, 2019.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer
to file code CMS–1717–FC when
commenting on the issues in this final
rule with comment period. Because of
staff and resource limitations, we cannot
accept comments by facsimile (FAX)
transmission.
Comments, including mass comment
submissions, must be submitted in one
of the following three ways (please
choose only one of the ways listed):
1. Electronically. You may (and we
encourage you to) submit electronic
comments on this regulation to https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions under the ‘‘submit a
comment’’ tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail
written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1717–FC, P.O. Box 8013,
Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed
comments to be received before the
close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You
may send written comments via express
or overnight mail to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention:
CMS–1717–FC, Mail Stop C4–26–05,
7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244–1850.
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD—
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and
Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850.
For information on viewing public
comments, we refer readers to the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
2–Midnight Rule (Short Inpatient
Hospital Stays), contact Lela StrongHolloway via email Lela.Strong@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–3213.
Advisory Panel on Hospital
Outpatient Payment (HOP Panel),
contact the HOP Panel mailbox at
APCPanel@cms.hhs.gov.
Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC)
Payment System, contact Scott Talaga
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via email Scott.Talaga@cms.hhs.gov or
at 410–786–4142 or Mitali Dayal via
email Mitali.Dayal2@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–4329.
Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality
Reporting (ASCQR) Program
Administration, Validation, and
Reconsideration Issues, contact Anita
Bhatia via email Anita.Bhatia@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–7236.
Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality
Reporting (ASCQR) Program Measures,
contact Nicole Hewitt via email
Nicole.Hewitt@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–7778.
Blood and Blood Products, contact
Josh McFeeters via email
Joshua.McFeeters@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–9732.
Cancer Hospital Payments, contact
Scott Talaga via email Scott.Talaga@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–4142.
CMS Web Posting of the OPPS and
ASC Payment Files, contact Chuck
Braver via email Chuck.Braver@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–6719.
Control for Unnecessary Increases in
Volume of Outpatient Services, contact
Elise Barringer via email
Elise.Barringer@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–9222.
Composite APCs (Low Dose
Brachytherapy and Multiple Imaging),
contact Elise Barringer via email
Elise.Barringer@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–9222.
Comprehensive APCs (C–APCs),
contact Lela Strong-Holloway via email
Lela.Strong@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–
3213, or Mitali Dayal via email at
Mitali.Dayal2@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–4329.
CPT and Level II HCPCS Codes,
contact Marjorie Baldo via email
Marjorie.Baldo@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–4617.
Grandfathered Children’s Hospitalswithin-Hospitals, contact Michele
Hudson via email Michele.Hudson@
cms.hhs.gov or 410–786–4487.
Hospital Cost Reporting and
Chargemaster Comment Solicitation,
contact Dr. Terri Postma at 410–786–
4169.
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting
(OQR) Program Administration,
Validation, and Reconsideration Issues,
contact Anita Bhatia via email
Anita.Bhatia@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–7236.
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting
(OQR) Program Measures, contact
Vinitha Meyyur via email
Vinitha.Meyyur@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–8819.
Hospital Outpatient Visits (Emergency
Department Visits and Critical Care
Visits), contact Elise Barringer via email
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Elise.Barringer@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–9222.
Inpatient Only (IPO) Procedures List,
contact Lela Strong-Holloway via email
Lela.Strong@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–
3213, or Au’Sha Washington via email
at Ausha.Washington@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–3736.
New Technology Intraocular Lenses
(NTIOLs), contact Scott Talaga via email
Scott.Talaga@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–4142.
No Cost/Full Credit and Partial Credit
Devices, contact Scott Talaga via email
Scott.Talaga@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–4142.
Notice of Closure of Two Teaching
Hospitals and Opportunity to Apply for
Available Slots, contact Michele
Hudson via email Michele.Hudson@
cms.hhs.gov or 410–786–4487.
OPPS Brachytherapy, contact Scott
Talaga via email Scott.Talaga@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–4142.
OPPS Data (APC Weights, Conversion
Factor, Copayments, Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs), Data Claims, Geometric
Mean Calculation, Outlier Payments,
and Wage Index), contact Erick Chuang
via email Erick.Chuang@cms.hhs.gov or
at 410–786–1816, or Scott Talaga via
email Scott.Talaga@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–4142, or Josh McFeeters via
email at Joshua.McFeeters@cms.hhs.gov
or at 410–786–9732.
OPPS Drugs, Radiopharmaceuticals,
Biologicals, and Biosimilar Products,
contact Josh McFeeters via email
Joshua.McFeeters@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–9732.
OPPS New Technology Procedures/
Services, contact the New Technology
APC mailbox at
NewTechAPCapplications@
cms.hhs.gov.
OPPS Packaged Items/Services,
contact Lela Strong-Holloway via email
Lela.Strong@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–
3213, or Mitali Dayal via email at
Mitali.Dayal2@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–4329.
OPPS Pass-Through Devices, contact
the Device Pass-Through mailbox at
DevicePTapplications@cms.hhs.gov.
OPPS Status Indicators (SI) and
Comment Indicators (CI), contact
Marina Kushnirova via email
Marina.Kushnirova@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–2682.
Organ Procurement Organization
(OPO) Conditions for Coverage (CfCs),
contact Alpha-Banu Wilson via email at
AlphaBanu.Wilson@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–8687, or Diane Corning via
email at Diane.Corning@cms.hhs.gov or
at 410–786–8486.
Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)
and Community Mental Health Center
(CMHC) Issues, contact the PHP
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Payment Policy Mailbox at
PHPPaymentPolicy@cms.hhs.gov.
Prior Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department Services, contact
Thomas Kessler via email at
Thomas.Kessler@cms.hhs.gov or at 410–
786–1991.
Rural Hospital Payments, contact Josh
McFeeters via email at
Joshua.McFeeters@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–9732.
Skin Substitutes, contact Josh
McFeeters via email Joshua.McFeeters@
cms.hhs.gov or at 410–786–9732.
Supervision of Outpatient
Therapeutic Services in Hospitals and
CAHs, contact Josh McFeeters via email
Joshua.McFeeters@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–9732.
All Other Issues Related to Hospital
Outpatient and Ambulatory Surgical
Center Payments Not Previously
Identified, contact Elise Barringer via
email Elise.Barringer@cms.hhs.gov or at
410–786–9222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All
comments received before the close of
the comment period are available for
viewing by the public, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they
have been received: https://
www.regulations.gov/. Follow the search
instructions on that website to view
public comments.
Addenda Available Only Through the
Internet on the CMS Website
In the past, a majority of the Addenda
referred to in our OPPS/ASC proposed
and final rules were published in the
Federal Register as part of the annual
rulemakings. However, beginning with
the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
all of the Addenda no longer appear in
the Federal Register as part of the
annual OPPS/ASC proposed and final
rules to decrease administrative burden
and reduce costs associated with
publishing lengthy tables. Instead, these
Addenda are published and available
only on the CMS website. The Addenda
relating to the OPPS are available at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/. The
Addenda relating to the ASC payment
system are available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/.
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61143
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
Copyright Notice
Throughout this final rule with
comment period, we use CPT codes and
descriptions to refer to a variety of
services. We note that CPT codes and
descriptions are copyright 2018
American Medical Association. All
Rights Reserved. CPT is a registered
trademark of the American Medical
Association (AMA). Applicable Federal
Acquisition Regulations (FAR and
Defense Federal Acquisition Regulations
(DFAR) apply.
Table of Contents
I. Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary of This Document
B. Legislative and Regulatory Authority for
the Hospital OPPS
C. Excluded OPPS Services and Hospitals
D. Prior Rulemaking
E. Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient
Payment (the HOP Panel or the Panel)
F. Public Comments Received in Response
to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed
Rule
G. Public Comments Received on the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With
Comment Period
II. Updates Affecting OPPS Payments
A. Recalibration of APC Relative Payment
Weights
B. Conversion Factor Update
C. Wage Index Changes
D. Statewide Average Default Cost-toCharge Ratios (CCRs)
E. Adjustment for Rural Sole Community
Hospitals (SCHs) and Essential Access
Community Hospitals (EACHs) Under
Section 1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act for CY
2020
F. Payment Adjustment for Certain Cancer
Hospitals for CY 2020
G. Hospital Outpatient Outlier Payments
H. Calculation of an Adjusted Medicare
Payment From the National Unadjusted
Medicare Payment
I. Beneficiary Copayments
III. OPPS Ambulatory Payment Classification
(APC) Group Policies
A. OPPS Treatment of New and Revised
HCPCS Codes
B. OPPS Changes—Variations Within APCs
C. New Technology APCs
D. APC-Specific Policies
IV. OPPS Payment for Devices
A. Pass-Through Payments for Devices
B. Device-Intensive Procedures
V. OPPS Payment Changes for Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
A. OPPS Transitional Pass-Through
Payment for Additional Costs of Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
B. OPPS Payment for Drugs, Biologicals,
and Radiopharmaceuticals Without PassThrough Payment Status
VI. Estimate of OPPS Transitional PassThrough Spending for Drugs, Biologicals,
Radiopharmaceuticals, and Devices
A. Background
B. Estimate of Pass-Through Spending
VII. OPPS Payment for Hospital Outpatient
Visits and Critical Care Services
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VIII. Payment for Partial Hospitalization
Services
A. Background
B. PHP APC Update for CY 2020
C. Outlier Policy for CMHCs
D. Update to PHP Allowable HCPCS Codes
IX. Procedures That Will Be Paid Only as
Inpatient Procedures
A. Background
B. Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO) List
X. Nonrecurring Policy Changes
A. Changes in the Level of Supervision of
Outpatient Therapeutic Services in
Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals
(CAHs)
B. Short Inpatient Hospital Stays
C. Method To Control Unnecessary
Increases in the Volume of Clinic Visit
Services Furnished in Excepted OffCampus Provider-Based Departments
(PBDs)
XI. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and
Comment Indicators
A. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status Indicator
Definitions
B. CY 2020 Comment Indicator Definitions
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
A. OPPS Payment Rates Update
B. ASC Conversion Factor Update
C. ASC Cost Data
XIII. Updates to the Ambulatory Surgical
Center (ASC) Payment System
A. Background
B. ASC Treatment of New and Revised
Codes
C. Update to the List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures and Covered
Ancillary Services
D. Update and Payment for ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures and Covered
Ancillary Services
E. New Technology Intraocular Lenses
(NTIOLs)
F. ASC Payment and Comment Indicators
G. Calculation of the ASC Payment Rates
and the ASC Conversion Factor
XIV. Requirements for the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR)
Program
A. Background
B. Hospital OQR Program Quality
Measures
C. Administrative Requirements
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submitted for the Hospital OQR Program
E. Payment Reduction for Hospitals That
Fail To Meet the Hospital OQR Program
Requirements for the CY 2020 Payment
Determination
XV. Requirements for the Ambulatory
Surgical Center Quality Reporting
(ASCQR) Program
A. Background
B. ASCQR Program Quality Measures
C. Administrative Requirements
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submitted for the ASCQR Program
E. Payment Reduction for ASCs That Fail
To Meet the ASCQR Program
Requirements
XVI. Requirements for Hospitals To Make
Public a List of Their Standard Charges
and Request for Information (RFI):
Quality Measurement Relating to Price
Transparency for Improving Beneficiary
Access to Provider and Supplier Charge
Information
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XVII. Organ Procurement Organizations
(OPOs) Conditions for Coverage (CfCs):
Revision of the Definition of ‘‘Expected
Donation Rate’’
A. Background
B. Revision of the Definition of ‘‘Expected
Donation Rate’’
C. Request for Information Regarding
Potential Changes to the Organ
Procurement Organization and
Transplant Center Regulations
XVIII. Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule:
Potential Revisions to the Laboratory
Date of Service Policy
A. Background on the Medicare Part B
Laboratory Date of Service Policy
B. Medicare DOS Policy and the ‘‘14-Day
Rule’’
C. Billing and Payment for Laboratory
Services Under the OPPS
D. ADLTs Under the New Private Payor
Rate-Based CLFS
E. Additional Laboratory DOS Policy
Exception for the Hospital Outpatient
Setting
F. Potential Revisions to Laboratory DOS
Policy and Request for Public Comments
XIX. Prior Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
A. Background
B. Prior Authorization Process for Certain
OPD Services
C. List of Outpatient Department Services
Requiring Prior Authorization
XX. Comments Received in Response to
Comment Solicitation on Cost Reporting,
Maintenance of Hospital Chargemasters,
and Related Medicare Payment Issues
XXI. Changes to Requirements for
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals (HwHs)
XXII. Notice of Closure of Two Teaching
Hospitals and Opportunity To Apply for
Available Slots
XXIII. Files Available to the Public via the
Internet
XXIV. Collection of Information
Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation
of Comments
B. ICRs for the Hospital OQR Program
C. ICRs for the ASCQR Program
D. ICRs for Revision of the Definition of
‘‘Expected Donation Rate’’ for Organ
Procurement Organizations
E. ICR for Prior Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
F. Potential Revisions to Laboratory Date of
Service (DOS) Policy
G. Total Reduction in Burden Hours and in
Costs
XXV. Response to Comments
XXVI. Economic Analyses
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact for the Provisions of This
Final Rule
C. Detailed Economic Analyses
D. Effects of Prior Authorization Process
and Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
E. Effects of Requirement Relating to
Changes in the Definition of Expected
Donation Rate for Organ Procurement
Organizations
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F. Potential Revisions to the Laboratory
Date of Service Policy
G. Effect of Changes to Requirements for
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals (HwHs)
H. Regulatory Review Costs
I. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
Analysis
J. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
K. Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
L. Conclusion
XXVII. Federalism Analysis
Regulation Text
I. Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary of This
Document
1. Purpose
In this final rule with comment
period, we are updating the payment
policies and payment rates for services
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries in
hospital outpatient departments
(HOPDs) and ambulatory surgical
centers (ASCs), beginning January 1,
2020. Section 1833(t) of the Social
Security Act (the Act) requires us to
annually review and update the
payment rates for services payable
under the Hospital Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS).
Specifically, section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the
Act requires the Secretary to review
certain components of the OPPS not less
often than annually, and to revise the
groups, the relative payment weights,
and the wage and other adjustments that
take into account changes in medical
practices, changes in technologies, and
the addition of new services, new cost
data, and other relevant information and
factors. In addition, under section
1833(i) of the Act, we annually review
and update the ASC payment rates. This
final rule with comment period also
includes additional policy changes
made in accordance with our experience
with the OPPS and the ASC payment
system. We describe these and various
other statutory authorities in the
relevant sections of this final rule with
comment period. In addition, this final
rule with comment period updates and
refines the requirements for the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR)
Program and the ASC Quality Reporting
(ASCQR) Program.
In this final rule with comment
period, we establish a process and
requirements for prior authorization for
certain covered outpatient department
services; revise the conditions for
coverage for organ procurement
organizations; and revise the regulations
to allow grandfathered children’s
hospitals-within-hospitals to increase
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the number of beds without resulting in
the loss of grandfathered status.
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
• OPPS Update: For CY 2020, we are
increasing the payment rates under the
OPPS by an Outpatient Department
(OPD) fee schedule increase factor of 2.6
percent. This increase factor is based on
the final hospital inpatient market
basket percentage increase of 3.0
percent for inpatient services paid
under the hospital inpatient prospective
payment system (IPPS), minus the
multifactor productivity (MFP)
adjustment required by the Affordable
Care Act of 0.4 percentage point. Based
on this update, we estimate that total
payments to OPPS providers (including
beneficiary cost-sharing and estimated
changes in enrollment, utilization, and
case-mix) for calendar year (CY) 2020
will be approximately $79.0 billion, an
increase of approximately $6.3 billion
compared to estimated CY 2019 OPPS
payments.
We are continuing to implement the
statutory 2.0 percentage point reduction
in payments for hospitals failing to meet
the hospital outpatient quality reporting
requirements, by applying a reporting
factor of 0.981 to the OPPS payments
and copayments for all applicable
services.
• 2-Midnight Rule (Short Inpatient
Hospital Stays): For CY 2020, we are
establishing a 2-year exemption from
Beneficiary and Family-Centered Care
Quality Improvement Organizations
(BFCC–QIOs) referrals to Recovery
Audit Contractors (RACs) and RAC
reviews for ‘‘patient status’’ (that is, siteof-service) for procedures that are
removed from the inpatient only (IPO)
list under the OPPS beginning on
January 1, 2020.
• Comprehensive APCs: For CY 2020,
we are creating two new comprehensive
APCs (C–APCs). These new C–APCs
include the following: C–APC 5182
(Level 2 Vascular Procedures) and C–
APC 5461 (Level 1 Neurostimulator and
Related Procedures). This increases the
total number of C–APCs to 67.
• Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO)
List: For CY 2020, we are removing
Total Hip Arthroplasty, six spinal
procedure codes, and five anesthesia
codes from the inpatient only list.
• Method to Control Unnecessary
Increases in the Volume of Clinic Visit
Services Furnished in Excepted OffCampus Provider-Based Departments
(PBDs): For CY 2020, we are completing
the phase-in of the reduction in
payment for the clinic visit services
described by HCPCS code G0463
furnished in expected off-campus
provider based departments as a method
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to control unnecessary increases in the
volume of this service. We acknowledge
that the district court vacated the
volume control policy for CY 2019 and
we are working to ensure affected 2019
claims for clinic visits are paid
consistent with the court’s order. We do
not believe it is appropriate at this time
to make a change to the second year of
the two-year phase-in of the clinic visit
policy. The government has appeal
rights, and is still evaluating the rulings
and considering, at the time of this
writing, whether to appeal from the
final judgment.
• Device Pass-Through Payment
Applications: For CY 2020, we
evaluated seven applications for device
pass-through payments and based on
public comments received, we are
approving four of these applications for
device pass-through payment status.
Additionally, we are approving an
additional application that was not
discussed in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, but has received a
Breakthrough Devices designation from
the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) and qualifies for the alternative
pathway to the OPPS device passthrough substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
• Changes to Substantial Clinical
Improvement Criterion: For CY 2020, we
are finalizing an alternative pathway to
the substantial clinical improvement
criterion for devices approved under the
FDA Breakthrough Devices Program to
qualify for device pass-through status
beginning with determinations effective
on or after January 1, 2020.
• Cancer Hospital Payment
Adjustment: For CY 2020, we are
continuing to provide additional
payments to cancer hospitals so that a
cancer hospital’s payment-to-cost ratio
(PCR) after the additional payments is
equal to the weighted average PCR for
the other OPPS hospitals using the most
recently submitted or settled cost report
data. However, section 16002(b) of the
21st Century Cures Act requires that this
weighted average PCR be reduced by 1.0
percentage point. Based on the data and
the required 1.0 percentage point
reduction, we are providing that a target
PCR of 0.89 will be used to determine
the CY 2020 cancer hospital payment
adjustment to be paid at cost report
settlement. That is, the payment
adjustments will be the additional
payments needed to result in a PCR
equal to 0.89 for each cancer hospital.
• Rural Adjustment: For 2020 and
subsequent years, we are continuing the
7.1 percent adjustment to OPPS
payments for certain rural SCHs,
including essential access community
hospitals (EACHs). We intend to
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61145
continue the 7.1 percent adjustment for
future years in the absence of data to
suggest a different percentage
adjustment should apply.
• 340B-Acquired Drugs: We are
continuing to pay ASP–22.5 percent for
340B-acquired drugs including when
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS. In light of
ongoing litigation, we also summarized
comments received on a potential
remedy for 2018 and 2019. CMS
announced in the Federal Register (84
FR 51590) its intent to conduct a 340B
hospital survey to collect drug
acquisition cost data for CY 2018 and
2019. Such survey data may be used in
setting the Medicare payment amount
for drugs acquired by 340B hospitals for
cost years going forward, and also may
be used to devise a remedy for prior
years in the event of an adverse decision
on appeal. In the event 340B hospital
survey data are not used to devise a
remedy, we intend to consider the
suggestions commenters submitted in
response to the comment solicitation in
the proposed rule to propose a remedy
in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule.
• ASC Payment Update: For CYs
2019 through 2023, we adopted a policy
to update the ASC payment system
using the hospital market basket update.
Using the hospital market basket
methodology, for CY 2020, we are
increasing payment rates under the ASC
payment system by 2.6 percent for ASCs
that meet the quality reporting
requirements under the ASCQR
Program. This increase is based on a
hospital market basket percentage
increase of 3.0 percent minus a
proposed multifactor productivity
adjustment required by the Affordable
Care Act of 0.4 percentage point. Based
on this update, we estimate that total
payments to ASCs (including
beneficiary cost-sharing and estimated
changes in enrollment, utilization, and
case-mix) for CY 2020 will be
approximately $4.96 billion, an increase
of approximately $230 million
compared to estimated CY 2019
Medicare payments.
• Changes to the List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures: For CY 2020, we
are adding several procedures to the
ASC list of covered surgical procedures.
Additions to the list include a total knee
arthroplasty procedure, a mosaicplasty
procedure, as well as six coronary
intervention procedures, as well as 12
surgical procedures with new CPT
codes for CY 2020.
• Changes to the Level of Supervision
of Outpatient Therapeutic Services in
Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals:
For CY 2020, we are changing the
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minimum required level of supervision
from direct supervision to general
supervision for all hospital outpatient
therapeutic services provided by all
hospitals and CAHs. This ensures a
standard minimum level of supervision
for each hospital outpatient service
furnished incident to a physician’s
service.
• Hospital Outpatient Quality
Reporting (OQR) Program: For the
Hospital OQR Program, we are removing
OP–33: External Beam Radiotherapy for
Bone Metastases for the CY 2022
payment determination and subsequent
years with modification.
• Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality
Reporting (ASCQR) Program: For the
ASCQR Program, we are adopting one
new measure, ASC–19: Facility-Level 7Day Hospital Visits after General
Surgery Procedures Performed at
Ambulatory Surgical Centers, beginning
with the CY 2024 payment
determination and for subsequent years.
• Prior Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services:
We are finalizing a prior authorization
process using the authority at section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act as a method for
controlling unnecessary increases in the
volume of the following five categories
of services: (1) Blepharoplasty, (2)
botulinum toxin injections, (3)
panniculectomy, (4) rhinoplasty, and (5)
vein ablation.
• Organ Procurement Organizations
(OPOs) Conditions for Coverage (CfCs)
Revision of the Definition of ‘‘Expected
Donation Rate.’’ We are revising the
definition of ‘‘expected donation rate’’
that is included in the second outcome
measure to match the Scientific Registry
of Transplant Recipients (SRTR)
definition. In conjunction with this
change, we are also temporarily
suspending the requirement that OPOs
meet two of three outcome measures for
the 2022 recertification cycle only.
• Request for Information Regarding
Potential Changes to the Organ
Procurement Organization and
Transplant Center Regulations: We
solicited public comments regarding
what revisions may be appropriate for
the current OPO CfCs and the current
transplant center CoPs. In addition, we
solicited public comments on two
potential outcome measures for OPOs.
3. Summary of Costs and Benefits
In sections XXVI. and XXVII. of this
final rule with comment period, we set
forth a detailed analysis of the
regulatory and federalism impacts that
the changes will have on affected
entities and beneficiaries. Key estimated
impacts are described below.
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a. Impacts of All OPPS Changes
Table 70 in section XXV.B of this final
rule with comment period displays the
distributional impact of all the OPPS
changes on various groups of hospitals
and CMHCs for CY 2020 compared to all
estimated OPPS payments in CY 2019.
We estimate that the policies in this
final rule with comment period will
result in a 1.3 percent overall increase
in OPPS payments to providers. We
estimate that total OPPS payments for
CY 2020, including beneficiary costsharing, to the approximately 3,732
facilities paid under the OPPS
(including general acute care hospitals,
children’s hospitals, cancer hospitals,
and CMHCs) will increase by
approximately $1.21 billion compared
to CY 2019 payments, excluding our
estimated changes in enrollment,
utilization, and case-mix.
We estimated the isolated impact of
our OPPS policies on CMHCs because
CMHCs are only paid for partial
hospitalization services under the
OPPS. Continuing the provider-specific
structure we adopted beginning in CY
2011, and basing payment fully on the
type of provider furnishing the service,
we estimate a 3.7 percent increase in CY
2020 payments to CMHCs relative to
their CY 2019 payments.
d. Impacts of the OPD Fee Schedule
Increase Factor
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC, we are
establishing an OPD fee schedule
increase factor of 2.6 percent and
applying that increase factor to the
conversion factor for CY 2020. As a
result of the OPD fee schedule increase
factor and other budget neutrality
adjustments, we estimate that urban
hospitals will experience an increase of
approximately 2.7 percent and that rural
hospitals will experience an increase of
2.8 percent. Classifying hospitals by
teaching status, we estimate
nonteaching hospitals will experience
an increase of 2.8 percent, minor
teaching hospitals will experience an
increase of 2.9 percent, and major
teaching hospitals will experience an
increase of 2.4 percent. We also
classified hospitals by the type of
ownership. We estimate that hospitals
with voluntary ownership will
experience an increase of 2.6 percent in
payments, while hospitals with
government ownership will experience
an increase of 2.8 percent in payments.
We estimate that hospitals with
proprietary ownership will experience
an increase of 3.2 percent in payments.
b. Impacts of the Updated Wage Indexes
e. Impacts of the ASC Payment Update
We estimate that our update of the
wage indexes based on the FY 2020
IPPS proposed rule wage indexes will
result in no estimated payment change
for urban hospitals under the OPPS and
an estimated increase of 0.7 percent for
rural hospitals. These wage indexes
include the continued implementation
of the OMB labor market area
delineations based on 2010 Decennial
Census data, with updates, as discussed
in section II.C. of this final rule with
comment period.
For impact purposes, the surgical
procedures on the ASC list of covered
procedures are aggregated into surgical
specialty groups using CPT and HCPCS
code range definitions. The percentage
change in estimated total payments by
specialty groups under the CY 2020
payment rates, compared to estimated
CY 2019 payment rates, generally ranges
between an increase of 1 and 5 percent,
depending on the service, with some
exceptions. We estimate the impact of
applying the hospital market basket
update to ASC payment rates will
increase payments by $230 million
under the ASC payment system in CY
2020.
c. Impacts of the Rural Adjustment and
the Cancer Hospital Payment
Adjustment
There are no significant impacts of
our CY 2020 payment policies for
hospitals that are eligible for the rural
adjustment or for the cancer hospital
payment adjustment. We are not making
any change in policies for determining
the rural hospital payment adjustments.
While we are implementing the required
reduction to the cancer hospital
payment adjustment required by section
16002 of the 21st Century Cures Act for
CY 2020, the target payment-to-cost
ratio (PCR) for CY 2020 is 0.89,
compared to 0.88 for CY 2019, and
therefore has a slight impact on budget
neutrality adjustments.
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f. Impact of the Changes to the Hospital
OQR Program
Across 3,300 hospitals participating
in the Hospital OQR Program, we
estimate that our requirements will
result in the following changes to costs
and burdens related to information
collection for the Hospital OQR Program
compared to previously adopted
requirements: There is a net reduction
of one measure reported by hospitals,
which results in a minimal net
reduction in burden of $21,379.
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g. Impacts of the Revision of the
Definition of ‘‘Expected Donation Rate’’
for Organ Procurement Organizations
We are finalizing our revision to the
definition of ‘‘expected donation rate’’
used in the second outcome measure of
the OPO CfCs at 42 CFR 486.318(a) and
(b) to eliminate the potential for
confusion in the OPO community due to
different definitions of the same term;
however, due to comments received on
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
we are finalizing a policy that would not
require all OPOs to meet the standards
of the second outcome measure for the
2022 recertification cycle only. As a
result, OPOs will only have to meet one
of the remaining outcome measures,
which may provide temporary relief for
a small number of OPOs that, absent
this waiver, might have faced decertification and the appeal process due
to only meeting one outcome measure.
For subsequent recertification cycles,
all 58 OPOs will once again be required
to meet two out of three outcome
measures detailed in the OPO CfCs. The
revised definition of ‘‘expected donation
rate’’ used in the second outcome
measure will not affect data collection
or reporting by the OPTN and SRTR, nor
their statistical evaluation of OPO
performance; therefore, it will not result
in any quantifiable financial impact.
B. Legislative and Regulatory Authority
for the Hospital OPPS
When Title XVIII of the Act was
enacted, Medicare payment for hospital
outpatient services was based on
hospital-specific costs. In an effort to
ensure that Medicare and its
beneficiaries pay appropriately for
services and to encourage more efficient
delivery of care, the Congress mandated
replacement of the reasonable costbased payment methodology with a
prospective payment system (PPS). The
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA)
(Pub. L. 105–33) added section 1833(t)
to the Act, authorizing implementation
of a PPS for hospital outpatient services.
The OPPS was first implemented for
services furnished on or after August 1,
2000. Implementing regulations for the
OPPS are located at 42 CFR parts 410
and 419.
The Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (BBRA) (Pub. L. 106–113) made
major changes in the hospital OPPS.
The following Acts made additional
changes to the OPPS: The Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits
Improvement and Protection Act of
2000 (BIPA) (Pub. L. 106–554); the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act of
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2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108–173); the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)
(Pub. L. 109–171), enacted on February
8, 2006; the Medicare Improvements
and Extension Act under Division B of
Title I of the Tax Relief and Health Care
Act of 2006 (MIEA–TRHCA) (Pub. L.
109–432), enacted on December 20,
2006; the Medicare, Medicaid, and
SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (MMSEA)
(Pub. L. 110–173), enacted on December
29, 2007; the Medicare Improvements
for Patients and Providers Act of 2008
(MIPPA) (Pub. L. 110–275), enacted on
July 15, 2008; the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148),
enacted on March 23, 2010, as amended
by the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
152), enacted on March 30, 2010 (these
two public laws are collectively known
as the Affordable Care Act); the
Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act
of 2010 (MMEA, Pub. L. 111–309); the
Temporary Payroll Tax Cut
Continuation Act of 2011 (TPTCCA,
Pub. L. 112–78), enacted on December
23, 2011; the Middle Class Tax Relief
and Job Creation Act of 2012
(MCTRJCA, Pub. L. 112–96), enacted on
February 22, 2012; the American
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (Pub. L.
112–240), enacted January 2, 2013; the
Pathway for SGR Reform Act of 2013
(Pub. L. 113–67) enacted on December
26, 2013; the Protecting Access to
Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA, Pub. L.
113–93), enacted on March 27, 2014; the
Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act (MACRA) of 2015
(Pub. L. 114–10), enacted April 16,
2015; the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015
(Pub. L. 114–74), enacted November 2,
2015; the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114–113), enacted on
December 18, 2015, the 21st Century
Cures Act (Pub. L. 114–255), enacted on
December 13, 2016; the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018 (Pub. L. 115–
141), enacted on March 23, 2018; and
the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention
that Promotes Opioid Recovery and
Treatment for Patients and Communities
Act (Pub. L. 115–271), enacted on
October 24, 2018.
Under the OPPS, we generally pay for
hospital Part B services on a rate-perservice basis that varies according to the
APC group to which the service is
assigned. We use the Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) (which includes certain
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
codes) to identify and group the services
within each APC. The OPPS includes
payment for most hospital outpatient
services, except those identified in
section I.C. of this final rule with
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61147
comment period. Section 1833(t)(1)(B)
of the Act provides for payment under
the OPPS for hospital outpatient
services designated by the Secretary
(which includes partial hospitalization
services furnished by CMHCs), and
certain inpatient hospital services that
are paid under Medicare Part B.
The OPPS rate is an unadjusted
national payment amount that includes
the Medicare payment and the
beneficiary copayment. This rate is
divided into a labor-related amount and
a nonlabor-related amount. The laborrelated amount is adjusted for area wage
differences using the hospital inpatient
wage index value for the locality in
which the hospital or CMHC is located.
All services and items within an APC
group are comparable clinically and
with respect to resource use, as required
by section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act. In
accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of
the Act, subject to certain exceptions,
items and services within an APC group
cannot be considered comparable with
respect to the use of resources if the
highest median cost (or mean cost, if
elected by the Secretary) for an item or
service in the APC group is more than
2 times greater than the lowest median
cost (or mean cost, if elected by the
Secretary) for an item or service within
the same APC group (referred to as the
‘‘2 times rule’’). In implementing this
provision, we generally use the cost of
the item or service assigned to an APC
group.
For new technology items and
services, special payments under the
OPPS may be made in one of two ways.
Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides
for temporary additional payments,
which we refer to as ‘‘transitional passthrough payments,’’ for at least 2 but not
more than 3 years for certain drugs,
biological agents, brachytherapy devices
used for the treatment of cancer, and
categories of other medical devices. For
new technology services that are not
eligible for transitional pass-through
payments, and for which we lack
sufficient clinical information and cost
data to appropriately assign them to a
clinical APC group, we have established
special APC groups based on costs,
which we refer to as New Technology
APCs. These New Technology APCs are
designated by cost bands which allow
us to provide appropriate and consistent
payment for designated new procedures
that are not yet reflected in our claims
data. Similar to pass-through payments,
an assignment to a New Technology
APC is temporary; that is, we retain a
service within a New Technology APC
until we acquire sufficient data to assign
it to a clinically appropriate APC group.
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C. Excluded OPPS Services and
Hospitals
Section 1833(t)(1)(B)(i) of the Act
authorizes the Secretary to designate the
hospital outpatient services that are
paid under the OPPS. While most
hospital outpatient services are payable
under the OPPS, section
1833(t)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act excludes
payment for ambulance, physical and
occupational therapy, and speechlanguage pathology services, for which
payment is made under a fee schedule.
It also excludes screening
mammography, diagnostic
mammography, and effective January 1,
2011, an annual wellness visit providing
personalized prevention plan services.
The Secretary exercises the authority
granted under the statute to also exclude
from the OPPS certain services that are
paid under fee schedules or other
payment systems. Such excluded
services include, for example, the
professional services of physicians and
nonphysician practitioners paid under
the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
(MPFS); certain laboratory services paid
under the Clinical Laboratory Fee
Schedule (CLFS); services for
beneficiaries with end-stage renal
disease (ESRD) that are paid under the
ESRD prospective payment system; and
services and procedures that require an
inpatient stay that are paid under the
hospital IPPS. In addition, section
1833(t)(1)(B)(v) of the Act does not
include applicable items and services
(as defined in subparagraph (A) of
paragraph (21)) that are furnished on or
after January 1, 2017 by an off-campus
outpatient department of a provider (as
defined in subparagraph (B) of
paragraph (21). We set forth the services
that are excluded from payment under
the OPPS in regulations at 42 CFR
419.22.
Under § 419.20(b) of the regulations,
we specify the types of hospitals that are
excluded from payment under the
OPPS. These excluded hospitals
include:
• Critical access hospitals (CAHs);
• Hospitals located in Maryland and
paid under Maryland’s All-Payer or
Total Cost of Care Model;
• Hospitals located outside of the 50
States, the District of Columbia, and
Puerto Rico; and
• Indian Health Service (IHS)
hospitals.
D. Prior Rulemaking
On April 7, 2000, we published in the
Federal Register a final rule with
comment period (65 FR 18434) to
implement a prospective payment
system for hospital outpatient services.
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The hospital OPPS was first
implemented for services furnished on
or after August 1, 2000. Section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the
Secretary to review certain components
of the OPPS, not less often than
annually, and to revise the groups,
relative payment weights, and the wage
and other adjustments that take into
account changes in medical practices,
changes in technologies, and the
addition of new services, new cost data,
and other relevant information and
factors.
Since initially implementing the
OPPS, we have published final rules in
the Federal Register annually to
implement statutory requirements and
changes arising from our continuing
experience with this system. These rules
can be viewed on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/HospitalOutpatient-Regulations-andNotices.html.
E. Advisory Panel on Hospital
Outpatient Payment (the HOP Panel or
the Panel)
1. Authority of the Panel
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, as
amended by section 201(h) of Public
Law 106–113, and redesignated by
section 202(a)(2) of Public Law 106–113,
requires that we consult with an
external advisory panel of experts to
annually review the clinical integrity of
the payment groups and their weights
under the OPPS. In CY 2000, based on
section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, the
Secretary established the Advisory
Panel on Ambulatory Payment
Classification Groups (APC Panel) to
fulfill this requirement. In CY 2011,
based on section 222 of the Public
Health Service Act, which gives
discretionary authority to the Secretary
to convene advisory councils and
committees, the Secretary expanded the
panel’s scope to include the supervision
of hospital outpatient therapeutic
services in addition to the APC groups
and weights. To reflect this new role of
the panel, the Secretary changed the
panel’s name to the Advisory Panel on
Hospital Outpatient Payment (the HOP
Panel or the Panel). The HOP Panel is
not restricted to using data compiled by
CMS, and in conducting its review, it
may use data collected or developed by
organizations outside the Department.
2. Establishment of the Panel
On November 21, 2000, the Secretary
signed the initial charter establishing
the Panel, and, at that time, named the
APC Panel. This expert panel is
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composed of appropriate representatives
of providers (currently employed fulltime, not as consultants, in their
respective areas of expertise) who
review clinical data and advise CMS
about the clinical integrity of the APC
groups and their payment weights.
Since CY 2012, the Panel also is charged
with advising the Secretary on the
appropriate level of supervision for
individual hospital outpatient
therapeutic services. The Panel is
technical in nature, and it is governed
by the provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA). The
current charter specifies, among other
requirements, that the Panel—
• May advise on the clinical integrity
of Ambulatory Payment Classification
(APC) groups and their associated
weights;
• May advise on the appropriate
supervision level for hospital outpatient
services;
• Continues to be technical in nature;
• Is governed by the provisions of the
FACA;
• Has a Designated Federal Official
(DFO); and
• Is chaired by a Federal Official
designated by the Secretary.
The Panel’s charter was amended on
November 15, 2011, renaming the Panel
and expanding the Panel’s authority to
include supervision of hospital
outpatient therapeutic services and to
add critical access hospital (CAH)
representation to its membership. The
Panel’s charter was also amended on
November 6, 2014 (80 FR 23009), and
the number of members was revised
from up to 19 to up to 15 members. The
Panel’s current charter was approved on
November 19, 2018, for a 2-year period
(84 FR 26117).
The current Panel membership and
other information pertaining to the
Panel, including its charter, Federal
Register notices, membership, meeting
dates, agenda topics, and meeting
reports, can be viewed on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/
FACA/AdvisoryPanelonAmbulatory
PaymentClassificationGroups.html.
3. Panel Meetings and Organizational
Structure
The Panel has held many meetings,
with the last meeting taking place on
August 19, 2019. Prior to each meeting,
we publish a notice in the Federal
Register to announce the meeting and,
when necessary, to solicit nominations
for Panel membership, to announce new
members, and to announce any other
changes of which the public should be
aware. Beginning in CY 2017, we have
transitioned to one meeting per year (81
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FR 31941). Further information on the
2019 summer meeting can be found in
the meeting notice titled ‘‘Medicare
Program: Announcement of the
Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient
Payment (the Panel) Meeting on August
19 through 20, 2019’’ (84 FR 26117).
In addition, the Panel has established
an operational structure that, in part,
currently includes the use of three
subcommittees to facilitate its required
review process. The three current
subcommittees include the following:
• APC Groups and Status Indicator
Assignments Subcommittee, which
advises the Panel on the appropriate
status indicators to be assigned to
HCPCS codes, including but not limited
to whether a HCPCS code or a category
of codes should be packaged or
separately paid, as well as the
appropriate APC assignment of HCPCS
codes regarding services for which
separate payment is made;
• Data Subcommittee, which is
responsible for studying the data issues
confronting the Panel and for
recommending options for resolving
them; and
• Visits and Observation
Subcommittee, which reviews and
makes recommendations to the Panel on
all technical issues pertaining to
observation services and hospital
outpatient visits paid under the OPPS.
Each of these subcommittees was
established by a majority vote from the
full Panel during a scheduled Panel
meeting, and the Panel recommended at
the August 19, 2019, meeting that the
subcommittees continue. We accepted
this recommendation.
For discussions of earlier Panel
meetings and recommendations, we
refer readers to previously published
OPPS/ASC proposed and final rules, the
CMS website mentioned earlier in this
section, and the FACA database at
https://facadatabase.gov.
Comment: One commenter supported
CMS’ extension of the HOP Panel
meeting presentation submission
deadline when there is a truncated
submittal timeframe due to delayed
publication of the OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. However, to avoid the need to
modify the submission deadline in the
future, the commenter suggested that
CMS revise the submission deadline in
the Federal Register notice from a firm
date to a fluid 21 days from the
proposed rule display date to avoid this
deadline issue in the future.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s request to modify the HOP
Panel meeting submission deadline
format. However, frequency, timing, and
presentation deadlines are outside the
scope of the proposed rule and are
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generally announced through either a
separate Federal Register notice or
subregulatory channel such as the CMS
website, or both.
F. Public Comments Received in
Response to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Proposed Rule
We received over 3400 timely pieces
of correspondence on the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule that appeared
in the Federal Register on August 9,
2019 (84 FR 39398). We note that we
received some public comments that
were outside the scope of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Out-of-scopepublic comments are not addressed in
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period. Summaries of those
public comments that are within the
scope of the proposed rule and our
responses are set forth in the various
sections of this final rule with comment
period under the appropriate headings.
G. Public Comments Received on the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With
Comment Period
We received over 540 timely pieces of
correspondence on the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period
that appeared in the Federal Register on
November 30, 2018 (83 FR 61567), some
of which contained comments on the
interim APC assignments and/or status
indicators of new or replacement Level
II HCPCS codes (identified with
comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in OPPS
Addendum B, ASC Addendum AA, and
ASC Addendum BB to that final rule).
Summaries of the public comments on
new or replacement Level II HCPCS
codes are set forth in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule and this final
rule with comment period under the
appropriate subject matter headings.
II. Updates Affecting OPPS Payments
A. Recalibration of APC Relative
Payment Weights
1. Database Construction
a. Database Source and Methodology
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act
requires that the Secretary review not
less often than annually and revise the
relative payment weights for APCs. In
the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule with
comment period (65 FR 18482), we
explained in detail how we calculated
the relative payment weights that were
implemented on August 1, 2000 for each
APC group.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39406), for CY 2020, we
proposed to recalibrate the APC relative
payment weights for services furnished
on or after January 1, 2020, and before
January 1, 2021 (CY 2020), using the
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61149
same basic methodology that we
described in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58827 through 58828), using updated
CY 2018 claims data. That is, as we
proposed, we recalibrate the relative
payment weights for each APC based on
claims and cost report data for hospital
outpatient department (HOPD) services,
using the most recent available data to
construct a database for calculating APC
group weights.
For the purpose of recalibrating the
APC relative payment weights for CY
2020, we began with approximately 164
million final action claims (claims for
which all disputes and adjustments
have been resolved and payment has
been made) for HOPD services furnished
on or after January 1, 2018, and before
January 1, 2019, before applying our
exclusionary criteria and other
methodological adjustments. After the
application of those data processing
changes, we used approximately 88
million final action claims to develop
the proposed CY 2020 OPPS payment
weights. For exact numbers of claims
used and additional details on the
claims accounting process, we refer
readers to the claims accounting
narrative under supporting
documentation for the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule on the CMS website
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
Addendum N to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website) included the
proposed list of bypass codes for CY
2020. The proposed list of bypass codes
contained codes that were reported on
claims for services in CY 2018 and,
therefore, included codes that were in
effect in CY 2018 and used for billing,
but were deleted for CY 2019. We
retained these deleted bypass codes on
the proposed CY 2020 bypass list
because these codes existed in CY 2018
and were covered OPD services in that
period, and CY 2018 claims data were
used to calculate CY 2020 payment
rates. Keeping these deleted bypass
codes on the bypass list potentially
allows us to create more ‘‘pseudo’’
single procedure claims for ratesetting
purposes. ‘‘Overlap bypass codes’’ that
are members of the proposed multiple
imaging composite APCs were
identified by asterisks (*) in the third
column of Addendum N to the proposed
rule. HCPCS codes that we proposed to
add for CY 2020 were identified by
asterisks (*) in the fourth column of
Addendum N.
Table 1 contains the list of codes that
we proposed to remove from the CY
2020 bypass list.
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b. Calculation and Use of Cost-to-Charge
Ratios (CCRs)
For CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39407), we
proposed to continue to use the
hospital-specific overall ancillary and
departmental cost-to-charge ratios
(CCRs) to convert charges to estimated
costs through application of a revenue
code-to-cost center crosswalk. To
calculate the APC costs on which the
CY 2020 APC payment rates are based,
we calculated hospital-specific overall
ancillary CCRs and hospital-specific
departmental CCRs for each hospital for
which we had CY 2018 claims data by
comparing these claims data to the most
recently available hospital cost reports,
which, in most cases, are from CY 2017.
For the proposed CY 2020 OPPS
payment rates, we used the set of claims
processed during CY 2018. We applied
the hospital-specific CCR to the
hospital’s charges at the most detailed
level possible, based on a revenue codeto-cost center crosswalk that contains a
hierarchy of CCRs used to estimate costs
from charges for each revenue code.
That crosswalk is available for review
and continuous comment on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/
index.html.
To ensure the completeness of the
revenue code-to-cost center crosswalk,
we reviewed changes to the list of
revenue codes for CY 2018 (the year of
claims data we used to calculate the
proposed CY 2020 OPPS payment rates)
and found that the National Uniform
Billing Committee (NUBC) did not add
any new revenue codes to the NUBC
2018 Data Specifications Manual.
In accordance with our longstanding
policy, we calculate CCRs for the
standard and nonstandard cost centers
accepted by the electronic cost report
database. In general, the most detailed
level at which we calculate CCRs is the
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hospital-specific departmental level. For
a discussion of the hospital-specific
overall ancillary CCR calculation, we
refer readers to the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (71 FR
67983 through 67985). The calculation
of blood costs is a longstanding
exception (since the CY 2005 OPPS) to
this general methodology for calculation
of CCRs used for converting charges to
costs on each claim. This exception is
discussed in detail in the CY 2007
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period and discussed further in section
II.A.2.a.(1) of the proposed rule and this
final rule with comment period.
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 74840
through 74847), we finalized our policy
of creating new cost centers and distinct
CCRs for implantable devices, magnetic
resonance imaging (MRIs), computed
tomography (CT) scans, and cardiac
catheterization. However, in response to
the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
commenters reported that some
hospitals used a less precise ‘‘square
feet’’ allocation methodology for the
costs of large moveable equipment like
CT scan and MRI machines. They
indicated that while CMS recommended
using two alternative allocation
methods, ‘‘direct assignment’’ or ‘‘dollar
value,’’ as a more accurate methodology
for directly assigning equipment costs,
industry analysis suggested that
approximately only half of the reported
cost centers for CT scans and MRIs rely
on these preferred methodologies. In
response to concerns from commenters,
we finalized a policy for the CY 2014
OPPS to remove claims from providers
that use a cost allocation method of
‘‘square feet’’ to calculate CCRs used to
estimate costs associated with the APCs
for CT and MRI (78 FR 74847). Further,
we finalized a transitional policy to
estimate the imaging APC relative
payment weights using only CT and
MRI cost data from providers that do not
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use ‘‘square feet’’ as the cost allocation
statistic. We provided that this finalized
policy would sunset in 4 years to
provide a sufficient time for hospitals to
transition to a more accurate cost
allocation method and for the related
data to be available for ratesetting
purposes (78 FR 74847). Therefore,
beginning CY 2018, with the sunset of
the transition policy, we would estimate
the imaging APC relative payment
weights using cost data from all
providers, regardless of the cost
allocation statistic employed. However,
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59228 and
59229) and in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58831), we finalized a policy to extend
the transition policy for 1 additional
year and we continued to remove claims
from providers that use a cost allocation
method of ‘‘square feet’’ to calculate CT
and MRI CCRs for the CY 2018 OPPS
and the CY 2019 OPPS.
As we discussed in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59228), some stakeholders
have raised concerns regarding using
claims from all providers to calculate
CT and MRI CCRs, regardless of the cost
allocations statistic employed (78 FR
74840 through 74847). Stakeholders
noted that providers continue to use the
‘‘square feet’’ cost allocation method
and that including claims from such
providers would cause significant
reductions in the imaging APC payment
rates.
Table 2 demonstrates the relative
effect on imaging APC payments after
removing cost data for providers that
report CT and MRI standard cost centers
using ‘‘square feet’’ as the cost
allocation method by extracting HCRIS
data on Worksheet B–1. Table 3
provides statistical values based on the
CT and MRI standard cost center CCRs
using the different cost allocation
methods.
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transition, we have extended the
transition an additional 2 years to offer
provider flexibility in applying cost
allocation methodologies for CT and
MRI cost centers other than ‘‘square
feet.’’ We noted that we believed we had
provided sufficient time for providers to
adopt an alternative cost allocation
methodology for CT and MRI cost
centers if they intended to do so.
However, many providers continue to
use the ‘‘square feet’’ cost allocation
methodology, which we believe
indicates that these providers believe
this methodology is a sufficient method
for attributing costs to this cost center.
Additionally, we generally believe that
increasing the amount of claims data
available for use in ratesetting improves
our ratesetting process. Therefore, we
proposed that for the CY 2020 OPPS we
would use all claims with valid CT and
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MRI cost center CCRs, including those
that use a ‘‘square feet’’ cost allocation
method, to estimate costs for the APCs
for CT and MRI identified in Table 2.
We noted that we did not believe
another extension was warranted and
expected to determine the imaging APC
relative payment weights for CY 2020
using cost data from all providers,
regardless of the cost allocation method
employed.
Comment: One commenter noted that
approximately half of all hospitals paid
under the OPPS had CT and/or MRI cost
centers that were reporting CCRs using
the preferred methods (‘‘dollar value’’ or
‘‘direct assignment’’). This commenter
further suggested that hospitals not
using these preferred methods are either
unable or unwilling to make the change
to using these preferred methods. This
commenter stated that some CT and
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Our analysis shows that since the CY
2014 OPPS in which we established the
transition policy, the number of valid
MRI CCRs has increased by 18.8 percent
to 2,207 providers and the number of
valid CT CCRs has increased by 16.0
percent to 2,291 providers. However, as
shown in Table 2, nearly all imaging
APCs would see an increase in payment
rates for CY 2020 if claims from
providers that report using the ‘‘square
feet’’ cost allocation method were
removed. This can be attributed to the
generally lower CCR values from
providers that use a ‘‘square feet’’ cost
allocation method as shown in Table 2.
We noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that the CT and MRI cost
center CCRs have been available for
ratesetting since the CY 2014 OPPS in
which we established the transition
policy. Since the initial 4-year
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MRI procedures show a significant
number of CCRs that are close to zero,
and that the commenter believed that
these hospitals are likely unable to
accurately reallocate these costs across
hospital departments to new CT and
MRI departmental cost centers. This
commenter acknowledged that the
number of valid CT and MRI CCRs has
increased over time, but noted that
incorrect cost allocation has negative
effects on payment rates for almost all
imaging APCs.
Several commenters recommended
that CMS continue to exclude ‘‘square
feet’’ cost allocation data and continue
to educate hospitals on the importance
of reporting direct CT and MRI services.
Several commenters requested that CMS
not use the CT and MRI-specific cost
centers and instead estimate cost using
the single diagnostic radiology cost
center, believing this will solve the
inaccurate reporting of costs for CT and
MR services. They further suggested that
we should advise hospitals through
regulation and cost reporting
instructions to no longer report costs
separately for CT and MRI cost centers
and make sure they review their
diagnostic radiology cost center
inclusive of CT and MR equipment,
space, labor and over factors. This same
commenter noted that the benefits of
using a single diagnostic radiology cost
center include consistency across
hospitals, properly accounting for highcost medical equipment, simplifying
and standardizing cost reporting within
the diagnostic radiology cost center,
eliminating partial allocation of costs to
CT and MRI cost centers, and reducing
burden. One commenter requested that
we work with various hospital
organizations to help educate the
hospital community on how to report
these costs on the CT and MRI CCRs in
hopes to transition to this policy over
time.
Other commenters requested that we
extend the transition to using all claims
for one additional year. These same
commenters requested that if extending
the transition 1 additional year is not
possible, that we phase in the payment
impacts of this transition over 2 years.
One commenter requested that CMS
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extend the transition for 2 additional
years and stated that we should study
the effects of this policy even further to
better understand its payment impacts.
One commenter noted that we should
continue the transition policy of
removing provider claims using the
‘‘square feet’’ cost allocation method to
calculate cost-to-charge ratios (CCRs)
associated with CT and MRI procedures
into 2020 and require providers to
report costs via the direct assignment or
dollar value methodologies moving
forward. Another commenter noted that
the use of separate CT and MRI CCRs
creates unintended consequences on the
technical component of CT and MRI
codes in the Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule (MPFS). The commenter noted
the resulting reductions in hospital
payments would also affect the
physician office practice setting. They
believed that the OPPS technical
payments would fall below the payment
rates in the MPFS causing further cuts
as mandated by the Deficit Reduction
Act of 2005 (DRA), which mandates
CMS pay the lesser of MPFS or OPPS
rate.
One commenter suggested that,
because CMS has various APC
groupings for MRI and CT, the
individual MRI and CT cost centers are
no longer needed. This commenter
suggested that, at the time separate cost
centers for these services were
established, the classification of imaging
procedures into APCs was very specific,
but that CMS is now ‘‘intermingling’’
the MRI and CT costs with other
imaging services.
Response: We appreciate the
comments regarding the use of CT and
MRI cost center CCRs. As we stated in
prior rulemaking, we recognize the
concerns with regard to the application
of the CT and MRI standard cost center
CCRs and their use in the OPPS
ratesetting. We understand that there is
greater sensitivity to the cost allocation
method being used on the cost report
forms for these relatively new standard
imaging cost centers under the OPPS
due to the limited size of the OPPS
payment bundles and because the OPPS
applies the CCRs at the departmental
level for cost estimation purposes.
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However, it is important to note that
since we initially established the
transition policy in the OPPS in CY
2014, we have continued to develop the
OPPS as a prospective payment system.
This includes greater packaging and the
development of comprehensive APCs.
As we have packaged a greater number
of items and services with imaging
payment under the OPPS, we believe
imaging payments are somewhat less
sensitive to the cost allocation method
being used than they previously were.
We also note that we still find value in
obtaining more specific cost data and
that the CT and MRI-specific cost
centers provide useful cost and charge
data for ratesetting purposes.
However, to address concerns in the
comments about the amount of the
decrease in imaging payment in CY
2020 due to ending of the transition
period, we are finalizing a 2-year
phased-in approach, as suggested by
some commenters, that will apply 50
percent of the payment impact from
ending the transition in CY 2020 and
100 percent of the payment impact from
ending the transition in CY 2021. For
CY 2020, we will calculate the imaging
payment rates using both the transition
methodology (excluding providers that
use a ‘‘square feet’’ cost allocation
method) and the standard methodology
(including all providers, regardless of
cost allocation method) and will assign
the imaging APCs a payment rate that
includes data representing 50 percent of
the transition methodology payment
rate and includes data representing 50
percent of the standard methodology
payment rate. Beginning in CY 2021, we
will set the imaging APC payment rates
at 100 percent of the payment rate using
the standard payment methodology
(including all providers, regardless of
cost allocation method). Table 4 below
illustrates the estimated impact on
geometric mean costs for CT and MRI
APCs under our blended approach of
utilizing 50 percent of the transitional
payment methodology and 50 percent of
the standard payment methodology for
CY 2020.
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As noted earlier, the Deficit Reduction
Act (DRA) of 2005 requires Medicare to
limit Medicare payment for certain
imaging services covered by the
physician fee schedule to not exceed
what Medicare pays for these services
under the OPPS. As required by law, for
certain imaging series paid for under the
MPFS, we cap the technical component
of the PFS payment amount for the
applicable year at the OPPS payment
amount (71 FR 69659 through 69661).
As we stated in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR
74845), we have noted the potential
impact the CT and MRI CCRs may have
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on other payment systems. We
understand that payment reductions for
imaging services under the OPPS could
have significant payment impacts under
the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) where
the technical component payment for
many imaging services is capped at the
OPPS payment amount. We will
continue to monitor OPPS imaging
payments in the future and consider the
potential impacts of payment changes
on the PFS and the ASC payment
system.
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2. Data Development and Calculation of
Costs Used for Ratesetting
In this section of this final rule with
comment period, we discuss the use of
claims to calculate the OPPS payment
rates for CY 2020. The Hospital OPPS
page on the CMS website on which this
final rule with comment period is
posted (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/)
provides an accounting of claims used
in the development of the final payment
rates. That accounting provides
additional detail regarding the number
of claims derived at each stage of the
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process. In addition, below in this
section, we discuss the file of claims
that comprises the data set that is
available upon payment of an
administrative fee under a CMS data use
agreement. The CMS website https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/, includes
information about obtaining the ‘‘OPPS
Limited Data Set,’’ which now includes
the additional variables previously
available only in the OPPS Identifiable
Data Set, including ICD–10–CM
diagnosis codes and revenue code
payment amounts. This file is derived
from the CY 2018 claims that were used
to calculate the final payment rates for
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
Previously, the OPPS established the
scaled relative weights, on which
payments are based using APC median
costs, a process described in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74188).
However, as discussed in more detail in
section II.A.2.f. of the CY 2013 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (77
FR 68259 through 68271), we finalized
the use of geometric mean costs to
calculate the relative weights on which
the CY 2013 OPPS payment rates were
based. While this policy changed the
cost metric on which the relative
payments are based, the data process in
general remained the same, under the
methodologies that we used to obtain
appropriate claims data and accurate
cost information in determining
estimated service cost. For CY 2020, in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39409), we proposed to continue
to use geometric mean costs to calculate
the proposed relative weights on which
the CY 2020 OPPS payment rates are
based.
We used the methodology described
in sections II.A.2.a. through II.A.2.c. of
this final rule with comment period to
calculate the costs we used to establish
the relative payment weights used in
calculating the OPPS payment rates for
CY 2020 shown in Addenda A and B to
this final rule with comment period
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website). We refer readers to
section II.A.4. of this final rule with
comment period for a discussion of the
conversion of APC costs to scaled
payment weights.
We note that under the OPPS, CY
2019 was the first year in which claims
data containing lines with the modifier
‘‘PN’’ were available, which indicate
nonexcepted items and services
furnished and billed by off-campus
provider-based departments (PBDs) of
hospitals. Because nonexcepted services
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are not paid under the OPPS, in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58832), we
finalized a policy to remove those claim
lines reported with modifier ‘‘PN’’ from
the claims data used in ratesetting for
the CY 2019 OPPS and subsequent
years. For the CY 2020 OPPS, we will
continue to remove these claim lines
with modifier ‘‘PN’’ from the ratesetting
process.
Comment: Several commenters noted
a potential issue with missing lines with
the PN modifier. Specifically, these
commenters believed that the CY 2020
proposed rule data, based on CY 2018
claims, excluded approximately 400,000
lines with Healthcare Common
Procedure Coding System (HCPCS)
codes and the PN modifier. They noted
that this would mean that there was
over an 80 percent decline from the CY
2017 claims data, which had
approximately 2.8 million lines with
HCPCS and the PN modifier. These
commenters reviewed the 2018
Outpatient Standard Analytic File (SAF)
and noted that they found
approximately 3.5 million lines with
HCPCS codes and the PN modifier.
These commenters asserted that the
ratesetting data included substantially
less PN modifiers than in the SAF file
for the same time period. These same
commenters assert that if the PN lines
were not included in the ratesetting
process then the OPPS payment weights
are accurate. They noted that,
conversely, if the PN lines were
included in the payment weights then
payments would be inaccurate. These
commenters wanted CMS to explain
what occurred in the proposed rule data
files to ensure that the APC payment
weights correctly reflect the exclusion of
PN modifier claims in the final rule.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. First, we would like to
note that claim lines with the PN
modifier are excluded from the
ratesetting process. Please note that the
difference between the 2019 OPPS Final
Rule and the 2020 OPPS Proposed rule
is the following: We processed the claim
lines with the PN modifier differently
between the two rules, which resulted
in the decrease in the number of PN
lines in the OPPS limited data set as
noted above. Specifically, the programs
used for the CY 2020 proposed rule
were modified to not factor in those
lines as being OPPS lines, which
resulted in more lines, and potentially,
more total claims being categorized as
non-OPPS claims. Previously, even
though those lines were excluded from
OPPS for ratesetting purposes, they
were still considered OPPS in
categorizing the claims for the limited
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data set. This change in processing logic
had no effect on ratesetting and all of
the lines with modifier ‘‘PN’’ are
excluded from the OPPS ratesetting
process for both CY 2019 and CY 2020.
We are including these lines as nonOPPS claims in the CY 2020 OPPS final
rule limited data set, but as discussed,
are continuing to exclude them for
ratesetting purposes.
For details of the claims accounting
process used in this final rule with
comment period, we refer readers to the
claims accounting narrative under
supporting documentation for this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
2. Final Data Development and
Calculation of Costs Used for Ratesetting
a. Calculation of Single Procedure APC
Criteria-Based Costs
(1) Blood and Blood Products
(a) Methodology
Since the implementation of the OPPS
in August 2000, we have made separate
payments for blood and blood products
through APCs rather than packaging
payment for them into payments for the
procedures with which they are
administered. Hospital payments for the
costs of blood and blood products, as
well as for the costs of collecting,
processing, and storing blood and blood
products, are made through the OPPS
payments for specific blood product
APCs.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39409), we proposed to
continue to establish payment rates for
blood and blood products using our
blood-specific CCR methodology, which
utilizes actual or simulated CCRs from
the most recently available hospital cost
reports to convert hospital charges for
blood and blood products to costs. This
methodology has been our standard
ratesetting methodology for blood and
blood products since CY 2005. It was
developed in response to data analysis
indicating that there was a significant
difference in CCRs for those hospitals
with and without blood-specific cost
centers, and past public comments
indicating that the former OPPS policy
of defaulting to the overall hospital CCR
for hospitals not reporting a bloodspecific cost center often resulted in an
underestimation of the true hospital
costs for blood and blood products.
Specifically, in order to address the
differences in CCRs and to better reflect
hospitals’ costs, we proposed to
continue to simulate blood CCRs for
each hospital that does not report a
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blood cost center by calculating the ratio
of the blood-specific CCRs to hospitals’
overall CCRs for those hospitals that do
report costs and charges for blood cost
centers. We also proposed to apply this
mean ratio to the overall CCRs of
hospitals not reporting costs and
charges for blood cost centers on their
cost reports in order to simulate bloodspecific CCRs for those hospitals. We
proposed to calculate the costs upon
which the proposed CY 2020 payment
rates for blood and blood products are
based using the actual blood-specific
CCR for hospitals that reported costs
and charges for a blood cost center and
a hospital-specific, simulated bloodspecific CCR for hospitals that did not
report costs and charges for a blood cost
center.
We continue to believe that the
hospital-specific, simulated bloodspecific, CCR methodology better
responds to the absence of a bloodspecific CCR for a hospital than
alternative methodologies, such as
defaulting to the overall hospital CCR or
applying an average blood-specific CCR
across hospitals. Because this
methodology takes into account the
unique charging and cost accounting
structure of each hospital, we believe
that it yields more accurate estimated
costs for these products. We stated in
the proposed rule that we continue to
believe that this methodology in CY
2020 would result in costs for blood and
blood products that appropriately reflect
the relative estimated costs of these
products for hospitals without blood
cost centers and, therefore, for these
blood products in general.
We note that, as discussed in section
II.A.2.b.(1). of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
58837 through 58843), we defined a
comprehensive APC (C–APC) as a
classification for the provision of a
primary service and all adjunctive
services provided to support the
delivery of the primary service. Under
this policy, we include the costs of
blood and blood products when
calculating the overall costs of these C–
APCs. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39410), we
proposed to continue to apply the
blood-specific CCR methodology
described in this section when
calculating the costs of the blood and
blood products that appear on claims
with services assigned to the C–APCs.
Because the costs of blood and blood
products would be reflected in the
overall costs of the C–APCs (and, as a
result, in the payment rates of the C–
APCs), we proposed to not make
separate payments for blood and blood
products when they appear on the same
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claims as services assigned to the C–
APCs (we refer readers to the CY 2015
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (79 FR 66796)).
We also referred readers to
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website) for the
proposed CY 2020 payment rates for
blood and blood products (which are
identified with status indicator ‘‘R’’).
For a more detailed discussion of the
blood-specific CCR methodology, we
refer readers to the CY 2005 OPPS
proposed rule (69 FR 50524 through
50525). For a full history of OPPS
payment for blood and blood products,
we refer readers to the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72
FR 66807 through 66810).
We did not receive any comments on
our proposal to establish payment rates
for blood and blood products using our
blood-specific CCR methodology and we
are finalizing this policy as proposed.
(b) Pathogen-Reduced Platelets Payment
Rate
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70322
through 70323), we reiterated that we
calculate payment rates for blood and
blood products using our blood-specific
CCR methodology, which utilizes actual
or simulated CCRs from the most
recently available hospital cost reports
to convert hospital charges for blood
and blood products to costs. Because
HCPCS code P9072 (Platelets, pheresis,
pathogen reduced or rapid bacterial
tested, each unit), the predecessor code
to HCPCS code P9073 (Platelets,
pheresis, pathogen-reduced, each unit),
was new for CY 2016, there were no
claims data available on the charges and
costs for this blood product upon which
to apply our blood-specific CCR
methodology. Therefore, we established
an interim payment rate for HCPCS code
P9072 based on a crosswalk to existing
blood product HCPCS code P9037
(Platelets, pheresis, leukocytes reduced,
irradiated, each unit), which we
believed provided the best proxy for the
costs of the new blood product. In
addition, we stated that once we had
claims data for HCPCS code P9072, we
would calculate its payment rate using
the claims data that should be available
for the code beginning in CY 2018,
which is our practice for other blood
product HCPCS codes for which claims
data have been available for 2 years.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59233) that, although our standard
practice for new codes involves using
claims data to set payment rates once
claims data become available, we were
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concerned that there may have been
confusion among the provider
community about the services that
HCPCS code P9072 described. That is,
as early as 2016, there were discussions
about changing the descriptor for
HCPCS code P9072 to include the
phrase ‘‘or rapid bacterial tested’’,
which is a less costly technology than
pathogen reduction. In addition,
effective January 2017, the code
descriptor for HCPCS code P9072 was
changed to describe rapid bacterial
testing of platelets and, effective July 1,
2017, the descriptor for the temporary
successor code (HCPCS code Q9988) for
HCPCS code P9072 was changed again
back to the original descriptor for
HCPCS code P9072 that was in place for
2016.
Based on the ongoing discussions
involving changes to the original HCPCS
code P9072 established in CY 2016, we
believed that claims from CY 2016 for
pathogen reduced platelets may have
potentially reflected certain claims for
rapid bacterial testing of platelets.
Therefore, we decided to continue to
crosswalk the payment amount for
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 (the successor code to HCPCS
code P9072 established January 1, 2018)
to the payment amount for services
described by HCPCS code P9037 for CY
2018 (82 FR 59232), to determine the
payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9072. In the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37058),
for CY 2019, we discussed that we had
reviewed the CY 2017 claims data for
the two predecessor codes to HCPCS
code P9073 (HCPCS codes P9072 and
Q9988), along with the claims data for
the CY 2017 temporary code for
pathogen test for platelets (HCPCS code
Q9987), which describes rapid bacterial
testing of platelets. We found that there
were over 2,200 claims billed with
either HCPCS code P9072 or Q9988 in
the CY 2017 claims data available for
CY 2019 rulemaking. Accordingly, we
believed that there were a sufficient
number of claims to calculate a payment
rate for HCPCS code P9073 for CY 2019
without using a crosswalk.
We also performed checks to estimate
the share of claims that may have been
billed for rapid bacterial testing of
platelets as compared to the share of
claims that may have been billed for
pathogen-reduced, pheresis platelets
(based on when HCPCS code P9072 was
an active procedure code from January
1, 2017 to June 30, 2017). First, we
found that the geometric mean cost for
pathogen-reduced, pheresis platelets, as
reported by HCPCS code Q9988 when
billed separately from rapid bacterial
testing of platelets, was $453.87, and
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that over 1,200 claims were billed for
services described by HCPCS code
Q9988. Next, we found that the
geometric mean cost for rapid bacterial
testing of platelets, as reported by
HCPCS code Q9987 on claims, was
$33.44, and there were 59 claims
reported for services described by
HCPCS code Q9987, of which 3 were
separately paid.
These findings implied that almost all
of the claims billed for services reported
with HCPCS code P9072 were for
pathogen-reduced, pheresis platelets. In
addition, the geometric mean cost for
services described by HCPCS code
P9072, which may have contained rapid
bacterial testing of platelets claims, was
$468.11, which was higher than the
geometric mean cost for services
described by HCPCS code Q9988 of
$453.87, which should not have
contained claims for rapid bacterial
testing of platelets. Because the
geometric mean for services described
by HCPCS code Q9987 was only $33.44,
it would be expected that if a significant
share of claims billed for services
described by HCPCS code P9072 were
for the rapid bacterial testing of
platelets, the geometric mean cost for
services described by HCPCS code
P9072 would be lower than the
geometric mean cost for services
described by HCPCS code Q9988.
Instead, we found that the geometric
mean cost for services described by
HCPCS code Q9988 was higher than the
geometric mean cost for services
described by HCPCS code P9072.
However, we received many
comments from providers and other
stakeholders including blood product
industry stakeholder groups and the
company who developed the pathogenreduced platelets technology requesting
that we not implement our proposal for
CY 2019, and instead that we should
once again establish the payment rate
for HCPCS code P9073 by performing a
crosswalk from the payment amount for
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 to the payment amount for
services described by HCPCS code
P9037. The commenters were concerned
that the payment rate for HCPCS code
P9073 calculated by using claims data
for that service was too low. Several
commenters believed the claim costs for
pathogen-reduced platelets were lower
than actual costs because of coding
errors by providers, providers who did
not use pathogen-reduced platelets
when billing the service, and confusion
over whether to use the hospital CCR or
the blood center CCR to report charges
for pathogen-reduced platelets. We
considered the comments we received
and decided not to finalize our proposal
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for CY 2019 to calculate the payment
rate for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 using claims payment
history. Instead, for CY 2019, we
established the payment rate for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 by
crosswalking the payment rate for the
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 from the payment rate for
services described by HCPCS code
P9037 (83 FR 58834).
For CY 2020 and subsequent years,
we proposed to calculate the payment
rate for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 by using claims payment
history, which is the standard
methodology used under the OPPS to
calculate payment rates for HCPCS
codes with at least 2 years of claims
history. Claims for HCPCS code P9073
and its predecessor codes have been
billed under the OPPS for over 3 years
and we believe providers have had
sufficient time to become familiar with
the services covered by the procedure
code and the appropriate charges and
CCRs used to report the service. Also, it
has been more than a year and half since
the issue in which payment for
pathogen-reduced platelets and
payment for rapid bacterial testing were
combined under the same code was
resolved. In our analysis of claims data
from CY 2018, we found that
approximately 4,700 claims have been
billed for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 and the estimated payment
rate for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 based on the claims data
was approximately $585. The claimsbased payment rate for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 was
approximately $60 less than the
estimated crosswalked payment rate
using HCPCS code P9037 of
approximately $645. The claims data
show that services described by HCPCS
code P9073 have been reported
regularly by providers during CY 2018
and the payment rate is close to the
payment rate of the crosswalked
payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9037. Therefore, we
believe that the payment rate for
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 can be determined using claims
data without a crosswalk from the
payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9037.
We refer readers to Addendum B of
the proposed rule for the proposed
payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9073 reportable under the
OPPS. Addendum B is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
Comment: We received comments
that opposed the proposal to end the
crosswalk between P9073 (Platelets,
pheresis, pathogen-reduced, each unit)
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and P9037 (Platelets, pheresis,
leukocytes reduced, irradiated, each
unit) and calculate the payment rate for
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 using claims payment history.
The commenters stated that the 2018
claims data used to establish the CY
2020 payment rate for pathogen-reduced
platelets continue to include erroneous
claims and is therefore inaccurate. The
commenters further state, as an example
of the inaccuracies of the 2018 claims
data, that approximately 30 percent of
the 2018 claims data for P9073 contain
costs that are at least $100 lower than
the costs of P9037, which is a less
expensive technology. The commenters
requested that we continue the
crosswalk between these two codes for
both CYs 2020 and 2021 to allow
hospitals time to continue to correct
errors in their chargemasters and to
prevent underpayment to hospitals for
pathogen-reduced platelets. The
commenters also claim that hospitals
may be reluctant to adopt a relatively
new technology, such as pathogenreduced platelets, if the payment is too
low.
Response: We continue to believe
that, beginning in CY 2020, it is
appropriate to calculate the payment
rate for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 using the standard
methodology (which involves using data
from CY 2018 claims for the code). We
have previously acknowledged (83 FR
58834) that there was confusion among
the provider community surrounding
the reporting and billing for P9073 and
have made exceptions to our standard
methodology for calculating payment
rates for this service. At this time, we
believe providers have had sufficient
time to become familiar with the
services covered by the procedure code
and we believe the issue in which
payment for pathogen-reduced platelets
and payment for rapid bacterial testing
was combined under the same code has
been resolved. Additionally, in response
to concerns that hospitals may be
reluctant to adopt the pathogen-reduced
platelet technology based on a payment
rate that is too low, in our analysis of
claims data from CY 2018, we found
that approximately 5,300 claims have
been billed for services described by
HCPCS code P9073, which is
significantly higher that the
approximately 2,200 claims billed in
2017 for services described by the
predecessor codes for HCPCS code
P9073, HCPCS codes Q9988 and P9072.
Also, the estimated CY 2020 payment
rate for services described by HCPCS
code P9073 based on the CY 2018
claims data is approximately $600
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which is comparable to the CY 2020
estimated crosswalked payment rate
using HCPCS code P9037 of
approximately $620. These data suggest
that a crosswalk is no longer necessary.
Further, we have now used a cross-walk
for P9073 and its predecessor codes for
4 years, which is longer than the typical
2-year period for which we normally
cross-walk new HCPCS codes. We
agreed with past commenters that an
extended period of cross-walking
payment for P9073 was necessary to
address the coding confusion in 2016
that may have led to the claims data
reflecting costs for services not
described by HCPCS code P9073.
However, the above-referenced coding
issues were resolved in January 2018, so
we have no reason to believe that the
data may reflect the costs for services
other than those described by P9073.
Accordingly, for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, we are finalizing the
policy to calculate the payment rate for
services described by HCPCS code
P9073 by using claims payment history
and to end the crosswalk between
HCPCS codes P9037 and P9073.
(2) Brachytherapy Sources
Section 1833(t)(2)(H) of the Act
mandates the creation of additional
groups of covered OPD services that
classify devices of brachytherapy
consisting of a seed or seeds (or
radioactive source) (‘‘brachytherapy
sources’’) separately from other services
or groups of services. The statute
provides certain criteria for the
additional groups. For the history of
OPPS payment for brachytherapy
sources, we refer readers to prior OPPS
final rules, such as the CY 2012 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (77
FR 68240 through 68241). As we have
stated in prior OPPS updates, we
believe that adopting the general OPPS
prospective payment methodology for
brachytherapy sources is appropriate for
a number of reasons (77 FR 68240). The
general OPPS methodology uses costs
based on claims data to set the relative
payment weights for hospital outpatient
services. This payment methodology
results in more consistent, predictable,
and equitable payment amounts per
source across hospitals by averaging the
extremely high and low values, in
contrast to payment based on hospitals’
charges adjusted to costs. We believe
that the OPPS methodology, as opposed
to payment based on hospitals’ charges
adjusted to cost, also would provide
hospitals with incentives for efficiency
in the provision of brachytherapy
services to Medicare beneficiaries.
Moreover, this approach is consistent
with our payment methodology for the
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vast majority of items and services paid
under the OPPS. We refer readers to the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70323 through
70325) for further discussion of the
history of OPPS payment for
brachytherapy sources.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, for CY 2020, we proposed to use
the costs derived from CY 2018 claims
data to set the proposed CY 2020
payment rates for brachytherapy sources
because CY 2018 is the year of data we
proposed to use to set the proposed
payment rates for most other items and
services that would be paid under the
CY 2020 OPPS. We proposed to base the
payment rates for brachytherapy sources
on the geometric mean unit costs for
each source, consistent with the
methodology that we proposed for other
items and services paid under the OPPS,
as discussed in section II.A.2. of the
proposed rule. We also proposed to
continue the other payment policies for
brachytherapy sources that we finalized
and first implemented in the CY 2010
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (74 FR 60537). We proposed to
pay for the stranded and nonstranded
not otherwise specified (NOS) codes,
HCPCS codes C2698 (Brachytherapy
source, stranded, not otherwise
specified, per source) and C2699
(Brachytherapy source, non-stranded,
not otherwise specified, per source), at
a rate equal to the lowest stranded or
nonstranded prospective payment rate
for such sources, respectively, on a per
source basis (as opposed to, for
example, a per mCi), which is based on
the policy we established in the CY
2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66785). We also
proposed to continue the policy we first
implemented in the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (74 FR
60537) regarding payment for new
brachytherapy sources for which we
have no claims data, based on the same
reasons we discussed in the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66786; which was
delayed until January 1, 2010 by section
142 of Pub. L. 110–275). Specifically,
this policy is intended to enable us to
assign new HCPCS codes for new
brachytherapy sources to their own
APCs, with prospective payment rates
set based on our consideration of
external data and other relevant
information regarding the expected
costs of the sources to hospitals. The
proposed CY 2020 payment rates for
brachytherapy sources were included in
Addendum B to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
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the CMS website) and were identified
with status indicator ‘‘U’’.
For CY 2018, we assigned status
indicator ‘‘U’’ (Brachytherapy Sources,
Paid under OPPS; separate APC
payment) to HCPCS code C2645
(Brachytherapy planar source,
palladium-103, per square millimeter)
in the absence of claims data and
established a payment rate using
external data (invoice price) at $4.69 per
mm2. For CY 2019, in the absence of
sufficient claims data, we continued to
establish a payment rate for C2645 at
$4.69 per mm2. For CY 2020, we
proposed to continue to assign status
indicator ‘‘U’’ to HCPCS code C2645
(Brachytherapy planar source,
palladium-103, per square millimeter).
Our CY 2018 claims data available for
the proposed CY 2020 rule, included
two claims with over 9,000 units of
HCPCS code C2645. Therefore, we
stated our belief that the CY 2018 claims
data were adequate to establish an APC
payment rate for HCPCS code C2645
and to discontinue our use of external
data for this brachytherapy source.
Specifically, we proposed to set the
proposed CY 2020 payment rate at the
geometric mean cost of HCPCS code
C2645 based on CY 2018 claims data,
which is $1.02 per mm2.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the reduction in the payment rate for
HCPCS code C2645 (Brachytherapy
planar source, palladium-103, per
square millimeter) for CY 2020 will
preclude outpatient use for an FDAcleared, predominantly outpatient
indication, for C2645. Additionally, the
commenter argued that the two claims
used to establish the payment rate for
C2645 are not a sufficient volume for
ratesetting and that the claims are most
likely erroneous in that the
brachytherapy source was used for
procedures on the inpatient-only list.
Response: Claims that include
brachytherapy sources along with
procedures on the inpatient-only list are
sufficient and appropriate to use for our
ratesetting process as brachytherapy
sources are line-item paid. However,
given the limited number of claims for
HCPCS C2645 for both CY 2020 and
previous calendar years and the new
FDA-approved outpatient indication for
HCPCS code C2645, we are persuaded
that the proposed CY 2020 payment
rate, which is significantly lower than
that of the rate in effect in prior years,
may not adequately represent the costs
associated with C2645. Therefore, we
are using our equitable adjustment
authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of
the Act, which states that the Secretary
shall establish, in a budget neutral
manner, other adjustments as
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determined to be necessary to ensure
equitable payments, to maintain the CY
2019 rate for this brachytherapy source,
despite the lower geometric mean costs
of $1.03 per mm2 available in the claims
data used for this final rule with
comment period. We believe this
situation is unique, given the very
limited number of claims for this
brachytherapy source for both CY 2020
ratesetting purposes and previous
calendar years.
After consideration of the public
comment we received, we are not
finalizing the proposed rate for C2645
and are instead assigning the
brachytherapy source described by
HCPCS code C2645 a payment rate of
$4.69 mm2 for CY 2020 through use of
our equitable adjustment authority.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that we reevaluate our
approach to ratesetting HCPCS C2642
(Brachytherapy source, stranded,
cesium-131, per source) and stated that
our proposed CY 2020 payment rate of
$67.29 per source for HCPCS code
C2642 would be too low to ensure fair
and adequate reimbursement.
Additionally, one provider who billed
C2642 stated there was a clerical error
and that it may have inadvertently
underreported the actual costs for C2642
incurred by the provider.
Response: Based on the most current
available data for the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
the geometric mean for HCPCS code
C2642 based on 85 claims from CY 2018
is $75.06 per source. We note that the
CY 2019 payment rate for HCPCS Code
C2642 was $79.94 per source. We
believe that the variation in costs for
HCPCS code C2642 does not appear
unusual or erroneous and that the CY
2020 geometric mean for HCPCS code
C2642 based on CY 2018 claims data is
consistent with historical payment rates
for this brachytherapy source.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the geometric mean cost and payment
for brachytherapy sources has fluctuated
significantly since 2013. The commenter
argued that such fluctuations may put
financial pressure on providers and
create access barriers for beneficiaries to
receive brachytherapy. The commenter
requested we review and consider
removing outliers to ensure payment
stability for low-volume brachytherapy
sources in future rulemaking.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their recommendation and will take
it under consideration in future
rulemaking. As discussed in the CY
2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68259 through
68271), geometric mean costs better
encompass the variation in costs that
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occur when providing a service because,
in addition to the individual cost values
that are reflected by medians, geometric
means reflect the magnitude of the cost
measurements, and thus are more
sensitive to changes in the data. OPPS
relative payment weights based on
geometric mean costs would better
capture the range of costs associated
with providing services. Further,
geometric means capture cost changes
that are introduced slowly into the
system on a case-by-case or hospital-byhospital basis. For these reasons, we
believe it would be inappropriate to
remove outliers when determining
brachytherapy geometric mean costs
and payment rates.
We continue to invite hospitals and
other parties to submit
recommendations to us for new codes to
describe new brachytherapy sources.
Such recommendations should be
directed to the Division of Outpatient
Care, Mail Stop C4–01–26, Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services, 7500
Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD
21244. We will continue to add new
brachytherapy source codes and
descriptors to our systems for payment
on a quarterly basis.
b. Comprehensive APCs (C–APCs) for
CY 2020
(1) Background
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 74861
through 74910), we finalized a
comprehensive payment policy that
packages payment for adjunctive and
secondary items, services, and
procedures into the most costly primary
procedure under the OPPS at the claim
level. The policy was finalized in CY
2014, but the effective date was delayed
until January 1, 2015, to allow
additional time for further analysis,
opportunity for public comment, and
systems preparation. The
comprehensive APC (C–APC) policy
was implemented effective January 1,
2015, with modifications and
clarifications in response to public
comments received regarding specific
provisions of the C–APC policy (79 FR
66798 through 66810).
A C–APC is defined as a classification
for the provision of a primary service
and all adjunctive services provided to
support the delivery of the primary
service. We established C–APCs as a
category broadly for OPPS payment and
implemented 25 C–APCs beginning in
CY 2015 (79 FR 66809 through 66810).
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70332), we
finalized 10 additional C–APCs to be
paid under the existing C–APC payment
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policy and added 1 additional level to
both the Orthopedic Surgery and
Vascular Procedures clinical families,
which increased the total number of C–
APCs to 37 for CY 2016. In the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79584 through 79585), we
finalized another 25 C–APCs for a total
of 62 C–APCs. In the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
did not change the total number of C–
APCs from 62. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
created 3 new C–APCs, increasing the
total number to 65 (83 FR 58844 through
58846).
Under our C–APC policy, we
designate a service described by a
HCPCS code assigned to a C–APC as the
primary service when the service is
identified by OPPS status indicator
‘‘J1’’. When such a primary service is
reported on a hospital outpatient claim,
taking into consideration the few
exceptions that are discussed below, we
make payment for all other items and
services reported on the hospital
outpatient claim as being integral,
ancillary, supportive, dependent, and
adjunctive to the primary service
(hereinafter collectively referred to as
‘‘adjunctive services’’) and representing
components of a complete
comprehensive service (78 FR 74865
and 79 FR 66799). Payments for
adjunctive services are packaged into
the payments for the primary services.
This results in a single prospective
payment for each of the primary,
comprehensive services based on the
costs of all reported services at the claim
level.
Services excluded from the C–APC
policy under the OPPS include services
that are not covered OPD services,
services that cannot by statute be paid
for under the OPPS, and services that
are required by statute to be separately
paid. This includes certain
mammography and ambulance services
that are not covered OPD services in
accordance with section
1833(t)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act;
brachytherapy seeds, which also are
required by statute to receive separate
payment under section 1833(t)(2)(H) of
the Act; pass-through payment drugs
and devices, which also require separate
payment under section 1833(t)(6) of the
Act; self-administered drugs (SADs) that
are not otherwise packaged as supplies
because they are not covered under
Medicare Part B under section
1861(s)(2)(B) of the Act; and certain
preventive services (78 FR 74865 and 79
FR 66800 through 66801). A list of
services excluded from the C–APC
policy is included in Addendum J to
this final rule with comment period
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(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website).
The C–APC policy payment
methodology set forth in the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period for the C–APCs and modified
and implemented beginning in CY 2015
is summarized as follows (78 FR 74887
and 79 FR 66800):
Basic Methodology. As stated in the
CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we define the C–APC
payment policy as including all covered
OPD services on a hospital outpatient
claim reporting a primary service that is
assigned to status indicator ‘‘J1’’,
excluding services that are not covered
OPD services or that cannot by statute
be paid for under the OPPS. Services
and procedures described by HCPCS
codes assigned to status indicator ‘‘J1’’
are assigned to C–APCs based on our
usual APC assignment methodology by
evaluating the geometric mean costs of
the primary service claims to establish
resource similarity and the clinical
characteristics of each procedure to
establish clinical similarity within each
APC.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we expanded the
C–APC payment methodology to
qualifying extended assessment and
management encounters through the
‘‘Comprehensive Observation Services’’
C–APC (C–APC 8011). Services within
this APC are assigned status indicator
‘‘J2’’. Specifically, we make a payment
through C–APC 8011 for a claim that:
• Does not contain a procedure
described by a HCPCS code to which we
have assigned status indicator ‘‘T’’
• Contains 8 or more units of services
described by HCPCS code G0378
(Hospital observation services, per
hour);
• Contains services provided on the
same date of service or 1 day before the
date of service for HCPCS code G0378
that are described by one of the
following codes: HCPCS code G0379
(Direct admission of patient for hospital
observation care) on the same date of
service as HCPCS code G0378; CPT code
99281 (Emergency department visit for
the evaluation and management of a
patient (Level 1)); CPT code 99282
(Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient
(Level 2)); CPT code 99283 (Emergency
department visit for the evaluation and
management of a patient (Level 3)); CPT
code 99284 (Emergency department
visit for the evaluation and management
of a patient (Level 4)); CPT code 99285
(Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient
(Level 5)) or HCPCS code G0380 (Type
B emergency department visit (Level 1));
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HCPCS code G0381 (Type B emergency
department visit (Level 2)); HCPCS code
G0382 (Type B emergency department
visit (Level 3)); HCPCS code G0383
(Type B emergency department visit
(Level 4)); HCPCS code G0384 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 5));
CPT code 99291 (Critical care,
evaluation and management of the
critically ill or critically injured patient;
first 30–74 minutes); or HCPCS code
G0463 (Hospital outpatient clinic visit
for assessment and management of a
patient); and
• Does not contain services described
by a HCPCS code to which we have
assigned status indicator ‘‘J1’’.
The assignment of status indicator
‘‘J2’’ to a specific combination of
services performed in combination with
each other allows for all other OPPS
payable services and items reported on
the claim (excluding services that are
not covered OPD services or that cannot
by statute be paid for under the OPPS)
to be deemed adjunctive services
representing components of a
comprehensive service and resulting in
a single prospective payment for the
comprehensive service based on the
costs of all reported services on the
claim (80 FR 70333 through 70336).
Services included under the C–APC
payment packaging policy, that is,
services that are typically adjunctive to
the primary service and provided during
the delivery of the comprehensive
service, include diagnostic procedures,
laboratory tests, and other diagnostic
tests and treatments that assist in the
delivery of the primary procedure; visits
and evaluations performed in
association with the procedure;
uncoded services and supplies used
during the service; durable medical
equipment as well as prosthetic and
orthotic items and supplies when
provided as part of the outpatient
service; and any other components
reported by HCPCS codes that represent
services that are provided during the
complete comprehensive service (78 FR
74865 and 79 FR 66800).
In addition, payment for hospital
outpatient department services that are
similar to therapy services and
delivered either by therapists or
nontherapists is included as part of the
payment for the packaged complete
comprehensive service. These services
that are provided during the
perioperative period are adjunctive
services and are deemed not to be
therapy services as described in section
1834(k) of the Act, regardless of whether
the services are delivered by therapists
or other nontherapist health care
workers. We have previously noted that
therapy services are those provided by
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therapists under a plan of care in
accordance with section 1835(a)(2)(C)
and section 1835(a)(2)(D) of the Act and
are paid for under section 1834(k) of the
Act, subject to annual therapy caps as
applicable (78 FR 74867 and 79 FR
66800). However, certain other services
similar to therapy services are
considered and paid for as hospital
outpatient department services.
Payment for these nontherapy
outpatient department services that are
reported with therapy codes and
provided with a comprehensive service
is included in the payment for the
packaged complete comprehensive
service. We note that these services,
even though they are reported with
therapy codes, are hospital outpatient
department services and not therapy
services. We refer readers to the July
2016 OPPS Change Request 9658
(Transmittal 3523) for further
instructions on reporting these services
in the context of a C–APC service.
Items included in the packaged
payment provided in conjunction with
the primary service also include all
drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals, regardless of cost,
except those drugs with pass-through
payment status and SADs, unless they
function as packaged supplies (78 FR
74868 through 74869 and 74909 and 79
FR 66800). We refer readers to Section
50.2M, Chapter 15, of the Medicare
Benefit Policy Manual for a description
of our policy on SADs treated as
hospital outpatient supplies, including
lists of SADs that function as supplies
and those that do not function as
supplies.
We define each hospital outpatient
claim reporting a single unit of a single
primary service assigned to status
indicator ‘‘J1’’ as a single ‘‘J1’’ unit
procedure claim (78 FR 74871 and 79
FR 66801). Line item charges for
services included on the C–APC claim
are converted to line item costs, which
are then summed to develop the
estimated APC costs. These claims are
then assigned one unit of the service
with status indicator ‘‘J1’’ and later used
to develop the geometric mean costs for
the C–APC relative payment weights.
(We note that we use the term
‘‘comprehensive’’ to describe the
geometric mean cost of a claim reporting
‘‘J1’’ service(s) or the geometric mean
cost of a C–APC, inclusive of all of the
items and services included in the C–
APC service payment bundle.) Charges
for services that would otherwise be
separately payable are added to the
charges for the primary service. This
process differs from our traditional cost
accounting methodology only in that all
such services on the claim are packaged
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(except certain services as described
above). We apply our standard data
trims, which exclude claims with
extremely high primary units or extreme
costs.
The comprehensive geometric mean
costs are used to establish resource
similarity and, along with clinical
similarity, dictate the assignment of the
primary services to the C–APCs. We
establish a ranking of each primary
service (single unit only) to be assigned
to status indicator ‘‘J1’’ according to its
comprehensive geometric mean costs.
For the minority of claims reporting
more than one primary service assigned
to status indicator ‘‘J1’’ or units thereof,
we identify one ‘‘J1’’ service as the
primary service for the claim based on
our cost-based ranking of primary
services. We then assign these multiple
‘‘J1’’ procedure claims to the C–APC to
which the service designated as the
primary service is assigned. If the
reported ‘‘J1’’ services on a claim map
to different C–APCs, we designate the
‘‘J1’’ service assigned to the C–APC with
the highest comprehensive geometric
mean cost as the primary service for that
claim. If the reported multiple ‘‘J1’’
services on a claim map to the same C–
APC, we designate the most costly
service (at the HCPCS code level) as the
primary service for that claim. This
process results in initial assignments of
claims for the primary services assigned
to status indicator ‘‘J1’’ to the most
appropriate C–APCs based on both
single and multiple procedure claims
reporting these services and clinical and
resource homogeneity.
Complexity Adjustments. We use
complexity adjustments to provide
increased payment for certain
comprehensive services. We apply a
complexity adjustment by promoting
qualifying paired ‘‘J1’’ service code
combinations or paired code
combinations of ‘‘J1’’ services and
certain add-on codes (as described
further below) from the originating C–
APC (the C–APC to which the
designated primary service is first
assigned) to the next higher paying C–
APC in the same clinical family of C–
APCs. We apply this type of complexity
adjustment when the paired code
combination represents a complex,
costly form or version of the primary
service according to the following
criteria:
• Frequency of 25 or more claims
reporting the code combination
(frequency threshold); and
• Violation of the 2 times rule, as
stated in section 1833(t)(2) of the Act
and section III.B.2. of this final rule, in
the originating C–APC (cost threshold).
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These criteria identify paired code
combinations that occur commonly and
exhibit materially greater resource
requirements than the primary service.
The CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79582) included
a revision to the complexity adjustment
eligibility criteria. Specifically, we
finalized a policy to discontinue the
requirement that a code combination
(that qualifies for a complexity
adjustment by satisfying the frequency
and cost criteria thresholds described
above) also not create a 2 times rule
violation in the higher level or receiving
APC.
After designating a single primary
service for a claim, we evaluate that
service in combination with each of the
other procedure codes reported on the
claim assigned to status indicator ‘‘J1’’
(or certain add-on codes) to determine if
there are paired code combinations that
meet the complexity adjustment criteria.
For a new HCPCS code, we determine
initial C–APC assignment and
qualification for a complexity
adjustment using the best available
information, crosswalking the new
HCPCS code to a predecessor code(s)
when appropriate.
Once we have determined that a
particular code combination of ‘‘J1’’
services (or combinations of ‘‘J1’’
services reported in conjunction with
certain add-on codes) represents a
complex version of the primary service
because it is sufficiently costly,
frequent, and a subset of the primary
comprehensive service overall
according to the criteria described
above, we promote the claim including
the complex version of the primary
service as described by the code
combination to the next higher cost C–
APC within the clinical family, unless
the primary service is already assigned
to the highest cost APC within the C–
APC clinical family or assigned to the
only C–APC in a clinical family. We do
not create new APCs with a
comprehensive geometric mean cost
that is higher than the highest geometric
mean cost (or only) C–APC in a clinical
family just to accommodate potential
complexity adjustments. Therefore, the
highest payment for any claim including
a code combination for services
assigned to a C–APC would be the
highest paying C–APC in the clinical
family (79 FR 66802).
We package payment for all add-on
codes into the payment for the C–APC.
However, certain primary service addon combinations may qualify for a
complexity adjustment. As noted in the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70331), all addon codes that can be appropriately
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reported in combination with a base
code that describes a primary ‘‘J1’’
service are evaluated for a complexity
adjustment.
To determine which combinations of
primary service codes reported in
conjunction with an add-on code may
qualify for a complexity adjustment for
CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39414), we
proposed to apply the frequency and
cost criteria thresholds discussed above,
testing claims reporting one unit of a
single primary service assigned to status
indicator ‘‘J1’’ and any number of units
of a single add-on code for the primary
‘‘J1’’ service. If the frequency and cost
criteria thresholds for a complexity
adjustment are met and reassignment to
the next higher cost APC in the clinical
family is appropriate (based on meeting
the criteria outlined above), we make a
complexity adjustment for the code
combination; that is, we reassign the
primary service code reported in
conjunction with the add-on code to the
next higher cost C–APC within the same
clinical family of C–APCs. As
previously stated, we package payment
for add-on codes into the C–APC
payment rate. If any add-on code
reported in conjunction with the ‘‘J1’’
primary service code does not qualify
for a complexity adjustment, payment
for the add-on service continues to be
packaged into the payment for the
primary service and is not reassigned to
the next higher cost C–APC. We listed
the complexity adjustments for ‘‘J1’’ and
add-on code combinations for CY 2020,
along with all of the other proposed
complexity adjustments, in Addendum J
to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website).
Addendum J to the proposed rule
included the cost statistics for each code
combination that would qualify for a
complexity adjustment (including
primary code and add-on code
combinations). Addendum J to the
proposed rule also contained summary
cost statistics for each of the paired code
combinations that describe a complex
code combination that would qualify for
a complexity adjustment and were
proposed to be reassigned to the next
higher cost C–APC within the clinical
family. The combined statistics for all
proposed reassigned complex code
combinations were represented by an
alphanumeric code with the first 4
digits of the designated primary service
followed by a letter. For example, the
proposed geometric mean cost listed in
Addendum J for the code combination
described by complexity adjustment
assignment 3320R, which is assigned to
C–APC 5224 (Level 4 Pacemaker and
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Similar Procedures), includes all paired
code combinations that were proposed
to be reassigned to C–APC 5224 when
CPT code 33208 is the primary code.
Providing the information contained in
Addendum J to the proposed rule
allowed stakeholders the opportunity to
better assess the impact associated with
the proposed reassignment of claims
with each of the paired code
combinations eligible for a complexity
adjustment.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS alter the established
C–APC complexity adjustment
eligibility criteria to allow additional
code combinations to qualify for
complexity adjustments. Some
commenters reiterated their request to
allow clusters of procedures, consisting
of a ‘‘J1’’ code-pair and multiple other
associated add-on codes used in
combination with that ‘‘J1’’ code-pair to
qualify for complexity adjustments.
Other commenters requested that CMS
allow procedures assigned status
indicator ‘‘S’’ or ‘‘T’’ to be eligible for
complexity adjustments, to allow a C–
APC to receive payment at the C–APC
rate two levels higher within the clinical
family when there is a violation of the
two-times rule in the receiving C–APC
and also to account for patient
characteristics such as comorbidities
and sociodemographic factors in the
complexity adjustment policy. One
commenter recommended that HCPCS
code 0546T—Radiofrequency
spectroscopy, real time, intraoperative
margin assessment, at the time of partial
mastectomy, with report—be assigned to
APC 5091—Level 1 Breast/Lymphatic
Surgery and Related Procedures and
designated for complexity adjustment to
APC 5092—Level 2 Breast/Lymphatic
Surgery and Related Procedures for CY
2020.
We also received a comment
requesting that CMS modify its
complexity adjustment criteria and
apply the complexity adjustment to all
blue light cystoscopy with Cysview
procedures in the HOPD, including
eliminating the claim frequency
requirement to determine eligibility for
the complexity adjustment and
expanding the eligibility for a
complexity adjustment to other APCs
besides C–APCs.
Response: We appreciate these
comments. However, at this time, we do
not believe changes to the C–APC
complexity adjustment criteria are
necessary or that we should make
exceptions to the criteria to allow claims
with the code combinations suggested
by the commenters to receive
complexity adjustments. As stated
previously (81 FR 79582), we continue
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to believe that the complexity
adjustment criteria, which require a
frequency of 25 or more claims
reporting a code combination and a
violation of the 2 times rule in the
originating C–APC in order to receive
payment in the next higher cost C–APC
within the clinical family, are adequate
to determine if a combination of
procedures represents a complex, costly
subset of the primary service. If a code
combination meets these criteria, the
combination receives payment at the
next higher cost C–APC. Code
combinations that do not meet these
criteria receive the C–APC payment rate
associated with the primary ‘‘J1’’
service. A minimum of 25 claims is
already a very low threshold for a
national payment system. Lowering the
minimum of 25 claims further could
lead to unnecessary complexity
adjustments for service combinations
that are rarely performed.
We also do not believe that it is
necessary to provide payment for claims
including qualifying code combinations
at two APC levels higher than the
originating APC. As stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58842), we
believe that payment at the next higher
paying C–APC is adequate for code
combinations that exhibit materially
greater resource requirements than the
primary service and that, in many cases,
paying the rate assigned to two levels
higher may lead to a significant
overpayment. As mentioned previously,
we do not create new APCs with a
comprehensive geometric mean cost
that is higher than the highest geometric
mean cost C–APC in a clinical family
just to accommodate potential
complexity adjustments. The highest
payment for any claim including a code
combination for services assigned to a
C–APC would be the highest paying C–
APC in the clinical family (79 FR
66802). Therefore, a policy to pay for
claims with qualifying code
combinations at two C–APC levels
higher than the originating APC is not
always feasible.
Lastly, as stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58843), we do not believe that it is
necessary to adjust the complexity
adjustment criteria to allow claims that
include more than two ‘‘J1’’ procedures,
procedures that are not assigned to C–
APCs, or procedures performed at
certain hospitals with patients with
more comorbidities, to qualify for a
complexity adjustment. As mentioned
earlier, we believe the current criteria
are adequate to determine if a
combination of procedures represents a
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61161
complex, costly subset of the primary
service.
With regard to the requests for further
complexity adjustments for blue light
cystoscopy procedures using the drug
Cysview, as discussed in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59243–59246), we
acknowledged that there are additional
equipment, supplies, operating room
time, and other resources required to
perform blue light cystoscopy in
addition to white light cystoscopy. We
also acknowledged stakeholder
concerns that the payment for blue light
cystoscopy procedures involving
Cysview® may be creating a barrier to
beneficiaries receiving access to
reasonable and necessary care for which
there may not be a clinically comparable
alternative. Based on these issues, in CY
2018, we created a HCPCS C-code
(C9738—Adjunctive blue light
cystoscopy with fluorescent imaging
agent (list separately in addition to code
for primary procedure)) to describe blue
light cystoscopy with fluorescent
imaging agent and allowed this code to
be eligible for complexity adjustments
when billed with procedure codes used
to describe white light cystoscopy of the
bladder, although this code is not a ‘‘J1’’
service or an add-on code for the
primary ‘‘J1’’ service. For CY 2020, there
are three code combinations of six total
involving C9738 and procedure codes
used to describe white light cystoscopy
that will qualify for a complexity
adjustment. At this time, we do not
believe that further modifications to the
C–APC policy are necessary.
After consideration of the public
comments we received on the proposed
complexity adjustment policy, we are
finalizing the C–APC complexity
adjustment policy for CY 2020, as
proposed, without modification.
(2) Additional C–APCs for CY 2020
For CY 2020 and subsequent years, in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39414), we proposed to continue
to apply the C–APC payment policy
methodology. We refer readers to the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79583) for a
discussion of the C–APC payment
policy methodology and revisions.
Each year, in accordance with section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, we review and
revise the services within each APC
group and the APC assignments under
the OPPS. As a result of our annual
review of the services and the APC
assignments under the OPPS, in the
proposed rule (84 FR 39414), we
proposed to add two C–APCs under the
existing C–APC payment policy in CY
2020: Proposed C–APC 5182 (Level 2
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Vascular Procedures); and proposed C–
APC 5461 (Level 1 Neurostimulator and
Related Procedures). These APCs were
selected to be included in this proposal
because, similar to other C–APCs, these
APCs include primary, comprehensive
services, such as major surgical
procedures, that are typically reported
with other ancillary and adjunctive
services. Also, similar to other APCs
that have been converted to C–APCs,
there are higher APC levels within the
clinical family or related clinical family
of these APCs that have previously been
assigned to a C–APC. Table 4 of the
proposed rule listed the proposed C–
APCs for CY 2020. All C–APCs were
displayed in Addendum J to the
proposed rule (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
Addendum J to the proposed rule also
contained all of the data related to the
C–APC payment policy methodology,
including the list of proposed
complexity adjustments and other
information.
We also are considering developing
an episode-of-care for skin substitutes
and are interested in comments
regarding a future C–APC for procedures
using skin substitute products furnished
in the hospital outpatient department
setting. We note that this comment
solicitation is discussed in section
V.B.7. of the proposed rule and this
final rule with comment period.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the creation of the two new
proposed C–APCs, encouraging CMS to
continue to evaluate outpatient charge
and cost data for additions to the list of
C–APCs during future rulemaking
periods. One commenter requested that
CMS closely monitor payments for the
proposed C–APC 5461 (Level 1
Neurostimulator and Related Products)
relative to costs of the procedure to
ensure accurate compensation and
availability in the ASC setting.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support and note that we
annually review the most recent data
available to determine costs associated
with furnishing a service and update
payment rates accordingly.
Comment: We received comments
requesting that CMS create a C–APC for
autologous hematopoietic stem cell
transplant similar to the C–APC
established for allogeneic hematopoietic
stem cell transplant. The commenters
stated CMS’ APC rate-setting process of
using single and pseudo-single
procedure claims results in an
inadequately low APC payment rate for
autologous stem cell transplant and
believed that the creation of a C–APC
for autologous hematopoietic stem cell
transplant would improve payment
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rates by allowing a greater number of
claims to be used in the rate setting
process. The Advisory Panel on
Hospital Outpatient Payment (HOP
Panel) also recommended that CMS
consider creating a comprehensive APC
for autologous stem cell transplantation
and that CMS provide a rationale if it
decides not to create such an APC.
Response: We thank the commenter
for this comment. In order to determine
whether it would be appropriate to
create a C–APC for autologous
hematopoietic stem cell transplant, we
modeled this change with APC 5242—
Level 2 Blood Product Exchange and
Related Services, which includes CPT
code 38241 Hematopoietic progenitor
cell (hpc); autologous transplantation as
well as APC 5243—Level 3 Blood
Product Exchange and Related Services,
in keeping with our practice of
converting APCs to C–APCs that have
higher APC levels within the clinical
family that are assigned to a C–APC.
After analyzing the results, we found
that creating a C–APC for APC 5242
would increase the number of single
claims available for ratesetting for this
APC by approximately 8 percent,
however creating new C–APCs in the
Stem Cell Transplant clinical family
would decrease the geometric mean cost
of C–APC 5244—Level 4 Blood Product
Exchange and Related Services by
approximately 75 percent due to
complexity adjustments of code
combinations within the clinical family,
specifically complexity adjustments
from C–APC 5243 to C–APC 5244.
Therefore, at this time we do not believe
it is appropriate to create a C–APC for
autologous hematopoietic stem cell
transplant.
Comment: Two manufacturers of
drugs used in ocular procedures
requested that CMS discontinue the C–
APC payment policy for existing C–
APCs that include procedures involving
their drugs and instead provide separate
payment for the drugs. The
manufacturer commenters believed that
the C–APC packaging policy, which
packages payment for certain drugs that
are adjunctive to the primary service,
results in underpayment for the drugs
and violates the 2 times rule.
Response: We continue to believe that
the procedures assigned to the proposed
C–APCs, including the procedures
involving the drugs used in ocular
procedures mentioned by the
commenters, are appropriately paid
through a C–APC and the costs of drugs
(as well as other items or services
furnished with the procedures) are
reflected in hospital billing, and
therefore the rates that are established
for the ocular procedures. As stated in
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the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79584),
procedures assigned to C–APCs are
primary services (mostly major surgical
procedures) that are typically the focus
of the hospital outpatient stay. In
addition, with regard to the packaging of
the drugs based on the C–APC policy, as
stated in previous rules (78 FR 74868
through 74869 and 74909 and 79 FR
66800), items included in the packaged
payment provided with the primary
‘‘J1’’ service include all drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
payable under the OPPS, regardless of
cost, except those drugs with passthrough payment status. In accordance
with section 1833(t)(2) of the Act and
§ 419.31 of the regulations, we annually
review the items and services within an
APC group to determine if there are any
APC violations of the 2 times rule and
whether there are any revisions to APC
assignments that may be necessary or
any exceptions that should be made.
Comment: Several commenters,
including device manufacturer
associations, expressed concern that the
C–APC payment rates may not
adequately reflect the costs associated
with services and requested that CMS
not establish any additional C–APCs.
These comments questioned the broader
C–APC payment methodology,
ratesetting accuracy, the impact of C–
APCs on broader agency objectives, and
recommended methodological changes
to better capture costs of providing
comprehensive services before further
expansion. Some commenters were
concerned that hospital are not correctly
charging for procedures assigned to C–
APCs and urged CMS to invest in
policies and education for hospitals
regarding correct billing patterns. These
commenters also requested that CMS
provide an analysis of the impact of the
C–APC policy on affected procedures
and patient access to services.
Response: We appreciate the
comments. We continue to believe that
the proposed new C–APCs for CY 2020
are appropriate to be added to the
existing C–APC payment policy. We
also note that, in the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (82
FR 59246), we conducted an analysis of
the effects of the C–APC policy. The
analysis looked at data from CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, and the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, which
involved claims data from CY 2014
(before C–APCs became effective) to CY
2016. We looked at separately payable
codes that were then assigned to C–
APCs and, overall, we observed an
increase in claim line frequency, units
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billed, and Medicare payment for those
procedures, which suggest that the C–
APC payment policy did not adversely
affect access to care or reduce payments
to hospitals.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS discontinue the C–APC
payment policy for single session
stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)
procedures, stating concerns that the C–
APC methodology does not account for
the complexity of delivering radiation
therapy and fails to capture
appropriately coded claims. The
commenters also requested that CMS
continue to make separate payments for
the 10 planning and preparation codes
related to SRS and include the HCPCS
code for IMRT planning (77301) on the
list of planning and preparation codes,
stating that the service has become more
common in single fraction radiosurgery
treatment planning.
Response: At this time, we do not
believe that it is necessary to
discontinue the C–APCs that include
single session SRS procedures. We
continue to believe that the C–APC
policy is appropriately applied to these
surgical procedures for the reasons cited
when this policy was first adopted and
note that the commenters did not
provide any empirical evidence to
support their claims that the existing C–
APC policy does not adequately pay for
these procedures. Also, we will
continue in CY 2020 to pay separately
for the 10 planning and preparation
services (HCPCS codes 70551, 70552,
70553, 77011, 77014, 77280, 77285,
77290, 77295, and 77336) adjunctive to
the delivery of the SRS treatment using
either the Cobalt-60-based or LINAC
based technology when furnished to a
beneficiary within 1 month of the SRS
treatment for CY 2020 (82 FR 59242 and
59243).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS discontinue the C–
APC payment policy for all surgical
insertion codes required for
brachytherapy treatment. The
commenters stated concerns about how
the C–APC methodology impacts
radiation oncology, particularly the
delivery of brachytherapy for the
treatment of cervical cancer. They also
stated that they oppose C–APC payment
for cancer care given the complexity of
coding, serial billing for cancer care,
and potentially different sites of service
for the initial surgical device insertion
and subsequent treatment delivery or
other supportive services.
Response: While we continue to
believe that the C–APC policy is
appropriately applied to these surgical
procedures, we will continue to
examine these concerns and will
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determine if any modifications to this
policy are warranted in future
rulemaking.
Comment: We received requests for
clarifications related to C–APC 8011
Comprehensive Observation Services
(status indicator ‘‘J2’’). One commenter
requested that CMS clarify the
distinction between status indicators for
‘‘V’’ and ‘‘J2’’. Another commenter
questioned the rationale for the
established criteria for payment through
C–APC 8011, specifically the
requirement that the claim does not
contain a procedure described by a
HCPCS code to which we have assigned
status indicator ‘‘T’’ that is reported
with a date of service on the same day
or 1 day earlier than the date of service
associated with services described by
HCPCS code G0378.
Response: The comprehensive
observation services C–APC (C–APC
8011) was established in CY 2016 (80
FR 70333 through 70336) to provide
payment for extended assessment and
management encounters. C–APC 8011 is
paid and status indicator ‘‘J2’’ is
assigned when a specific combination of
services is performed. This combination
of services was described in previous
rulemaking (80 FR 70333 through
70336) in detail and is repeated for
clarity below. Specifically, we make a
payment through C–APC 8011 for a
claim that:
• Does not contain a procedure
described by a HCPCS code to which we
have assigned status indicator ‘‘T;’’
• Contains 8 or more units of services
described by HCPCS code G0378
(Hospital observation services, per
hour);
• Contains services provided on the
same date of service or 1 day before the
date of service for HCPCS code G0378
that are described by one of the
following codes: HCPCS code G0379
(Direct admission of patient for hospital
observation care) on the same date of
service as HCPCS code G0378; CPT code
99281 (Emergency department visit for
the evaluation and management of a
patient (Level 1)); CPT code 99282
(Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient
(Level 2)); CPT code 99283 (Emergency
department visit for the evaluation and
management of a patient (Level 3)); CPT
code 99284 (Emergency department
visit for the evaluation and management
of a patient (Level 4)); CPT code 99285
(Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient
(Level 5)) or HCPCS code G0380 (Type
B emergency department visit (Level 1));
HCPCS code G0381 (Type B emergency
department visit (Level 2)); HCPCS code
G0382 (Type B emergency department
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visit (Level 3)); HCPCS code G0383
(Type B emergency department visit
(Level 4)); HCPCS code G0384 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 5));
CPT code 99291 (Critical care,
evaluation and management of the
critically ill or critically injured patient;
first 30–74 minutes); or HCPCS code
G0463 (Hospital outpatient clinic visit
for assessment and management of a
patient); and
• Does not contain services described
by a HCPCS code to which we have
assigned status indicator ‘‘J1’.’
The assignment of status indicator
‘‘J2’’ results in a single prospective
payment for the comprehensive
observation services based on the costs
of all reported services on the claim. We
make payment for all other items and
services reported on the hospital
outpatient claim as being adjunctive to
the specific combination of observation
services. The assignment of status
indicator ‘‘V’’ describes a clinic or
emergency department visit. It does not
describe services paid through a
comprehensive APC and it will not
trigger payment through C–APC 8011.
With regard to the comment
questioning the rationale for the
requirement that the claim does not
contain a procedure described by a
HCPCS code to which we have assigned
status indicator ‘‘T’’ that is reported
with a date of service on the same day
or 1 day earlier than the date of service
associated with services described by
HCPCS code G0378 in order to be paid
through C–APC 8011, this criterion was
incorrectly quoted as the final policy in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39412). This language has been
updated in this final rule with comment
period. This criterion was proposed in
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
however a modification of this criterion
was finalized. We refer readers to the
discussion of the establishment of C–
APC 8011 in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
Final Rule with comment period (80 FR
70335–70336). In this rule, we stated in
response to commenters’ concerns
regarding packaging payment for
potentially high-cost surgical
procedures into the payment for an
observation C–APC, we finalized a
policy that claims reporting procedures
assigned status indicator ‘‘T’’ should not
qualify for payment through C–APC
8011, regardless of whether the
procedure assigned status indicator ‘‘T’’
was furnished before or after
observation services (described by
HCPCS code G0378) were provided. We
state the final criteria for assignment for
payment through C–APC 8011 in the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, including that the
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claims must not contain a procedure
described by a HCPCS code to which we
have assigned status indicator ‘‘T’’ (80
FR 70335).
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed C–APCs for CY
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2020. Table 4 below lists the final C–
APCs for CY 2020. All C–APCs are
displayed in Addendum J to this final
rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website). Addendum J to this final rule
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with comment period also contains all
of the data related to the C–APC
payment policy methodology, including
the list of complexity adjustments and
other information for CY 2020.
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(3) Exclusion of Procedures Assigned to
New Technology APCs from the C–APC
Policy
Services that are assigned to New
Technology APCs are typically new
procedures that do not have sufficient
claims history to establish an accurate
payment for the procedures. Beginning
in CY 2002, we retain services within
New Technology APC groups until we
gather sufficient claims data to enable
us to assign the service to an
appropriate clinical APC. This policy
allows us to move a service from a New
Technology APC in less than 2 years if
sufficient data are available. It also
allows us to retain a service in a New
Technology APC for more than 2 years
if sufficient data upon which to base a
decision for reassignment have not been
collected (82 FR 59277).
The C–APC payment policy packages
payment for adjunctive and secondary
items, services, and procedures into the
most costly primary procedure under
the OPPS at the claim level. Prior to CY
2019 when a procedure assigned to a
New Technology APC was included on
the claim with a primary procedure,
identified by OPPS status indicator
‘‘J1’’, payment for the new technology
service was typically packaged into the
payment for the primary procedure.
Because the new technology service was
not separately paid in this scenario, the
overall number of single claims
available to determine an appropriate
clinical APC for the new service was
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reduced. This was contrary to the
objective of the New Technology APC
payment policy, which is to gather
sufficient claims data to enable us to
assign the service to an appropriate
clinical APC.
For example, for CY 2017, there were
seven claims generated for HCPCS code
0100T (Placement of a subconjunctival
retinal prosthesis receiver and pulse
generator, and implantation of
intraocular retinal electrode array, with
vitrectomy), which involves the use of
the Argus® II Retinal Prosthesis System.
However, several of these claims were
not available for ratesetting because
HCPCS code 0100T was reported with a
‘‘J1’’ procedure and, therefore, payment
was packaged into the associated C–
APC payment. If these services had been
separately paid under the OPPS, there
would be at least two additional single
claims available for ratesetting. As
mentioned previously, the purpose of
the new technology APC policy is to
ensure that there are sufficient claims
data for new services, which is
particularly important for services with
a low volume such as procedures
described by HCPCS code 0100T.
Another concern is the costs reported
for the claims when payment is not
packaged for a new technology
procedure may not be representative of
all of the services included on a claim
that is generated, which may also affect
our ability to assign the new service to
the most appropriate clinical APC.
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To address this issue and help ensure
that there is sufficient claims data for
services assigned to New Technology
APCs, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR
58847), we proposed excluded payment
for any procedure that is assigned to a
New Technology APC (APCs 1491
through 1599 and APCs 1901 through
1908) from being packaged when
included on a claim with a ‘‘J1’’ service
assigned to a C–APC. For CY 2020, we
proposed to continue to exclude
payment for any procedure that is
assigned to a New Technology APC
from being packaged when included on
a claim with a ‘‘J1’’ service assigned to
a C–APC.
Some stakeholders have raised
questions about whether the policy
established in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period would
also apply to comprehensive
observation services assigned status
indicator ‘‘J2.’’ We recognize that the
policy described and adopted in the CY
2019 rulemaking may have been
ambiguous with respect to this issue.
While our intention in the CY 2019
rulemaking was only to exclude
payment for services assigned to New
Technology APCs from being bundled
into the payment for a comprehensive
‘‘J1’’ service, we believe that there may
also be some instances in which it
would be clinically appropriate to
provide a new technology service when
providing comprehensive observation
services. We would not generally expect
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that to be the case, because procedures
assigned to New Technology APCs
typically are new or low-volume
surgical procedures, or are specialized
tests to diagnosis a specific condition. In
addition, it is highly unlikely a general
observation procedure would be
assigned to a New Technology APC
because there are clinical APCs already
established under the OPPS to classify
general observation procedures. As we
stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, observation
services may not be used for postoperative recovery and, as such,
observation services furnished with
services assigned to status indicator ‘‘T’’
will always be packaged (80 FR 70334).
Therefore, we proposed that payment
for services assigned to a New
Technology APC when included on a
claim for a service assigned status
indicator ‘‘J2’’ assigned to a C–APC will
be packaged into the payment for the
comprehensive service. Nonetheless, we
sought public comments on whether it
would be clinically appropriate to
exclude payment for any New
Technology APC procedures from being
packaged into the payment for a
comprehensive ‘‘J2’’ service starting in
CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters,
including device manufacturers, device
manufacturer associations and
physicians were opposed to our
proposal to package payment for
procedures assigned to a New
Technology APC into the payment for
comprehensive observation services
assigned status indicator ‘‘J2’’. The
commenters stated that there were
instances where beneficiaries receiving
observation services may require the
types of procedures that are assigned to
new technology APCs. Several
commenters specifically mentioned the
HeartFlow Analysis, and stated that it
could be performed appropriately for a
patient receiving observation services.
The commenters also stated that
providing separate payment for this new
technology procedure will allow CMS to
collect sufficient claims data to enable
assignment of the procedure to an
appropriate clinical APC.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholders’ comments regarding this
proposal and agree that, although rare,
there are situations in which it is
clinically appropriate to provide a new
technology service when providing
comprehensive observation services. As
discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58847), the purpose of the new
technology APC policy is to ensure that
there are sufficient claims data for new
services to assign these procedures to an
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appropriate clinical APC and therefore,
we excluded procedures assigned to
New Technology APCs from packaging
under the C–APC policy. In the CY 2019
final rule, we specifically stated that the
exclusion policy included
circumstances when New Technology
procedures were billed with
comprehensive services assigned to
status indicator ‘‘J1’’, however we
believe this rationale is also applicable
to comprehensive observation services
that are assigned status indicator ‘‘J2’’.
Therefore, we are modifying our policy
for excluding procedures assigned to
New Technology APCs from the C–APC
policy. For CY 2020, we are finalizing
our policy to continue to exclude
payment for any procedure that is
assigned to a New Technology APC
from being packaged when included on
a claim with a ‘‘J1’’ service assigned to
a C–APC. For CY 2020, we are also
finalizing a policy to exclude payment
for any procedures that are assigned to
a New Technology APC from being
packaged into the payment for
comprehensive observation services
assigned to status indicator ‘‘J2’’ when
they are included on a claim with ‘‘J2’’
procedures.
c. Calculation of Composite APC
Criteria-Based Costs
As discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72
FR 66613), we believe it is important
that the OPPS enhance incentives for
hospitals to provide necessary, high
quality care as efficiently as possible.
For CY 2008, we developed composite
APCs to provide a single payment for
groups of services that are typically
performed together during a single
clinical encounter and that result in the
provision of a complete service.
Combining payment for multiple,
independent services into a single OPPS
payment in this way enables hospitals
to manage their resources with
maximum flexibility by monitoring and
adjusting the volume and efficiency of
services themselves. An additional
advantage to the composite APC model
is that we can use data from correctly
coded multiple procedure claims to
calculate payment rates for the specified
combinations of services, rather than
relying upon single procedure claims
which may be low in volume and/or
incorrectly coded. Under the OPPS, we
currently have composite policies for
mental health services and multiple
imaging services. (We note that, in the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we finalized a policy
to delete the composite APC 8001 (LDR
Prostate Brachytherapy Composite) for
CY 2018 and subsequent years.) We
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refer readers to the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR
66611 through 66614 and 66650 through
66652) for a full discussion of the
development of the composite APC
methodology, and the CY 2012 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (76
FR 74163) and the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59241 through 59242 and 59246 through
52950) for more recent background.
(1) Mental Health Services Composite
APC
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39398), we proposed to
continue our longstanding policy of
limiting the aggregate payment for
specified less resource-intensive mental
health services furnished on the same
date to the payment for a day of partial
hospitalization services provided by a
hospital, which we consider to be the
most resource-intensive of all outpatient
mental health services. We refer readers
to the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule
with comment period (65 FR 18452
through 18455) for the initial discussion
of this longstanding policy and the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74168) for more
recent background.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79588
through 79589), we finalized a policy to
combine the existing Level 1 and Level
2 hospital-based PHP APCs into a single
hospital-based PHP APC, and thereby
discontinue APCs 5861 (Level 1—Partial
Hospitalization (3 services) for HospitalBased PHPs) and 5862 (Level—2 Partial
Hospitalization (4 or more services) for
Hospital-Based PHPs) and replace them
with APC 5863 (Partial Hospitalization
(3 or more services per day)).
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule and final rule with comment period
(82 FR 33580 through 33581 and 59246
through 59247, respectively), we
proposed and finalized the policy for
CY 2018 and subsequent years that,
when the aggregate payment for
specified mental health services
provided by one hospital to a single
beneficiary on a single date of service,
based on the payment rates associated
with the APCs for the individual
services, exceeds the maximum per
diem payment rate for partial
hospitalization services provided by a
hospital, those specified mental health
services will be paid through composite
APC 8010 (Mental Health Services
Composite). In addition, we set the
payment rate for composite APC 8010
for CY 2018 at the same payment rate
that will be paid for APC 5863, which
is the maximum partial hospitalization
per diem payment rate for a hospital,
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and finalized a policy that the hospital
will continue to be paid the payment
rate for composite APC 8010. Under this
policy, the I/OCE will continue to
determine whether to pay for these
specified mental health services
individually, or to make a single
payment at the same payment rate
established for APC 5863 for all of the
specified mental health services
furnished by the hospital on that single
date of service. We continue to believe
that the costs associated with
administering a partial hospitalization
program at a hospital represent the most
resource intensive of all outpatient
mental health services. Therefore, we do
not believe that we should pay more for
mental health services under the OPPS
than the highest partial hospitalization
per diem payment rate for hospitals.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39398), for CY 2020, we
proposed that when the aggregate
payment for specified mental health
services provided by one hospital to a
single beneficiary on a single date of
service, based on the payment rates
associated with the APCs for the
individual services, exceeds the
maximum per diem payment rate for
partial hospitalization services provided
by a hospital, those specified mental
health services would be paid through
composite APC 8010 for CY 2020. In
addition, we proposed to set the
proposed payment rate for composite
APC 8010 at the same payment rate that
we proposed for APC 5863, which is the
maximum partial hospitalization per
diem payment rate for a hospital, and
that the hospital continue to be paid the
proposed payment rate for composite
APC 8010.
We did not receive any public
comment on these proposals. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, that when the aggregate
payment for specified mental health
services provided by one hospital to a
single beneficiary on a single date of
service, based on the payment rates
associated with the APCs for the
individual services, exceeds the
maximum per diem payment rate for
partial hospitalization services provided
by a hospital, those specified mental
health services would be paid through
composite APC 8010 for CY 2020. In
addition, we are finalizing our proposal
to set the payment rate for composite
APC 8010 for CY 2020 at the same
payment rate that we set for APC 5863,
which is the maximum partial
hospitalization per diem payment rate
for a hospital.
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(2) Multiple Imaging Composite APCs
(APCs 8004, 8005, 8006, 8007, and
8008)
Effective January 1, 2009, we provide
a single payment each time a hospital
submits a claim for more than one
imaging procedure within an imaging
family on the same date of service, in
order to reflect and promote the
efficiencies hospitals can achieve when
performing multiple imaging procedures
during a single session (73 FR 41448
through 41450). We utilize three
imaging families based on imaging
modality for purposes of this
methodology: (1) Ultrasound; (2)
computed tomography (CT) and
computed tomographic angiography
(CTA); and (3) magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance
angiography (MRA). The HCPCS codes
subject to the multiple imaging
composite policy and their respective
families are listed in Table 12 of the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 74920 through
74924).
While there are three imaging
families, there are five multiple imaging
composite APCs due to the statutory
requirement under section 1833(t)(2)(G)
of the Act that we differentiate payment
for OPPS imaging services provided
with and without contrast. While the
ultrasound procedures included under
the policy do not involve contrast, both
CT/CTA and MRI/MRA scans can be
provided either with or without
contrast. The five multiple imaging
composite APCs established in CY 2009
are:
• APC 8004 (Ultrasound Composite);
• APC 8005 (CT and CTA without
Contrast Composite);
• APC 8006 (CT and CTA with
Contrast Composite);
• APC 8007 (MRI and MRA without
Contrast Composite); and
• APC 8008 (MRI and MRA with
Contrast Composite).
We define the single imaging session
for the ‘‘with contrast’’ composite APCs
as having at least one or more imaging
procedures from the same family
performed with contrast on the same
date of service. For example, if the
hospital performs an MRI without
contrast during the same session as at
least one other MRI with contrast, the
hospital will receive payment based on
the payment rate for APC 8008, the
‘‘with contrast’’ composite APC.
We make a single payment for those
imaging procedures that qualify for
payment based on the composite APC
payment rate, which includes any
packaged services furnished on the
same date of service. The standard
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(noncomposite) APC assignments
continue to apply for single imaging
procedures and multiple imaging
procedures performed across families.
For a full discussion of the development
of the multiple imaging composite APC
methodology, we refer readers to the CY
2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (73 FR 68559 through
68569).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39398), we proposed to
continue to pay for all multiple imaging
procedures within an imaging family
performed on the same date of service
using the multiple imaging composite
APC payment methodology. We stated
that we continue to believe that this
policy would reflect and promote the
efficiencies hospitals can achieve when
performing multiple imaging procedures
during a single session.
The proposed CY 2020 payment rates
for the five multiple imaging composite
APCs (APCs 8004, 8005, 8006, 8007,
and 8008) were based on proposed
geometric mean costs calculated from
CY 2018 claims available for the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that
qualified for composite payment under
the current policy (that is, those claims
reporting more than one procedure
within the same family on a single date
of service). To calculate the proposed
geometric mean costs, we used the same
methodology that we have used to
calculate the geometric mean costs for
these composite APCs since CY 2014, as
described in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR
74918). The imaging HCPCS codes
referred to as ‘‘overlap bypass codes’’
that we removed from the bypass list for
purposes of calculating the proposed
multiple imaging composite APC
geometric mean costs, in accordance
with our established methodology as
stated in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (78 FR
74918), were identified by asterisks in
Addendum N to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website) and
were discussed in more detail in section
II.A.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we were able to identify
approximately 700,000 ‘‘single session’’
claims out of an estimated 4.9 million
potential claims for payment through
composite APCs from our ratesetting
claims data, which represents
approximately 14 percent of all eligible
claims, to calculate the proposed CY
2020 geometric mean costs for the
multiple imaging composite APCs.
Table 5 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule listed the proposed
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Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposal to continue the use of multiple
imaging composite APCs to pay for
services providing more than one
imaging procedure from the same family
on the same date, without modification.
Table 6 below lists the HCPCS codes
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that will be subject to the multiple
imaging composite APC policy and their
respective families and approximate
composite APC final geometric mean
costs for CY 2020.
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HCPCS codes that would be subject to
the multiple imaging composite APC
policy and their respective families and
approximate composite APC proposed
geometric mean costs for CY 2020.
We did not receive any public
comments on these proposals.
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3. Changes to Packaged Items and
Services
a. Background and Rationale for
Packaging in the OPPS
Like other prospective payment
systems, the OPPS relies on the concept
of averaging to establish a payment rate
for services. The payment may be more
or less than the estimated cost of
providing a specific service or a bundle
of specific services for a particular
beneficiary. The OPPS packages
payments for multiple interrelated items
and services into a single payment to
create incentives for hospitals to furnish
services most efficiently and to manage
their resources with maximum
flexibility. Our packaging policies
support our strategic goal of using larger
payment bundles in the OPPS to
maximize hospitals’ incentives to
provide care in the most efficient
manner. For example, where there are a
variety of devices, drugs, items, and
supplies that could be used to furnish
a service, some of which are more costly
than others, packaging encourages
hospitals to use the most cost-efficient
item that meets the patient’s needs,
rather than to routinely use a more
expensive item, which may occur if
separate payment is provided for the
item.
Packaging also encourages hospitals
to effectively negotiate with
manufacturers and suppliers to reduce
the purchase price of items and services
or to explore alternative group
purchasing arrangements, thereby
encouraging the most economical health
care delivery. Similarly, packaging
encourages hospitals to establish
protocols that ensure that necessary
services are furnished, while
scrutinizing the services ordered by
practitioners to maximize the efficient
use of hospital resources. Packaging
payments into larger payment bundles
promotes the predictability and
accuracy of payment for services over
time. Finally, packaging may reduce the
importance of refining service-specific
payment because packaged payments
include costs associated with higher
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cost cases requiring many ancillary
items and services and lower cost cases
requiring fewer ancillary items and
services. Because packaging encourages
efficiency and is an essential component
of a prospective payment system,
packaging payments for items and
services that are typically integral,
ancillary, supportive, dependent, or
adjunctive to a primary service has been
a fundamental part of the OPPS since its
implementation in August 2000. For an
extensive discussion of the history and
background of the OPPS packaging
policy, we refer readers to the CY 2000
OPPS final rule (65 FR 18434), the CY
2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66580), the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 74925), the CY
2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66817), the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70343), the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79592), the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59250), and the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58854). As we
continue to develop larger payment
groups that more broadly reflect services
provided in an encounter or episode of
care, we have expanded the OPPS
packaging policies. Most, but not
necessarily all, categories of items and
services currently packaged in the OPPS
are listed in 42 CFR 419.2(b). Our
overarching goal is to make payments
for all services under the OPPS more
consistent with those of a prospective
payment system and less like those of a
per-service fee schedule, which pays
separately for each coded item. As a part
of this effort, we have continued to
examine the payment for items and
services provided under the OPPS to
determine which OPPS services can be
packaged to further achieve the
objective of advancing the OPPS toward
a more prospective payment system.
For CY 2020, we examined the items
and services currently provided under
the OPPS, reviewing categories of
integral, ancillary, supportive,
dependent, or adjunctive items and
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services for which we believe payment
would be appropriately packaged into
payment for the primary service that
they support. Specifically, we examined
the HCPCS code definitions (including
CPT code descriptors) and outpatient
hospital billing patterns to determine
whether there were categories of codes
for which packaging would be
appropriate according to existing OPPS
packaging policies or a logical
expansion of those existing OPPS
packaging policies. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39423
through 39424), beginning in CY 2020,
we proposed to conditionally package
the costs of selected newly identified
ancillary services into payment with a
primary service where we believe that
the packaged item or service is integral,
ancillary, supportive, dependent, or
adjunctive to the provision of care that
was reported by the primary service
HCPCS code. Below we discuss the
proposed and finalized changes to the
packaging policies beginning in CY
2020.
Comment: We received several
comments from patient advocates,
physicians, drug manufacturers, and
professional medical societies regarding
payment for blue light cystoscopy
procedures involving Cysview®
(hexaminolevulinate HCl) (described by
HCPCS code C9275). Cysview® is a drug
that functions as a supply in a
diagnostic test or procedure and
therefore payment for this product is
packaged with payment for the primary
procedure in the OPPS and ASC
settings. Commenters stated that
utilization of Cysview® is low in the
HOPD and ASC settings, which they
attributed to the packaging of Cysview
as a drug that functions as a supply in
a diagnostic test or procedure.
Commenters indicated that packaged
payment does not adequately pay for the
blue light cystoscopy procedures,
particularly in the ASC setting where
payment is generally approximately 55
percent of the HOPD payment.
Commenters believe that providers have
been deterred from the use of this
technology, especially in the ASC, and
as a result a significant percentage of
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beneficiaries are not able to access the
procedure.
Commenters also stated that there has
been literature published showing that
Blue Light Cystoscopy with Cysview® is
more effective than white light
cystoscopy alone at detecting and
eliminating nonmuscle invasive bladder
cancer tumors, leading to a reduction in
bladder cancer recurrence.
Commenters made various
recommendations for payment for blue
light cystoscopy procedures involving
Cysview®, including to pay separately
for Cysview® when it is used with blue
light cystoscopy in the HOPD and ASC
settings, to pay separately for Cysview®
when it is used with blue light
cystoscopy in the ASC setting, similar to
the policy finalized for Exparel® in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58860), or to
utilize our equitable adjustment
authority at section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the
Act to provide an ‘‘add-on’’ or ‘‘drug
intensive’’ payment to ASCs when using
Cysview® in blue light cystoscopy
procedures. Other commenters
requested separate payment for all
diagnostic imaging drugs
(radiopharmaceuticals and contrast
agents).
Response: We acknowledge the
concerns of the numerous stakeholders
who commented on this issue and
understand the importance of blue light
cystoscopy procedures involving
Cysview®. Cysview has been packaged
as a drug, biological, or
radiopharmaceutical that functions as a
supply in a diagnostic test or procedure
since CY 2014 (78 FR 74930). As we
stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (82 FR
59244), we recognize that blue light
cystoscopy represents an additional
elective but distinguishable service as
compared to white light cystoscopy that,
in some cases, may allow greater
detection of bladder tumors in
beneficiaries relative to white light
cystoscopy alone. Given the additional
equipment, supplies, operating room
time, and other resources required to
perform blue light cystoscopy in
addition to white light cystoscopy, in
CY 2018, we created a new HCPCS Ccode to describe blue light cystoscopy
and since CY 2018 have allowed for
complexity adjustments to higher
paying C–APCs for qualifying white
light and blue light cystoscopy code
combinations. At this time, we continue
to believe that Cysview® is a drug that
functions as a supply in a diagnostic test
or procedure and payment for this drug
is packaged with payment for the
diagnostic procedure. Therefore, we do
not believe it is necessary to pay
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separately for Cysview® when it is used
with blue light cystoscopy in either the
HOPD or ASC setting. We also do not
believe that it would be appropriate to
utilize our equitable adjustment
authority at section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the
Act to provide an ‘‘add-on’’ or ‘‘drug
intensive’’ payment to ASCs when using
Cysview® in blue light cystoscopy
procedures nor do we have any
evidence to show that separate payment
for all diagnostic imaging drugs
(radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents)
is required. However, we will continue
to examine payment for blue light
cystoscopy procedures involving
Cysview to determine if any changes to
this policy would be appropriate in
future rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that we eliminate the
packaging policy for drugs that function
as a supply when used in a diagnostic
test or procedure.
Response: In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, we
established a policy to package drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
that function as supplies when used in
a diagnostic test or procedure. In
particular, we referred to drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
that function as supplies as a part of a
larger, more encompassing service or
procedure, namely, the diagnostic test
or procedure in which the drug,
biological, or radiopharmaceutical is
employed (78 FR 74927). At this time,
we do not believe it is necessary to
eliminate this policy. As previously
noted, the OPPS packages payments for
multiple interrelated items and services
into a single payment to create
incentives for hospitals to furnish
services most efficiently and to manage
their resources with maximum
flexibility. Our packaging policies
support our strategic goal of using larger
payment bundles in the OPPS to
maximize hospitals’ incentives to
provide care in the most efficient
manner.
Comment: One commenter requested
separate payment for add-on codes for
Fractional Flow Reserve Studies (FFR/
iFR) and Intravascular Ultrasound
(IVUS). The commenter stated that they
believe the packaging of these codes
will disincentivize physicians to
perform these adjunct procedures
because of cost. The codes include:
• 93571—Intravascular doppler
velocity and/or pressure derived
coronary flow reserve measurement
(coronary vessel or graft) during
coronary angiography including
pharmacologically induced stress;
initial vessel (list separately in addition
to code for primary procedure);
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• 93572—Intravascular doppler
velocity and/or pressure derived
coronary flow reserve measurement
(coronary vessel or graft) during
coronary angiography including
pharmacologically induced stress; each
additional vessel (list separately in
addition to code for primary
procedure));
• 92978—Endoluminal imaging of
coronary vessel or graft using
intravascular ultrasound (ivus) or
optical coherence tomography (oct)
during diagnostic evaluation and/or
therapeutic intervention including
imaging supervision, interpretation and
report; initial vessel (list separately in
addition to code for primary procedure);
and
• 92979—Endoluminal imaging of
coronary vessel or graft using
intravascular ultrasound (ivus) or
optical coherence tomography (oct)
during diagnostic evaluation and/or
therapeutic intervention including
imaging supervision, interpretation and
report; each additional vessel (list
separately in addition to code for
primary procedure)).
Response: As stated in the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66630), we continue to
believe that IVUS and FFR are
dependent services that are always
provided in association with a primary
service. Add-on codes represent services
that are integral, ancillary, supportive,
dependent, or adjunctive items and
services for which we believe payment
would be appropriately packaged into
payment for the primary service that
they support. As we have noted in past
rules, add-on codes do not represent
standalone procedures and are inclusive
to other procedures performed at the
same time (79 FR 66818). We continue
to believe it is unnecessary to provide
separate payment for the previously
mentioned add-on codes at this time.
b. Packaging Policy for Non-Opioid Pain
Management Treatments
(1) Background on OPPS/ASC NonOpioid Pain Management Packaging
Policies
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (82 FR 33588), within the
framework of existing packaging
categories, such as drugs that function
as supplies in a surgical procedure or
diagnostic test or procedure, we
requested stakeholder feedback on
common clinical scenarios involving
currently packaged items and services
described by HCPCS codes that
stakeholders believe should not be
packaged under the OPPS. We also
expressed interest in stakeholder
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feedback on common clinical scenarios
involving separately payable HCPCS
codes for which payment would be most
appropriately packaged under the OPPS.
Commenters who responded to the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
expressed a variety of views on
packaging under the OPPS. In the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59255), we
summarized these public comments.
The public comments ranged from
requests to unpackage most items and
services that are either conditionally or
unconditionally packaged under the
OPPS, including drugs and devices, to
specific requests for separate payment
for a specific drug or device.
In terms of Exparel® in particular, we
received several requests to pay
separately for the drug Exparel® rather
than packaging payment for it as a
surgical supply. We had previously
stated that we considered Exparel® to be
a drug that functions as a surgical
supply because it is indicated for the
alleviation of postoperative pain (79 FR
66874 and 66875). We had also stated
before that we considered all items
related to the surgical outcome and
provided during the hospital stay in
which the surgery is performed,
including postsurgical pain
management drugs, to be part of the
surgery for purposes of our drug and
biological surgical supply packaging
policy. (We note that Exparel® is a
liposome injection of bupivacaine, an
amide local anesthetic, indicated for
single-dose infiltration into the surgical
site to produce postsurgical analgesia. In
2011, Exparel® was approved by FDA
for single-dose infiltration into the
surgical site to provide postsurgical
analgesia.1 2 Exparel® had pass-through
payment status from CYs 2012 through
2014 and was separately paid under
both the OPPS and the ASC payment
system during this 3-year period.
Beginning in CY 2015, Exparel® was
packaged as a surgical supply under
both the OPPS and the ASC payment
system.)
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 52485, we
reiterated our position with regard to
payment for Exparel®, stating that we
believed that payment for this drug is
appropriately packaged with the
primary surgical procedure. We also
stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period that CMS
would continue to explore and evaluate
1 2011 product label available at: https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/
2011/022496s000lbl.pdf.
2 2011 FDA approval letter available at: https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/
2011/022496Orig1s000Approv.pdf.
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packaging policies under the OPPS and
consider these policies in future
rulemaking.
In addition to stakeholder feedback
regarding OPPS packaging policies in
response to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, the President’s
Commission on Combating Drug
Addiction and the Opioid Crisis (the
Commission) had recommended that
CMS examine payment policies for
certain drugs that function as a supply,
specifically non-opioid pain
management treatments (83 FR 37068).
The Commission was established in
2017 to study ways to combat and treat
drug abuse, addiction, and the opioid
crisis. The Commission’s report 3
included a recommendation for CMS to
‘‘. . . review and modify ratesetting
policies that discourage the use of nonopioid treatments for pain, such as
certain bundled payments that make
alternative treatment options cost
prohibitive for hospitals and doctors,
particularly those options for treating
immediate postsurgical pain . . . .’’ 4
With respect to the packaging policy,
the Commission’s report states that
‘‘. . . the current CMS payment policy
for ‘supplies’ related to surgical
procedures creates unintended
incentives to prescribe opioid
medications to patients for postsurgical
pain instead of administering nonopioid pain medications. Under current
policies, CMS provides one all-inclusive
bundled payment to hospitals for all
‘surgical supplies,’ which includes
hospital administered drug products
intended to manage patients’
postsurgical pain. This policy results in
the hospitals receiving the same fixed
fee from Medicare whether the surgeon
administers a non-opioid medication or
not.’’ 5 HHS also presented an Opioid
Strategy in April 2017 6 that aims in part
to support cutting-edge research and
advance the practice of pain
management. On October 26, 2017, the
President declared the opioid crisis a
national public health emergency under
Federal law 7 and this declaration was
3 President’s Commission on Combating Drug
Addiction and the Opioid Crisis, Report (2017).
Available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/images/Final_Report_Draft_
11-1-2017.pdf.
4 Ibid, at page 57, Recommendation 19.
5 Ibid.
6 Available at: https://www.hhs.gov/about/
leadership/secretary/speeches/2017-speeches/
secretary-price-announces-hhs-strategy-for-fightingopioid-crisis/.
7 Available at: https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/
2017/10/26/hhs-acting-secretary-declares-publichealth-emergency-address-national-opioidcrisis.html.
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most recently renewed on April 19,
2019.8
For the CY 2019 rulemaking, we
reviewed available literature with
respect to Exparel®, including a briefing
document 9 submitted for FDA Advisory
Committee Meeting held February 14–
15, 2018, by the manufacturer of
Exparel® that notes that ‘‘. . .
Bupivacaine, the active pharmaceutical
ingredient in Exparel®, is a local
anesthetic that has been used for
infiltration/field block and peripheral
nerve block for decades’’ and that ‘‘since
its approval, Exparel® has been used
extensively, with an estimated 3.5
million patient exposures in the US.’’ 10
On April 6, 2018, FDA approved
Exparel®’s new indication for use as an
interscalene brachial plexus nerve block
to produce postsurgical regional
analgesia.11 Therefore, we also stated in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
that, based on our review of currently
available OPPS Medicare claims data
and public information from the
manufacturer of the drug, we did not
believe that the OPPS packaging policy
had discouraged the use of Exparel® for
either of the drug’s indications when
furnished in the hospital outpatient
department setting.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, in response to stakeholder
comments on the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
52485) and in light of the
recommendations regarding payment
policies for certain drugs, we evaluated
the impact of our packaging policy for
drugs that function as a supply when
used in a surgical procedure on the
utilization of these drugs in both the
hospital outpatient department and the
ASC setting. Our packaging policy is
that the costs associated with packaged
drugs that function as a supply are
included in the ratesetting methodology
for the surgical procedures with which
they are billed, and the payment rate for
the associated procedure reflects the
costs of the packaged drugs and other
packaged items and services to the
extent they are billed with the
procedure. In our evaluation, we used
currently available data to analyze the
utilization patterns associated with
8 Available at: https://www.phe.gov/emergency/
news/healthactions/phe/Pages/default.aspx.
9 Food and Drug Administration, Meeting of the
Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory
Committee Briefing Document (2018). Available at:
https://www.fda.gov/downloads/
AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/
Drugs/AnestheticAndAnalgesicDrugProducts
AdvisoryCommittee/UCM596314.pdf.
10 Ibid, page 9.
11 2018 updated product label available at:
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/
label/2018/022496s009lbledt.pdf.
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specific drugs that function as a supply
over a 5-year time period to determine
whether this packaging policy reduced
the use of these drugs. If the packaging
policy discouraged the use of drugs that
function as a supply or impeded access
to these products, we would expect to
see a significant decline in utilization of
these drugs over time, although we note
that a decline in utilization could also
reflect other factors, such as the
availability of alternative products, or a
combination thereof.
The results of the evaluation of our
packaging policies under the OPPS and
the ASC payment system showed
decreased utilization for certain drugs
that function as a supply in the ASC
setting, in comparison to the hospital
outpatient department setting. In light of
these results, as well as the
Commission’s recommendation to
examine payment policies for nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as a supply, we stated that we
believe it was appropriate to pay
separately for evidence-based nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as a supply in a surgical
procedure in the ASC setting to address
the decreased utilization of these drugs
and to encourage use of these types of
drugs rather than prescription opioids.
Therefore, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58855 through 58860), we finalized the
proposed policy to unpackage and pay
separately at ASP + 6 percent for the
cost of non-opioid pain management
drugs that function as surgical supplies
when they are furnished in the ASC
setting for CY 2019. We also stated that
we would continue to analyze the issue
of access to non-opioid alternatives in
the hospital outpatient department
setting and in the ASC setting as we
implemented section 6082 of the
Substance Use–Disorder Prevention that
Promotes Opioid Recovery and
Treatment for Patients and Communities
(SUPPORT) Act (Pub. L. 115–271)
enacted on October 24, 2018 (83 FR
58860 through 58861).
(2) Evaluation and CY 2020 Proposal for
Payment for Non-Opioid Alternatives
Section 1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of the Act, as
added by section 6082(a) of the
SUPPORT Act, states that the Secretary
must review payments under the OPPS
for opioids and evidence-based nonopioid alternatives for pain management
(including drugs and devices, nerve
blocks, surgical injections, and
neuromodulation) with a goal of
ensuring that there are not financial
incentives to use opioids instead of nonopioid alternatives. As part of this
review, under section 1833(t)(22)(A)(iii)
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of the Act, the Secretary must consider
the extent to which revisions to such
payments (such as the creation of
additional groups of covered OPD
services to separately classify those
procedures that utilize opioids and nonopioid alternatives for pain
management) would reduce the
payment incentives for using opioids
instead of non-opioid alternatives for
pain management. In conducting this
review and considering any revisions,
the Secretary must focus on covered
OPD services (or groups of services)
assigned to C–APCs, APCs that include
surgical services, or services determined
by the Secretary that generally involve
treatment for pain management. If the
Secretary identifies revisions to
payments pursuant to section
1833(t)(22)(A)(iii) of the Act, section
1833(t)(22)(C) of the Act requires the
Secretary to, as determined appropriate,
begin making revisions for services
furnished on or after January 1, 2020.
Any revisions under this paragraph are
required to be treated as adjustments for
purposes of paragraph (9)(B), which
requires any adjustments to be made in
a budget neutral manner. Pursuant to
these requirements, in our evaluation of
whether there are payment incentives
for using opioids instead of non-opioid
alternatives, for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we used currently
available data to analyze the payment
and utilization patterns associated with
specific non-opioid alternatives,
including drugs that function as a
supply, nerve blocks, and
neuromodulation products, to
determine whether our packaging
policies have reduced the use of nonopioid alternatives. We focused on
covered OPD services for this review,
including services assigned to C–APCs,
surgical APCs, and other pain
management services. We believed that
if the packaging policy discouraged the
use of these non-opioid alternatives or
impeded access to these products, we
would expect to see a decline in the
utilization over time, although we note
that a decline in utilization could also
reflect other factors, such as the
availability of alternative products or a
combination thereof.
We evaluated continuous peripheral
nerve blocks and neuromodulation
alternatives to determine if the current
packaging policy represented a barrier
to access. For each product, we
examined the most recently available
Medicare claims data. All of the
alternatives examined showed
consistent or increasing utilization in
recent years, with no products showing
decreases in utilization.
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We also evaluated drugs that function
as surgical supplies over a 6-year time
period (CYs 2013 through 2018). During
our evaluation, we did not observe
significant declines in the total number
of units used in the hospital outpatient
department for a majority of the drugs
included in our analysis. In fact, under
the OPPS, we observed the opposite
effect for several drugs that function as
surgical supplies, including Exparel®
(HCPCS code C9290). This trend
indicates appropriate packaged
payments that adequately reflect the
cost of the drug and are not prohibiting
beneficiary access.
From CYs 2013 through 2018, we
found that there was an overall increase
in the OPPS Medicare utilization of
Exparel® of approximately 491 percent
(from 2.3 million units to 13.6 million
units) during this 6-year time period.
The total number of claims reporting the
use of Exparel® increased by 463
percent (from 10,609 claims to 59,724
claims) over this 6-year time period.
This increase in utilization continued,
even after the expiration of the 3-year
period of pass-through payment status
for this drug in 2014, resulting in a 109percent overall increase in the total
number of units used between CYs 2015
and 2018, from 6.5 million units to 13.6
million units. The number of claims
reporting the use of Exparel® increased
by 112 percent during this time period,
from 28,166 claims to 59,724 claims.
The results of our review and
evaluation of our claims data do not
provide evidence to indicate that the
OPPS packaging policy has had the
unintended consequence of
discouraging the use of non-opioid
treatments for postsurgical pain
management in the hospital outpatient
department. Therefore, based on this
data evaluation, we stated in the
proposed rule that we do not believe
that changes are necessary under the
OPPS for the packaged drug policy for
drugs that function as a surgical supply,
nerve blocks, surgical injections, and
neuromodulation products when used
in a surgical procedure in the OPPS
setting at this time.
For Exparel®, we reviewed claims
data for development of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule and, based on
these data and available literature, we
concluded that there is no clear
evidence that the OPPS packaging
policy discourages the use of Exparel®
for either of the drug’s indications in the
hospital outpatient department setting
because the use of Exparel® continues to
increase in this setting. Accordingly, we
stated in the proposed rule that we
continue to believe it is appropriate to
package payment for the use of
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Exparel®, as we do for other
postsurgical pain management drugs,
when it is furnished in a hospital
outpatient department. In addition, our
updated review of claims data for the
proposed rule showed a continued
decline in the utilization of Exparel® in
the ASC setting, which we believed
supports our proposal to continue
paying separately for Exparel® in the
ASC setting.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we proposed
to continue our policy to pay separately
at ASP+6 percent for the cost of nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies in the
performance of surgical procedures
when they are furnished in the ASC
setting and to continue to package
payment for non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as
surgical supplies in the performance of
surgical procedures in the hospital
outpatient department setting for CY
2020. However, we invited public
comments on this proposal and asked
the public to provide peer-reviewed
evidence, if any, to describe existing
evidence-based non-opioid pain
management therapies used in the
outpatient and ASC setting. We also
invited the public to provide detailed
claims-based evidence to document how
specific unfavorable utilization trends
are due to the financial incentives of the
payment systems rather than other
factors.
Multiple stakeholders, largely
manufacturers of devices and drugs,
requested separate payments for various
non-opioid pain management
treatments, such as continuous nerve
blocks (including a disposable
elastomeric pump that delivers nonopioid local anesthetic to a surgical site
or nerve), cooled thermal
radiofrequency ablation, and local
anesthetics designed to reduce
postoperative pain for cataract surgery
and other procedures. These
stakeholders suggested various
mechanisms through which separate
payment or a higher-paying APC
assignment for the primary service
could be made. The stakeholders offered
surveys, reports, studies, and anecdotal
evidence of varying degrees to support
why the devices, drugs, or services offer
an alternative to or a reduction of the
need for opioid prescriptions. The
majority of these stakeholder offerings
lacked adequate sample size, contained
possible conflicts of interest such as
studies conducted by employees of
device manufacturers, have not been
fully published in peer-reviewed
literature, or have only provided
anecdotal evidence as to how the drug
or device could serve as an alternative
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to, or reduce the need for, opioid
prescriptions.
After reviewing the data from
stakeholders and Medicare claims data,
we did not find compelling evidence to
suggest that revisions to our OPPS
payment policies for non-opioid pain
management alternatives are necessary
for CY 2020. Additionally, MedPAC’s
March 2019 Report to Congress supports
our conclusion; specifically, Chapter 16
of MedPAC’s report, titled Mandated
Report: Opioids and Alternatives in
Hospital Settings—Payments,
Incentives, and Medicare Data,
concludes that there is no clear
indication that Medicare’s OPPS
provides systematic payment incentives
that promote the use of opioid
analgesics over non-opioid analgesics.12
However, we invited public comments
on whether there were other non-opioid
pain management alternatives for which
our payment policy should be revised to
allow separate payment. We requested
public comments that provided
evidence-based support, such as
published peer-reviewed literature, that
we could use to determine whether
these products help to deter or avoid
prescription opioid use and addiction as
well as evidence that the current
packaged payment for such non-opioid
alternatives presents a barrier to access
to care and therefore warrants revised,
including possibly separate, payment
under the OPPS. We noted that
evidence that current payment policy
provides a payment incentive for using
opioids instead of non-opioid
alternatives should align with available
Medicare claims data.
We provide a summary of the
comments received and our responses to
those comments below.
Comment: Multiple commenters,
including hospital associations, medical
specialty societies, and drug
manufacturers, requested that we pay
separately for Exparel and other drugs
that function as surgical supply in the
hospital outpatient setting. Some of
these commenters noted that Exparel is
more frequently used in this setting and
the use of non-opioid pain management
treatments should also be encouraged in
the hospital outpatient department. The
manufacturer of Exparel, Pacira
Pharmaceuticals, presented a 5-year
OPPS claims data analysis of hospital
trends in Exparel use and a 200 hospital
survey on purchasing decisions for nonopioid alternatives, concluding that
Medicare’s packaging policy has led to
hospitals reducing or stopping Exparel
use.
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Response: As we stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR
58856), we do not believe that there is
sufficient evidence that non-opioid pain
management drugs should be paid
separately in the hospital outpatient
setting at this time. The commenters did
not provide evidence that the OPPS
packaging policy for Exparel (or other
non-opioid drugs) creates a barrier to
use of Exparel in the hospital setting.
Further, while we received some public
comments suggesting that, as a result of
using Exparel in the OPPS setting,
providers may prescribe fewer opioids
for Medicare beneficiaries, we do not
believe that the OPPS payment policy
presents a barrier to use of Exparel or
affects the likelihood that providers will
prescribe fewer opioids in the HOPD
setting. Several drugs are packaged
under the OPPS and payment for such
drugs is included in the payment for the
associated primary procedure. We were
not persuaded by the information
supplied by commenters suggesting that
some providers avoid use of non-opioid
alternatives (including Exparel) solely
because of the OPPS packaged payment
policy. We observed increasing Exparel
utilization in the HOPD setting with the
total units increasing from 9.0 million in
2017 to 13.6 million in 2018, despite the
bundled payment in the OPPS setting.
This upward trend has been consistent
since 2015, as the data shows
approximately 6.5 million total units in
2015 and 8.1 million total units in 2016.
Therefore, we do not believe that the
current OPPS payment methodology for
Exparel and other non-opioid pain
management drugs presents a
widespread barrier to their use.
In addition, higher use in the hospital
outpatient setting not only supports the
notion that the packaged payment for
Exparel is not causing an access to care
issue, but also that the payment rate for
primary procedures in the HOPD using
Exparel adequately reflects the cost of
the drug. That is, because Exparel is
commonly used and billed under the
OPPS, the APC rates for the primary
procedures reflect such utilization.
Therefore, the higher utilization in the
OPPS setting should mitigate the need
for separate payment. We remind
readers that the OPPS is a prospective
payment system, not a cost-based
system and, by design, is based on a
system of averages under which
payment for certain cases may exceed
the costs incurred, while for others, it
may not. As stated earlier in this
section, the OPPS packages payments
for multiple interrelated items and
services into a single payment to create
incentives for hospitals to furnish
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services most efficiently and to manage
their resources with maximum
flexibility. Our packaging policies
support our strategic goal of using larger
payment bundles in the OPPS to
maximize hospitals’ incentives to
provide care in the most efficient
manner. We continue to invite
stakeholders to share evidence, such as
published peer-reviewed literature, on
these non-opioid alternatives. We also
intend to continue to analyze the
evidence and monitor utilization of nonopioid alternatives in the OPD and ASC
settings for potential future rulemaking.
We also stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule that, although we
found increases in utilization for
Exparel when it is paid under the OPPS,
we did notice a continued decline in
Exparel utilization in the ASC setting.
While several variables may contribute
to this difference in utilization and
claims reporting between the hospital
outpatient department and the ASC
setting, one potential explanation is
that, in comparison to hospital
outpatient departments, ASCs tend to
provide specialized care and a more
limited range of services. Also, ASCs are
paid, in aggregate, approximately 55
percent of the OPPS rate. Therefore,
fluctuations in payment rates for
specific services may impact these
providers more acutely than hospital
outpatient departments, and as a result,
ASCs may be less likely to choose to
furnish non-opioid postsurgical pain
management treatments, which are
typically more expensive than opioids.
Another possible contributing factor is
that ASCs do not typically report
packaged items and services and,
accordingly, our analysis may be
undercounting the number of Exparel
units utilized in the ASC setting.
Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposal to continue to unpackage and
pay separately for the cost of non-opioid
pain management drugs that function as
surgical supplies when they are
furnished in the ASC setting without
modification. This policy and related
comments are addressed in section
XIII.D.3. of this final rule with comment
period.
As we stated previously in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59250), our
packaging policies are designed to
support our strategic goal of using larger
payment bundles in the OPPS to
maximize hospitals’ incentives to
provide clinically appropriate care in
the most efficient manner. The
packaging policies established under the
OPPS also typically apply when
services are provided in the ASC setting,
and the policies have the same strategic
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goals in both settings. While
unpackaging and paying separately for
drugs that function as surgical supplies
is a departure from our overall
packaging policy for drugs, we believe
that the proposed change will continue
to incentivize the use of non-opioid
pain management drugs and is
responsive to the Commission’s
recommendation to examine payment
policies for non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as a
supply, with the overall goal of
combating the current opioid addiction
crisis. As previously noted, a discussion
of the CY 2020 proposal for payment of
non-opioid pain management drugs in
the ASC setting was presented in further
detail in section XIII.D.3 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and we refer
readers to section XIII.D.3 of this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period for further discussion
of the final policy for CY 2020. As stated
above, we also requested public
comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that provide peerreviewed evidence, such as published
peer-reviewed literature, that we could
use to determine whether these
products help to deter or avoid
prescription opioid use and addiction as
well as evidence that the current
packaged payment for such non-opioid
alternatives presents a barrier to access
to care and therefore warrants revised,
including possibly separate, payment
under the OPPS. We also stated that
evidence that current payment policy
provides a payment incentive for using
opioids instead of non-opioid
alternatives should align with available
Medicare claims data.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the assignment of status
indicator ‘‘K’’ (Nonpass-Through Drugs
and Nonimplantable Biologicals,
Including Therapeutic
Radiopharmaceuticals) and continuing
to pay separately for the drug Prialt
(HCPCS J2278, injection, ziconitide), a
non-narcotic pain reliever administered
via intrathecal injection. Commenters
provided data indicating that Prialt
potentially could lower opioid use,
including opioids such as morphine. In
addition to continued separate payment,
several commenters recommended CMS
reduce or eliminate the coinsurance for
the drug in order to increase beneficiary
access. Commenters stated that due to
the drug’s significant cost, the 20
percent coinsurance would put the drug
out of reach for beneficiaries.
Additionally, commenters stated that
there is not enough financial incentive
for providers to use Prialt in their
patients compared to lower cost opioids.
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Commenters claim that Prialt is only
paid at invoice cost, which they believe
discourages provider use.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback and for their support of
the continued assignment of status
indicator ‘‘K’’ to HCPCS J2278. Prialt is
paid at its average sales price plus 6
percent according to the ASP
methodology under the OPPS. We note
that under section 1833(t)(8) of the Act,
the payment is subject to applicable
deductible and coinsurance, and we are
unaware of statutory authority to alter
beneficiary coinsurance for payments
made under the OPPS. We note that
because the dollar value of beneficiary
coinsurance is directly proportionate to
the payment rate (which is ASP + 6
percent for HCPCS code J2278), a lower
sales price for the drug (which would
lead to a lower Medicare payment rate
under current policy) would be
necessary for beneficiaries to have a
lower coinsurance amount.
Comment: Many commenters
requested that the drug Omidria (HCPCS
code C9447, injection, phenylephrine
ketorolac) be excluded from the
packaging policy once its pass-through
status expires on September 30, 2020.
Omidria is indicated for maintaining
pupil size by preventing intraoperative
miosis and reducing postoperative
ocular pain in cataract or intraocular
surgeries. The commenters stated that
the available data and multiple peerreviewed articles on Omidria meet the
section 6082 criteria for packaging
exclusion. Commenters asserted that the
use of Omidria decreases patients’ need
for fentanyl during surgeries and
another commenter stated that Omidria
reduces opioid use after cataract
surgeries. In addition, commenters
asserted that the OPPS and ASC
payment system do not address the cost
of packaged products used by small
patient populations. Therefore, the
OPPS and ASC payment structures for
packaged supplies creates an access
barrier and patients are forced to use
inferior products that have increased
complication risk and require the
continued use of opioids to manage
pain. One commenter referenced the
results of a study that showed that
Omidria reduces the need for opioids
during cataract surgery by nearly 80
percent while decreasing pain scores by
more than 50 percent.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback on Omidria. Omidria
received pass-through status for a 3-year
period from 2015 to 2017. After
expiration of its pass-through status, it
was packaged per OPPS policy.
Subsequently, Omidria’s pass-through
status was reinstated in October 2018
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through September 30, 2020 as required
by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as
added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act 2018
(Pub. L. 115–141). While our analysis
supports the commenter’s assertion that
there was a decrease in the utilization
of Omidria in 2018 following its passthrough expiration, we note that there
could be many reasons that utilization
declines after the pass-through period
ends that are unrelated to the lack of
separate payment, including the
availability of other alternatives on the
market (many of which had been used
for several years before Omidria came
on the market and are sold for a lower
price), or physician preference among
others.
Further, our clinical advisors’ review
of the clinical evidence submitted
concluded that the study the commenter
submitted was not sufficiently
compelling or authoritative to overcome
contrary evidence. Moreover, the results
of a CMS study of cataract procedures
performed on Medicare beneficiaries in
the OPPS between January 2015 and
July 2019 comparing procedures
performed with Omidria to procedures
performed without Omidria did not
demonstrate a significant decrease in
fentanyl utilization during the cataract
surgeries in the OPPS when Omidria
was used. Our results also did not
suggest any decrease in opioid
utilization post-surgery for procedures
involving Omidria. At this time, we do
not have compelling evidence to
exclude Omidria from packaging after
its current pass-through expires on
September 30, 2020. We will continue
to analyze the evidence and monitor
utilization of this drug.
Comment: One commenter requested
that MKO Melt, a non-FDA-approved,
compounded drug comprised of
midazolam/ketamine/ondansetron be
excluded from the packaging policy
under section 1833(t)(22)(A)(iii) of the
Act. The commenter contended that
MKO Melt are drugs functioning as a
surgical supply in the ASC setting. The
commenter provided a reference to a
study titled, ‘‘Anesthesia for opioid
addict: Challenges for perioperative
physician’’ by Goyal et al., on the need
for pain management in the opioiddependent patient. The commenter also
referenced a review article,
‘‘Perioperative Management of Acute
Pain in the Opioid-dependent Patient,’’
by Mitra et al., on the special needs of
opioid-dependent patients in surgeries
and the potential opioid relapse in those
patients who are recovering from opioid
use disorder. Additionally, the
commenter referenced a clinical trial
registered in clinicaltrials.gov
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(NCT03653520) that supports sublingual
MKO Melt for use during cataract
surgeries to replace opioids. The study
looked at 611 patients that were divided
into three arms: (1) MKO melt arm, (2)
diazepam/tramadol/ondansetron arm,
(3) diazepam only arm. The study
concluded that the MKO melt arm had
the lowest incidence for supplemental
injectable anesthesia to control pain.
Response: We thank the commenter
for the comment. Based on the
information provided, we are not able to
validate that MKO Melt reduces the use
of opioids. We note that ketamine, one
of the components of MKO melt,
exhibits some addictive properties.
Moreover, we did not identify any
compelling evidence that MKO Melt is
effective for patients with a prior opioid
addiction nor did we receive any data
demonstrating that the current OPPS
packaging policy incentivized providers
to use opioids over MKO Melt. In
accordance with our review under
section 1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of the Act, as
well as the lack of HCPCS code for the
drug, and FDA approval, we were not
able to establish any compelling
evidence that MKO should be excluded
from packaged payment.
Comment: Several commenters,
including individual physicians,
medical associations, and device
manufacturers, supported separate
payment for continuous peripheral
nerve blocks as the commenters
believed they significantly reduce
opioid use. One commenter suggested
that CMS provide separate payment for
HCPCS code A4306 (Disposable drug
delivery system, flow rate of less than
50 ml per hour) in the hospital
outpatient department setting and the
ASC setting because packaging
represents a cost barrier for providers.
The commenter contended that
continuous nerve block procedures have
been shown in high quality clinical
studies to reduce the use of opioids,
attaching studies for review. The
commenter stated that separate payment
for A4306 will remove the financial
disincentive for HOPDs and ASCs to use
these items, and would encourage
continuous nerve blocks as a non-opioid
alternative for post-surgical pain
management.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestion. We examined
the data for A4306 and noted an overall
trend of increasing utilization from CY
2014 through CY 2017. There was a
slight decrease in utilization in CY
2018. However, we note that this slight
decline may be an outlier, given the four
year trend of consistently increasing
utilization. Additionally, the geometric
mean cost for HCPCS code A4306 was
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approximately $30 each year during that
4-year period. We acknowledge that use
of these items may help in the reduction
of opioid use. However, we note that
packaged payment of such an item does
not prevent the use of these items, as we
found with the overall increased
utilization of this product. We do not
believe that the current utilization
trends for HCPCS code A4306 suggest
that the packaged payment is preventing
use and remind readers that payment for
packaged items is included in the
payment for the primary service. We
share the commenter’s concern about
the need to reduce opioid use and will
take the commenter’s suggestion
regarding the need for separate payment
for HCPCS code A4306 into
consideration for future rulemaking.
Comment: Multiple commenters
identified other non-opioid pain
management alternatives that they
believe decrease the dose, duration,
and/or number of opioid prescriptions
beneficiaries receive during and
following an outpatient visit or
procedure (especially for beneficiaries at
high-risk for opioid addiction) and that
may warrant separate payment for CY
2020. Commenters representing various
stakeholders requested separate
payments for various non-opioid pain
management treatments, such as
continuous nerve blocks,
neuromodulation radiofrequency
ablation, implants for lumbar stenosis,
enhanced recovery after surgery, IV
acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, Polar ice
devices for postoperative pain relief,
THC oil, acupuncture, and dry needling
procedures.
For neuromodulation, several
commenters noted that spinal cord
stimulators (SCS) may lead to a
reduction in the use of opioids for
chronic pain patients. One manufacturer
commented that SCS provides the
opportunity to potentially stabilize or
decrease opioid usage and that
neuromodulation retains its efficacy
over multiple years. Regarding barriers
to access, the commenter noted that
Medicare beneficiaries often do not have
access to SCS until after they have
exhausted other treatments, which often
includes opioids. The commenter
presented evidence from observational
studies that use of SCS earlier in a
patient’s treatment could help reduce
opioid use while controlling pain,
suggesting CMS look for ways to
incorporate SCS earlier in the treatment
continuum.
Another commenter asserted that the
standard endpoints, such as a greater
than 50 percent reduction in pain, that
are used to determine if a
neuromodulation-based non-opioid pain
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alternative therapy is effective are wellestablished and validated in all types of
clinical trials and that CMS should
establish a general, national coverage
determination for neuromodulationbased non-opioid pain therapy based on
these endpoints, rather than taking the
time to create and process specific
national coverage determinations or
local coverage determinations. The
commenter suggested that this would be
a much faster and streamlined process
for enhancing Medicare beneficiary
access to neuromodulation-based pain
management therapies.
One of the manufacturers of a highfrequency SCS device stated that
additional payment was warranted for
non-opioid pain management treatments
because they provide an alternative
treatment option to opioids for patients
with chronic, leg, or back pain. The
commenter provided supporting studies
that claimed that patients treated with
their high-frequency SCS device
reported a statistically significant
average decrease in opioid use
compared to the control group. This
commenter also submitted data that
showed a decline in the mean daily
dosage of opioid medication taken and
that fewer patients were relying on
opioids at all to manage their pain when
they used the manufacturer’s device.
Other commenters wrote regarding
their personal experiences with
radiofrequency ablation for sacral iliac
joints and knees. One commenter
referenced several studies, one of which
found a decrease in analgesic
medications associated with
radiofrequency ablation; however, it did
not provide evidence regarding a
decrease in opioid usage.
One national hospital association
commenter recommended that while
‘‘certainly not a solution to the opioid
epidemic, unpackaging appropriate nonopioid therapies, like Exparel, is a lowcost tactic that could change longstanding practice patterns without major
negative consequences.’’ This same
commenter suggested that Medicare
consider separate payment for IV
acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, and Polar
ice devices for postoperative pain relief
after knee procedures. The commenter
also noted that therapeutic massage,
topically applied THC oil, acupuncture,
and dry needling procedures are very
effective therapies for relief of both
postoperative pain and long-term and
chronic pain. Several other commenters
expressed support for separate payment
for IV acetaminophen.
Response: We appreciate the detailed
responses from commenters on this
topic. At this time, we have not found
compelling evidence for other non-
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opioid pain management alternatives
described above to warrant separate
payment under the OPPS or ASC
payment systems for CY 2020. We plan
to take these comments and suggestions
into consideration for future
rulemaking. We agree that providing
incentives to avoid and/or reduce
opioid prescriptions may be one of
several strategies for addressing the
opioid epidemic. To the extent that the
items and services mentioned by the
commenters are effective alternatives to
opioid prescriptions, we encourage
providers to use them when medically
necessary. We note that some of the
items and services mentioned by
commenters are not covered by
Medicare, and we do not intend to
establish payment for noncovered items
and services at this time. We look
forward to working with stakeholders as
we further consider suggested
refinements to the OPPS and the ASC
payment system that will encourage use
of medically necessary items and
services that have demonstrated efficacy
in decreasing opioid prescriptions and/
or opioid abuse or misuse during or
after an outpatient visit or procedure.
After reviewing the non-opioid pain
management alternatives suggested by
the commenters as well as the studies
and other data provided to support the
request for separate payment, we have
not determined that separate payment is
warranted at this time for any of the
non-opioid pain management
alternatives discussed above.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed payment barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid pain
management treatments discussed
throughout this section. Several
commenters disagreed with CMS’s
assessment that current payment
policies do not represent barriers to
access for certain non-opioid pain
management alternatives. Commenters
encouraged CMS to provide timely
insurance coverage for evidenceinformed interventional procedures
early in the course of treatment when
clinically appropriate. Several other
commenters encouraged CMS to more
broadly evaluate all of its packaging
policies to help ensure patient access to
appropriate therapies and to evaluate
how packaging affects the utilization of
a medicine.
Response: We appreciate the various,
insightful comments we received from
stakeholders regarding barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid alternatives
for pain treatment and management in
order to more effectively address the
opioid epidemic. We will take these
comments into consideration for future
rulemaking. Many of these comments
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have been previously addressed
throughout this section. CMS recognizes
that medical exposure to opioids entails
inherent risks, which may include
delayed recovery, diversion, misuse,
accidental overdose, development or reemergence of addiction, and neonatal
abstinence syndrome. However, there
are challenges in developing a
methodology to identify disincentives to
use opioid alternatives. In the context of
the opioid crisis, and given the central
role the federal government plays in
addressing it, these issues are of
particular concern to CMS. Because of
this, CMS intends to work with an
interagency task force to review
available data and to develop criteria for
revisions to payment for opioid
alternatives that are effective for pain
relief or in reducing opioid use.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed policy, without
modification, to unpackage and pay
separately at ASP+6 percent for the cost
of non-opioid pain management drugs
that function as surgical supplies when
they are furnished in the ASC setting for
CY 2020. Under this policy, the only
FDA-approved drug that meets this
criteria is Exparel.
We will continue to analyze the issue
of access to non-opioid alternatives in
the OPPS and the ASC settings for any
subsequent reviews we conduct under
section 1833(t)(22)(A)(ii). We are
continuing to examine whether there are
other non-opioid pain management
alternatives for which our payment
policy should be revised to allow
separate payment. We will be reviewing
evidence-based support, such as
published peer-reviewed literature, that
we could use to determine whether
these products help to deter or avoid
prescription opioid use and addiction as
well as evidence that the current
packaged payment for such non-opioid
alternatives presents a barrier to access
to care and therefore warrants revised,
including possibly separate, payment
under the OPPS. This policy is also
discussed in section XII.D.3 of this final
rule with comment period.
4. Calculation of OPPS Scaled Payment
Weights
We established a policy in the CY
2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68283) of using
geometric mean-based APC costs to
calculate relative payment weights
under the OPPS. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58860 through 58861), we applied
this policy and calculated the relative
payment weights for each APC for CY
2019 that were shown in Addenda A
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and B to that final rule with comment
period (which were made available via
the internet on the CMS website) using
the APC costs discussed in sections
II.A.1. and II.A.2. of that final rule with
comment period. For CY 2020, as we
did for CY 2019, we proposed to
continue to apply the policy established
in CY 2013 and calculate relative
payment weights for each APC for CY
2020 using geometric mean-based APC
costs.
For CY 2012 and CY 2013, outpatient
clinic visits were assigned to one of five
levels of clinic visit APCs, with APC
0606 representing a mid-level clinic
visit. In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (78 FR 75036
through 75043), we finalized a policy
that created alphanumeric HCPCS code
G0463 (Hospital outpatient clinic visit
for assessment and management of a
patient), representing any and all clinic
visits under the OPPS. HCPCS code
G0463 was assigned to APC 0634
(Hospital Clinic Visits). We also
finalized a policy to use CY 2012 claims
data to develop the CY 2014 OPPS
payment rates for HCPCS code G0463
based on the total geometric mean cost
of the levels one through five CPT E/M
codes for clinic visits previously
recognized under the OPPS (CPT codes
99201 through 99205 and 99211 through
99215). In addition, we finalized a
policy to no longer recognize a
distinction between new and
established patient clinic visits.
For CY 2016, we deleted APC 0634
and reassigned the outpatient clinic
visit HCPCS code G0463 to APC 5012
(Level 2 Examinations and Related
Services) (80 FR 70372). For CY 2020,
as we did for CY 2019, we proposed to
continue to standardize all of the
relative payment weights to APC 5012.
We believe that standardizing relative
payment weights to the geometric mean
of the APC to which HCPCS code G0463
is assigned maintains consistency in
calculating unscaled weights that
represent the cost of some of the most
frequently provided OPPS services. For
CY 2020, as we did for CY 2019, we
proposed to assign APC 5012 a relative
payment weight of 1.00 and to divide
the geometric mean cost of each APC by
the geometric mean cost for APC 5012
to derive the unscaled relative payment
weight for each APC. The choice of the
APC on which to standardize the
relative payment weights does not affect
payments made under the OPPS
because we scale the weights for budget
neutrality.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal to continue
to use the geometric mean cost of APC
5012 to standardize relative payment
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weights for CY 2020. Therefore, we are
finalizing our proposal and assigning
APC 5012 the relative payment weight
of 1.00, and using the relative payment
weight for APC 5012 to derive the
unscaled relative payment weight for
each APC for CY 2020.
We note that in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59004 through 59015), we discuss
our policy, implemented on January 1,
2019, to control for unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered
outpatient department services by
paying for clinic visits furnished at
excepted off-campus provider-based
department (PBD) at a reduced rate, and
we are continuing the policy with the
second year of the two-year transition in
CY 2020. While the volume associated
with these visits is included in the
impact model, and thus used in
calculating the weight scalar, the policy
has a negligible effect on the scalar.
Specifically, under this policy, there is
no change to the relativity of the OPPS
payment weights because the
adjustment is made at the payment level
rather than in the cost modeling.
Further, under this policy, the savings
that will result from the change in
payments for these clinic visits will not
be budget neutral. Therefore, the impact
of this policy will generally not be
reflected in the budget neutrality
adjustments, whether the adjustment is
to the OPPS relative weights or to the
OPPS conversion factor. We refer
readers to section X.C. of this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period for further discussion of this
final policy.
Section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act
requires that APC reclassification and
recalibration changes, wage index
changes, and other adjustments be made
in a budget neutral manner. Budget
neutrality ensures that the estimated
aggregate weight under the OPPS for CY
2020 is neither greater than nor less
than the estimated aggregate weight that
would have been calculated without the
changes. To comply with this
requirement concerning the APC
changes, we proposed to compare the
estimated aggregate weight using the CY
2019 scaled relative payment weights to
the estimated aggregate weight using the
proposed CY 2020 unscaled relative
payment weights.
For CY 2019, we multiplied the CY
2019 scaled APC relative payment
weight applicable to a service paid
under the OPPS by the volume of that
service from CY 2018 claims to calculate
the total relative payment weight for
each service. We then added together
the total relative payment weight for
each of these services in order to
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calculate an estimated aggregate weight
for the year. For CY 2020, we proposed
to apply the same process using the
estimated CY 2020 unscaled relative
payment weights rather than scaled
relative payment weights. We proposed
to calculate the weight scalar by
dividing the CY 2019 estimated
aggregate weight by the unscaled CY
2020 estimated aggregate weight.
For a detailed discussion of the
weight scalar calculation, we refer
readers to the OPPS claims accounting
document available on the CMS website
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
Click on the CY 2020 OPPS final rule
link and open the claims accounting
document link at the bottom of the page.
We proposed to compare the
estimated unscaled relative payment
weights in CY 2020 to the estimated
total relative payment weights in CY
2019 using CY 2018 claims data,
holding all other components of the
payment system constant to isolate
changes in total weight. Based on this
comparison, we proposed to adjust the
calculated CY 2020 unscaled relative
payment weights for purposes of budget
neutrality. We proposed to adjust the
estimated CY 2020 unscaled relative
payment weights by multiplying them
by a proposed weight scalar of 1.4401 to
ensure that the proposed CY 2020
relative payment weights are scaled to
be budget neutral. The proposed CY
2020 relative payment weights listed in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website) were scaled and
incorporated the recalibration
adjustments discussed in sections II.A.1.
and II.A.2. of the proposed rule.
Section 1833(t)(14) of the Act
provides the payment rates for certain
SCODs. Section 1833(t)(14)(H) of the
Act provides that additional
expenditures resulting from this
paragraph shall not be taken into
account in establishing the conversion
factor, weighting, and other adjustment
factors for 2004 and 2005 under
paragraph (9), but shall be taken into
account for subsequent years. Therefore,
the cost of those SCODs (as discussed in
section V.B.2. of this final rule with
comment period) is included in the
budget neutrality calculations for the CY
2020 OPPS.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed weight
scalar calculation. Therefore, we are
finalizing our proposal to use the
calculation process described in the
proposed rule, without modification, for
CY 2020. Using updated final rule
claims data, we are updating the
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estimated CY 2020 unscaled relative
payment weights by multiplying them
by a weight scalar of 1.4349 to ensure
that the final CY 2020 relative payment
weights are scaled to be budget neutral.
The final CY 2020 relative payments
weights listed in Addenda A and B to
this final rule with comment period
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website) were scaled and
incorporate the recalibration
adjustments discussed in sections II.A.1.
and II.A.2. of this final rule with
comment period.
B. Conversion Factor Update
Section 1833(t)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act
requires the Secretary to update the
conversion factor used to determine the
payment rates under the OPPS on an
annual basis by applying the OPD fee
schedule increase factor. For purposes
of section 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) of the Act,
subject to sections 1833(t)(17) and
1833(t)(3)(F) of the Act, the OPD fee
schedule increase factor is equal to the
hospital inpatient market basket
percentage increase applicable to
hospital discharges under section
1886(b)(3)(B)(iii) of the Act. In the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 19401), consistent with current law,
based on IHS Global, Inc.’s fourth
quarter 2018 forecast of the FY 2020
market basket increase, the proposed FY
2020 IPPS market basket update was 3.2
percent. However, sections 1833(t)(3)(F)
and 1833(t)(3)(G)(v) of the Act, as added
by section 3401(i) of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–148) and as amended
by section 10319(g) of that law and
further amended by section 1105(e) of
the Health Care and Education
Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–
152), provide adjustments to the OPD
fee schedule increase factor for CY 2020.
Specifically, section 1833(t)(3)(F)(i) of
the Act requires that, for 2012 and
subsequent years, the OPD fee schedule
increase factor under subparagraph
(C)(iv) be reduced by the productivity
adjustment described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act defines
the productivity adjustment as equal to
the 10-year moving average of changes
in annual economy-wide, private
nonfarm business multifactor
productivity (MFP) (as projected by the
Secretary for the 10-year period ending
with the applicable fiscal year, year,
cost reporting period, or other annual
period) (the ‘‘MFP adjustment’’). In the
FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76
FR 51689 through 51692), we finalized
our methodology for calculating and
applying the MFP adjustment, and then
revised this methodology, as discussed
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in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (80 FR 49509). According to the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 19402), the proposed MFP
adjustment for FY 2020 was 0.5
percentage point.
For CY 2020, we proposed that the
MFP adjustment for the CY 2020 OPPS
is 0.5 percentage point (84 FR 39428).
We proposed that if more recent data
become subsequently available after the
publication of the proposed rule (for
example, a more recent estimate of the
market basket increase and the MFP
adjustment), we would use such
updated data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2020 market basket
update and the MFP adjustment, which
are components in calculating the OPD
fee schedule increase factor under
sections 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) and
1833(t)(3)(F) of the Act, in this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period.
We note that section 1833(t)(3)(F) of
the Act provides that application of this
subparagraph may result in the OPD fee
schedule increase factor under section
1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) of the Act being less
than 0.0 percent for a year, and may
result in OPPS payment rates being less
than rates for the preceding year. As
described in further detail below, we
proposed for CY 2020 an OPD fee
schedule increase factor of 2.7 percent
for the CY 2020 OPPS (which was 3.2
percent, the final estimate of the
hospital inpatient market basket
percentage increase, less the final 0.5
percentage point MFP adjustment).
We proposed that hospitals that fail to
meet the Hospital OQR Program
reporting requirements would be subject
to an additional reduction of 2.0
percentage points from the OPD fee
schedule increase factor adjustment to
the conversion factor that would be
used to calculate the OPPS payment
rates for their services, as required by
section 1833(t)(17) of the Act. For
further discussion of the Hospital OQR
Program, we refer readers to section
XIV. of this final rule with comment
period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to amend 42 CFR
419.32(b)(1)(iv)(B) by adding a new
paragraph (11) to reflect the requirement
in section 1833(t)(3)(F)(i) of the Act that,
for CY 2020, we reduce the OPD fee
schedule increase factor by the MFP
adjustment as determined by CMS.
To set the OPPS conversion factor for
CY 2020, we proposed to increase the
CY 2019 conversion factor of $79.490 by
2.7 percent. In accordance with section
1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act, we proposed
further to adjust the conversion factor
for CY 2020 to ensure that any revisions
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made to the wage index and rural
adjustment were made on a budget
neutral basis. We proposed to calculate
an overall budget neutrality factor of
0.9993 for wage index changes. This
adjustment was comprised of a 1.0005
proposed budget neutrality adjustment,
using our standard calculation, of
comparing proposed total estimated
payments from our simulation model
using the proposed FY 2020 IPPS wage
indexes to those payments using the FY
2019 IPPS wage indexes, as adopted on
a calendar year basis for the OPPS as
well as a 0.9988 proposed budget
neutrality adjustment for the proposed
CY 2020 5 percent cap on wage index
decreases to ensure that this transition
wage index is implemented in a budget
neutral manner, consistent with the
proposed FY 2020 IPPS wage index
policy (84 FR 19398). We stated in the
proposed rule that we believed it was
appropriate to ensure that this proposed
wage index transition policy (that is, the
proposed CY 2020 5 percent cap on
wage index decreases) did not increase
estimated aggregate payments under the
OPPS beyond the payments that would
be made without this transition policy.
We proposed to calculate this budget
neutrality adjustment by comparing
total estimated OPPS payments using
the FY 2020 IPPS wage index, adopted
on a calendar year basis for the OPPS,
where a 5 percent cap on wage index
decreases is not applied to total
estimated OPPS payments where the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases is
applied. We stated in the proposed rule
that these two proposed wage index
budget neutrality adjustments would
maintain budget neutrality for the
proposed CY 2020 OPPS wage index
(which, as we discussed in section II.C
of the proposed rule, would use the FY
2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage index
and any adjustments, including without
limitation any adjustments finalized
under the IPPS to address wage index
disparities).
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposed
methodology for calculating the wage
index budget neutrality adjustments
discussed earlier in this section.
Therefore, for the reasons discussed
above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39428 through
39429), we are finalizing our
methodology for calculating the wage
index budget neutrality adjustments as
proposed, without modification. For CY
2020, we are finalizing an overall budget
neutrality factor of 0.9981 for wage
index changes. This adjustment is
comprised of a 0.9990 budget neutrality
adjustment, using our standard
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calculation of comparing total estimated
payments from our simulation model
using the final FY 2020 IPPS wage
indexes to those payments using the FY
2019 IPPS wage indexes, as adopted on
a calendar year basis for the OPPS as
well as a 0.9991 budget neutrality
adjustment for the CY 2020 5 percent
cap on wage index decreases to ensure
that this transition wage index is
implemented in a budget neutral
manner. We note that the final wage
index budget neutrality adjustment
figures set forth above differ from the
figures set forth in the proposed rule
due to updated data for the final rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS, we are
maintaining the current rural
adjustment policy, as discussed in
section II.E. of the proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed budget
neutrality factor for the rural adjustment
is 1.0000.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to continue
previously established policies for
implementing the cancer hospital
payment adjustment described in
section 1833(t)(18) of the Act, as
discussed in section II.F. of the
proposed rule and this final rule with
comment period. We proposed to
calculate a CY 2020 budget neutrality
adjustment factor for the cancer hospital
payment adjustment by comparing
estimated total CY 2020 payments under
section 1833(t) of the Act, including the
proposed CY 2020 cancer hospital
payment adjustment, to estimated CY
2020 total payments using the CY 2019
final cancer hospital payment
adjustment, as required under section
1833(t)(18)(B) of the Act. The proposed
CY 2020 estimated payments applying
the proposed CY 2020 cancer hospital
payment adjustment were the same as
estimated payments applying the CY
2019 final cancer hospital payment
adjustment. Therefore, we proposed to
apply a budget neutrality adjustment
factor of 0.9998 to the conversion factor
for the cancer hospital payment
adjustment. In accordance with section
16002(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act,
we stated in the proposed rule that we
are applying a budget neutrality factor
calculated as if the proposed cancer
hospital adjustment target payment-tocost ratio was 0.90, not the 0.89 target
payment-to-cost ratio we applied as
stated in section II.F. of the proposed
rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we estimated that proposed passthrough spending for drugs, biologicals,
and devices for CY 2020 would equal
approximately $268.8 million, which
represented 0.34 percent of total
projected CY 2020 OPPS spending.
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Therefore, the proposed conversion
factor would be adjusted by the
difference between the 0.14 percent
estimate of pass-through spending for
CY 2019 and the 0.34 percent estimate
of proposed pass-through spending for
CY 2020, resulting in a proposed
decrease for CY 2020 of 0.20 percent.
Proposed estimated payments for
outliers would remain at 1.0 percent of
total OPPS payments for CY 2020. We
estimated for the proposed rule that
outlier payments would be 1.03 percent
of total OPPS payments in CY 2019; the
1.00 percent for proposed outlier
payments in CY 2020 would constitute
a 0.03 percent increase in payment in
CY 2020 relative to CY 2019.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we also proposed that hospitals
that fail to meet the reporting
requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program would continue to be subject to
a further reduction of 2.0 percentage
points to the OPD fee schedule increase
factor. For hospitals that fail to meet the
requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program, we proposed to make all other
adjustments discussed above, but use a
reduced OPD fee schedule update factor
of 0.7 percent (that is, the proposed OPD
fee schedule increase factor of 2.7
percent further reduced by 2.0
percentage points). This would result in
a proposed reduced conversion factor
for CY 2020 of $79.770 for hospitals that
fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program
requirements (a difference of ¥1.628 in
the conversion factor relative to
hospitals that met the requirements).
In summary, for CY 2020, we
proposed to amend § 419.32 by adding
a new paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B)(11) to
reflect the reductions to the OPD fee
schedule increase factor that are
required for CY 2020 to satisfy the
statutory requirements of sections
1833(t)(3)(F) and (t)(3)(G)(v) of the Act.
We proposed to use a reduced
conversion factor of $79.770 in the
calculation of payments for hospitals
that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program requirements (a difference of
¥1.628 in the conversion factor relative
to hospitals that met the requirements).
For CY 2020, we proposed to use a
conversion factor of $81.398 in the
calculation of the national unadjusted
payment rates for those items and
services for which payment rates are
calculated using geometric mean costs;
that is, the proposed OPD fee schedule
increase factor of 2.7 percent for CY
2020, the required proposed wage index
budget neutrality adjustment of
approximately 0.9993, the proposed
cancer hospital payment adjustment of
0.9998, and the proposed adjustment of
¥0.20 percentage point of projected
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61183
OPPS spending for the difference in
pass-through spending that resulted in a
proposed conversion factor for CY 2020
of $81.398. We referred readers to
section XXVI.B. of the proposed rule for
a discussion of the estimated effect on
the conversion factor of a policy to pay
for 340B-acquired drugs at ASP + 3
percent, which is a policy on which we
solicited comments for potential future
rulemaking in the event of an adverse
decision on appeal in the ongoing
litigation involving our payment policy
for 340B-acquired drugs.
Comment: One commenter, a state
hospital association, asserts its member
hospitals receive payments from CMS
that are substantially lower than the
costs their members incur to provide
services. The commenter believes
underpayments occur because the CMS
hospital market basket estimate of
inflation of 2.7 percent substantially
underestimates overall health care
inflation which the commenter claims
to be between 5.5 percent and 7 percent.
The commenter also states that hospital
payments from CMS are reduced
because of payment sequestration and
the policy to reduce payment rates for
clinic visits at off-campus hospital
outpatient departments to 40 percent of
the standard OPPS payment rate. The
commenter suggests that CMS should
help hospitals in all states regain this
lost revenue by implementing a much
larger annual increase in the market
basket amount. The commenter
advocates a 4.7 percent market basket
adjustment in CY 2020, and even larger
percentage increases in following years.
Response: The percentage change in
the hospital market basket reflects the
average change in the price of goods and
services purchased by hospitals in order
to provide medical care. A general
measure of health care inflation (such as
the Consumer Price Index for Medical
Care Services) would not be appropriate
as it is not specific to hospital medical
services and is not reflective of the
input price changes experienced by
hospitals but rather the inflation
experienced by the consumer for their
medical expenses. In addition, the OPPS
conversion factor is not designed to
redress payment reductions made in a
non-budget neutral manner. The
policies cited by the commenter are
intended to reduce Medicare
expenditures. If the conversion factor
was to be increased to offset these
payment reductions, it would defeat the
intent of these policy initiatives.
Comment: A commenter expressed
their support for the proposed market
basket increase of 2.7 percent.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter.
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After reviewing the public comments
we received, we are finalizing these
proposals without modification. For CY
2020, we proposed to continue
previously established policies for
implementing the cancer hospital
payment adjustment described in
section 1833(t)(18) of the Act (discussed
in section II.F. of this final rule with
comment period). Based on the final
rule updated data used in calculating
the cancer hospital payment adjustment
in section II.F. of this final rule with
comment period, the target payment-tocost ratio for the cancer hospital
payment adjustment, which was 0.88 for
CY 2019, is 0.89 for CY 2020. As a
result, we are applying a budget
neutrality adjustment factor of 0.9999 to
the conversion factor for the cancer
hospital payment adjustment.
As a result of these finalized policies,
the OPD fee schedule increase factor for
the CY 2020 OPPS is 2.6 percent (which
reflects the 3.0 percent final estimate of
the hospital inpatient market basket
percentage increase, less the final 0.4
percentage point MFP adjustment). For
CY 2020, we are using a conversion
factor of $80.784 in the calculation of
the national unadjusted payment rates
for those items and services for which
payment rates are calculated using
geometric mean costs; that is, the OPD
fee schedule increase factor of 2.6
percent for CY 2020, the required wage
index budget neutrality adjustment of
approximately 0.9981, and the
adjustment of 0.88 percentage point of
projected OPPS spending for the
difference in pass-through spending that
results in a conversion factor for CY
2020 of $80.784.
C. Wage Index Changes
Section 1833(t)(2)(D) of the Act
requires the Secretary to determine a
wage adjustment factor to adjust the
portion of payment and coinsurance
attributable to labor-related costs for
relative differences in labor and laborrelated costs across geographic regions
in a budget neutral manner (codified at
42 CFR 419.43(a)). This portion of the
OPPS payment rate is called the OPPS
labor-related share. Budget neutrality is
discussed in section II.B. of this final
rule with comment period.
The OPPS labor-related share is 60
percent of the national OPPS payment.
This labor-related share is based on a
regression analysis that determined that,
for all hospitals, approximately 60
percent of the costs of services paid
under the OPPS were attributable to
wage costs. We confirmed that this
labor-related share for outpatient
services is appropriate during our
regression analysis for the payment
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adjustment for rural hospitals in the CY
2006 OPPS final rule with comment
period (70 FR 68553). In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39429),
we proposed to continue this policy for
the CY 2020 OPPS. We refer readers to
section II.H. of this final rule with
comment period for a description and
an example of how the wage index for
a particular hospital is used to
determine payment for the hospital. We
did not receive any public comments on
this proposal. Therefore, for the reasons
discussed above and in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39429),
we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue this policy as
discussed above for the CY 2020 OPPS.
As discussed in the claims accounting
narrative included with the supporting
documentation for this final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website), for
estimating APC costs, we standardize 60
percent of estimated claims costs for
geographic area wage variation using the
same FY 2020 pre-reclassified wage
index that that is used under the IPPS
to standardize costs. This
standardization process removes the
effects of differences in area wage levels
from the determination of a national
unadjusted OPPS payment rate and
copayment amount.
Under 42 CFR 419.41(c)(1) and
419.43(c) (published in the OPPS April
7, 2000 final rule with comment period
(65 FR 18495 and 18545)), the OPPS
adopted the final fiscal year IPPS postreclassified wage index as the calendar
year wage index for adjusting the OPPS
standard payment amounts for labor
market differences. Therefore, the wage
index that applies to a particular acute
care, short-stay hospital under the IPPS
also applies to that hospital under the
OPPS. As initially explained in the
September 8, 1998 OPPS proposed rule
(63 FR 47576), we believe that using the
IPPS wage index as the source of an
adjustment factor for the OPPS is
reasonable and logical, given the
inseparable, subordinate status of the
HOPD within the hospital overall. In
accordance with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, the IPPS wage index is updated
annually.
The Affordable Care Act contained
several provisions affecting the wage
index. These provisions were discussed
in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (76 FR 74191).
Section 10324 of the Affordable Care
Act added section 1886(d)(3)(E)(iii)(II)
to the Act, which defines a frontier State
and amended section 1833(t) of the Act
to add paragraph (19), which requires a
frontier State wage index floor of 1.00 in
certain cases, and states that the frontier
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State floor shall not be applied in a
budget neutral manner. We codified
these requirements at § 419.43(c)(2) and
(3) of our regulations. For the CY 2020
OPPS, we proposed to implement this
provision in the same manner as we
have since CY 2011. Under this policy,
the frontier State hospitals would
receive a wage index of 1.00 if the
otherwise applicable wage index
(including reclassification, the rural
floor, and rural floor budget neutrality)
is less than 1.00. Because the HOPD
receives a wage index based on the
geographic location of the specific
inpatient hospital with which it is
associated, we stated that the frontier
State wage index adjustment applicable
for the inpatient hospital also would
apply for any associated HOPD. In the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39430), we referred readers to the FY
2011 through FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rules for discussions regarding this
provision, including our methodology
for identifying which areas meet the
definition of ‘‘frontier States’’ as
provided for in section
1886(d)(3)(E)(iii)(II) of the Act: For FY
2011, 75 FR 50160 through 50161; for
FY 2012, 76 FR 51793, 51795, and
51825; for FY 2013, 77 FR 53369
through 53370; for FY 2014, 78 FR
50590 through 50591; for FY 2015, 79
FR 49971; for FY 2016, 80 FR 49498; for
FY 2017, 81 FR 56922; for FY 2018, 82
FR 38142; and for FY 2019, 83 FR
41380. We did not receive any public
comments on this proposal.
Accordingly, for the reasons discussed
above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39430), we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue to implement
the frontier State floor under the OPPS
in the same manner as we have since CY
2011.
In addition to the changes required by
the Affordable Care Act, we noted in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39430) that the FY 2020 IPPS wage
indexes continue to reflect a number of
adjustments implemented over the past
few years, including, but not limited to,
reclassification of hospitals to different
geographic areas, the rural floor
provisions, an adjustment for
occupational mix, and an adjustment to
the wage index based on commuting
patterns of employees (the out-migration
adjustment). Also, we noted that, as
discussed in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19393
through 19399), we proposed a number
of policies under the IPPS to address
wage index disparities between high
and low wage index value hospitals. In
particular, in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
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PPS proposed rule, we proposed to (1)
calculate the rural floor without
including the wage data of urban
hospitals that have reclassified as rural
under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act
(as implemented in § 412.103) (84 FR
19396 through 19398); (2) remove the
wage data of urban hospitals that have
reclassified as rural under § 412.103
from the calculation of ‘‘the wage index
for rural areas in the State’’ for purposes
of applying section 1886(d)(8)(C)(iii) of
the Act (84 FR 19398); (3) increase the
wage index values for hospitals with a
wage index below the 25th percentile
wage index value across all hospitals by
half the difference between the
otherwise applicable final wage index
value for a year for that hospital and the
25th percentile wage index value for
that year, and to offset the estimated
increase in payments to hospitals with
wage index values below the 25th
percentile by decreasing the wage index
values for hospitals with wage index
values above the 75th percentile wage
index value across all hospitals (84 FR
19394 through 19396); and (4) apply a
5-percent cap for FY 2020 on any
decrease in a hospital’s final wage index
from the hospital’s final wage index in
FY 2019, as a proposed transition wage
index to help mitigate any significant
negative impacts on hospitals (84 FR
19398). In addition, in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR
19398), we proposed to apply a budget
neutrality adjustment to the
standardized amount so that our
proposed transition wage index for
hospitals that may be negatively
impacted (described in item (4) above)
would be implemented in a budget
neutral manner. Furthermore, in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 19398 through 19399), we noted that
our proposed adjustment relating to the
rural floor calculation also would be
budget neutral. We referred readers to
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (84 FR 19373 through 19399) for a
detailed discussion of all proposed
changes to the FY 2020 IPPS wage
indexes.
Furthermore, as discussed in the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR
49951 through 49963) and in each
subsequent IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule,
including the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (83 FR 41362), the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) issued
revisions to the labor market area
delineations on February 28, 2013
(based on 2010 Decennial Census data),
that included a number of significant
changes, such as new Core Based
Statistical Areas (CBSAs), urban
counties that became rural, rural
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counties that became urban, and
existing CBSAs that were split apart
(OMB Bulletin 13–01). This bulletin can
be found at: https://
obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/
default/files/omb/bulletins/2013/b1301.pdf. In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (79 FR 49950 through 49985),
for purposes of the IPPS, we adopted the
use of the OMB statistical area
delineations contained in OMB Bulletin
No. 13–01, effective October 1, 2014.
For purposes of the OPPS, in the CY
2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66826 through
66828), we adopted the use of the OMB
statistical area delineations contained in
OMB Bulletin No. 13–01, effective
January 1, 2015, beginning with the CY
2015 OPPS wage indexes. In the FY
2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81 FR
56913), we adopted revisions to
statistical areas contained in OMB
Bulletin No. 15–01, issued on July 15,
2015, which provided updates to and
superseded OMB Bulletin No. 13–01
that was issued on February 28, 2013.
For purposes of the OPPS, in the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79598), we
adopted the revisions to the OMB
statistical area delineations contained in
OMB Bulletin No. 15–01, effective
January 1, 2017, beginning with the CY
2017 OPPS wage indexes.
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued
OMB Bulletin No. 17–01, which
provided updates to and superseded
OMB Bulletin No. 15–01 that was issued
on July 15, 2015. The attachments to
OMB Bulletin No. 17–01 provide
detailed information on the update to
the statistical areas since July 15, 2015,
and are based on the application of the
2010 Standards for Delineating
Metropolitan and Micropolitan
Statistical Areas to Census Bureau
population estimates for July 1, 2014
and July 1, 2015. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58863 through 58865), we adopted
the updates set forth in OMB Bulletin
No. 17–01, effective January 1, 2019,
beginning with the CY 2019 wage index.
We continue to believe that it is
important for the OPPS to use the latest
labor market area delineations available
as soon as is reasonably possible in
order to maintain a more accurate and
up-to-date payment system that reflects
the reality of population shifts and labor
market conditions. For a complete
discussion of the adoption of the
updates set forth in OMB Bulletin No.
17–01, we refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58864 through 58865).
As we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42301), for
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the FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes, we are
using the OMB delineations that were
adopted, beginning with FY 2015 (based
on the revised delineations issued in
OMB Bulletin No. 13–01) to calculate
the area wage indexes, with updates as
reflected in OMB Bulletin Nos. 15–01
and 17–01. Similarly, in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431),
for the proposed CY 2020 OPPS wage
indexes, we proposed to continue to use
the OMB delineations that were adopted
under the OPPS, beginning with CY
2015 (based on the revised delineations
issued in OMB Bulletin No. 13–01) to
calculate the area wage indexes, with
updates as reflected in OMB Bulletin
Nos. 15–01 and 17–01. We did not
receive any public comments on our
proposal. Accordingly, for the reasons
discussed above and in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39430
through 39431), we are finalizing our
proposal to continue to use the OMB
delineations that were adopted
beginning with CY 2015 to calculate
area wage indexes under the OPPS, with
updates as reflected in the OMB
Bulletin Nos. 15–01, and 17–01.
CBSAs are made up of one or more
constituent counties. Each CBSA and
constituent county has its own unique
identifying codes. The FY 2018 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (82 FR 38130)
discussed the two different lists of codes
to identify counties: Social Security
Administration (SSA) codes and Federal
Information Processing Standard (FIPS)
codes. Historically, CMS listed and used
SSA and FIPS county codes to identify
and crosswalk counties to CBSA codes
for purposes of the IPPS and OPPS wage
indexes. However, the SSA county
codes are no longer being maintained
and updated, although the FIPS codes
continue to be maintained by the U.S.
Census Bureau. The Census Bureau’s
most current statistical area information
is derived from ongoing census data
received since 2010; the most recent
data are from 2015. The Census Bureau
maintains a complete list of changes to
counties or county equivalent entities
on the website at: https://
www.census.gov/geo/reference/countychanges.html (which, as of May 6, 2019,
migrated to: https://www.census.gov/
programs-surveys/geography.html). In
the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(82 FR 38130), for purposes of
crosswalking counties to CBSAs for the
IPPS wage index, we finalized our
proposal to discontinue the use of the
SSA county codes and begin using only
the FIPS county codes. Similarly, for the
purposes of crosswalking counties to
CBSAs for the OPPS wage index, in the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
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comment period (82 FR 59260), we
finalized our proposal to discontinue
the use of SSA county codes and begin
using only the FIPS county codes. For
CY 2020, under the OPPS, we are
continuing to use only the FIPS county
codes for purposes of crosswalking
counties to CBSAs.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39431), we proposed to use
the FY 2020 hospital IPPS postreclassified wage index for urban and
rural areas as the wage index for the
OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment
rate and the copayment standardized
amount for CY 2020. Therefore, we
stated in the proposed rule that any
adjustments for the FY 2020 IPPS postreclassified wage index, including, but
not limited to, any policies finalized
under the IPPS to address wage index
disparities between low and high wage
index value hospitals, would be
reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS
wage index beginning on January 1,
2020. (We referred readers to the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 19373 through 19399) and the
proposed FY 2020 hospital wage index
files posted on the CMS website.) With
regard to budget neutrality for the CY
2020 OPPS wage index, we referred
readers to section II.B. of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We stated
that we continue to believe that using
the IPPS wage index as the source of an
adjustment factor for the OPPS is
reasonable and logical, given the
inseparable, subordinate status of the
HOPD within the hospital overall.
Summarized below are the comments
we received regarding our proposal to
use the final FY 2020 hospital IPPS
post-reclassified wage index for urban
and rural areas as the wage index for the
OPPS, including any adjustments for the
final FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified
wage index as discussed above, along
with our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS adopting the finalized
post-reclassified wage index from the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule for
use under the OPPS. Many of these
commenters noted that the gap in
payment between rural and urban
hospitals has contributed to disparities
in care and noted that increasing the
wage index for hospitals with wage
index values below the 25th percentile
wage index value will help to lessen the
gap. Some of these commenters noted
that this change will help rural areas
have access to quality, affordable health
care. One commenter supported the
proposal to increase the wage index for
hospitals with wage index values below
the 25th percentile, but wanted CMS to
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consider this solution temporary until
the wage index is more equitable
between hospitals.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. In response to the
comment that CMS should consider the
increase in the wage index for hospitals
with wage index values below the 25th
percentile wage index value (that it, low
wage index hospitals) temporary until
the wage index is more equitable
between hospitals, as we stated in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42326 through 42327), the increase
in the IPPS wage index for low wage
index hospitals is not intended to be
permanent. As we stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42326
through 42327), we expect that this
policy will be in place for at least 4
years in order to allow employee
compensation increases implemented
by low wage index hospitals sufficient
time to be reflected in the wage index
calculation. We stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42327)
that, once there has been sufficient time
for that increased employee
compensation to be reflected in the
wage data, there should not be a
continuing need for this policy.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to increase the
wage index for low wage index
hospitals but wanted it implemented in
a non-budget neutral manner. They
believe this would mitigate disparities
for median wage index hospitals.
Several commenters opposed the
proposal to recalculate the wage index
to help the lowest wage hospitals. These
commenters believed that applying a
budget neutrality adjustment for all
hospitals to offset the increase in
payments for low wage index hospitals
would result in a significant loss of
resources for patient care in other
hospitals. While these commenters
understood and appreciated the goal of
the proposed changes to increase the
wage index for low wage hospitals, they
did not believe that these policies
would help rural hospitals. They
believed that certain communities
would benefit from increasing the wage
index for low wage hospitals but
believed this policy does not adequately
recognize differences in geographic
labor markets. They further claimed that
the offsetting reductions to the wage
index in some areas will hinder
hospitals’ ability to attract and recruit
quality health care practitioners.
Some commenters noted that OPPS
payments to hospitals in their respective
states would decrease by millions in CY
2020 due to the budget neutral
implementation of the increase in the
wage index for low wage hospitals.
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These commenters noted that any
reduction in Medicare payments would
force hospitals to reduce staff and/or
salary and benefits. One commenter
noted that, for many years, the
disparities among geographic areas have
continued to grow and have resulted in
challenges recruiting staff. Some
commenters recommended CMS
convene a meeting to understand all of
the challenges and issues in order to
develop a comprehensive reform of the
wage index. One commenter
recommended that, if CMS is going to
redistribute the area wage index, CMS
offset the increased wage index for very
low wage areas with a budget neutrality
adjustment to the wage index applied
evenly to all hospitals. However, this
commenter preferred that CMS not use
budget neutrality for the area wage
index. They did not believe that the
budget neutrality adjustment policy
follows statutory requirements for
adjusting the area wage index that
require CMS to address real differences
in labor costs. Several commenters
believed CMS went beyond its authority
in reallocating funding from hospitals in
high wage areas, to provide funding to
low wage area hospitals, without any
relationship to actual wage-related data
for the impacted areas. Another
commenter strongly opposed decreasing
payments to some or all hospitals to
offset an increase in the area wage index
for low wage index hospitals and did
not believe the rationale in the FY 2020
IPPS final rule supported this change.
One commenter opposed CMS making a
budget neutrality adjustment across all
hospitals as well as the transition wage
index adjustment to ensure that no
hospital’s wage index decreases by more
than 5 percent. This commenter
believed that these adjustments
negatively impact hospitals in the
bottom quartile of wage index that
would have seen a larger increase in
payment without these additional
adjustments.
Response: As we stated in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42331), the intent of the wage index
increase for hospitals with wage indexes
below the 25th percentile wage index
value across all hospitals (that is, low
wage index hospitals) is to increase the
accuracy of the wage index as a
technical adjustment, and not to use the
wage index as a policy tool to address
non-wage issues related to rural
hospitals, or the laudable goals of the
overall financial health of hospitals in
low wage areas or broader wage index
reform. As we stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we believe
the wage index increase we finalized for
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low wage index hospitals increases the
accuracy of the wage index as a relative
measure because it allows low wage
index hospitals to increase their
employee compensation in ways that we
would expect if there were no lag in
reflecting compensation adjustments in
the wage index. Thus, we stated in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that
we believe the IPPS wage index
adjustment for low wage index hospitals
will appropriately reflect the relative
hospital wage level in those areas
compared to the national average wage
level. We further stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that because
this policy is based on the actual wages
that we expect low wage index hospitals
to pay, it falls within the scope of the
authority of section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act.
However, we note that, in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42331
through 42332), we did not finalize our
budget neutrality proposal to decrease
the wage index for hospitals with wage
index values above the 75th percentile
wage index value to offset the estimated
increase in payments to low wage index
hospitals. Instead, in the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, consistent with
our current methodology for
implementing wage index budget
neutrality under the IPPS, we finalized
a budget neutrality adjustment to the
IPPS national standardized amount for
all hospitals so that the increase in the
IPPS wage index for low wage index
hospitals is implemented in a budget
neutral manner. As explained in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR42331), under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, the IPPS wage index adjustment
is required to be implemented in a
budget neutral manner. We further
noted in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule that, even if the wage index
were not required to be budget neutral,
we would consider it inappropriate to
use the wage index to increase or
decrease overall spending. Similarly,
under section 1886(t)(2)(D) and (9)(B) of
the Act, the OPPS wage index
adjustment is required to be
implemented in a budget neutral
manner. Accordingly, consistent with
the policy finalized in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing a
budget neutrality adjustment to the
conversion factor for all hospitals paid
under the OPPS so that the increase in
the OPPS wage index for low wage
index hospitals is implemented in a
budget neutral manner. We refer readers
to section II.B. of this final rule with
comment period for a discussion of
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budget neutrality. In addition, we refer
readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (84 FR 42328 through 42332)
for further discussion of the final FY
2020 IPPS wage index policies
(including the transition wage index
adjustment) and detailed responses to
similar comments.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39431), we proposed to use
the FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage
index for urban and rural areas as the
wage index under the OPPS to
determine the wage adjustments for
both the OPPS payment rate and the
copayment standardized amount.
Because we continue to believe that
using the IPPS post-reclassified wage
index as the source of the wage index
adjustment factor under the OPPS is
reasonable and logical given the
inseparable, subordinate status of the
HOPD within the hospital overall, as
proposed, we are finalizing the use of
the FY 2020 hospital IPPS postreclassified wage index for urban and
rural areas as the wage index under the
OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment
rate and the copayment standardized
amount for CY 2020. Accordingly, any
adjustments for the final FY 2020 IPPS
post-reclassified wage index, including,
but not limited to, any policies finalized
in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule to address wage index disparities
between low and high wage index value
hospitals, will be reflected in the final
CY 2020 OPPS wage index beginning on
January 1, 2020.
Comment: Several commenters noted
support for the revised rural floor policy
finalized in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
final rule. Many of these commenters
supported the proposal to exclude the
wage data of urban hospitals that
reclassify as rural in calculating the
rural floor. These commenters suggested
that including the wage data of these
hospitals in the rural floor calculation
has inflated wage index values in
certain states and that excluding the
wage data of these hospitals will have
positive effects on OPPS payment for
rural hospitals.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: A few commenters
opposed the change to exclude the wage
data of urban hospitals that have been
reclassified as rural in calculating the
IPPS rural floor. One of these
commenters believed that CMS lacks the
legal authority to remove from the rural
floor calculation the wage data of
hospitals that have been reclassified
from urban to rural as implemented in
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH final rule. This
commenter believed CMS misread the
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61187
applicable law in Section 1886(d)(8)(E)
of the Act. One of the commenter’s
believed that removing the urban to
rural reclassifications from the
calculation of the rural floor penalizes
hospitals that are allowed to reclassify
under HHS authority.
One commenter believed that CMS
should put more structure around the
rural floor policy and should not apply
the rural floor in primarily urban states
with only one or two rural facilities. The
commenter believed that this would
reduce the potential for gaming the
system in determining an equitable
wage adjustment.
Response: We addressed similar
comments in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (84 FR 42334 through
42336). As provided in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH final rule (84 FR 42334), in
the absence of broader wage index
reform from Congress, we believe it is
appropriate to revise the rural floor
calculation as part of an effort to reduce
wage index disparities. Regarding
CMS’s statutory authority to exclude the
wage data of urban hospitals reclassified
as rural from the IPPS rural floor
calculation, as we stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42334), we believe our calculation
methodology is permissible under
section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act (as
implemented in § 412.103) and the rural
floor statute (section 4410 of Pub. L.
105–33). Further, as we discussed in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42336), we do not believe this policy
penalizes or adversely impacts urban
hospitals that have reclassified as rural.
We refer readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42332
through 42336) for further discussion of
this policy and detailed responses to
similar comments. We note that impact
files and supporting data files available
on the FY 2020 IPPS Final Rule Home
Page provide the data necessary to
understand the impact of the finalized
policies under the IPPS. Furthermore,
we appreciate the comment that CMS
should not apply the rural floor in
primarily urban states with only one or
two rural facilities; however, because
we consider this comment to be outside
the scope of the CY 2020 OPPS wage
index proposals, we are not addressing
it in this final rule with comment
period.
As we discussed above, we continue
to believe that using the IPPS postreclassified wage index as the source of
the wage index adjustment factor under
the OPPS is reasonable and logical given
the inseparable, subordinate status of
the HOPD within the hospital overall.
Thus, as proposed, we are using the FY
2020 hospital IPPS post-reclassified
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wage index for urban and rural areas as
the wage index under the OPPS to
determine the wage adjustments for
both the OPPS payment rate and the
copayment standardized amount for CY
2020. Accordingly, as we proposed, any
adjustments for the final FY 2020 IPPS
post-reclassified wage index, including,
but not limited to, the revised rural floor
calculation methodology and other IPPS
wage index policies finalized in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to
address wage index disparities, will be
reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS
wage index beginning on January 1,
2020.
After considering the public
comments received, for the reasons
discussed earlier in this section and in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we are finalizing without modification
our proposal to use the final FY 2020
IPPS post-reclassified wage index for
urban and rural areas as the wage index
under the OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment
rate and the copayment standardized
amount for CY 2020. Accordingly, as we
proposed, any adjustments for the final
FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage
index (as set forth in the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule, 84 FR 42300
through 42339), including, but not
limited to, any policies finalized in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to
address wage index disparities between
low and high wage index value
hospitals (as set forth at 84 FR 42300
through 42339), will be reflected in the
final CY 2020 OPPS wage index
beginning on January 1, 2020. As
discussed above, we note that in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42325 through 42332), we did not
finalize our budget neutrality proposal
to decrease the wage index for hospitals
with wage index values above the 75th
percentile wage index value to offset the
estimated increase in payments to
hospitals with wage index values below
the 25th percentile wage index value,
and thus this budget neutrality policy
will not be applied under the OPPS.
Instead, in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule, consistent with our current
methodology for implementing IPPS
wage index budget neutrality, we
finalized a budget neutrality adjustment
to the IPPS national standardized
amount for all hospitals so that the
increase in the IPPS wage index for low
wage index hospitals is implemented in
a budget neutral manner. Consistent
with this IPPS policy, in this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we are finalizing a budget
neutrality adjustment to the conversion
factor for all hospitals paid under the
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OPPS so that the increase in the OPPS
wage index for low wage index
hospitals is implemented in a budget
neutral manner. We refer readers to
section II.B. of this final rule with
comment period for a discussion of
budget neutrality.
Hospitals that are paid under the
OPPS, but not under the IPPS, do not
have an assigned hospital wage index
under the IPPS. Therefore, for non-IPPS
hospitals paid under the OPPS, it is our
longstanding policy to assign the wage
index that would be applicable if the
hospital were paid under the IPPS,
based on its geographic location and any
applicable wage index adjustments. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39431), we proposed to continue
this policy for CY 2020, and included a
brief summary of the major proposed FY
2020 IPPS wage index policies and
adjustments that we proposed to apply
to these hospitals under the OPPS for
CY 2020, which we have summarized
below. We refer readers to the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42300
through 42339) for a detailed discussion
of the final changes to the FY 2020 IPPS
wage indexes.
It has been our longstanding policy to
allow non-IPPS hospitals paid under the
OPPS to qualify for the out-migration
adjustment if they are located in a
section 505 out-migration county
(section 505 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA)).
Applying this adjustment is consistent
with our policy of adopting IPPS wage
index policies for hospitals paid under
the OPPS. We note that, because nonIPPS hospitals cannot reclassify, they
are eligible for the out-migration wage
index adjustment if they are located in
a section 505 out-migration county. This
is the same out-migration adjustment
policy that applies if the hospital were
paid under the IPPS. For CY 2020, we
proposed to continue our policy of
allowing non-IPPS hospitals paid under
the OPPS to qualify for the outmigration adjustment if they are located
in a section 505 out-migration county
(section 505 of the MMA). In addition,
for non-IPPS hospitals paid under the
OPPS, we proposed to apply any
policies that are finalized under the
IPPS relating to wage index disparities.
We also proposed that the wage index
that would apply to non-IPPS hospitals
for CY 2020 would include the rural
floor adjustment. We did not receive
any public comments on these
proposals. Accordingly, for the reasons
discussed above and in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431),
we are finalizing these proposals
without modifications.
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For CMHCs, for CY 2020, we
proposed to continue to calculate the
wage index by using the postreclassification IPPS wage index based
on the CBSA where the CMHC is
located. We also proposed to apply any
policies that are finalized under the
IPPS relating to wage index disparities.
In addition, we proposed that the wage
index that would apply to CMHCs for
CY 2020 would include the rural floor
adjustment. Also, we proposed that the
wage index that would apply to CMHCs
would not include the out-migration
adjustment because that adjustment
only applies to hospitals. We did not
receive any public comments on these
proposals. Therefore, for the reasons
discussed above and in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431),
we are finalizing these proposals
without modifications.
Table 4 associated with the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (available via
the internet on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
AcuteInpatientPPS/)
identifies counties eligible for the outmigration adjustment. Table 2
associated with the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (available for download
via the website above) identifies IPPS
hospitals that will receive the outmigration adjustment for FY 2020. We
are including the out-migration
adjustment information from Table 2
associated with the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule as Addendum L to this
final rule with comment period with the
addition of non-IPPS hospitals that will
receive the section 505 out-migration
adjustment under this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
Addendum L is available via the
internet on the CMS website. We refer
readers to the CMS website for the OPPS
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/. At
this link, readers will find a link to the
final FY 2020 IPPS wage index tables
and Addendum L.
D. Statewide Average Default Cost-toCharge Ratios (CCRs)
In addition to using CCRs to estimate
costs from charges on claims for
ratesetting, CMS uses overall hospitalspecific CCRs calculated from the
hospital’s most recent cost report to
determine outlier payments, payments
for pass-through devices, and monthly
interim transitional corridor payments
under the OPPS during the PPS year.
For certain hospitals, under the
regulations at 42 CFR 419.43(d)(5)(iii),
CMS uses the statewide average default
CCRs to determine the payments
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mentioned earlier if it is unable to
determine an accurate CCR for a
hospital in certain circumstances. This
includes hospitals that are new,
hospitals that have not accepted
assignment of an existing hospital’s
provider agreement, and hospitals that
have not yet submitted a cost report.
CMS also uses the statewide average
default CCRs to determine payments for
hospitals whose CCR falls outside the
predetermined ceiling threshold for a
valid CCR or for hospitals in which the
most recent cost report reflects an allinclusive rate status (Medicare Claims
Processing Manual (Pub. 100–04),
Chapter 4, Section 10.11).
We discussed our policy for using
default CCRs, including setting the
ceiling threshold for a valid CCR, in the
CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (73 FR 68594 through
68599) in the context of our adoption of
an outlier reconciliation policy for cost
reports beginning on or after January 1,
2009. For details on our process for
calculating the statewide average CCRs,
we referred readers to the CY 2020
OPPS proposed rule Claims Accounting
Narrative that is posted on the CMS
website. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39432), we
proposed to update the default ratios for
CY 2020 using the most recent cost
report data. We indicated that we would
update these ratios in this final rule
with comment period if more recent
cost report data are available.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal to use
statewide average default CCRs if we
cannot calculate a CCR for a hospital
and to use these CCRs to adjust charges
on claims to costs for setting the final
CY 2020 OPPS payment weights.
Therefore, we finalizing our proposal
without modification.
As we stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39432), we
are no longer publishing a table in the
Federal Register containing the
statewide average CCRs in the annual
OPPS proposed rule and final rule.
These CCRs with the upper limit will be
available for download with each OPPS
CY proposed rule and final rule on the
CMS website. We refer readers to the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/
Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-andNotices.html; click on the link on the
left of the page titled ‘‘Hospital
Outpatient Regulations and Notices’’
and then select the relevant regulation
to download the statewide CCRs and
upper limit in the downloads section of
the web page.
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E. Adjustment for Rural Sole
Community Hospitals (SCHs) and
Essential Access Community Hospitals
(EACHs) Under Section 1833(t)(13)(B) of
the Act for CY 2020
In the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with
comment period (70 FR 68556), we
finalized a payment increase for rural
sole community hospitals (SCHs) of 7.1
percent for all services and procedures
paid under the OPPS, excluding drugs,
biologicals, brachytherapy sources, and
devices paid under the pass-through
payment policy, in accordance with
section 1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act, as
added by section 411 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and
Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub.
L. 108–173). Section 1833(t)(13) of the
Act provided the Secretary the authority
to make an adjustment to OPPS
payments for rural hospitals, effective
January 1, 2006, if justified by a study
of the difference in costs by APC
between hospitals in rural areas and
hospitals in urban areas. Our analysis
showed a difference in costs for rural
SCHs. Therefore, for the CY 2006 OPPS,
we finalized a payment adjustment for
rural SCHs of 7.1 percent for all services
and procedures paid under the OPPS,
excluding separately payable drugs and
biologicals, brachytherapy sources,
items paid at charges reduced to costs,
and devices paid under the passthrough payment policy, in accordance
with section 1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act.
In the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (71 FR 68010 and
68227), for purposes of receiving this
rural adjustment, we revised our
regulations at § 419.43(g) to clarify that
essential access community hospitals
(EACHs) are also eligible to receive the
rural SCH adjustment, assuming these
entities otherwise meet the rural
adjustment criteria. Currently, two
hospitals are classified as EACHs, and
as of CY 1998, under section 4201(c) of
Public Law 105–33, a hospital can no
longer become newly classified as an
EACH.
This adjustment for rural SCHs is
budget neutral and applied before
calculating outlier payments and
copayments. We stated in the CY 2006
OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68560) that we would not
reestablish the adjustment amount on an
annual basis, but we may review the
adjustment in the future and, if
appropriate, would revise the
adjustment. We provided the same 7.1
percent adjustment to rural SCHs,
including EACHs, again in CYs 2008
through 2019. Further, in the CY 2009
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (73 FR 68590), we updated the
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regulations at § 419.43(g)(4) to specify,
in general terms, that items paid at
charges adjusted to costs by application
of a hospital-specific CCR are excluded
from the 7.1 percent payment
adjustment.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 58870 through 58871), for
the CY 2020 OPPS, we proposed to
continue the current policy of a 7.1
percent payment adjustment that is
done in a budget neutral manner for
rural SCHs, including EACHs, for all
services and procedures paid under the
OPPS, excluding separately payable
drugs and biologicals, brachytherapy
sources, items paid at charges reduced
to costs, and devices paid under the
pass-through payment policy.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to continue the
7.1 percent payment adjustment.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS make the 7.1 percent rural
adjustment permanent. The commenter
appreciated the policy that CMS
adopted in CY 2019 where we stated
that the 7.1 percent rural adjustment
would continue to be in place until our
data support establishing a different
rural adjustment percentage. However,
the commenter believed that this policy
still does not provide enough certainty
for rural SCHs and EACHs to know
whether they should take into account
the rural SCH adjustment when
attempting to calculate expected
revenues for their hospital budgets.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their input. We believe that our
currrent policy, which states that the 7.1
percent payment adjustment for rural
SCHs and EACHs will remain in effect
until our data show that a different
percentage for the rural payment
adjustment is necessary, provides
sufficient budget predictability for rural
SCHs and EACHs. Providers would
receive notice in a proposed rule before
any changes to the rural adjustment
percentage would be implemented.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS expand the payment
adjustment for rural SCHs and EACHs to
additional types of hospitals. One
commenter requested that the payment
adjustment apply to include urban SCHs
because, according to the commenter,
urban SCHs care for patient populations
similar to rural SCHs and EACHs, face
similar financial challenges to rural
SCHs and EACHs, and act as safety net
providers for rural areas despite their
designation as urban providers. Another
commenter requested that the payment
adjustment also apply to Medicaredependent hospitals (MDHs) because,
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according to the commenter, these
hospitals face similar financial
challenges to rural SCHs and EACHs,
and MDHs play a similar safety net role
to rural SCHs and EACHs, especially for
Medicare. One commenter requested
that payment rates for OPPS services for
all rural hospitals be increased to reduce
financial vulnerability for rural
hospitals related to the high share of
Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries
they serve.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. However, the
analysis we did to compare costs of
urban providers to those of rural
providers did not support an add-on
adjustment for providers other than
rural SCHs and EACHs. In addition, our
follow-up analyses performed in recent
years have not shown differences in
costs for all services for any of the
additional types of providers mentioned
by the commenters. Accordingly, we do
not believe we currently have a basis to
expand the payment adjustment to any
providers other than rural SCHs and
EACHs.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue the current
policy of a 7.1 percent payment
adjustment that is done in a budget
neutral manner for rural SCHs,
including EACHs, for all services and
procedures paid under the OPPS,
excluding separately payable drugs and
biologicals, devices paid under the passthrough payment policy, and items paid
at charges reduced to costs.
F. Payment Adjustment for Certain
Cancer Hospitals for CY 2020
1. Background
Since the inception of the OPPS,
which was authorized by the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105–
33), Medicare has paid the 11 hospitals
that meet the criteria for cancer
hospitals identified in section
1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act under the
OPPS for covered outpatient hospital
services. These cancer hospitals are
exempted from payment under the IPPS.
With the Medicare, Medicaid and
SCHIP Balanced Budget Refinement Act
of 1999 (Pub. L. 106–113), Congress
established section 1833(t)(7) of the Act,
‘‘Transitional Adjustment to Limit
Decline in Payment,’’ to determine
OPPS payments to cancer and children’s
hospitals based on their pre-BBA
payment amount (often referred to as
‘‘held harmless’’).
As required under section
1833(t)(7)(D)(ii) of the Act, a cancer
hospital receives the full amount of the
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difference between payments for
covered outpatient services under the
OPPS and a ‘‘pre-BBA amount.’’ That is,
cancer hospitals are permanently held
harmless to their ‘‘pre-BBA amount,’’
and they receive transitional outpatient
payments (TOPs) or hold harmless
payments to ensure that they do not
receive a payment that is lower in
amount under the OPPS than the
payment amount they would have
received before implementation of the
OPPS, as set forth in section
1833(t)(7)(F) of the Act. The ‘‘pre-BBA
amount’’ is the product of the hospital’s
reasonable costs for covered outpatient
services occurring in the current year
and the base payment-to-cost ratio (PCR)
for the hospital defined in section
1833(t)(7)(F)(ii) of the Act. The ‘‘preBBA amount’’ and the determination of
the base PCR are defined at 42 CFR
419.70(f). TOPs are calculated on
Worksheet E, Part B, of the Hospital
Cost Report or the Hospital Health Care
Complex Cost Report (Form CMS–2552–
96 or Form CMS–2552–10,
respectively), as applicable each year.
Section 1833(t)(7)(I) of the Act exempts
TOPs from budget neutrality
calculations.
Section 3138 of the Affordable Care
Act amended section 1833(t) of the Act
by adding a new paragraph (18), which
instructs the Secretary to conduct a
study to determine if, under the OPPS,
outpatient costs incurred by cancer
hospitals described in section
1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act with respect
to APC groups exceed outpatient costs
incurred by other hospitals furnishing
services under section 1833(t) of the
Act, as determined appropriate by the
Secretary. Section 1833(t)(18)(A) of the
Act requires the Secretary to take into
consideration the cost of drugs and
biologicals incurred by cancer hospitals
and other hospitals. Section
1833(t)(18)(B) of the Act provides that,
if the Secretary determines that cancer
hospitals’ costs are higher than those of
other hospitals, the Secretary shall
provide an appropriate adjustment
under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to
reflect these higher costs. In 2011, after
conducting the study required by
section 1833(t)(18)(A) of the Act, we
determined that outpatient costs
incurred by the 11 specified cancer
hospitals were greater than the costs
incurred by other OPPS hospitals. For a
complete discussion regarding the
cancer hospital cost study, we refer
readers to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (76 FR 74200
through 74201).
Based on these findings, we finalized
a policy to provide a payment
adjustment to the 11 specified cancer
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hospitals that reflects their higher
outpatient costs, as discussed in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74202 through
74206). Specifically, we adopted a
policy to provide additional payments
to the cancer hospitals so that each
cancer hospital’s final PCR for services
provided in a given calendar year is
equal to the weighted average PCR
(which we refer to as the ‘‘target PCR’’)
for other hospitals paid under the OPPS.
The target PCR is set in advance of the
calendar year and is calculated using
the most recently submitted or settled
cost report data that are available at the
time of final rulemaking for the calendar
year. The amount of the payment
adjustment is made on an aggregate
basis at cost report settlement. We note
that the changes made by section
1833(t)(18) of the Act do not affect the
existing statutory provisions that
provide for TOPs for cancer hospitals.
The TOPs are assessed, as usual, after
all payments, including the cancer
hospital payment adjustment, have been
made for a cost reporting period. For
CYs 2012 and 2013, the target PCR for
purposes of the cancer hospital payment
adjustment was 0.91. For CY 2014, the
target PCR was 0.90. For CY 2015, the
target PCR was 0.90. For CY 2016, the
target PCR was 0.92, as discussed in the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70362 through
70363). For CY 2017, the target PCR was
0.91, as discussed in the CY 2017 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (81
FR 79603 through 79604). For CY 2018,
the target PCR was 0.88, as discussed in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59265 through
59266). For CY 2019, the target PCR was
0.88, as discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58871 through 58873).
2. Policy for CY 2020
Section 16002(b) of the 21st Century
Cures Act (Pub. L. 114–255) amended
section 1833(t)(18) of the Act by adding
subparagraph (C), which requires that in
applying § 419.43(i) (that is, the
payment adjustment for certain cancer
hospitals) for services furnished on or
after January 1, 2018, the target PCR
adjustment be reduced by 1.0
percentage point less than what would
otherwise apply. Section 16002(b) also
provides that, in addition to the
percentage reduction, the Secretary may
consider making an additional
percentage point reduction to the target
PCR that takes into account payment
rates for applicable items and services
described under section 1833(t)(21)(C)
of the Act for hospitals that are not
cancer hospitals described under
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section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act.
Further, in making any budget
neutrality adjustment under section
1833(t) of the Act, the Secretary shall
not take into account the reduced
expenditures that result from
application of section 1833(t)(18)(C) of
the Act.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39433), for CY 2020, we
proposed to provide additional
payments to the 11 specified cancer
hospitals so that each cancer hospital’s
final PCR is equal to the weighted
average PCR (or ‘‘target PCR’’) for the
other OPPS hospitals, using the most
recent submitted or settled cost report
data that were available at the time of
the development of the proposed rule,
reduced by 1.0 percentage point, to
comply with section 16002(b) of the
21st Century Cures Act.
We did not propose an additional
reduction beyond the 1.0 percentage
point reduction required by section
16002(b) for CY 2020. To calculate the
proposed CY 2020 target PCR, we are
using the same extract of cost report
data from HCRIS, as discussed in
section II.A. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule and this final rule with
comment period, used to estimate costs
for the CY 2020 OPPS. Using these cost
report data, we included data from
Worksheet E, Part B, for each hospital,
using data from each hospital’s most
recent cost report, whether as submitted
or settled.
We then limited the dataset to the
hospitals with CY 2018 claims data that
we used to model the impact of the
proposed CY 2020 APC relative
payment weights (3,770 hospitals)
because it is appropriate to use the same
set of hospitals that are being used to
calibrate the modeled CY 2020 OPPS.
The cost report data for the hospitals in
this dataset were from cost report
periods with fiscal year ends ranging
from 2016 to 2018. We then removed
the cost report data of the 49 hospitals
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located in Puerto Rico from our dataset
because we did not believe their cost
structure reflected the costs of most
hospitals paid under the OPPS, and,
therefore, their inclusion may bias the
calculation of hospital-weighted
statistics. We also removed the cost
report data of 23 hospitals because these
hospitals had cost report data that were
not complete (missing aggregate OPPS
payments, missing aggregate cost data,
or missing both), so that all cost reports
in the study would have both the
payment and cost data necessary to
calculate a PCR for each hospital,
leading to a proposed analytic file of
3,539 hospitals with cost report data.
Using this smaller dataset of cost
report data, we estimated that, on
average, the OPPS payments to other
hospitals furnishing services under the
OPPS were approximately 90 percent of
reasonable cost (weighted average PCR
of 0.90). Therefore, after applying the
1.0 percentage point reduction, as
required by section 16002(b) of the 21st
Century Cures Act, we proposed that the
payment amount associated with the
cancer hospital payment adjustment to
be determined at cost report settlement
would be the additional payment
needed to result in a proposed target
PCR equal to 0.89 for each cancer
hospital.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposals. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposed cancer
hospital payment adjustment
methodology without modification. For
this final rule with comment period, we
are using the most recent cost report
data through June 30, 2019 to update the
adjustment. This updated yields a target
PCR of 0.90. We limited the dataset to
hospitals with CY 2018 claims data that
we used to model the impact of the CY
2020 APC relative payment weights
(3,763) because it is appropriate to use
the same set of hospitals that we are
using to calibrate the modeled CY 2020
OPPS. The cost report data for the
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hospitals in the dataset were from cost
report periods with fiscal years ends
ranging from 2010 to 2018. We then
removed the cost report data of the 46
hospitals located in Puerto Rico from
our dataset because we do not believe
their cost structure reflects the cost of
most hospitals paid under the OPPS
and, therefore, their inclusion may bias
the calculation of hospital-weighted
statistics. We also removed the cost
report data of 21 hospitals because these
hospitals had cost report data that were
not complete (missing aggregate OPPS
payments, missing aggregate cost data,
or missing both), so that all cost report
in the study would have both the
payment and cost data necessary to
calculate a PCR for each hospital,
leading to an analytic file of 3,523
hospitals with cost report data.
Using this smaller dataset of cost
report data, we estimated a target PCR
of 0.90. Therefore, after applying the 1.0
percentage point reduction as required
by section 1602(b) of the 21st Century
Cures Act, we are finalizing that the
payment amount associated with the
cancer hospital adjustment to be
determined at cost report settlement
will be the additional payment needed
to result in a PCR equal to 0.89 for each
cancer hospital.
Table 7 shows the estimated
percentage increase in OPPS payments
to each cancer hospital for CY 2020, due
to the cancer hospital payment
adjustment policy. The actual amount of
the CY 2020 cancer hospital payment
adjustment for each cancer hospital will
be determined at cost report settlement
and will depend on each hospital’s CY
2020 payments and costs. We note that
the requirements contained in section
1833(t)(18) of the Act do not affect the
existing statutory provisions that
provide for TOPs for cancer hospitals.
The TOPs will be assessed, as usual,
after all payments, including the cancer
hospital payment adjustment, have been
made for a cost reporting period.
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G. Hospital Outpatient Outlier
Payments
1. Background
The OPPS provides outlier payments
to hospitals to help mitigate the
financial risk associated with high-cost
and complex procedures, where a very
costly service could present a hospital
with significant financial loss. As
explained in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR
66832 through 66834), we set our
projected target for aggregate outlier
payments at 1.0 percent of the estimated
aggregate total payments under the
OPPS for the prospective year. Outlier
payments are provided on a service-byservice basis when the cost of a service
exceeds the APC payment amount
multiplier threshold (the APC payment
amount multiplied by a certain amount)
as well as the APC payment amount
plus a fixed-dollar amount threshold
(the APC payment plus a certain amount
of dollars). In CY 2019, the outlier
threshold was met when the hospital’s
cost of furnishing a service exceeded
1.75 times (the multiplier threshold) the
APC payment amount and exceeded the
APC payment amount plus $4,825 (the
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fixed-dollar amount threshold) (83 FR
58874 through 58875). If the cost of a
service exceeds both the multiplier
threshold and the fixed-dollar
threshold, the outlier payment is
calculated as 50 percent of the amount
by which the cost of furnishing the
service exceeds 1.75 times the APC
payment amount. Beginning with CY
2009 payments, outlier payments are
subject to a reconciliation process
similar to the IPPS outlier reconciliation
process for cost reports, as discussed in
the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (73 FR 68594 through
68599).
It has been our policy to report the
actual amount of outlier payments as a
percent of total spending in the claims
being used to model the OPPS. Our
estimate of total outlier payments as a
percent of total CY 2018 OPPS
payments, using CY 2018 claims
available for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39434 through
39435) was approximately 1.0 percent of
the total aggregated OPPS payments.
Therefore, for CY 2018, we estimated
that we paid the outlier target of 1.0
percent of total aggregated OPPS
payments. Using an updated claims
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dataset for this CY 2020 OPPS final rule
with comment period, we estimate that
we paid approximately 1.00 percent of
the total aggregated OPPS payments in
outliers for CY 2018.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, using CY 2018 claims data and CY
2019 payment rates, we estimated that
the aggregate outlier payments for CY
2019 would be approximately 1.03
percent of the total CY 2019 OPPS
payments. We provided estimated CY
2020 outlier payments for hospitals and
CMHCs with claims included in the
claims data that we used to model
impacts in the Hospital–Specific
Impacts—Provider-Specific Data file on
the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatient
PPS/.
2. Outlier Calculation for CY 2020
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39434 through 39435), for
CY 2020, we proposed to continue our
policy of estimating outlier payments to
be 1.0 percent of the estimated aggregate
total payments under the OPPS. We
proposed that a portion of that 1.0
percent, an amount equal to less than
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0.01 percent of outlier payments (or
0.0001 percent of total OPPS payments),
would be allocated to CMHCs for PHP
outlier payments. This is the amount of
estimated outlier payments that would
result from the proposed CMHC outlier
threshold as a proportion of total
estimated OPPS outlier payments. As
discussed in section VIII.C. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39435), we proposed to continue our
longstanding policy that if a CMHC’s
cost for partial hospitalization services,
paid under APC 5853 (Partial
Hospitalization for CMHCs), exceeds
3.40 times the payment rate for
proposed APC 5853, the outlier
payment would be calculated as 50
percent of the amount by which the cost
exceeds 3.40 times the proposed APC
5853 payment rate.
For further discussion of CMHC
outlier payments, we refer readers to
section VIII.C. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule and this final rule
with comment period.
To ensure that the estimated CY 2020
aggregate outlier payments would equal
1.0 percent of estimated aggregate total
payments under the OPPS, we proposed
that the hospital outlier threshold be set
so that outlier payments would be
triggered when a hospital’s cost of
furnishing a service exceeds 1.75 times
the APC payment amount and exceeds
the APC payment amount plus $4,950.
We calculated the proposed fixeddollar threshold of $4,950 using the
standard methodology most recently
used for CY 2019 (83 FR 58874 through
58875). For purposes of estimating
outlier payments for the proposed rule,
we used the hospital-specific overall
ancillary CCRs available in the April
2019 update to the Outpatient ProviderSpecific File (OPSF). The OPSF
contains provider-specific data, such as
the most current CCRs, which are
maintained by the MACs and used by
the OPPS Pricer to pay claims. The
claims that we use to model each OPPS
update lag by 2 years.
In order to estimate the CY 2020
hospital outlier payments for the
proposed rule, we inflated the charges
on the CY 2018 claims using the same
inflation factor of 1.11189 that we used
to estimate the IPPS fixed-dollar outlier
threshold for the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19596). We
used an inflation factor of 1.05446 to
estimate CY 2019 charges from the CY
2018 charges reported on CY 2018
claims. The methodology for
determining this charge inflation factor
is discussed in the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (83 FR 41717 through
41718). As we stated in the CY 2005
OPPS final rule with comment period
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(69 FR 65845), we believe that the use
of these charge inflation factors is
appropriate for the OPPS because, with
the exception of the inpatient routine
service cost centers, hospitals use the
same ancillary and outpatient cost
centers to capture costs and charges for
inpatient and outpatient services.
As noted in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (71 FR
68011), we are concerned that we could
systematically overestimate the OPPS
hospital outlier threshold if we did not
apply a CCR inflation adjustment factor.
Therefore, we proposed to apply the
same CCR inflation adjustment factor
that we proposed to apply for the FY
2020 IPPS outlier calculation to the
CCRs used to simulate the proposed CY
2020 OPPS outlier payments to
determine the fixed-dollar threshold.
Specifically, for CY 2020, we proposed
to apply an adjustment factor of 0.97517
to the CCRs that were in the April 2019
OPSF to trend them forward from CY
2019 to CY 2020. The methodology for
calculating the proposed adjustment is
discussed in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19597).
To model hospital outlier payments
for the proposed rule, we applied the
overall CCRs from the April 2019 OPSF
after adjustment (using the proposed
CCR inflation adjustment factor of
0.97517 to approximate CY 2020 CCRs)
to charges on CY 2018 claims that were
adjusted (using the proposed charge
inflation factor of 1.11189 to
approximate CY 2020 charges). We
simulated aggregated CY 2020 hospital
outlier payments using these costs for
several different fixed-dollar thresholds,
holding the 1.75 multiplier threshold
constant and assuming that outlier
payments would continue to be made at
50 percent of the amount by which the
cost of furnishing the service would
exceed 1.75 times the APC payment
amount, until the total outlier payments
equaled 1.0 percent of aggregated
estimated total CY 2020 OPPS
payments. We estimated that a proposed
fixed-dollar threshold of $4,950,
combined with the proposed multiplier
threshold of 1.75 times the APC
payment rate, would allocate 1.0
percent of aggregated total OPPS
payments to outlier payments. For
CMHCs, we proposed that, if a CMHC’s
cost for partial hospitalization services,
paid under APC 5853, exceeds 3.40
times the payment rate for APC 5853,
the outlier payment would be calculated
as 50 percent of the amount by which
the cost exceeds 3.40 times the APC
5853 payment rate.
Section 1833(t)(17)(A) of the Act,
which applies to hospitals, as defined
under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act,
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61193
requires that hospitals that fail to report
data required for the quality measures
selected by the Secretary, in the form
and manner required by the Secretary
under section 1833(t)(17)(B) of the Act,
incur a 2.0 percentage point reduction
to their OPD fee schedule increase
factor; that is, the annual payment
update factor. The application of a
reduced OPD fee schedule increase
factor results in reduced national
unadjusted payment rates that will
apply to certain outpatient items and
services furnished by hospitals that are
required to report outpatient quality
data and that fail to meet the Hospital
OQR Program requirements. For
hospitals that fail to meet the Hospital
OQR Program requirements, as we
proposed, we are continuing the policy
that we implemented in CY 2010 that
the hospitals’ costs will be compared to
the reduced payments for purposes of
outlier eligibility and payment
calculation. For more information on
the Hospital OQR Program, we referred
readers to section XIV. of this final rule
with comment period.
We received no public comments on
our proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue our policy of
estimating outlier payments to be 1.0
percent of the estimated aggregate total
payments under the OPPS and to use
our established methodology to set the
OPPS outlier fixed-dollar loss threshold
for CY 2020.
3. Final Outlier Calculation
Consistent with historical practice, we
used updated data for this final rule
with comment period for outlier
calculations. For CY 2020, we are
applying the overall CCRs from the
October 2019 OPSF file after adjustment
(using the CCR inflation adjustment
factor of 0.97615 to approximate CY
2020 CCRs) to charges on CY 2018
claims that were adjusted using a charge
inflation factor of 1.11100 to
approximate CY 2020 charges. These are
the same CCR adjustment and charge
inflation factors that were used to set
the IPPS fixed-dollar threshold for the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42629). We simulated aggregated CY
2020 hospital outlier payments using
these costs for several different fixeddollar thresholds, holding the 1.75
multiple-threshold constant and
assuming that outlier payments will
continue to be made at 50 percent of the
amount by which the cost of furnishing
the service would exceed 1.75 times the
APC payment amount, until the total
outlier payment equaled 1.0 percent of
aggregated estimated total CY 2020
OPPS payments. We estimated that a
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fixed-dollar threshold of $5,075
combined with the multiple threshold
of 1.75 times the APC payment rate, will
allocate the 1.0 percent of aggregated
total OPPS payments to outlier
payments.
For CMHCs, if a CMHC’s cost for
partial hospitalization services, paid
under APC 5853, exceeds 3.40 times the
payment rate the outlier payment will
be calculated as 50 percent of the
amount by which the cost exceeds 3.40
times APC 5853.
H. Calculation of an Adjusted Medicare
Payment From the National Unadjusted
Medicare Payment
The basic methodology for
determining prospective payment rates
for HOPD services under the OPPS is set
forth in existing regulations at 42 CFR
part 419, subparts C and D. For this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the payment rate for
most services and procedures for which
payment is made under the OPPS is the
product of the conversion factor
calculated in accordance with section
II.B. of this final rule with comment
period and the relative payment weight
determined under section II.A. of this
final rule with comment period.
Therefore, the proposed national
unadjusted payment rate for most APCs
contained in Addendum A to this final
rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website) and for most HCPCS codes to
which separate payment under the
OPPS has been assigned in Addendum
B to this final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website) was calculated by
multiplying the proposed CY 2020
scaled weight for the APC by the CY
2020 conversion factor.
We note that section 1833(t)(17) of the
Act, which applies to hospitals, as
defined under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of
the Act, requires that hospitals that fail
to submit data required to be submitted
on quality measures selected by the
Secretary, in the form and manner and
at a time specified by the Secretary,
incur a reduction of 2.0 percentage
points to their OPD fee schedule
increase factor, that is, the annual
payment update factor. The application
of a reduced OPD fee schedule increase
factor results in reduced national
unadjusted payment rates that apply to
certain outpatient items and services
provided by hospitals that are required
to report outpatient quality data and
that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program (formerly referred to as the
Hospital Outpatient Quality Data
Reporting Program (HOP QDRP))
requirements. For further discussion of
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the payment reduction for hospitals that
fail to meet the requirements of the
Hospital OQR Program, we refer readers
to section XIV of this final rule with
comment period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39435), we demonstrated the
steps used to determine the APC
payments that will be made in a CY
under the OPPS to a hospital that fulfills
the Hospital OQR Program requirements
and to a hospital that fails to meet the
Hospital OQR Program requirements for
a service that has any of the following
status indicator assignments: ‘‘J1’’, ‘‘J2’’,
‘‘P’’, ‘‘Q1’’, ‘‘Q2’’, ‘‘Q3’’, ‘‘Q4’’, ‘‘R’’, ‘‘S’’,
‘‘T’’, ‘‘U’’, or ‘‘V’’ (as defined in
Addendum D1 to the proposed rule,
which is available via the internet on
the CMS website), in a circumstance in
which the multiple procedure discount
does not apply, the procedure is not
bilateral, and conditionally packaged
services (status indicator of ‘‘Q1’’ and
‘‘Q2’’) qualify for separate payment. We
noted that, although blood and blood
products with status indicator ‘‘R’’ and
brachytherapy sources with status
indicator ‘‘U’’ are not subject to wage
adjustment, they are subject to reduced
payments when a hospital fails to meet
the Hospital OQR Program
requirements.
We did not receive any public
comments on these steps under the
methodology that we included in the CY
2020 CY OPPS/ASC proposed rule to
determine the APC payments for CY
2020. Therefore, we are using the steps
in the methodology specified below, as
we proposed, to demonstrate the
calculation of the final CY 2020 OPPS
payments using the same parameters.
Individual providers interested in
calculating the payment amount that
they will receive for a specific service
from the national unadjusted payment
rates presented in Addenda A and B to
this final rule with comment period
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website) should follow the
formulas presented in the following
steps. For purposes of the payment
calculations below, we refer to the
national unadjusted payment rate for
hospitals that meet the requirements of
the Hospital OQR Program as the ‘‘full’’
national unadjusted payment rate. We
refer to the national unadjusted
payment rate for hospitals that fail to
meet the requirements of the Hospital
OQR Program as the ‘‘reduced’’ national
unadjusted payment rate. The reduced
national unadjusted payment rate is
calculated by multiplying the reporting
ratio of 0.980 times the ‘‘full’’ national
unadjusted payment rate. The national
unadjusted payment rate used in the
calculations below is either the full
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national unadjusted payment rate or the
reduced national unadjusted payment
rate, depending on whether the hospital
met its Hospital OQR Program
requirements to receive the full CY 2020
OPPS fee schedule increase factor.
Step 1. Calculate 60 percent (the
labor-related portion) of the national
unadjusted payment rate. Since the
initial implementation of the OPPS, we
have used 60 percent to represent our
estimate of that portion of costs
attributable, on average, to labor. We
refer readers to the April 7, 2000 OPPS
final rule with comment period (65 FR
18496 through 18497) for a detailed
discussion of how we derived this
percentage. During our regression
analysis for the payment adjustment for
rural hospitals in the CY 2006 OPPS
final rule with comment period (70 FR
68553), we confirmed that this laborrelated share for hospital outpatient
services is appropriate.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 1 and identifies
the labor-related portion of a specific
payment rate for a specific service.
X is the labor-related portion of the
national unadjusted payment rate.
X = .60 * (national unadjusted payment
rate).
Step 2. Determine the wage index area
in which the hospital is located and
identify the wage index level that
applies to the specific hospital. We note
that, under the CY 2020 OPPS policy for
continuing to use the OMB labor market
area delineations based on the 2010
Decennial Census data for the wage
indexes used under the IPPS, a hold
harmless policy for the wage index may
apply, as discussed in section II.C. of
this final rule with comment period.
The wage index values assigned to each
area reflect the geographic statistical
areas (which are based upon OMB
standards) to which hospitals are
assigned for FY 2020 under the IPPS,
reclassifications through the Medicare
Geographic Classification Review Board
(MGCRB), section 1886(d)(8)(B) ‘‘Lugar’’
hospitals, reclassifications under section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act, as defined in
§ 412.103 of the regulations, and
hospitals designated as urban under
section 601(g) of Public Law 98–21. For
further discussion of the changes to the
FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes, as applied
to the CY 2020 OPPS, we refer readers
to section II.C. of this final rule with
comment period. We are continuing to
apply a wage index floor of 1.00 to
frontier States, in accordance with
section 10324 of the Affordable Care Act
of 2010.
Step 3. Adjust the wage index of
hospitals located in certain qualifying
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counties that have a relatively high
percentage of hospital employees who
reside in the county, but who work in
a different county with a higher wage
index, in accordance with section 505 of
Public Law 108–173. Addendum L to
this final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website) contains the
qualifying counties and the associated
wage index increase developed for the
proposed FY 2020 IPPS, which are
listed in Table 2 associated with the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule and
available via the internet on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/AcuteInpatientPPS/
index.html. (Click on the link on the left
side of the screen titled ‘‘FY 2020 IPPS
Proposed Rule Home Page’’ and select
‘‘FY 2020 Proposed Rule Tables.’’) This
step is to be followed only if the
hospital is not reclassified or
redesignated under section 1886(d)(8) or
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
Step 4. Multiply the applicable wage
index determined under Steps 2 and 3
by the amount determined under Step 1
that represents the labor-related portion
of the national unadjusted payment rate.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 4 and adjusts the
labor-related portion of the national
unadjusted payment rate for the specific
service by the wage index.
Xa is the labor-related portion of the
national unadjusted payment rate
(wage adjusted).
Xa = .60 * (national unadjusted payment
rate) * applicable wage index.
Step 5. Calculate 40 percent (the
nonlabor-related portion) of the national
unadjusted payment rate and add that
amount to the resulting product of Step
4. The result is the wage index adjusted
payment rate for the relevant wage
index area.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 5 and calculates
the remaining portion of the national
payment rate, the amount not
attributable to labor, and the adjusted
payment for the specific service.
Y is the nonlabor-related portion of the
national unadjusted payment rate.
Y = .40 * (national unadjusted payment
rate).
Adjusted Medicare Payment = Y + Xa.
Step 6. If a provider is an SCH, as set
forth in the regulations at § 412.92, or an
EACH, which is considered to be an
SCH under section 1886(d)(5)(D)(iii)(III)
of the Act, and located in a rural area,
as defined in § 412.64(b), or is treated as
being located in a rural area under
§ 412.103, multiply the wage index
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adjusted payment rate by 1.071 to
calculate the total payment.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 6 and applies the
rural adjustment for rural SCHs.
Adjusted Medicare Payment (SCH or
EACH) = Adjusted Medicare
Payment * 1.071.
We are providing examples below of
the calculation of both the full and
reduced national unadjusted payment
rates that will apply to certain
outpatient items and services performed
by hospitals that meet and that fail to
meet the Hospital OQR Program
requirements, using the steps outlined
above. For purposes of this example, we
are using a provider that is located in
Brooklyn, New York that is assigned to
CBSA 35614. This provider bills one
service that is assigned to APC 5071
(Level 1 Excision/Biopsy/Incision and
Drainage). The CY 2020 full national
unadjusted payment rate for APC 5071
is $609.94. The reduced national
unadjusted payment rate for APC 5071
for a hospital that fails to meet the
Hospital OQR Program requirements is
$598.35. This reduced rate is calculated
by multiplying the reporting ratio of
0.981 by the full unadjusted payment
rate for APC 5071.
The FY 2020 wage index for a
provider located in CBSA 35614 in New
York, which includes the proposed
adoption of IPPS 2020 wage index
policies, is 1.2866. The labor-related
portion of the full national unadjusted
payment is approximately $470.84 (.60
* $609.94 * 1.2866). The labor-related
portion of the reduced national
unadjusted payment is approximately
$461.90 (.60 * $598.35 * 1.2866). The
nonlabor-related portion of the full
national unadjusted payment is
approximately $243.98 (.40 * $609.94).
The nonlabor-related portion of the
reduced national unadjusted payment is
approximately $239.34 (.40 * $598.35).
The sum of the labor-related and
nonlabor-related portions of the full
national adjusted payment is
approximately $714.82 ($470.84 +
$243.98). The sum of the portions of the
reduced national adjusted payment is
approximately $701.24 ($461.90 +
$239.34).
I. Beneficiary Copayments
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(3)(B) of the Act
requires the Secretary to set rules for
determining the unadjusted copayment
amounts to be paid by beneficiaries for
covered OPD services. Section
1833(t)(8)(C)(ii) of the Act specifies that
the Secretary must reduce the national
unadjusted copayment amount for a
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61195
covered OPD service (or group of such
services) furnished in a year in a
manner so that the effective copayment
rate (determined on a national
unadjusted basis) for that service in the
year does not exceed a specified
percentage. As specified in section
1833(t)(8)(C)(ii)(V) of the Act, the
effective copayment rate for a covered
OPD service paid under the OPPS in CY
2006, and in CYs thereafter, shall not
exceed 40 percent of the APC payment
rate.
Section 1833(t)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act
provides that, for a covered OPD service
(or group of such services) furnished in
a year, the national unadjusted
copayment amount cannot be less than
20 percent of the OPD fee schedule
amount. However, section
1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the Act limits the
amount of beneficiary copayment that
may be collected for a procedure
(including items such as drugs and
biologicals) performed in a year to the
amount of the inpatient hospital
deductible for that year.
Section 4104 of the Affordable Care
Act eliminated the Medicare Part B
coinsurance for preventive services
furnished on and after January 1, 2011,
that meet certain requirements,
including flexible sigmoidoscopies and
screening colonoscopies, and waived
the Part B deductible for screening
colonoscopies that become diagnostic
during the procedure. Our discussion of
the changes made by the Affordable
Care Act with regard to copayments for
preventive services furnished on and
after January 1, 2011, may be found in
section XII.B. of the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (75 FR
72013).
2. OPPS Copayment Policy
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39437), we proposed to
determine copayment amounts for new
and revised APCs using the same
methodology that we implemented
beginning in CY 2004. (We refer readers
to the November 7, 2003 OPPS final rule
with comment period (68 FR 63458).) In
addition, we proposed to use the same
standard rounding principles that we
have historically used in instances
where the application of our standard
copayment methodology would result in
a copayment amount that is less than 20
percent and cannot be rounded, under
standard rounding principles, to 20
percent. (We refer readers to the CY
2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66687) in which
we discuss our rationale for applying
these rounding principles.) The
proposed national unadjusted
copayment amounts for services payable
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under the OPPS that would be effective
January 1, 2020 are included in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website).
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed copayment
amounts for new and revised APCs
using the same methodology we
implemented beginning in CY 2004 or
the standard rounding principles we
apply to our copayment amounts.
Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposed copayment policies, without
modification.
As discussed in section XIV.E. of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and
this final rule with comment period, for
CY 2020, the Medicare beneficiary’s
minimum unadjusted copayment and
national unadjusted copayment for a
service to which a reduced national
unadjusted payment rate applies will
equal the product of the reporting ratio
and the national unadjusted copayment,
or the product of the reporting ratio and
the minimum unadjusted copayment,
respectively, for the service.
We note that OPPS copayments may
increase or decrease each year based on
changes in the calculated APC payment
rates, due to updated cost report and
claims data, and any changes to the
OPPS cost modeling process. However,
as described in the CY 2004 OPPS final
rule with comment period, the
development of the copayment
methodology generally moves
beneficiary copayments closer to 20
percent of OPPS APC payments (68 FR
63458 through 63459).
In the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with
comment period (68 FR 63459), we
adopted a new methodology to calculate
unadjusted copayment amounts in
situations including reorganizing APCs,
and we finalized the following rules to
determine copayment amounts in CY
2004 and subsequent years.
• When an APC group consists solely
of HCPCS codes that were not paid
under the OPPS the prior year because
they were packaged or excluded or are
new codes, the unadjusted copayment
amount would be 20 percent of the APC
payment rate.
• If a new APC that did not exist
during the prior year is created and
consists of HCPCS codes previously
assigned to other APCs, the copayment
amount is calculated as the product of
the APC payment rate and the lowest
coinsurance percentage of the codes
comprising the new APC.
• If no codes are added to or removed
from an APC and, after recalibration of
its relative payment weight, the new
payment rate is equal to or greater than
the prior year’s rate, the copayment
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amount remains constant (unless the
resulting coinsurance percentage is less
than 20 percent).
• If no codes are added to or removed
from an APC and, after recalibration of
its relative payment weight, the new
payment rate is less than the prior year’s
rate, the copayment amount is
calculated as the product of the new
payment rate and the prior year’s
coinsurance percentage.
• If HCPCS codes are added to or
deleted from an APC and, after
recalibrating its relative payment
weight, holding its unadjusted
copayment amount constant results in a
decrease in the coinsurance percentage
for the reconfigured APC, the
copayment amount would not change
(unless retaining the copayment amount
would result in a coinsurance rate less
than 20 percent).
• If HCPCS codes are added to an
APC and, after recalibrating its relative
payment weight, holding its unadjusted
copayment amount constant results in
an increase in the coinsurance
percentage for the reconfigured APC, the
copayment amount would be calculated
as the product of the payment rate of the
reconfigured APC and the lowest
coinsurance percentage of the codes
being added to the reconfigured APC.
We noted in the CY 2004 OPPS final
rule with comment period that we
would seek to lower the copayment
percentage for a service in an APC from
the prior year if the copayment
percentage was greater than 20 percent.
We noted that this principle was
consistent with section 1833(t)(8)(C)(ii)
of the Act, which accelerates the
reduction in the national unadjusted
coinsurance rate so that beneficiary
liability will eventually equal 20
percent of the OPPS payment rate for all
OPPS services to which a copayment
applies, and with section 1833(t)(3)(B)
of the Act, which achieves a 20-percent
copayment percentage when fully
phased in and gives the Secretary the
authority to set rules for determining
copayment amounts for new services.
We further noted that the use of this
methodology would, in general, reduce
the beneficiary coinsurance rate and
copayment amount for APCs for which
the payment rate changes as the result
of the reconfiguration of APCs and/or
recalibration of relative payment
weights (68 FR 63459).
3. Calculation of an Adjusted
Copayment Amount for an APC Group
Individuals interested in calculating
the national copayment liability for a
Medicare beneficiary for a given service
provided by a hospital that met or failed
to meet its Hospital OQR Program
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requirements should follow the
formulas presented in the following
steps.
Step 1. Calculate the beneficiary
payment percentage for the APC by
dividing the APC’s national unadjusted
copayment by its payment rate. For
example, using APC 5071, $121.99 is
approximately 20 percent of the full
national unadjusted payment rate of
$609.94. For APCs with only a
minimum unadjusted copayment in
Addenda A and B to this final rule with
comment period (which are available
via the internet on the CMS website),
the beneficiary payment percentage is
20 percent.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 1 and calculates
the national copayment as a percentage
of national payment for a given service.
B is the beneficiary payment percentage.
B = National unadjusted copayment for
APC/national unadjusted payment
rate for APC.
Step 2. Calculate the appropriate
wage-adjusted payment rate for the APC
for the provider in question, as
indicated in Steps 2 through 4 under
section II.H. of this final rule with
comment period. Calculate the rural
adjustment for eligible providers, as
indicated in Step 6 under section II.H.
of this final rule with comment period.
Step 3. Multiply the percentage
calculated in Step 1 by the payment rate
calculated in Step 2. The result is the
wage-adjusted copayment amount for
the APC.
The formula below is a mathematical
representation of Step 3 and applies the
beneficiary payment percentage to the
adjusted payment rate for a service
calculated under section II.H. of this
final rule with comment period, with
and without the rural adjustment, to
calculate the adjusted beneficiary
copayment for a given service.
Wage-adjusted copayment amount for
the APC = Adjusted Medicare Payment
* B.
Wage-adjusted copayment amount for
the APC (SCH or EACH) = (Adjusted
Medicare Payment * 1.071) * B.
Step 4. For a hospital that failed to
meet its Hospital OQR Program
requirements, multiply the copayment
calculated in Step 3 by the reporting
ratio of 0.980.
The proposed unadjusted copayments
for services payable under the OPPS
that will be effective January 1, 2020,
are shown in Addenda A and B to this
final rule with comment period (which
are available via the internet on the
CMS website). We note that the national
unadjusted payment rates and
copayment rates shown in Addenda A
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and B to this final rule with comment
period reflect the CY 2020 OPD fee
schedule increase factor discussed in
section II.B. of this final rule with
comment period.
In addition, as noted earlier, section
1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the Act limits the
amount of beneficiary copayment that
may be collected for a procedure
performed in a year to the amount of the
inpatient hospital deductible for that
year.
III. OPPS Ambulatory Payment
Classification (APC) Group Policies
A. OPPS Treatment of New and Revised
HCPCS Codes
Payment for OPPS procedures,
services, and items are generally based
on medical billing codes, specifically,
HCPCS codes, that are reported on
HOPD claims. The HCPCS is divided
into two principal subsystems, referred
to as Level I and Level II of the HCPCS.
Level I is comprised of CPT (Current
Procedural Terminology), a numeric and
alphanumeric coding system
maintained by the American Medical
Association (AMA), and consist of
Category I, II, and III CPT codes. Level
II, which is maintained by CMS, is a
standardized coding system that is used
primarily to identify products, supplies,
and services not included in the CPT
codes. HCPCS codes are used to report
surgical procedures, medical services,
items, and supplies under the hospital
OPPS. Specifically, CMS recognizes the
following codes on OPPS claims:
• Category I CPT codes, which
describe surgical procedures, diagnostic
and therapeutic services, and vaccine
codes;
• Category III CPT codes, which
describe new and emerging
technologies, services, and procedures;
and
• Level II HCPCS codes (also known
as alphanumeric codes), which are used
primarily to identify drugs, devices,
ambulance services, durable medical
equipment, orthotics, prosthetics,
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supplies, temporary surgical
procedures, and medical services not
described by CPT codes.
CPT codes are established by the
American Medical Association (AMA)
while the Level II HCPCS codes are
established by the CMS HCPCS
Workgroup. These codes are updated
and changed throughout the year. CPT
and Level II HCPCS code changes that
affect the OPPS are published through
the annual rulemaking cycle and
through the OPPS quarterly update
Change Requests (CRs). Generally, these
code changes are effective January 1,
April 1, July 1, or October 1. CPT code
changes are released by the AMA via
their website while Level II HCPCS code
changes are released to the public via
the CMS HCPCS website. CMS
recognizes the release of new CPT and
Level II HCPCS codes and makes the
codes effective (that is, the codes can be
reported on Medicare claims) outside of
the formal rulemaking process via OPPS
quarterly update CRs. Based on our
review, we assign the new codes to
interim status indicators (SIs) and APCs.
These interim assignments are finalized
in the OPPS/ASC final rules. This
quarterly process offers hospitals access
to codes that more accurately describe
items or services furnished and provides
payment for these items or services in
a timelier manner than if we waited for
the annual rulemaking process. We
solicit public comments on the new CPT
and Level II HCPCS codes and finalize
our proposals through our annual
rulemaking process.
We note that, under the OPPS, the
APC assignment determines the
payment rate for an item, procedure, or
service. Those items, procedures, or
services not paid separately under the
hospital OPPS are assigned to
appropriate status indicators. Certain
payment status indicators provide
separate payment while other payment
status indicators do not. In section XI.
(CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and
Comment Indicators) of this final rule
with comment period, we discuss the
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various status indicators used under the
OPPS. We also provide a complete list
of the status indicators and their
definitions in Addendum D1 to this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
1. HCPCS Codes That Were Effective
April 1, 2019 for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC Proposed Rule
For the April 2019 update, there were
no new CPT codes. However, eight new
Level II HCPCS codes were established
and made effective on April 1, 2019.
These codes and their long descriptors
were displayed in Table 7 of the
proposed rule and are now listed in
Table 8 of this final rule with comment
period. Through the April 2019 OPPS
quarterly update CR (Transmittal 4255,
Change Request 11216, dated March 15,
2019), we recognized several new Level
II HCPCS codes for separate payment
under the OPPS. In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39531–
39532), we solicited public comments
on the proposed APC and status
indicator assignments for these Level II
HCPCS codes, which were listed in
Table 7 of the proposed rule.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed OPPS APC
and status indicator assignments for the
new Level II HCPCS codes implemented
in April 2019. Therefore, we are
finalizing the proposed APC and status
indicator assignments for these codes, as
indicated in Table 8 below. We note that
several of the HCPCS C-codes have been
replaced with HCPCS J-codes, effective
January 1, 2020. Their replacement
codes are listed in Table 8. The final
payment rates for these codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period. In addition, the
status indicator definitions can be found
in Addendum D1 to this final rule with
comment period. Both Addendum B
and Addendum D1 are available via the
internet on the CMS website.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
2. HCPCS Codes That Were Effective
July 1, 2019 for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC Proposed Rule
For the July 2019 update, 58 new
codes were established and made
effective July 1, 2019. The codes and
long descriptors were listed in Table 8
of the proposed rule. Through the July
2019 OPPS quarterly update CR
(Transmittal 4313, Change Request
11318, dated May 24, 2019), we
recognized several new codes for
separate payment and assigned them to
appropriate interim OPPS status
indicators and APCs. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we solicited
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public comments on the proposed APC
and status indicator assignments for the
codes implemented on July 1, 2019, all
of which were listed in Table 8 of the
proposed rule.
We received some public comments
related to CPT codes 0546T, 0548T,
0549T, 0554T, 0555T, 0556T, 0557T,
and 0558T, which we address in section
III.D. (OPPS APC-Specific Policies) of
this final rule with comment period.
With the exception of the eight codes,
we did not receive any public comments
on the proposed OPPS APC and status
indicator assignments for the other new
CPT and Level II HCPCS codes
implemented in July 2019. Therefore,
we are finalizing the proposed APC and
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status indicator assignments for the July
2019 codes, including the eight codes
on which we received public comments,
as indicated in Table 9 below. We note
that several of the HCPCS C-codes have
been replaced with HCPCS J-codes,
effective January 1, 2020. Their
replacement codes are listed in Table 9.
The final payment rates for the codes
can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period. In
addition, the status indicator meanings
can be found in Addendum D1 to this
final rule with comment period. Both
Addendum B and Addendum D1 are
available via the internet on the CMS
website.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
3. October 2019 HCPCS Codes for
Which We Are Soliciting Public
Comments in This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Final Rule With Comment Period
As has been our practice in the past,
we incorporate those new HCPCS codes
that are effective October 1 in the final
rule with comment period, thereby
updating the OPPS for the following
calendar year, as displayed in Table 9 of
the proposed rule and reprinted as
Table 10 of this final rule with comment
period. These codes are released to the
public through the October OPPS
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quarterly update CRs and via the CMS
HCPCS website (for Level II HCPCS
codes). For CY 2020, these codes are
flagged with comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in
Addendum B to this OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period to indicate
that we are assigning them an interim
payment status which is subject to
public comment. Specifically, the
interim status indicator and APC
assignments for codes flagged with
comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ are open to
public comment in this final rule with
comment period, and we will respond
to these public comments in the OPPS/
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ASC final rule with comment period for
the next year’s OPPS/ASC update.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39449), we proposed to
continue this process for CY 2020.
Specifically, for CY 2020, we proposed
to include in Addendum B to the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period the new HCPCS codes
effective October 1, 2019, that would be
incorporated in the October 2019 OPPS
quarterly update CR. Also, as stated
above, the October 1, 2019 codes are
flagged with comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in
Addendum B to this CY 2020 OPPS/
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ASC final rule with comment period to
indicate that we have assigned the codes
an interim OPPS payment status for CY
2020. We are inviting public comments
on the interim status indicator and APC
assignments for these codes, if
applicable, that will be finalized in the
CY 2021 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
We note that we received a comment
related to HCPCS code Q4184 (Cellesta
or Cellesta Duo, per square centimeter),
which was assigned to comment
indicator ‘‘NI’’ in Addendum B of the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule. The
comment and our response can be found
in section V.B.7 (Skin Substitutes) of
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
4. January 2020 HCPCS Codes
a. New Level II HCPCS Codes for Which
We Are Soliciting Public Comments in
This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule
With Comment Period
As shown in Table 10 below, and as
stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39449), consistent
with past practice, we solicit comments
on the new Level II HCPCS codes that
will be effective January 1 in the OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
thereby allowing us to finalize the status
indicators and APC assignments for the
codes in the next OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period. Unlike the CPT
codes that are effective January 1 and
are included in the OPPS/ASC proposed
rules, most Level II HCPCS codes are
not released until sometime around
November to be effective January 1.
Because these codes are not available
until November, we are unable to
include them in the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules. Consequently, for CY
2020, we proposed to include in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period the new
Level II HCPCS codes effective January
1, 2020, that would be incorporated in
the January 2020 OPPS quarterly update
CR. These codes will be released to the
public through the January OPPS
quarterly update CRs and via the CMS
HCPCS website (for Level II HCPCS
codes). For CY 2020, the Level II HCPCS
codes effective January 1, 2020 codes
are flagged with comment indicator
‘‘NI’’ in Addendum B to this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period to indicate that we have assigned
the codes an interim OPPS payment
status for CY 2020. We are inviting
public comments on the interim status
indicator and APC assignments for these
codes, if applicable, that will be
finalized in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
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b. CPT Codes for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC Proposed Rule
For CY 2020, we received the CY 2020
CPT code updates that would be
effective January 1, 2020, from AMA in
time for inclusion in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. We note that in the
CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66841 through
66844), we finalized a revised process of
assigning APC and status indicators for
new and revised Category I and III CPT
codes that would be effective January 1.
Specifically, for the new/revised CPT
codes that we receive in a timely
manner from the AMA’s CPT Editorial
Panel, we finalized our proposal to
include the codes that would be
effective January 1 in the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules, along with proposed
APC and status indicator assignments
for them, and to finalize the APC and
status indicator assignments in the
OPPS/ASC final rules beginning with
the CY 2016 OPPS update. For those
new/revised CPT codes that were
received too late for inclusion in the
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we finalized
our proposal to establish and use
HCPCS G-codes that mirror the
predecessor CPT codes and retain the
current APC and status indicator
assignments for a year until we can
propose APC and status indicator
assignments in the following year’s
rulemaking cycle. We note that even if
we find that we need to create HCPCS
G-codes in place of certain CPT codes
for the PFS proposed rule, we do not
anticipate that these HCPCS G-codes
will always be necessary for OPPS
purposes. We will make every effort to
include proposed APC and status
indicator assignments for all new and
revised CPT codes that the AMA makes
publicly available in time for us to
include them in the annual proposed
rule, and to avoid the resort to HCPCS
G-codes and the resulting delay in
utilization of the most current CPT
codes. Also, we finalized our proposal
to make interim APC and status
indicator assignments for CPT codes
that are not available in time for the
proposed rule and that describe wholly
new services (such as new technologies
or new surgical procedures), solicit
public comments, and finalize the
specific APC and status indicator
assignments for those codes in the
following year’s final rule.
As stated above, for the CY 2020
OPPS update, we received the CY 2020
CPT codes from AMA in time for
inclusion in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. The new, revised, and
deleted CY 2020 Category I and III CPT
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codes were included in Addendum B to
the proposed rule (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website).
We noted in the proposed rule that the
new and revised codes are assigned to
new comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ to
indicate that the code is new for the
next calendar year or the code is an
existing code with substantial revision
to its code descriptor in the next
calendar year as compared to current
calendar year with a proposed APC
assignment, and that comments will be
accepted on the proposed APC and
status indicator assignments.
Further, we reminded readers that the
CPT code descriptors that appear in
Addendum B are short descriptors and
do not accurately describe the complete
procedure, service, or item described by
the CPT code. Therefore, we included
the 5-digit placeholder codes and their
long descriptors for the new and revised
CY 2020 CPT codes in Addendum O to
the proposed rule (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website) so
that the public could adequately
comment on the proposed APCs and
status indicator assignments. The 5-digit
placeholder codes were included in
Addendum O, specifically under the
column labeled ‘‘CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Proposed Rule 5-Digit AMA Placeholder
Code,’’ to the proposed rule. We noted
that the final CPT code numbers will be
included in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. We also
noted that not every code listed in
Addendum O is subject to public
comment. For the new and revised
Category I and III CPT codes, we
requested public comments on only
those codes that are assigned to
comment indicator ‘‘NP’’.
In summary, in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we solicited public
comments on the proposed CY 2020
status indicator and APC assignments
for the new and revised Category I and
III CPT codes that will be effective
January 1, 2020. The CPT codes were
listed in Addendum B to the proposed
rule with short descriptors only. We
listed them again in Addendum O to the
proposed rule with long descriptors. We
also proposed to finalize the status
indicator and APC assignments for these
codes (with their final CPT code
numbers) in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. The
proposed status indicator and APC
assignments for these codes were
included in Addendum B to the
proposed rule (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
Commenters addressed several of the
new CPT codes that were assigned to
comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum
B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
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rule. We have responded to those public
comments in sections III.D. (OPPS APCSpecific Policies), IV.B. (DeviceIntensive Procedures) and XII. (Updates
to the ASC Payment System) of this CY
2020OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
The final status indicators, APC
assignments, and payment rates for the
new CPT codes that are effective
January 1, 2020 can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with
comment period. In addition, the status
indicator meanings can be found in
Addendum D1 (OPPS Payment Status
Indicators for CY 2020) to this final rule
with comment period. Both Addendum
B and D1 are available via the internet
on the CMS website.
Finally, Table 10 below, which is a
reprint of Table 9 from the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, shows the
comment timeframe for new and revised
HCPCS codes. The table provides
information on our current process for
updating codes through our OPPS
quarterly update CRs, seeking public
comments, and finalizing the treatment
of these codes under the OPPS.
B. OPPS Changes—Variations Within
APCs
Classifications (APCs), as set forth in
regulations at 42 CFR 419.31. We use
Level I (also known as CPT codes) and
Level II HCPCS codes (also known as
alphanumeric codes) to identify and
group the services within each APC.
The APCs are organized such that each
group is homogeneous both clinically
and in terms of resource use. Using this
classification system, we have
established distinct groups of similar
services. We also have developed
separate APC groups for certain medical
devices, drugs, biologicals, therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, and
brachytherapy devices that are not
packaged into the payment for the
procedure.
We have packaged into the payment
for each procedure or service within an
APC group the costs associated with
those items and services that are
typically ancillary and supportive to a
primary diagnostic or therapeutic
modality and, in those cases, are an
integral part of the primary service they
support. Therefore, we do not make
separate payment for these packaged
items or services. In general, packaged
items and services include, but are not
limited to, the items and services listed
in regulations at 42 CFR 419.2(b). A
further discussion of packaged services
is included in section II.A.3. of this final
rule with comment period.
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(2)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to develop a
classification system for covered
hospital outpatient department services.
Section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act provides
that the Secretary may establish groups
of covered OPD services within this
classification system, so that services
classified within each group are
comparable clinically and with respect
to the use of resources. In accordance
with these provisions, we developed a
grouping classification system, referred
to as Ambulatory Payment
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Under the OPPS, we generally pay for
covered hospital outpatient services on
a rate-per-service basis, where the
service may be reported with one or
more HCPCS codes. Payment varies
according to the APC group to which
the independent service or combination
of services is assigned. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39451–
39452), for CY 2020, we proposed that
each APC relative payment weight
represents the hospital cost of the
services included in that APC, relative
to the hospital cost of the services
included in APC 5012 (Clinic Visits and
Related Services). The APC relative
payment weights are scaled to APC 5012
because it is the hospital clinic visit
APC and clinic visits are among the
most frequently furnished services in
the hospital outpatient setting.
2. Application of the 2 Times Rule
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to review, not less
often than annually, and revise the APC
groups, the relative payment weights,
and the wage and other adjustments
described in paragraph (2) to take into
account changes in medical practice,
changes in technology, the addition of
new services, new cost data, and other
relevant information and factors.
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act also
requires the Secretary to consult with an
expert outside advisory panel composed
of an appropriate selection of
representatives of providers to review
(and advise the Secretary concerning)
the clinical integrity of the APC groups
and the relative payment weights. We
note that the HOP Panel
recommendations for specific services
for the CY 2020 OPPS update are
discussed in the relevant specific
sections throughout this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
In addition, section 1833(t)(2) of the
Act provides that, subject to certain
exceptions, the items and services
within an APC group cannot be
considered comparable with respect to
the use of resources if the highest cost
for an item or service in the group is
more than 2 times greater than the
lowest cost for an item or service within
the same group (referred to as the ‘‘2
times rule’’). The statute authorizes the
Secretary to make exceptions to the 2
times rule in unusual cases, such as
low-volume items and services (but the
Secretary may not make such an
exception in the case of a drug or
biological that has been designated as an
orphan drug under section 526 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act).
In determining the APCs with a 2 times
rule violation, we consider only those
HCPCS codes that are significant based
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on the number of claims. We note that,
for purposes of identifying significant
procedure codes for examination under
the 2 times rule, we consider procedure
codes that have more than 1,000 single
major claims or procedure codes that
both have more than 99 single major
claims and contribute at least 2 percent
of the single major claims used to
establish the APC cost to be significant
(75 FR 71832). This longstanding
definition of when a procedure code is
significant for purposes of the 2 times
rule was selected because we believe
that a subset of 1,000 or fewer claims is
negligible within the set of
approximately 100 million single
procedure or single session claims we
use for establishing costs. Similarly, a
procedure code for which there are
fewer than 99 single claims and that
comprises less than 2 percent of the
single major claims within an APC will
have a negligible impact on the APC
cost (75 FR 71832). In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39451
through 39452), for CY 2020, we
proposed to make exceptions to this
limit on the variation of costs within
each APC group in unusual cases, such
as for certain low-volume items and
services.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we identified the APCs with
violations of the 2 times rule. Therefore,
we proposed changes to the procedure
codes assigned to these APCs in
Addendum B to the proposed rule. We
noted that Addendum B does not appear
in the printed version of the Federal
Register as part of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. Rather, it is
published and made available via the
internet on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/. To
eliminate a violation of the 2 times rule
and improve clinical and resource
homogeneity, we proposed to reassign
these procedure codes to new APCs that
contain services that are similar with
regard to both their clinical and
resource characteristics. In many cases,
the proposed procedure code
reassignments and associated APC
reconfigurations for CY 2020 included
in the proposed rule were related to
changes in costs of services that were
observed in the CY 2018 claims data
newly available for CY 2020 ratesetting.
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule identified with a
comment indicator ‘‘CH’’ those
procedure codes for which we proposed
a change to the APC assignment or
status indicator, or both, that were
initially assigned in the July 1, 2019
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OPPS Addendum B Update (available
via the internet on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/Addendum-Aand-Addendum-B-Updates.html), which
was the latest payment rate file for 2019
prior to issuance of the proposed rule.
3. APC Exceptions to the 2 Times Rule
Taking into account the APC changes
that we proposed to make for CY 2020
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we reviewed all of the APCs to
determine which APCs would not meet
the requirements of the 2 times rule. We
used the following criteria to evaluate
whether to propose exceptions to the 2
times rule for affected APCs:
• Resource homogeneity;
• Clinical homogeneity;
• Hospital outpatient setting
utilization;
• Frequency of service (volume); and
• Opportunity for upcoding and code
fragments.
Based on the CY 2018 claims data
available for the CY 2020 proposed rule,
we found 18 APCs with violations of the
2 times rule. We applied the criteria as
described above to identify the APCs for
which we proposed to make exceptions
under the 2 times rule for CY 2020, and
found that all of the 18 APCs we
identified met the criteria for an
exception to the 2 times rule based on
the CY 2018 claims data available for
the proposed rule. We did not include
in that determination those APCs where
a 2 times rule violation was not a
relevant concept, such as APC 5401
(Dialysis), which only has two HCPCS
codes assigned to it that have a similar
geometric mean costs and do not create
a 2 time rule violation. Therefore, we
only identified those APCs, including
those with criteria-based costs, such as
device-dependent CPT/HCPCS codes,
with violations of the 2 times rule.
We note that, for cases in which a
recommendation by the HOP Panel
appears to result in or allow a violation
of the 2 times rule, we may accept the
HOP Panel’s recommendation because
those recommendations are based on
explicit consideration (that is, a review
of the latest OPPS claims data and group
discussion of the issue) of resource use,
clinical homogeneity, site of service,
and the quality of the claims data used
to determine the APC payment rates.
Table 10 of the proposed rule listed
the 18 APCs that we proposed to make
an exception for under the 2 times rule
for CY 2020 based on the criteria cited
above and claims data submitted
between January 1, 2018, and December
31, 2018, and processed on or before
December 31, 2018. In the proposed
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rule, we stated that for the final rule
with comment period, we intend to use
claims data for dates of service between
January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2018,
that were processed on or before June
30, 2019, and updated CCRs, if
available.
Based on the updated final rule CY
2018 claims data used for this CY 2020
final rule with comment period, we
were able to remedy two APC violation
out of the 18 APCs that appeared in
Table 10 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. Specifically, APC 5672
(Level 2 Pathology) and APC 5733
(Level 3 Minor Procedures) no longer
met the criteria for exception to the 2
times rule in this final rule with
comment period. In addition, based on
our analysis of the final rule claims
data, we found a total of 17 APCs with
violations of the 2 times rule. Of these
17 total APCs, 16 were identified in the
proposed rule and one newly identified
APC. Specifically, we found the
following 16 APCs from the proposed
rule continued to have violations of the
2 times rule for this final rule with
comment period:
• APC 5112 (Level 2 Musculoskeletal
Procedures);
• APC 5161 (Level 1 ENT Procedures)
• APC 5181 (Level 1 Vascular
Procedures)
• APC 5311 (Level 1 Lower GI
Procedures)
• APC 5521 (Level 1 Imaging without
Contrast);
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• APC 5522 (Level 2 Imaging without
Contrast);
• APC 5523 (Level 3 Imaging without
Contrast);
• APC 5524 (Level 4 Imaging without
Contrast);
• APC 5571 (Level 1 Imaging with
Contrast)
• APC 5612 (Level 2 Therapeutic
Radiation Treatment Preparation);
• APC 5691 (Level 1 Drug
Administration);
• APC 5721 (Level 1 Diagnostic Tests
and Related Services);
• APC 5731 (Level 1 Minor
Procedures);
• APC 5734 (Level 4 Minor
Procedures);
• APC 5822 (Level 2 Health and
Behavior Services); and
• APC 5823 (Level 3 Health and
Behavior Services).
In addition, we found that APC 5593
(Level 3 Nuclear Medicine and Related
Services) violated the 2 times rule using
the final rule with comment period
claims data.
Although we did not receive any
comments on Table 10 of the proposed
rule, we did receive comments on APC
assignments for specific HCPCS codes.
The comments, and our responses, can
be found in section III.D. (OPPS APCSpecific Policies) of this final rule with
comment period.
After considering the public
comments we received on APC
assignments and our analysis of the CY
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2018 costs from hospital claims and cost
report data available for this CY 2020
final rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposals with some
modifications. Specifically, we are
finalizing our proposal to except 16 of
the 18 proposed APCs from the 2 times
rule for CY 2020 and also excepting one
additional APC (APC 5593). As noted
above, we were able to remedy two of
the proposed rule 2 time violations in
this final rule with comment period.
In summary, Table 11 below lists the
17 APCs that we are excepting from the
2 times rule for CY 2020 based on the
criteria described earlier and a review of
updated claims data for dates of service
between January 1, 2018 and December
31, 2018, that were processed on or
before June 30, 2019, and updated CCRs,
if available. We note that, for cases in
which a recommendation by the HOP
Panel appears to result in or allow a
violation of the 2 times rule, we
generally accept the HOP Panel’s
recommendation because those
recommendations are based on explicit
consideration of resource use, clinical
homogeneity, site of service, and the
quality of the claims data used to
determine the APC payment rates. The
geometric mean costs for hospital
outpatient services for these and all
other APCs that were used in the
development of this final rule with
comment period can be found on the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov.
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C. New Technology APCs
1. Background
In the CY 2002 OPPS final rule (66 FR
59903), we finalized changes to the time
period in which a service can be eligible
for payment under a New Technology
APC. Beginning in CY 2002, we retain
services within New Technology APC
groups until we gather sufficient claims
data to enable us to assign the service
to an appropriate clinical APC. This
policy allows us to move a service from
a New Technology APC in less than 2
years if sufficient data are available. It
also allows us to retain a service in a
New Technology APC for more than 2
years if sufficient data upon which to
base a decision for reassignment have
not been collected.
In the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with
comment period (68 FR 63416), we
restructured the New Technology APCs
to make the cost intervals more
consistent across payment levels and
refined the cost bands for these APCs to
retain two parallel sets of New
Technology APCs, one set with a status
indicator of ‘‘S’’ (Significant Procedures,
Not Discounted when Multiple. Paid
under OPPS; separate APC payment)
and the other set with a status indicator
of ‘‘T’’ (Significant Procedure, Multiple
Reduction Applies. Paid under OPPS;
separate APC payment). These current
New Technology APC configurations
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allow us to price new technology
services more appropriately and
consistently.
For CY 2019, there were 52 New
Technology APC levels, ranging from
the lowest cost band assigned to APC
1491 (New Technology–Level 1A ($0–
$10)) through the highest cost band
assigned to APC 1908 (New
Technology–Level 52 ($145,001–
$160,000)). We note that the cost bands
for the New Technology APCs,
specifically, APCs 1491 through 1599
and 1901 through 1908, vary with
increments ranging from $10 to $14,999.
These cost bands identify the APCs to
which new technology procedures and
services with estimated service costs
that fall within those cost bands are
assigned under the OPPS. Payment for
each APC is made at the mid-point of
the APC’s assigned cost band. For
example, payment for New Technology
APC 1507 (New Technology–Level 7
($501–$600)) is made at $550.50.
Under the OPPS, one of our goals is
to make payments that are appropriate
for the services that are necessary for the
treatment of Medicare beneficiaries. The
OPPS, like other Medicare payment
systems, is budget neutral and increases
are limited to the annual hospital
inpatient market basket increase
adjusted for multifactor productivity.
We believe that our payment rates
generally reflect the costs that are
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associated with providing care to
Medicare beneficiaries. Furthermore, we
believe that our payment rates are
adequate to ensure access to services (80
FR 70374).
For many emerging technologies,
there is a transitional period during
which utilization may be low, often
because providers are first learning
about the technologies and their clinical
utility. Quite often, parties request that
Medicare make higher payment
amounts under the New Technology
APCs for new procedures in that
transitional phase. These requests, and
their accompanying estimates for
expected total patient utilization, often
reflect very low rates of patient use of
expensive equipment, resulting in high
per-use costs for which requesters
believe Medicare should make full
payment. Medicare does not, and we
believe should not, assume
responsibility for more than its share of
the costs of procedures based on
projected utilization for Medicare
beneficiaries and does not set its
payment rates based on initial
projections of low utilization for
services that require expensive capital
equipment. For the OPPS, we rely on
hospitals to make informed business
decisions regarding the acquisition of
high-cost capital equipment, taking into
consideration their knowledge about
their entire patient base (Medicare
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beneficiaries included) and an
understanding of Medicare’s and other
payers’ payment policies. (We refer
readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (77 FR
68314) for further discussion regarding
this payment policy.)
We note that, in a budget neutral
system, payments may not fully cover
hospitals’ costs in a particular
circumstance, including those for the
purchase and maintenance of capital
equipment. We rely on hospitals to
make their decisions regarding the
acquisition of high-cost equipment with
the understanding that the Medicare
program must be careful to establish its
initial payment rates, including those
made through New Technology APCs,
for new services that lack hospital
claims data based on realistic utilization
projections for all such services
delivered in cost-efficient hospital
outpatient settings. As the OPPS
acquires claims data regarding hospital
costs associated with new procedures,
we regularly examine the claims data
and any available new information
regarding the clinical aspects of new
procedures to confirm that our OPPS
payments remain appropriate for
procedures as they transition into
mainstream medical practice (77 FR
68314). For CY 2020, we included the
proposed payment rates for New
Technology APCs 1491 to 1599 and
1901 through 1908 in Addendum A to
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website). The final payment
rates for these New Technology APCs
are included in Addendum A to the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
2. Establishing Payment Rates for LowVolume New Technology Procedures
Procedures that are assigned to New
Technology APCs are typically new
procedures that do not have sufficient
claims history to establish an accurate
payment for the procedures. One of the
objectives of establishing New
Technology APCs is to generate
sufficient claims data for a new
procedure so that it can be assigned to
an appropriate clinical APC. Some
procedures that are assigned to New
Technology APCs have very low annual
volume, which we consider to be fewer
than 100 claims. We consider
procedures with fewer than 100 claims
annually as low-volume procedures
because there is a higher probability that
the payment data for a procedure may
not have a normal statistical
distribution, which could affect the
quality of our standard cost
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methodology that is used to assign
services to an APC. In addition, services
with fewer than 100 claims per year are
not generally considered to be a
significant contributor to the APC
ratesetting calculations and, therefore,
are not included in the assessment of
the 2 times rule. As we explained in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58890), we were
concerned that the methodology we use
to estimate the cost of a procedure
under the OPPS by calculating the
geometric mean for all separately paid
claims for a HCPCS procedure code
from the most recent available year of
claims data may not generate an
accurate estimate of the actual cost of
the procedure for these low-volume
procedures.
In accordance with section
1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, services
classified within each APC must be
comparable clinically and with respect
to the use of resources. As described
earlier, assigning a procedure to a new
technology APC allows us to gather
claims data to price the procedure and
assign it to the APC with services that
use similar resources and are clinically
comparable. However, where utilization
of services assigned to a New
Technology APC is low, it can lead to
wide variation in payment rates from
year to year, resulting in even lower
utilization and potential barriers to
access to new technologies, which
ultimately limits our ability to assign
the service to the appropriate clinical
APC. To mitigate these issues, we
determined in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period that it
was appropriate to utilize our equitable
adjustment authority at section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to adjust how we
determined the costs for low-volume
services assigned to New Technology
APCs (83 FR 58892 through 58893). We
have utilized our equitable adjustment
authority at section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the
Act, which states that the Secretary
shall establish, in a budget neutral
manner, other adjustments as
determined to be necessary to ensure
equitable payments, to estimate an
appropriate payment amount for lowvolume new technology procedures in
the past (82 FR 59281). Although we
have used this adjustment authority on
a case-by-case basis in the past, we
stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period that we
believe it is appropriate to adopt an
adjustment for low-volume services
assigned to New Technology APCs in
order to mitigate the wide payment
fluctuations that have occurred for new
technology services with fewer than 100
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claims and to provide more predictable
payment for these services.
For purposes of this adjustment, we
stated that we believe that it is
appropriate to use up to 4 years of
claims data in calculating the applicable
payment rate for the prospective year,
rather than using solely the most recent
available year of claims data, when a
service assigned to a New Technology
APC has a low annual volume of claims,
which, for purposes of this adjustment,
we define as fewer than 100 claims
annually. We adopted a policy to
consider procedures with fewer than
100 claims annually as low-volume
procedures because there is a higher
probability that the payment data for a
procedure may not have a normal
statistical distribution, which could
affect the quality of our standard cost
methodology that is used to assign
services to an APC. We explained that
we were concerned that the
methodology we use to estimate the cost
of a procedure under the OPPS by
calculating the geometric mean for all
separately paid claims for a HCPCS
procedure code from the most recent
available year of claims data may not
generate an accurate estimate of the
actual cost of the low-volume
procedure. Using multiple years of
claims data will potentially allow for
more than 100 claims to be used to set
the payment rate, which would, in turn,
create a more statistically reliable
payment rate.
In addition, to better approximate the
cost of a low-volume service within a
New Technology APC, we stated that we
believe using the median or arithmetic
mean rather than the geometric mean
(which ‘‘trims’’ the costs of certain
claims out) could be more appropriate
in some circumstances, given the
extremely low volume of claims. Low
claim volumes increase the impact of
‘‘outlier’’ claims; that is, claims with
either a very low or very high payment
rate as compared to the average claim,
which would have a substantial impact
on any statistical methodology used to
estimate the most appropriate payment
rate for a service. We also explained that
we believe having the flexibility to
utilize an alternative statistical
methodology to calculate the payment
rate in the case of low-volume new
technology services would help to
create a more stable payment rate.
Therefore, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58893), we established that, in each of
our annual rulemakings, we will seek
public comments on which statistical
methodology should be used for each
low-volume service assigned to a New
Technology APC. In the preamble of
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each annual rulemaking, we stated that
we would present the result of each
statistical methodology and solicit
public comment on which methodology
should be used to establish the payment
rate for a low-volume new technology
service. In addition, we will use our
assessment of the resources used to
perform a service and guidance from the
developer or manufacturer of the
service, as well as other stakeholders, to
determine the most appropriate
payment rate. Once we identify the most
appropriate payment rate for a service,
we will assign the service to the New
Technology APC with the cost band that
includes its payment rate.
Accordingly for CY 2020, we
proposed to continue the policy we
adopted in CY 2019 under which we
will utilize our equitable adjustment
authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of
the Act to calculate the geometric mean,
arithmetic mean, and median using
multiple years of claims data to select
the appropriate payment rate for
purposes of assigning services with
fewer than 100 claims per year to a New
Technology APC. Additional details on
our policy is available in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58892 through 58893).
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the continuation of our
policy regarding payment rates for lowvolume new technology procedures.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support.
After considering the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing this proposal without
modification.
3. Procedures Assigned to New
Technology APC Groups for CY 2020
As we explained in the CY 2002 OPPS
final rule with comment period (66 FR
59902), we generally retain a procedure
in the New Technology APC to which
it is initially assigned until we have
obtained sufficient claims data to justify
reassignment of the procedure to a
clinically appropriate APC.
In addition, in cases where we find
that our initial New Technology APC
assignment was based on inaccurate or
inadequate information (although it was
the best information available at the
time), where we obtain new information
that was not available at the time of our
initial New Technology APC
assignment, or where the New
Technology APCs are restructured, we
may, based on more recent resource
utilization information (including
claims data) or the availability of refined
New Technology APC cost bands,
reassign the procedure or service to a
different New Technology APC that
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more appropriately reflects its cost (66
FR 59903).
Consistent with our current policy, for
CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39454), we
proposed to retain services within New
Technology APC groups until we obtain
sufficient claims data to justify
reassignment of the service to a
clinically appropriate APC. The
flexibility associated with this policy
allows us to reassign a service from a
New Technology APC in less than 2
years if sufficient claims data are
available. It also allows us to retain a
service in a New Technology APC for
more than 2 years if sufficient claims
data upon which to base a decision for
reassignment have not been obtained
(66 FR 59902).
a. Magnetic Resonance-Guided Focused
Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS) (APCs
1575, 5114, and 5414)
Currently, there are four CPT/HCPCS
codes that describe magnetic resonance
image-guided, high-intensity focused
ultrasound (MRgFUS) procedures, three
of which we proposed to continue to
assign to standard APCs, and one that
we proposed to continue to assign to a
New Technology APC for CY 2020.
These codes include CPT codes 0071T,
0072T, and 0398T, and HCPCS code
C9734. CPT codes 0071T and 0072T
describe procedures for the treatment of
uterine fibroids, CPT code 0398T
describes procedures for the treatment
of essential tremor, and HCPCS code
C9734 describes procedures for pain
palliation for metastatic bone cancer.
As shown in Table 11 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and as listed
in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we proposed to
continue to assign the procedures
described by CPT codes 0071T and
0072T to APC 5414 (Level 4
Gynecologic Procedures) for CY 2020.
We also proposed to continue to assign
the APC to status indicator ‘‘J1’’
(Hospital Part B services paid through a
comprehensive APC). In addition, we
proposed to continue to assign the
services described by HCPCS code
C9734 (Focused ultrasound ablation/
therapeutic intervention, other than
uterine leiomyomata, with magnetic
resonance (mr) guidance) to APC 5115
(Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures)
for CY 2020. We also proposed to
continue to assign HCPCS code C9734
to status indicator ‘‘J1’’. We refer readers
to Addendum B to the proposed rule for
the proposed payment rates for CPT
codes 0071T and 0072T and HCPCS
code C9734 under the OPPS.
Addendum B is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
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For the procedure described by CPT
code 0398T, we have identified 37 paid
claims from CY 2016 through CY 2018
(1 claim in CY 2016, 11 claims in CY
2017, and 25 claims in CY 2018). We
note that the procedure described by
CPT code 0398T was first assigned to a
New Technology APC in CY 2016.
Accordingly, there are 3 years of claims
data available for the OPPS ratesetting
purposes. The payment amounts for the
claims vary widely, with a cost of
approximately $29,254 for the sole CY
2016 claim, a geometric mean cost of
approximately $4,647 for the 11 claims
from CY 2017, and a geometric mean
cost of approximately $11,716 for the 25
claims from CY 2018. We are concerned
about the large fluctuation in the cost of
the procedure described by CPT code
0398T from year to year and the
relatively small number of claims
available to establish a payment rate for
the service. In accordance with section
1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we must
establish that services classified within
each APC are comparable clinically and
with respect to the use of resources.
Therefore, as discussed in section
III.C.2. of the proposed rule, we
proposed to apply the policy we
adopted in CY 2019, under which we
will utilize our equitable adjustment
authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of
the Act to calculate the geometric mean,
arithmetic mean, and median costs
using multiple years of claims data to
select the appropriate payment rate for
purposes of assigning CPT code 0398T
to a New Technology APC. We believe
using this approach to assign CPT code
0398T to a New Technology APC is
more likely to yield a payment rate that
will be representative of the cost of the
procedure described by CPT code
0398T, despite the fluctuating geometric
mean costs for the procedure available
in the claims data used for the proposed
rule. We continue to believe that the
situation for the procedure described by
CPT code 0398T is unique, given the
limited number of claims for the
procedure and the high variability for
the cost of the claims, which makes it
challenging to determine a reliable
payment rate.
Our analysis found that the estimated
geometric mean cost of the 37 claims
over the 3 year period for which there
are claims was approximately $8,829,
the estimated arithmetic mean cost of
the claims was approximately $10,021,
and the median cost of the claims was
approximately $11,985. While the
results of using different methodologies
range from approximately $8,800 to
nearly $12,000, two of the estimates fall
within the cost bands of New
Technology APC 1575 (New
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Technology—Level 38 ($10,001$15,000)), with a proposed payment rate
of $12,500.50. Consistent with our low
volume policy for procedures assigned
to a new technology APC, we presented
the result of each statistical
methodology in the proposed rule, and
we sought public comments on which
methodology should be used to
establish payment for the procedures
described by CPT code 0398T. We noted
that we believe that the median cost
estimate was the most appropriate
representative cost of the procedure
described by CPT code 0398T because it
was consistent with the payment rates
established for the procedure from CY
2017 to CY 2019 and did not involve
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any trimming of claims. Calculating the
payment rate using either the geometric
mean cost or the arithmetic mean cost
would involve trimming the one paid
claim from CY 2016, because the paid
amount for the claim of $29,254 is
substantially larger than the amount for
any other paid claim reported for the
procedure described by CPT code
0398T. The median cost estimate for
CPT code 0398T also falls within the
same New Technology APC cost band
that was used to set the payment rate for
CY 2019, which is $12,500.50 for this
procedure. Therefore, for purposes of
determining the proposed CY 2020
payment rate, we proposed to estimate
the cost for the procedure described by
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CPT code 0398T by calculating the
median cost of the 37 paid claims for
the procedures in CY 2016 through CY
2018, and assigned the procedure
described by CPT code 0398T to the
New Technology APC that includes the
estimated cost. Accordingly, we
proposed to maintain the procedure
described by CPT code 0398T in APC
1575 (New Technology—Level 38
($10,001-$15,000)), with a proposed
payment rate of $12,500.50 for CY 2020.
We refer readers to Addendum B to the
proposed rule for the proposed payment
rates for all codes reportable under the
OPPS. Addendum B is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
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Comment: Multiple commenters,
including the developer of MRgFUS,
stated that the proposed payment rate
for CPT code 0398T was too low
because they believed the claims data
for CPT code 0398T continue to
underestimate the resources used to
perform the procedure even when using
the low-volume payment policy to
establish the payment rate for the
procedure. The developer also used the
example of the service described by
HCPCS code C9734 (Focused ultrasound
ablation/therapeutic intervention, other
than uterine leiomyomata, with
magnetic resonance (mr) guidance),
where the payment rate for the service
had doubled from $5,222 in CY 2017 to
$11,675 in the CY 2020 proposed rule,
to argue that a similar increase could
occur for CPT code 0398T. Commenters
suggested several ideas for what they
believed would be a more appropriate
rate. Commenters believed the claims
cost data reported for CPT code 0398T
does not fully reflect the resource costs
for the time the procedure takes, the
cost of single-use supplies for the
procedure, and hours of use of a
provider’s MRI machine. To reflect
these costs, several commenters
supported restoring the payment rate
from CY 2018 of $17,500.50. Other
commenters simply requested a higher
rate than what was proposed such as a
payment rate of either $22,000 or
$25,000.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns, but the claims
data we currently have for CPT code
0398T do not support a higher payment
rate even when using the low-volume
payment policy. Also, while the
payment rate for HCPCS code C9734
(Focused ultrasound ablation/
therapeutic intervention, other than
uterine leiomyomata, with magnetic
resonance (mr) guidance) doubled from
CY 2017 to CY 2020, the payment rate
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increase for HCPCS code C9734 is not
predictive of the changes in cost that
may occur with CPT code 0398T
(Magnetic resonance image guided high
intensity focused ultrasound (mrgfus),
stereotactic ablation lesion, intracranial
for movement disorder including
stereotactic navigation and frame
placement when performed). Rather, the
payment rate for each service, including
that described by HCPCS code C9734, is
generally based on the costs associated
with furnishing the service, which, in
turn, drives the APC assignment. The
geometric mean for C9734, which
represents the cost of the individual
procedure, increased from $8,655 in CY
2017 to $9,294 in CY 2020, and was
reassigned to a higher level APC based
clinical and resource similarity to other
services.
Under the low-volume payment
policy, we utilized our equitable
adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to calculate the
geometric mean, arithmetic mean, and
median costs using multiple years of
claims data to select the appropriate
payment rate for purposes of assigning
CPT code 0398T to a New Technology
APC. We identified 43 claims reporting
the procedure described by CPT code
0398T for the 3-year period of CY 2016
through CY 2018. We found the
geometric mean cost for the procedure
described by CPT code 0398T is
approximately $8,485, the arithmetic
mean cost is approximately $9,672, and
the median cost is approximately
$11,182. Based on our methodology, we
will use the median cost of CPT code
0398T to set the payment rate for the
procedure because the median cost is
the highest rate of the three statistical
methods and may reflect some of the
higher resource costs, as described by
commenters, for the procedure. The
median cost for CPT code 0398T falls
within the same New Technology APC
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1575 (New Technology—Level 38
($10,001–$15,000)) with a proposed
payment rate of $12,500.50 that was
proposed as the APC assignment for
CPT code 0398T in the proposed rule.
Comment: Two commenters
supported the assignment of CPT code
0398T to New Technology APC 1575
(New Technology—Level 38 ($10,001–
$15,000)) with a proposed payment rate
of $12,500.50. One of the commenters
supported the proposed new technology
APC assignment because it is reflective
of the median cost of the service and
would ensure that what the commenter
believed would be a severe
underpayment calculated from the
geometric mean would not be used to
establish the payment rate for CPT code
0398T, which the commenter believed
could discourage providers from
performing the service.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters.
Comment: One commenter, the
developer, supported the assignment of
HCPCS code C9734 to APC 5115 (Level
5 Musculoskeletal Procedures) for CY
2020.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal for the APC
assignment of CPT code 0398T.
Specifically, we are continuing to assign
this code to New Technology APC 1575
(New Technology—Level 38 ($10,001–
$15,000)), with a payment rate of
$12,500.50, for CY 2020 through use of
our low-volume payment policy for new
technology procedures. In addition, we
are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to assign HCPCS code
C9734 to APC 5115. We also are
finalizing our proposal to continue to
assign CPT codes 0071T and 0072T to
APC 5414, without modification. Table
11 above lists the final CY 2018 status
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indicator and APC assignments for
MRgFUS procedures. We refer readers
to Addendum B of this final rule with
comment period for the final payment
rates for all codes reportable under the
OPPS. Addendum B is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
b. Retinal Prosthesis Implant Procedure
CPT code 0100T (Placement of a
subconjunctival retinal prosthesis
receiver and pulse generator, and
implantation of intra-ocular retinal
electrode array, with vitrectomy)
describes the implantation of a retinal
prosthesis, specifically, a procedure
involving the use of the Argus® II
Retinal Prosthesis System. This first
retinal prosthesis was approved by the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in
2013 for adult patients diagnosed with
severe to profound retinitis pigmentosa.
Pass-through payment status was
granted for the Argus® II device under
HCPCS code C1841 (Retinal prosthesis,
includes all internal and external
components) beginning October 1, 2013,
and this status expired on December 31,
2015. We note that after pass-through
payment status expires for a medical
device, the payment for the device is
packaged into the payment for the
associated surgical procedure.
Consequently, for CY 2016, the device
described by HCPCS code C1841 was
assigned to OPPS status indicator ‘‘N’’
to indicate that payment for the device
is packaged and included in the
payment rate for the surgical procedure
described by CPT code 0100T. For CY
2016, the procedure described by CPT
code 0100T was assigned to New
Technology APC 1599, with a payment
rate of $95,000, which was the highest
paying New Technology APC for that
year. This payment included both the
surgical procedure (CPT code 0100T)
and the use of the Argus® II device
(HCPCS code C1841). However,
stakeholders (including the device
manufacturer and hospitals) believed
that the CY 2016 payment rate for the
procedure involving the Argus® II
System was insufficient to cover the
hospital cost of performing the
procedure, which includes the cost of
the retinal prosthesis at the retail price
of approximately $145,000.
For CY 2017, analysis of the CY 2015
OPPS claims data used for the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period showed 9 single claims (out of 13
total claims) for the procedure described
by CPT code 0100T, with a geometric
mean cost of approximately $142,003
based on claims submitted between
January 1, 2015, through December 31,
2015, and processed through June 30,
2016. Based on the CY 2015 OPPS
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claims data available for the final rule
with comment period and our
understanding of the Argus® II
procedure, we reassigned the procedure
described by CPT code 0100T from New
Technology APC 1599 to New
Technology APC 1906, with a final
payment rate of $150,000.50 for CY
2017. We noted that this payment rate
included the cost of both the surgical
procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the
retinal prosthesis device (HCPCS code
C1841).
For CY 2018, the reported cost of the
Argus® II procedure based on CY 2016
hospital outpatient claims data for 6
claims used for the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period was
approximately $94,455, which was more
than $55,000 less than the payment rate
for the procedure in CY 2017, but closer
to the CY 2016 payment rate for the
procedure. We noted that the costs of
the Argus® II procedure are
extraordinarily high compared to many
other procedures paid under the OPPS.
In addition, the number of claims
submitted has been very low and has
not exceeded 10 claims within a single
year. We believed that it is important to
mitigate significant payment
differences, especially shifts of several
tens of thousands of dollars, while also
basing payment rates on available cost
information and claims data. In CY
2016, the payment rate for the Argus®
II procedure was $95,000.50. The
payment rate increased to $150,000.50
in CY 2017. For CY 2018, if we had
established the payment rate based on
updated final rule claims data, the
payment rate would have decreased to
$95,000.50 for CY 2018, a decrease of
$55,000 relative to CY 2017. We were
concerned that these large fluctuations
in payment could potentially create an
access to care issue for the Argus® II
procedure, and we wanted to establish
a payment rate to mitigate the potential
sharp decline in payment from CY 2017
to CY 2018.
In accordance with section
1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we must
establish that services classified within
each APC are comparable clinically and
with respect to the use of resources.
Therefore, for CY 2018, we used our
equitable adjustment authority under
section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which
states that the Secretary shall establish,
in a budget neutral manner, other
adjustments as determined to be
necessary to ensure equitable payments,
to maintain the payment rate for this
procedure, despite the lower geometric
mean costs available in the claims data
used for the final rule with comment
period. For CY 2018, we reassigned the
Argus® II procedure to APC 1904 (New
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Technology—Level 50 ($115,001–
$130,000)), which established a
payment rate for the Argus® II
procedure of $122,500.50, which was
the arithmetic mean of the payment
rates for the procedure for CY 2016 and
CY 2017.
For CY 2019, the reported cost of the
Argus® II procedure based on the
geometric mean cost of 12 claims from
the CY 2017 hospital outpatient claims
data was approximately $171,865,
which was approximately $49,364 more
than the payment rate for the procedure
for CY 2018. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, we
continued to note that the costs of the
Argus® II procedure are extraordinarily
high compared to many other
procedures paid under the OPPS (83 FR
58897 through 58898). In addition, the
number of claims submitted continued
to be very low for the Argus® II
procedure. We stated that we continued
to believe that it is important to mitigate
significant payment fluctuations for a
procedure, especially shifts of several
tens of thousands of dollars, while also
basing payment rates on available cost
information and claims data because we
are concerned that large decreases in the
payment rate could potentially create an
access to care issue for the Argus® II
procedure. In addition, we indicated
that we wanted to establish a payment
rate to mitigate the potential sharp
increase in payment from CY 2018 to
CY 2019, and potentially ensure a more
stable payment rate in future years.
As discussed in section III.C.2. of the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58892 through
58893), we used our equitable
adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which states
that the Secretary shall establish, in a
budget neutral manner, other
adjustments as determined to be
necessary to ensure equitable payments,
to establish a payment rate that is more
representative of the likely cost of the
service. We stated that we believed the
likely cost of the Argus® II procedure is
higher than the geometric mean cost
calculated from the claims data used for
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period but lower than the
geometric mean cost calculated from the
claims data used for the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
For CY 2019, we analyzed claims data
for the Argus® II procedure using 3
years of available data from CY 2015
through CY 2017. These data included
claims from the last year that the Argus®
II received transitional device passthrough payments (CY 2015) and the
first 2 years since device pass-through
payment status for the Argus® II
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expired. We found that the geometric
mean cost for the procedure was
approximately $145,808, the arithmetic
mean cost was approximately $151,367,
and the median cost was approximately
$151,266. As we do each year, we
reviewed claims data regarding hospital
costs associated with new procedures.
We regularly examine the claims data
and any available new information
regarding the clinical aspects of new
procedures to confirm that OPPS
payments remain appropriate for
procedures like the Argus® II procedure
as they transition into mainstream
medical practice (77 FR 68314). We
noted that the proposed payment rate
included both the surgical procedure
(CPT code 0100T) and the use of the
Argus® II device (HCPCS code C1841).
For CY 2019, the estimated costs using
all three potential statistical methods for
determining APC assignment under the
New Technology low-volume payment
policy fell within the cost band of New
Technology APC 1908, which is
between $145,001 and $160,000.
Therefore, we reassigned the Argus® II
procedure (CPT code 0100T) to APC
1908 (New Technology—Level 52
($145,001–$160,000)), with a payment
rate of $152,500.50 for CY 2019.
For CY 2020, the number of reported
claims for the Argus® II procedure
continues to be very low with a
substantial fluctuation in cost from year
to year. The high annual variability of
the cost of the Argus® II procedure
continues to make it difficult to
establish a consistent and stable
payment rate for the procedure. As
previously mentioned, in accordance
with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we
are required to establish that services
classified within each APC are
comparable clinically and with respect
to the use of resources. Therefore, for
CY 2020, we proposed to apply the
policy we adopted in CY 2019, under
which we utilize our equitable
adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to calculate the
geometric mean, arithmetic mean, and
median costs using multiple years of
claims data to select the appropriate
payment rate for purposes of assigning
the Argus® II procedure (CPT code
0100T) to a New Technology APC.
We identified 35 claims reporting the
procedure described by CPT code 0100T
for the 4-year period of CY 2015 through
CY 2018. We found the geometric mean
cost for the procedure described by CPT
code 0100T to be approximately
$146,059, the arithmetic mean cost to be
approximately $152,123, and the
median cost to be approximately
$151,267. All of the resulting estimates
from using the three statistical
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methodologies fall within the same New
Technology APC cost band ($145,001–
$160,000), where the Argus® II
procedure is assigned for CY 2019.
Consistent with our policy stated in
section III.C.2. of the proposed rule, we
presented the result of each statistical
methodology in the proposed rule, and
we sought public comments on which
method should be used to assign
procedures described by CPT code
0100T to a New Technology APC. All
three potential statistical methodologies
used to estimate the cost of the Argus®
II procedure fell within the cost band for
New Technology APC 1908, with the
estimated cost being between $145,001
and $160,000. Accordingly, we
proposed to maintain the assignment of
the procedure described by CPT code
0100T in APC 1908 (New Technology—
Level 52 ($145,001–$160,000)), with a
proposed payment rate of $152,500.50
for CY 2020. We note that the proposed
payment rate includes both the surgical
procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the
use of the Argus® II device (HCPCS code
C1841). We refer readers to Addendum
B to the proposed rule for the proposed
payment rates for all codes reportable
under the OPPS. Addendum B is
available via the internet on the CMS
website.
Comment: Two commenters,
including the manufacturer, supported
the assignment of 0100T to APC 1908
(New Technology—Level 52 ($145,001–
$160,000)), with a proposed payment
rate of $152,500.50 for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters. Consistent with our
policy for low-volume services assigned
to a New Technology APC, for this final
rule, we calculated the geometric mean,
arithmetic mean, and median costs
using multiple years of claims data to
select the appropriate payment rate for
purposes of assigning the Argus® II
procedure (CPT code 0100T) to a New
Technology APC. We identified 41
claims reporting the procedure
described by CPT code 0100T for the 4year period of CY 2015 through CY
2018. We found the geometric mean cost
for the procedure described by CPT
code 0100T to be approximately
$146,042, the arithmetic mean cost to be
approximately $151,453, and the
median cost to be approximately
$151,426. All of the resulting estimates
from using the three statistical
methodologies fall within the same New
Technology APC cost band ($145,001–
$160,000), that was proposed as the
APC assignment for CPT code 0100T in
the proposed rule. Therefore, we are
finalizing our proposal to maintain the
assignment of the procedure described
by CPT code 0100T in APC 1908 (New
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Technology—Level 52 ($145,001–
$160,000)), with a payment rate of
$152,500.50 for CY 2020. We refer
readers to Addendum B to the proposed
rule for the proposed payment rates for
all codes reportable under the OPPS.
Addendum B is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
As we discussed in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58898), the claims data
from CY 2017 showed another payment
issue with regard to the Argus® II
procedure. We found that payment for
the Argus® II procedure was sometimes
bundled into the payment for another
procedure. Therefore in CY 2019, we
implemented a policy to exclude
payment for all procedures assigned to
New Technology APCs from being
bundled into the payment for
procedures assigned to a C–APC. For CY
2020, we proposed to continue this
policy as described in section
II.A.2.b.(3) of the proposed rule. Our
proposal would continue to exclude
payment for any procedure that is
assigned to a New Technology APC
from being packaged when included on
a claim with a service assigned to status
indicator ‘‘J1’’. While we did not
propose to exclude payment for a
procedure assigned to a New
Technology APC from being packaged
when included on a claim with a service
assigned to status indicator ‘‘J2’’, we
sought public comments on this issue.
Comment: Several commenters,
including device manufacturers, device
manufacturer associations and
physicians were opposed to our
proposal to package payment for
procedures assigned to a New
Technology APC into the payment for
comprehensive observation services
assigned status indicator ‘‘J2’’. The
commenters stated that there were
instances where beneficiaries receiving
observation services may require the
types of procedures that are assigned to
New Technology APCs. Several
commenters specifically mentioned
HeartFlow, and stated that it could be
performed appropriately for a patient
receiving observation services. The
commenters also stated that providing
separate payment for this new
technology procedure will allow CMS to
collect sufficient claims data to enable
assignment of the procedure to an
appropriate clinical APC.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholders’ comments regarding this
proposal and agree that, although rare,
there are situations in which it is
clinically appropriate to provide a new
technology service when providing
comprehensive observation services. As
discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
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a claim with a ‘‘J1’’ service assigned to
a C–APC. For CY 2020 and subsequent
years, we are also finalizing a policy to
exclude payment for any procedures
that are assigned to a New Technology
APC from being packaged into the
payment for comprehensive observation
services assigned to status indicator
‘‘J2’’ when they are included on a claim
with ‘‘J2’’ procedures. This policy is
also described in section II.A.2.b.(3) of
this final rule.
Comment: The developer of the
procedure noted that there will be
clinical trials for HCPCS code C9751 in
CY 2020 and it is anticipated the
procedure also will have a limited
market release in CY 2020. Therefore,
the developer is expecting claims to be
reported billed with HCPCS code C9751
for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the update
on the expected utilization for HCPCS
code C9751 for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter supported
our proposal to assign HCPCS code
C9751 to New Technology APC 1571
(New Technology—Level 34 ($8,001-
$8,500)), with a proposed payment rate
of $8,250.50 for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter.
After considering the public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign HCPCS code C9751 to
New Technology APC 1571 (New
Technology—Level 34 ($8,001–$8,500)),
with a payment rate of $8,250.50 for CY
2020.
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c. Bronchoscopy With Transbronchial
Ablation of Lesion(s) by Microwave
Energy
Effective January 1, 2019, CMS
established HCPCS code C9751
(Bronchoscopy, rigid or flexible,
transbronchial ablation of lesion(s) by
microwave energy, including
fluoroscopic guidance, when performed,
with computed tomography
acquisition(s) and 3–D rendering,
computer-assisted, image-guided
navigation, and endobronchial
ultrasound (EBUS) guided transtracheal
and/or transbronchial sampling (eg,
d. Pathogen Test for Platelets
As stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59281), HCPCS code P9100 is used to
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aspiration[s]/biopsy[ies]) and all
mediastinal and/or hilar lymph node
stations or structures and therapeutic
intervention(s)). This microwave
ablation procedure utilizes a flexible
catheter to access the lung tumor via a
working channel and may be used as an
alternative procedure to a percutaneous
microwave approach. Based on our
review of the New Technology APC
application for this service and the
service’s clinical similarity to existing
services paid under the OPPS, we
estimated the likely cost of the
procedure would be between $8,001 and
$8,500. We have not received any
claims data for this service. Therefore,
we proposed to continue to assign the
procedure described by HCPCS code
C9751 to New Technology APC 1571
(New Technology—Level 34 ($8,001–
$8,500)), with a proposed payment rate
of $8,250.50 for CY 2020. Details
regarding HCPCS code C9751 were
shown in Table 12 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed Rule, which is
reprinted below in Table 13.
report any test used to identify bacterial
or other pathogen contamination in
blood platelets. Currently, there are two
rapid bacterial detection tests cleared by
FDA that are described by HCPCS code
P9100. According to their instructions
for use, rapid bacterial detection tests
should be performed on platelets from
72 hours after collection. Currently,
certain rapid and culture-based tests can
be used to extend the dating for platelets
from 5 days to 7 days. Blood banks and
transfusion services may test and use 6day old to 7-day old platelets if the test
results are negative for bacterial
contamination.
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final rule with comment period (83 FR
58847), the purpose of the new
technology APC policy is to ensure that
there are sufficient claims data for new
services in order to assign these
procedures to a clinical APC and
therefore, we excluded procedures
assigned to New Technology APCs from
packaging under the C–APC policy. In
the CY 2019 final rule, we specifically
stated that the exclusion policy
included circumstances when New
Technology procedures were billed with
comprehensive services assigned to
status indicator ‘‘J1’’, however we
believe this rationale is also applicable
to comprehensive observations services
that are assigned status indicator ‘‘J2’’.
Accordingly, for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, we are modifying our
policy for excluding procedures
assigned to New Technology APCs from
the C–APC policy. That is, we are
finalizing our proposal to exclude
payment for any procedure that is
assigned to a New Technology APC
from being packaged when included on
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HCPCS code P9100 was assigned in
CY 2019 to New Technology APC 1493
(New Technology—Level 1C ($21–$30)),
with a payment rate of $25.50. For CY
2020, based on CY 2018 claims data,
there are approximately 1,100 claims
reported for this service with a
geometric mean cost of approximately
$32. This geometric mean cost would
result in the assignment of the service
described by HCPCS code P9100 to a
New Technology APC, based on the
associated cost band, with a higher
payment rate than where the service is
currently assigned. Therefore, for CY
2020, we proposed to reassign the
service described by HCPCS code P9100
to New Technology APC 1494 (New
Technology—Level 1D ($31–$40)), with
a proposed payment rate of $35.50.
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenter.
After considering the public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign HCPCS code P9100 to
New Technology APC 1494 (New
Technology—Level 1D ($31–$40)), with
a payment rate of $35.50.
e. Fractional Flow Reserve Derived
From Computed Tomography (FFRCT)
Fractional Flow Reserve Derived from
Computed Tomography (FFRCT), also
known by the trade name HeartFlow, is
a noninvasive diagnostic service that
allows physicians to measure coronary
artery disease in a patient through the
use of coronary CT scans. The
HeartFlow procedure is intended for
clinically stable symptomatic patients
with coronary artery disease, and, in
many cases, may avoid the need for an
invasive coronary angiogram procedure.
HeartFlow uses a proprietary data
analysis process performed at a central
facility to develop a three-dimensional
image of a patient’s coronary arteries,
which allows physicians to identify the
fractional flow reserve to assess whether
or not patients should undergo further
invasive testing (that is, a coronary
angiogram).
For many procedures in the OPPS,
payment for analytics that are
performed after the main diagnostic/
image procedure are packaged into the
payment for the primary procedure.
However, in CY 2018, we determined
that HeartFlow should receive a
separate payment because the procedure
is performed by a separate entity (that
is, a HeartFlow technician who
conducts computer analysis offsite)
rather than the provider performing the
CT scan. We assigned CPT code 0503T,
which describes the analytics
performed, to New Technology APC
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1516 (New Technology—Level 16
($1,401–$1,500)), with a payment rate of
$1,450.50 based on pricing information
provided by the developer of the
procedure that indicated the price of the
procedure was approximately $1,500.
For CY 2020, based on our analysis of
the CY 2018 claims data available for
the proposed rule, we found that over
840 claims had been submitted for
payment for HeartFlow during CY 2018.
We stated that the estimated geometric
mean cost of HeartFlow was $788.19, or
roughly $660 lower that the payment
rate for CY 2019 of $1,450.50. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we proposed to reassign
the service described by CPT code
0503T in order to adjust the payment
rate to better reflect the cost for the
service. We proposed to reassign the
service described by CPT code 0503T to
New Technology APC 1509 (New
Technology—Level 9 ($701–$800)), with
a proposed payment rate of $750.50 for
CY 2020. We sought public comments
on this proposal.
Comment: Multiple commenters
requested that we retain the CY 2019
OPPS APC assignment of APC 1516
(New Technology—Level 16 ($1401–
$1500)) for HeartFlow with a payment
rate of $1,450.50. The commenters were
concerned that reducing the payment
rate to $750.50 would discourage
hospitals from using the service because
they stated that the list price of the
HeartFlow service is substantially
higher than the proposed payment rate.
Commenters were concerned that
reduced utilization of HeartFlow would
cause some beneficiaries to have
unnecessary invasive coronary
angiograms that are more costly than the
HeartFlow procedure.
Multiple commenters, including the
developer of HeartFlow, provided
additional reasons to maintain the
current payment rate for the service of
$1,450.50 despite claims data suggesting
a lower payment rate for HeartFlow. The
commenters believed that 78 single
frequency claims used for the proposed
rule solely represented a single year and
that such a low number of claims would
be an insufficient number of claims on
which to base a payment rate reduction
for the service. Two commenters
suggested that CMS should collect
another one or two years of claims data
before making changes to the current
payment rate. One of the commenters
believed the reason the estimated cost of
HeartFlow derived from claims data is
substantially less than the current
payment rate may be due to providers
submitting claims without marked up
gross charges for the services they
provide.
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Another commenter, the developer,
encouraged CMS to use our equitable
adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which states
that the Secretary shall establish, in a
budget neutral manner, other
adjustments as determined to be
necessary to ensure equitable payments
to maintain the current payment rate for
HeartFlow. The developer suggested
that CMS should use its own assessment
of the resources required to perform the
HeartFlow service to set the payment
rate for the service. The developer cited
instances in the last four years where
CMS used its equitable adjustment
authority to mitigate either large
fluctuations or declines in annual
payment rates. These cases include: (1)
A CY 2018 decision to use multiple
years of claims data to pay a higher rate
for CPT code 0100T (Placement of a
subconjunctival retinal prosthesis
receiver and pulse generator, and
implantation of intraocular retinal
electrode array, with vitrectomy) of
$122,500.50 rather than the payment
rate generated by the most recent year
of claims data of $95,000.50; (2) a CY
2016 decision regarding the payment
rate of CPT code 0308T (Insertion of
ocular telescope prosthesis including
removal of crystalline lens or
intraocular lens prosthesis) where the
median cost of $18,365 was used to set
the payment rate instead of the
geometric mean cost of $13,865 because
only 39 single frequency claims were
reported for the service, and where we
stated that ‘‘the median cost would be
a more appropriate measure of the
central tendency for purposes of
calculating the cost and the payment
rate for the procedure;’’ (3) a CY 2016
decision to adjust the geometric mean
per diem cost for the partial hospital
program to ensure a per diem payment
for fewer services was less than a per
diem payment for a larger number of
services; and (4) a CY 2018 decision to
establish a payment rate of $17,500.50
for CPT code 0398T (Magnetic
resonance image guided high intensity
focused ultrasound (mrgfus),
stereotactic ablation lesion, intracranial
for movement disorder including
stereotactic navigation and frame
placement when performed) instead of
proposed payment rate of $9,750.50.
The developer believes that the
proposed New Technology APC
assignment for HeartFlow, which would
result in a nearly 50 percent reduction
in the payment rate between CY 2019
and CY 2020, is similar to these cases
described in their comment. Therefore,
the developer asked us to use our
equitable adjustment authority to
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maintain the CY 2019 payment rate of
$1,450.50 for the service rather than
adopt the proposed payment rate.
Response: The proposed payment rate
for CPT code 0503T was based on
claims data from CY 2018, which is the
first year the service was payable in the
OPPS. For ratesetting for CY 2018 and
CY 2019, there were no claims data
available showing the cost of the
service. Also, there were no services
identified as comparable to CPT code
0503T, which meant we could not
estimate the cost of CPT code 0503T by
using the cost of a similar service.
Accordingly, we previously based
pricing for the service on pricing
information provided by the developer
of the procedure.
We recognize that there was a low
volume of claims for HeartFlow based
on the data available for the proposed
rule and, thus, we should have applied
the low-volume policy for new
technology services in the proposed
rule.
However, for the final rule, using the
most recently available data, there are
now 957 total claims billed with CPT
code 0503T and 101 single frequency
claims. We appreciate the concerns of
the commenters who stated that there
were not enough claims billed with
HeartFlow to use claims data to revise
the rate for HeartFlow. While 101 single
claims is above the threshold we
established for low-volume services
assigned to a new technology APC, we
agree with the commenters that a
payment reduction of nearly 50 percent
is significant for a new technology that
still has relatively low volume.
Accordingly, given the low number of
single frequency claims for CPT code
0503T, that number of claims for the
Heartflow procedure was below the lowvolume payment policy threshold for
the proposed rule, and that it is only
two claims above the threshold using
data available for this final rule with
comment period, we have decided to
use our equitable adjustment authority
under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to
calculate the geometric mean, arithmetic
mean, and median using the CY 2018
claims data to determine an appropriate
payment rate for HeartFlow using our
new technology APC low-volume
payment policy. While the number of
single frequency claims is just above our
threshold to use the low-volume
payment policy, we still have concerns
about the normal cost distribution of the
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claims used to calculate the payment
rate for Heartflow, and we decided the
low-volume payment policy would be
the best approach to address those
concerns.
Our analysis found that the geometric
mean cost for CPT code 0503T was
$768.26, the arithmetic mean cost for
CPT code 0503T was $960.12 and that
the median cost for CPT code 0503T
was $900.28. Of the three cost methods,
the highest amount was for the
arithmetic mean. The arithmetic mean
falls within the cost band for New
Technology APC 1511 (New
Technology—Level 11 ($901–$1000))
with a payment rate of $950.50. The
arithmetic mean helps to account for
some of the higher costs of CPT code
0503T identified by the commenters
that may not have been reflected by
either the median or the geometric
mean. We acknowledge the
commenters’ concern and recognize that
it may be theoretically possible that the
reported cost of CPT code 0503T is
higher than what we calculated from the
claims data due to some providers
reporting costs lower than actual costs
for the service. However, we rely on
hospitals to bill all CPT codes
accurately in accordance with their code
descriptors and CPT and CMS
instructions, as applicable, and to report
charges on claims and charges and costs
on their Medicare hospital cost reports
appropriately. In addition, we do not
specify the methodologies that hospitals
must use to set charges for this or any
other service.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are utilizing
our new technology low-volume
payment policy to set the payment rate
for the HeartFlow service CPT code
0503T based on the arithmetic mean for
the procedure. Specifically, we are
assigning CPT code 0503T to New
Technology APC 1511 (New
Technology—Level 11 ($901–$1000))
with a payment rate of $950.50.
f. Cardiac Positron Emission
Tomography (PET)/Computed
Tomography (CT) Studies
Effective January 1, 2020, we have
assigned three CPT codes (78431, 78432,
and 78433) that describe the services
associated with cardiac PET/CT studies
to New Technology APCs. Table 13
reports code descriptors, status
indicators, and APC assignments for
these CPT codes. These codes were
listed in Addendum B to the CY 2020
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OPPS/ASC proposed rule as 78X32,
78X33, and 78X44. More information
about CPT codes 78431, 78432, and
78433 can be found in section III. D. b.
of this final rule.
Comment: Several commenters
reported that certain societies submitted
a new technology application to CMS
for CPT codes 78431, 78432, and 78433
that details the costs associated with
providing these services. For CPT code
78431, these same commenters
disagreed with the proposed APC
placement and recommended its
reassignment from APC 5594 (Level 4
Nuclear Medicine and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of
$1,466.16 to APC 1522 (New
Technology—Level 23 ($2501–$3000))
with a proposed payment rate of
$2,750.50. They reported that, based on
the resource cost of the service
described by CPT code 78431, APC 1522
provides adequate reimbursement for
the service. Similarly, for CPT codes
78432 and 78433, the commenters
indicated that APC 5594 would not
adequately cover the resource costs
associated with these procedures, and
recommended their reassignment to
APC 1523 (New Technology—Level 23
($2501–$3000)) with a proposed
payment rate of $ 2,750.50
Response: Based on the information
provided in the new technology
application, and the comments received,
we are revising the APC assignments for
these codes. Specifically, we are
revising the APC assignment for CPT
code 78431 from APC 5594 to APC
1522, and reassigning CPT codes 78432
and 78433 from APC 5594 to APC 1523.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments for the new cardiac
PET/CT codes, and based on our
evaluation of the new technology
application which provided the
estimated costs for the services and
described the components and
characteristics of the new codes, we are
assigning CPT codes 78431, 78432, and
78433 to the final APCs listed in Table
14 below. Please refer to section III. D.
b. of this final rule for more information
on the finalized proposal to establish a
payment rate for other new CPT codes
associated with PET/CT studies. The
final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website).
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coding of these services by Medicare
would reveal to the study participants
whether they have received the
interatrial shunt because an additional
procedure code, CPT code 93799
(Unlisted cardiovascular service or
procedure) would be included on the
claims for participants receiving the
interatrial shunt. Therefore, we created
a temporary HCPCS code to describe the
V-wave interatrial shunt procedure for
both the experimental group and the
control group in the study. Specifically,
we established HCPCS code C9758
(Blinded procedure for NYHA class III/
IV heart failure; transcatheter
implantation of interatrial shunt or
placebo control, including right heart
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catheterization, trans-esophageal
echocardiography (TEE)/intracardiac
echocardiography (ICE), and all imaging
with or without guidance (for example,
ultrasound, fluoroscopy), performed in
an approved investigational device
exemption (IDE) study) to describe the
service, and we assigned the service to
New Technology APC 1589 (New
Technology—Level 38 ($10,001–
$15,000)). Details about the temporary
HCPCS code are shown in Table 15
below. The final CY 2020 payment rate
for V-Wave interatrial shunt procedure
can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period (which
is available via the internet on the CMS
website).
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g. V-Wave Interatrial Shunt Procedure
A randomized, double-blinded
control IDE study is currently in
progress for the V-Wave interatrial
shunt procedure. All participants who
passed initial screening for the study
receive a right heart catherization
procedure described by CPT code 93451
(Right heart catheterization including
measurement(s) of oxygen saturation
and cardiac output, when performed).
Participants assigned to the
experimental group also receive the VWave interatrial shunt procedure while
participants assigned to the control
group only receive right heart
catheterization. The developer of VWave is concerned that the current
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D. OPPS APC-Specific Policies
1. Barostim
NeoTM
System (APC 5464)
In CY 2019, CPT codes 0266T and
0268T were assigned to APC 5463
(Level 3 Neurostimulator and Related
Procedures) with a payment rate of
$18,707.16. For CY 2020, as listed in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to reassign
both codes to APC 5464 (Level 4
Neurostimulator and Related
Procedures) with a proposed payment
rate of $29,025.99. Table 16 below lists
the long descriptors, proposed status
indicator (SI), and APC assignments for
these codes. We note that both codes are
associated with the Barostim NeoTM
System.
Comment: A medical device company
agreed with the reassignment for CPT
codes 0266T and 0268T to APC 5464.
The commenter stated that APC 5464 is
the more appropriate assignment for
these codes based on clinical and
resource homogeneity, and encouraged
CMS to finalize the APC assignment.
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Response: As we have stated every
year since the implementation of the
OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on
an annual basis, the APC assignments
for all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on our analysis of the latest
claims data.
Based on our analysis of the proposed
rule claims data as well as clinical
review of the services described, we
proposed to revise the APC assignment
for both CPT codes 0266T and 0268T to
APC 5464. In our analysis of CPT code
0268T (which describes implantation/
replacement of the pulse generator), we
noticed that the APC assignment for
CPT code 0266T (which describes the
implantation or replacement of the
complete system) was lower. We do not
believe that the payment for the
complete system (CPT code 0266T)
should be less than the payment for the
implantation/replacement of the pulse
generator (CPT code 0268T) procedure.
Consequently, we proposed to revise the
APC assignment for CPT code 0266T to
APC 5464. Although we had no claims
data for CPT code 0266T, we believed
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it was necessary to revise the APC
assignment to appropriately reflect the
device cost associated with the
procedure.
Similar to our findings for the
proposed rule, based on updated claims
data for this final rule with comment
period, the geometric mean cost for CPT
code 0268T supports its reassignment
from APC 5463 to APC 5464.
Specifically, our claims data show a
geometric mean cost of approximately
$25,558 for CPT code 0268T based on 6
single claims (out of 6 total claims),
which is consistent with the geometric
mean cost of approximately $28,491 for
APC 5464, rather than the geometric
mean cost of approximately $18,864 for
APC 5463. Furthermore, as mentioned
above, we are also assigning CPT code
0266T to APC 5464 even though we do
not yet have claims data because we do
not believe that the service for
implantation of the entire system (CPT
code 0266T) would be less resource
intensive than the implantation of the
pulse generator alone (CPT code 0268T).
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In summary, after consideration of the
public comment and analysis of the
latest claims data, we are finalizing our
proposal, without modification, to
assign CPT codes 0266T and 0268T to
APC 5464 for CY 2020. Table 16 below
list the long descriptors for the codes
and the final SI and APC assignments.
The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator (SI)
assignments for all codes reported under
the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
2. Biomechanical Computed
Tomography (BCT) Analysis (APCs
5521, 5523, and 5731)
The CPT Editorial Panel established
five new codes, specifically, CPT codes
0554T, 0555T, 0556T, 0557T, and
0558T, to describe the services
associated with biomechanical
computed tomography (BCT) analysis
effective July 1, 2019. Through the July
2019 OPPS quarterly update CR
(Transmittal 4313, Change Request
11318, dated May 24, 2019), we
assigned these new codes to appropriate
interim status indicators (SI) and APCs.
Table 17 below lists the long descriptors
and proposed SI and APCs of the codes.
Comment: A commenter agreed with
the SI and APC assignments and stated
that the APC assignments for these
codes are the best available placements.
The commenter also noted that CMS did
not assign the comprehensive code (CPT
code 0554T) and the physician
interpretation code (CPT code 0557T) to
an APC because the codes represent
physician services.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its feedback. We are finalizing the
SIs and APC assignments for the codes.
Table 17 below list the long descriptors
and final SIs and APCs. The final CY
2020 payment rate for the codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period. In addition, we
refer readers to Addendum D1 of this
final rule with comment period for the
complete list of the OPPS payment
status indicators and their definitions
for CY 2020. Both Addendum B and
Addendum D1 are available via the
internet on the CMS website.
As we do for all codes, we will
reevaluate the APC assignments for CPT
codes 0555T, 0556T, and 0558T once
we have claims data. We remind
hospitals that we review, on an annual
basis, the APC assignments for all
services and items paid under the OPPS
based on the latest claims data.
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3. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR)
Imaging (APC 5572)
For CY 2020, we proposed to
maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 75561 (Cardiac magnetic resonance
imaging for morphology and function
without contrast material(s), followed
by contrast material(s) and further
sequences) to APC 5572 (Level 2
Imaging with Contrast) with a proposed
payment rate of $373.45.
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Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern with the placement
of CPT code 75561 in APC 5572, and
stated that it is grouped with services
that are not similar clinically or with
respect to resource use. As an example,
they observed that CPT code 75561 is
unlike CT of the abdomen or pelvis or
MRI of the neck and spine, and instead,
is more similar to those services in APC
5573 (Level 3 Imaging with Contrast),
with a proposed payment rate of
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$682.96.Another commenter expressed
concern with the payment stability for
CPT code 75561. The commenter noted
that although the code is assigned to the
same APC for CY 2020, the payment for
the service is slated for another
reduction. The commenter observed that
the payment rate for the service has
decreased in the last several years and
noted the following yearly rates:
• CY 2017 OPPS payment rate: $426.52
• CY 2018 OPPS payment rate: $456.34
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• CY 2019 OPPS payment rate: $385.88
• CY 2020 OPPS proposed payment
rate: $373.45
This same commenter reported that
the code was previously included in a
nuclear medicine APC, which it
maintained was appropriate based on its
clinical and resource homogeneity to
cardiovascular magnetic resonance and
cardiac nuclear imaging services in the
APC, and that, since its APC
reassignment, the payment for the
service has dropped. The commenter
believed that the different cost reporting
methods used by hospitals may
contribute to the artificially low relative
payment weights and payment amounts
for CT and MR.
Response: For CY 2020, based on
claims submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 30, 2018, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule continues to
support our proposal of assigning CPT
code 75561 to APC 5572. Specifically,
our claims data show a geometric mean
cost of approximately $413 for CPT code
75561 based on 14,350 single claims
(out of 18,118 total claims), which is
comparable to the geometric mean cost
of about $359 for APC 5572, rather than
the geometric mean cost of
approximately $660 for APC 5573. The
geometric cost of approximately $413
for CPT code 75561 is also consistent
with the costs for significant services in
APC 5572, which range between about
$269 (for CPT code 74174) to $515 (for
CPT code 73525). Based on our analysis
of the latest claims data, we believe that
CPT code 75561 is appropriately
assigned to APC 5572.
With regards to the issue of payment
stability, we note that Section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the
Secretary to review, not less often than
annually, and to revise the groups,
relative payment weights, and the wage
and other adjustments to take into
account changes in medical practices,
changes in technology, the addition of
new services, new cost data, and other
relevant information and factors.
Therefore, every year we review and
revise the APC assignments based on
our evaluation of these factors using the
latest OPPS claims data. While we
recognize the concerns about payment
stability, we note that changes made to
payment rates are based on our
calculations of geometric mean costs
from the most recently available
Medicare claims and cost report data
analysis, which may or may not result
in payment increases and/or reductions
based on the most recent geometric
mean costs available. We note that the
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geometric mean costs reflect the
national average resources to furnish a
service in the hospital outpatient
setting. To the extent that costs
decrease, so too, would the payment
rate.
In addition, with regard to the issue
of different hospital cost reporting
methods, we are unable to determine
whether hospitals are misreporting the
procedure. It is generally not our policy
to judge the accuracy of hospital
charging and coding for purposes of
ratesetting. We rely on hospitals to
accurately report the use of HCPCS
codes in accordance with their code
descriptors and CPT and CMS
instructions, and to appropriately report
services on claims and charges and costs
for the services on their Medicare
hospital cost report. Also, we do not
specify the methodologies that hospitals
use to set charges for this or any other
service. Furthermore, we state in
Chapter 4 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual that ‘‘it is extremely
important that hospitals report all
HCPCS codes consistent with their
descriptors; CPT and/or CMS
instructions and correct coding
principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
or is packaged’’ to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
Comment: One commenter who
expressed concern with the APC
assignment for CPT code 75561 also
requested that we address in the final
rule how we determine which services
are clinically similar. The commenter
noted that CMS has constructed many
APCs with a mix of imaging services
that are dissimilar and yet preserves the
clinical homogeneity of some APCs,
such as nuclear medicine services.
Response: Under the OPPS, each
service is assigned to an APC based on
the clinical and resource similarity to
other services within the APC or family
of APCS. The OPPS is a prospective
payment system under which payment
groupings (that is, APCs) are based on
clinical and resource similarity rather
than code-specific payment rates, which
would result in a cost-based fee
schedule. For example APCs 5111–
5116, which are described as Levels 1
through 6 Musculoskeletal Procedures,
all include services that involve
musculoskeletal services/procedures
and the various levels of that APC
family differentiate such procedures
based on resource homogeneity. That is,
the descriptors for APCs 5111 through
5116 are general and broadly describe a
variety of musculoskeletal procedures,
and are differentiated by the various
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61227
levels based on the geometric mean
costs for each APC. Clinically, all the
procedures in APCs 5111 through 5116
are similar in that they involve some
form of musculoskeletal procedure. In
addition, as stated in section III.B.2.
(Application of the 2 Times Rule) of this
final rule with comment, section
1833(t)(2) of the Act provides that,
subject to certain exceptions, the items
and services within an APC group
cannot be considered comparable with
respect to the use of resources if the
highest cost for an item or service in the
group is more than 2 times greater than
the lowest cost for an item or service
within the same group (referred to as the
‘‘2 times rule’’). While it may seem
appropriate to place one code in a
specific grouping, based on our 2 times
rule criteria, we must assign the code to
the appropriate APC based on its
geometric mean cost.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal, without modification, to
assign CPT code 75561 to APC 5572.
The final CY 2020 payment rate for CPT
code 75561 can be found in Addendum
B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the status indicator
(SI) meanings for all codes reported
under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and
D1 are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
4. CardioFluxTM Magnetocardiography
(MCG) Myocardial Imaging (APC 5723)
For CY 2020, we proposed to
maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 0541T to APC 5722 (Level 2
Diagnostic Tests and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of
$256.60. We also proposed to continue
to assign CPT code 0541T, which is an
add-on code, to status indicator ‘‘N’’ to
indicate that the code is packaged and
payment for it is included in the
primary procedure or service. In this
case, the payment for 0542T is included
in CPT code 0541T. We note that CPT
codes 0541T and 0542T are associated
with the CardioFlux
magnetocardiography imaging
technology. Table 18 below lists the
long descriptors for the codes as well as
the proposed SI and APC assignments.
Comment: A commenter disagreed
with the assignment to APC 5722 and
reported that the service associated with
CPT code 0541T is not clinically and
resource comparable to the services in
the APC. The commenter stated that the
service is clinically comparable to the
services that are assigned to APCs 5593
and 5724, specifically:
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• APC 5593 (Level 3 Nuclear
Medicine), with a proposed payment
rate of $ 1,293.33, which includes—
+ CPT code 78451 (Myocardial
perfusion imaging); and
+ CPT code 78452 (Myocardial
perfusion imaging).
• APC 5724 (Level 4 Diagnostic Tests
and Related Services), with a proposed
payment rate of approximately $ 920.66,
which includes—
+ CPT code 95965
(Magnetoencephalography (MEG)); and
+ CPT code 95966
(Magnetoencephalography (MEG)).
The commenter indicated that this new
technology requires the use of very
expensive capital equipment, and added
that the CardioFlux System costs about
$1.5 million with a useful life of seven
years. The technology itself involves
hospital site implementation and
ongoing operation. The commenter
stated that the proposed payment does
not provide adequate payment for this
novel technology. The commenter
expressed concern that the proposed
low payment rate will severely limit
uptake of this new technology, and,
consequently, urged CMS to reassign
CPT code 0541T to either APC 5593 or
APC 5724 to ensure patient access to
this emerging technology and its
potential for savings to the Medicare
program.
Response: Under the OPPS, one of our
goals is to make payments that are
appropriate for the services that are
necessary for the treatment of Medicare
beneficiaries. The OPPS, like other
Medicare payment systems, is a
prospective payment system. The
payment rates that are established
reflect the geometric mean costs
associated with items and services
assigned to an APC and we believe that
our payment rates generally reflect the
costs that are associated with providing
care to Medicare beneficiaries in cost
efficient settings. Moreover, we strive to
establish rates that are adequate to
ensure access to medically necessary
services for Medicare beneficiaries.
For many emerging technologies there
is a transitional period during which
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utilization may be low, often because
providers are first learning about the
techniques and their clinical utility.
Quite often, the requests for higher
payment amounts are for new
procedures in that transitional phase.
These requests, and their accompanying
estimates for expected Medicare
beneficiary or total patient utilization,
often reflect very low rates of patient
use, resulting in high per use costs for
which requesters believe Medicare
should make full payment. Medicare
does not, and we believe should not,
assume responsibility for more than its
share of the costs of procedures based
on Medicare beneficiary projected
utilization and does not set its payment
rates based on initial projections of low
utilization for services that require
expensive capital equipment.
We note that in a budget neutral
environment, payments may not fully
cover hospitals’ costs, including those
for the purchase and maintenance of
capital equipment. We rely on hospitals
to make their decisions regarding the
acquisition of high cost equipment with
the understanding that the Medicare
program must be careful to establish its
initial payment rates for new services
that lack hospital claims data based on
realistic utilization projections for all
such services delivered in cost-efficient
hospital outpatient settings. As the
OPPS acquires claims data regarding
hospital costs associated with new
procedures, we annually review the
claims data and any available new
information regarding the clinical
aspects of new procedures to confirm
that our OPPS payments remain
appropriate for procedures as they
transition into mainstream medical
practice.
In addition, we note this new
technology is currently under clinical
trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers:
NCT03968809 and NCT04044391) and
does not appear to be a service that is
typically performed in an HOPD facility.
Further, based on our clinical
evaluation, we do not agree that
CardioFlux MCG is similar to the MEG
procedures described by CPT codes
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95965 and 95966 since MEG procedures
involve the brain while the CardioFlux
technology involves imaging of the
heart. Also, we do not agree that
CardioFlux MCG is similar to the
myocardial perfusion scans described
by CPT codes 78451 and 78452 because
these scans involve the use of
radioactive tracers, specialized staff, and
more time as the test generally takes two
to four hours to complete. Furthermore,
based on our findings, the CardioFlux
MCG scan is unlike other cardiac
imaging tests because it does not require
or expose the patient to radiation, and
takes about 90 seconds to perform with
physician review and return of
interpretation of the results in an
estimated 5 minutes per patient.
However, based on our review of the
issue and feedback from our medical
advisors, as well as the anticipated
operating costs per case derived from
the public comment and publicly
available information about the service,
we believe that CPT code 0541T should
be assigned to APC 5723 (Level 3
Diagnostic Tests and Related Services)
rather than to APC 5722 (Level 2
Diagnostic Tests and Related Services).
Because we have neither claims data nor
specific HOPD costs, including the cost
to perform each exam (other than the
cost of the capital equipment that was
supplied to us), we believe that APC
5723 is the most appropriate assignment
at this time.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comment, we are finalizing our
proposal, with modification, to assign
CPT code 0541T to APC 5723. Table 18
list the long descriptors and final SI and
APC assignments for both codes. The
final CY 2020 payment rate for CPT
code 0541T can be found in Addendum
B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the status indicator
(SI) meanings for all codes reported
under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and
D1 are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
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5. Cataract Removal With Endoscopic
Cyclophotocoagulation (ECP) (APC
5492)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel
established two new codes to describe
cataract removal with endoscopic
cyclophotocoagulation (ECP),
specifically, CPT codes 66987 and
66988. As listed in Table 19 below with
the long descriptors, and also in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to assign
CPT code 66987 and 66988 to APC 5491
(Level 1 Intraocular Procedures) with a
proposed payment rate of $2,053.39.
The codes were listed as 66X01 and
66X02 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder
codes), respectively, in Addendum B
with the short descriptors and again in
Addendum O with the long descriptors.
We also assigned the codes to comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to
indicate that they are new for CY 2020
and that public comments would be
accepted on their proposed status
indicator assignments. We note these
codes will be effective January 1, 2020.
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Comment: A commenter disagreed
with the APC assignment and, based on
their analysis of the combined geometric
mean costs for the existing cataract and
ECP procedures (CPT codes 66982,
66984, and 66711), believed the new
codes should be reassigned to APC 5492
(Level 2 Intraocular Procedures) with a
proposed payment rate of $3,867.16.
Four professional ophthalmology
organizations suggested that CMS
should establish the payment rate for
CPT code 66987 based on the combined
costs of CPT codes 66711 and 66982,
and, similarly, determine the payment
rate for CPT code 66988 based on the
combined costs of CPT codes 66711 and
66984. They expressed concern that the
proposed payment rates for the codes do
not adequately capture the resources
hospitals will expend for each
combined procedure.
Response: APC assignment for a code
is not typically based on combined costs
of existing HCPCS codes, rather, it is
based on similarity to other codes
within an APC based clinical
homogeneity and resource costs. As
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specified in 42 CFR 419.31(a)(1), CMS
classifies outpatient services and
procedures that are comparable
clinically and in terms of resource use
into APC groups. Also, as we stated in
the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule (76
FR 74224), the OPPS is a prospective
payment system that provides payment
for groups of services that share clinical
and resource use characteristics. It
should be noted that, with all new
codes, our policy has been to assign the
service or procedure to an APC based on
feedback from a variety of sources,
including but not limited to review of
the clinical similarity of the service to
existing procedures; advice from CMS
medical advisors; information from
interested specialty societies; and
review of all other information available
to us, including information provided to
us by the public, whether through
meetings with stakeholders or
additional information that is mailed or
otherwise communicated to us.
Based on our analysis of the public
comment and input from our medical
advisors, we believe that we should
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revise the APC assignment for these new
cataract codes. We reviewed the
components of the procedure associated
with CPT codes 66987 and 66988, and
after our analysis, we agree with
commenters that the resources
associated with the new codes are
higher than the routine cataract and ECP
procedures when performed by
themselves. Therefore, we are
reassigning the new codes from APC
5491 to APC 5492.
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In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification, and
revising the APC assignment for CPT
codes 66987 and 66988 to APC 5492 for
CY 2020. Table 19 lists the final SI and
APC assignments for the two codes. The
final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator (SI)
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meanings for all codes reported under
the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
We note that we will reevaluate the
APC assignments for CPT codes 66987
and 66988 once we have claims data.
We review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items
paid under the OPPS based on the latest
claims data that we have available.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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6. Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell
(CAR T) Therapy (APCs 5694, 9035, and
9194)
Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR)
T-cell therapy is a cell-based gene
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therapy in which T-cells are collected
and genetically engineered to express a
chimeric antigen receptor that will bind
to a certain protein on a patient’s
cancerous cells. The CAR T-cells are
then administered to the patient to
attack certain cancerous cells and the
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individual is observed for potential
serious side effects that would require
medical intervention.
Two CAR T-cell therapies received
FDA approval in 2017. KYMRIAH®
(manufactured by Novartis
Pharmaceuticals Corporation) was
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approved for use in the treatment of
patients up to 25 years of age with Bcell precursor acute lymphoblastic
leukemia (ALL) that is refractory or in
second or later relapse. In May 2018,
KYMRIAH® received FDA approval for
a second indication, treatment of adult
patients with relapsed or refractory large
B-cell lymphoma after two or more lines
of systemic therapy, including diffuse
large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), high
grade B-cell lymphoma, and DLBCL
arising from follicular lymphoma.
YESCARTA® (manufactured by Kite
Pharma, Inc.) was approved for use in
the treatment of adult patients with
relapsed or refractory large B-cell
lymphoma and who have not responded
to or who have relapsed after at least
two other kinds of treatment.
The HCPCS code to describe the use
of KYMRIAH® (HCPCS code Q2042) has
been active since January 1, 2019 for
OPPS, which replaced HCPCS code
Q2040, active January 1, 2018 through
December 31, 2018, as discussed in the
CY2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period. The HCPCS code to
describe the use of YESCARTA®
(HCPCS code Q2041) has been active
since April, 1, 2018 for OPPS. The
HCPCS Q-code for the currently
approved CAR T-cell therapies include
leukapheresis and dose preparation
procedures because these services are
included in the manufacturing of these
biologicals. Both of these CAR T-cell
therapies were approved for transitional
pass-through payment status, effective
April 1, 2018. The HCPCS codes that
describe the use of these CAR T-cell
therapies were assigned status indicator
‘‘G’’ in Addenda A and B to the CY2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
As discussed in section V.A.4. (Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
with New or Continuing Pass-Through
Payment Status in CY 2019) of this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal to continue passthrough payment status for HCPCS code
Q2042 and HCPCS code Q2041 for CY
2020. In section V.A.4. of this final rule
with comment period, we also are
finalizing our proposal to determine the
pass-through payment rate following the
standard ASP methodology, updating
pass-through payment rates on a
quarterly basis if applicable information
indicates that adjustments to the
payment rates are necessary.
The AMA created four Category III
CPT codes that are related to CAR T-cell
therapy, effective January 1, 2019. As
discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, we
finalized our proposal to assign
procedures described by CPT codes,
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T to status
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indicator ‘‘B’’ (Codes that are not
recognized by OPPS when submitted on
an outpatient hospital Part B bill type
(12x and 13x)) to indicate that the
services are not paid under the OPPS.
The procedures described by CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T describe the
various steps required to collect and
prepare the genetically modified T-cells,
and Medicare does not generally pay
separately for each step used to
manufacture a drug or biological.
Additionally, we finalized that the
procedures described by CPT code
0540T would be assigned status
indicator ‘‘S’’ (Procedure or Service, Not
Discounted when Multiple) and APC
5694 (Level IV Drug Administration) for
CY 2019. Additionally, the National
Uniform Billing Committee (NUBC)
established CAR T-cell related revenue
codes and value code to be reportable
on Hospital Outpatient Department
(HOPD) claims effective for claims
received on or after April 1, 2019.
As listed in Addendum B of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to assign procedures described
by these CPT codes, 0537T, 0538T, and
0539T, to status indicator ‘‘B’’ (Codes
that are not recognized by OPPS when
submitted on an outpatient hospital Part
B bill type (12x and 13x)) to indicate
that the services are not paid under the
OPPS. We proposed to assign CPT code
0540T to status indicator ‘‘S’’
(Procedure or Service, Not Discounted
when Multiple) and APC 5694 (Level IV
Drug Administration).
At the August 19, 2019 meeting, the
HOP Panel recommended that CMS
reassign the status indicator for the
procedures described by the specific
CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T
from ‘‘B’’ to ‘‘Q1’’ for CY2020.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed our proposal to continue to
assign status indicator ‘‘B’’ to CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for CY2020.
Commenters proposed a variety of
alternative status indicators including
status indicators ‘‘N’’, ‘‘S’’, and ‘‘Q1.’’
Commenters believed that CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T did not
represent the steps required to
manufacture the CAR T product as CMS
has stated. Generally, those advocating
for status indicator ‘‘N’’ (Items and
Services Packaged into APC Rates)
stated that this assignment would ease
the billing burden and confusion
experienced by providers under the
current status indicator assignment of
‘‘B’’. Generally, those advocating for
status indicator ‘‘S’’ (Procedure or
Service, Not Discounted When
Multiple) believed that separate
payment is warranted for these services
as they are distinct procedures and are
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ordered and performed by clinicians.
Finally, generally those advocating for
status indicator ‘‘Q1’’, indicating
conditional separate payment,
supported the HOP Panel’s
recommendation to assign this status
indicator based on codes, such as CPT
code 0565T (placeholder code 05X3T)
(Autologous cellular implant derived
from adipose tissue for the treatment of
osteoarthritis of the knees; tissue
harvesting and cellular implant
creation). CPT code 0565T has a status
indicator of ‘‘Q1’’ and commenters
believe it is similar to the procedures
described by CPT codes 0537T, 0538T,
and 0539T, since CPT code 0565T
involves the collection and harvest of
cells, in the form of tissue, for the
treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee.
Additionally, commenters stated that
the HCPCS drug Q-codes (Q2041 and
Q2042) should be revised to eliminate
the language referencing leukapheresis
and dose preparation procedures.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback. CMS does not believe
that separate or packaged payment
under the OPPS is necessary for the
procedures described by CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for CY2020.
The existing CAR T-cell therapies on the
market were approved as biologics and,
therefore, provisions of the Medicare
statute providing for payment for
biological products apply. The
procedures described by CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T describe the
various steps required to collect and
prepare the genetically modified T-cells
and Medicare does not generally pay
separately for each step used to
manufacture a drug or biological
product. Additionally, we note that CAR
T-cell therapy is a unique therapy
approved as a biologic, with unique
preparation procedures, and it cannot be
directly compared to other therapies or
existing CPT codes. We note that the
current HCPCS coding for the currently
approved CAR T-cell therapy drugs,
HCPCS codes Q2041 and Q2042,
include leukapheresis and dose
preparation procedures as these services
are including in the manufacturing of
these biologicals. Therefore, payment
for these services is incorporated into
the drug Q-codes. We note that although
there is no payment associated with
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for reasons
stated previously, these codes can still
be reported to CMS for tracking
purposes. Additionally, HOPDs can bill
Medicare for reasonable and necessary
services that are otherwise payable
under the OPPS, and we believe that the
comments in reference to payment for
services in settings not payable under
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Comment: Some commenters
recommended CMS evaluate
modifications to CAR T-cell payments
for future rule making years, including
strategies such as creating a new
statutory benefit category for cell and
gene therapies and value-based
payment. Specifically, commenters
suggested value-based payments could
include milestone-based payments over
time, indication-based pricing or
combination-based pricing.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback. Currently, the existing
CAR T-cell therapies on the market were
approved as biologics and, therefore,
provisions of the Medicare statute
providing for payment for biologicals
apply. In regards to the creation of a
new statutory benefit category, that is
out of the scope of existing CMS
statutory authority.
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In summary, after consideration of the
public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal to assign status
indicator ‘‘B’’ to CPT codes 0537T,
0538T, and 0539T for CY2020.
Additionally, we are continuing our
policy from CY2019 to assign status
indicator ‘‘S’’ to CPT code 0540T for
CY2020. Tables 20 and 21 below show
the final SI and APC assignments for
HCPCS codes Q2041, Q2042, 0537T,
0538T, 0539T, and 0540T for CY 2020.
We refer readers to Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period for the
payment rates for all codes reportable
under the OPPS. Addendum B is
available via the internet on the CMS
website. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 to this final rule with
comment period for the complete list of
the OPPS payment status indicators and
their definitions for CY2020.
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the OPPS are outside the scope of this
proposed rule.
Accordingly, we are not revising the
existing Q-codes for CAR T-cell
therapies to remove leukapheresis and
dose preparation procedures, and we are
not accepting the recommendations to
revise the status indicators for
procedures described by CPT codes
0537T, 0538T, and 0539T. We will
continue to evaluate and monitor our
payment for CAR T-cell therapies.
Comment: We note that commenters
were supportive of the decision to
continue the assignment of status
indicator ‘‘S’’ (Procedure or Service, Not
Discounted When Multiple) to CPT code
0540T.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and are finalizing our
proposal to maintain status indicator
‘‘S’’ for CPT code 0540T.
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7. Colonoscopy and Sigmoidoscopy
With Endoscopic Mucosal Resection
(EMR) (APC 5313)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT codes 45349 and 45390 to
APC 5312 (Level 2 Lower GI
Procedures), with a proposed payment
rate of $1,024.08. The long descriptors
and proposed SI and APC assignments
for both codes can be found in Table 22
below.
Comment: A commenter believed that
the two procedures are different from
the other procedures currently assigned
to APC 5312, and stated they are more
similar to these procedures that are
assigned to APC 5313:
• 46610 (Anoscopy; with removal of
single tumor, polyp, or other lesion by
hot biopsy forceps or bipolar cautery);
• 46612 (Anoscopy; with removal of
multiple tumors, polyps, or other
lesions by hot biopsy forceps, bipolar
cautery or snare technique); and
• 46615 (Anoscopy; with ablation of
tumor(s), polyp(s), or other lesion(s) not
amenable to removal by hot biopsy
forceps, bipolar cautery or snare
technique) where lesions are being
removed by methods other than just the
snare wire technique.
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Based on clinical and resource
homogeneity, the commenter requested
a reassignment from APC 5312 to APC
5313 (Level 3 Lower GI Procedures),
which had a proposed payment rate of
$2,512.28, for CPT code 45349 and
45390
Response: Upon review of data
available for this final rule with
comment period, we agree with the
commenter that the most appropriate
assignment for both codes is APC 5313.
Based on the latest hospital outpatient
claims data used for this final rule with
comment period, our analysis supports
the reassignment for the codes to APC
5313. Specifically, our analysis of the
claims data show a geometric mean cost
of approximately $1,941 for CPT code
45349 based on 386 single claims (out
of 387 total claims), and a geometric
mean cost of about $2,039 for CPT code
45390 based on 10,212 single claims
(out of 10,246). In both instances, the
geometric mean cost for the codes are
most compatible with APC 5313, whose
geometric mean cost is approximately
$2,294, compared to APC 5312, whose
geometric mean cost is about $983. We
believe that maintaining both codes in
APC 5312 would underpay for the
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procedures. Therefore, we are
reassigning the codes from APC 5312 to
APC 5313 for CY 2020.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comment, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification, and
revising the APC assignment for 45349
and 45390 from APC 5312 to APC 5313
for CY 2020. Table 22 lists the final SI
and APC assignments for the two codes.
The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator (SI)
meanings for all codes reported under
the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
As we do every year, we will
reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
codes 45349 and 45390 in the next
rulemaking cycle. We remind hospitals
that we review, on an annual basis, the
APC assignments for all services and
items paid under the OPPS based on the
latest claims data available to us.
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8. Coronary Computed Tomographic
Angiography (CCTA) (APC 5571)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT codes 75572, 75573, and
75574 to APC 5571 (Level 1 Imaging
with Contrast) with a proposed payment
rate of $179.91. The long descriptors
and proposed status indicator (SI) and
APC assignments for the codes can be
found in Table 23 below.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern with the decreased
reimbursement for the codes and stated
that the proposed payment rate
underestimates the resources necessary
to provide the service. They noted this
is the third consecutive year of
decreased reimbursement for cardiac
CT. Some commenters added that the
exams described by CPT codes 75572,
75573, and 75574 require more
resources than the contrast-enhanced
studies in APC 5571 because they
require more time, are performed by
highly trained technologists, involve
higher risk patients, require
administration of vasoactive
medications, and require close
supervision of patients during and after
the procedure. A commenter urged CMS
to reassign the codes to a higher paying
APC that is more resource intensive and
includes procedures that share similar
clinical characteristics, such as APC
5572 (Level 2 Imaging with Contrast),
which had a proposed payment rate of
$373.45, or APC 5573 (Level 3 Imaging
with Contrast), which had a proposed
payment rate of $682.96. Other
commenters specifically requested a
reassignment to APC 5573 based on
clinical and resource homogeneity to
these services that are assigned to the
APC: Stress cardiac magnetic resonance
imaging (CPT code 75563), stress
echocardiography (HCPCS codes C8928,
C8930), and nuclear SPECT MPI (CPT
codes 78451, 78452). One commenter
recommended the reassignment of CPT
code 75574 to APC 5191 (Level 1
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Endovascular Procedures) with a
proposed payment rate of $2,899.34 and
believed the service is very similar to a
cardiac catheterization procedure that is
described by CPT code 93455 (Catheter
placement in coronary artery(s) for
coronary angiography, including
intraprocedural injection(s) for coronary
angiography, imaging supervision and
interpretation; with catheter
placement(s) in bypass graft(s) (internal
mammary, free arterial, venous grafts)
including intraprocedural injection(s)
for bypass graft angiography). This same
commenter suggested that the lessintensive CPT codes 75572 and 75573
be reassigned to APC 5572.
Response: CPT codes 75572, 75573,
and 75574 were effective January 1,
2010, and prior to that they were
described by Category III CPT codes
from January 1, 2006 through December
31, 2009; therefore, we have many years
of claims data associated with these
services. For this final rule with
comment period, based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2018
through December 30, 2018, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019,
our analysis of the latest claims data for
this final rule supports maintaining CPT
codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 in APC
5571. Specifically, our claims data show
a geometric mean cost of approximately
$159 for CPT code 75572 based on
12,299 single claims (out of 23,902 total
claims), $185 for CPT code 75573 based
on 323 single claims (out of 466 total
claims), and $196 for CPT code 75574
based on 25,434 single claims (out of
40,219 total claims). Because the
geometric mean costs for the CCTA
codes range are between $159 and $196,
we believe it would be inappropriate to
reassign the codes to these suggested
APCs because their geometric mean
costs are significantly higher:
• APC 5572 (with geometric mean
cost of about $359)
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61235
• APC 5573 (with a geometric mean
cost of approximately $660)
• APC 5191 (with a geometric mean
cost of about $2,788)
In our analysis to determine the cause
of the decreased payment rates for the
last several years, we also reviewed our
claims data to determine whether
changes in payment for certain
computed tomography (CT) services
impacted the OPPS payment rates.
Specifically, section 218(a)(1) of the
Protecting Access to Medicare Act of
2014 (PAMA) (Pub. L. 113–93) amended
section 1834 of the Act by establishing
a new subsection 1834(p). Effective for
services furnished on or after January 1,
2016, section 1834(p) of the Act reduces
payment for the technical component
(TC) of applicable CT services paid
under the MPFS and applicable CT
services paid under the OPPS, with a 5percent reduction required in 2016 and
a 15-percent reduction required in 2017
and subsequent years. The applicable
CT services are identified by HCPCS
codes 70450 through 70498; 71250
through 71275; 72125 through 72133;
72191 through 72194; 73200 through
73206; 73700 through 73706; 74150
through 74178; 74261 through 74263;
and 75571 through 75574 (and any
succeeding codes) for services furnished
using equipment that does not meet
each of the attributes of the National
Electrical Manufacturers Association
(NEMA) Standard XR–29–2013, entitled
‘‘Standard Attributes on CT Equipment
Related to Dose Optimization and
Management.’’
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70470), we
established a new ‘‘CT’’ modifier to be
used on claims that include CT services
furnished using equipment that does not
meet each of the attributes of NEMA
Standard XR–29–2013. Hospitals are
required to report the ‘‘CT’’ modifier on
claims for CT scans described by any of
the HCPCS codes we identified (and any
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successor codes) that are furnished on
non-NEMA Standard XR–29–2013compliant CT scanners. The use of this
modifier results in the applicable
payment reduction for the CT service, as
specified under section 1834(p) of the
Act.
Based on our analysis, we observed
declining use of the CT modifier in both
billing volume and the number of
providers using the modifier over the
past several years. Further, we note that
the payment reduction required by
section 1834(p), as amended by section
218(a)(1) of PAMA, does not directly
affect the geometric mean costs under
the OPPS, because we do not use
payment rates to establish CCRs, rather
we use the charges submitted by
hospitals on claims and costs estimated
through applying the cost report CCRs
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for modeling purposes. The application
of the payment reductions associated
with the CT modifier only occurs after
the prospective OPPS payments are
already calculated.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended the establishment of a
new cost center specific to CCTA. They
noted that hospitals currently do not
submit any cost center data for cardiac
CT services.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestion. CMS is currently
reviewing non-standard cost centers
used frequently in the Medicare cost
report in order to establish additional
standardized reporting. We will
consider the establishment of a new cost
center specific to cardiac CT services in
our review.
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In summary, after consideration of the
public comments and after our analysis
of the latest claims data, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to assign CPT codes
75572, 75573, and 75574 to APC 5571
for CY 2020. Table 23 lists the final SI
and APC assignments for the three
codes. The final CY 2020 payment rate
for the codes can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
As we do every year, we will
reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 for the
next rulemaking cycle. We remind
hospitals that we review, on an annual
basis, the APC assignments for all
services and items paid under the OPPS
based on the latest claims data.
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9. Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS)
Programming (APC 5742)
In CY 2018, the DBS programming
codes were described by CPT code
95978 (first 60 minutes), which was
assigned to APC 5742, with a payment
of $115.18, and CPT code 95979 (each
additional 30 minutes), which was
assigned to SI ‘‘N’’ to indicate that the
code is packaged since it is an add-on
code. For CY 2019, the CPT Editorial
Panel deleted CPT code 95978 and
replaced it with CPT code 95983 (first
15 minutes) effective January 1, 2019.
Similarly, CPT code 95979 was deleted
and replaced with CPT code 95984
(each additional 15 minutes) effective
January 1, 2019. As a result of this
coding change, we assigned the 15minute CPT code 95983 to APC 5741
(Level 1 Electronic Analysis of Devices)
with a payment rate of $37.16, and
assigned CPT code 95984 to ‘‘N’’ to
indicate that the code is packaged
because it describes an add-on service,
which is similar to the SI for its
predecessor code (CPT code 95979).
Table 24 below list the long descriptors
and proposed SI and APC assignments
for CPT codes 95983 and 95984.
At the August 21, 2019 HOP Panel
Meeting, a presenter requested that the
15-minute CPT code 95983 be
reassigned to APC 5742. The presenter
added that the cost of providing the
service from 2018 to 2019 has not
changed but the reimbursement has
reduced the hospital payment by about
$100. The presenter requested an APC
modification for CPT code 95983 from
APC 5741 to APC 5742 so that hospitals
receive adequate payment for providing
the service. Based on the information
presented at the meeting, the HOP Panel
recommended a reassignment to APC
5742 for CPT code 95983. Specifically,
the Panel recommended that ‘‘CMS
move HCPCS code 95983, Electronic
analysis of implanted neurostimulator
pulse generator/transmitter (e.g., contact
group[s], interleaving, amplitude, pulse
width, frequency [hz], on/off cycling,
burst, magnet mode, dose lockout,
patient selectable parameters,
responsive neurostimulation, detection
algorithms, closed loop parameters, and
passive parameters) by physician or
other qualified health care professional;
with brain neurostimulator pulse
generator/transmitter programming, first
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15 minutes face-to-face time with
physician or other qualified health care
professional, to APC code 5472, Level II
Electronic Analysis of Devices, if the
final data that are available in time for
consideration of the Final Rule are
consistent with preliminary data.’’
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT code 95983 to APC 5741
(Level 1 Electronic Analysis of Devices)
with a proposed payment rate of $36.81.
In addition, we proposed to continue to
assign CPT code 95984 to status
indicator (SI) ‘‘N’’ to indicate that the
code is an add-on that is packaged and
payment for it is included in the
primary service. In this case, the
payment for the add-on code is included
in CPT code 95983.
Comment: Several commenters
requested the reassignment of CPT code
95983 to APC 5742. One commenter
stated that the assignment of the
primary CPT code 95983 to the lower
level APC 5741 is not appropriate
because the overall time and resources
expended by a hospital when furnishing
this service in the HOPD setting remains
the same, even if the units are billed
differently. This same commenter
indicated that, based on the coding
descriptor for the replacement codes
with the primary service described as
the first 15-minutes and the secondary
service as each additional 15-minutes,
hospitals will continue to receive a
single line-item payment for the service,
with the payment for the add-on CPT
code packaged into it, regardless of the
number of units billed. Another
commenter stated that reassigning the
code from APC 5741 to APC 5742 will
have no effect on the geometric mean
cost of either APC. Another commenter
requested the reassignment based on the
geometric mean cost of approximately
$109 for the predecessor code (CPT code
95978) and the Panel’s recommendation
at the August 19, 2019 HOP Panel
Meeting.
Response: As noted above, the
predecessor CPT code 95978 described
a 60-minute service, while the
replacement code—CPT code 95983—
describes a 15-minute service. Based on
the new time specified in the descriptor
for CPT code 95983, we believed that
assigning the replacement code to APC
5741 was appropriate. However, at the
August 21, 2019 HOP Panel meeting, the
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presenter indicated that the service of
providing DBS programming during
2018 and 2019 are the same, but because
of the coding change that packages any
service after each additional 15 minutes,
the maximum payment that a hospital
would receive for the service is a single
unit of the code. The presenter
recommended a change in the APC
assignment to APC 5742 so that
hospitals receive adequate payment for
the service based on the coding
structure of the replacement codes.
As recommended by the HOP Panel,
we reviewed the claims data associated
with the predecessor code (CPT code
95978). Based on the latest hospital
outpatient claims data used for this final
rule with comment period, our analysis
reveals a geometric mean cost of
approximately $109 for the code, which
is consistent with the geometric mean
cost of about $111 for APC 5742
compared to APC 5741 whose geometric
mean cost is about $35. Based on the
information presented at the HOP Panel
Meeting, the Panel’s recommendation,
as well as the final rule claims data, we
agree with the commenters that APC
5741 may not adequately reflect the
resources to provide the service
described by CPT code 95983 and are,
therefore, modifying the assignment for
CPT code 95983 to APC 5742.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments and the presentation
at the August 21 HOP Panel Meeting, we
are finalizing our proposal, with
modification, and revising the APC
assignment for CPT code 95983 to APC
5742 for CY 2020. Table 24 list the final
SI and APC assignments for CPT code
95983 and 95984. The final CY 2020
payment rate for CPT code 95983 can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period. In addition, we
refer readers to Addendum D1 of this
final rule with comment period for the
status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
As we do every year, we will
reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
code 95983 for the next rulemaking
cycle. We remind hospitals that we
review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items
paid under the OPPS.
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10. Extracorporeal Shock Wave
Lithotripsy (ESWL) (APC 5374)
For the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule,
we reviewed all of the procedures
assigned to the Urology Procedures
APCs, specifically, APCs 5371 through
5377, and made some modifications to
more appropriately reflect the resource
costs and clinical characteristics of the
services within each APC grouping.
Specifically, we revised the APC
assignment of the procedures assigned
to the family of Urology APCs to more
appropriately reflect a prospective
payment system that is based on
payment groupings and not codespecific payment rates, while
maintaining clinical and resource
homogeneity. As we stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR
58900), this modification was based on
public comments we received in
response to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule on the proposed APC
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assignments for certain urology
procedures.
We received many comments on the
APC reassignment for the extracorporeal
shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)
procedure, which is described by CPT
code 50590 (Lithotripsy, extracorporeal
shock wave), in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. The
commenters indicated there was no
discussion in the preamble on the
reassignment of the code from APC 5375
(Level 5 Urology and Related Services)
to APC 5374 (Level 4 Urology and
Related Services), and they disagreed
with the revision and believed that APC
5375 was the more appropriate
assignment for the code. We remind the
commenters that, as we have stated in
every OPPS/ASC proposed and final
rules, we review, on an annual basis, the
APC assignments for all services and
items paid under the OPPS based on our
analysis of the latest claims data. Based
on updated claims data for the final rule
for CY 2019, we found that the
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geometric mean cost of approximately
$3,265 for CPT code 50590 did not
support its continued assignment to
APC 5375, which had a geometric mean
cost of about $4,055. We believed that
we would have significantly overpaid
for the procedure had we maintained
the assignment to APC 5375.
Consequently, we revised the APC
assignment for CPT code 50590 to APC
5374, which had a geometric mean cost
of approximately $2,952 for CY 2019.
We note that the SI and APC
assignment for CPT code 50590 were
subject to comment in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC proposed rule but not in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period. Nevertheless, we
received comments on this specific
issue in response to the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
Because CPT code 50590 was not
assigned to comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in
the final rule because it was not a new
code for CY 2019, and therefore, the
comments received related to this code
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were out-of-scope. Nonetheless, we
discuss above to provide some clarity to
this issue.
For CY 2020, as listed in Addendum
B to the proposed rule, we proposed to
maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 50590 to APC 5374 with a
proposed payment rate of $3,059.21.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that we restore the code to
APC 5375 where it had been placed for
several years prior to CY 2019. The
commenters indicated that CPT code
50590 is similar to two ureteroscopy
with lithotripsy (URSL) procedures that
are assigned to APC 5375, specifically:
• CPT code 52353
(Cystourethroscopy, with ureteroscopy
and/or pyeloscopy; with lithotripsy
(ureteral catheterization is included));
and
• CPT code 52356
(Cystourethroscopy, with ureteroscopy
and/or pyeloscopy; with lithotripsy
including insertion of indwelling
ureteral stent (e.g., gibbons or double-j
type)).
In addition, some commenters
suggested that placing the three
procedures in two separate APCs may
create an unintended consequence of
unplanned admissions to the hospital.
Specifically, the commenters indicated
that if the proposed assignment for CPT
code 50590 is finalized in APC 5374,
while CPT codes 52353 and 52356 are
finalized in APC 5375, hospitals might
discontinue ESWL services (described
by CPT code 50590) which would make
it less accessible to Medicare
beneficiaries and, ultimately, encourage
hospitals to perform more URSL
procedures, which, according to the
commenter, have higher complication
rates compared to ESWL. These
commenters asserted that 90 percent of
Medicare patients require an indwelling
ureteral stent after a URSL procedure
(described by CPT codes 52353 and
52356), and that the stents lead to
infection, visits to the ER, and
unplanned admissions. Hence, the
commenters requested an APC
reassignment to APC 5375 for CPT code
50590 to eliminate any unintended
consequences.
Further, the commenters noted that
because of the capital equipment
expense associated with purchasing
($500,000) and maintaining ($65,000 per
year) a lithotripter, hospitals rarely own
their own lithotripter and generally
contract under arrangement with
suppliers to provide the service.
Alternatively, the commenter asserted
that all URSL equipment is owned by
the hospitals furnishing the service and
that the hospitals are therefore able to
train clinicians on the equipment.
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Response: As discussed above, we
revised the APC assignment for CPT
code 50590 based on our analysis of the
latest claims data for the CY 2019 final
rule. For this final rule with comment
period, which is based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2018
through December 30, 2018, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019,
our findings do not support a
reassignment to APC 5375. Instead, our
analysis supports retaining CPT code
50590 in APC 5374. Specifically, our
data reveal a geometric mean cost of
approximately $3,247 for CPT code
50590 based on 40,009 single claims
(out of 40,351 total claims). The
geometric mean cost for APC 5374 is
about $2,953 while APC 5375 shows a
geometric mean cost of approximately
$4,140. Based on the geometric mean
cost, we believe that maintaining CPT
code in APC 5374 is more appropriate
than reassigning it to APC 5375, based
on the geometric mean cost of CPT code
50590 relative to that of APCs 5374 and
5375.
In addition, we note that the resource
costs associated with the URSL
procedures (CPT codes 52353 and
52356) are higher than that of ESWL
(CPT code 50590). Specifically, the
geometric mean cost for CPT code 50590
for CY 2020 is $3,247 while the
geometric mean cost for CPT codes
52353 and 52356 are $3,740 and $4,361,
respectively. The geometric mean cost
of $3,247 for CPT code 50590 falls
within APC 5374, whose geometric
mean costs for the significant
procedures range between $2,495 (for
CPT code 52351) and $3,472 (for CPT
code 52318), while the geometric mean
costs of $3,740 and $4,361 for CPT
codes 52353 and 52356, respectively,
fall within APC 5375, whose geometric
mean costs for the significant
procedures range between $3,575 (for
CPT code 52630) and $5,655 (for CPT
code 55875). Although all three
procedures are used for the treatment of
kidney stones, we disagree that CPT
codes 50590, 52353, and 52356 are
similar based on resource and clinical
homogeneity. With regards to
unintended consequences as a result of
the assignment to APC 5374 for CPT
code 50590, we rely on physicians to
provide appropriate care based on the
needs of their patients. While the
payment rate for services assigned to
APC 5375 is higher than that of APC
5374, it is based on the relative
resources associated with furnishing the
services assigned to that APC. While
each of the lithotripsy procedures have
some clinical similarity, as the
commenters pointed out, they have
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clinical differences. While the
commenters expected that these clinical
differences may result in similar or
higher resources for CPT code 50590
compared to CPT codes 52353 and
52356, that has not been borne out in
the Medicare data we have available. As
we do every year, we will review the
claims data associated with CPT code
50590 to determine its appropriate APC
placement for the next rulemaking
update.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested, based on their analysis of the
OPPS Limited Data Sets (LDS) for the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule, the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule, and the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, that the
methodology formula that was supplied
with the LDS materials was flawed and,
therefore, they were unable to validate
CMS’s calculation or the accuracy of the
cost data upon which CMS relied to
determine the payment rates. In
addition, these same commenters
suggested that because hospitals do not
generally own lithotripters, they would
not be surprised if the cost reports for
CPT code 50590 were inaccurate.
Response: It is generally not our
policy to judge the accuracy of hospital
coding and charging for purposes of
ratesetting. We rely on hospitals to
accurately report the use of HCPCS
codes in accordance with their code
descriptors and CPT and CMS
instructions, and to report services on
claims and charges and costs for the
services on their Medicare hospital cost
report appropriately. We do not specify
the methodologies that hospitals use to
set charges for this or any other service.
In addition, we state in Chapter 4 of the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual
that ‘‘it is extremely important that
hospitals report all HCPCS codes
consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct
coding principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
or is packaged’’ to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
Comment: To pay appropriately for
CPT code 50590, some commenters
suggested adding the cost of a ureteral
stent in calculating the geometric mean
cost since some procedures (less than 20
percent) require the device. They noted
that the URSL procedure described by
CPT code 52356 requires the insertion
of a ureteral stent that costs $609.16.
Response: Geometric mean costs are
determined based on the costs reported
on the claim. If the CPT code descriptor
describes the insertion of a device, we
would expect the device cost to be
packaged into the cost of the procedure
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since the charges associated with the
device and its insertion should be
reflected in claims submitted to
Medicare. We note that the CPT code
descriptor for the URSL procedures
(CPT codes 52353 and 52356) describes
the use of stents, consequently, the
geometric mean cost for the procedures
include the packaged cost of the
devices. However, the CPT code
descriptor for the ESWL procedure does
not describe the use of a ureteral stent,
so we disagree that device costs for a
ureteral stent should be included in CPT
code 50590. If a ureteral stent were
involved in an ESWL procedure, HOPDs
should report the CPT code that
appropriately describes the procedure
performed. Moreover, as we have stated
previously, we rely on HOPDs to
accurately report all HCPCS codes
consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct
coding principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
or is packaged.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments and after our analysis
of the updated claims data for this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue to assign CPT
code 50590 to APC 5374 for CY 2020.
The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
code can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator (SI)
meanings for all codes reported under
the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
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are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the
APC assignment for CPT code 50590 for
the next rulemaking cycle. As stated
above, we review, on an annual basis,
the APC assignments for all services and
items paid under the OPPS.
11. Extravascular Implantable
Cardioverter Defibrillator (EV ICD)
As displayed in Table 25 and in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to assign
CPT codes 0571T through 0580T to
status indicator (SI) ‘‘E1’’ to indicate
that the codes are not payable by
Medicare when submitted on outpatient
claims (any outpatient bill type) because
the services associated with these codes
are either not covered by any Medicare
outpatient benefit category, are
statutorily excluded from Medicare
payment, or are not reasonable and
necessary. The codes were listed as
06X0T through and 07X4T (the 5-digit
CMS placeholder codes) in Addendum
B with the short descriptors, and again
in Addendum O with the long
descriptors. We also assigned the codes
to comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ in
Addendum B to indicate that they are
new for CY 2020 and that public
comments would be accepted on their
proposed status indicator assignments.
We note that these codes will be
effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A commenter reported that
the device associated with these codes
is in a clinical trial and also received
FDA approval with an IDE Category B
designation. The commenter added that
they are currently in the process of
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applying for Medicare national coverage
for the clinical trial as a Category B IDE
study. The commenter requested that
we crosswalk the new codes to the SIs
and APC assignments of comparable
procedures involving ICD placement so
that appropriate hospital outpatient
payment may be made in the event the
Category B IDE study is approved for
Medicare coverage. The commenter
listed the comparable codes with the SI
and APCs assignments.
Response: Based on our review, the
clinical trial has not met Medicare’s
standards for coverage, nor does it
appear on the CMS Approved IDE List,
which can be found at this CMS
website: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Coverage/IDE/Approved-IDEStudies.html. Because the clinical trial
associated with these codes has not
been approved for Medicare coverage,
we believe we should continue to assign
CPT codes 0571T through 0580T to
status indicator ‘‘E1’’ for CY 2020. If
Medicare approves the clinical trial as a
Category B IDE study, we will reassess
the SI and APC assignments for the
codes.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comment received, we are
finalizing our proposal without
modification for CPT codes 0571T
through 0580T. The final status
indicator assignments for both codes are
listed in Table 25 below. We refer
readers to Addendum D1 of this final
rule with comment period for the
complete list of the OPPS payment
status indicators and their definitions
for CY 2020. Addendum D1 is available
via the internet on the CMS website.
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12. Genicular and Sacroiliac Joint Nerve
Injections/Procedures (APCs 5442 and
5431)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel
established four new codes to describe
genicular and sacroiliac joint nerve
injections and procedures. As listed in
Table 26 below with the long
descriptors, and also in Addendum B to
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we proposed to assign CPT codes 64451
and 64454 to APC 5442 (Level 2 Nerve
Injections) with a proposed payment
rate of $627.39. We note both CPT codes
64451 and 64454 describe therapeutic
and/or diagnostic injection procedures.
We also proposed to assign CPT code
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64624 to APC 5443 (Level 3 Nerve
Injections) with a proposed payment
rate of $808.58. In addition, we
proposed to assign CPT code 64625 to
APC 5431 (Level 1 Nerve Procedures)
with a proposed payment rate of
$1,747.26. CPT codes 64451, 64454,
64624, and 64625 were listed as 6XX00,
64XX0, 64XX1, and 6XX01 (the 5-digit
CMS placeholder codes), respectively,
in Addendum B with the short
descriptors, and again in Addendum O
with the long descriptors. We also
assigned these codes to comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to
indicate that the codes are new for CY
2020 and that public comments would
be accepted on their proposed status
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indicator assignments. We note that
these codes will be effective January 1,
2020.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the APC assignment for
CPT code 64624 (shown in the proposed
rule with placeholder code 64XX1) and
suggested that it would be more
appropriate, based on clinical
homogeneity, to assign it to APC 5431,
where similar radiofrequency ablation
procedures are assigned, specifically,
CPT codes 64633 (Destruction by
neurolytic agent, paravertebral facet
joint nerve(s), with imaging guidance
(fluoroscopy or ct); cervical or thoracic,
single facet joint), 64635 (Destruction by
neurolytic agent, paravertebral facet
joint nerve(s), with imaging guidance
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(fluoroscopy or ct); lumbar or sacral,
single facet joint), and new CPT code
64625. Several commenters reported
that, unlike CPT code 64640
(Destruction by neurolytic agent; other
peripheral nerve or branch) which only
involves one nerve, the procedure
described by CPT code 64624 requires
more expensive medical equipment and
supplies and involves the destruction of
three nerves. Most commenters agreed
that the procedure is not a nerve
injection. One commenter explained
that the procedure describes the
destruction of three nerve branches at
three locations in the knee, and the
destruction is typically done via
radiofrequency ablation similar to those
procedures described by CPT codes
64633 and 64635 that are assigned to
APC 5431. Another commenter
suggested that reassigning CPT code
64624 to APC 5431, similar to new CPT
code 64625, would provide adequate
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reimbursement for the procedure and
enable providers to offer patients with
chronic knee pain an effective
alternative to systemic opioids.
Response: After consideration of the
public comments, and based on the
characteristics of the procedure, as well
as input from our medical advisors, we
believe that it would be appropriate to
revise the APC assignment for CPT code
64624 from APC 5443 to APC 5431. We
agree with the commenters that this new
procedure shares similar characteristics
with CPT codes 64633 and 64635 that
are assigned to APC 5431.
Comment: A commenter agreed with
the proposed APC assignments for CPT
codes 64451, 64454, and 64425.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their feedback and are finalizing the
APC assignments for these codes.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification.
Specifically, we are finalizing the APC
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assignments for CPT codes 64451,
64454, and 64425 to the APCs listed in
Table 26. In addition, we are revising
the APC assignment for CPT code 64624
from APC 5443 to APC 5431. Table 26
lists the long descriptors for the codes,
as well as the final APC and SI
assignments for all four codes. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can
be found in Addendum B to this final
rule with comment period. In addition,
we refer readers to Addendum D1 of
this final rule with comment period for
the status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the
APC assignment for these codes once we
have claims data. We review, on an
annual basis, the APC assignments for
all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on the latest claims data
that we have available.
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13. FemBloc® and FemChec®
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel
established two new codes to describe
FemBloc (0567T) and FemChec (0568T).
As listed in Table 27 with the long
descriptors, and in Addendum B to the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to assign CPT code 0567T to
APC 5414 (Level 4 Gynecologic
Procedures) and status indicator (SI)
‘‘J1’’ (Hospital Part B services paid
through a comprehensive APC) with a
payment rate of $2,564.60. In addition,
we proposed to assign new CPT code
0568T to APC 5732 (Level 2 Minor
Procedures) and status indicator ‘‘Q1’’
(conditionally packaged) with a
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payment rate of $34.33. The codes were
listed as 05X1T and 05X2T (the 5-digit
CMS placeholder codes), respectively,
in Addendum B with the short
descriptors, and again in Addendum O
with the long descriptors. We also
assigned these codes to comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to
indicate that the codes are new for CY
2020 and that public comments would
be accepted on their proposed status
indicator assignments. We note these
codes will be effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A medical technology
company disagreed with the proposed
APC assignment for CPT code 0567T
and suggested that we reassign the
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procedure code from APC 5414 to APC
5415 (Level 5 Gynecologic Procedures)
with a proposed payment rate of
$4,426.45. The commenter noted that
the single-use, disposable device
associated with the code contains two
deployable and retractable balloon
catheters and a biopolymer that retails
for $1,800. The commenter believes the
procedure more appropriately fits in
APC 5415 based on its similarity to CPT
code 58565 (Hysteroscopy, surgical;
with bilateral fallopian tube cannulation
to induce occlusion by placement of
permanent implants). Specifically, the
commenter explained that in both
procedures, specifically CPT codes
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58565 and 0567T, the entrances to the
fallopian tubes are accessed and a
device is placed that causes permanent
occlusion of the tubes.
Response: Based on our findings
associated with FemBloc, the procedure
is currently in clinical trial with an
estimated study completion date of
September 2022 (ClinicalTrials.gov
Identifier: NCT03067272). Because the
FemBloc device has not received FDA
approval, we believe that we should
reassign CPT code 0567T to status
indicator ‘‘E1’’ to indicate that the code
is not payable by Medicare when
submitted on outpatient claims (any
outpatient bill type). If FDA approves
the device, we will reassess the code
and determine the appropriate SI and
APC assignments.
Comment: The same commenter for
FemBloc also requested an APC
modification for the code associated
with FemChec. Specifically, the
commenter requested the reassignment
for CPT code 0568T from APC 5732
(Level 2 Minor Procedures) to APC 5523
(Level 3 Imaging without Contrast) with
a proposed payment rate of $231.28.
The commenter reported that the code
is more clinically related to one of the
procedures assigned to APC 5523,
specifically, CPT code 76831 (Saline
infusion sonohysterography (sis),
including color flow doppler, when
performed). Both CPT codes 0568T and
76831 require ultrasound and saline to
study the uterus.
Response: Our findings reveal that the
clinical study associated with FemBloc
also applies to FemChec. Based on the
clinical study (ClinicalTrials.gov
Identifier: NCT03067272), FemChec will
be used with FemBloc. Because the
FemBloc device has not received FDA
approval, we believe that we should
reassign CPT code 0568T to status
indicator ‘‘E1’’ to indicate that the code
is not payable by Medicare when
submitted on outpatient claims (any
outpatient bill type). If FDA approves
FemBloc, we will reassess the code
associated with FemChec and determine
the appropriate OPPS SI and APC
assignments for CPT code 0568T.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comments, we are revising the SI
and APC assignments for CPT codes
0567T and 0568T. The final status
indicator assignments for both codes are
listed in Table 27 below. We refer
readers to Addendum D1 of this final
rule with comment period for the
complete list of the OPPS payment
status indicators and their definitions
for CY 2020. Addendum D1 is available
via the internet on the CMS website.
14. Hemodialysis Arteriovenous Fistula
(AVF) Procedures (APC 5194)
to APC 5193 (Level 3 Endovascular
Procedures) with a payment rate of
9,669.04 for CY 2019.
At the August 21, 2019 HOP Panel
Meeting, a presenter requested that we
reassign the WavelinQ procedure to
APC 5194. The presenter indicated that
the APC payment associated with
HCPCS code C9755 is inadequate to
cover the cost of the procedure.
According to the presenter, the
conservative cost estimate for the
procedure is over $12,500. The
presenter also reported that their HOPD
facility performed 35 procedures
between October 2018 to July 31, 2019,
and the average payment for each
procedure ranged between $3,410 and
$11,247. Based on the information
presented at the meeting, the HOP Panel
made no recommendation to CMS on
the APC assignment for the WavelinQ
procedure.
For CY 2020, as listed in Table 28
below with the long descriptors and
proposed SI and APC assignments, we
For CY 2019, based on two new
technology applications received by
CMS for hemodialysis arteriovenous
fistula creation, CMS established two
new HCPCS codes to describe the
procedures. Specifically, CMS
established HCPCS code C9754 for the
Ellipsys® System and C9755 for the
WavelinQTM System effective January 1,
2019. Both HCPCS codes were assigned
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proposed to continue to assign HCPCS
codes C9754 and C9755 to APC 5193
with a proposed payment rate of
$10,013.25. We received several
comments related to this proposal.
Below are the comments and our
responses.
Comment: Several physicians stated
that the current payment rate does not
cover the cost of the procedure and
requested the reassignment of both
HCPCS code C9754 and C9755 to APC
5194 (Level 4 Endovascular Procedures)
with a proposed payment rate of
$16,049.73. A physician association
explained that the new technologies
describe innovative new procedures that
increase options for dialysis patients to
have a successful arteriovenous fistula
for dialysis access, and that the
procedures are important in making
fistula access possible for patients that
either refuse open surgery or where
skilled surgeons are not readily
available. However, they expressed
concern that the procedures may not be
available to patients if the costs are
higher than the payment, and requested
that CMS carefully examine the most
recent claims to determine if they
should be reclassified to APC 5194.
Response: After consideration of the
public comments received and based on
input from our medical advisors, as well
as our review of the latest claims data
available to us, we believe that we
should revise the APC assignment for
HCPCS code C9754 and C9755 to APC
5194 for CY 2020.
Comment: A medical device company
requested an APC reassignment based
on data presented at the August 21,
2019 HOP Panel Meeting. They
indicated that their analysis of the
1Q2019 Medicare Limited Data Set
(LDS) Standard Analytic File (SAF) for
HCPCS code C9755 showed a geometric
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mean cost of $12,960, and suggested
reassigning the code to APC 5194. They
also reminded CMS that the
reassignment to APC 5194 is in line
with various HHS initiatives, such as
the HHS Initiative on ‘‘Advancing
American Kidney Health’’ since the
payment rate for the procedure would
improve access to the service.
Response: As stated above, we believe
that it is appropriate to revise the APC
assignment for HCPCS code C9754 and
C9755. Consequently, we are
reassigning both codes from APC 5193
to APC 5194 for CY 2020.
Comment: A commenter representing
13 different health systems suggested
that CMS adopt the recommendation
they made at the August 21, 2019 HOP
Panel Meeting. Specifically, they
recommended the reassignment of
HCPCS code C9755 from APC 5193 to
APC 5194.
Response: Although there was a
presentation at the August 21, 2019
meeting on HCPCS code C9755 with a
request to reassign the code to APC
5194, the HOP Panel made no
recommendation to CMS. We note that
the August 21, 2019, HOP Panel
recommendations are posted online and
can be found on this CMS website:
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/FACA/
AdvisoryPanelon
AmbulatoryPaymentClassification
Groups.html. Although the HOP Panel
made no recommendation to CMS,
based on the proposed rule comments,
and our review of the issue, we are
revising the APC assignment for HCPCS
code C9755 to APC 5194 for CY 2020.
Comment: A commenter stated that it
was brought to their attention that other
comments related to the WavelinQ
procedure may urge CMS to revisit the
APC assignment for HCPCS code C9755.
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The commenter indicated that if CMS
were to revisit the issue and reassign the
APC assignment for the WavelinQ
procedure, it should also apply the same
consideration to the Ellipsys procedure
(C9754).
Response: We agree that the services
described by HCPCS codes C9754 and
C9755 are clinically similar and,
therefore, we are revising the APC
assignment for both HCPCS code C9754
and C9755 to APC 5194 for CY 2020.
However, we note that claims data upon
which we could determine the
geometric mean costs associated with
each procedure are not yet available for
ratesetting but once such data become
available, we will be able to determine
whether the two services are similar in
terms of resources. In addition, as has
been our practice since the
implementation of the OPPS in 2000,
we review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for the procedures and
services paid under the OPPS.
Consequently, we will review the cost
data associated with HCPCS codes
C9754 and C9755 for the next annual
rulemaking.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification.
Specifically, we are reassigning HCPCS
codes C9754 and C9755 from APC 5193
to APC 5194 for CY 2020. The final CY
2020 payment rate for the codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period. In addition, we
refer readers to Addendum D1 of this
final rule with comment period for the
status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website. Table
28 lists the final SI and APC
assignments for HCPCS codes C9754
and C9755.
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15. Hemodialysis Duplex Studies (APCs
5522 and 5523)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel
established two new codes to describe
hemodialysis duplex studies,
specifically, CPT codes 93985 and
93986. The new codes replace HCPCS
code G0365 (Vessel mapping of vessels
for hemodialysis access (services for
preoperative vessel mapping prior to
creation of hemodialysis access using an
autogenous hemodialysis conduit,
including arterial inflow and venous
outflow)). HCPCS code G0365 was
assigned to status indicator ‘‘D’’ in the
proposed rule to indicate that the code
would be deleted on December 31, 2019.
As listed in Table 29 below with the
long descriptors, and also in Addendum
B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to assign CPT code
93985 and 93986 to APC 5522 (Level 2
Imaging without Contrast) with a
proposed payment rate of $111.04. The
codes were listed as 93X00 and 93X01
(the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes),
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respectively, in Addendum B with the
short descriptors, and again in
Addendum O with the long descriptors.
We also assigned these codes to
comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum
B to indicate that the codes are new for
CY 2020 and that public comments
would be accepted on their proposed
status indicator assignments. We note
that these codes will be effective
January 1, 2020.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended a reassignment of CPT
code 93985 from APC 5522 to APC 5523
(Level 3 Imaging without Contrast) with
a proposed payment rate of $231.28.
They indicated that the code represents
a bilateral study, and as such, should be
assigned to APC 5523 with similar
bilateral/complete duplex studies.
Response: Based on the public
comments that we received, our review
of the procedure associated with CPT
code 93985 and advice from our
medical advisors, we agree that the code
fits more appropriately in APC 5523
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based on its clinical homogeneity and
resource use to the other procedures in
the APC. Therefore, we are reassigning
the code to APC 5523. We received no
comments on CPT code 93986.
Consequently, we are finalizing its APC
assignment to APC 5522.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification.
Specifically, we are finalizing our
proposal for CPT code 93986 to APC
5522, and reassigning CPT code 93985
to APC 5523. Table 29 below lists the
long descriptors for the three codes and
the final SI and APC assignments for CY
2020. The final CY 2020 OPPS payment
rates can be found in Addendum B of
this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator meanings
for all codes reported under the OPPS
for CY 2020. Both Addendum B and
Addendum D1 are available via the
internet on the CMS website.
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16. Intraocular Procedures (APCs 5491
Through 5494)
In prior years, CPT code 0308T
(Insertion of ocular telescope prosthesis
including removal of crystalline lens or
intraocular lens prosthesis) was
assigned to the APC 5495 (Level 5
Intraocular Procedures) based on its
estimated costs. In addition, its relative
payment weight has been based on its
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median cost under our payment policy
for low-volume device-intensive
procedures because the APC contained
a low volume of claims. The lowvolume device-intensive procedures
payment policy is discussed in more
detail in section III.C.2. of the proposed
rule.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to reassign CPT code
0308T from APC 5495 to APC 5493
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(Level 3 Intraocular Procedures), based
on the data for two claims available for
ratesetting for the proposed rule, and to
delete APC 5495 (83 FR 37096 through
37097). However in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
based on updated data on a single claim
available for ratesetting for the final
rule, we modified our proposal and
reassigned procedure code CPT code
0308T to the APC 5494 (Level 4
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Intraocular Procedures) (83 FR 58917
through 58918). We made this change
based on the similarity of the estimated
cost for the single claim of $12,939.75
to that of the APC ($11,427.14).
However, this created a discrepancy in
payments between the OPPS setting and
the ASC setting in which the ASC
payments would be higher than the
OPPS payments for the same service
because of the intersection of the
estimated cost for the encounter
determined under a comprehensive
methodology within the OPPS and the
estimated cost determined under the
payment methodology for deviceintensive services within the ASC
payment system.
In reviewing the claims data available
for the proposed rule for CY 2020 OPPS
ratesetting, we found several claims
reporting the procedure described by
CPT code 0308T. Based on the claims
data, the procedure would have a
geometric mean cost of $28,122.51 and
a median cost of $19,864.38. These cost
statistics are significantly higher than
the geometric mean cost of the other
procedure assigned to APC 5494, that is,
the procedure described by CPT code
67027 (Implant eye drug system), which
has a geometric mean cost of
$12,296.27. In addition, if we continued
to assign the procedure described by
CPT code 0308T to APC 5494 (the Level
4 Intraocular Procedures APC), the
discrepancy between payments within
the OPPS and the ASC payment system
would also continue to exist. As a
result, we proposed to reestablish APC
5495 (Level 5 Intraocular Procedures)
because we believe that the procedure
described by CPT code 0308T would be
most appropriately placed in this APC
based on its estimated cost. Assignment
of the procedure to the Level 5
Intraocular Procedures APC is
consistent with its historical placement
and would also address the large
discrepancy in payment for the
procedure between the OPPS and the
ASC payment system. We note that,
based on data available for the proposed
rule, the proposed payment rate for this
procedure when performed in an ASC,
as discussed in more detail in section
XIII.D.1.c. of the proposed rule, would
be no higher than the OPPS payment
rate for this procedure when performed
in the hospital outpatient setting. We
will continue to monitor the volume of
claims data available for the procedure
for ratesetting purposes.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we proposed
to reestablish APC 5495 (Level 5
Intraocular Procedures) and reassign the
procedure described by CPT code 0308T
from APC 5494 to APC 5495. Under this
proposal, the proposed CY 2020 OPPS
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payment rate for the service would be
established based on its median cost, as
discussed in section V.A.5. of the
proposed rule, because it is a deviceintensive procedure assigned to an APC
with fewer than 100 total annual claims
within the APC.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for our proposal to
assign the HCPCS code 0308T to APC
5495 (Level 5 Intracoular Procedures).
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to assign HCPCS code
CPT 0308T to APC 5495 for the CY 2020
OPPS.
17. Long-Term Electroencephalogram
(EEG) Monitoring Services (APCs 5722,
5723, and 5724)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel
deleted four existing long-term EEG
monitoring services, specifically, CPT
codes 95950, 95951, 95953, and 95956,
and replaced them with 23 new CPT
codes that consisted of 10 professional
component (PC) codes and 13 technical
component (TC) codes. As listed in
Table 30 below with the long
descriptors, and also in Addendum B to
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we proposed to assign the 13 technical
component codes, specifically, CPT
codes 95700 through 95716, to either
APC 5722 (Level 2 Diagnostic Tests and
Related Services) with a proposed
payment rate of $256.60 or APC 5723
(Level 3 Diagnostic Tests and Related
Services) with a proposed payment rate
of $486.65. The codes were listed as
95X01 through and 95X13 (the 5-digit
CMS placeholder codes) in Addendum
B with the short descriptors, and again
in Addendum O with the long
descriptors. In addition, we proposed to
assign the 10 professional component
codes, specifically, CPT codes 95717
through 95726, to status indicator ‘‘M’’
to indicate that the services are not paid
under the OPPS since they describe
physician services. These codes were
listed were listed as 95X14 through
95X23 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder
codes) in Addendum B with the short
descriptors, and again in Addendum O
with the long descriptors. We assigned
these 23 codes to comment indicator
‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to indicate that
the codes are new for CY 2020 and that
public comments would be accepted on
their proposed status indicator
assignments. We note these codes will
be effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern with the proposed
APC assignments for CPT codes 95712,
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95713, 95715, and 95716 and stated that
the proposed payment rates for the
codes do not provide adequate
reimbursement. A commenter indicated
that the proposed APC assignments for
the EEG monitoring services for 2 to 12
hours does not appropriately reflect the
resources and time required to monitor
complex epilepsy patients. Several other
commenters recommended the
reassignment of CPT codes 95712 and
95713 to APC 5723 and stated they
should be paid approximately half the
rate of the 24-hour video EEG services.
These same commenters stated that the
reassignment of CPT codes 95715 and
95716 to APC 5724, which had a
proposed payment rate of $920.66,
would be appropriate since patients
being tested may be classified as
observation stays and will not be
admitted to the hospital. The
commenters added that these codes
were previously described by
predecessor CPT code 95951 (24 hour
VEEG), which was assigned to APC
5724 (Level 4 Diagnostic Tests and
Related Services).
Response: With respect to CPT codes
95712 (2–12 hours VEEG with
intermittent monitoring) and 95713 (2–
12 hours VEEG with continuous
monitoring), we believe that the
resources and time associated with
intermittent monitoring (CPT code
95712) are less than that of continuous
monitoring (CPT code 95713), and
therefore, believe they should be
assigned to different APCs. Based on
input from our medical advisors that
intermittent monitoring involves
checking the patient every two hours
rather than the full 12 hours, we believe
it would be appropriate to modify the
APC assignment for the continuous
monitoring code (CPT code 95713) to
APC 5723. Applying this same concept
to the 12–24 VEEG technical component
codes, we believe that the resources
associated with the intermittent
monitoring code (CPT code 95715) are
not the same as the continuous
monitoring code (CPT code 95716).
Therefore, we are reassigning the APC
assignment for CPT code 95716 to APC
5724. Although the commenters
indicated that the predecessor code for
95715 and 95716 was CPT code 95951,
we are uncertain whether the
predecessor code describes continuous
or intermittent monitoring since the
code descriptor lacks this specificity.
Comment: Some commenters urged
CMS not to finalize the policies
proposed in the PFS or OPPS proposed
rules. They indicated that the policies
would dramatically reduce
reimbursement for EEG and VEEG
services and instead, suggested that we
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In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal, with modification.
Specifically, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign CPT codes 95700
through 95712, 95714, and 95715 to the
APCs listed in Table 30 below. In
addition, we are modifying our proposal
for CPT codes 95713 and 95716, and
revising their APC assignments to APC
5723 and APC 5724, respectively.
Further, we are finalizing our proposal
to assign CPT codes 95717 through
95726 to status indicator ‘‘M’’. These
codes, along with the deleted codes, are
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listed in Table 30. The final CY 2020
payment rate for these codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website).
As always, we will reevaluate the
APC assignment for these codes once we
have claims data. We review, on an
annual basis, the APC assignments for
all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on the latest claims data
that we have available.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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appropriately value these services so
that people with epilepsy have access
and can be diagnosed and treated in a
timely manner.
Response: We believe these
commenters did not fully understand
our APC proposal. Because the existing
EEG and VEEG CPT codes will be
deleted on December 31, 2019, if we do
not finalize our proposal for the 13
technical codes that will be effective
January 1, 2020, there would be no
codes to report the services associated
with EEG and VEEG.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
18. Musculoskeletal Procedures (APCs
5111 Through 5116)
Prior to the CY 2016 OPPS, payment
for musculoskeletal procedures was
primarily divided according to anatomy
and the type of musculoskeletal
procedure. As part of the CY 2016
reorganization to better structure the
OPPS payments towards prospective
payment packages, we consolidated
those individual APCs so that they
became a general Musculoskeletal APC
series (80 FR 70397 through 70398).
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59300), we
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continued to apply a six-level structure
for the Musculoskeletal APCs because
doing so provided an appropriate
distinction for resource costs at each
level and provided clinical
homogeneity. However, we indicated
that we would continue to review the
structure of these APCs to determine
whether additional granularity would be
necessary.
In the CY 2019 OPPS proposed rule
(83 FR 37096), we recognized that
commenters had previously expressed
concerns regarding the granularity of the
current APC levels and, therefore,
requested comment on the
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establishment of additional levels.
Specifically, we solicited comments on
the creation of a new APC level between
the current Level 5 and Level 6 within
the Musculoskeletal APC series. While
some commenters provided suggested
APC reconfigurations and requests for
change to APC assignments, many
commenters requested that we maintain
the current six-level structure and
continue to monitor the claims data as
they become available. Therefore, in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we maintained the sixlevel APC structure for the
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Musculoskeletal Procedures APCs (83
FR 58920 through 58921).
Based on the claims data available for
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we continue to believe that the six-level
APC structure for the Musculoskeletal
Procedures APC series is appropriate.
Therefore, we proposed to maintain the
APC structure for the CY 2020 OPPS
update.
We note that this is the first year for
which claims data are available for the
total knee arthroplasty procedure
described by CPT code 27447, which
was removed from the inpatient only
list in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59382
through 59385). Based on approximately
60,000 hospital outpatient claims
reporting the procedure that were
available for ratesetting in the proposed
rule, the geometric mean cost was
approximately $12,472.05, which is
similar to the geometric mean cost for
APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal
Procedures) of $11,879.66, and within a
range of the lowest geometric mean cost
of the significant procedure costs of
$9,969.37 and the highest geometric
mean cost of the significant procedure
costs of $12,894.18. Therefore, we
believed that the assignment of the
procedure described by CPT code 27447
in the Level 5 Musculoskeletal
Procedures APC series remains
appropriate and, therefore, we proposed
to continue to assign CPT code 27447 to
APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal
Procedures) for CY 2020.
We also proposed to remove the
procedure described by CPT code 27130
(Total hip arthroplasty) from the CY
2020 OPPS inpatient only list. Based on
the estimated costs derived from in the
available claims data, as well as the 50th
percentile IPPS payment for TKA/THA
procedures without major complications
or comorbidities (MS–DRG 470) of
approximately $11,900 for FY 2020
when the procedure is performed on an
inpatient basis, we believed that it was
appropriate to assign the procedure
described by CPT code 27130 to the
Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures
APC series, which had a geometric
mean cost of $11,879.66. Therefore, for
CY 2020, we also proposed to assign the
procedure described by CPT code 27130
to APC 5115. We noted that we will
monitor the claims data reflecting these
procedures as they become available.
For a more detailed discussion of the
procedures that were proposed to be
removed from the inpatient only (IPO)
list for CY 2020 under the OPPS, we
refer readers to section IX. of the
proposed rule.
Table 31 displays the CY 2020
Musculoskeletal Procedures APC series’
structure and APC geometric mean
costs.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS reconsider the
proposal to assign CPT code 22869
(Insertion of interlaminar/interspinous
process stabilization/distraction device,
without open decompression or fusion,
including image guidance when
performed, lumbar; single level) to APC
5115, and instead allow the code to
remain in APC 5116, where it has been
historically placed. They believed that
the proposal to move the APC was based
on inaccurate data, due to one hospital
incorrectly reporting its costs and
charges. They noted that the influence
of that inaccurate data would be short
term and that the claims would
eventually support the higher
placement, as the reporting issues were
corrected. We also note that the HOP
Panel made a recommendation that
CMS examine the claims data for CPT
code 22869 and determine an
appropriate APC placement.
Response: While we recognize the
concerns that the commenters have
described, it is generally not our policy
to judge the accuracy of hospital coding
and charging for purposes of ratesetting.
We rely on hospitals to accurately report
the use of HCPCS codes in accordance
with their code descriptors and CPT and
CMS instructions, and to report services
on claims and charges and costs for the
services on their Medicare hospital cost
report appropriately. However, we do
not specify the methodologies that
hospitals use to set charges for this or
any other service. In addition, we state
in Chapter 4 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual that ‘‘it is extremely
important that hospitals report all
HCPCS codes consistent with their
descriptors; CPT and/or CMS
instructions and correct coding
principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
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or is packaged’’ to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed six level
Musculoskeletal Procedures APC
structure. We also are finalizing the
proposed assignment of the procedure
described by CPT codes 22869 to APC
5115. As discussed in section IX. of this
final rule, we are also finalizing the
proposal to remove the procedure
described by CPT code 27130 from the
inpatient only list and to assign it to
APC 5115 for the CY 2020 OPPS.
19. Nuclear Medicine Services
a. Cardiac Positron Emission
Tomography (PET) Studies (APCs 5593
and 5594)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT code 78459 (Myocardial
imaging, positron emission tomography
(pet), metabolic evaluation) to APC 5593
(Level 3 Nuclear Medicine and Related
Services) with a proposed payment rate
of $1,293.33. Similarly, we proposed to
maintain the APC assignments for CPT
codes 78491 (Myocardial imaging,
positron emission tomography (pet),
perfusion; single study at rest or stress)
and 78492 (Myocardial imaging,
positron emission tomography (pet),
perfusion; multiple studies at rest and/
or stress) to APC 5594 (Level 4 Nuclear
Medicine and Related Services) with a
proposed payment rate of $1,466.16.
Comment: Commenters agreed with
the APC assignments for CPT codes
78459, 78491, and 78492 and stated
they are placed appropriately in APCs
5593 and 5594. Some commenters
added that the cost associated with CPT
code 78492, which describes a wall
motion and ejection fraction, supports
its maintenance in APC 5594.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and will finalize the
APC assignments for CPT code 78459 to
APC 5593, and for CPT codes 78491 and
78492 to APC 5594.
b. Cardiac Positron Emission
Tomography (PET)/Computed
Tomography (CT) Studies (APCs 1522,
1523, and 5594)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial
established six new codes to describe
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the services associated with cardiac
PET/CT studies, specifically, CPT codes
78429, 78430, 78431, 78432, 78433, and
78434. These codes were listed in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule as 78X29, 78X31, 78X32,
78X33, 78X34, and 78X35 (the 5-digit
CMS placeholder codes), respectively,
in Addendum B with the short
descriptors, and again in Addendum O
with the long descriptors. We also
assigned these codes to comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to
indicate that the codes are new for CY
2020 and that public comments would
be accepted on their proposed status
indicator assignments. We note that
these codes will be effective January 1,
2020. Table 32 below list the
placeholder codes, long descriptors, and
proposed SI and APC assignments.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed the APC assignment for CPT
code 78429 (placeholder code 78X29)
and recommended its reassignment
from APC 5593 to APC 5594. They
stated that APC 5593 does not recognize
the additional cost associated with the
CT scan that is included in the service,
and requested revising the code to APC
5594.
Response: Based on the commenters’
feedback and our review of the
components of this new service, we
agree with the commenters that APC
5594 is the more appropriate assignment
for CPT code 78429. Therefore, we will
reassign CPT code 78429 from APC
5593 to APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters agreed
with the APC placement for CPT code
78430 (placeholder code 78X31) in APC
5594. They stated that APC 5594 allows
adequate payment for the CT scanner
that that is a component of this service.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and are finalizing the
APC assignment for CPT code 78430 to
APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters
reported that certain societies submitted
a new technology application to CMS
for CPT codes 78431 (placeholder code
78X32), 78432 (placeholder code
78X33), and 78433 (placeholder code
78X34) that details the costs associated
with providing the services. For CPT
code 78431, these same commenters
disagreed with the proposed APC
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placement and recommended its
revision from APC 5594 (Level 4
Nuclear Medicine and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of
$1,466.16 to APC 1522 (New
Technology—Level 23 ($2501–$3000))
with a proposed payment rate of
$2,750.50. They reported that, based on
the resource cost of the service
described by CPT code 78431, APC 1522
provides adequate reimbursement for
the service. Similarly, for CPT codes
78432 and 78433, the commenters
indicated that APC 5594 would not
adequately reimburse the resource costs
associated with providing these
services, and recommended their
reassignment to APC 1523 (New
Technology—Level 23 ($2501–$3000))
with a proposed payment rate of $
2,750.50
Response: Based on our assessment of
the information provided in the new
technology application and the public
comments received, we are revising the
APC assignments for these codes.
Specifically, we are revising the APC
assignment for CPT code 78431 from
APC 5594 to APC 1522, and reassigning
CPT codes 78432 and 78433 from APC
5594 to APC 1523.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments for the new cardiac
PET/CT codes, and based on our
evaluation of the new technology
application that provided the estimated
costs for the services and described the
components and characteristics of the
new codes, we are finalizing our
proposal, with modification, to assign
CPT codes 78429, 78431, 78432, and
78433 to the final APCs listed in Table
32 below. In addition, we are finalizing
our proposal, without modification, for
CPT codes 78430 and 78434. In Table 32
below we list the long descriptors and
final SI and APC assignments for the
codes. The final CY 2020 payment rate
for the codes can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
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c. Single-Photon Emission Computed
Tomography (SPECT) Studies (APCs
5591, 5593, and 5594).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT codes 78800 and 78801 to
APC 5591 with a proposed payment rate
of $372.69, CPT codes 78802 and 78804
to APC 5593 with a proposed payment
rate of $1,293.33), and CPT code 78803
to APC 5592 with a proposed payment
rate of $482.38.
We also proposed to assign new CPT
codes 78830 and 78831 to APC 5593,
and 78832 to APC 5594 with a proposed
payment rate of $1,466.16. In addition,
we proposed to assign new CPT code
78835 to status indicator ‘‘N’’ because it
is an add-on code that is packaged and
payment for it is included in the
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primary service. Table 33 below list the
long descriptors and their proposed SI
and APC assignments for these codes.
Comment: Some commenters agreed
with the proposed APC assignments for
CPT codes 78800, 78801, and 78802.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and are finalizing the
APC assignments for these codes.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the assignment for CPT
codes 78803 and requested a
modification from APC 5592 to APC
5593 because this one code will replace
seven SPECT codes that will be deleted
on December 31, 2019. Specifically,
they reported that the seven CPT codes
listed in Figure 34 will be deleted.
Several commenters indicated that APC
5592 would not account for the deleted
SPECT codes and recommended using a
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weighted average to determine an
appropriate geometric mean cost for
78803. Based on their calculation, the
geometric mean cost for the code should
be $784.18, which is higher than the
approximately $462 geometric mean
cost for APC 5592, and is more
consistent with the geometric mean cost
for APC 5593.
Response: Based on our analysis of
the latest claims data for this final rule
with comment period, and as listed in
the Figure 33 below, the range of
geometric mean cost for CPT code 78803
and the seven deleted codes is between
$433 and $1,417. We note that several
of the deleted codes were assigned to
APC 5593, and based on our review of
these codes, we believe it would be
appropriate to reassign CPT code 78803
from APC 5592 to APC 5593.
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Comment: Some commenters
disagreed with the assignment of CPT
code 78804 to APC 5593, and stated that
the APC assignment does not adequately
capture the cost of multiple SPECTs
provided. The commenters indicated
that it would not make sense to
continue to assign single and full sets of
studies to the same APC and urged CMS
to reassign the code to APC 5594.
Response: For CY 2020, based on
claims submitted between January 1,
2018 and December 30, 2018 that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019,
our analysis of the latest claims data for
this final rule supports maintaining CPT
code 78804 in APC 5593. Specifically,
our claims data show a geometric mean
cost of approximately $1,298 for CPT
code 78804 based on 1,656 single claims
(out of 2,961 total claims), which is
more appropriate in APC 5593 whose
geometric mean cost is about $1,245
compared to the geometric mean cost of
approximately $1,412 for APC 5594.
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Comment: Some commenters agreed
with the APC assignment for new CPT
codes 78830 and 78832 to APC 5593
and APC 5594, respectively.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ feedback and are finalizing
the APC assignment for CPT code 78830
to APC 5593 and for CPT code 78832 to
APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed the APC assignment for CPT
code 78831 to APC 5593. They
indicated that the proposed APC
assignment for CPT code 78831 does not
adequately capture the resources
required to perform the procedure and
should be reassigned to APC 5594.
Response: We believe that new CPT
code 78831 shares similar
characteristics and resources to existing
CPT code 78804. Consequently, we
assigned the new code to APC 5593,
which is the same APC assignment for
CPT 78804. We note that once we have
claims data for CPT code 78831, we will
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assess and determine whether a
reassignment is necessary. As always,
we review the APC assignments for all
services under the OPPS based on the
latest claims data.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments and after evaluation of
our claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our
proposal, without modification, for CPT
codes 78800, 78801, 78802, 78804,
78830, 78831, 78832, and 78835.
However, we are finalizing our
proposal, with modification, for CPT
code 78803 and reassigning the code
from APC 5592 to APC 5593 for CY
2020. Table 34 below list the long
descriptors for these codes and their
final SI and APC assignments. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can
be found in Addendum B to this final
rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website).
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20. Radiofrequency Spectroscopy
As displayed in Table 8 and
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
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proposed rule, we proposed to assign
CPT code 0546T (Radiofrequency
spectroscopy, real time, intraoperative
margin assessment, at the time of partial
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mastectomy, with report) to status
indicator (SI) ‘‘N’’ to indicate that the
code is packaged and payment for it is
included in the primary surgical
procedure. Specifically, payment for the
codes assigned to status indicator ‘‘N’’ is
made through the payment for the
separately payable, independent
services with which they are billed. No
separate payment is made for services
that we have assigned to status indicator
‘‘N.’’ We note that CPT code 0546T is
associated with the MarginProbe
procedure.
Comment: Several commenters
requested separate payment for CPT
code 0546T. One commenter stated that
the code should be adequately valued
and removed from packaging. Another
commenter stated that packaging the
code will limit the number of Medicare
beneficiaries who will benefit from the
procedure. Still another commenter
suggested a modification in the status
indicator from ‘‘N’’ to ‘‘J1’’
(comprehensive APC) but did not
suggest any specific APC to which they
believed the code should be assigned.
Another commenter stated that
assigning separate payment for CPT
code 0546T is in line with CMS’
objectives of reducing the number of
repeat surgical excisions.
Response: As noted in the code
descriptor, CPT code 0546T describes
an intraoperative procedure that is
performed at the time of partial
mastectomy. As specified in 42 CFR
419.2(b)(14), intraoperative items and
services are packaged under the OPPS.
By definition, a service that is
performed intraoperatively is provided
during and, therefore on the same date
of service, as another procedure that is
separately payable under the OPPS.
Because intraoperative services support
the performance of an independent
procedure and they are provided in the
same operative session as the
independent procedure, we have
packaged the payment for the
radiofrequency spectroscopy into the
OPPS payment for the primary surgical
procedure with which it is reported. In
this case, the payment for CPT code
0546T is included in the breast
mastectomy codes that are reported with
the procedure.
We note that since 2008,
intraoperative services have been
packaged under the OPPS, however,
packaging has always been a primary
component of the OPPS since its
implementation in 2000. As we state in
section II.A.3. (Changes to Packaged
Items and Services) of this final rule,
because packaging encourages efficiency
and is an essential component of a
prospective payment system, packaging
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payment for items and services that are
typically integral, ancillary, supportive,
dependent, or adjunctive to a primary
service has been a fundamental part of
the OPPS since its implementation in
August 2000.
Comment: A medical device company
stated that although CPT code 0546T is
a procedure provided during an
operative session, it is a distinct
procedure with a beginning, middle,
and end. The commenter reported that
the cost of the procedure is not included
in the primary surgical procedure. The
same commenter pointed out that based
on the language below from the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule (72 FR 66621), it
believed CMS has the discretion not to
package an intraoperative service:
‘‘To the extent that a service for which
New Technology APC status is being
requested is ancillary and supportive of
another service, for example, a new
intraoperative service or a new guidance
service, we might not consider it to be a
complete service because its value is as part
of an independent service. However, if the
entire, complete service, including the
guidance component of the service, for
example, is ‘truly new,’ as we explained that
term at length . . . we would consider the
new complete procedure for New Technology
APC assignment.’’
The commenter also indicated that, at
its September 2018 meeting, the CPT
Editorial Panel determined that
radiofrequency spectroscopy is a standalone service and, therefore, issued a
unique code, specifically, CPT code
0546T to be effective July 1, 2019. The
commenter noted that until July 1, 2019
there was no code available to
adequately describe the service,
therefore, the procedure could not be
represented in the claims data upon
which CMS has established the CY 2020
OPPS payment determinations.
Consequently, the commenter requested
that CMS assign CPT code 0546T to
New Technology APC 1518 (New
Technology—Level 18 ($1601-$1700))
with a proposed payment rate of
$1,650.50, and indicated that the
payment would reflect the cost of the
sterile, disposable, radiofrequency
spectroscopy probe and supplies. The
commenter asserted that assigning
separate payment for the procedure
would alleviate the barrier to access to
care for the service.
Response: We note that the
establishment of a new CPT code does
not indicate that a code is always a
stand-alone procedure or service. The
current CPT code set lists hundreds of
add-on codes that do not describe standalone services. For the list of add-on
codes, refer to Appendix D (Summary of
CPT Add-on Codes) of the latest CPT
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code book. We note that the CPT
Editorial Panel does not establish new
CPT codes because the service or
procedure is considered stand-alone,
rather they establish new codes for
procedures and services that are not
described by any existing code and have
met their application criteria.
As stated above, CPT code 0546T is
associated with the MarginProbe
procedure. CPT code 0546T describes
an intraoperative procedure that is
performed at the time of partial
mastectomy. As specified in 42 CFR
419.2(b)(14), intraoperative items and
services are packaged under the OPPS.
We also disagree with the
commenter’s statement that CMS has
the discretion not to package an
intraoperative procedure. As noted
above, 42 CFR 419.2(b)(14) states that
intraoperative items and services are
packaged under the OPPS. We do not
agree that MarginProbe, for which CPT
code 0546T was established, is a new,
standalone procedure for which
separate payment should be made. We
note that the preamble language the
commenter quoted only applies for
services that are truly new and a
complete service and, as mentioned in
the quoted language, with respect to an
ancillary service, which may include a
new intraoperative service or a new
guidance service, we might not consider
it to be a complete service because its
value is as part of an independent
service. MarginProbe, received
Premarket Approval (PMA) from the
FDA on December 27, 2012, and has
been on the market since February 2013,
however, FDA approval alone does not
compel a determination under Medicare
that the technology represents a separate
standalone service that would qualify
for New Technology APC assignment.
Finally, because CPT code 0546T
describes an intraoperative service that
is performed during a mastectomy
procedure, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign the code to status
indicator ‘‘N’’. Therefore, after
consideration of the public comments
received, we are finalizing our proposal
without modification for CPT code
0546T. The final status indicator
assignment for the code is listed in
Addendum B to this final with comment
period. We refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the complete list of the OPPS
payment status indicators and their
definitions for CY 2020. Both
Addendum B and Addendum D1 are
available via the internet on the CMS
website.
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21. Reflectance Confocal Microscopy
(RCM)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign CPT code 96932 to status
indicator ‘‘Q1’’ (conditionally packaged)
and APC 5731 (Level 1 Minor
Procedures) with a proposed payment
rate of $23.57. We note that the CPT
Editorial Panel established six (6) CPT
codes to describe the services associated
with RCM. These codes are shown in
Table 35 with the long descriptors and
proposed status indicator assignments.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the low payment rate for this service
under the OPPS is based on
misreporting of charges by a hospital.
The commenter explained that based on
their review and analysis of the OPPS
claims, only two hospitals in the
country are performing this imaging
test, and that the proposed payment rate
is based primarily on one hospital’s
charges. The same commenter stated
that the cost of performing the imaging
service is about $128, which is more
than the proposed payment rate of
$23.57. To correct the low payment for
the test, the commenter suggested that
CMS use its equitable adjustment
authority to set an appropriate payment
for 96932 and also recommended that
we do one of the following:
• Reassign the code to APC 5522
(Level 1 Imaging without Contrast) with
a proposed payment rate of $111.04;
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• Reassign the code to New
Technology APC 1503 (New
Technology—Level 3 ($101–$200) with
a proposed payment rate of $150.50; or
• Assign an unconditionally
packaged (‘‘N’’) or non-payable status
indicator to the code, similar to the
other RCM codes.
The commenter also expressed
concern that the low payment rate
under the OPPS significantly impacts
the payment for the service under the
PFS. The commenter added that RCM is
primarily performed in the physician
office setting, however, because of the
low payment rate established under the
OPPS, the payment for the service is
inadequate. To correct the low payment
rate, the commenter suggested that CMS
revise the status indicator of CPT code
96932 to identify the service as
packaged or non-payable, and, therefore,
not have a published OPPS payment
rate for the code. The commenter
believed that packaging the code or
assigning it as non-payable will correct
the payment rate and provide adequate
payment for the service.
Response: Section 5102(b) of the
Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)
amended the PFS statute to place a
payment cap on the technical
component (TC) of certain diagnostic
imaging procedures and the TC portions
of the global diagnostic imaging services
at the amount paid under the OPPS. To
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implement this provision, the physician
fee schedule (PFS) amount is compared
to the OPPS payment amount and the
lower amount is used for payment. CPT
code 96932 is designated as a DRA
imaging code whose payment under the
PFS is capped at the OPPS rate even
when performed in a physician office
setting. Based on our review of the
issue, we believe that we should revise
the OPPS status indicator assignment
for CPT code 96932 from ‘‘Q1’’ to ‘‘N’’,
similar to the status indicator
assignment for several other RCM codes.
Since CPT code was low volume under
the OPPS, it may be inappropriate to
establish an OPPS payment rate by
which the PFS rate would be capped.
Accordingly, this change will allow
there not to be an OPPS cap for the
service.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comment, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification and revising
the status indicator assignment for CPT
code 96930 to ‘‘N’’ for CY 2020. Table
35 below lists the long descriptors and
final status indicator assignments for the
six (6) codes that describe the services
associated with RCM. We refer readers
to Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the complete list of
the OPPS payment status indicators and
their definitions for CY 2020.
Addendum D1 is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
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22. remede¯® System—Transvenous
Phrenic Nerve Stimulation Therapy
(APCs 5461–5464, 5724, and 5742)
For the CY 2020 update, we proposed
to modify the APC assignment for
certain CPT codes associated with the
Transvenous Phrenic Nerve Stimulation
Therapy or remede¯® System. Of the 13
codes, we received a comment on the
APC assignment for three codes,
specifically, CPT codes 0426T, 0427T,
and 0431T. As shown in Table 36 below
with the long descriptors, and also in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to reassign
CPT codes 0426T and 0431T from APC
5463 (Level 3 Neurostimulator and
Related Procedures) to APC 5464 (Level
4 Neurostimulator and Related
Procedures) with a proposed payment
rate of $29,025.99. In addition, we
proposed to continue to assign CPT
code 0427T to APC 5463 ((Level 3
Neurostimulator and Related
Procedures) with a proposed payment
rate of $19,370.82.
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Comment: A device company
suggested that we maintain the current
assignment and not revise the APC
assignment to APC 5464 for CPT code
0426T. The commenter stated that the
resources required for the procedure are
more closely aligned with the
procedures in APC 5463.
Response: Based on our evaluation of
the procedure associated with CPT code
0426T, we agree that the procedure
described by the code appropriately fits
in APC 5463 based on its clinical
similarity to other procedures in the
APC. CPT code 0426T describes the
insertion or replacement of the
stimulation lead associated with a
neurostimulator system for the
treatment of central sleep apnea, and
APC 5463 includes other procedures
that involve the insertion or
replacement of a stimulation lead for a
neurostimulator system. Therefore, we
will maintain the APC assignment for
CPT code 0426T to APC 5463 for CY
2020.
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Comment: The same device company
that commented on CPT code 0426T
also commented on the APC assignment
for CPT code 0427T. According to the
commenter, the procedure describes the
initial insertion of the implantable pulse
generator when the full system cannot
be implanted for a patient, and added
that the procedure does not occur
frequently.
The commenter also noted that the
hospital resources associated with CPT
code 0427T are very similar to CPT code
0431T, which is assigned to APC 5464,
and recommended the assignment of
both procedures to APC 5464.
Response: Based on our review of the
two procedures, we agree that the
resources associated with inserting or
replacing a pulse generator for a
neurostimulator system that is described
by CPT code 0427T are very similar to
removing and replacing a pulse
generator for a neurostimulator system
that is described by CPT code 0431T.
Consequently, we are modifying our
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proposal and reassigning CPT code
0427T to APC 5464.
Comment: The same device company
that commented on CPT codes 0426T
and 0427T also commented on CPT
code 0431T. Specifically, the
commenter concurred with the APC
reassignment for the code to APC 5464.
Response: As indicated above, based
on our review of the two procedures, we
agree that the resources associated with
inserting or replacing a pulse generator
for a neurostimulator system that is
described by CPT code 0427T are very
similar to removing and replacing a
pulse generator for a neurostimulator
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system that is described by CPT code
0431T. Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposal for CPT code 0431T and
assigning the code to APC 5464.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comment, we are finalizing our
proposal with modification.
Specifically, we are finalizing our APC
proposal for CPT code 0431T to APC
5464, however, we are maintaining the
APC assignment for CPT code 0426T to
APC 5463, and reassigning CPT code
0427T to APC 5464. We note that the
final CY 2020 OPPS payment rates for
all the codes associated with the
Transvenous Phrenic Nerve Stimulation
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Therapy or remede¯® System can be
found in Addendum B of this final rule
with comment period. Table 36 below
lists the long descriptors for all 13 codes
and the final APC and SI assignments
for CY 2020. In addition, we refer
readers to Addendum D1 of this final
rule with comment period for the status
indicator meanings for all codes
reported under the OPPS for CY 2020.
Both Addendum B and Addendum D1
are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
23. Surgical Pathology Tissue Exam
(APC 5673)
In CY 2019, CPT code 88307 (Level
V—surgical pathology, gross and
microscopic examination) was assigned
to APC 5673 (Level 3 Pathology) with a
payment rate of $274.22. For CY 2020,
we proposed to reassign the code to
APC 5672 (Level 2 Pathology) with a
proposed payment rate of $148.62.
Comment: A commenter disagreed
with the proposed reassignment and
urged CMS to continue to assign CPT
code 88307 to APC 5673. This same
commenter reported that the service
includes complex Level V surgical
pathology specimens and the proposed
change represents a 46 percent decrease
in the payment amount. The commenter
added that the proposed reassignment
creates a resource cost rank order
anomaly with other physician services
and the technical costs will not be fully
recovered from each unit of service. In
addition, the commenter believed that
the data do not identify actual costs for
specific procedures, and stated that the
cost associated with CPT code 88307 is
greater than six times the cost of the
services assigned to APC 5672 (Level 2
Pathology) based on physician fee
schedule technical component cost
differences. The commenter also
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believed that the data leading to the
APC reassignment must be flawed and
added that charge-based cost data were
neither designed nor intended to be an
accurate estimate of service/procedure
level costs at the CPT code level. The
commenter stated that the hospital
charge-based cost data used for OPPS
rate-setting allows CMS to estimate
costs for purposes of grouping a number
of services or procedures (multiple
distinct codes) into appropriate
clinically and economically
homogeneous APCs.
Response: As stated in section III.B.
(Final OPPS Changes—Variations
Within APCs) of this final rule with
comment period, payments for OPPS
services and procedures are based on
our analysis of the latest claims data.
For the proposed rule, the OPPS
proposed payment rates were based on
claims data that were submitted
between January 1, 2018 through
December 31, 2018, that were processed
on or before December 31, 2018.
However, for the final rule, the OPPS
final payment rates are based on claims
that were submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 31, 2018, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2019. Based on the latest hospital
outpatient claims data used for this final
rule with comment period, we agree
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with the commenter that the code
should continue to be assigned to APC
5673 for CY 2020. Specifically, CPT
code 88307 shows a geometric mean
cost of approximately $219, which is
more appropriate in APC 5673 whose
geometric cost is approximately $277
compared to the geometric mean cost of
about $140 for APC 5672. Consequently,
we are revising our proposal and
maintaining the APC assignment for
CPT code 88307 to APC 5673 for CY
2020.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comment, and after our analysis
of the updated claims data for this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal with
modification. Specifically, we are
revising the APC assignment for CPT
code 88307 to APC 5673 for CY 2020.
The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
code can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website).
As we do every year, we will
reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
code 88307 for the next rulemaking
cycle. We note that we review, on an
annual basis, the APC assignments for
all services and items paid under the
OPPS.
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24. Urology Procedures
a. HIFU Procedure—High-Intensity
Focused Ultrasound of the Prostate
(APC 5375)
In 2017, CMS received a new
technology application for the prostate
HIFU procedure and established a new
code, specifically, HCPCS code C9747
(Ablation of prostate, transrectal, high
intensity focused ultrasound (hifu),
including imaging guidance). Based on
the estimated cost provided in the new
technology application, we assigned the
new code to APC 5376 (Level 6 Urology
and Related Services) with a payment
rate of $7,452.66 effective July 1, 2017.
We announced the SI and APC
assignment in the July 2017 OPPS
quarterly update CR (Transmittal 3783,
Change Request 10122, dated May 26,
2017).
For the CY 2018 update, we made no
change to the APC assignment and
continued to assign HCPCS code C9747
to APC 5376 with a payment rate of
$7,596.26. We note that the payment
rates for the CY 2018 OPPS update were
based on claims submitted between
January 1, 2016 through December 30,
2016, that were processed on or before
June 30, 2017. Since HCPCS code C9747
was established on July 1, 2017, we had
no claims data for the procedure for use
in ratesetting for CY 2018.
However, for the CY 2019 update,
based on the latest claims data for the
final rule, we revised the APC
assignment for HCPCS code C9747 from
APC 5376 to APC 5375 with a payment
rate of $4,020.54. We note that the
payment rates for CY 2019 were based
on claims submitted between January 1,
2017 through December 30, 2017, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2018. Our claims data showed a
geometric mean cost of approximately
$5,000 for HCPCS code C9747 based on
64 single claims (out of 64 total claims),
which was significantly lower than the
geometric mean cost of about $7,717 for
APC 5376. We believed that the
geometric mean cost for HCPCS code
C9747 was more comparable to the
geometric mean cost of approximately
$4,055 for APC 5375. Consequently, we
reassigned the code from APC 5376 to
APC 5375 (Level 5 Urology and Related
Services) for CY 2019.
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign HCPCS code C9747 to APC
5375 with a proposed payment rate
$4,286.06.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the APC assignment for
HCPCS code C9747 and recommended a
reclassification to APC 5376 because
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they believed the service is clinically
similar and comparable in terms of
resources to cryoablation of the prostate,
which is described by CPT code 55873
(Cryosurgical ablation of the prostate
(includes ultrasonic guidance and
monitoring), and placed in APC 5376
(Level 6 Urology and Related Services),
with a proposed payment rate of
$8,193.30. The commenters believed
that the geometric mean cost, and
ultimately, the APC determination for
the prostate HIFU procedure was based
on inaccurate hospital costs. They
believed that the average cost of the
procedure should be approximately
$6,250, and requested a reassignment to
APC 5376 to enable Medicare
beneficiaries to continue to receive the
treatment. They stated based on their
projections that maintaining the APC
assignment to APC 5375 for the
procedure will decrease the number of
Medicare beneficiaries receiving the
treatment by 75 percent if the CY 2020
payment rate is finalized.
Response: As we have stated every
year since the implementation of the
OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on
an annual basis, the APC assignments
for all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on our analysis of the latest
claims data. For CY 2020, based on
claims submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 30, 2018, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports
maintaining HCPCS code C9747 in APC
5375. Specifically, our claims data
shows a geometric mean cost of
approximately $5,850 for HCPCS code
C9747 based on 264 single claims (out
of 268 total claims), which is
comparable to the geometric mean cost
of about $4,140 for APC 5375, rather
than the geometric mean cost of
approximately $7,894 for APC 5376.
Also, we do not agree that the
resource costs associated with the
prostate HIFU procedure are similar to
those of cryoablation of the prostate.
Our claims data for the CY 2020 update
shows a geometric mean cost of about
$8,152 based on 1,417 single claims (out
of 1,429 total claims) for cryoablation of
the prostate. The geometric mean cost
for CPT code 55873 is reasonably
consistent with APC 5376, whose
geometric mean cost is approximately
$7,894.
With respect to the issue of inaccurate
hospital cost reporting for HCPCS code
C9747, based on our analysis of the CY
2020 hospital outpatient claims data
used for this final rule with comment
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period, we are unable to determine
whether hospitals are misreporting the
procedure. It is generally not our policy
to judge the accuracy of hospital coding
and charging for purposes of ratesetting.
We rely on hospitals to accurately report
the use of HCPCS codes in accordance
with their code descriptors and CPT and
CMS instructions, and to report services
on claims and charges and costs for the
services on their Medicare hospital cost
report appropriately. Also, we do not
specify the methodologies that hospitals
use to set charges for this or any other
service. Furthermore, we state in
Chapter 4 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual that ‘‘it is extremely
important that hospitals report all
HCPCS codes consistent with their
descriptors; CPT and/or CMS
instructions and correct coding
principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
or is packaged’’ to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
Comment: A commenter reported that
the prostate HIFU procedure (C9747)
and cryoablation of the prostate (55873)
are two clinically similar procedures for
the ablation of prostate for cancer, and
are the only two acknowledged
treatments for radiorecurrent, nonmetastatic prostate cancer. This same
commenter requested that we either
create a new APC group specific to
prostate ablation procedures or modify
the organization of HCPCS codes within
the urology family of APCs. The
commenter specifically noted that a
reorganization for APCs 5374 through
5376 would be appropriate but added
that there are other inconsistencies
across procedures within the urology
APCs. The commenter also mentioned
that CPT codes 50555 (Renal endoscopy
through established nephrostomy or
pyelostomy, with or without irrigation,
instillation, or ureteropyelography,
exclusive of radiologic service; with
biopsy) and 50557 (Renal endoscopy
through established nephrostomy or
pyelostomy, with or without irrigation,
instillation, or ureteropyelography,
exclusive of radiologic service; with
fulguration and/or incision, with or
without biopsy) are assigned to two
different APCs, however, their APC
assignments appear reversed. The
commenter further suggested updating
the procedures within APCs 5374, 5375,
and 5376 so that the geometric mean
costs for the procedure fall into the
following ranges:
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Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestions and may
consider a reorganization of the
procedures in the urology APCs in
future rulemaking. We note that each
year, under the OPPS, we revise and
make changes to the APC groupings
based on the latest hospital outpatient
claims data to appropriately place
procedures and services in APCs based
on clinical characteristics and resource
similarity. For CY 2020, based on our
analysis of the latest claims data for this
final rule, we do not believe that
establishing a new APC specific to
prostate ablation procedures is
necessary, nor do we believe that
modifying the HCPCS codes within the
urology family APCs is appropriate at
this time.
With respect to CPT codes 50555 and
50557, based on our review of the
claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we revised the APC
assignment for CPT code 50555 from
APC 5375 to APC 5376, and maintained
the APC assignment for CPT code 50557
in APC 5376. Specifically, our claims
data show a geometric about $7,327 for
CPT code 50555 and approximately
$6,224 for CPT code 50557, which are
more comparable with the geometric
cost for APC 5376 of about $7,894
unlike that of APC 5375 whose
geometric mean cost is approximately
$4,140.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comments, and after our analysis
of the updated claims data for this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue to assign
HCPCS code C9747 to APC 5375 for CY
2020. The final CY 2020 payment rate
for the code can be found in Addendum
B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the status indicator
(SI) meanings for all codes reported
under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and
D1 are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
b. ProACT Procedure—Transperineal
Periurethral Adjustable Balloon
Continence Device Procedure (APCs
5371, 5374, 5375, and 5376)
In 2017, CMS received a new
technology application for the
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transperineal periurethral adjustable
balloon continence device procedure,
which is associated with ProACT
Therapy, and established a new code,
specifically, HCPCS code C9746. Based
on the estimated cost for the bilateral
placement of the balloon continence
devices, we assigned the code to APC
5377 (Level 7 Urology and Related
Services) with a payment rate of
$14,363.61 effective July 1, 2017. We
announced the new code, and interim SI
and APC assignments, and payment rate
in the July 2017 quarterly update to the
OPPS (Transmittal 3783, Change
Request 10122, dated May 26, 2017).
For the CY 2018 update, we made no
change to the APC assignment and
continued to assign HCPCS code C9746
to APC 5377 with a payment rate of
$15,697.82. We note that OPPS payment
rates for the CY 2018 update were based
on claims submitted between January 1,
2016 through December 30, 2016, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2017. Since HCPCS code C9746 was
established on July 1, 2017, we had no
claims data for the procedure for use in
ratesetting in CY 2018.
For the CY 2019 update, we again had
no claims data for the code so we made
no change to the APC assignment and
continued to assign HCPCS code C9746
to APC 5377 with a payment rate of
$16,319.55. We note that the payment
rates for CY 2019 were based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2017
through December 30, 2017, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2018.
In July 2019, the CPT Editorial Panel
established four new codes to describe
the transperineal periurethral adjustable
balloon continence device procedure,
specifically, CPT codes 0548T, 0549T,
0550T, and 0551T. In the July 2019
quarterly update to the OPPS
(Transmittal 4313, Change Request
11318, dated May 24, 2019), we listed
the temporary APC assignments for the
new codes in the July 2019 OPPS
Update CR and announced the deletion
of HCPCS code C9746 on June 30, 2019,
since it was replaced with CPT code
0548T effective July 1, 2019. These
codes are listed in Table 37 along with
their long descriptors and proposed SI
and APC assignments.
For CY 2020, we proposed to revise
the APC assignment for new CPT code
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0548T, which was previously described
by HCPCS code C9746. In addition, we
proposed to assign CPT codes 0549T,
0550T, and 0551T to APCs 5375, 5374,
and 5371, respectively.
Comment: A medical device company
suggested that CPT code 0548T remain
in APC 5377, consistent with the APC
assignment for the predecessor code
(HCPCS code C9746). This commenter
indicated that the calculated geometric
mean cost does not accurately reflect the
actual cost of the procedure. The
commenter noted there were only two
billings identified in the CMS data—one
billing at the correct cost of $16,250 and
one billing incorrectly recorded at $0.
The commenter stated that the resulting
calculation of the geometric mean cost
of $8,125 does not accurately represent
the actual cost of the bilateral procedure
for CPT code 0548T. In addition, the
same commenter requested a
reassignment from APC 5375 to APC
5376 for CPT code 0549T.
Response: As we have stated every
year since the implementation of the
OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on
an annual basis, the APC assignments
for all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on our analysis of the latest
claims data. For CY 2020, based on
claims submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 30, 2018, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports revising
the APC assignment for CPT code 0548T
(which was previously described by
predecessor HCPCS code C9746) from
APC 5377 to APC 5376 (Level 6 Urology
and Related Services). Specifically, our
claims data shows a geometric mean
cost of approximately $9,504 for HCPCS
code C9746 based on 7 single claims
(out of 7 total claims), which is most
comparable to the geometric mean cost
of about $7,894 for APC 5376, rather
than the geometric mean cost of
approximately $17,195 for APC 5377.
We believe that assigning CPT code
0548T to APC 5377 would significantly
overpay for the procedure.
In addition, based on the geometric
mean cost for the placement of the
bilateral balloon continence devices
(CPT code 0548T), we do not agree that
we should revise the APC assignment
for CPT code 0549T, which represents
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the unilateral placement of the balloon
continence device, from APC 5375 to
APC 5376. We believe that the cost
associated with CPT code 0549T should
be less than that of CPT code 0548T
since CPT code 0549T describes the use
of only one device.
Moreover, we rely on hospitals to
accurately report the use of HCPCS
codes in accordance with their code
descriptors and CPT and CMS
instructions, and to appropriately report
services on claims and charges and costs
for the services on their Medicare
hospital cost report. However, we do not
specify the methodologies that hospitals
use to set charges for this or any other
service. We also state in Chapter 4 of the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual
that ‘‘it is extremely important that
hospitals report all HCPCS codes
consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct
coding principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment
for the services is made separately paid
or is packaged’’ to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
In summary, after consideration of the
public comment and after our analysis
of the updated claims data for this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to assign CPT codes
0548T, 0549T, 0550T, and 0551T to the
APCs listed in Table 37 below. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can
be found in Addendum B to this final
rule with comment period. In addition,
we refer readers to Addendum D1 of
this final rule with comment period for
the status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
c. Rezum Procedure—Transurethral
High Energy Water Vapor Thermal
Therapy of the Prostate (APC 5373)
OPPS/ASC final rule and the January
2018 OPPS Update CR (Transmittal
3941, Change Request 10417, dated
December 22, 2017).
For the CY 2019 update, the CPT
Editorial Panel established a new code
to describe the Rezum procedure,
specifically, CPT code 53854
(Transurethral destruction of prostate
tissue; by radiofrequency generated
water vapor thermotherapy) effective
January 1, 2019. We deleted HCPCS
code C9748 on December 31, 2018
because it was replaced with CPT code
53854 and assigned the new code to
APC 5373, which was the same APC
assignment for the predecessor code,
with a payment rate of $1,739.75. We
note that payment rates for the CY 2019
update were based on claims submitted
between January 1, 2017 and December
30, 2017 that were processed on or
before June 30, 2018.
For the CY 2020 update, we proposed
to maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 53854 to APC 5373 with a
proposed payment rate of $1,797.97.
Comment: Several commenters
requested a reclassification for CPT code
53854 from APC 5373 to APC 5374
(Level 4 Urology and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of
$3,059.21. The commenters reported
that the Rezum procedure is most
clinically similar to the transurethral
microwave therapy (TUMT), which is
described by CPT code 53850
(Transurethral destruction of prostate
tissue; by microwave thermotherapy),
and transurethral needle
(radiofrequency) ablation (TUNA),
which is described by CPT code 53852
In late 2017, CMS received a new
technology application for the
transurethral radiofrequency generated
water vapor thermal therapy of the
prostate, also known as the Rezum
procedure, and established a new code,
specifically, HCPCS code C9748
(Transurethral destruction of prostate
tissue; by radiofrequency water vapor
(steam) thermal therapy) effective
January 1, 2018. Based on the estimated
cost of the procedure, we assigned the
new code to APC 5373 (Level 3 Urology
and Related Services) with a payment
rate of $1,695.68 effective January 1,
2018. The new code appeared in both
the OPPS Addendum B of the CY 2018
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(Transurethral destruction of prostate
tissue; by radiofrequency
thermotherapy). Some commenters
reported that the primary difference
between each of these codes is the
energy source used to destroy or shrink
the prostate tissue, specifically, CPT
code 53850 uses microwave energy,
53852 uses radiofrequency energy, and
53854 uses radiofrequency generated
water vapor thermotherapy. Apart from
the energy source, the commenters
indicated that the procedures and
resources used in these procedures are
similar. Consequently, they
recommended that all three procedures
be placed in APC 5374.
Response: As we have stated every
year since the implementation of the
OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on
an annual basis, the APC assignments
for all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on our analysis of the latest
claims data. For CY 2020, based on
claims submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 30, 2018, that
were processed on or before June 30,
2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports
maintaining the APC assignment for
CPT code 53854 (which was previously
described by predecessor HCPCS code
C9748) to APC 5373. Our claims data
show a geometric mean cost of
approximately $1,899 for the
predecessor HCPCS code C9748 based
on 191 single claims (out of 192 total
claims). The geometric mean cost for the
Rezum procedure is more in line with
the geometric mean cost of about $1,733
for APC 5373 rather than with APC 5374
whose geometric mean cost is
approximately $2,953.
In addition, based on our analysis of
the claims data, the resource costs
associated with the TUMT and TUNA
procedures are not similar to the Rezum
procedure. While all three procedures
treat the same indication and utilize the
same type of technology, time, set up,
and planning, their resource costs vary.
Our claims data show a geometric mean
cost of approximately $2,851 for the
TUMT procedure (CPT code 53850)
based on 41 single claims (out of 41
total claims), and about $3,027 for the
TUNA procedure (CPT code 53852)
based on 513 single claims (out of 514
total claims). In both cases, the resource
costs for the TUMT and TUNA
procedures are much higher than those
for the Rezum procedure.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comments, and after our analysis
of the updated claims data for this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, and assigning CPT code
53854 to APC 5373. Table 38 below list
the final APC assignments for CPT code
58350 (TUMT), 53852 (TUNA) and
53854 (Rezum). In addition, the final CY
2020 payment rates for these procedures
can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period.
Further, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment
period for the status indicator (SI)
meanings for all codes reported under
the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the
APC assignment for CPT code 53854 in
the next rulemaking cycle. As stated
above, we review, on an annual basis,
the APC assignments for all services and
items paid under the OPPS.
d. VaporBlate Procedure—Transurethral
Radiofrequency Generated Water Vapor
Thermal Therapy of the Prostate
indicate that the code is not payable by
Medicare when submitted on outpatient
claims (any outpatient bill type) because
the services associated with these codes
are either not covered by any Medicare
outpatient benefit category, are
statutorily excluded by Medicare, or are
not reasonable and necessary. The code
was listed as 0X76T (the 5-digit CMS
placeholder code) in Addendum B with
the short descriptor, and again in
Addendum O with the long descriptor.
We also assigned the code to comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ in Addendum B to
indicate that the code is new for CY
2020 and that public comments would
be accepted on the proposed status
indicator assignment. We note that the
code will be effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A medical device company
reported that the technology associated
with this new code received FDA
approval as an IDE. Specifically, the
VaporBlate technology was designated
by the FDA as a Category B IDE on
August 29, 2019. The commenter also
As displayed in Addendum B to the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to assign the procedure
described by CPT code 0582T
(Transurethral ablation of malignant
prostate tissue by high-energy water
vapor thermotherapy, including
intraoperative imaging and needle
guidance) to status indicator ‘‘E1’’ to
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stated that they are in the process of
applying for Medicare coverage of the
Category B IDE clinical trial. In the
event the clinical trial is approved by
Medicare, the commenter suggested
assigning the code to one of the
following APCs:
• APC 1590 (New Technology—Level
39 ($15,001-$20,000)) with a proposed
payment rate of $ 17,500.50; or
• APC 5377 (Level 7 Urology and
Related Services) with a proposed
payment rate of $17,465.94.
The commenter explained that the
VaporBlate procedure involves the
transurethral ablation of malignant
prostate tissue by high-energy water
vapor thermotherapy, which is unlike
that of the Rezum procedure that
involves transurethral radiofrequency
generated water vapor thermal therapy
for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).
The commenter added that the resource
costs associated with the VaporBlate
procedure are significantly higher than
those for the Rezum procedure. The
Rezum generator (capital equipment)
used in CPT code 53854 costs $32,500
and the Rezum supply kit (disposables)
costs between $1,000 and $1,500, while
the VaporBlate generator (capital
equipment) used to perform the
procedure described by the VaporBlate
procedure costs $80,000 and the supply
kits (disposables) cost $12,500 each.
Based on the clinical and cost
differences, the commenter stated that
CPT code 0582T should not be assigned
to the same APC as CPT code 53854
(Rezum procedure).
Response: Based on our
understanding of the procedure, we
found that the service associated with
CPT code 0582T is currently in clinical
trial (Study Title: ‘‘Ablation of Prostate
Tissue in Patients With Intermediate
Risk Localized Prostate Cancer’’;
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT04087980). Further review of the
clinical trial revealed that the clinical
study has not yet met CMS’ standards
for coverage, nor does it appear on the
CMS Approved IDE List, which can be
found at this CMS website: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/IDE/
Approved-IDE-Studies.html. Because
the VaporBlate technology has not been
approved for Medicare coverage as a
Category B IDE, we believe that we
should continue to assign CPT code
0582T to status indicator ‘‘E1’’. If this
technology later meets CMS’ standards
for coverage, we will reassess the APC
assignment for the code in a future
quarterly update and/or rulemaking
cycle.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comment, we are finalizing our
proposal, without modification, to
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assign CPT code 0582T to status
indicator ‘‘E1’’. We refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the complete list of
the OPPS payment status indicators and
their definitions for CY 2020.
Addendum D1 is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
IV. OPPS Payment for Devices
A. Pass-Through Payment for Devices
1. Beginning Eligibility Date for Device
Pass-Through Status and Quarterly
Expiration of Device Pass-Through
Payments
a. Background
The intent of transitional device passthrough payment, as implemented at 42
CFR 419.66, is to facilitate access for
beneficiaries to the advantages of new
and truly innovative devices by
allowing for adequate payment for these
new devices while the necessary cost
data is collected to incorporate the costs
for these devices into the procedure
APC rate (66 FR 55861). Under section
1833(t)(6)(B)(iii) of the Act, the period
for which a device category eligible for
transitional pass-through payments
under the OPPS can be in effect is at
least 2 years but not more than 3 years.
Prior to CY 2017, our regulation at 42
CFR 419.66(g) provided that this passthrough payment eligibility period
began on the date CMS established a
particular transitional pass-through
category of devices, and we based the
pass-through status expiration date for a
device category on the date on which
pass-through payment was effective for
the category. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR
79654), in accordance with section
1833(t)(6)(B)(iii)(II) of the Act, we
amended § 419.66(g) to provide that the
pass-through eligibility period for a
device category begins on the first date
on which pass-through payment is made
under the OPPS for any medical device
described by such category.
In addition, prior to CY 2017, our
policy was to propose and finalize the
dates for expiration of pass-through
status for device categories as part of the
OPPS annual update. This means that
device pass-through status would expire
at the end of a calendar year when at
least 2 years of pass-through payments
had been made, regardless of the quarter
in which the device was approved. In
the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79655), we
changed our policy to allow for
quarterly expiration of pass-through
payment status for devices, beginning
with pass-through devices approved in
CY 2017 and subsequent calendar years,
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to afford a pass-through payment period
that is as close to a full 3 years as
possible for all pass-through payment
devices.
We refer readers to the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79648 through 79661) for
a full discussion of the current device
pass-through payment policy.
We also have an established policy to
package the costs of the devices that are
no longer eligible for pass-through
payments into the costs of the
procedures with which the devices are
reported in the claims data used to set
the payment rates (67 FR 66763).
b. Expiration of Transitional PassThrough Payments for Certain Devices
As stated earlier, section
1833(t)(6)(B)(iii) of the Act requires that,
under the OPPS, a category of devices
be eligible for transitional pass-through
payments for at least 2 years, but not
more than 3 years. There currently is
one device category eligible for passthrough payment: C1823 Generator,
neurostimulator (implantable),
nonrechargeable, with transvenous
sensing and stimulation leads), which
was established effective January 1,
2019. The pass-through payment status
of the device category for HCPCS code
C1823 will end on December 31, 2021.
HCPCS code C1823 will continue to
receive pass-through status in CY 2020.
2. New Device Pass-Through
Applications
a. Background
Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides
for pass-through payments for devices,
and section 1833(t)(6)(B) of the Act
requires CMS to use categories in
determining the eligibility of devices for
pass-through payments. As part of
implementing the statute through
regulations, we have continued to
believe that it is important for hospitals
to receive pass-through payments for
devices that offer substantial clinical
improvement in the treatment of
Medicare beneficiaries to facilitate
access by beneficiaries to the advantages
of the new technology. Conversely, we
have noted that the need for additional
payments for devices that offer little or
no clinical improvement over
previously existing devices is less
apparent. In such cases, these devices
can still be used by hospitals, and
hospitals will be paid for them through
appropriate APC payment. Moreover, a
goal is to target pass-through payments
for those devices where cost
considerations might be most likely to
interfere with patient access (66 FR
55852; 67 FR 66782; and 70 FR 68629).
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We note that, in section IV.A.4. of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed an alternative pathway that
would grant fast-track device passthrough payment under the OPPS for
devices approved under the FDA
Breakthrough Device Program for OPPS
device pass-through payment
applications received on or after January
1, 2020. We refer readers to section
IV.A.4. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule for a complete discussion
on this proposal.
As specified in regulations at 42 CFR
419.66(b)(1) through (3), to be eligible
for transitional pass-through payment
under the OPPS, a device must meet the
following criteria:
• If required by FDA, the device must
have received FDA approval or
clearance (except for a device that has
received an FDA investigational device
exemption (IDE) and has been classified
as a Category B device by the FDA), or
meet another appropriate FDA
exemption; and the pass-through
payment application must be submitted
within 3 years from the date of the
initial FDA approval or clearance, if
required, unless there is a documented,
verifiable delay in U.S. market
availability after FDA approval or
clearance is granted, in which case CMS
will consider the pass-through payment
application if it is submitted within 3
years from the date of market
availability;
• The device is determined to be
reasonable and necessary for the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or
injury or to improve the functioning of
a malformed body part, as required by
section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act; and
• The device is an integral part of the
service furnished, is used for one
patient only, comes in contact with
human tissue, and is surgically
implanted or inserted (either
permanently or temporarily), or applied
in or on a wound or other skin lesion.
In addition, according to
§ 419.66(b)(4), a device is not eligible to
be considered for device pass-through
payment if it is any of the following: (1)
Equipment, an instrument, apparatus,
implement, or item of this type for
which depreciation and financing
expenses are recovered as depreciation
assets as defined in Chapter 1 of the
Medicare Provider Reimbursement
Manual (CMS Pub. 15–1); or (2) a
material or supply furnished incident to
a service (for example, a suture,
customized surgical kit, or clip, other
than a radiological site marker).
Separately, we use the following
criteria, as set forth under § 419.66(c), to
determine whether a new category of
pass-through payment devices should
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be established. The device to be
included in the new category must—
• Not be appropriately described by
an existing category or by any category
previously in effect established for
transitional pass-through payments, and
was not being paid for as an outpatient
service as of December 31, 1996;
• Have an average cost that is not
‘‘insignificant’’ relative to the payment
amount for the procedure or service
with which the device is associated as
determined under § 419.66(d) by
demonstrating: (1) The estimated
average reasonable costs of devices in
the category exceeds 25 percent of the
applicable APC payment amount for the
service related to the category of
devices; (2) the estimated average
reasonable cost of the devices in the
category exceeds the cost of the devicerelated portion of the APC payment
amount for the related service by at least
25 percent; and (3) the difference
between the estimated average
reasonable cost of the devices in the
category and the portion of the APC
payment amount for the device exceeds
10 percent of the APC payment amount
for the related service (with the
exception of brachytherapy and
temperature-monitored cryoablation,
which are exempt from the cost
requirements as specified at
§ 419.66(c)(3) and (e)); and
• Demonstrate a substantial clinical
improvement, that is, substantially
improve the diagnosis or treatment of an
illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part
compared to the benefits of a device or
devices in a previously established
category or other available treatment.
Beginning in CY 2016, we changed
our device pass-through evaluation and
determination process. Device passthrough applications are still submitted
to CMS through the quarterly
subregulatory process, but the
applications will be subject to noticeand-comment rulemaking in the next
applicable OPPS annual rulemaking
cycle. Under this process, all
applications that are preliminarily
approved upon quarterly review will
automatically be included in the next
applicable OPPS annual rulemaking
cycle, while submitters of applications
that are not approved upon quarterly
review will have the option of being
included in the next applicable OPPS
annual rulemaking cycle or
withdrawing their application from
consideration. Under this notice-andcomment process, applicants may
submit new evidence, such as clinical
trial results published in a peerreviewed journal or other materials for
consideration during the public
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61273
comment process for the proposed rule.
This process allows those applications
that we are able to determine meet all
of the criteria for device pass-through
payment under the quarterly review
process to receive timely pass-through
payment status, while still allowing for
a transparent, public review process for
all applications (80 FR 70417 through
70418).
More details on the requirements for
device pass-through payment
applications are included on the CMS
website in the application form itself at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/passthrough_
payment.html, in the ‘‘Downloads’’
section. In addition, CMS is amenable to
meeting with applicants or potential
applicants to discuss research trial
design in advance of any device passthrough application or to discuss
application criteria, including the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
b. Applications Received for Device
Pass-Through Payment for CY 2020
We received seven complete
applications by the March 1, 2019
quarterly deadline, which was the last
quarterly deadline for applications to be
received in time to be included in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We
received one of the applications in the
second quarter of 2018, three of the
applications in the fourth quarter of
2018, and three of the applications in
the first quarter of 2019. None of the
applications were approved for device
pass-through payment during the
quarterly review process.
Applications received for the later
deadlines for the remaining 2019
quarters (June 1, September 1, and
December 1), if any, will be presented
in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. We note that the quarterly
application process and requirements
have not changed in light of the
addition of rulemaking review. Detailed
instructions on submission of a
quarterly device pass-through payment
application are included on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/
Downloads/catapp.pdf. A discussion of
the applications received by the March
1, 2019 deadline is presented below.
(1) Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
TriSalus Life Sciences submitted an
application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment
status for the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System. The Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System is described as a
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flexible, ultra-thin microcatheter with a
self-expanding, nonocclusive one-way
microvalve at the distal end. The
applicant stated that it has designed the
Pressure Enabled Drug DeliveryTM
technology of the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System to overcome
intratumoral pressure in solid tumors
and improve distribution and
penetration of therapy during
Transcatheter Arterial
Chemoembolization (TACE) procedures.
TACE is a minimally invasive, imageguided procedure used to infuse a high
dose of chemotherapy into liver tumors.
According to the applicant, the pliable,
one-way valve at the distal tip of the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
creates a temporary local increase in
pressure during infusion, opening up
collapsed vessels in tumors, which
enables perfusion and therapy delivery
in areas inaccessible to the systemic
circulation, a positive hydrostatic
pressure gradient, and restores
convective flow to enable therapy to
penetrate deeper into the tumor. During
the TACE procedure, the physician first
gains catheter access into the arterial
system of the hepatic arteries through a
small incision in the groin or the wrist.
The applicant stated that the physician
then uses real-time fluoroscopic
guidance to navigate the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System into the blood
vessels feeding the tumors, infusing the
chemotherapy and embolic materials
through the Surefire® SparkTM Infusion
System until the tumor bed is
completely saturated.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), FDA granted 510(k)
premarket clearance as of April 3, 2018.
The application for a new device
category for transitional pass-through
payment status for the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System was received
on November 29, 2018, which is within
3 years of the date of the initial FDA
approval or clearance. We invited
public comments on whether the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
meets the newness criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer of
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
believed this device meets the eligibility
criteria for device pass-through payment
under the regulation at § 419.66, which
includes the newness criterion.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s input. After consideration
of the public comments we received and
based on the fact that the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System application
was received within 3 years of FDA
approval, we believe that the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System meets the
newness criterion.
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With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), according to the
applicant, the use of the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System is integral to
the service of providing delivery of
chemotherapy into liver tumors, is used
for one patient only, comes in contact
with human skin, and is applied in or
on a wound or other skin lesion. The
applicant also claimed the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System meets the
device eligibility requirements of
§ 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or
items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it
is not a supply or material furnished
incident to a service. We invited public
comments on whether the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System meets the
eligibility criteria at § 419.66(b).
Comment: The manufacturer of
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
believed that that the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System met the eligibility
criteria at § 419.66(b).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s input. Based on the
information we have received and our
review of the application, we have
determined that Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System meets the eligibility
criterion at § 419.66(b)(3) and (b)(4).
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously
in effect, and was not being paid for as
an outpatient service as of December 31,
1996. We identified several existing
pass-through payment categories that
may be applicable to the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System. The Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System may be
described by HCPCS code C1887
(Catheter, guiding (may include
infusion/perfusion capability)). The
applicant describes the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System as a device
used in vascular interventional
procedures to deliver diagnostic and
therapeutic agents in the peripheral
vasculatures. The CMS List of Device
Category Codes for Present or Previous
Pass-Through Payment and Related
Definitions describes HCPCS code
C1887 as intended for the introduction
of interventional/diagnostic devices into
the coronary or peripheral vascular
systems. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we also stated that the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System may
also be described by HCPCS code C1751
(Catheter, infusion, inserted
peripherally, centrally or midline (other
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than hemodialysis)). The applicant
describes the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System as being inserted
through a small incision in the groin or
the wrist. We invited public comments
on this issue.
Comment: The manufacturer of the
device does not believe there is an
existing pass-through payment category
that describes the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System, commenting that the
existing device categories that CMS
identified do not adequately describe
critical aspects of the device. The
manufacturer noted that existing
categories, such as C1887 Catheter,
guiding (may include infusion/
perfusion capability) and C1751
Catheter, infusion, inserted
peripherally, centrally or midline (other
than hemodialysis)—do not
appropriately describe catheters with a
pressure-enabled drug delivery (PEDD)
valve, a key mechanism of action of the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System. The
manufacturer stated that the PEDD valve
is closely associated with differential
and improved outcomes as compared to
catheters without PEDD valves and is
not appropriately described by existing
categories.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s input. After consideration
of the public comments we received, we
believe there is no existing pass-through
payment category that appropriately
describes the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System, due to the pressureenabled drug delivery (PEDD) valve
which offers a unique mechanism for
therapy delivery. Based on this
information, we believe that the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
meets the eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing
a device category, at § 419.66(c)(2),
provides that CMS determines that a
device to be included in the category
has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment. With respect to this criterion,
the applicant submitted four studies to
support the claim that their technology
represents a substantial clinical
improvement over existing technologies.
The applicant asserts that the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System represents a
substantial clinical improvement over
existing technologies because it offers a
treatment option that no other catheters
currently available can provide. The
manufacturer notes that the selfexpanding, nonocclusive, one-way valve
can infuse therapy at pressure higher
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than the baseline mean arterial pressure,
and this pressurized delivery opens up
collapsed vessels in tumors and enables
perfusion and therapy delivery into
hypoxic areas of the liver tumors. The
applicant also believes that the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
represents a substantial clinical
improvement because the technology
has shown improved tumor response
rates in hepatocellular carcinoma, as
well as a decrease in the rate of disease
recurrence and the need for subsequent
treatment.
The first pilot study of nine patients
being treated for hepatocellular
carcinoma, who received infusions via
both a conventional end-hole catheter
and an antireflux microcatheter,
demonstrated statistically significant
reductions in downstream distribution
of embolic particles with the antireflux
catheter and increases in tumor
deposition (p < 0.05).13 The second
singlecenter retrospective study was
conducted with 22 patients treated for
hepatocellular carcinoma with the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System and
TACE. As assessed by MRI, there
appeared to be overall disease response
in 91 percent of patients and 85 percent
of lesions and complete response in 32
percent of patients and 54 percent of
lesions.14 In the first study for a casecontrol series, 19 patients undergoing
treatment using SIS–TACE had a
statistically significant improvement in
disease response rate compared to 19
patients treated with end-hole
microcatheters, 78.9 percent compared
to 36.8 percent for initial overall
response rate (p = 0.008).15 In the
second study, a multi-center registry of
72 patients demonstrated high response
rate when compared to historical
control at 6 months follow-up.16
13 Pasciak AS, McElmurray JH, Bourgeois AC,
Heidel RE, Bradley YC. Impact of an antireflux
catheter on target volume particulate distribution in
liver-directed embolotherapy: a pilot study. J Vasc
Interv Radiol. 2015 May;26(5):660–9.
14 Kim AY, Frantz S, Krishnan P, DeMulder D,
Caridi T, Lynskey GE, et al. (2017) Short-term
imaging response after drug-eluting embolic transarterial chemoembolization delivered with the
Surefire Infusion System® for the treatment of
hepatocellular carcinoma. PloS one 12.9 (2017):
e0183861.
15 N Apseloff, J Keung, T Caridi, D Buckley, G
Lynskey, A Kim. Case-control evaluation of endhole
microcatheter versus Surefire Infusion System for
use during transarterial chemoembolization for
hepatocellular carcinoma. Conference abstract
presented at 2017 Society of Intervention Radiology
Annual Congress, March 8, 2017.
16 Kapoor B, Contreras F, Katz M, Arepally A,
Fischman A, Rose S, Kim A, Ferraro J. Surefire
Infusion System (SIS) hepatocellular carcinoma
registry study interim results: A multicenter study
of the safety, feasibility, and outcomes of the SIS
expandable-tip microcatheter in DEB–TACE.
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Based on the information submitted
by the applicant, one concern was that
large-scale studies with long-term
follow-up were limited. Also, the
majority of studies presented had a
sample size of less than 25 and the
highest sample size presented was less
than 100 patients. Additionally, patient
follow-up occurred mostly within a 3 to
6 month timeframe with few studies
occurring beyond this range. Another
concern was that none of the studies
presented improvements in mortality
with the use of the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System. Outcomes focused
primarily on tumor response rates and
lesion size, based upon imaging. We
noted additional data on mortality
endpoints would be helpful to fully
assess substantial clinical improvement.
We invited public comments on
whether the Surefire® SparkTM Infusion
System meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer
responded to several statements
regarding Surefire® SparkTM Infusion
System and substantial clinical
improvement in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, and asserted that
SparkTM Infusion System meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion. The manufacturer stated that
the population size in the studies
submitted to CMS are normal for a new
and innovative technology, noting that
the studies are methodologically
rigorous and show statistically
significant differentiation from
comparators. The manufacturer also
noted that overall survival is not an
appropriate endpoint for hepatocellular
carcinoma. They cited National
Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN)
guidelines, noting that tumor necrosis
and pathologic response are primary
predictors of success in these cases and
locoregional therapy should be viewed
as a way to transition patients to
transplant or resection. The
manufacturer also suggested that CMS
should consider that clinical
improvements vary based on the
therapeutic agent being delivered by the
SparkTM Infusion System and that these
agents are approved on a variety of
endpoints.
Response: We appreciate the response
to the questions we had regarding
SparkTM Infusion System. After
reviewing the information provided in
the public comment, we agree that
while the opportunity for large-scale
studies with long-term follow-up is
limited for a new technology, the
Conference abstract presented at 2018 Society of
Intervention Radiology Annual Congress, March 19,
2017.
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61275
existing studies show statistically
significant improvements. Additionally,
with regard to our questions about
impacts on mortality, we accept the
applicant’s statement that there are
other key clinical endpoints, such as
tumor necrosis and progression-free
survival, that can be used to assess
improvements from the SparkTM
Infusion System.
Comment: Multiple commenters
supported granting SparkTM Infusion
System transitional pass-through
payment status. Many of the
commenters mentioned that SparkTM
Infusion System provides substantial
clinical benefit over conventional
therapy and urged CMS to approve the
transitional pass-through payment to
reduce cost burden and increase patient
access.
Response: We appreciate the
additional information that the
commenters provided on the
performance and the benefits of SparkTM
Infusion System.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we have
determined that SparkTM Infusion
System does meet the substantial
clinical improvement criterion.
The third criterion for establishing a
device category, at § 419.66(c)(3),
requires us to determine that the cost of
the device is not insignificant, as
described in § 419.66(d). Section
419.66(d) includes three cost
significance criteria that must each be
met. The applicant provided the
following information in support of the
cost significance requirements. The
applicant stated that the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System would be
reported with CPT code 37243, which is
assigned to APC 5193 (Level 3
Endovascular Procedures). To meet the
cost criterion for device pass-through
payment status, a device must pass all
three tests of the cost criterion for at
least one APC. For our calculations, we
used APC 5193, which has a CY 2019
payment rate of $9,669.04. Beginning in
CY 2017, we calculated the device offset
amount at the HCPCS/CPT code level
instead of the APC level (81 FR 79657).
CPT code 37243 had a device offset
amount of $3,894.69 at the time the
application was received. According to
the applicant, the cost of the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System is $7,750.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost
significance requirement, provides that
the estimated average reasonable cost of
devices in the category must exceed 25
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount for the service related to the
category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $7,750 for the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System is
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80.2 percent of the applicable APC
payment amount for the service related
to the category of devices of $9,669.04
($7,750/$9,669.04 × 100 = 80.2 percent).
Therefore, we believe the Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System meets the first
cost significance requirement.
The second cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(2), provides
that the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category must
exceed the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs
to be at least 125 percent of the offset
amount (the device-related portion of
the APC found on the offset list). The
estimated average reasonable cost of
$7,750 for the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System exceeds the cost of the
device-related portion of the APC
payment amount for the related service
of $3,894.69 by 199 percent
($7,750¥$3,894.69) × 100 = 198.99
percent). Therefore, we believe that the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
meets the second cost significance
requirement.
The third cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(3), provides
that the difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of the
devices in the category and the portion
of the APC payment amount for the
device must exceed 10 percent of the
APC payment amount for the related
service. The difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of
$7,750 for the SparkTM Infusion System
and the portion of the APC payment
amount for the device of $3,894.69
exceeds the APC payment amount for
the related service of $9,669.04 by 40
percent (($7,750¥$3,894.69)/$9,669.04)
× 100 = 39.87 percent). Therefore, we
believe that the Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System meets the third cost
significance requirement.
We invited public comments on
whether the Surefire® SparkTM Infusion
System meets the device pass-through
payment criteria discussed in this
section, including the cost criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer of the
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System
believed that the device meets the cost
criterion for device pass-through
payment status.
Response: We appreciate the
manufacturer’s input. After
consideration of the public comments
we received, we believe that Surefire®
SparkTM Infusion System meets the cost
criterion for device pass-through
payment status.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
approving the Surefire® SparkTM
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Infusion System for device pass-through
payment status beginning in CY 2020.
(2) TracPatch
According to the applicant, TracPatch
is a wearable device that utilizes an
accelerometer, temperature sensor and
step counter to allow the surgeon and
patient to monitor recovery and help
ensure critical milestones are being met.
The applicant states that TracPatch
utilizes wearable monitoring technology
and methods in an effort to enhance the
rehabilitation experience for both
patients and physicians. Accelerometers
are utilized to recognize and record the
results when patients perform standard
physical therapy exercises, in addition
to providing standard step count and
high-acceleration events that may
indicate a fall. A temperature sensor
monitors the skin temperature near the
joint.
TracPatch is described by the
applicant as a 24/7 remote monitoring
wearable device that captures a patient’s
key daily activities: such as range of
motion progress, exercise compliance,
and ambulation. TracPatch is used for
pre- and post-operative patient
monitoring, patient engagement, data
analytics and post-op cost reduction.
According to the applicant, the
wearable devices stick on the skin above
and below the knee. The wearables are
applied before total knee surgery to
determine a patient’s baseline activity
levels, and then again after surgery to
allow the patient and surgeon to
monitor activity, pain, range of motion
and physical therapy. The use of the
Bluetooth connectivity allows the
device to be paired with any
smartphone and the TracPatch cloud
allows for unlimited data collection and
storage. The applicant states that
TracPatch includes a web dashboard
and computer application, which permit
a health care provider to monitor a
patient’s recovery in real-time, allowing
for immediate care adjustments and the
ability for providers and patients to
respond to issues that may occur during
recovery from surgery.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), the applicant stated
that TracPatch does not need FDA
clearance because it is a Class I device
that would be assigned to a generic
category of devices described in 21 CFR
parts 862 through 892 that is exempt
from FDA premarket notification.
However, the applicant did not identify
which category of exempted devices
that TracPatch would be assigned. The
applicant also stated that TracPatch will
be introduced into the market in 2019,
which would be within 3 years of the
device pass-through payment
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application for TracPatch that was
received in March 2019. We invited
public comments on whether the
TracPatch is exempt from FDA
clearance and if the TracPatch meets the
newness criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, stated that they had
registered TracPatch as a Class I Exempt
goniometer with FDA which was listed
on the Global Unique Device
Identification Database (GUDID) as of
August 28, 2019.
Response: We thank the manufacturer
for clarifying that TracPatch is now
registered with FDA as a Class I Exempt
goniometer as of August 28, 2019.
After consideration of the public
comments, we have determined that
TracPatch meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), the applicant claimed
that the TracPatch is an integral part of
monitoring the range of motion for a
knee prior to and after total knee
arthroplasty, is used for one patient
only, and is placed on the skin above
and below the knee and secured by
Velcro strips. The applicant stated that
the device is not surgically implanted or
inserted into the patient and is not
applied in or on a wound or other skin
lesion. We stated concerns in the
proposed rule with TracPatch’s
eligibility with respect to the criterion at
§ 419.66(b)(3) because to be eligible for
pass-through payment a device must be
surgically implanted or inserted into the
patient or applied in a wound or on
other skin lesions. In addition, the
applicant stated that the TracPatch
meets the device eligibility
requirements of § 419.66(b)(4) because it
is not an instrument, apparatus,
implement, or item for which
depreciation and financing expenses are
recovered. We determined that
TracPatch was not a material or supply
furnished incident to a service. We
invited public comments on whether
the TracPatch meets the eligibility
criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, provided more
information on whether TracPatch
meets the eligibility criterion. The
manufacturer states that the device is
adhered to a patient’s skin using a
medical adhesive patch and not Velcro
strips and that the device is placed near
a wound (which we assume is the
incision for the associated knee surgery)
in a sterile setting. The placement of the
device near the wound allows real time
monitoring of changes to the wound and
complications and abnormalities that
may arise. Also the device placement is
important to perform measurements
related to the knee’s range of motion.
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Response: The commenter did not
state or provide evidence either in its
device pass-through application or in its
comment on the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, that the TracPatch device
is surgically implanted or inserted into
a patient or is applied in a wound or on
other skin lesions. In fact, the
description of the Class I Exempt
goniometer on the FDA product
classification web page states that the
goniometer is not an implantable
device. To be considered for device
pass-through payment, a device must
meet this part of the eligibility criterion.
After consideration of all of the
information we have received, we have
determined that TracPatch is not
surgically implanted or inserted into a
patient or applied in a wound or on
other skin lesions, and the product thus
does not meet the eligibility criterion for
device pass-through payment status.
Because we have determined that
TracPatch does not meet the basic
eligibility criterion for transitional passthrough payment status, we have not
evaluated this product to determine
whether it meets the other criteria
required for transitional pass-through
payment for devices; that is the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion, and the cost criterion.
Comment: Multiple commenters,
including physicians and patients,
described the benefits of TracPatch and
how it helped either them or their
patients with their recoveries from knee
surgery.
Response: We appreciate the
comments we received about the
benefits of TracPatch. However, we did
not evaluate substantial clinical
improvement for TracPatch because it
did not meet the eligibility criterion.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are not
approving device pass-through payment
status for TracPatch for CY 2020.
(3) Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS)
Therapy® System for Treatment
Resistant Depression (TRD)
LivaNova USA Inc. submitted an
application for the Vagus Nerve
Stimulation (VNS) Therapy® System for
Treatment Resistant Depression (TRD).
According to the applicant, the VNS
Therapy® System consists of two
implantable components: A
programmable electronic pulse
generator and a bipolar electrical lead
that is connected to the programmable
electronic pulse generator. The
applicant stated that the surgical
procedure to implant the VNS Therapy®
System involves subcutaneous
implanting of the pulse generator in the
intraclavicular region as well as
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insertion of the bipolar electrical lead
which entails wrapping two spiral
electrodes around the cervical portion of
the left vagus nerve within the carotid
sheath.
According to the applicant, following
implant and recovery, the physician
programs the pulse generator to
intermittently stimulate the vagus nerve
at a level that balances efficacy and
patient tolerability. The pulse generator
delivers electrical stimulation via the
bipolar electrical lead to the cervical
portion of the left vagus nerve within
the carotid sheath thereby relaying
information to the brain stem
modulating structures relevant to
depression. Stimulation typically
consists of a 30-second period of ‘‘on
time,’’ during which the device
stimulates at a fixed level of output
current, followed by a 5-minute ‘‘off
time’’ period of no stimulation.
The applicant states that a hand-held
programmer is utilized to program the
pulse generator stimulation parameters,
including the current charge, pulse
width, pulse frequency, and the on/off
stimulus time, which is also known as
the on/off duty cycle. Initial settings can
be adjusted to enhance the tolerability
of the device as well as its clinical
effects on the patient. The generator
runs continuously, but patients can
temporarily turn off the device by
holding a magnet over it. The generator
can also be turned on and off by the
programmer.
The applicant states that the VNS
Therapy® System provides indirect
modulation of brain activity through the
stimulation of the vagus nerve. The
vagus nerve, the tenth cranial nerve, has
parasympathetic outflow that regulates
the autonomic (that is, involuntary)
functions of heart rate and gastric acid
secretion, and also includes the primary
functions of sensation from the pharynx,
muscles of the vocal cords and
swallowing. It is a nerve that carries
both sensory and motor information to
and from the brain. Importantly, the
vagus nerve has influence over
widespread brain areas and it is
believed that electrical stimulation of
the vagus nerve alters various networks
of the brain in order to treat psychiatric
disease.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), the applicant received
FDA clearance for the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD through the premarket
approval (PMA) process on July 15,
2005, and the VNS Therapy® for TRD
device was introduced to the market in
September 2005. However, on May 4,
2007, a national coverage determination
(NCD 160.18) was released prohibiting
Medicare from covering the use of the
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VNS Therapy® System for TRD. This
NCD remained in effect until February
15, 2019, when CMS determined that
the VNS Therapy® for TRD could
receive payment if the service was
performed in CMS-approved coverage
with evidence development (CED)
studies. Although the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD was introduced to the
market in September 2005, Medicare
has only covered it for slightly more
than 11⁄2 years. However, § 419.66(b)(1)
states that a pass-through payment
application for a device must be
received within 3 years of when the
device either received FDA approval or
was introduced to the market. The
applicant stated that the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD was introduced to the
market in September 2005, which
means the device pass-through payment
application would have needed to have
been submitted to CMS by September
2008. However, the pass-through
application for the device was not
received by CMS until March 2019.
In addition, it appeared that the
neurostimulator device for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD is the same
device that has been used since 1997 to
treat epilepsy.17 The applicant stated
the following three differences between
the two devices: (1) How the device is
programmed to treat epilepsy versus
TRD; (2) how the external magnets of
the device are used for epilepsy
treatment as compared to TRD
treatment; and (3) that the battery life of
the device to treat epilepsy is different
than the battery life of the device when
treating TRD. However, it was not clear
that these differences demonstrate that
the actual device used to treat TRD is
any different than the device used to
treat epilepsy.
Based on the information presented,
we invited public comments on whether
the VNS Therapy® System for TRD
meets the newness criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, made additional
arguments for why the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD meets the newness
criterion. The manufacturer stated that
there were 22 months between the FDA
approval of the associated procedure to
treat TRD in July 2005 and CMS’
issuance of the national determination
of non-coverage on May 4, 2007. The
manufacturer asserts that during those
22 months the VNS Therapy® System
for TRD was ‘‘realistically not available’’
because of concerns about covering the
TRD treatment procedure during the
period between FDA approval and the
national determination of non-coverage.
17 Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports. 2014
Jun; 1(2): 64–73.
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In another part of the manufacturer’s
comment, they state that the uncertainty
of coverage for the TRD treatment
procedure meant that the treatment was
not available to patients during the July
2005 to May 2007 time period.
The manufacturer believes the most
equitable reading of the rule that is
consistent with the intent of the
criterion when it was established in the
CY 2016 OPPS final rule (80 FR 70418
through 70420) is that the 3-year period
for newness from when the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD was
introduced into the market in July 2015
should have been held in suspension
from May 4, 2007 when the original
national determination of non-coverage
by CMS until the subsequent national
determination allowing coverage of the
VNS Therapy® System for TRD with
coverage with evidence development
(CED) was released on February 15,
2019.
The manufacturer cites CMS
statements from the CY 2016 OPPS final
rule supporting this reading, including
that device pass-through payment is for
devices that are truly new and do not
have sufficient claims data for CMS to
analyze, and that market availability for
a device could be considered to be after
its FDA approval or clearance date
where there is a national coverage
determination of non-coverage of the
device within the Medicare population.
The manufacturer asserts that the reason
that the newness criterion does not
address the market availability situation
faced by the VNS Therapy® System for
TRD is that CMS simply did not
envision that such a situation would
occur. The manufacturer asserts that the
VNS Therapy® System for TRD
neurostimulator device has not been
available in the market for 3 full years,
and therefore still meets the newness
criterion.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s conclusion. The
manufacturer did not provide evidence
to establish that the neurostimulator
device for the VNS Therapy® System for
TRD was not similar to the
neurostimulator device that has been
used since 1997 to treat epilepsy. With
no evidence to the contrary, it appears
the neurostimulator device for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD has been on
the market continuously since 1997 and
therefore fails the newness criterion.
However, even if we were to assume
the neurostimulator device for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD was a new
device upon FDA approval for the TRD
treatment procedure in July 2005, the
device would still not meet the newness
criterion. The manufacturer’s comment
about suggesting an equitable reading of
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the newness criterion consistent with
what it believed was our intent in the
CY 2016 OPPS final rule (80 FR 70418
through 70420) implied that, for a
device to meet the newness standard, it
had to be available in the market for less
than three years and that the availability
period would be suspended if the
device was unavailable in the market
due to national non-coverage. This
comment does not align with the
language of § 419.66(b)(1), which states
that the application for device passthrough payment must be received
within 3 years from the date of market
availability and makes no exception for
periods of national non-coverage. As we
stated in the proposed rule, based on
information provided in the original
device pass-through application, the
device pass-through application had to
be submitted by September 2008 to meet
the newness requirement.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it did not believe that the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD meets the
newness criterion for device passthrough payment. The commenter states
that while there have been technical
improvements with the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD, the commenter believes
these are typical upgrades of an existing
technology and not evidence of a new
device.
Response: We appreciate the feedback
from the commenter, including their
concern that the differences cited by the
manufacturer between the
neurostimulator VNS device to treat
epilepsy and the neurostimulator VNS
device to treat TRD are not substantial
enough to establish the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD neurostimulator device
as a new device that meets the newness
criterion. A device also will fail the
newness criterion if, as noted above, it
is on the market more than three years,
based either on its FDA clearance or
approval date or the date of U.S. market
availability.
After consideration of all of the
information we have received, we have
determined that the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD does not meet the
newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), the applicant claimed
that the VNS Therapy® System for TRD
is an integral part of a procedure to
provide adjunctive treatment of chronic
or recurrent depression in adult patients
that have failed four or more
antidepressant treatments. The VNS
Therapy® System for TRD is used for
one patient only, comes in contact with
human tissue, and is surgically
implanted or inserted into the patient.
In addition, the applicant stated that the
VNS Therapy® System for TRD meets
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the device eligibility requirements of
§ 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or
item for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered. We
determined that the VNS Therapy® for
TRD was not a material or supply
furnished incident to a service. We
invited public comments on whether
the VNS Therapy® for TRD meets the
eligibility criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, claimed that the VNS
Therapy® for TRD device meets the
basic eligibility criteria for pass-through
status. The device is an integral part of
the service provided which is the
adjunctive treatment of TRD. The device
is used by one patient, comes in contact
with human tissue and is surgically
implanted. The manufacturer also
asserts that the device is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or
item for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered. The
manufacturer states that the device is
not a material or supply furnished
incident to a service.
Response: We appreciate the
additional comments from the
manufacturer. After consideration of all
of the information we have received, we
have determined that the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD does meet the device
eligibility criterion as described by
§ 419.66(b)(4).
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any existing categories or
by any category previously in effect, and
was not being paid for as an outpatient
service as of December 31, 1996. With
respect to the existence of a previous
pass-through device category that
describes the device used for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD, the applicant
suggested a category descriptor of
‘‘Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), treatment resistant
depression, non-rechargeable.’’
However, the device category
represented by HCPCS code C1767 is
described as ‘‘Generator,
neurostimulator (implantable), nonrechargeable,’’ which appears to
encompass the device category
descriptor for the VNS Therapy® System
for TRD suggested by the applicant. The
applicant asserts that the device
category descriptor for HCPCS code
C1767 is overly broad and noted the
establishment of HCPCS code C1823
(Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), nonrechargeable, with
transvenous sensing and stimulation
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leads), effective January 1, 2019, as an
example of where a new device category
for a nonrechargeable neurostimulation
system to treat central sleep apnea was
carved out from the broad category
described by HCPCS code C1767.
The applicant believes its proposed
category for the device for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD should
similarly qualify as a new category.
However, HCPCS code C1823 was
established due to specific device
features which distinguish that device
category from HCPCS code C1767. The
applicant for the VNS Therapy® System
for TRD requested a new device
category based on a beneficiary’s
diagnosis, but OPPS does not
differentiate payment by diagnosis.
Comment: The applicant asserts that
the VNS Therapy® for TRD device is not
described by any of the existing device
categories in the OPPS and that the
associated service was not paid as an
outpatient service as of December 31,
1996.
Response: We do not agree with the
applicant’s assertion. We believe the
VNS Therapy® for TRD device is
described by existing HCPCS code
C1767 (Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), non-rechargeable) and
does not meet the criterion that is
described by § 419.66(c)(1) because the
device is described by an existing
device category. As stated in the
proposed rule, OPPS does not
differentiate payment by diagnosis and
therefore cannot establish new device
categories based solely on a previously
described device being used to treat a
new indication. In the original passthrough application, the applicant cited
the example of the establishment of a
new category code, HCPCS code C1823
(Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), nonrechargeable, with
transvenous sensing and stimulation
leads), for the remede system even
though that device is a non-rechargeable
neurostimulator and initially appeared
to be covered by HCPCS code C1767,
like the VNS Therapy® for TRD device.
However, as we stated in the proposed
rule, HCPCS code C1823 was
established due to specific device
features that distinguish that device
category from HCPCS code C1767. The
applicant has not identified any device
features of the VNS Therapy® for TRD
device that distinguish it from the
category described by HCPCS code
C1767.
After consideration of all of the
information we have received, we have
determined that the VNS Therapy®
System for TRD is described by either
an existing category or by a category
previously in effect and does not meets
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the requirements of § 419.66(c)(1) and
the device category eligibility criterion.
Because we have determined that the
VNS Therapy® System for TRD does not
meet either the newness criterion or the
device category eligibility criterion for
transitional pass-through payment
status, we have not evaluated this
device to determine whether it meets
the other criteria required for
transitional pass-through payment for
devices; namely, the substantial clinical
improvement criterion and the cost
criterion.
Comment: A commenter supported
giving pass-through status for the VNS
Therapy® System for TRD because the
commenter believes the clinical benefits
of the VNS Therapy® System for TRD
have been demonstrated by the studies
submitted for the recent national
coverage determination that established
coverage with evidence development for
the procedure.
Response: We appreciate the
comment in support of the clinical
benefits of the VNS Therapy® System
for TRD. However, we did not evaluate
substantial clinical improvement for the
VNS Therapy® System for TRD because
this device does not meet the newness
criterion or the device category
eligibility criterion.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are not
approving VNS Therapy® System for
TRD device pass-through payment
status for CY 2020.
(4) Optimizer® System
Impulse Dynamics submitted an
application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment
status for the Optimizer® System.
According to the applicant, the
Optimizer® System is an implantable
device that delivers Cardiac
Contractility Modulation (CCM) therapy
for the treatment of patients with
moderate to severe chronic heart failure.
CCM therapy is intended to treat
patients with persistent symptomatic
heart failure despite receiving guideline
directed medical therapy (GDMT). The
applicant stated that the Optimizer
System consists of the Optimizer
Implantable Pulse Generator (IPG),
Optimizer Mini Charger, and Omni II
Programmer with Omni Smart Software.
Lastly, the applicant stated that the
Optimizer® System delivers CCM
signals to the myocardium. CCM signals
are nonexcitatory electrical signals
applied during the cardiac absolute
refractory period that, over time,
enhance the strength of cardiac muscle
contraction.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), the applicant received
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a Category B–3 Investigational Device
Exemption (IDE) from FDA on April 6,
2017. Subsequently, the applicant
received its premarket approval (PMA)
application from FDA on March 21,
2019. We received the application for a
new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for the
Optimizer® System on February 26,
2019, which is within 3 years of the date
of the initial FDA approval or clearance.
We invited public comments on
whether the Optimizer® System meets
the newness criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer believes
that the Optimizer® System meets the
newness criterion.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s input. After consideration
of the public comment we received, we
believe that the Optimizer® System
meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), according to the
applicant, the Optimizer® System is
integral to the CCM therapy service
provided, is used for one patient only,
comes in contact with human skin, and
is applied in or on a wound or other
skin lesion. The applicant also stated
that the Optimizer® System meets the
device eligibility requirements of
§ 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or
items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it
is not a supply or material furnished
incident to a service.
We did not receive any public
comments regarding whether
Optimizer® System meets the eligibility
criterion. Based on the information we
have received, we have determined that
Optimizer® System meets the eligibility
criterion.
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously
in effect, and was not being paid for as
an outpatient service as of December 31,
1996. For the proposed rule, we had not
identified an existing pass-through
payment category that describes the
Optimizer® System.
Comment: The manufacturer of the
Optimizer® System indicated that there
is not an existing pass-through payment
category that describes the device.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s input. After consideration
of the public comment we received, we
believe that the Optimizer® System
meets the device category eligibility
criterion.
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The second criterion for establishing
a device category, at § 419.66(c)(2),
provides that CMS determines that a
device to be included in the category
has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment. The applicant stated that the
use of CCM significantly improves
clinical outcomes for a patient
population compared to currently
available treatments. With respect to
this criterion, the applicant submitted
studies that examined the impact of
CCM on quality of life, exercise
tolerance, hospitalizations, and
mortality.
The applicant noted that the use of
the Optimizer® System significantly
improves clinical outcomes for patients
with moderate-to-severe chronic heart
failure, and specifically improves
exercise tolerance, quality of life, and
functional status of patients that are
otherwise underserved. The applicant
claims that the Optimizer® System
fulfills an unmet need because there is
currently no therapeutic medical device
therapies available for the 70 percent of
heart failure patients who have New
York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III
heart failure, normal QRS duration and
reduced ejection fraction (EF). FDA
approved the Optimizer® System for
NYHA Class III heart failure patients
who remain symptomatic despite
guideline directed medical therapy, who
are in normal sinus rhythm, are not
indicated for Cardiac Resynchronization
Therapy, and have a left ventricular
ejection fraction ranging from 25
percent to 45 percent.18
The applicant presented several
studies to support these claims.
According to the applicant, the results
of a randomized clinical study in which
patients with NYHA functional Class III,
ambulatory Class IV heart failure
despite OMT, an EF from 25–45 percent,
or a normal sinus rhythm with QRS
duration <130ms (n = 160) were
randomized to continued medical
therapy (n = 86) or CCM with the
Optimizer® System (n = 74) for 24 weeks
showed a statistically significant
improvement in the primary endpoint of
peak oxygen consumption
(pVO2 = 0.84, 95 percent Bayesian
credible interval 0.123 to 1.52)
compared with the patients who were
randomized to continued medical
18 https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cdrh_docs/
pdf18/P180036B.pdf.
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therapy.19 The secondary endpoint of
quality of life, measured by Minnesota
Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire
(MLWHFQ) (p<0.001), 6-minute hall
walk test (p = 0.02), and an NYHA
function class assessment (p<0.001)
were better in the treatment group
versus control group. The secondary
endpoint of heart failure-related
hospitalizations was lowered from 10.8
percent to 2.9 percent (p = 0.048). The
applicant also reported a registry study
of 140 patients with a left ventricular
ejection fraction from 25–45 percent
receiving CCM therapy with a primary
endpoint of comparing observed
survival to Seattle Heart Failure Model
(SHFM) predicted survival over 3 years
of follow-up. All patients implanted
with the Optimizer® System at
participating centers were offered
participation and 72 percent of patients
agreed to enroll in the registry. There
were improvements in quality of life
markers (MLWHFQ) and a 75-percent
reduction in heart failure
hospitalizations (p<0.0001). Survival at
3 years was similar between the two
study arms with CCM at 82.8 percent
[73.4 percent-89.1 percent] and SHFM at
76.7 percent (p = 0.16). However, for
patients with a left ventricular ejection
fraction from 35–45 percent receiving
CCM therapy, the 3-year mortality for
CCM therapy was significantly better
than predicted with 88 percent for CCM
compared to 74.7 percent for SHFM
(p = 0.0463).20 The applicant presented a
randomized, double blind, crossover
study of CCM signals with 164 patients
with EF ≤35 percent and NYHA Class II
(24 percent) or III (76 percent)
symptoms who received a CCM pulse
generator. After the 6-month treatment
period, results indicated statistically
significantly improved peak VO2 and
MLWHFQ (p = 0.03 for each parameter),
concluding that CCM signals appear to
be safe for patients and that exercise
tolerance and quality of life were
significantly better while patients were
receiving active CCM treatment.21
19 Abraham, W. T., Kuck, K. H., Goldsmith, R. L.,
Lindenfeld, J., Reddy, V. Y., Carson, P. E., . &
Wiegn, P. (2018). A randomized controlled trial to
evaluate the safety and efficacy of cardiac
contractility modulation. JACC: Heart Failure, 6(10),
874–883.
20 Anker, S. D., Borggrefe, M., Neuser, H., Ohlow,
M. A., Ro¨ger, S., Goette, A., . & Rousso, B. Cardiac
contractility modulation improves long-term
survival and hospitalizations in heart failure with
reduced ejection fraction. Eur J Heart Fail .2019 Jan
16. doi: 10.1002/ejhf.1374. [Epub ahead of print]
21 Borggrefe MM, Lawo T, Butter C, Schmidinger
H, Lunati M, Pieske B, Misier AR, Curnis A, Bocker
D, Remppis A, Kautzner J, Stuhlinger M, Leclerq C,
Taborsky M, Frigerio M, Parides M, Burkhoff D and
Hindricks G. Randomized, double blind study of
non-excitatory, cardiac contractility modulation
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
A study was conducted with 68
consecutive heart failure patients with
NYHA Class II or III symptoms, QRS
duration ≤130 ms, and who had been
implanted with a CCM device between
May 2002 and July 2013 in Germany.
Based upon pre-implant SHFM survival
rates, 4.5 years mean follow-up, and an
average patient age of 61 years old, the
study found lower mortality rates for
CCM therapy group with 0 percent at 1
year, 3.5 percent at 2 years, and 14.2
percent at 5 years, compared to 6.1
percent, 11.8 percent, and 27.7 percent
predicted by SHFM, respectively
(p = 0.007).22 In a study on long-term
outcomes, 41 consecutive heart failure
patients with left ventricular ejection
fraction (EF) < 40 percent receiving
CCM therapy were compared to a
control group of 41 similar heart failure
patients and primarily evaluated for allcause mortality, as well as heart failure
hospitalization, cardiovascular death,
and a death and heart failure
hospitalization composite. After 6 years
of follow-up, the results showed that allcause mortality was lower for the CCM
group as compared to the control group
(39 percent versus 71 percent
respectively, p = 0.001), especially
among patients with EF ≥ 25–40 percent
with 36 percent for the CCM group
versus 80 percent for the control group
(p <0.001). Although heart failure
hospitalization was similar between the
treatment and control cohorts, there was
a significantly lower heart failure
hospitalization rate for CCM patients
with EF ≥ 25–40 percent (36 percent
versus 64 percent respectively,
p = 0.005).23 The applicant also
presented additional studies 24 25 that
presented similar conclusions to the
studies discussed above, noting that
CCM therapy provided improvements in
quality of life, exercise capacity, NYHA
class, and mortality rates.
electrical impulses for symptomatic heart failure.
Eur Heart J. 2008;29:1019–28.
22 Kloppe A, Lawo T, Mijic D, et al. Long-term
survival with Cardiac Contractility Modulation in
patients with NYHA II or III symptoms and normal
QRS duration. Int J Cardiol. 2016 Apr 15;209:291–
5.
23 Liu M, Fang F, Luo XX, Shlomo BH, Burkhoff
D, Chan JY, Chan CP, Cheung L, Rousso B,
Gutterman D, Yu CM. Improvement of long-term
survival by cardiac contractility modulation in
heart failure patients: A case-control study. Int J
Cardiol. 2016 Mar 1;206:122–6.
24 Mu
¨ ller D, Remppis A, Schauerte P, et al.
Clinical effects of long-term cardiac contractility
modulation (CCM) in subjects with heart failure
caused by left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Clin
Res. Cardiol. 2017 Nov 1;106(11):893–904.
25 Kuschyk J, Roeger S, Schneider R, et al.
Efficacy and survival in patients with cardiac
contractility modulation: Long-term single center
experience in 81 patients. Int J Cardiol.
2015;183C:76–81.
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We noted several concerns with the
studies presented by the applicant. One
concern regarding the evidence for the
Optimizer® System involves the mixed
mortality outcomes presented. Three
studies showed significantly lower
mortality rates with the use of CCM
compared to controls or predicted
mortality. Each of these studies focused
on slightly different mortality outcomes,
including all-cause mortality, a
composite of death and heart failure
hospitalization, and cardiac mortality
rates from 1 to 5 years. Two studies
show mixed results. For the first, 3-year
survival was not significant for the
overall population, despite a
significantly higher survival rate found
in a subpopulation. For the second,
mortality rates were significant
compared to predictions at 1 year, but
not 3 years. The final study did not
report significance in its overall survival
at 2 years. Although the studies and
trials presented show improvements in
mortality when evaluating CCM therapy
with comparators, the studies have
small sample sizes and limited
timeframes for measuring survival.
Additionally, three studies compared
observed mortality rates to statistically
projected mortality rates. In the two
studies with observed mortality rates,
the overall improvement in mortality
was not significant, despite some
significance found in subanalyses.
These issues raise concerns about the
strength of the conclusions related to
the use of CCM therapy improving
patient outcomes.
Another concern with the studies
presented for the Optimizer® System is
that the included study population may
not be necessarily representative of the
Medicare beneficiary population.
Several studies had a predominantly
white, male patient population, which
could make generalization of study
results to a more diverse Medicare
population difficult. Additionally, the
average age of patients for several
studies was under 65 years old, which
may also be a limitation in applying
these study results to the Medicare
population.
Overall, we were concerned that there
was a lack of evidence from large trials
for the CCM therapy provided by the
Optimizer® System. The studies
presented had sample sizes fewer than
500 patients. Other limitations include
the potential placebo effects and
selection bias that may have impacted
study results. Only two studies
presented were randomized and only
one of those two was a double-blinded
study. For the remaining studies, no
blinding occurred to minimize potential
biases, which indicates that patients and
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researchers knew they were receiving
CCM therapy. This is a limitation
because observed outcomes may be
impacted by the placebo effect.
Although most studies matched
participants for similar demographics,
there could be systematic differences
and unmeasured bias between the two
groups beyond the similarities
addressed in the study that could affect
outcomes. The lack of randomization
may have implications for the strength
of the studies’ conclusions.
Based upon the evidence presented,
we invited public comments on whether
the Optimizer® System meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer
responded to several statements
regarding Optimizer® System and
substantial clinical improvement in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and
asserted that Optimizer® System meets
the substantial clinical improvement
criterion. The manufacturer noted that a
mortality benefit cannot be claimed
based on currently published data but
that the Optimizer® System does not
appear to have a negative impact on
mortality. The manufacturer
acknowledged that male patients and
those that identify as white were
prevalent in the Optimizer System
studies but contended that for clinical
trials in general, and for heart failure
specifically, these groups are typically
over-represented. They presented
several examples of cardiac device and
pharmaceutical clinical trials for the
treatment of heart failure, where a
similar mix of patients in terms of
gender and race existed across unrelated
trials and therapies. In response to the
concern that the average age of patients
for several studies was under 65 years
old, limiting the application of the study
results to the Medicare population, the
manufacturer conducted additional
analyses on patients aged 65 and older.
The analysis showed that the two
populations were not dissimilar, and the
manufacturer believes the clinical trial
results are applicable to the Medicare
patient population.
The manufacturer presented data to
demonstrate that the Optimizer® System
delivers substantial clinical
improvement in terms of improved
functional status, quality of life, and
exercise tolerance. In response to the
concern regarding clinical trials
enrolling sample sizes fewer than 500
patients, the manufacturer noted that
there were 638 subjects enrolled and
implanted with the Optimizer System in
the U.S. randomized trials and that
trials of this size are common in Class
III medical device trials, which are
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61281
tailored for gathering the required
evidence to support FDA approval of
novel technology. Regarding the
concern about the lack of randomization
and blinding in studies presented, the
manufacturer noted that four out of the
six studies were randomized, and two of
the four were also blinded with both the
control and the treatment group
receiving the device.
Response: We appreciate the response
to the questions we had regarding
Optimizer® System. After reviewing the
additional information provided during
the public comment period, we agree
that, for patients with NYHA Class III
heart failure patients who remain
symptomatic despite guideline directed
medical therapy, who are in normal
sinus rhythm, are not indicated for
Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy,
and have a left ventricular ejection
fraction ranging from 25 percent to 45
percent, Optimizer® System is a
substantial clinical improvement over
existing treatment options for this
population. The provided studies
support improvements in functional
status, quality of life, and exercise
tolerance, all of which are relevant
outcomes in this population. While the
studies describe improved survival in a
subset of patients and substantially
reduced hospitalizations, the numbers
are small, the observation period is
short, and the data on readmissions are
not specifically highlighted. However,
we accept the manufacturer’s note that
while mortality benefit cannot be
claimed based on currently published
data, the Optimizer® System does not
appear to have a negative impact on
mortality.
Accordingly, we have determined that
the Optimizer® System has
demonstrated substantial clinical
improvement relative to existing
treatment options for patients diagnosed
with moderate to severe chronic heart
failure. As the Optimizer® System
received a Breakthrough Device
designation from FDA, it meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion under this alternative pathway
as well.
The third criterion for establishing a
device category, at § 419.66(c)(3),
requires us to determine that the cost of
the device is not insignificant, as
described in § 419.66(d). Section
419.66(d) includes three cost
significance criteria that must each be
met. The applicant provided the
following information in support of the
cost significance requirements. The
applicant stated that the Optimizer®
System would be reported with CPT
codes 0408T, 0409T, 0410T, 0411T,
0412T, 0413T, 0414T, 0415T, 0416T,
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0417T, and 0418T. The associated APCs
are APC 5231 (Level 1 ICD and Similar
Procedures) and APC 5222 (Level 2
Pacemaker and Similar Procedures). To
meet the cost criterion for device passthrough payment status, a device must
pass all three tests of the cost criterion
for at least one APC. For our
calculations, we used APC 5222, which
had a CY 2019 payment rate of
$7,404.11 at the time the application
was received. Beginning in CY 2017, we
calculate the device offset amount at the
HCPCS/CPT code level instead of the
APC level (81 FR 79657). CPT code
0410T had a device offset amount of
$2,295.27 at the time the application
was received. According to the
applicant, the cost of the Optimizer®
System was $15,700.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost
significance requirement, provides that
the estimated average reasonable cost of
devices in the category must exceed 25
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount for the service related to the
category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $15,700 for
the Optimizer® System exceeds 212
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount for the service related to the
category of devices of $7,404.11
($15,700/$7,404.11 × 100 = 212
percent). Therefore, we believe the
Optimizer® System meets the first cost
significance requirement.
The second cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(2), provides
that the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category must
exceed the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs
to be at least 125 percent of the offset
amount (the device-related portion of
the APC found on the offset list). The
estimated average reasonable cost of
$15,700 for the Optimizer® System
exceeds the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service of $2,295.27 by 684
percent ($15,700/$2,295.27) × 100 = 684
percent. Therefore, we believe that the
Optimizer® System meets the second
cost significance requirement.
The third cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(3), provides
that the difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of the
devices in the category and the portion
of the APC payment amount for the
device must exceed 10 percent of the
APC payment amount for the related
service. The difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of
$15,700 for the Optimizer® System and
the portion of the APC payment amount
for the device of $2,295.27 exceeds the
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APC payment amount for the related
service of $7,404.11 by 181 percent
(($15,700 ¥ $2,295.27)/$7,404.11) × 100
= 181 percent). Therefore, we believe
that the Optimizer® System meets the
third cost significance requirement.
We invited public comments on
whether the Optimizer® System meets
the device pass-through payment
criteria discussed in this section,
including the cost criterion for device
pass-through payment status.
Comment: The manufacturer of the
Optimizer® System believed that the
device meets the cost criterion for
device pass-through payment status.
The manufacturer noted a point of
clarification regarding the average sales
price (ASP) of the Optimizer® System
used for these calculations. They stated
that the $15,700 price in the application
was based on discounted clinical trial
pricing used during the FDA IDE
clinical trials to cover the
manufacturing and research costs only.
After FDA approval on March 21, 2019,
commercial pricing took effect,
changing the Optimizer® System to
$23,000. The manufacturer contended
the Cost Criteria are still met with the
current $23,000 ASP for the Optimizer
Smart System.
Response: We appreciate the
manufacturer’s input. After
consideration of the public comments
we received, we believe that Optimizer®
System meets the cost criterion for
device pass-through payment status.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we believe that
the Optimizer® System qualifies for
device pass-through payment status and
we are approving the application for
device pass-through payment status for
the Optimizer® System beginning in CY
2020.
(5) AquaBeam® System
PROCEPT BioRobotics Corporation
submitted an application for a new
device category for transitional passthrough payment status for the
AquaBeam® System as a resubmission
of their CY 2019 application. The
AquaBeam® System is intended for the
resection and removal of prostate tissue
in males suffering from lower urinary
tract symptoms (LUTS) due to benign
prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). The
applicant stated that this is a very
common condition typically occurring
in elderly men. The clinical symptoms
of this condition can include
diminished urinary stream and partial
urethral obstruction.26 According to the
26 Chungtai B. Forde JC. Thomas DDM et al.
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia. Nature Reviews
Disease Primers 2 (2016) article 16031.
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applicant, the AquaBeam® system
resects the prostate to relieve symptoms
of urethral compression. The resection
is performed robotically using a high
velocity, nonheated sterile saline water
jet (in a procedure called Aquablation).
The applicant stated that the
AquaBeam® System utilizes real-time
intra-operative ultrasound guidance to
allow the surgeon to precisely plan the
surgical resection area of the prostate
and then the system delivers
Aquablation therapy to accurately resect
the obstructive prostate tissue without
the use of heat. The materials submitted
by the applicant state that the
AquaBeam® System consists of a
disposable, single-use handpiece as well
as other components that are considered
capital equipment.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), FDA granted a De
Novo request classifying the
AquaBeam® System as a Class II device
under section 513(f)(2) of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act on
December 21, 2017. The application for
a new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for the
AquaBeam® System was received on
March 1, 2018, which is within 3 years
of the date of the initial FDA approval
or clearance. We invited public
comments on whether the AquaBeam®
System meets the newness criterion. We
did not receive any comments on the
newness of the AquaBeam® System. We
believe AquaBeam® System meets the
transitional pass-through payment
newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), according to the
applicant, the AquaBeam® System is
integral to the service provided, is used
for one patient only, comes in contact
with human skin, and is applied in or
on a wound or other skin lesion. The
applicant also claimed the AquaBeam®
System meets the device eligibility
requirements of § 419.66(b)(4) because it
is not an instrument, apparatus,
implement, or items for which
depreciation and financing expenses are
recovered, and it is not a supply or
material furnished incident to a service.
However, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed and final rules, we cited the
CY 2000 OPPS interim final rule with
comment period (65 FR 67804 through
67805), where we explained how we
interpreted § 419.43(e)(4)(iv). We stated
that we consider a device to be
surgically implanted or inserted if is
surgically inserted or implanted via a
natural or surgically created orifice, or
inserted or implanted via a surgically
created incision. We also stated that we
do not consider an item used to cut or
otherwise create a surgical opening to be
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a device that is surgically implanted or
inserted. We consider items used to
create incisions, such as scalpels,
electrocautery units, biopsy
apparatuses, or other commonly used
operating room instruments to be
supplies or capital equipment not
eligible for transitional pass-through
payments. We stated that we believe the
function of these items is different and
distinct from that of devices that are
used for surgical implantation or
insertion. Finally, we stated that,
generally, we would expect that surgical
implantation or insertion of a device
occurs after the surgeon uses certain
primary tools, supplies, or instruments
to create the surgical path or site for
implanting the device. In the CY 2006
OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68329 and 68630), we adopted as
final our interpretation that surgical
insertion or implantation criteria
include devices that are surgically
inserted or implanted via a natural or
surgically created orifice, as well as
those devices that are inserted or
implanted via a surgically created
incision. We reiterated that we maintain
all of the other criteria in § 419.66 of the
regulations, namely, that we do not
consider an item used to cut or
otherwise create a surgical opening to be
a device that is surgically implanted or
inserted.
The applicant resubmitted their
application with additional information
that they believe supports their stance
that the device should be considered
eligible under the device pass-through
payment eligibility criteria. The
applicant stated that the AquaBeam®
System’s handpiece is temporarily
surgically inserted into the urethra via
the urinary meatus. The applicant
indicated that the AquaBeam® System’s
handpiece does not create an incision or
surgical opening or pathway, but
instead ablates prostate tissue. The
applicant further stated that the device
only cuts the prostatic tissue after being
inserted into the prostatic urethra and
therefore it should be considered
eligible. The applicant also stated that
the prostatic urethra tissue is cut
because it is at the center of the
obstruction in the prostate.
Additionally, the applicant explained
that to relieve the symptoms of BPH,
both the prostatic urethra and prostate
tissue encircling the prostatic urethra
must be ablated, or cut, to relieve the
symptoms of BPH and provide some
additional clearance for future swelling
or growth of the prostate. The applicant
stated that the prostatic urethra tissue is
not cut or disturbed to access the
prostate tissue underneath, but the
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removal of the prostatic urethra is a key
aspect of treating the obstruction that
causes BPH symptoms. Finally, the
applicant believes that clinically the
distinction between the prostatic
urethra tissue and the prostate tissue are
not meaningful in the context of a BPH
surgical intervention. We invited public
comments on whether the AquaBeam®
System meets the eligibility criteria at
§ 419.66(b).
Comments: We received several
comments in regards to the eligibility of
the AquaBeam® System. While other
stakeholders commented generally on
the eligibility of the AquaBeam®
System, the applicant provided
additional detail in support of
AquaBeam’s eligibility. Stakeholders
agreed that AquaBeam® System was
eligible, and providing the following
reasons: AquaBeam® System is not used
to cut or otherwise create a surgical
opening; the AquaBeam System
handpiece is not a commonly used
operation room instrument; the
AquaBeam System handpiece is integral
to the service provided; it is a single use
item; it comes into contact with human
tissue and finally, it is inserted into the
prostatic urethra through a natural
orifice.
The applicant restated that the
AquaBeam® System does not cut or
otherwise create a surgical opening.
They reiterated that the AquaBeam®
System is inserted into the body through
a natural orifice at the meatus of the
urethra without any cutting. The
applicant again stated that the
AquaBeam® System is not used to cut
or otherwise create a surgical opening at
the meatus, or the prostatic urethra. The
applicant further detailed that the
purpose of the ablation procedure is to
remove the tissue that is obstructing
urine flow through the urethra as well
as to remove additional tissue that may
obstruct the urethra causing LUTS. The
applicant claimed that the removal of
the obstruction is not the creation of a
surgical opening for inserting the device
and that the device is already positioned
inside the body.
The applicant further argued that
ablating both the prostatic urethra and
the prostate tissue is central to the
treatment of BPH symptoms.
Additionally, they argued that
clinically, the distinction between the
prostatic urethra and the prostate tissue
are not meaningful to treat BPH and the
procedure does not create an opening at
the urethra to access the prostate for
tissue removal. The applicant further
argued that the plain meaning of the
language used to expand eligibility to
include devices inserted through natural
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61283
orifices 27 means that passing the
AquaBeam® System through the natural
orifice into the body is taking the place
of creating a surgical opening.
Response: We appreciate the
comments submitted by the
stakeholders on the eligibility of the
AquaBeam® System. After consideration
of submitted comments and after
gaining additional clarity on the clinical
details of the procedure, we have
determined that the AquaBeam® System
meets the eligibility criteria at
§ 419.66(b). Specifically, we believe that
the AquaBeam® System is inserted into
the urethra, a natural orifice. We
recognize that after being inserted into
the urethra, the device then ablates both
the prostatic urethra and the prostate
tissue in order to relieve and treat the
symptoms of BPH.
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously
in effect, and was not being paid for as
an outpatient service as of December 31,
1996. In the proposed rule, we had not
identified an existing pass-through
payment category that describes the
AquaBeam® System. The applicant
proposed a category descriptor for the
AquaBeam® System of ‘‘Probe, image
guided, robotic resection of prostate.’’
We invited public comments on
whether the AquaBeam® System meets
this criterion.
We did not receive public comments
that identified an existing pass-through
payment category that describes the
AquaBeam® System. We believe that the
AquaBeam® System meets this criterion.
The second criterion for establishing
a device category, at § 419.66(c)(2),
provides that CMS determines that a
device to be included in the category
has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment. The applicant stated that the
AquaBeam® System provides a
substantial clinical improvement as the
first autonomous tissue resection robot
for the treatment of lower urinary tract
symptoms due to BPH. The applicant
further provided that the AquaBeam®
System is also a substantial clinical
improvement because the Aquablation
procedure demonstrated superior
27 70
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efficacy and safety for larger prostates
(prostates sized 50–80 mL) as compared
to transurethral resection of the prostate
(TURP). The applicant also believes that
the Aquablation procedure would
provide better outcomes for patients
with large prostates (>80 mL) who may
undergo open prostatectomy whereas
the open prostatectomy procedure
would require a hospital inpatient
admission. With respect to this
criterion, the applicant submitted
several articles that examined the use of
a current standard treatment for BPH—
transurethral prostatectomy TURP,
including complications associated with
the procedure and the comparison of the
effectiveness of TURP to other
modalities used to treat BPH, including
holmium laser enucleation of the
prostate (HoLEP) 28 and photoselective
vaporization (PVP).29
The most recent clinical study
involving the AquaBeam® System was
an accepted manuscript describing a
double-blind trial that compared men
treated with the AquaBeam® System
versus men treated with traditional
TURP.30 This was a multicenter study in
4 countries with 17 sites, 6 of which
contributed 5 patients or fewer. Patients
were randomized to receive treatment
with either the AquaBeam® System or
TURP in a two-to-one ratio. With
exclusions and dropouts, 117 patients
were treated with the AquaBeam®
System and 67 patients with TURP. The
data on efficacy supported the
equivalence of the two procedures based
upon noninferiority analysis. The safety
data were reported as showing
superiority of the AquaBeam® System
over TURP, although the data were
difficult to track because adverse
consequences were combined into
categories. The applicant claimed that
the International Prostate Symptom
Scores (IPPS) were significantly
improved in AquaBeam® System
patients as compared to TURP patients
in men whose prostate was greater the
50 mL in size. The applicant also
claimed that the proportion of men with
a worsening of sexual function (as
28 Montorsi, F. et al.: Holmium Laser Enucleation
Versus Transurethral Resection of The Prostate:
Results from A 2-Center, Prospective, Randomized
Trial In Patients With Obstructive Benign Prostatic
Hyperplasia. J. Urol. 172, 1926–1929 (2004).
29 Bachmann A, et al.: 180–W XPS GreenLight
laser vaporisation versus transurethral resection of
the prostate for the treatment of benign prostatic
obstruction: 6-month safety and efficacy results of
a European Multicentre Randomised Trial—the
GOLIATH study. Eur Urol, 2014;65(5):931–42.
30 Gilling P. Barber M. Anderson P et al.:
WATER—A Double-Blind Randomized Controlled
Trial of Aquablation vs Transurethal Resection of
the Prostate in Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia. J Urol.
Accepted December 29, 2017 doi 10.1016/
j.juro.2017.12.065.
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shown with a decrease in Male Sexual
Health Questionnaire for Ejaculatory
Dysfunction (MSHQ) score of at least 2
points or a decrease in International
Index of Erectile Function (IIEF–5) score
of at least 6 points by 6 months) was
lower for the Aquablation procedure at
32.9 percent compared to the TURP
groups at 52.8 percent.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we stated that we believed that the
comparison of the AquaBeam® System
with TURP does not recognize that there
are other treatment modalities available
that are likely to have a similar safety
profile as the AquaBeam® System. No
studies comparing other treatment
modalities were cited to show that the
AquaBeam® System is a significant
improvement over other available
procedures.
Based on the evidence submitted with
the application, we were concerned that
there was a lack of sufficient evidence
that the AquaBeam® System provides a
substantial clinical improvement over
other similar products, particularly in
the outpatient setting where large
prostates are less likely to be treated. We
invited public comments on whether
the AquaBeam® System meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
Comment: We received several
comments regarding the substantial
clinical improvement that the
AquaBeam® System may provide. They
were concerned that the comparison of
the AquaBeam® System with TURP
does not recognize that there are other
treatment modalities available that are
likely to have a similar safety profile as
the AquaBeam® System and that there
were no studies provided comparing
other treatment modalities to show that
the AquaBeam® System is a significant
improvement over other available
procedures.
The applicant commented that in the
FY 2019 IPPS notice of final
rulemaking, CMS concluded that the
WATER study findings were statistically
significant and showed Aquablation
superior to TURP in safety, as well as
that patients in the WATER study with
prostates larger than 50 mL in volume
treated with Aquablation had superior
improvement in quantifiable symptom
outcomes.
Additionally, the applicant provided
that TURP is the gold standard and most
common treatment for LUTS due to BPH
and that through a direct comparison to
TURP, the WATER study demonstrates
that the AquaBeam® System is a
substantial clinical improvement over
the gold standard. The applicant also
provides that the direct comparison to
TURP in the WATER study allows a
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comparison of Aquablation to other
treatment modalities, including
transurethral incision of the prostate,
photoselective vaporization
prostatectomy, transurethral needle
ablation of the prostate, transurethral
microwave therapy, and prostatic
urethral lift. The applicant included
several additional pieces of clinical
literature to demonstrate that the abovementioned modalties are inferior in
efficacy to TURP in numerous objective
and subjective measurers, including
peak urine flow, post-void reduction,
and BPH symptom reduction.31 32 33
Additionally, the applicant provided
published data on a list of all surgical
treatment modalities. The applicant
claims that based on this provided data
it is evident that larger prostates are a
clinical challenge for all other
transurethral surgical approaches to
BPH due to high rates of sexual
dysfunction in TURP, SP, PVP, HoLEP,
and ThuLEP; high rates of blood
transfusions in TURP and SP; longer
operative time due to the size of prostate
in PVP, HoLEP, and ThuLEP;
transurethral resection (TUR) syndrome
due to length of procedure; high rates of
re-intervention or secondary procedures
in PVP; and, transient incontinence in
HoLEP and ThuLEP. The applicant
states that these complication have
traditionally limited the treatment of
larger prostates in the outpatient setting.
The applicant further details that the
reason for the increase in complications
in large prostates is due to the length of
the resection time required. In support
of their claim of being appropriate for
the outpatient study, the applicant
restates findings from the WATER II
study, which utilized Aquablation
therapy to treat large prostates 80 to 150
mL in volume, with greater than 50
percent of the cases involving large
prostates in the hospital outpatient
setting. The average Aquablation
operative time was 37 minutes,
including 8 minutes of resection time
and 29 minutes used for planning and
robotic programming.
Response: We appreciate the
submission of public comments.
31 Christidis, D. et al. Minimally Invasive
Therapies for Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy: The
Rise in Minimally Invasive Surgical Therapies,
Prostate International. 5, 41–46 (2017).
32 Bachmann A, Tubaro A, Barber N et al: 180–
W XPS GreenLight laser vaporisation versus
transurethral resection of the prostate for the
treatment of benign prostatic obstruction: 6-month
safety and efficacy results of a European
multicenter randomised trial—the GOLIATH study.
Eur Urol 2014; 65: 931.
33 Sonksen J et al. Prospective, Randomized,
Multinational Study of Prostatic Urethral Lift
Versus Transurethral Resection of the Prostate: 12month Results from the BPH6 Study. Eur Urol 2015;
68:643–52.
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Specifically, we appreciate the
additional scientific data provided that
demonstrates the AquaBeam® System’s
superiority to other techniques,
specifically for reducing operative time
and complications in general, especially
for larger prostates. We agree that the
results of the WATER study are
statistically significant with a 95 percent
confidence interval of the difference
between AquaBeam® and TURP and
show AquaBeam® is superior to TURP
in safety as evidenced by a lower
proportion of persistent Clavien-Dindo
(CD) Grade 1 adverse events
(incontinence, ejaculatory dysfunction
and erectile dysfunction) at 3 months.
We also agree that when considering CD
Grade 2 and above events (events
requiring pharmacological treatment,
blood transfusions, or endoscopic,
surgical or radiological interventions)
the WATER study demonstrated a
superior safety rate to TURP.
Additionally, patients enrolled in the
WATER study with prostate sizes
greater than 50 mL in volume and
treated with AquaBeam® had superior
BPH symptom reduction (IPSS) than
those treated with TURP, as well as
better peak urinary flow rates at 6
months (Qmax), improved ejaculatory
function, and improved incontinence
scores at 3 months.
Additionally, results from the WATER
II study for patients with large prostates
demonstrate better outcomes of the
AquaBeam® System over open
prostatectomy, regarding shorter
operative time, shorter length of stay,
and decreased rates of severe
hemorrhage and transfusions. We also
agree that the minimally invasive nature
of Aquablation offers men with large
prostates (>80 mL) an outpatient option.
In conclusion, after review of the
additional data and literature, we agree
that the AquaBeam® System provides a
substantial clinical improvement.
The third criterion for establishing a
device category, at § 419.66(c)(3),
requires us to determine that the cost of
the device is not insignificant, as
described in § 419.66(d). Section
419.66(d) includes three cost
significance criteria that must each be
met. The applicant provided the
following information in support of the
cost significance requirements. The
applicant stated that the AquaBeam®
System would be reported with CPT
code 0421T. CPT code 0421T is
assigned to APC 5375 (Level 5 Urology
and Related Services). To meet the cost
criterion for device pass-through
payment status, a device must pass all
three tests of the cost criterion for at
least one APC. For our calculations, we
used APC 5375, which has a CY 2018
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payment rate of $3,706.03. Beginning in
CY 2017, we calculate the device offset
amount at the HCPCS/CPT code level
instead of the APC level (81 FR 79657).
CPT code 0421T had device offset
amount of $0.00 at the time the
application was received. According to
the applicant, the cost of the handpiece
for the AquaBeam® System is $2,500.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost
significance requirement, provides that
the estimated average reasonable cost of
devices in the category must exceed 25
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount for the service related to the
category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $2,500 for the
AquaBeam® System exceeds 25 percent
of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of
devices of $3,706.03 ($2,500/$3,706.03 ×
100 = 67.5 percent). Therefore, we
believe the AquaBeam® System meets
the first cost significance requirement.
The second cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(2), provides
that the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category must
exceed the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs
to be at least 125 percent of the offset
amount (the device-related portion of
the APC found on the offset list). Given
that there are no device-related costs in
the APC payment amount and the
AquaBeam® System has an estimated
average reasonable cost of $2,500, we
believe that the AquaBeam® System
meets the second cost significance
requirement.
The third cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(3), provides
that the difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of the
devices in the category and the portion
of the APC payment amount for the
device must exceed 10 percent of the
APC payment amount for the related
service. The difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of
$2,500 for the AquaBeam® System and
the portion of the APC payment amount
for the device of $0.00 exceeds the APC
payment amount for the related service
of $3,706.03 by 68 percent (($2,500 ¥
$0.00)/$3,706.03 × 100 = 67.5 percent).
Therefore, we believe that the
AquaBeam® System meets the third cost
significance requirement.
We invited public comments on
whether the AquaBeam® System meets
the device pass-through payment
criteria discussed in this section,
including the cost criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer believed
that the AquaBeam® System meets the
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61285
device pass-through payment criteria,
including the cost criterion.
Response: We thank the manufacturer
for their input. After consideration of
the public comments we received, we
believe the AquaBeam® System meets
the cost criterion and we are approving
it for device pass-through payment
status beginning in CY 2020.
(6) EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular
Stent System
Boston Scientific Corporation
submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent
System for FY 2020. According to the
applicant, the EluviaTM system is a
sustained-release drug-eluting stent
indicated for improving luminal
diameter in the treatment of peripheral
artery disease (PAD) with symptomatic
de novo or restenotic lesions in the
native superficial femoral artery (SFA)
and/or the proximal popliteal artery
(PPA) with reference vessel diameters
(RVD) ranging from 4.0 to 6.0 mm and
total lesion lengths up to 190 mm.
The applicant stated that PAD is a
circulatory condition in which
narrowed arteries reduce blood flow to
the limbs, usually in the legs. Symptoms
of PAD may include lower extremity
pain due to varying degrees of ischemia,
claudication which is characterized by
pain induced by exercise and relieved
with rest. According to the applicant,
risk factors for PAD include individuals
who are age 70 years old and older;
individuals who are between the ages of
50 years old and 69 years old with a
history of smoking or diabetes;
individuals who are between the ages of
40 years old and 49 years old with
diabetes and at least one other risk
factor for atherosclerosis; leg symptoms
suggestive of claudication with exertion,
or ischemic pain at rest; abnormal lower
extremity pulse examination; known
atherosclerosis at other sites (for
example, coronary, carotid, renal artery
disease); smoking; hypertension,
hyperlipidemia, and
homocysteinemia.34 PAD is primarily
caused by atherosclerosis—the buildup
of fatty plaque in the arteries. PAD can
occur in any blood vessel, but it is more
common in the legs than the arms.
Approximately 8.5 million people in the
U.S. have PAD, including 12 to 20
34 Neschis, David G. & MD, Golden, M., ‘‘Clinical
features and diagnosis of lower extremity peripheral
artery disease.’’ Available at: https://
www.uptodate.com/contents/clinical-features-anddiagnosis-of-lower-extremity-peripheral-arterydisease.
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percent of individuals who are age 60
years old and older.35
Management of the disease is aimed at
improving symptoms, improving
functional capacity, and preventing
amputations and death. Management of
patients who have been diagnosed with
lower extremity PAD may include
medical therapies to reduce the risk for
future cardiovascular events related to
atherosclerosis, such as myocardial
infarction, stroke, and peripheral
arterial thrombosis. Such therapies may
include antiplatelet therapy, smoking
cessation, lipid-lowering therapy, and
treatment of diabetes and hypertension.
For patients with significant or
disabling symptoms unresponsive to
lifestyle adjustment and pharmacologic
therapy, intervention (percutaneous,
surgical) may be needed. Surgical
intervention includes angioplasty, a
procedure in which a balloon-tip
catheter is inserted into the artery and
inflated to dilate the narrowed artery
lumen. The balloon is then deflated and
removed with the catheter. For patients
with limb-threatening ischemia (for
example, pain while at rest and/or
ulceration), revascularization is a
priority to reestablish arterial blood
flow. According to the applicant,
treatment of the SFA is problematic due
to multiple issues including high rate of
restenosis and significant forces of
compression.
The applicant describes the EluviaTM
Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System as a
sustained-release drug-eluting selfexpanding, nickel titanium alloy
(nitinol) mesh stent used to reestablish
blood flow to stenotic arteries.
According to the applicant, the EluviaTM
stent is coated with the drug paclitaxel,
which helps prevent the artery from
restenosis. The applicant stated that
EluviaTM’s polymer-based drug delivery
system is uniquely designed to sustain
the release of paclitaxel beyond 1 year
to match the restenotic process in the
SFA. According to the applicant, the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent
System is comprised of: (1) The
implantable endoprosthesis; and (2) the
stent delivery system (SDS). On both the
proximal and distal ends of the stent,
radiopaque markers made of tantalum
increase visibility of the stent to aid in
placement. The tri-axial designed
delivery system consists of an outer
shaft to stabilize the stent delivery
system, a middle shaft to protect and
constrain the stent, and an inner shaft
to provide a guide wire lumen. The
35 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
‘‘Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD) Fact Sheet,’’
2018, Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/DHDSP/
data_statistics/fact_sheets/fs_PAD.htm.
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20:50 Nov 08, 2019
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delivery system is compatible with
0.035 in (0.89 mm) guide wires. The
EluviaTM stent is available in a variety
of diameters and lengths. The delivery
system is offered in 2 working lengths
(75 cm and 130 cm).
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), EluviaTM received FDA
premarket approval (PMA) on
September 18, 2018. The application for
a new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for
EluviaTM was received on November 15,
2018, which is within 3 years of the date
of the initial FDA approval or clearance.
We invited public comments on
whether the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System meets the
newness criterion. We did not receive
public comments in regards to Eluvia’s
newness, however, since the application
was received within 3 years of the
initial date of FDA approval or
clearance, we believe that the EluviaTM
Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System
meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), according to the
applicant, the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System is integral to the
service provided, is used for one patient
only, comes in contact with human
skin, and is applied in or on a wound
or other skin lesion. The applicant also
claimed that the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System meets the device
eligibility requirements of § 419.66(b)(4)
because it is not an instrument,
apparatus, implement, or items for
which depreciation and financing
expenses are recovered, and it is not a
supply or material furnished incident to
a service. We invited public comments
on whether the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System meets the
eligibility criterion at § 419.66(b).
We did not receive any public
comments on this issue. We believe that
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent
System meets the eligibility criterion.
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously
in effect, and was not being paid for as
an outpatient service as of December 31,
1996. We have not identified an existing
pass-through payment category that
describes the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System. The applicant
proposed a category descriptor for the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent
System of ‘‘Stent, non-coronary,
polymer matrix, minimum 12-month
sustained drug release, with delivery
PO 00000
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system.’’ We invited public comments
on this issue.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the stent platform, the drug coating, and
the polymer coating of the EluviaTM
Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System are
not new. The commenter compared
EluviaTM to the Zilver PTX drug-eluting
stent, arguing that both are selfexpanding nitinol stents coated with
paclitaxel. The commenter also
compared the underlying stent platform
and delivery system of EluviaTM to
Boston Scientific’s Innova selfexpanding stent.36 Finally, the
commenter believed that the polymers
used in the EluviaTM coating are the
same used in the Xience V and Promus
Element coronary stents.37
Comment: Another commenter, the
manufacturer, restated that they are
vastly different than the Zilver PTX
drug eluting stent, as well as any other
device. The commenter provided that
Eluvia’s polymer matrix layer is
different from the paclitaxel-coated
Zilver PTX, and allows for targeted,
localized, sustained, low-dose
amorphous paclitaxel delivery with
minimal systemic distribution or
particulate loss. The commenter also
states that there is a difference in the
diffusion gradient: Paclitaxel is
delivered to the lesion via a diffusion
gradient with poly(vinylidene fluoride)co-hexafluoropropylene, whereas they
state that the Zilver PTX does not have
a diffusion gradient. The commenter
stated that EluviaTM releases paclitaxel
directly to the target lesion, while Zilver
PTX release is non-specific to the target
lesion. The commenter also stated that
Eluvia releases paclitaxel over
approximately 12 to 15 months, while
Zilver PTX’s release is complete at two
months. The commenter stated that
these significant differences in the
device designs impact drug dose, drug
release mechanism, and drug release
kinetics.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholders’ comments and
comparison of the polymer matrix
EluviaTM versus the paclitaxel-coated
Zilver PTX and several other devices.
After consideration of the comments, we
36 Gray W, et al. A polymer-coated, paclitaxeleluting stent (Eluvia) versus a polymer-free,
paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX) for
endovascular femoropopliteal intervention
(IMPERIAL): a randomised, non-inferiority trial.
Lancet; Published Online September 22, 2018;
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
37 Gray W, et al. A polymer-coated, paclitaxeleluting stent (Eluvia) versus a polymer-free,
paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX) for
endovascular femoropopliteal intervention
(IMPERIAL): a randomised, non-inferiority trial.
Lancet; Published Online September 22, 2018;
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
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believe that EluviaTM device is a new
design with a unique mechanism of
action, and therefore is not described by
any current device category. Therefore,
the EluviaTM device meets the device
category eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing
a device category, at § 419.66(c)(2),
provides that CMS determines that a
device to be included in the category
has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment. With respect to this criterion,
the applicant submitted several articles
that examined the use of a current
standard treatment for peripheral artery
disease (PAD) with symptomatic de
novo or restenotic lesions in the native
superficial femoral artery (SFA) and/or
proximal popliteal artery (PPA), with
claims of substantial clinical
improvement in achieving superior
primary patency; reducing the rate of
subsequent therapeutic interventions;
decreasing the number of future
hospitalizations or physician visits;
reducing hospital readmission rates;
reducing the rate of device-related
complications; and achieving similar
functional outcomes and EQ–5D index
values while associated with half the
rate of target lesion revascularizations
(TLRs) procedures.
The applicant submitted the results of
the MAJESTIC study, a single-arm, firstin-human study of the EluviaTM DrugEluting Vascular Stent System. The
MAJESTICT 38 study is a prospective,
multi-center, single-arm, open-label
study. According to the applicant, the
MAJESTIC study demonstrated longterm treatment durability among
patients whose femoropopliteal arteries
were treated with the EluviaTM stent.
The applicant asserted that the
MAJESTIC study demonstrates the
sustained impact of the EluviaTM stent
on primary patency. The MAJESTIC
study enrolled 57 patients who had
been diagnosed with symptomatic lower
limb ischemia and lesions in the SAF or
PPA. Efficacy measures at 2 years
included primary patency, defined as
duplex ultrasound peak systolic velocity
ratio of less than 2.5 and the absence of
TLR or bypass. Safety monitoring
through 3 years included adverse events
and TLR. The 24-month clinic visit was
completed by 53 patients; 52 had
38 Mu
¨ ller-Hu¨lsbeck,
S., et al., ‘‘Long-Term Results
from the MAJESTIC Trial of the Eluvia PaclitaxelEluting Stent for Femoropopliteal Treatment: 3-Year
Follow-up,’’ Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol, December
2017, vol. 40(12), pp. 1832–1838.
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Doppler ultrasound evaluable by the
core laboratory, and 48 patients had
radiographs taken for stent fracture
analysis. The 3-year follow-up was
completed by 54 patients. At 2 years,
90.6 percent (48/53) of the patients had
improved by 1 or more Rutherford
categories as compared with the preprocedure level without the need for
TLR (when those with TLR were
included, 96.2 percent sustained
improvement); only 1 patient exhibited
a worsening in level, 66.0 percent (35/
53) of the patients exhibited no
symptoms (Category 0) and 24.5 percent
(13/53) had mild claudication (Category
1) at the 24-month visit. Mean ABI
improved from 0.73 ± 0.22 at baseline to
1.02 ± 0.20 at 12 months and 0.93 ± 0.26
at 24 months. At 24 months, 79.2
percent (38/48) of the patients had an
ABI increase of at least 0.1 compared
with baseline or had reached an ABI of
at least 0.9. The applicant also noted
that at 12 months the Kaplan–Meier
estimate of primary patency was 96.4
percent.
With regard to the EluviaTM stent
achieving superior primary patency, the
applicant submitted the results of the
IMPERIAL 39 study in which the
EluviaTM stent is compared, head-tohead, to the Zilver® PTX Drug-Eluting
stent. The IMPERIAL study is a global,
multi-center, randomized controlled
trial consisting of 465 subjects. Eligible
patients were aged 18 years old or older
and had a diagnosis of symptomatic
lower-limb ischaemia, defined as
Rutherford Category 2, 3, or 4 and
stenotic, restenotic (treated with a drugcoated balloon greater than 12 months
before the study or standard
percutaneous transluminal angioplasty
only), or occlusive lesions in the native
SFA or PPA, with at least 1
infrapopliteal vessel patent to the ankle
or foot. Patients had to have stenosis of
70 percent or more (via angiographic
assessment), vessel diameter between 4
mm and 6 mm, and total lesion length
between 30 mm and 140 mm.
Patients who had previously stented
target lesion/vessels treated with drugcoated balloon less than 12 months
prior to randomization/enrollment and
patients who had undergone prior
surgery of the SFA/PPA in the target
limb to treat atherosclerotic disease
were excluded from the study. Two
concurrent single-group (EluviaTM only)
substudies were done: A nonblinded,
nonrandomized pharmacokinetic sub39 Gray, W.A., et al., ‘‘A polymer-coated,
paclitaxel-eluting stent (Eluvia) versus a polymerfree, paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX) for
endovascular femoropopliteal intervention
(IMPERIAL): a randomised, non-inferiority trial,’’
Lancet, September 24, 2018.
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study and a nonblinded,
nonrandomized study of patients who
had been diagnosed with long lesions
(greater than 140 mm in diameter).
The IMPERIAL study is a prospective,
multi-center, single-blinded
randomized, controlled (RCT)
noninferiority trial. Patients were
randomized (2:1) to implantation of
either a paclitaxel-eluting polymer stent
(EluviaTM) or a paclitaxel-coated stent
(Zilver® PTX) after the treating
physician had successfully crossed the
target lesion with a guide wire. The
primary endpoints of the study are
Major Adverse Events defined as all
causes of death through 1 month, Target
Limb Major Amputation through 12
months and/or Target Lesion
Revascularization (TLR) procedure
through 12 months and primary vessel
patency at 12 months post-procedure.
Secondary endpoints included the
Rutherford categorization, Walking
Impairment Questionnaire, and EQ–5D
assessments at 1 month, 6 months, and
12 months post-procedure. Patient
demographic and characteristics were
balanced between the EluviaTM stent
and Zilver® PTX stent groups.
The applicant noted that lesion
characteristics for the patients in the
EluviaTM stent versus the Zilver® PTX
stent arms were comparable. Clinical
follow-up visits related to the study
were scheduled for 1 month, 6 months,
and 12 months after the procedure, with
follow-up planned to continue through
5 years, including clinical visits at 24
months and 5 years and clinical or
telephone follow-up at 3 and 4 years.
The applicant asserted that in the
IMPERIAL study the EluviaTM stent
demonstrated superior primary patency
over the Zilver® PTX stent, 86.8 percent
versus 77.5 percent, respectively (p =
0.0144). The noninferiority primary
efficacy endpoint was also met. The
applicant provided that the superior
primary patency results at the SFA are
notable because the SFA presents
unique challenges with respect to
maintaining long-term patency. There
are distinct pathological differences
between the SFA and coronary arteries.
The SFA tends to have higher levels of
calcification and chronic total
occlusions when compared to coronary
arteries. Following an intervention
within the SFA, the SFA produces a
healing response which often results in
restenosis or re-narrowing of the arterial
lumen. This cascade of events leading to
restenosis starts with inflammation,
followed by smooth muscle cell
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proliferation and matrix formation.40
Because of the unique mechanical forces
in the SFA, this restenotic process of the
SFA can continue well beyond 300 days
from the initial intervention. Results
from the IMPERIAL study showed that
primary patency at 12 months, by
Kaplan-Meier estimate, was
significantly greater for EluviaTM than
for Zilver® PTX, 88.5 percent and 79.5
percent, respectively (p = 0.0119).
According to the applicant, these results
are consistent with the 96.4 percent
primary patency rate at 12 months in
the MAJESTIC study.
The IMPERIAL study included two
concurrent single-group (EluviaTM only)
substudies: A nonblinded,
nonrandomized pharmacokinetic
substudy and a nonblinded,
nonrandomized study of patients with
long lesions (greater than 140 mm in
diameter). For the pharmacokinetic substudy, patients had venous blood drawn
before stent implantation and at
intervals ranging from 10 minutes to 24
hours post implantation, and again at
either 48 hours or 72 hours post
implantation. The pharmacokinetics
sub-study confirmed that plasma
paclitaxel concentrations after EluviaTM
stent implantation were well below
thresholds associated with toxic effects
in studies in patients who had been
diagnosed with cancer (0·05 mM or ∼43
ng/mL).
The IMPERIAL substudy long lesion
subgroup consisted of 50 patients with
average lesion length of 162.8 mm that
were each treated with two EluviaTM
stents. According to the applicant, 12month outcomes for the long lesion
subgroup are 87 percent primary
patency and 6.5 percent TLR. According
to the applicant, in a separate subgroup
analysis of patients 65 years old and
older (Medicare population), the
primary patency rate in the EluviaTM
stent group is 92.6 percent, compared to
75.0 percent for the Zilver® PTX stent
group (p = 0.0386).
With regard to reducing the rate of
subsequent therapeutic interventions,
secondary outcomes in the IMPERIAL
study included repeat re-intervention on
the same lesion, referred to as target
lesion revascularization (TLR), over the
12 months following the index
procedure. The rate of subsequent
interventions, or TLRs, in the EluviaTM
stent group was 4.5 percent compared to
9.0 percent in the Zilver® PTX stent
group. The applicant asserted that the
TLR rate in the EluviaTM stent group
represents a substantial reduction in
reintervention on the target lesion
compared to that of the Zilver® PTX
stent group (at a p = 0.067 p-value). The
Eluvia® stent group clinically driven
TLR rates through 12 months following
the index procedure were likewise
lower for U.S. patients age 65 and older
as well as for those with medically
treated diabetes (confidential and
unpublished as of the date of the device
transitional pass-through payment
application, data on file with Boston
Scientific). In the subgroup of U.S.
patients age 65 and older, the rates of
TLR were 2.4 percent in the EluviaTM
group compared to 3.1 percent in the
Zilver® PTX group, and in the subgroup
of medically treated diabetes patients,
the rates of TLR were 3.7 percent
compared to 13.6 percent in the Zilver®
PTX group (p = 0.0269).
With regard to decreasing the number
of future hospitalizations or physician
visits, the applicant asserted that the
substantial reduction in the lesion
revascularization rate led to a reduced
need to provide additional intensive
care, distinguishing the EluviaTM stent
group from the Zilver® PTX stent group.
In the IMPERIAL study, the EluviaTMtreated patients required fewer days of
re-hospitalization. Patients in the
EluviaTM group averaged 13.9 days of
rehospitalization for all adverse events
compared to 17.7 days of
rehospitalization for patients in the
Zilver® PTX stent group. Patients in the
EluviaTM group were rehospitalized for
2.8 days for TLR/Total Vessel
Revascularization (TVR) compared to
7.1 days in the Zilver® PTX stent group.
Lastly, patients in the EluviaTM stent
group were rehospitalized for 2.7 days
for procedure/device-related adverse
events compared to 4.5 days from the
Zilver® PTX stent group.
Regarding reduction in hospital
readmission rates, the applicant asserted
that patients treated in the EluviaTM
stent group experienced reduced rates of
hospital readmission following the
index procedure compared to those in
the Zilver® PTX stent group. Hospital
readmission rates at 12 months were 3.9
percent for the EluviaTM stent group
compared to 7.1 percent for the Zilver®
PTX stent group. Similar results were
noted at 1 and 6 months; 1.0 percent
versus 2.6 percent and 2.4 percent
versus 3.8 percent, respectively.
With regard to reducing the rate of
device-related complications, the
applicant asserted that while the rates of
adverse events were similar in total
between treatment arms in the
IMPERIAL study, there were measurable
differences in device-related
complications. Device-related adverseevents were reported in 8 percent of the
patients in the EluviaTM stent group
compared to 14 percent of the patients
in the Zilver® PTX stent group.
Lastly, the applicant asserted that
while functional outcomes appear
similar between the EluviaTM and
Zilver® PTX stent groups at 12 months,
these improvements for the Zilver® PTX
stent group are associated with twice as
many TLRs to achieve similar EQ–5D
index values.41 Secondary endpoints
improved after stent implantation and
were generally similar between the
groups. At 12 months, of the patients
with complete Rutherford assessment
data, 241 (86 percent) of the 281
patients in the EluviaTM group and 120
(85 percent) of the 142 patients in the
Zilver® PTX group had symptoms
reported as Rutherford Category 0 or 1
(none to mild claudication). The mean
ankle-brachial index was 1·0 (SD 0·2) in
both groups at 12 months (baseline
mean ankle-brachial index 0·7 [SD 0·2]
for EluviaTM; 0·8 [0·2] for Zilver® PTX),
with sustained hemodynamic
improvement for approximately 80
percent of the patients in both groups.
Walking function improved
significantly from baseline to 12 months
in both groups, as measured with the
Walking Impairment Questionnaire and
the 6-minute walk test. In both groups,
the majority of patients had sustained
improvement in the mobility dimension
of the EQ–5D, and approximately half
had sustained improvement in the pain
or discomfort dimension. No significant
between-group differences were
observed in the Walking Impairment
Questionnaire, 6-minute walk test, or
EQ–5D. Secondary endpoint results for
the EluviaTM stent and Zilver® PTX
stent groups are shown in Table 39 as
follows:
40 Forrester, J.S., Fishbein, M., Helfant, R., Fagin,
J., ‘‘A paradigm for restenosis based on cell biology:
clues for the development of new preventive
therapies,’’ J Am Coll Cardiol, March 1, 1991, vol.
17(3), pp. 758–69.
41 Gray, W.A., Keirse, K., Soga, Y., et al., ‘‘A
polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting stent (Eluvia)
versus a polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated stent
(Zilver PTX) for endovascular femoropopliteal
intervention (IMPERIAL): A randomized, non-
inferiority trial,’’ Lancet, 2018. Available at: https://
dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
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42 Katsanos, K., et al., ‘‘Risk of Death Following
Application of Paclitaxel-Coated Balloons and
Stents in the Femoropopliteal Artery of the Leg: A
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of
Randomized Controlled Trials,’’ JAHA, vol. 7(24).
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a finding of substantial clinical
improvement for the EluviaTM system.
We further noted that the applicant
for the EluviaTM Drug Eluting Vascular
Stent System also applied for the IPPS
new technology add-on payment (FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule; 86
FR 19314). In the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule, we discussed several
publicly available comments that also
raised concerns relating to substantial
clinical improvement. We list several of
those concerns below. While the
EluviaTM IMPERIAL study does cite a
reduced rate of ‘‘Subsequent
Therapeutic Interventions’’, public
comments for the IPPS proposed rule
note that ‘‘Subsequent Therapeutic
Interventions’’ was not further defined
in the New Technology Town Hall
presentation nor in the IMPERIAL
study. The commenters stated that it
would appear from the presentation
materials, however, that this claim
refers specifically to ‘‘target lesion
revascularizations (TLR)’’, which does
not appear statistically significant.
With regard to the applicant’s
assertion that the use of the EluviaTM
stent reduces hospital readmission rates,
a commenter noted that during the New
Technology Town Hall presentation, the
presenter noted that the EluviaTM group
had a hospital readmission rate at 12
months of 3.9 percent compared to the
Zilver® PTX group’s rate of 7.1 percent,
and that no p-value was included on the
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slide used for the presentation to offer
an assessment of the statistical
significance of this difference. The
commenter noted that the manufacturer
of the EluviaTM stent did not discuss
this particular hospital readmission rate
data comparison in the main body of
The Lancet paper; however, the data
could be found in the online appendix
and is shown as not statistically
significant.
With regards to longer-term data on
the Zilver® PTX stent and the EluviaTM
stent, the commenter noted that in the
commentary in The Lancet paper
accompanying the IMPERIAL study,
Drs. Salvatore Cassese and Robert Byrne
write that a follow-up duration of 12
months is insufficient to assess late
failure, which is not infrequently
observed. According to Drs. Cassese and
Byrne, the preclinical models of
restenosis after stenting of peripheral
arteries have shown that stents
permanently overstretch the arterial
wall, thus stimulating persistent
neointimal growth, which might cause a
catch-up phenomenon and late failure.
The Lancet paper noted that, in this
regard, data on outcomes beyond one
year will be important to confirm the
durability of the efficacy of the EluviaTM
stent.43 The commenter stated that, at
43 Cassese, S., & Byrne, R.E., ‘‘Endovascular
stenting in femoropopliteal arteries,’’ The Lancet,
2018, vol. 392(10157), pp. 1491–1493.
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ER12NO19.062
We noted that the IMPERIAL study,
which showed significant differences in
primary patency at 12 months, was
designed for noninferiority and not
superiority. Therefore, we
wereconcerned that results showing
primary patency at 12 months may not
be valid given the study design. We also
are concerned that the results of a
recently published meta-analysis of
randomized controlled trials of the risk
of death associated with the use of
paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents in
the femoropopliteal artery of the leg,
which found that there is increased risk
of death following application of
paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents in
the femoropopliteal artery of the lower
limbs and that further investigations are
urgently warranted,42 although the
EluviaTM system was not included in
the meta-analysis. We were also
concerned that the findings from this
study indicated that the data suggesting
that drug-coated stents are substantially
clinically improved are unconfirmed.
We invited public comments on
whether the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion, including the implications of
the meta-analysis results with respect to
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this point in time, very limited longerterm data are available on the use of the
EluviaTM stent and that the IMPERIAL
study offers only 12-month data,
although data out to three years have
been published from the relatively small
57-patient single-arm MAJESTIC study.
The commenter noted that the
MAJESTIC study demonstrates a
decrease in primary patency from 96.4
percent at one year to 83.5 percent at 2
years; and a doubling in TLR rates from
1 year to 2 years (3.6 percent to 7.2
percent) and again from 2 years to 3
years (7.2 percent to 14.7 percent). The
commenter stated that this is not
inconsistent with Drs. Cassese and
Byrne’s commentary regarding late
failure, and that the relatively small,
single-arm design of the study does not
lend itself well to direct comparison to
other SFA treatment options such as the
Zilver® PTX stent.
The commenter also stated that
EluviaTM’s lack of long-term data
contrasts with 5-year data that is
available from the Zilver® PTX stent’s
pivotal 479-patient RCT comparing the
use of the Zilver® PTX stent to
angioplasty (with a sub-randomization
comparing provisional use of Zilver®
PTX stenting to bare metal Zilver
stenting in patients experiencing an
acute failure of percutaneous
transluminal angioplasty (PTA)). The
commenter believed that these 5-year
data demonstrate that the superiority of
the use of the Zilver® PTX stent
demonstrated at 12 and 24 months is
maintained through 5 years compared to
PTA and provisional bare metal
stenting, and actually increases rather
than decreases over time. The
commenter also believed that, given that
these stent devices are permanent
implants and they are used to treat a
chronic disease, long-term data are
important to fully understand an SFA
stent’s clinical benefits. The commenter
stated that with 5-year data available to
support the ongoing safety and
effectiveness of the use of the Zilver®
PTX stent, but no such corresponding
data available for the use of the
EluviaTM stent, it seems incongruous to
suggest that the use of the EluviaTM
stent results in a substantial clinical
improvement compared to the Zilver®
PTX stent.
The commenter further stated that, in
addition to the limited long-term data
available for the EluviaTM stent, there is
also a lack of clinical data for the use
of the EluviaTM stent to confirm the
benefit of the device outside of a strictly
controlled clinical study population.
The commenter stated that, in contrast,
the Zilver® PTX stent has demonstrated
comparable outcomes across a broad
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patient population, including a 787
patient study conducted in Europe with
2-year follow-up and a 904-patient
study of all-comers (no exclusion
criteria) in Japan with 5-year follow-up
completed. The commenter believed
that, with no corresponding data for the
use of the EluviaTM stent in a broad
patient population, it seems
unreasonable to suggest that the use of
the EluviaTM stent results in a
substantial clinical improvement
compared to the Zilver® PTX stent.
Based on the evidence submitted with
the application, we were concerned that
there was a lack of sufficient evidence
that the EluviaTM Vascular Drug-Eluting
Stent System provides a substantial
clinical improvement over other similar
products. We invited public comments
on whether EluviaTM Vascular DrugEluting Stent System meets the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, stated that the IMPERIAL
trial’s design as a non-inferiority study
is consistent with accepted research
methodology and is typical of many
head-to-head trials of medical devices.
The commenter stated that they defined
a pre-specified, post-hoc superiority
analysis before evaluation of the clinical
trial results, the non-inferiority and
subsequent superiority testing
methodology and results are not
subjected to bias. The commenter
argued that the pre-specified success
criteria for superiority used the same
logic as the pre-specified success
criteria for non-inferiority. The
commenter stated: ‘‘Eluvia will be
concluded to be superior to Zilver PTX
for device effectiveness if the one-sided
lower 95 percent confidence bound on
the difference between treatment groups
in 12-month primary patency is greater
than zero.’’ The commenter believes that
the more stringent one-sided lower 97.5
percent confidence bound (shown as
two-sided 95 percent confidence
interval on the difference between
treatment groups) was observed to be
greater than zero and the corresponding
p-value was 0.0144. The commenter
also provided that the aforementioned
data were published in The Lancet
following its rigorous peer-review
process, suggesting that the claims are
not misleading and are supported by
valid scientific evidence. The
commenters also claimed that clinical
guidelines support performing a prespecified post-hoc analysis given
specific requirements, that they believe
they met.
Comment: Two commenters
mentioned the meta-analysis of
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paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents 44
that initiated an FDA panel and
analysis. The meta-analysis and
systematic review of several randomized
controlled trials of the risk of death
associated with the use of paclitaxelcoated balloons and stents in the
femoropopliteal artery of the leg and
found that there is an increased risk of
death following the application of
paclitaxel-coated devices.
Commenters stated that EluviaTM is
different from the devices that were
studied in the meta-analysis of
paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents.
Specifically, the commenters claim that
EluviaTM delivers paclitaxel in lower
doses than the devices in the metaanalysis and is the only peripheral
device to deliver paclitaxel through a
sustained-release mechanism of action
where delivery of paclitaxel is
controlled and focused on the target
lesion. The commenters, including the
applicant, believe that the suggestion in
the meta-analysis of a late-term
mortality risk associated with
paclitaxel-coated devices is not directly
applicable to the EluviaTM device.
Additionally, the applicant stated that
given the differences between
EluviaTM’s paclitaxel delivery
mechanisms and other peripheral
paclitaxel-coated devices, it would be
more appropriate to examine safety
considerations and data for Eluvia
relative to products with similar
mechanisms of action and dose levels.
The applicant provides the TAXUS
coronary stent as such an appropriate
comparator, stating that Eluvia and
TAXUS are similar in design intent and
mechanism of action. In support, the
applicant provided additional data
showing a 5-year all-cause mortality
observed between paclitaxel-eluting and
bare metal stents. The applicant also
stated that coronary and peripheral
atherosclerotic lesions have similar
disease presentation and the same
antiproliferative impact of paclitaxel on
the lesions regardless of vessel bed. The
applicant recommends that signals for
any potential long-term systemic effects
of targeted paclitaxel eluted from a stent
polymer matrix would be apparent in
patients treated with TAXUS. As
opposed to the meta-analysis and the
resulting FDA panel analysis, the
applicant believes that data on TAXUS
can be used to gauge potential system
44 Katsanos, K., Spiliopoulos, S., Kitrou, P.,
Krokidis, M., & Karnabatidis, D. (2018). Risk of
Death Following Application of Paclitaxel-Coated
Balloons and Stents in the Femoropopliteal Artery
of the Leg: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
of Randomized Controlled Trials. Journal of the
American Heart Association, 7(24). https://doi.org/
10.1161/jaha.118.011245.
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effects of paclitaxel eluted from Eluvia.
The applicant argues that the TAXUS
stent’s safety and effects has been
extensively studied with
more than 14 years of commercial
experience and clinical trial data out to
10 years 45 46 47 48 in patients with
coronary implants and 5 years for those
with infrapopliteal implants. The
applicant then recognizes that mortality
rates for patients treated for peripheral
artery disease (PAD) are not directly
comparable to rates for patients with
coronary artery or infrapopliteal disease
due to appreciable differences in
baseline risk. The applicant states that
an additive effect due to low dose
paclitaxel elution over time, if it exists,
would have been observed in patients
receiving treatment in these vessel beds.
In regards to the meta-analysis and the
risk of late mortality, the applicant
further argues that understanding
possible effects of paclitaxel exposure is
not possible without complete analysis
of uniformly re-adjudicated patient level
data, particularly with treatment arm
crossover and previous interventions or
subsequent reinterventions with
paclitaxel-coated devices, which
occurred in the analyzed studies.
The applicant also provided
responses to several comments that
CMS noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that were originally
mentioned during and following the
NTAP Town Hall meeting (84 FR
39479). In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, CMS noted a comment
that showed concern over the EluviaTM
IMPERIAL study’s citation of a reduced
rate of ‘‘Subsequent Therapeutic
Interventions’’. The applicant states that
the use of the term ‘‘Subsequent
Therapeutic Interventions’’ was used as
a lay explanation for target lesion
revascularization. The applicant then
states that it has recently obtained and
analyzed IMPERIAL trial 2-year TLR
results, which they also released at the
45 Yamaji K, Raber L, Zanchin T, et al. Ten-year
clinical outcomes of first-generation drug-eluting
stents: The Sirolimus-Eluting vs. Paclitaxel-Eluting
Stents for Coronary Revascularization (SIRTAX)
VERY LATE trial. Eur Heart J. 2016;37(45):3386–
3395.
46 Ormiston JA, Charles O, Mann T, et al. Final
5-year results of the TAXUS ATLAS, TAXUS
ATLAS Small Vessel, and TAXUS ATLAS Long
Lesion clinical trials of the TAXUS Liberte
paclitaxel-eluting stent in de-novo coronary artery
lesions. Coron Artery Dis. 2013;24(1):61–68.
47 Kereiakes DJ, Cannon LA, Dauber I, et al. Longterm follow-up of the platinum chromium TAXUS
Element (ION) stent: The PERSEUS Workhorse and
Small Vessel trial five-year results. Catheter
Cardiovasc Interv. 2015;86(6):994–1001.
48 Stone GW, Ellis SG, Colombo A, et al. Longterm safety and efficacy of paclitaxel-eluting stents
final 5-year analysis from the TAXUS Clinical Trial
Program. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2011;4(5):530–
542.
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FDA panel meeting on June 19, 2019.
The applicant states that 1-year trial
results, published in The Lancet,
demonstrated a 50 percent reduction in
TLRs and 2-year data demonstrated a
statistically significantly (p-value not
provided) lower rate of repeat reinterventions at 2 years compared to
Zilver PTX. The applicant states that the
clinical impact of fewer TLR procedures
is significant and therefore demonstrates
substantial clinical improvement.
The applicant also addressed
concerns regarding hospital
readmissions. Specifically, the applicant
stated that in the NTAP Town Hall
Eluvia Meeting, they presented 12month readmission rates for Eluvia (3.9
percent) and Zilver PTX (7.1 percent),
with a self-reported p-value of 0.1369.
The applicant argues that statistical
significance of the 12-month
readmission rates should not be
expected to be statistically significant
due to the small number of patients.
They conclude their response by stating
that the data suggests a lower patient
and health system burden for
rehospitalization of patients for
EluviaTM versus patients for Zilver PTX.
Additionally, the applicant responded
to concerns regarding long-term data
and real-world evidence, stating that
due to the nature of the transitional
pass-through status requirements for
medical devices, EluviaTM is new to the
market and would no longer meet the
newness criterion if the applicant were
to wait until 5-year data are available.
The applicant further stated that
Medicare NTAP precedent suggests that
one-year peer reviewed published
results are sufficient to prove substantial
clinical improvement, given that at the
time of Zilver PTX’s NTAP approval
they only provided 12-month data
published in peer-reviewed literature.49
The applicant further argues that
waiting for a substantial amount of realworld evidence for the use of the
EluviaTM drug-eluting stent would
disqualify the technology for the
transitional pass-through consideration,
as the technology would no longer be
considered new by the time the data are
available.
Response: We appreciate the
comments. We are aware of FDA’s
actions in regards to the meta-analysis
of paclitaxel devices and the late
mortality signal in patients treated for
PAD with paclitaxel-coated balloons
and paclitaxel-eluting stents. We agree
with the applicant that mortality rates
for patients treated for peripheral artery
disease are not directly comparable to
rates for patients with coronary artery or
49 84
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infrapopliteal. We have continued to
closely follow FDA’s guidance and
recommendations for the use of
paclitaxel-coated balloons and
paclitaxel-eluting stents for PAD, with
details provided below.
On June 19–20, 2019, FDA convened
a public meeting of the Circulatory
System Devices Panel of the Medical
Devices Advisory Committee to discuss,
analyze, and make recommendations on
the topic of a potential late mortality
signal after treatment of PAD in the
femoropopliteal artery with paclitaxelcoated balloons and paclitaxel-eluting
stents. The Panel concluded that a late
mortality signal associated with the use
of paclitaxel-coated devices to treat
femoropopliteal PAD was present. With
that, the Panel and FDA cautiously
interpreted the magnitude of the signal
due to multiple limitations in the
available data including: Wide
confidence intervals due to a small
sample size, pooling of studies of
different paclitaxel-coated devices that
were not intended to be combined,
substantial amounts of missing study
data, no clear evidence of a paclitaxel
dose effect on mortality, and no
identified pathophysiologic mechanism
for the late deaths. The Panel and FDA
further concluded that additional
clinical study data are needed to fully
evaluate the late mortality signal.
As of August 7, 2019,50 FDA
continues to actively work with the
manufacturers and investigators on
developing additional clinical evidence
to better assess the long-term safety of
paclitaxel-coated devices. They
continue to assert that data could
potentially suggest that paclitaxelcoated balloons and stents may improve
blood flow to the legs and decrease the
likelihood of repeat procedures to
reopen blocked blood vessels compared
to uncoated devices. However, they also
continue to stress the importance of
clinicians weighing potential benefits of
the paclitaxel-coated devices with the
potential risks, including late mortality.
After consideration of public
comments and the latest available
information from FDA advisory panel,
we note that FDA’s panel’s has
continued to review data that has
identified a potentially concerning
signal of increased long-term mortality
in study subjects treated with paclitaxelcoated products compared to patients
treated with uncoated devices. We also
note that FDA determined that the
analysis revealed no clear evidence of a
50 https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/lettershealth-care-providers/august-7-2019-updatetreatment-peripheral-arterial-disease-paclitaxelcoated-balloons-and-paclitaxel.
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paclitaxel dose effect on mortality.
While FDA continues to further evaluate
the increased long-term mortality signal
and its impact on the overall benefit-risk
profile of these devices, we remain
concerned that we do not have enough
information to determine that the
EluviaTM device represents a substantial
clinical improvement over existing
devices. Therefore, we are not
approving the EluviaTM device for CY
2020 device transitional payment. We
will continue to monitor any new
information and/or recommendations as
they become available.
(7) AUGMENT® Bone Graft
Wright Medical submitted an
application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment
status for the AUGMENT® Bone Graft.
The applicant describes AUGMENT®
Bone Graft as a device/drug indicated
for use as an alternative to autograft in
arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hindfoot
where the need for supplemental graft
material is required. The applicant
stated that the product has two
components: Recombinant human
platelet-derived growth factor-BB
(rhPDGF–BB) solution (0.3 mg/mL) and
Beta-tricalcium phosphate (b-TCP)
granules (1000–2000 mm). The two
components are combined at the point
of use and applied to the surgical site.
The beta-TCP provides a porous
osteoconductive scaffold for new bone
growth and the rhPDGF–BB, which act
as an osteoinductive chemo-attractant
and mitogen for cells involved in
wound healing and through promotion
of angiogenesis.
According to the applicant, the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft is indicated for
use in arthrodesis of the ankle and/or
hindfoot due to osteoarthritis, posttraumatic arthritis (PTA), rheumatoid
arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, avascular
necrosis, joint instability, joint
deformity, congenital defect or joint
arthropathy as an alternative to autograft
in patients needing graft material.
Osteoarthritis is the most common joint
disease among middle aged and older
individuals and has been shown to also
have health related mental and physical
disabilities, which can be compared to
the severity as patients with end-stage
hip arthritis.51 Additionally, posttraumatic arthritis develops after an
acute direct trauma to the joint and can
cause 12 percent of all osteoarthritis
cases.52 Common causes leading to
51 Greaser
M, Ellington JK. 2014. ‘‘Ankle
arthritis.’’ Journal of Arthritis, 3:129. doi:10.4172/
2167-7921.1000129.
52 Punzi, Leonardo et al. 2016. ‘‘Post-traumatic
arthritis: overview on pathogenic mechanisms and
role of inflammation.’’ Rheumatic &
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PTOA include intra-articular fractures
and meniscal, ligamentous and chondral
injuries.53 The ankle is cited as the most
affected joint, reportedly accounting for
54 to 78 percent of over 300,000 injuries
occurring in the USA annually. The
applicant stated that autologous bone
graft has often been used in ankle
arthrodesis. Autologous bone is
retrieved from a donor site, which may
require an incision separate from the
arthrodesis.54 The applicant stated that,
in these procedures, harvested
autologous bone graft is implanted to
stimulate healing between the bones
across a diseased joint. The applicant
further stated that the procedures may
require the use of synthetic bone
substitutes to fill the bony voids or gaps
or to serve as an alternative to the
autograft where autograft is not feasible.
The applicant stated that the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft removes the
need for autologous retrieval. The
applicant noted that during the
procedure, the surgeon prepares the
joint for the graft application and locates
any potential bony defect, then applying
and packing the AUGMENT® Bone Graft
into the joint defects intended for
arthrodesis.
With respect to the newness criterion
at § 419.66(b)(1), FDA granted the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft premarket
approval on September 1, 2015. The
application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment
status for the AUGMENT® Bone Graft
was received May 31, 2018, which is
within 3 years of the date of the initial
FDA approval or clearance. We invited
public comments on whether the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets the
newness criterion.
Comment: We received one comment
from the manufacturer restating the date
of their application and their initial
FDA approval or clearance.
Response: As the application was
received within 3 years of the date of
the initial FDA approval or clearance,
we believe that AUGMENT® Bone Graft
meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion
at § 419.66(b)(3), according to the
applicant, the use of the AUGMENT®
Bone Graft is integral to the service
provided, is used for one patient only,
comes in contact with human skin, and
is applied in or on a wound or other
skin lesion. The applicant also claimed
that the AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets
Musculoskeletal Diseases. RMD open, 2(2),
e000279. doi:10.1136/rmdopen–2016–000279.
53 Ibid.
54 Lareau, Craig R. et al. 2015.’’Does autogenous
bone graft work? A logistic regression analysis of
data from 159 papers in the foot and ankle
literature.’’ Foot and Ankle Surgery. 21 (3):150–59.
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the device eligibility requirements of
§ 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or
items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it
is not a supply or material furnished
incident to a service.
The criteria for establishing new
device categories are specified at
§ 419.66(c). The first criterion, at
§ 419.66(c)(1), provides that CMS
determines that a device to be included
in the category is not appropriately
described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously
in effect, and was not being paid for as
an outpatient service as of December 31,
1996. We have not identified an existing
pass-through payment category that
describes the AUGMENT® Bone Graft.
The applicant proposed a category
descriptor for the AUGMENT® of
‘‘rhPDGF–BB and b-TCP as an
alternative to autograft in arthrodesis of
the ankle and/or hindfoot.’’
We did not receive any public
comments on these issue. We continue
to believe that there is no existing passthrough category that describes
AUGMENT® Bone Graft and have
determined that AUGMENT® Bone Graft
meets this eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing
a device category, at § 419.66(c)(2),
provides that CMS determines that a
device to be included in the category
has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment. The applicant claims that the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft provides a
substantial clinical improvement over
autograft procedures by reducing pain at
the autograft donor site. With respect to
this criterion, the applicant submitted
data that examined the use of autograft
arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hind foot
and arthrodesis with the use of the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft.
In a randomized, nonblinded, placebo
controlled, noninferiority trial of the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft versus
autologous bone graft, the AUGMENT®
arm showed equivalence bone bridging
as demonstrated by CT, pain on weight
bearing, The American Orthopaedic
Foot & Ankle Society Ankle-Hindfoot
(AOFAS—AHS) score, and the Foot
Function Index to autologous bone graft.
The study noted that patients
experienced significantly decreased (in
fact no) pain due to elimination of the
donor site procedure. In the autograft
group, at 6 months, 18/142 patients (13
percent) experienced pain >20 mm (of
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100 mm) on the Visual Analog Scale
(VAS) at the autograft donor site as
compared to 0/272 in the AUGMENT®
Bone Graft group. At 12 months, 13/142
autograft patients (9 percent) had pain
defined as >20 mm VAS as compared to
0/272 AUGMENT® patients.55 The VAS
has patients mark a visual
representation of pain on a ruler based
scale from 1 to 100. The measured
distance (in mm) on the 10-cm line
between the ‘‘no pain’’ anchor and the
patient’s mark represents the level of
pain. We were concerned that we are
unable to sufficiently determine
substantial clinical improvement using
the provided data, given that a
comparison to alternatives to autologous
bone graft, such as the reamer-irrigatoraspirator (RIA) technique were not
evaluated. Specifically, the RIA
technique has been suggested in a
number of studies to be a viable
alternative to bone autograft, because
autogenous bone graft can be readily
obtained without the need for additional
incisions, therefore eliminating pain
from an incisional site.56 Another
concern was the time period of the
study because certain ankle arthrodesis
complications such as ankle
replacement and repeat arthrodesis can
happen more than two years after the
initial surgery.57 A long-term study of at
least 60 months is currently underway
in order to assess long-term safety and
efficacy, looking at the following 4
primary outcomes: bone bridging as
demonstrated by CT, pain on weight
bearing, The American Orthopaedic
Foot & Ankle Society Ankle-Hindfoot
(AOFAS—AHS) score, and the Foot
Function Index. We believe that this
long-term study is necessary for
meaningful information about long-term
efficacy of the Augment® Bone Graft.
Further, there was a notable difference
in the infection rate, musculoskeletal
and tissue disorders, and pain in
extremity for those in the AUGMENT®
Bone Graft group. These findings were
unfortunately not tested for significance
and also were not necessarily focused
on relevance to the procedure. Should
these be significant and related to the
device, these findings would suggest
that the adverse outcomes due to the
55 DiGiovanni CW, Lin SS, Baumbauer JF, et al.
2013. ‘‘Recombinant Human Platelet-Derived
Growth Factor-BB and Beta-Tricalcium Phosphate
(rhPDGF–BB/b-TCP): An Alternative to Autogenous
Bone Graft.’’ J Bone Joint Surg Am., 95: 1184–92.
56 Herscovici, D., Scaduto, J.M. 2012. ‘‘Use of the
reamer–irrigator–aspirator technique to obtain
autograft for ankle and hindfoot arthrodesis.’’ The
Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. 94–B:75–9.
57 Stavrakis, AL., SooHoo, NF. 2016. ‘‘Trends in
complication rates following ankle arthrodesis and
total ankle replacement.’’ The Journal of Bone &
Joint Surgery. JBJS 1453–1458.
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Augment® Bone Graft may outweigh its
potential benefits.
We invited public comments on
whether the AUGMENT® Bone Graft
meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
Comment: We received several
comments in regards to our inquiry of
whether or not RIA is an appropriate
comparator to AUGMENT® Bone Graft.
Specifically, the applicant asserted that
the standard of care has been autograft,
as evidenced by peer-review literature,
a review of claims, and randomized
controlled trials. The commenters
further asserted that the RIA technique
is another way to harvest autograft,
requires a separate incision, and is not
appropriate given the volume of graft
needed for ankle and hindfoot
arthrodesis. The applicant further
argued that given that the RIA technique
still requires a separate incision, the
concerns surrounding the second
procedure, including pain and potential
complications, would still apply.
Finally, the applicant asserted that the
RIA technique has additional risks and
complications, including: A steep
learning curve for surgeons with the
potential for technical errors creating
risk of potential complications;58 select
populations for whom the technique is
not appropriate, including patients with
osteoporosis and osteopenia, as well as
elderly patients;59 and, risk for fractures,
penetration of the anterior cortex,
violation of the knee joint, blood loss,
and pressure emboli. 60 61 62
The applicant also commented on
concerns regarding long-term outcomes.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we noted a potential lack of data
on AUGMENT® beyond 2 years after the
initial procedure. In response, the
applicant submitted information on
ongoing longer-term post-market
surveillance data for AUGMENT®.
Specifically, the applicant describes
FDA post-market approval studies as a
post-market requirement for the FDA
58 Haubruck P, Ober J, Heller R, Miska M,
Schmidmaier G, Tanner MC (2018) Complications
and risk management in the use of the reamingirrigator-aspirator (RIA) system: RIA is a safe and
reliable method in harvesting autologous bone graft.
PLoS ONE 13(4): e0196051.
59 Ibid.
60 Dimitriou R, Mataliotakis GI, Angoules AG, et
al. Complications following autologous bone graft
harvesting from the iliac crest and using the RIA:
a systematic review. Injury. 2011 Sep;42 Suppl
2:S3–15.
61 See Complications and risk management in the
use of the reaming-irrigator-aspirator (RIA) system:
RIA is a safe and reliable method in harvesting
autologous bone graft, supra.
62 See Use of the reamer–irrigator–aspirator
technique to obtain autograft for ankle and hindfoot
arthrodesis, supra.
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PMA approval order to be submitted in
Q4 2019.
In response to our concern about
potential safety and adverse event rates,
the applicant stated that available data
demonstrates that the benefits of
AUGMENT® outweigh the risks.
Specifically, the applicant stated that
although the reported percentage of
infection rates outlined in the FDA’s
Summary of Safety and Effectiveness
Data were higher for the AUGMENT®
versus autograft, this is due to various
infections unrelated to ankle and
hindfoot arthrodesis. The applicant
focused on infections related to the
surgical support and commented that
there was a dramatically lower infection
rate, not significantly different between
AUGMENT® versus autograft (p =
0.447). The applicant reported that
surgical site infections occurred in 7
percent of AUGMENT® subjects and 9.2
percent in traditional autograft
procedure subjects. The applicant also
stated that it is common when studying
a novel therapy against an active
comparator that is known to be safe and
effective to use a non-inferiority study.
The applicant also stated that they
conducted an additional analysis of the
IDE trial data to determine the impact of
graft type (AUGMENT® Bone Graft
versus autograft) and subject age (over
65 vs those 65 and younger) on fusion
outcomes.63 The applicant believed that
the data confirm results of prior studies
that have found that autograft tissue
quality is affected by age. The applicant
suggested that while AUGMENT® was
non-inferior to autograft overall, the
elderly population data shows better
odds of fusion success with
AUGMENT® compared with autograft.
Response: We appreciate the
additional information and analysis
provided by the applicant and other
stakeholders. After reviewing the
additional information provided by the
applicant and other stakeholders
addressing our concerns raised in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
agree with the applicant that
AUGMENT® provides a substantial
clinical improvement by significantly
reducing, or eliminating, chronic pain
(measured at > 20mm on VAS)
associated with the autograft donor site
with the elimination of the donor site
procedure, at 6 months and 12 months.
We also note that in subjects 65+,
AUGMENT® was more than twice as
63 Haddad SL, Berlet GC, Baumhauer JF, et al.
Impact of patient age and graft type on fusion
following ankle and hindfoot arthrodesis.
Combined Australia & New Zealand Orthopaedic
Foot & Ankle Societies Conference, Surfers
Paradise, Queensland, Australia, 2019
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likely as autograft to result in fusion.64
Finally, after analyzing the additional
data provided through public comment,
we believe that AUGMENT® will
provide a substantial clinical
improvement by reducing chronic pain
and also reducing complications.
The third criterion for establishing a
device category, at § 419.66(c)(3),
requires us to determine that the cost of
the device is not insignificant, as
described in § 419.66(d). Section
419.66(d) includes three cost
significance criteria that must each be
met. The applicant provided the
following information in support of the
cost significance requirements. The
applicant stated that the use of the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft would be
reported with CPT code 27870
(Arthrodesis, ankle, open), which is
assigned to APC 5115 (Level 5
Musculoskeletal Procedures). To meet
the cost criterion for device passthrough payment status, a device must
pass all three tests of the cost criterion
for at least one APC. For our
calculations, we used APC 5115, which
has a CY 2019 payment rate of
$10,122.92. Beginning in CY 2017, we
calculate the device offset amount at the
HCPCS/CPT code level instead of the
APC level (81 FR 79657). CPT code
27870 had a device offset amount of
$4,553.29. According to the applicant,
the cost of the AUGMENT® Bone Graft
is $3,077 per device/drug combination.
The applicant further provided a
weighted average cost of the graft,
accounting for how many procedures
required one, two, or three AUGMENT®
Bone Graft device/drug kits, equaling a
weighted average cost of $6,020.22.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost
significance requirement, provides that
the estimated average reasonable cost of
devices in the category must exceed 25
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount for the service related to the
category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft is more than 25
percent of the applicable APC payment
amount 65 for the service related to the
category of devices of $10,122.92
(($6,020.22/$10,122.92) × 100 = 59
percent)). Therefore, we believe that the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets the first
cost significance requirement.
The second cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(2), provides
that the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category must
exceed the cost of the device-related
64 Ibid.
65 Due to the timing of the application, the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft cost values were calculated
using the 2018 proposed rule data.
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portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs
to be at least 125 percent of the offset
amount (the device-related portion of
the APC found on the offset list). The
estimated average reasonable cost of
$6,020.22 for AUGMENT® Bone Graft
exceeds the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for
the related service of $4,553.29 by at
least 25 percent (($6,020.22/$4,553.29) ×
100 = 132 percent). Therefore, we
believe AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets
the second cost significance
requirement.
The third cost significance
requirement, at § 419.66(d)(3), provides
that the difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of the
devices in the category and the portion
of the APC payment amount for the
device must exceed 10 percent of the
APC payment amount for the related
service. The difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of
$6,020.22 for the AUGMENT® Bone
Graft and the portion of the APC
payment amount for the device of
$4,553.29 exceeds the APC payment
amount for the related service of
$10,122.92 by more than 10 percent
(($6,020.22 ¥ $4,553.29)/$10,122.92 ×
100 = 15 percent). Therefore, we believe
that AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets the
third cost significance test. We invited
public comments on whether the
AUGMENT® Bone Graft meets the
device pass-through payment criteria
discussed in this section, including the
cost criterion.
Comment: The applicant submitted a
comment in support of our cost analysis
of AUGMENT® Bone Graft.
Response: We thank the applicant for
their comment in support, and continue
to believe AUGMENT® Bone Graft
meets the cost criteria.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
approving the AUGMENT® Bone Graft
for device pass-through payment status
beginning in CY 2020.
3. Request for Information and Potential
Revisions to the OPPS Device PassThrough Substantial Clinical
Improvement Criterion in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS Proposed Rule
As mentioned earlier, section
1833(t)(6) of the Act provides for passthrough payments for devices, and
section 1833(t)(6)(B) of the Act requires
CMS to use categories in determining
the eligibility of devices for passthrough payments. Separately, the
criteria as set forth under § 419.66(c) are
used to determine whether a new
category of pass-through payment
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devices should be established. One of
these criteria, at § 419.66(c)(2), states
that CMS determines that a device to be
included in the category has
demonstrated that it will substantially
improve the diagnosis or treatment of an
illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part
compared to the benefits of a device or
devices in a previously established
category or other available treatment.
CMS considers the totality of the
substantial clinical improvement claims
and supporting data, as well as public
comments, when evaluating this aspect
of each application. CMS summarizes
each applicant’s claim of substantial
clinical improvement as part of its
discussion of the entire application in
the relevant proposed rule, as well as
any concerns regarding those claims. In
the relevant final rule for the OPPS,
CMS responds to public comments and
discusses its decision to approve or
deny the application for separate
transitional pass-through payments.
Over the years, applicants and
commenters have indicated that it
would be helpful for CMS to provide
greater guidance on what constitutes
‘‘substantial clinical improvement.’’ In
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (84 FR 19368 through 19371), we
requested information on the substantial
clinical improvement criterion for OPPS
transitional pass-through payments for
devices and stated that we were
considering potential revisions to that
criterion. In particular, we sought public
comments in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule on the type of
additional detail and guidance that the
public and applicants for device passthrough transitional payment would
find useful (84 FR 19367 to 19369). This
request for public comments was
intended to be broad in scope and
provide a foundation for potential
rulemaking in future years. We refer
readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
proposed rule for the full text of this
request for information.
In addition to the broad request for
public comments for potential
rulemaking in future years, in order to
respond to stakeholder feedback
requesting greater understanding of
CMS’ approach to evaluating substantial
clinical improvement, we also solicited
comments from the public in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 19369 through 19371) on specific
changes or clarifications to the IPPS and
OPPS substantial clinical improvement
criterion that CMS might consider
making in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule to provide greater clarity and
predictability. We refer readers to the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule
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for complete details on those potential
revisions. We noted that any responses
to public comments we received on
potential revisions to the OPPS
substantial clinical improvement
criterion in response to the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, as well
as any revisions that might be adopted,
would be included in this final rule
with comment period and would inform
future OPPS rulemaking.
Comment: We received one comment
addressing this RFI, which
recommended that CMS demonstrate
greater flexibility in considering what
constitutes substantial clinical
improvement, including evidence
developed through data registries and
evidence from markets outside the U.S.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their response. We note that we
accept a wide range of data and other
evidence to help determine whether a
device meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
4. Proposed Alternative Pathway to the
OPPS Device Pass-Through Substantial
Clinical Improvement Criterion for
Transformative New Devices
Since 2001 when we first established
the substantial clinical improvement
criterion, FDA programs for helping to
expedite the development and review of
transformative new devices that are
intended to treat or diagnose serious
diseases or conditions and address
unmet medical needs (referred to, for
purposes of this rule) as FDA’s
expedited programs) have continued to
evolve in tandem with advances in
medical innovations and technology.
There is currently one FDA expedited
program for devices, the Breakthrough
Devices Program. The 21st Century
Cures Act (Cures Act) (Pub. L. 144–255)
established the Breakthrough Devices
Program to expedite the development of,
and provide for priority review of,
medical devices and device-led
combination products that provide for
more effective treatment or diagnosis of
life-threatening or irreversibly
debilitating diseases or conditions and
which meet one of the following four
criteria: (1) That represent breakthrough
technologies; (2) for which no approved
or cleared alternatives exist; (3) that
offer significant advantages over
existing approved or cleared
alternatives, including the potential,
compared to existing approved
alternatives, to reduce or eliminate the
need for hospitalization, improve
patient quality of life, facilitate patients’
ability to manage their own care (such
as through self-directed personal
assistance), or establish long-term
clinical efficiencies; or (4) the
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availability of which is in the best
interest of patients.
Some stakeholders over the years
have requested that devices that receive
marketing authorization and are part of
an FDA expedited program be deemed
as representing a substantial clinical
improvement for purposes of OPPS
device pass-through status. We
understand this request would arguably
create administrative efficiency because
the commenters currently view the two
sets of criteria as the same, overlapping,
similar, or otherwise duplicative or
unnecessary.
The Administration is committed to
addressing barriers to health care
innovation and ensuring Medicare
beneficiaries have access to critical and
life-saving new cures and technologies
that improve beneficiary health
outcomes. As detailed in the President’s
FY 2020 Budget (we refer readers to
HHS FY 2020 Budget in Brief, Improve
Medicare Beneficiary Access to
Breakthrough Devices, pp. 84–85), HHS
is pursuing several policies that will
instill greater transparency and
consistency around how Medicare
covers and pays for innovative
technology.
Therefore, given the existence of the
current and past FDA programs for
helping to expedite the development
and review of certain devices intended
to treat or diagnose serious or lifethreatening or irreversibly debilitating
diseases or conditions for which there is
an unmet medical need), we considered
whether it would also be appropriate to
similarly facilitate access to these
transformative new technologies for
Medicare beneficiaries taking into
consideration that, at the time of
marketing authorization (that is,
Premarket Approval (PMA); 510(k)
clearance; or the granting of a De Novo
classification request) for a product that
is the subject of a FDA expedited
program, the evidence base for
demonstrating substantial clinical
improvement in accordance with CMS’
current standard may not be fully
developed. We also considered whether
FDA marketing authorization of a
product that is part of an FDA expedited
program is evidence that the product is
sufficiently different from existing
products for purposes of newness.
After consideration of these issues,
and consistent with the
Administration’s commitment to
addressing barriers to health care
innovation and ensuring Medicare
beneficiaries have access to critical and
life-saving new cures and technologies
that improve beneficiary health
outcomes, we concluded that it would
be appropriate to develop an alternative
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pathway for transformative medical
devices. In situations where a new
medical device is part of the
Breakthrough Devices Program and has
received FDA marketing authorization
(that is, the device has received PMA;
510(k) clearance; or the granting of a De
Novo classification request), we
proposed an alternative outpatient passthrough pathway to facilitate access to
this technology for Medicare
beneficiaries beginning with
applications received for pass-through
payment on or after January 1, 2020.
We continue to believe that hospitals
should receive pass-through payments
for devices that offer clear clinical
improvement and that cost
considerations should not interfere with
patient access. In light of the criteria
designation as a Breakthrough Device,
and because we recognize that such
devices may not have a sufficient
evidence base to demonstrate
substantial clinical improvement at the
time of FDA marketing authorization,
we proposed to amend the OPPS device
transitional pass-through payment
regulations to create an alternative
pathway to demonstrating substantial
clinical improvement that would enable
devices that receive FDA marketing
authorization and are part of the FDA
Breakthrough Devices Program to
qualify for our quarterly approval
process for device pass-through
payment under the OPPS for passthrough payment applications received
on or after January 1, 2020. With this
proposal, OPPS device pass-through
payment applicants for devices that
have received FDA marketing
authorization and are part of the FDA
Breakthrough Devices Program would
not be evaluated in terms of the current
substantial clinical improvement
criterion at § 419.66(c)(2) for the
purposes of determining device passthrough payment status, but would
continue to need to meet the other
requirements for pass-through payment
status in our regulation at § 419.66.
Devices that have received FDA
marketing authorization and are part of
the Breakthrough Devices Program can
be approved through the quarterly
process and would be announced
through that process (81 FR 79655).
Finally, we would include proposals
regarding these devices and whether
pass-through payment status should
continue to apply in the next applicable
OPPS rulemaking cycle.
As such, we proposed to revise
paragraph (c)(2) under § 419.66. Under
proposed revised paragraph (c)(2), we
proposed to establish an alternative
pathway where applications for device
pass-through payment status for new
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medical devices received on or after
January 1, 2020 that are a part of FDA’s
Breakthrough Devices Program and have
received FDA marketing authorization
(that is, the device has received PMA,
510(k) clearance, or the granting of a De
Novo classification request) will not be
evaluated for substantial clinical
improvement for the purposes of
determining device pass-through
payment status. Under this proposed
alternative pathway, a medical device
that has received FDA marketing
authorization (that is, has been
approved or cleared by, or had a De
Novo classification request granted by,
FDA) and that is part of FDA’s
Breakthrough Devices Program would
still need to meet the eligibility criteria
under § 419.66(b), the other criteria for
establishing device categories under
§ 419.66(c), and the cost criterion under
§ 419.66(d). We noted that this proposal
aligns with a proposal in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR
19371 through 19373) and final rule (84
FR 42292 through 42297) and will help
achieve the goals of expedited access to
innovative devices to further reduce
administrative burden.
Comment: MedPAC opposed our
proposal and stated that participation in
the FDA Breakthrough Device Program
does not necessarily reflect
improvements in outcomes or justify
increased payment for Medicare
beneficiaries. MedPAC expressed
concern that such a policy would
provide inappropriate incentives for
providers to use new technology
without proven safety or efficacy by
allowing increased payment for the new
technology.
Most commenters supported the
proposal for an alternative pathway and
offered suggestions that they thought
would enhance the proposal.
Specifically, commenters requested that
CMS expand the alternative pathway to
include other FDA designations, namely
the Expedited Access Pathway and the
Regenerative Medicine Advanced
Therapy (RMAT) Designation. A
commenter requested that similar to the
IPPS policy, we also waive the newness
criterion under the alternative pathway.
Commenters also requested that we
expand the alternative pathway to New
Technology APCs, drug pass-through
payment, and non-opioid alternatives.
Finally, a number of commenters
encouraged us to ensure coverage for
devices that are approved under the
alternative pathway.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the alternative
pathway proposal. After reviewing the
public comments, we continue to
believe that the benefits of providing
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earlier access to Breakthrough Devices
can improve beneficiary health
outcomes support establishing this
alternative pathway. While we
appreciate the commenter’s concern
regarding potential negative incentives,
we continue to believe that it is
appropriate to facilitate beneficiary
access to transformative new medical
devices by establishing an alternative
pathway for devices that receive FDA
marketing authorization through FDA’s
Breakthrough Devices Program, and not
to require substantial clinical
improvement as a requirement for passthrough status for these devices because
the evidence base to demonstrate
substantial clinical improvement may
not be completely developed at the time
of FDA marketing authorization for such
devices, which would delay their
eligibility for pass-through status.
In regards to expanding the
alternative pathway to include passthrough drugs and New Technology
APCs, we continue to believe that it is
appropriate to distinguish between
drugs and devices, while we continue to
work on other initiatives for drug
affordability; a priority for this
Administration. Importantly, substantial
clinical improvement is not a
requirement to be assigned to a New
Technology APC or for drug passthrough status, so it is not necessary to
waive such a criterion under either of
these policies. Finally, we appreciate
the commenters’ suggestion that we
should apply the alternative pathway to
other types of FDA designations and
will continue to take those comments
into consideration for future
rulemaking, where appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that we revise the effective
date of the policy, and specifically
requested that the policy be effective on
or after January 1, 2020 for applications
submitted prior to the September 2019
quarterly application submission
deadline.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. We agree with
commenters and do not believe
applicants with devices that would
qualify for the alternative pathway
should be required to re-submit their
pass-through applications after January
1, 2020 in order to be considered for the
alternative pathway. Therefore, after
considering the public comments we
received, we are finalizing a policy that
the alternative pathway will apply for
devices that will receive pass-through
payments effective on or after January 1,
2020 and we are revising paragraph
(c)(2) under § 419.66 consistent with
this final policy.
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Where we received a device passthrough application by the September
2019 quarterly application deadline for
a device that qualifies for the alternative
pathway and the device meets the other
criteria for device pass-through status,
the device can be approved for passthrough status beginning on January 1,
2020. Similarly, devices for which we
received a device pass-through
application prior to the December 2019
quarterly deadline can receive passthrough status beginning April 1, 2020,
assuming they qualify for the alternative
pathway and meet the other criteria for
device pass-through status.
In summary, we are finalizing our
proposal with the change to the effective
date suggested by commenters to
establish an alternative pathway to the
substantial clinical improvement
criterion for devices that have FDA
Breakthrough Devices Program
designation and have received FDA
marketing authorization (that is, the
device has received PMA, 510(k)
clearance, or the granting of a De Novo
classification request) for devices
approved for transitional pass-through
status effective on or after January 1,
2020.
Devices Approved for Pass-Through
Status Under the Breakthrough Device
Alternative Pathway
We received two device pass-through
applications by the September 2, 2019
quarterly application deadline that have
received FDA marketing authorization
and a Breakthrough Devices designation
from FDA and that qualify for
consideration under the alternative
pathway to the OPPS device passthrough substantial clinical
improvement criterion. These devices
meet the other criteria for device passthrough including the eligibility criteria
under § 419.66(b), the criteria for
establishing device categories under
§ 419.66(c), and the cost criterion under
§ 419.66(d) and are approved for passthrough status beginning on January 1,
2020.
The devices include: (1) Optimizer®
System which is discussed earlier in
this section and approved under the
standard pathway, and (2)
ARTIFICIALIris® which is an iris
prosthesis for the treatment of iris
defects. The ARTIFICIALIris®
application was received in June 2019
after the March 2019 quarterly deadline
for applications to be received in time
to be included in CY 2020 rulemaking.
We are approving ARTIFICIALIris® for
transitional pass-through payment
under the alternative pathway for CY
2020. As previously stated, all
applications that are preliminarily
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approved upon quarterly review will
automatically be included in the next
applicable OPPS annual rulemaking
cycle, therefore a discussion of this
application will be included in CY 2021
rulemaking.
B. Device-Intensive Procedures
1. Background
Under the OPPS, prior to CY 2017,
device-intensive status for procedures
was determined at the APC level for
APCs with a device offset percentage
greater than 40 percent (79 FR 66795).
Beginning in CY 2017, CMS began
determining device-intensive status at
the HCPCS code level. In assigning
device-intensive status to an APC prior
to CY 2017, the device costs of all the
procedures within the APC were
calculated and the geometric mean
device offset of all of the procedures had
to exceed 40 percent. Almost all of the
procedures assigned to device-intensive
APCs utilized devices, and the device
costs for the associated HCPCS codes
exceeded the 40-percent threshold. The
no cost/full credit and partial credit
device policy (79 FR 66872 through
66873) applies to device-intensive APCs
and is discussed in detail in section
IV.B.4. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. A related device policy
was the requirement that certain
procedures assigned to device-intensive
APCs require the reporting of a device
code on the claim (80 FR 70422). For
further background information on the
device-intensive APC policy, we refer
readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70421
through 70426).
a. HCPCS Code-Level Device-Intensive
Determination
As stated earlier, prior to CY 2017, the
device-intensive methodology assigned
device-intensive status to all procedures
requiring the implantation of a device
that were assigned to an APC with a
device offset greater than 40 percent
and, beginning in CY 2015, that met the
three criteria listed below. Historically,
the device-intensive designation was at
the APC level and applied to the
applicable procedures within that APC.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79658), we
changed our methodology to assign
device-intensive status at the individual
HCPCS code level rather than at the
APC level. Under this policy, a
procedure could be assigned deviceintensive status regardless of its APC
assignment, and device-intensive APCs
were no longer applied under the OPPS
or the ASC payment system.
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We believe that a HCPCS code-level
device offset is, in most cases, a better
representation of a procedure’s device
cost than an APC-wide average device
offset based on the average device offset
of all of the procedures assigned to an
APC. Unlike a device offset calculated at
the APC level, which is a weighted
average offset for all devices used in all
of the procedures assigned to an APC,
a HCPCS code-level device offset is
calculated using only claims for a single
HCPCS code. We believe that this
methodological change results in a more
accurate representation of the cost
attributable to implantation of a highcost device, which ensures consistent
device-intensive designation of
procedures with a significant device
cost. Further, we believe a HCPCS codelevel device offset removes
inappropriate device-intensive status for
procedures without a significant device
cost that are granted such status because
of APC assignment.
Under our existing policy, procedures
that meet the criteria listed below in
section IV.B.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule are identified as
device-intensive procedures and are
subject to all the policies applicable to
procedures assigned device-intensive
status under our established
methodology, including our policies on
device edits and no cost/full credit and
partial credit devices discussed in
sections IV.B.3. and IV.B.4. of the CY
2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule,
respectively.
b. Use of the Three Criteria To Designate
Device-Intensive Procedures
We clarified our established policy in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 52474), where
we explained that device-intensive
procedures require the implantation of a
device and additionally are subject to
the following criteria:
• All procedures must involve
implantable devices that would be
reported if device insertion procedures
were performed;
• The required devices must be
surgically inserted or implanted devices
that remain in the patient’s body after
the conclusion of the procedure (at least
temporarily); and
• The device offset amount must be
significant, which is defined as
exceeding 40 percent of the procedure’s
mean cost.
We changed our policy to apply these
three criteria to determine whether
procedures qualify as device-intensive
in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66926),
where we stated that we would apply
the no cost/full credit and partial credit
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device policy—which includes the three
criteria listed above—to all deviceintensive procedures beginning in CY
2015. We reiterated this position in the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70424), where
we explained that we were finalizing
our proposal to continue using the three
criteria established in the CY 2007
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period for determining the APCs to
which the CY 2016 device intensive
policy will apply. Under the policies we
adopted in CYs 2015, 2016, and 2017,
all procedures that require the
implantation of a device and meet the
above criteria are assigned deviceintensive status, regardless of their APC
placement.
2. Device-Intensive Procedure Policy for
CY 2019 and Subsequent Years
As part of CMS’ effort to better
capture costs for procedures with
significant device costs, in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58944 through 58948), for
CY 2019, we modified our criteria for
device-intensive procedures. We had
heard from stakeholders that the criteria
excluded some procedures that
stakeholders believed should qualify as
device-intensive procedures.
Specifically, we were persuaded by
stakeholder arguments that procedures
requiring expensive surgically inserted
or implanted devices that are not capital
equipment should qualify as deviceintensive procedures, regardless of
whether the device remains in the
patient’s body after the conclusion of
the procedure. We agreed that a broader
definition of device-intensive
procedures was warranted, and made
two modifications to the criteria for CY
2019 (83 FR 58948). First, we allowed
procedures that involve surgically
inserted or implanted single-use devices
that meet the device offset percentage
threshold to qualify as device-intensive
procedures, regardless of whether the
device remains in the patient’s body
after the conclusion of the procedure.
We established this policy because we
no longer believe that whether a device
remains in the patient’s body should
affect its designation as a deviceintensive procedure, as such devices
could, nonetheless, comprise a large
portion of the cost of the applicable
procedure. Second, we modified our
criteria to lower the device offset
percentage threshold from 40 percent to
30 percent, to allow a greater number of
procedures to qualify as deviceintensive. We stated that we believe
allowing these additional procedures to
qualify for device-intensive status will
help ensure these procedures receive
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more appropriate payment in the ASC
setting, which will help encourage the
provision of these services in the ASC
setting. In addition, we stated that this
change would help to ensure that more
procedures containing relatively highcost devices are subject to the device
edits, which leads to more correctly
coded claims and greater accuracy in
our claims data. Specifically, for CY
2019 and subsequent years, we finalized
that device-intensive procedures will be
subject to the following criteria:
• All procedures must involve
implantable devices assigned a CPT or
HCPCS code;
• The required devices (including
single-use devices) must be surgically
inserted or implanted; and
• The device offset amount must be
significant, which is defined as
exceeding 30 percent of the procedure’s
mean cost (83 FR 58945).
In addition, to further align the
device-intensive policy with the criteria
used for device pass-through payment
status, we finalized, for CY 2019 and
subsequent years, that for purposes of
satisfying the device-intensive criteria, a
device-intensive procedure must
involve a device that:
• Has received FDA marketing
authorization, has received an FDA
investigational device exemption (IDE),
and has been classified as a Category B
device by FDA in accordance with 42
CFR 405.203 through 405.207 and
405.211 through 405.215, or meets
another appropriate FDA exemption
from premarket review;
• Is an integral part of the service
furnished;
• Is used for one patient only;
• Comes in contact with human
tissue;
• Is surgically implanted or inserted
(either permanently or temporarily); and
• Is not either of the following:
(a) Equipment, an instrument,
apparatus, implement, or item of this
type for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered as
depreciable assets as defined in Chapter
1 of the Medicare Provider
Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15–
1); or
(b) A material or supply furnished
incident to a service (for example, a
suture, customized surgical kit, scalpel,
or clip, other than a radiological site
marker) (83 FR 58945).
In addition, for new HCPCS codes
describing procedures requiring the
implantation of medical devices that do
not yet have associated claims data, in
the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79658), we
finalized a policy for CY 2017 to apply
device-intensive status with a default
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device offset set at 41 percent for new
HCPCS codes describing procedures
requiring the implantation or insertion
of a medical device that did not yet have
associated claims data until claims data
are available to establish the HCPCS
code-level device offset for the
procedures. This default device offset
amount of 41 percent was not calculated
from claims data; instead, it was applied
as a default until claims data were
available upon which to calculate an
actual device offset for the new code.
The purpose of applying the 41-percent
default device offset to new codes that
describe procedures that implant or
insert medical devices was to ensure
ASC access for new procedures until
claims data become available.
As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule and final rule with
comment period (83 FR 37108 through
37109 and 58945 through 58946,
respectively), in accordance with our
policy stated above to lower the device
offset percentage threshold for
procedures to qualify as deviceintensive from greater than 40 percent to
greater than 30 percent, for CY 2019 and
subsequent years, we modified this
policy to apply a 31-percent default
device offset to new HCPCS codes
describing procedures requiring the
implantation of a medical device that do
not yet have associated claims data until
claims data are available to establish the
HCPCS code-level device offset for the
procedures. In conjunction with the
policy to lower the default device offset
from 41 percent to 31 percent, we
continued our current policy of, in
certain rare instances (for example, in
the case of a very expensive implantable
device), temporarily assigning a higher
offset percentage if warranted by
additional information such as pricing
data from a device manufacturer (81 FR
79658). Once claims data are available
for a new procedure requiring the
implantation of a medical device,
device-intensive status is applied to the
code if the HCPCS code-level device
offset is greater than 30 percent,
according to our policy of determining
device-intensive status by calculating
the HCPCS code-level device offset.
In addition, in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
clarified that since the adoption of our
policy in effect as of CY 2018, the
associated claims data used for purposes
of determining whether or not to apply
the default device offset are the
associated claims data for either the new
HCPCS code or any predecessor code, as
described by CPT coding guidance, for
the new HCPCS code. Additionally, for
CY 2019 and subsequent years, in
limited instances where a new HCPCS
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code does not have a predecessor code
as defined by CPT, but describes a
procedure that was previously described
by an existing code, we use clinical
discretion to identify HCPCS codes that
are clinically related or similar to the
new HCPCS code but are not officially
recognized as a predecessor code by
CPT, and to use the claims data of the
clinically related or similar code(s) for
purposes of determining whether or not
to apply the default device offset to the
new HCPCS code (83 FR 58946).
Clinically related and similar
procedures for purposes of this policy
are procedures that have little or no
clinical differences and use the same
devices as the new HCPCS code. In
addition, clinically related and similar
codes for purposes of this policy are
codes that either currently or previously
describe the procedure described by the
new HCPCS code. Under this policy,
claims data from clinically related and
similar codes are included as associated
claims data for a new code, and where
an existing HCPCS code is found to be
clinically related or similar to a new
HCPCS code, we apply the device offset
percentage derived from the existing
clinically related or similar HCPCS
code’s claims data to the new HCPCS
code for determining the device offset
percentage. We stated that we believe
that claims data for HCPCS codes
describing procedures that have minor
differences from the procedures
described by new HCPCS codes will
provide an accurate depiction of the
cost relationship between the procedure
and the device(s) that are used, and will
be appropriate to use to set a new code’s
device offset percentage, in the same
way that predecessor codes are used. If
a new HCPCS code has multiple
predecessor codes, the claims data for
the predecessor code that has the
highest individual HCPCS-level device
offset percentage is used to determine
whether the new HCPCS code qualifies
for device-intensive status. Similarly, in
the event that a new HCPCS code does
not have a predecessor code but has
multiple clinically related or similar
codes, the claims data for the clinically
related or similar code that has the
highest individual HCPCS level device
offset percentage is used to determine
whether the new HCPCS code qualifies
for device-intensive status.
As we indicated in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule
with comment period, additional
information for our consideration of an
offset percentage higher than the default
of 31 percent for new HCPCS codes
describing procedures requiring the
implantation (or, in some cases, the
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insertion) of a medical device that do
not yet have associated claims data,
such as pricing data or invoices from a
device manufacturer, should be directed
to the Division of Outpatient Care, Mail
Stop C4–01–26, Centers for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244–1850,
or electronically at outpatientpps@
cms.hhs.gov. Additional information
can be submitted prior to issuance of an
OPPS/ASC proposed rule or as a public
comment in response to an issued
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Device offset
percentages will be set in each year’s
final rule.
For CY 2020, we did not propose any
changes to our device-intensive policy.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that CPT codes 22612 and 64912 had a
device-offset percentage greater than 30
percent and should have been proposed
to have device-intensive status for CY
2020.
Response: We agree with commenters
that CPT codes 22612 and 64912 were
inadvertently omitted from Addendum
P and were not assigned deviceintensive status in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. For the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, the device offset for both
procedures exceeds the 30 percent
threshold and these procedures are
assigned device-intensive status for CY
2020.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we assign HCPCS code C9752 a
higher device offset percentage.
Additionally, one commenter requested
that we assign HCPCS code C9754 a
higher device offset percentage.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations and their
submission of device pricing
information. After reviewing the pricing
information provided by commenters,
we believe a default device offset
percentage of 31 percent appropriately
reflects the device costs for these
procedures for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter requested
we assign device-intensive status for
CPT codes 36904, 36905, 50590, and
HCPCS code 0275T for CY 2020.
Response: Using the most currently
available data for this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
have determined that the device offset
percentages for CPT codes 36905,
50590, and HCPCS code 0275T are not
above the 30-percent threshold and,
therefore, these procedures are not
eligible to be assigned device-intensive
status. Additionally, based on the most
currently available data for this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we have determined that the
device offset percentage for CPT code
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36904 exceeds the 30-percent threshold
and therefore, this procedure is assigned
device-intensive status for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the device offset for CPT code 53854
should be based on the predecessor
code of HCPCS code 0275T and that
CPT code 53854 should be assigned
device-intensive status for CY 2020.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that, in the absence of
device cost statistics for a particular
procedure, we may use the predecessor
code (in this case HCPCS code 0275T)
to make a device-intensive
determination. However, we note that
the device-intensive percentage for
HCPCS code 0275T is below the 30
percent threshold and, therefore, we are
not assigning CPT code 53854 deviceintensive status for CY 2020.
The full listing of the proposed CY
2020 device-intensive procedures can be
found in Addendum P to this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website).
3. Device Edit Policy
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66795), we
finalized a policy and implemented
claims processing edits that require any
of the device codes used in the previous
device-to-procedure edits to be present
on the claim whenever a procedure code
assigned to any of the APCs listed in
Table 5 of the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (the CY 2015
device-dependent APCs) is reported on
the claim. In addition, in the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70422), we modified our
previously existing policy and applied
the device coding requirements
exclusively to procedures that require
the implantation of a device that are
assigned to a device-intensive APC. In
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we also finalized our
policy that the claims processing edits
are such that any device code, when
reported on a claim with a procedure
assigned to a device-intensive APC
(listed in Table 42 of the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70422)) will satisfy the edit.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79658
through 79659), we changed our policy
for CY 2017 and subsequent years to
apply the CY 2016 device coding
requirements to the newly defined
device-intensive procedures. For CY
2017 and subsequent years, we also
specified that any device code, when
reported on a claim with a deviceintensive procedure, will satisfy the
edit. In addition, we created HCPCS
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61299
code C1889 to recognize devices
furnished during a device-intensive
procedure that are not described by a
specific Level II HCPCS Category Ccode. Reporting HCPCS code C1889
with a device-intensive procedure will
satisfy the edit requiring a device code
to be reported on a claim with a deviceintensive procedure. In the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we revised the description of
HCPCS code C1889 to remove the
specific applicability to device-intensive
procedures (83 FR 58950). For CY 2019
and subsequent years, the description of
HCPCS code C1889 is ‘‘Implantable/
insertable device, not otherwise
classified’’.
We did not propose any changes to
this policy for CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS restore the deviceto-procedure and procedure-to-device
edits. Additionally, some commenters
requested specific device edits for total
hip arthroplasty procedures and total
knee arthroplasty procedures as well as
device-intensive ‘‘C’’ HCPCS codes.
Response: As we stated in the CY
2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66794), we
continue to believe that the elimination
of device-to-procedure edits and
procedure-to-device edits is appropriate
due to the experience hospitals now
have in coding and reporting these
claims fully. More specifically, for the
most costly devices, we believe the C–
APCs will reliably reflect the cost of the
device if charges for the device are
included anywhere on the claim. We
note that, under our current policy,
hospitals are still expected to adhere to
the guidelines of correct coding and
append the correct device code to the
claim when applicable. We also note
that, as with all other items and services
recognized under the OPPS, we expect
hospitals to code and report their costs
appropriately, regardless of whether
there are claims processing edits in
place. Further, we also note that our
current device edit policy requires
hospitals to report a device for certain
device-intensive procedures, which
include total knee arthroplasty, deviceintensive ‘‘C’’ HCPCS codes, as well as
total hip arthroplasty beginning in CY
2020.
4. Adjustment to OPPS Payment for No
Cost/Full Credit and Partial Credit
Devices
a. Background
To ensure equitable OPPS payment
when a hospital receives a device
without cost or with full credit, in CY
2007, we implemented a policy to
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reduce the payment for specified
device-dependent APCs by the
estimated portion of the APC payment
attributable to device costs (that is, the
device offset) when the hospital receives
a specified device at no cost or with full
credit (71 FR 68071 through 68077).
Hospitals were instructed to report no
cost/full credit device cases on the
claim using the ‘‘FB’’ modifier on the
line with the procedure code in which
the no cost/full credit device is used. In
cases in which the device is furnished
without cost or with full credit,
hospitals were instructed to report a
token device charge of less than $1.01.
In cases in which the device being
inserted is an upgrade (either of the
same type of device or to a different
type of device) with a full credit for the
device being replaced, hospitals were
instructed to report as the device charge
the difference between the hospital’s
usual charge for the device being
implanted and the hospital’s usual
charge for the device for which it
received full credit. In CY 2008, we
expanded this payment adjustment
policy to include cases in which
hospitals receive partial credit of 50
percent or more of the cost of a specified
device. Hospitals were instructed to
append the ‘‘FC’’ modifier to the
procedure code that reports the service
provided to furnish the device when
they receive a partial credit of 50
percent or more of the cost of the new
device. We refer readers to the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period for more background information
on the ‘‘FB’’ and ‘‘FC’’ modifiers
payment adjustment policies (72 FR
66743 through 66749).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75005
through 75007), beginning in CY 2014,
we modified our policy of reducing
OPPS payment for specified APCs when
a hospital furnishes a specified device
without cost or with a full or partial
credit. For CY 2013 and prior years, our
policy had been to reduce OPPS
payment by 100 percent of the device
offset amount when a hospital furnishes
a specified device without cost or with
a full credit and by 50 percent of the
device offset amount when the hospital
receives partial credit in the amount of
50 percent or more of the cost for the
specified device. For CY 2014, we
reduced OPPS payment, for the
applicable APCs, by the full or partial
credit a hospital receives for a replaced
device. Specifically, under this
modified policy, hospitals are required
to report on the claim the amount of the
credit in the amount portion for value
code ‘‘FD’’ (Credit Received from the
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Manufacturer for a Replaced Medical
Device) when the hospital receives a
credit for a replaced device that is 50
percent or greater than the cost of the
device. For CY 2014, we also limited the
OPPS payment deduction for the
applicable APCs to the total amount of
the device offset when the ‘‘FD’’ value
code appears on a claim. For CY 2015,
we continued our policy of reducing
OPPS payment for specified APCs when
a hospital furnishes a specified device
without cost or with a full or partial
credit and to use the three criteria
established in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (71 FR
68072 through 68077) for determining
the APCs to which our CY 2015 policy
will apply (79 FR 66872 through 66873).
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70424), we
finalized our policy to no longer specify
a list of devices to which the OPPS
payment adjustment for no cost/full
credit and partial credit devices would
apply and instead apply this APC
payment adjustment to all replaced
devices furnished in conjunction with a
procedure assigned to a device-intensive
APC when the hospital receives a credit
for a replaced specified device that is 50
percent or greater than the cost of the
device.
b. Policy for No Cost/Full Credit and
Partial Credit Devices
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79659
through 79660), for CY 2017 and
subsequent years, we finalized our
policy to reduce OPPS payment for
device-intensive procedures, by the full
or partial credit a provider receives for
a replaced device, when a hospital
furnishes a specified device without
cost or with a full or partial credit.
Under our current policy, hospitals
continue to be required to report on the
claim the amount of the credit in the
amount portion for value code ‘‘FD’’
when the hospital receives a credit for
a replaced device that is 50 percent or
greater than the cost of the device.
We did not propose any changes to
our no cost/full credit and partial credit
device policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule.
5. Payment Policy for Low-Volume
Device-Intensive Procedures
In CY 2016, we used our equitable
adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act and used the
median cost (instead of the geometric
mean cost per our standard
methodology) to calculate the payment
rate for the implantable miniature
telescope procedure described by CPT
code 0308T (Insertion of ocular
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telescope prosthesis including removal
of crystalline lens or intraocular lens
prosthesis), which is the only code
assigned to APC 5494 (Level 4
Intraocular Procedures) (80 FR 70388).
We noted that, as stated in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (81 FR 45656),
we proposed to reassign the procedure
described by CPT code 0308T to APC
5495 (Level 5 Intraocular Procedures)
for CY 2017, but it would be the only
procedure code assigned to APC 5495.
The payment rates for a procedure
described by CPT code 0308T
(including the predecessor HCPCS code
C9732) were $15,551 in CY 2014,
$23,084 in CY 2015, and $17,551 in CY
2016. The procedure described by CPT
code 0308T is a high-cost deviceintensive surgical procedure that has a
very low volume of claims (in part
because most of the procedures
described by CPT code 0308T are
performed in ASCs). We believe that the
median cost is a more appropriate
measure of the central tendency for
purposes of calculating the cost and the
payment rate for this procedure because
the median cost is impacted to a lesser
degree than the geometric mean cost by
more extreme observations. We stated
that, in future rulemaking, we would
consider proposing a general policy for
the payment rate calculation for very
low-volume device-intensive APCs (80
FR 70389).
For CY 2017, we proposed and
finalized a payment policy for lowvolume device-intensive procedures
that is similar to the policy applied to
the procedure described by CPT code
0308T in CY 2016. In the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79660 through 79661), we
established our current policy that the
payment rate for any device-intensive
procedure that is assigned to a clinical
APC with fewer than 100 total claims
for all procedures in the APC be
calculated using the median cost instead
of the geometric mean cost, for the
reasons described above for the policy
applied to the procedure described by
CPT code 0308T in CY 2016. The CY
2018 final rule geometric mean cost for
the procedure described by CPT code
0308T (based on 19 claims containing
the device HCPCS C-code, in
accordance with the device-intensive
edit policy) was $21,302, and the
median cost was $19,521. The final CY
2018 payment rate (calculated using the
median cost) was $17,560.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58951), for
CY 2019, we continued with our policy
of establishing the payment rate for any
device-intensive procedure that is
assigned to a clinical APC with fewer
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than 100 total claims for all procedures
in the APC based on calculations using
the median cost instead of the geometric
mean cost. For more information on the
specific policy for assignment of lowvolume device-intensive procedures for
CY 2019, we refer readers to section
III.D.13. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 58917
through 58918).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
our current policy of establishing the
payment rate for any device-intensive
procedure that is assigned to a clinical
APC with fewer than 100 total claims
for all procedures in the APC using the
median cost instead of the geometric
mean cost. For CY 2020, this policy
would apply to CPT code 0308T, which
we proposed to assign to APC 5495
(Level 5 Intraocular Procedures) in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. The
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
geometric mean cost for the procedure
described by CPT code 0308T (based on
7 claims containing the device HCPCS
C-code, in accordance with the deviceintensive edit policy) was $28,237, and
the median cost was $19,270. The
proposed CY 2020 payment rate
(calculated using the median cost) was
$19,740 and can be found in Addendum
B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website).
V. OPPS Payment Changes for Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
A. OPPS Transitional Pass-Through
Payment for Additional Costs of Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides
for temporary additional payments or
‘‘transitional pass-through payments’’
for certain drugs and biologicals.
Throughout the proposed rule, the term
‘‘biological’’ is used because this is the
term that appears in section 1861(t) of
the Act. A ‘‘biological’’ as used in the
proposed rule includes (but is not
necessarily limited to) a ‘‘biological
product’’ or a ‘‘biologic’’ as defined
under section 351 of the Public Health
Service Act. As enacted by the
Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP
Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (BBRA) (Pub. L. 106–113), this
pass-through payment provision
requires the Secretary to make
additional payments to hospitals for:
Current orphan drugs for rare disease
and conditions, as designated under
section 526 of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act; current drugs and
biologicals and brachytherapy sources
used in cancer therapy; and current
radiopharmaceutical drugs and
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biologicals. ‘‘Current’’ refers to those
types of drugs or biologicals mentioned
above that are hospital outpatient
services under Medicare Part B for
which transitional pass-through
payment was made on the first date the
hospital OPPS was implemented.
Transitional pass-through payments
also are provided for certain ‘‘new’’
drugs and biologicals that were not
being paid for as an HOPD service as of
December 31, 1996 and whose cost is
‘‘not insignificant’’ in relation to the
OPPS payments for the procedures or
services associated with the new drug or
biological. For pass-through payment
purposes, radiopharmaceuticals are
included as ‘‘drugs.’’ As required by
statute, transitional pass-through
payments for a drug or biological
described in section 1833(t)(6)(C)(i)(II)
of the Act can be made for a period of
at least 2 years, but not more than 3
years, after the payment was first made
for the product as a hospital outpatient
service under Medicare Part B. Proposed
CY 2020 pass-through drugs and
biologicals and their designated APCs
are assigned status indicator ‘‘G’’ in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website).
Section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act
specifies that the pass-through payment
amount, in the case of a drug or
biological, is the amount by which the
amount determined under section
1842(o) of the Act for the drug or
biological exceeds the portion of the
otherwise applicable Medicare OPD fee
schedule that the Secretary determines
is associated with the drug or biological.
The methodology for determining the
pass-through payment amount is set
forth in regulations at 42 CFR 419.64.
These regulations specify that the passthrough payment equals the amount
determined under section 1842(o) of the
Act minus the portion of the APC
payment that CMS determines is
associated with the drug or biological.
Section 1847A of the Act establishes
the average sales price (ASP)
methodology, which is used for
payment for drugs and biologicals
described in section 1842(o)(1)(C) of the
Act furnished on or after January 1,
2005. The ASP methodology, as applied
under the OPPS, uses several sources of
data as a basis for payment, including
the ASP, the wholesale acquisition cost
(WAC), and the average wholesale price
(AWP). In the proposed rule, the term
‘‘ASP methodology’’ and ‘‘ASP-based’’
are inclusive of all data sources and
methodologies described therein.
Additional information on the ASP
methodology can be found on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
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61301
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-PartB-Drugs/McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/
index.html.
The pass-through application and
review process for drugs and biologicals
is described on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/passthrough_
payment.html.
2. Three-Year Transitional Pass-Through
Payment Period for All Pass-Through
Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals and Quarterly
Expiration of Pass-Through Status
As required by statute, transitional
pass-through payments for a drug or
biological described in section
1833(t)(6)(C)(i)(II) of the Act can be
made for a period of at least 2 years, but
not more than 3 years, after the payment
was first made for the product as a
hospital outpatient service under
Medicare Part B. Our current policy is
to accept pass-through applications on a
quarterly basis and to begin passthrough payments for newly approved
pass-through drugs and biologicals on a
quarterly basis through the next
available OPPS quarterly update after
the approval of a product’s pass-through
status. However, prior to CY 2017, we
expired pass-through status for drugs
and biologicals on an annual basis
through notice-and-comment
rulemaking (74 FR 60480). In the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79662), we
finalized a policy change, beginning
with pass-through drugs and biologicals
newly approved in CY 2017 and
subsequent calendar years, to allow for
a quarterly expiration of pass-through
payment status for drugs, biologicals,
and radiopharmaceuticals to afford a
pass-through payment period that is as
close to a full 3 years as possible for all
pass-through drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals.
This change eliminated the variability
of the pass-through payment eligibility
period, which previously varied based
on when a particular application was
initially received. We adopted this
change for pass-through approvals
beginning on or after CY 2017, to allow,
on a prospective basis, for the maximum
pass-through payment period for each
pass-through drug without exceeding
the statutory limit of 3 years. Notice of
drugs whose pass-through payment
status is ending during the calendar year
will continue to be included in the
quarterly OPPS Change Request
transmittals.
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3. Drugs and Biologicals With Expiring
Pass-Through Payment Status in CY
2019
We proposed that the pass-through
payment status of six drugs and
biologicals would expire on December
31, 2019 as listed in Table 14. These
drugs and biologicals will have received
OPPS pass-through payment for 3 years
during the period of January 1, 2017
until December 31, 2019.
In accordance with the policy
finalized in CY 2017 and described
earlier, pass-through payment status for
drugs and biologicals newly approved
in CY 2017 and subsequent years will
expire on a quarterly basis, with a passthrough payment period as close to 3
years as possible. With the exception of
those groups of drugs and biologicals
that are always packaged when they do
not have pass-through payment status
(specifically, anesthesia drugs; drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
that function as supplies when used in
a diagnostic test or procedure (including
diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals,
contrast agents, and stress agents); and
drugs and biologicals that function as
supplies when used in a surgical
procedure), our standard methodology
for providing payment for drugs and
biologicals with expiring pass-through
payment status in an upcoming calendar
year is to determine the product’s
estimated per day cost and compare it
with the OPPS drug packaging threshold
for that calendar year (which is
proposed to be $130 for CY 2020), as
discussed further in section V.B.2. of the
proposed rule. We proposed that if the
estimated per day cost for the drug or
biological is less than or equal to the
applicable OPPS drug packaging
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threshold, we would package payment
for the drug or biological into the
payment for the associated procedure in
the upcoming calendar year. If the
estimated per day cost of the drug or
biological is greater than the OPPS drug
packaging threshold, we proposed to
provide separate payment at the
applicable relative ASP-based payment
amount (which is proposed at ASP+6
percent for CY 2020, as discussed
further in section V.B.3. of the proposed
rule).
The proposed packaged or separately
payable status of each of these drugs or
biologicals is listed in Addendum B to
the proposed rule (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS should establish a new policy
to require equal payment for all drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
included in the same CED trial to avoid
affecting the trial by implicitly favoring
one product over another through a
higher payment rate. The commenter
referenced a current CED trial for
amyloid positron emission tomography
(PET) that will be active into CY 2020.
(Information on this CED trial can be
found on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/
Coverage-withEvidence-Development/
AmyloidPET.html). In the CED trial,
NeuraceqTM (florbetaben F18, HCPCS
code Q9982) and VizamylTM
(flutemetamol F18, HCPCS code Q9983)
have not had pass-through status since
December 31, 2018, while a third drug,
AmyvidTM (florbetapir F18, HCPCS
code A9586) continues to have passthrough status until September 30, 2020.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter’s request that we establish a
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policy to require the equal payment of
all drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals in the same CED
trial. The payment rate for each product
is consistent with current OPPS
statutory requirements. In the case of
the particular products mentioned
above, one product has drug passthrough status through September 30,
2020, as required by section
1833(t)(6)(G), while the pass-through
period for the other products has
already expired, meaning payment for
these products is packaged into the
payment for the primary procedure.
Further, section 1833(t)(6) establishes
the statutory authority for CMS to
provide pass-through payment to cover
the additional costs of innovative drugs
including radiopharmaceuticals. All of
these products receive payment that is
consistent with statutory and regulatory
requirements and payment will be
packaged for all three products once the
statutory pass-through period for
Amyvid expires. We note that the
payment rate for each product does not
affect the protocol established under the
CED trial because the protocol does not
consider the cost of the
radiopharmaceutical used for treatment.
Therefore, we expect providers to make
their own decision about which
radiopharmaceutical to use to provide
the treatment independent of the
payment received for an individual
drug.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to expire the pass-through
payment status of the 6 drugs and
biologicals listed in Table 40 below on
December 31, 2019.
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4. Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals With New or
Continuing Pass-Through Payment
Status in CY 2020
We proposed to continue passthrough payment status in CY 2020 for
61 drugs and biologicals. These drugs
and biologicals, which were approved
for pass-through payment status
between April 1, 2017 and April 1, 2019
are listed in Table 15. The APCs and
HCPCS codes for these drugs and
biologicals approved for pass-through
payment status on or after January 1,
2020 are assigned status indicator ‘‘G’’
in Addenda A and B to the proposed
rule (which are available via the internet
on the CMS website). In addition, there
are four drugs and biologicals that have
already had 3 years of pass-through
payment status but for which passthrough payment status is required to be
extended for an additional 2 years,
effective October 1, 2018 under section
1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as added by
section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018 (Pub. L. 115–141). That means the
last 9 months of pass-through status for
these drugs will occur in CY 2020.
Because of this requirement, these drugs
and biologicals are also included in
Table 15, which brings the total number
of drugs and biologicals with proposed
pass-through payment status in CY 2020
to 65.
Section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act sets
the amount of pass-through payment for
pass-through drugs and biologicals (the
pass-through payment amount) as the
difference between the amount
authorized under section 1842(o) of the
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Act and the portion of the otherwise
applicable OPD fee schedule that the
Secretary determines is associated with
the drug or biological. For CY 2020, we
proposed to continue to pay for passthrough drugs and biologicals at ASP+6
percent, equivalent to the payment rate
these drugs and biologicals would
receive in the physician’s office setting
in CY 2020. We proposed that a $0 passthrough payment amount would be paid
for pass-through drugs and biologicals
under the CY 2020 OPPS because the
difference between the amount
authorized under section 1842(o) of the
Act, which is proposed at ASP+6
percent, and the portion of the
otherwise applicable OPD fee schedule
that the Secretary determines is
appropriate, which is proposed at
ASP+6 percent, is $0.
In the case of policy-packaged drugs
(which include the following:
Anesthesia drugs; drugs, biologicals,
and radiopharmaceuticals that function
as supplies when used in a diagnostic
test or procedure (including contrast
agents, diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals,
and stress agents); and drugs and
biologicals that function as supplies
when used in a surgical procedure), we
proposed that their pass-through
payment amount would be equal to
ASP+6 percent for CY 2020 minus a
payment offset for any predecessor drug
products contributing to the passthrough payment as described in section
V.A.6. of the proposed rule. We are
making this proposal because, if not for
the pass-through payment status of
these policy-packaged products,
payment for these products would be
packaged into the associated procedure.
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61303
We proposed to continue to update
pass-through payment rates on a
quarterly basis on the CMS website
during CY 2020 if later quarter ASP
submissions (or more recent WAC or
AWP information, as applicable)
indicate that adjustments to the
payment rates for these pass-through
payment drugs or biologicals are
necessary. For a full description of this
policy, we refer readers to the CY 2006
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (70 FR 68632 through 68635).
For CY 2020, consistent with our CY
2019 policy for diagnostic and
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals, we
proposed to provide payment for both
diagnostic and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals that are granted
pass-through payment status based on
the ASP methodology. As stated earlier,
for purposes of pass-through payment,
we consider radiopharmaceuticals to be
drugs under the OPPS. Therefore, if a
diagnostic or therapeutic
radiopharmaceutical receives passthrough payment status during CY 2020,
we proposed to follow the standard ASP
methodology to determine the passthrough payment rate that drugs receive
under section 1842(o) of the Act, which
is proposed at ASP+6 percent. If ASP
data are not available for a
radiopharmaceutical, we proposed to
provide pass-through payment at
WAC+3 percent (consistent with our
proposed policy in section V.B.2.b. of
the proposed rule), the equivalent
payment provided to pass-through
payment drugs and biologicals without
ASP information. Additional detail and
comments on the WAC+3 percent
payment policy can be found in section
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V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule. If WAC
information also is not available, we
proposed to provide payment for the
pass-through radiopharmaceutical at 95
percent of its most recent AWP.
We did not receive any public
comments regarding these proposals.
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Therefore, we are finalizing these
proposals for CY 2020 without
modification. We note that public
comments pertaining to our proposal to
continue to pay WAC+3 percent for
drugs and biologicals without ASP
information are addressed elsewhere in
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this final rule with comment period.
The drugs and biologicals that continue
to have pass-through payment status for
CY 2020 or have been granted passthrough payment status as of January
2020 are shown in Table 41 below.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
5. Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals With PassThrough Status as a Result of Section
1301 of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018 (Pub. L.
115–141)
As mentioned earlier, section
1301(a)(1) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018 (Pub. L.
115–141) amended section 1833(t)(6) of
the Act and added a new section
1833(t)(6)(G), which provides that for
drugs or biologicals whose period of
pass-through payment status ended on
December 31, 2017 and for which
payment was packaged into a covered
hospital outpatient service furnished
beginning January 1, 2018, such passthrough payment status shall be
extended for a 2-year period beginning
on October 1, 2018 through September
30, 2020. There are four products whose
period of drug and biological passthrough payment status ended on
December 31, 2017 and for which
payment would have been packaged
beginning January 1, 2018. These
products were listed in Table 39 of the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58962).
Starting in CY 2019, the HCPCS code
Q4172 (PuraPly, and PuraPly
Antimicrobial, any type, per square
centimeter) was discontinued. In its
place, two new HCPCS codes were
established—Q4195 (Puraply, per
square centimeter) and Q4196 (Puraply
am, per square centimeter). Because
these HCPCS codes are direct successors
to HCPCS code Q4172, the provisions of
section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act apply to
HCPCS codes Q4195 and Q4196, and
these codes were listed in Table 16 of
the proposed rule (84 FR 39495). For CY
2020, we proposed to continue pass-
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through payment status for the drugs
and biologicals listed in Table 16 of the
proposed rule (we note that these drugs
and biologicals are also listed in Table
15 of the proposed rule) through
September 30, 2020 as required in
section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as
added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018. The APCs and HCPCS codes for
these drugs and biologicals approved for
pass-through payment status are
assigned status indicator ‘‘G’’ in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website).
We proposed to continue to update
pass-through payment rates for HCPCS
codes Q4195 and Q4196 along with the
other three drugs and biologicals
covered by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the
Act on a quarterly basis on the CMS
website during CY 2020 if later quarter
ASP submissions (or more recent WAC
or AWP information, as applicable)
indicate that adjustments to the
payment rates for these pass-through
drugs or biologicals are necessary. The
replacement of HCPCS code Q4172 by
HCPCS codes Q4195 and Q4196 means
there are five HCPCS codes for drugs
and biologicals covered by section
1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act. For a full
description of this policy, we refer
readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 58960
through 58962).
The five HCPCS codes for drugs and
biologicals that we proposed would
have pass-through payment status for
CY 2020 under section 1833(t)(6)(G) of
the Act, as added by section
1301(a)(1)(C) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018, are shown
in Table 16 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. Included as two of the
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five HCPCS codes for drugs and
biologicals with pass-through payment
status for CY 2020 are HCPCS codes
Q4195 (Puraply, per square centimeter)
and Q4196 (Puraply am, per square
centimeter). PuraPly and PuraPly AM
are skin substitute products that were
approved for pass-through payment
status on January 1, 2015 through the
drug and biological pass-through
payment process. Beginning on April 1,
2015, skin substitute products are
evaluated for pass-through payment
status through the device pass-through
payment process. However, we stated in
the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66887) that skin
substitutes that are approved for passthrough payment status as biologicals
effective on or before January 1, 2015
would continue to be paid as passthrough biologicals for the duration of
their pass-through payment period.
Because PuraPly and PuraPly AM were
approved for pass-through payment
status through the drug and biological
pass-through payment pathway, we
finalized a policy to consider both
PuraPly and PuraPly AM to be drugs or
biologicals as described by section
1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as added by
section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018, and to be eligible for extended
pass-through payment under our
proposal for CY 2020 (83 FR 58961
through 58962).
We did not receive any comments on
this policy. Therefore, we are finalizing
this proposal without modification.
Starting on October 1, 2020, the drugs
and biologicals listed in Table 42 will
no longer receive pass-through status,
and will be assigned to status indicator
‘‘N’’, which means these drugs will once
again be packaged in the OPPS.
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Under the regulations at 42 CFR
419.2(b), nonpass-through drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
that function as supplies when used in
a diagnostic test or procedure are
packaged in the OPPS. This category
includes diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents,
stress agents, and other diagnostic
drugs. Also under 42 CFR 419.2(b),
nonpass-through drugs and biologicals
that function as supplies in a surgical
procedure are packaged in the OPPS.
This category includes skin substitutes
and other surgical-supply drugs and
biologicals. As described earlier, section
1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act specifies that
the transitional pass-through payment
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amount for pass-through drugs and
biologicals is the difference between the
amount paid under section 1842(o) of
the Act and the otherwise applicable
OPD fee schedule amount. Because a
payment offset is necessary in order to
provide an appropriate transitional
pass-through payment, we deduct from
the pass-through payment for policypackaged drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals an amount
reflecting the portion of the APC
payment associated with predecessor
products in order to ensure no duplicate
payment is made. This amount
reflecting the portion of the APC
payment associated with predecessor
products is called the payment offset.
The payment offset policy applies to
all policy packaged drugs, biologicals,
and radiopharmaceuticals. For a full
description of the payment offset policy
as applied to diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents,
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stress agents, and skin substitutes, we
refer readers to the discussion in the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70430 through
70432). For CY 2020, as we did in CY
2019, we proposed to continue to apply
the same policy packaged offset policy
to payment for pass-through diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, pass-through
contrast agents, pass-through stress
agents, and pass-through skin
substitutes. The proposed APCs to
which a payment offset may be
applicable for pass-through diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, pass-through
contrast agents, pass-through stress
agents, and pass-through skin
substitutes are identified in Table 43
below.
We did not receive any comments on
this proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing this proposal without
modification.
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6. Provisions for Reducing Transitional
Pass-Through Payments for PolicyPackaged Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals To Offset Costs
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We proposed to continue to post
annually on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/Annual-PolicyFiles.html a file that contains the APC
offset amounts that will be used for that
year for purposes of both evaluating cost
significance for candidate pass-through
payment device categories and drugs
and biologicals and establishing any
appropriate APC offset amounts.
Specifically, the file will continue to
provide the amounts and percentages of
APC payment associated with packaged
implantable devices, policy-packaged
drugs, and threshold packaged drugs
and biologicals for every OPPS clinical
APC.
B. OPPS Payment for Drugs, Biologicals,
and Radiopharmaceuticals Without
Pass-Through Payment Status
1. Criteria for Packaging Payment for
Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals
a. Packaging Threshold
In accordance with section
1833(t)(16)(B) of the Act, the threshold
for establishing separate APCs for
payment of drugs and biologicals was
set to $50 per administration during CYs
2005 and 2006. In CY 2007, we used the
four quarter moving average Producer
Price Index (PPI) levels for
Pharmaceutical Preparations
(Prescription) to trend the $50 threshold
forward from the third quarter of CY
2005 (when the Pub. L. 108–173
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mandated threshold became effective) to
the third quarter of CY 2007. We then
rounded the resulting dollar amount to
the nearest $5 increment in order to
determine the CY 2007 threshold
amount of $55. Using the same
methodology as that used in CY 2007
(which is discussed in more detail in
the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (71 FR 68085 through
68086)), we set the packaging threshold
for establishing separate APCs for drugs
and biologicals at $125 for CY 2019 (83
FR 58963 through 58964).
Following the CY 2007 methodology,
for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule,
we used the most recently available four
quarter moving average PPI levels to
trend the $50 threshold forward from
the third quarter of CY 2005 to the third
quarter of CY 2020 and rounded the
resulting dollar amount ($128.11) to the
nearest $5 increment, which yielded a
figure of $130. In performing this
calculation, we used the most recent
forecast of the quarterly index levels for
the PPI for Pharmaceuticals for Human
Use (Prescription) (Bureau of Labor
Statistics series code WPUSI07003) from
CMS’ Office of the Actuary. For this CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, based on these
calculations using the CY 2007 OPPS
methodology, we are finalizing a
packaging threshold for CY 2020 of
$130.
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b. Packaging of Payment for HCPCS
Codes That Describe Certain Drugs,
Certain Biologicals, and Therapeutic
Radiopharmaceuticals Under the Cost
Threshold (‘‘Threshold-Packaged
Drugs’’)
To determine the proposed CY 2020
packaging status for all nonpass-through
drugs and biologicals that are not policy
packaged, we calculated, on a HCPCS
code-specific basis, the per day cost of
all drugs, biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals (collectively
called ‘‘threshold-packaged’’ drugs) that
had a HCPCS code in CY 2018 and were
paid (via packaged or separate payment)
under the OPPS. We used data from CY
2018 claims processed before January 1,
2019 for this calculation. However, we
did not perform this calculation for
those drugs and biologicals with
multiple HCPCS codes that include
different dosages, as described in
section V.B.1.d. of the proposed rule, or
for the following policy-packaged items
that we proposed to continue to package
in CY 2020: Anesthesia drugs; drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
that function as supplies when used in
a diagnostic test or procedure; and drugs
and biologicals that function as supplies
when used in a surgical procedure.
In order to calculate the per day costs
for drugs, biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals to determine their
proposed packaging status in CY 2020,
we used the methodology that was
described in detail in the CY 2006 OPPS
proposed rule (70 FR 42723 through
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42724) and finalized in the CY 2006
OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68636 through 68638). For each
drug and biological HCPCS code, we
used an estimated payment rate of
ASP+6 percent (which is the payment
rate we proposed for separately payable
drugs and biologicals for CY 2020, as
discussed in more detail in section
V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule) to
calculate the CY 2020 proposed rule per
day costs. We used the manufacturersubmitted ASP data from the fourth
quarter of CY 2018 (data that were used
for payment purposes in the physician’s
office setting, effective April 1, 2019) to
determine the proposed rule per day
cost.
As is our standard methodology, for
CY 2020, we proposed to use payment
rates based on the ASP data from the
first quarter of CY 2019 for budget
neutrality estimates, packaging
determinations, impact analyses, and
completion of Addenda A and B to the
proposed rule (which are available via
the internet on the CMS website)
because these are the most recent data
available for use at the time of
development of the proposed rule.
These data also were the basis for drug
payments in the physician’s office
setting, effective April 1, 2019. For
items that did not have an ASP-based
payment rate, such as some therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, we used their
mean unit cost derived from the CY
2018 hospital claims data to determine
their per day cost.
We proposed to package items with a
per day cost less than or equal to $130,
and identify items with a per day cost
greater than $130 as separately payable
unless they are policy-packaged.
Consistent with our past practice, we
cross-walked historical OPPS claims
data from the CY 2018 HCPCS codes
that were reported to the CY 2019
HCPCS codes that we display in
Addendum B to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website) for proposed payment
in CY 2020.
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that CMS create an exception to the
drug cost threshold packaging policy in
situations where a shortage of a drug
that is packaged under the drug cost
threshold packaging policy requires
providers to use a higher-cost substitute
drug that presumably is still packaged
because of the drug cost packaging
threshold. The commenters suggested
that the substitute drug be separately
paid even though the per day cost of the
substitute drug is still below the drug
cost packaging threshold amount.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its suggestion but disagree that such
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a policy is necessary at this time. We
note that the purpose of the drug cost
threshold is to require the packaging of
relatively small per day drug costs into
the associated outpatient hospital
procedure. This suggestion runs
contrary to our policy goal of bundling
more services to encourage provider
efficiency. However, we are cognizant of
issues surrounding drug shortages and
will consider this suggestion for the
future.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we no longer package HCPCS code
J2274 (Injection, Morphine Sulfate,
Preservative-Free For Epidural Or
Intrathecal Use, 10 mg) because the drug
is used in an implantable infusion
pump for intrathecal management of
pain and/or spasticity, and another
drug, HCPCS code J0475 (injection,
baclofen, 10 mg) which can be used
with the same infusion pump, currently
receives separate payment in the OPPS.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter. Neither HCPCS code J2274
nor HCPCS code J0475 are classified as
drugs that are policy packaged. We refer
readers to section V.B.1.c. for a
description of drugs that are policy
packaged. Also, neither of these drugs is
assigned to drug pass-through status.
Therefore, we use our drug cost
threshold methodology as described in
this section of the rule to determine
whether the drugs are packaged into an
associated procedure or if the drugs are
separately paid. The per day cost of
HCPCS code J2274 is below the $130
drug packaging threshold, and therefore,
the drug is packaged in the OPPS. The
per day cost of HCPCS code J0475 is
above the drug packaging threshold, and
therefore, the drug is paid separately in
the OPPS. The drug packaging threshold
is based on the per day cost of the
specific drug administered, and the
threshold is not affected by the means
by which the drug is administered to the
beneficiary (in this case, through a
pump). In the case brought up by the
commenter, the per day cost of HCPCS
code J2274 is below the $130 drug
packaging threshold, and is therefore
packaged into the payment for its
associated procedure.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, and consistent
with our methodology for establishing
the packaging threshold using the most
recent PPI forecast data, we are adopting
a CY 2019 packaging threshold of $130.
Our policy during previous cycles of
the OPPS has been to use updated ASP
and claims data to make final
determinations of the packaging status
of HCPCS codes for drugs, biologicals,
and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals
for the OPPS/ASC final rule with
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61313
comment period. We note that it is also
our policy to make an annual packaging
determination for a HCPCS code only
when we develop the OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period for the
update year. Only HCPCS codes that are
identified as separately payable in the
final rule with comment period are
subject to quarterly updates. For our
calculation of per day costs of HCPCS
codes for drugs and biologicals in this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to use ASP data from the
fourth quarter of CY 2018, which is the
basis for calculating payment rates for
drugs and biologicals in the physician’s
office setting using the ASP
methodology, effective April 1, 2019,
along with updated hospital claims data
from CY 2018. We note that we also
proposed to use these data for budget
neutrality estimates and impact analyses
for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule.
Payment rates for HCPCS codes for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
included in Addenda A and B for the
final rule with comment period will be
based on ASP data from the third
quarter of CY 2019. These data will be
the basis for calculating payment rates
for drugs and biologicals in the
physician’s office setting using the ASP
methodology, effective October 1, 2019.
These payment rates would then be
updated in the January 2020 OPPS
update, based on the most recent ASP
data to be used for physicians’ office
and OPPS payment as of January 1,
2020. For items that do not currently
have an ASP-based payment rate, we
proposed to recalculate their mean unit
cost from all of the CY 2018 claims data
and update cost report information
available for the CY 2020 final rule with
comment period to determine their final
per day cost.
Consequently, the packaging status of
some HCPCS codes for drugs,
biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals in the proposed
rule may be different from the same
drugs’ HCPCS codes’ packaging status
determined based on the data used for
the final rule with comment period.
Under such circumstances, we proposed
to continue to follow the established
policies initially adopted for the CY
2005 OPPS (69 FR 65780) in order to
more equitably pay for those drugs
whose costs fluctuate relative to the
proposed CY 2020 OPPS drug packaging
threshold and the drug’s payment status
(packaged or separately payable) in CY
2019. These established policies have
not changed for many years and are the
same as described in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70434). Specifically, for CY 2020,
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consistent with our historical practice,
we proposed to apply the following
policies to these HCPCS codes for drugs,
biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals whose
relationship to the drug packaging
threshold changes based on the updated
drug packaging threshold and on the
final updated data:
• HCPCS codes for drugs and
biologicals that were paid separately in
CY 2019 and that are proposed for
separate payment in CY 2020, and that
then have per day costs equal to or less
than the CY 2020 final rule drug
packaging threshold, based on the
updated ASPs and hospital claims data
used for the CY 2020 final rule, would
continue to receive separate payment in
CY 2020.
• HCPCS codes for drugs and
biologicals that were packaged in CY
2019 and that are proposed for separate
payment in CY 2020, and that then have
per day costs equal to or less than the
CY 2020 final rule drug packaging
threshold, based on the updated ASPs
and hospital claims data used for the CY
2020 final rule, would remain packaged
in CY 2020.
• HCPCS codes for drugs and
biologicals for which we proposed
packaged payment in CY 2020 but that
then have per-day costs greater than the
CY 2020 final rule drug packaging
threshold, based on the updated ASPs
and hospital claims data used for the CY
2020 final rule, would receive separate
payment in CY 2020.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal to
recalculate the mean unit cost for items
that do not currently have an ASP-based
payment rate from all of the CY 2018
claims data and updated cost report
information available for this CY 2020
final rule with comment period to
determine their final per day cost. We
also did not receive any public
comments on our proposal to continue
to follow the established policies,
initially adopted for the CY 2005 OPPS
(69 FR 65780), when the packaging
status of some HCPCS codes for drugs,
biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals in the proposed
rule may be different from the same
drug HCPCS code’s packaging status
determined based on the data used for
the final rule with comment period.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we are finalizing
these two proposals without
modification.
c. Policy Packaged Drugs, Biologicals,
and Radiopharmaceuticals
As mentioned earlier in this section,
in the OPPS, we package several
categories of drugs, biologicals, and
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radiopharmaceuticals, regardless of the
cost of the products. Because the
products are packaged according to the
policies in 42 CFR 419.2(b), we refer to
these packaged drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals as ‘‘policypackaged’’ drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals. These policies
are either longstanding or based on
longstanding principles and inherent to
the OPPS and are as follows:
• Anesthesia, certain drugs,
biologicals, and other pharmaceuticals;
medical and surgical supplies and
equipment; surgical dressings; and
devices used for external reduction of
fractures and dislocations
(§ 419.2(b)(4));
• Intraoperative items and services
(§ 419.2(b)(14));
• Drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as
supplies when used in a diagnostic test
or procedure (including, but not limited
to, diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals,
contrast agents, and pharmacologic
stress agents) (§ 419.2(b)(15)); and
• Drugs and biologicals that function
as supplies when used in a surgical
procedure (including, but not limited to,
skin substitutes and similar products
that aid wound healing and implantable
biologicals) (§ 419.2(b)(16)).
The policy at § 419.2(b)(16) is broader
than that at § 419.2(b)(14). As we stated
in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period: ‘‘We consider all
items related to the surgical outcome
and provided during the hospital stay in
which the surgery is performed,
including postsurgical pain
management drugs, to be part of the
surgery for purposes of our drug and
biological surgical supply packaging
policy’’ (79 FR 66875). The category
described by § 419.2(b)(15) is large and
includes diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents,
stress agents, and some other products.
The category described by § 419.2(b)(16)
includes skin substitutes and some
other products. We believe it is
important to reiterate that cost
consideration is not a factor when
determining whether an item is a
surgical supply (79 FR 66875).
We did not make any proposals to
revise our policy-packaged drug policy.
Comment: CMS received several
comments from stakeholders regarding
the policy-packaged status of diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
continue to apply the nuclear medicine
procedure to radiolabeled product edits
to ensure that all packaged costs are
included on nuclear medicine claims in
order to establish appropriate payment
rates in the future. There was concern
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that many providers performing nuclear
medicine procedures are not including
the cost of diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals used for the
procedures in their claims submissions.
Commenters believe this lack of drug
cost reporting could be causing the cost
of nuclear medicine procedures to be
underreported and therefore requests
that the radiolabeled product edits be
reinstated.
Response: We appreciated the
commenter’s feedback; however, we do
not agree with the commenter that we
should reinstate the nuclear medicine
procedure to radiolabeled product edits,
which required a diagnostic
radiopharmaceutical to be present on
the same claim as a nuclear medicine
procedure for payment under the OPPS
to be made. As previously discussed in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58965), the
edits were in place between CY 2008
and CY 2014 (78 FR 75033). We believe
the period of time in which the edits
were in place was sufficient for
hospitals to gain experience reporting
procedures involving radiolabeled
products and to become accustomed to
ensuring that they code and report
charges so that their claims fully and
appropriately reflect the costs of those
radiolabeled products. As with all other
items and services recognized under the
OPPS, we expect hospitals to code and
report their costs appropriately,
regardless of whether there are claims
processing edits in place.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals be paid separately
in all cases, not just when the drugs
have pass-through payment status.
Some commenters suggested payment
based upon ASP, WAC, AWP, or mean
unit cost data derived from hospital
claims. Some commenters mentioned
that pass-through payment status helps
the diffusion of new diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals into the market,
but is not enough to make up for the
inadequate payment after pass-through
expires. Several commenters
recommended treating diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals similarly to
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals.
Commenters opposed incorporating the
cost of the drug into the associated APC,
and provided limited evidence showing
procedures in which diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals are considered to
be a surgical supply that the commenter
believed are often paid at a lower rate
than the payment rate for the diagnostic
radiopharmaceutical itself when the
drug was paid separately because it had
pass-through payment status.
Additionally, commenters proposed
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alternative payment methodologies such
as subjecting diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals to the drug
packaging threshold, creating separate
APC payments for diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals that cost more
than $500, or using ASP, WAC, or AWP
to account for packaged
radiopharmaceutical costs. Conversely,
other commenters disagreed with the
idea to pay separately for diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals that cost more
than $500 because they claimed that
this would incentivize
radiopharmaceutical companies to raise
their prices to exceed the threshold.
Additionally, commenters stated that
nearly 95 percent of
radiopharmaceuticals are priced less
than $500, so creating a diagnostic
radiopharmaceutical packaging
threshold of $500 would not be
appropriate.
Response: We thank commenters for
their responses. We continue to believe
that diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals are
an integral component of many nuclear
medicine and imaging procedures and
charges associated with them should be
reported on hospital claims to the extent
they are used. Therefore, the payment
for the radiopharmaceuticals is reflected
within the payment for the primary
procedure. In response to the comment
regarding the proposed cost of the
packaged procedure in CY 2020 being
substantially lower than the payment
rate of the radiopharmaceutical when it
was on pass-through payment status
plus the payment rate of the procedure
associated with the
radiopharmaceutical, we note the rates
are established in a manner that uses the
average, more specifically the geometric
mean, of reported costs to furnish the
procedure based on data submitted to
CMS from all hospitals paid under the
OPPS to set the payment rate for the
service. Accordingly, the costs that are
calculated by Medicare reflect the
average costs of items and services that
are packaged into a primary procedure
and will not necessarily equal the sum
of the cost of the primary procedure and
the average sales price of items and
services because the billing patterns of
hospitals may not reflect that a
particular item or service is always
billed with the primary procedure.
Furthermore, the costs will be based on
the reported costs submitted to
Medicare by the hospitals and not the
list price established by the
manufacturer. Claims data that include
the radiopharmaceutical packaged with
the associated procedure reflect the
combined cost of the procedure and the
radiopharmaceutical used in the
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procedure. Additionally, we do not
believe it is appropriate to create a new
packaging threshold specifically for
diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals as that
does not align with our overall
packaging policy and limited data has
been submitted to support a specific
threshold. With respect to the request
that we create a new APC for each
radiopharmaceutical product, we do not
believe it is appropriate to create unique
APCs for diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals. Diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals function as
supplies during a diagnostic test or
procedure and following our
longstanding packaging policy, these
items are packaged under the OPPS,
which supports our goal of making
OPPS payments consistent with those of
a prospective payment system, which
packages costs into a single aggregate
payment for a service, encounter, or
episode of care. Furthermore, diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals function as
supplies that enable the provision of an
independent service, and are not
themselves the primary therapeutic
modality, and therefore, we do not
believe they warrant separate payment
through creation of a unique APC at this
time. We welcome ongoing dialogue
with stakeholders regarding suggestions
for payment changes for consideration
for future rulemaking.
d. Packaging Determination for HCPCS
Codes That Describe the Same Drug or
Biological but Different Dosages
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (74 FR 60490
through 60491), we finalized a policy to
make a single packaging determination
for a drug, rather than an individual
HCPCS code, when a drug has multiple
HCPCS codes describing different
dosages because we believe that
adopting the standard HCPCS codespecific packaging determinations for
these codes could lead to inappropriate
payment incentives for hospitals to
report certain HCPCS codes instead of
others. We continue to believe that
making packaging determinations on a
drug-specific basis eliminates payment
incentives for hospitals to report certain
HCPCS codes for drugs and allows
hospitals flexibility in choosing to
report all HCPCS codes for different
dosages of the same drug or only the
lowest dosage HCPCS code. Therefore,
we proposed to continue our policy to
make packaging determinations on a
drug-specific basis, rather than a HCPCS
code-specific basis, for those HCPCS
codes that describe the same drug or
biological but different dosages in CY
2020.
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61315
For CY 2020, in order to propose a
packaging determination that is
consistent across all HCPCS codes that
describe different dosages of the same
drug or biological, we aggregated both
our CY 2018 claims data and our pricing
information at ASP+6 percent across all
of the HCPCS codes that describe each
distinct drug or biological in order to
determine the mean units per day of the
drug or biological in terms of the HCPCS
code with the lowest dosage descriptor.
The following drugs did not have
pricing information available for the
ASP methodology for this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and as is our
current policy for determining the
packaging status of other drugs, we used
the mean unit cost available from the
CY 2018 claims data to make the
proposed packaging determinations for
these drugs: HCPCS code J1840
(Injection, kanamycin sulfate, up to 500
mg); HCPCS code J1850 (Injection,
kanamycin sulfate, up to 75 mg); HCPCS
code J3472 (Injection, hyaluronidase,
ovine, preservative free, per 1000 usp
units); HCPCS code J7100 (Infusion,
dextran 40, 500 ml); and HCPCS code
J7110 (Infusion, dextran 75, 500 ml).
For all other drugs and biologicals
that have HCPCS codes describing
different doses, we then multiplied the
proposed weighted average ASP+6
percent per unit payment amount across
all dosage levels of a specific drug or
biological by the estimated units per day
for all HCPCS codes that describe each
drug or biological from our claims data
to determine the estimated per day cost
of each drug or biological at less than or
equal to the proposed CY 2020 drug
packaging threshold of $130 (so that all
HCPCS codes for the same drug or
biological would be packaged) or greater
than the proposed CY 2020 drug
packaging threshold of $130 (so that all
HCPCS codes for the same drug or
biological would be separately payable).
The proposed packaging status of each
drug and biological HCPCS code to
which this methodology would apply in
CY 2020 was displayed in Table 18 of
the proposed rule (84 FR 39499).
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposal. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we are finalizing our CY
2020 proposal, without modification, to
continue our policy to make packaging
determinations on a drug-specific basis,
rather than a HCPCS code-specific basis,
for those HCPCS codes that describe the
same drug or biological but different
dosages. Table 44 below displays the
final packaging status of each drug and
biological HCPCS code to which the
finalized methodology applies for CY
2020.
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2. Payment for Drugs and Biologicals
Without Pass-Through Status That Are
Not Packaged
a. Payment for Specified Covered
Outpatient Drugs (SCODs) and Other
Separately Payable Drugs and
Biologicals
Section 1833(t)(14) of the Act defines
certain separately payable
radiopharmaceuticals, drugs, and
biologicals and mandates specific
payments for these items. Under section
1833(t)(14)(B)(i) of the Act, a ‘‘specified
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covered outpatient drug’’ (known as a
SCOD) is defined as a covered
outpatient drug, as defined in section
1927(k)(2) of the Act, for which a
separate APC has been established and
that either is a radiopharmaceutical
agent or is a drug or biological for which
payment was made on a pass-through
basis on or before December 31, 2002.
Under section 1833(t)(14)(B)(ii) of the
Act, certain drugs and biologicals are
designated as exceptions and are not
included in the definition of SCODs.
These exceptions are—
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• A drug or biological for which
payment is first made on or after
January 1, 2003, under the transitional
pass-through payment provision in
section 1833(t)(6) of the Act.
• A drug or biological for which a
temporary HCPCS code has not been
assigned.
• During CYs 2004 and 2005, an
orphan drug (as designated by the
Secretary).
Section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii) of the Act
requires that payment for SCODs in CY
2006 and subsequent years be equal to
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the average acquisition cost for the drug
for that year as determined by the
Secretary, subject to any adjustment for
overhead costs and taking into account
the hospital acquisition cost survey data
collected by the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) in CYs
2004 and 2005, and later periodic
surveys conducted by the Secretary as
set forth in the statute. If hospital
acquisition cost data are not available,
the law requires that payment be equal
to payment rates established under the
methodology described in section
1842(o), section 1847A, or section
1847B of the Act, as calculated and
adjusted by the Secretary as necessary
for purposes of paragraph (14). We refer
to this alternative methodology as the
‘‘statutory default.’’ Most physician Part
B drugs are paid at ASP+6 percent in
accordance with section 1842(o) and
section 1847A of the Act.
Section 1833(t)(14)(E)(ii) of the Act
provides for an adjustment in OPPS
payment rates for SCODs to take into
account overhead and related expenses,
such as pharmacy services and handling
costs. Section 1833(t)(14)(E)(i) of the Act
required MedPAC to study pharmacy
overhead and related expenses and to
make recommendations to the Secretary
regarding whether, and if so how, a
payment adjustment should be made to
compensate hospitals for overhead and
related expenses. Section
1833(t)(14)(E)(ii) of the Act authorizes
the Secretary to adjust the weights for
ambulatory procedure classifications for
SCODs to take into account the findings
of the MedPAC study.66
It has been our policy since CY 2006
to apply the same treatment to all
separately payable drugs and
biologicals, which include SCODs, and
drugs and biologicals that are not
SCODs. Therefore, we apply the
payment methodology in section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii) of the Act to SCODs,
as required by statute, but we also apply
it to separately payable drugs and
biologicals that are not SCODs, which is
a policy determination rather than a
statutory requirement. In this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed
to apply section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of
the Act to all separately payable drugs
and biologicals, including SCODs.
Although we do not distinguish SCODs
in this discussion, we note that we are
required to apply section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act to
SCODs, but we also are applying this
66 Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. June
2005 Report to the Congress. Chapter 6: Payment for
pharmacy handling costs in hospital outpatient
departments. Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/
docs/default-source/reports/June05_
ch6.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
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provision to other separately payable
drugs and biologicals, consistent with
our history of using the same payment
methodology for all separately payable
drugs and biologicals.
For a detailed discussion of our OPPS
drug payment policies from CY 2006 to
CY 2012, we refer readers to the CY
2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68383 through
68385). In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (77 FR 68386
through 68389), we first adopted the
statutory default policy to pay for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
at ASP+6 percent based on section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act. We
have continued this policy of paying for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
at the statutory default for CYs 2014
through 2019.
b. CY 2020 Payment Policy
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
our payment policy that has been in
effect since CY 2013 to pay for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
at ASP+6 percent in accordance with
section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act
(the statutory default). We proposed to
continue to pay for separately payable
nonpass-through drugs acquired with a
340B discount at a rate of ASP minus
22.5 percent, but we also solicited
comments on alternative policies as
well as the appropriate remedy for CYs
2018 and 2019 in the event that we do
not prevail on appeal in the pending
litigation, as discussed in greater detail
later in this section. We refer readers to
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59353 through
59371) and the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58979 through 58981) for more
information about how the payment rate
for drugs acquired with a 340B discount
was established.
In the case of a drug or biological
during an initial sales period in which
data on the prices for sales for the drug
or biological are not sufficiently
available from the manufacturer, section
1847A(c)(4) of the Act permits the
Secretary to make payments that are
based on WAC. Under section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II), the amount of
payment for a separately payable drug
equals the average price for the drug for
the year established under, among other
authorities, section 1847A of the Act. As
explained in greater detail in the CY
2019 PFS final rule, under section
1847A(c)(4), although payments may be
based on WAC, unlike section 1847A(b)
of the Act (which specifies that
payments using ASP or WAC must be
made with a 6 percent add-on), section
1847A(c)(4) of the Act does not require
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61317
that a particular add-on amount be
applied to WAC-based pricing for this
initial period when ASP data is not
available. Consistent with section
1847A(c)(4) of the Act, in the CY 2019
PFS final rule (83 FR 59661 to 59666),
we finalized a policy that, effective
January 1, 2019, WAC-based payments
for Part B drugs made under section
1847A(c)(4) of the Act will utilize a 3percent add-on in place of the 6-percent
add-on that was being used according to
our policy in effect as of CY 2018. For
the CY 2019 OPPS, we followed the
same policy finalized in the CY 2019
PFS final rule (83 FR 59661 to 59666).
For the CY 2020 OPPS, we proposed to
continue to utilize a 3 percent add-on
instead of a 6-percent add-on for WACbased drugs pursuant to our authority
under section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of
the Act, which provides, in part, that
the amount of payment for a SCOD is
the average price of the drug in the year
established under section 1847A of the
Act. We also proposed to apply this
provision to non-SCOD separately
payable drugs. Because we proposed to
establish the average price for a WACbased drug under section 1847A of the
Act as WAC+3 percent instead of
WAC+6 percent, we believe it is
appropriate to price separately payable
WAC-based drugs at the same amount
under the OPPS. We proposed that, if
finalized, our proposal to pay for drugs
or biologicals at WAC+3 percent, rather
than WAC+6 percent, would apply
whenever WAC-based pricing is used
for a drug or biological. For drugs and
biologicals that would otherwise be
subject to a payment reduction because
they were acquired under the 340B
Program, the 340B Program rate (in this
case, WAC minus 22.5 percent) would
continue to apply. We refer readers to
the CY 2019 PFS final rule (83 FR 59661
to 59666) for additional background on
this proposal.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed our proposal to utilize a 3
percent add-on instead of a 6 percent
add-on for drugs that are paid based on
WAC under section 1847A(c)(4) of the
Act. Commenters were concerned that
paying less for new drugs may
discourage the use of new innovative
drugs and inhibit access to patients.
Commenters also noted that the
sequestration cuts further decreased
payment for drugs, which leaves a
smaller margin for providers.
Additionally, some commenters believe
that this proposal would only negatively
impact providers, and would not
address increasing drug costs.
Additionally, commenters suggested
excluding certain drugs and biologicals
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from this policy, such as biosimilar
biological products or
radiopharmaceuticals. These
commenters felt as though the policy
was appropriate for drugs in general, but
not for the previously mentioned
products, which could potentially offer
savings to the Medicare program if
utilized in the case of biosimilars or
which have a higher associated
overhead in the case of
radiopharmaceuticals. Commenters also
discussed value-based payments as a
more meaningful change than this
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s feedback. We continue to
believe our policy will improve
Medicare payment rates by better
aligning payments with drug acquisition
costs, which is of the utmost importance
to CMS as Part B drug spending has
grown significantly. WAC plus a 3
percent add-on is more comparable to
an ASP plus a 6 percent add-on, since
the WAC pricing does not reflect many
of the discounts associated with ASP,
such as rebates. This proposal to
continue to utilize a 3 percent add-on
instead of a 6 percent add-on for drugs
that are paid based on WAC under
section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act is
consistent with MedPAC’s previous
analysis and recommendations in its
June 2017 Report to the Congress. This
policy is not meant to provide
preferential treatment to any specific
drug or biological, but to address WAC
based payment under 1847A of the Act.
We remind commenters that this
proposal still results in a net payment
greater than the WAC. In addition, this
policy decreases the beneficiary costsharing for these drugs. This could help
Medicare beneficiaries afford to pay for
new drugs by reducing their out-ofpocket expenses.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to utilize a 3 percent addon instead of a 6 percent add-on for
drugs that are paid based on WAC under
section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act pursuant
to our authority under section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
We proposed that payments for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
are included in the budget neutrality
adjustments, under the requirements in
section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act. We also
proposed that the budget neutral weight
scalar not be applied in determining
payments for these separately paid
drugs and biologicals.
We note that separately payable drug
and biological payment rates listed in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(available via the internet on the CMS
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website), which illustrate the proposed
CY 2020 payment of ASP+6 percent for
separately payable nonpass-through
drugs and biologicals and ASP+6
percent for pass-through drugs and
biologicals, reflect either ASP
information that is the basis for
calculating payment rates for drugs and
biologicals in the physician’s office
setting effective April 1, 2019, or WAC,
AWP, or mean unit cost from CY 2018
claims data and updated cost report
information available for the proposed
rule. In general, these published
payment rates are not the same as the
actual January 2020 payment rates. This
is because payment rates for drugs and
biologicals with ASP information for
January 2020 will be determined
through the standard quarterly process
where ASP data submitted by
manufacturers for the third quarter of
CY 2019 (July 1, 2019 through
September 30, 2019) will be used to set
the payment rates that are released for
the quarter beginning in January 2020
near the end of December 2019. In
addition, payment rates for drugs and
biologicals in Addenda A and B to the
proposed rule for which there was no
ASP information available for April
2019 are based on mean unit cost in the
available CY 2018 claims data. If ASP
information becomes available for
payment for the quarter beginning in
January 2020, we will price payment for
these drugs and biologicals based on
their newly available ASP information.
Finally, there may be drugs and
biologicals that have ASP information
available for the proposed rule
(reflecting April 2019 ASP data) that do
not have ASP information available for
the quarter beginning in January 2020.
These drugs and biologicals would then
be paid based on mean unit cost data
derived from CY 2018 hospital claims.
Therefore, the proposed payment rates
listed in Addenda A and B to the
proposed rule are not for January 2020
payment purposes and are only
illustrative of the CY 2020 OPPS
payment methodology using the most
recently available information at the
time of issuance of the proposed rule.
c. Biosimilar Biological Products
For CY 2016 and CY 2017, we
finalized a policy to pay for biosimilar
biological products based on the
payment allowance of the product as
determined under section 1847A of the
Act and to subject nonpass-through
biosimilar biological products to our
annual threshold-packaged policy (for
CY 2016, 80 FR 70445 through 70446;
and for CY 2017, 81 FR 79674). In the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82
FR 33630), for CY 2018, we proposed to
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continue this same payment policy for
biosimilar biological products.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59351), we
noted that, with respect to comments we
received regarding OPPS payment for
biosimilar biological products, in the CY
2018 PFS final rule, CMS finalized a
policy to implement separate HCPCS
codes for biosimilar biological products.
Therefore, consistent with our
established OPPS drug, biological, and
radiopharmaceutical payment policy,
HCPCS coding for biosimilar biological
products is based on the policy
established under the CY 2018 PFS final
rule.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59351),
after consideration of the public
comments we received, we finalized our
proposed payment policy for biosimilar
biological products, with the following
technical correction: All biosimilar
biological products are eligible for passthrough payment and not just the first
biosimilar biological product for a
reference product. In the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37123),
for CY 2019, we proposed to continue
the policy in place from CY 2018 to
make all biosimilar biological products
eligible for pass-through payment and
not just the first biosimilar biological
product for a reference product.
In addition, in CY 2018, we adopted
a policy that biosimilars without passthrough payment status that were
acquired under the 340B Program would
be paid the ASP of the biosimilar minus
22.5 percent of the reference product’s
ASP (82 FR 59367). We adopted this
policy in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period because we
believe that biosimilars without passthrough payment status acquired under
the 340B Program should be treated in
the same manner as other drugs and
biologicals acquired through the 340B
Program. As noted earlier, biosimilars
with pass-through payment status are
paid their own ASP+6 percent of the
reference product’s ASP. Separately
payable biosimilars that do not have
pass-through payment status and are not
acquired under the 340B Program are
also paid their own ASP+6 percent of
the reference product’s ASP. If a
biosimilar does not have ASP pricing,
but instead has WAC pricing, the WAC
pricing add-on of either 3 percent or 6
percent is calculated from the
biosimilar’s WAC and is not calculated
from the WAC price of the reference
product.
As noted in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (83 FR 37123), several
stakeholders raised concerns to us that
the current payment policy for
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biosimilars acquired under the 340B
Program could unfairly lower the OPPS
payment for biosimilars not on passthrough payment status because the
payment reduction would be based on
the reference product’s ASP, which
would generally be expected to be
priced higher than the biosimilar, thus
resulting in a more significant reduction
in payment than if the 22.5 percent was
calculated based on the biosimilar’s
ASP. We agreed with stakeholders that
the current payment policy could
unfairly lower the price of biosimilars
without pass-through payment status
that are acquired under the 340B
Program. In addition, we believe that
these changes would better reflect the
resources and production costs that
biosimilar manufacturers incur. We also
believe this approach is more consistent
with the payment methodology for
340B-acquired drugs and biologicals, for
which the 22.5 percent reduction is
calculated based on the drug or
biological’s ASP, rather than the ASP of
another product. In addition, we believe
that paying for biosimilars acquired
under the 340B Program at ASP minus
22.5 percent of the biosimilar’s ASP,
rather than 22.5 percent of the reference
product’s ASP, will more closely
approximate hospitals’ acquisition costs
for these products.
Accordingly, in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37123), for
CY 2019, we proposed changes to our
Medicare Part B drug payment
methodology for biosimilars acquired
under the 340B Program. Specifically,
for CY 2019 and subsequent years, in
accordance with section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act, we
proposed to pay nonpass-through
biosimilars acquired under the 340B
Program at ASP minus 22.5 percent of
the biosimilar’s ASP instead of the
biosimilar’s ASP minus 22.5 percent of
the reference product’s ASP. This
proposal was finalized without
modification in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58977).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
our policy to make all biosimilar
biological products eligible for passthrough payment and not just the first
biosimilar biological product for a
reference product. We also proposed to
continue our policy to pay nonpassthrough biosimilars acquired under the
340B Program at the biosimilar’s ASP
minus 22.5 percent of the biosimilar’s
ASP instead of the biosimilar’s ASP
minus 22.5 percent of the reference
product’s ASP, in accordance with
section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
In addition, as discussed further below,
we solicited comments on the
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appropriate remedy in the event of an
adverse decision on appeal in the
litigation related to our policy for
payment of 340B-acquired drugs and
biologicals, including on whether
paying for 340B-acquired biosimilars at
ASP+3 percent of the reference
product’s ASP would be an appropriate
policy in line with that discussion. Our
policy for 340B-acquired drugs and
biologicals is discussed in V.B.6. of this
final rule with comment period.
Comment: Many commenters
supported our biosimilar proposal to
continue our policy from CY 2018 to
make biosimilar biological products
eligible for pass-through payment and
not just the first biosimilar biological
product for a reference product.
Commenters believe this would
continue to improve access to these
treatments and lower costs, and they
stressed the importance of consistency
with biosimilar payment. Commenters
stated that there is a large disparity
between payment for biosimilars and
their reference products and that this
proposal helps to mitigate that concern.
Commenters also advocated for
additional proposals to increase the
utilization of biosimilars, such as
extended pass-through payment.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We believe this
proposal will continue to encourage
competition, lower costs for the
Medicare program and beneficiaries,
and eliminate any financial incentive to
utilize one product over another. We
will continue to assess biosimilar
utilization under the OPPS.
Comment: Several commenters
supported our proposal to pay nonpassthrough biosimilars acquired under the
340B Program at ASP minus 22.5
percent of the biosimilar’s ASP in
accordance with section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. Please see section
V.B.6 for a discussion of payment for
biosimilars aquired under 340B.
Comment: Some commenters did not
support our proposal to continue our CY
2018 policy to make all biosimilar
biological products eligible for passthrough payment and not just the first
biosimilar biological product for a
reference product. Commenters believe
biosimilars are not new or innovative
drugs or biologicals, because they
believe the originator product is the
only new and innovative product.
Therefore, they stated biosimilars
should not be considered for passthrough payment status. Additionally,
commenters stated there should be a
level playing field between biosimilars
and their originator reference products
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in order to increase competition and
reduce costs for beneficiaries.
Commenters believe that this proposal
could potentially lead to increased
Medicare spending on biosimilars, and
commenters articulated concerns that
therapies will be interrupted by
providers switching from innovator
products to biosimilars.
Response: As discussed in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58977), we
continue to believe that eligibility for
pass-through payment status reflects the
unique, complex nature of biosimilars
and is important as biosimilars become
established in the market, just as it is for
all other new drugs and biologicals.
Additionally, we are not convinced that
making all biosimilar biological
products eligible for pass-through
payment status will lead to
inappropriate treatment changes from a
reference product without pass-through
payment to a biosimilar product with
pass-through payment. Under current
policy, both originator products and
their associated biosimilars receive the
same percentage add-on amount,
regardless of the ASP of the product;
therefore, we do not believe that
therapies will be interrupted by
providers switching from innovator
products to biosimilars. We note that
Section 351(i) of the Public Health
Service Act defines biosimilarity to
mean ‘‘that the biological product is
highly similar to the reference product
notwithstanding minor differences in
clinically inactive components’’ and
that ‘‘there are no clinically meaningful
differences between the biological
product and the reference product in
terms of the safety, purity, and potency
of the product.’’ Therefore, concerns
that therapy would be interrupted by a
switch from an innovator product to a
biosimilar are unfounded as the
biosimilar has been determined to have
no clinically meaningful difference from
the reference product. In regards to the
increased payment of biosimilars under
this policy, overall increased
competition due to more biosimilars on
the market as a result of this policy is
expected to drive payments down for
both Medicare and for beneficiaries over
time, even if there may be increased
spending on biosimilars in the short
term.
For CY 2020, after consideration of
the public comments we received, we
are finalizing our proposed payment
policy for biosimilar products, without
modification, to continue the policy
established in CY 2018 to make all
biosimilar biological products eligible
for pass-through payment and not just
the first biosimilar biological product
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for a reference product. We also are
finalizing our proposal to pay nonpassthrough biosimilars acquired under the
340B Program at the biosimilar’s ASP
minus 22.5 percent of the reference
product’s ASP, in accordance with
section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
3. Payment Policy for Therapeutic
Radiopharmaceuticals
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39502), for CY 2020, we
proposed to continue the payment
policy for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals that began in CY
2010. We pay for separately payable
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals under
the ASP methodology adopted for
separately payable drugs and
biologicals. If ASP information is
unavailable for a therapeutic
radiopharmaceutical, we base
therapeutic radiopharmaceutical
payment on mean unit cost data derived
from hospital claims. We believe that
the rationale outlined in the CY 2010
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (74 FR 60524 through 60525) for
applying the principles of separately
payable drug pricing to therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals continues to be
appropriate for nonpass-through,
separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals in CY 2020.
Therefore, we proposed for CY 2020 to
pay all nonpass-through, separately
payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals at ASP+6 percent,
based on the statutory default described
in section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the
Act. For a full discussion of ASP-based
payment for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, we refer readers
to the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (74 FR 60520
through 60521). We also proposed to
rely on CY 2018 mean unit cost data
derived from hospital claims data for
payment rates for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals for which ASP
data are unavailable and to update the
payment rates for separately payable
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals
according to our usual process for
updating the payment rates for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
on a quarterly basis if updated ASP
information is unavailable. For a
complete history of the OPPS payment
policy for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, we refer readers
to the CY 2005 OPPS final rule with
comment period (69 FR 65811), the CY
2006 OPPS final rule with comment
period (70 FR 68655), and the CY 2010
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (74 FR 60524). The proposed CY
2020 payment rates for nonpassthrough, separately payable therapeutic
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radiopharmaceuticals were included in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule
(which are available via the internet on
the CMS website).
Comment: Commenters supported the
continuation of the policy to pay ASP+6
percent for radiopharmaceuticals, if
available, and to base payment on the
mean unit cost derived from hospital
claims data when not available.
Commenters also stressed the high
overhead, handling, compounding and
storage costs associated with delivering
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals and
asked CMS to look into higher payment
rates for radiopharmaceuticals or ways
to compensate hospitals for the higher
overhead and handling costs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. As previously
stated, we continue to believe a single
payment is appropriate for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals and that the
payment rate of ASP+6 percent is
appropriate because it provides
payment for both the therapeutic
radiopharmaceutical’s acquisition cost
and the associated costs such as storage
and handling of the
radiopharmaceuticals. Payment for the
radiopharmaceutical and
radiopharmaceutical processing services
is made through the single ASP-based
payment.
For CY 2020, after consideration of
the public comments we received, we
are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to continue to pay all
nonpass-through, separately payable
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals at
ASP+6 percent. We are also finalizing
our proposal to continue to rely on CY
2018 mean unit cost data derived from
hospital claims data for payment rates
for therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals for
which ASP data are unavailable. The CY
2020 final payment rates for nonpassthrough separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals are included in
Addenda A and B to this final rule with
comment period (which are available
via the internet on the CMS website).
4. Payment for Blood Clotting Factors
For CY 2019, we provided payment
for blood clotting factors under the same
methodology as other nonpass-through
separately payable drugs and biologicals
under the OPPS and continued paying
an updated furnishing fee (83 FR
58979). That is, for CY 2019, we
provided payment for blood clotting
factors under the OPPS at ASP+6
percent, plus an additional payment for
the furnishing fee. We note that when
blood clotting factors are provided in
physicians’ offices under Medicare Part
B and in other Medicare settings, a
furnishing fee is also applied to the
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payment. The CY 2019 updated
furnishing fee was $0.220 per unit.
For CY 2020, we proposed to pay for
blood clotting factors at ASP+6 percent,
consistent with our proposed payment
policy for other nonpass-through,
separately payable drugs and
biologicals, and to continue our policy
for payment of the furnishing fee using
an updated amount. Our policy to pay
for a furnishing fee for blood clotting
factors under the OPPS is consistent
with the methodology applied in the
physician’s office and in the inpatient
hospital setting. These methodologies
were first articulated in the CY 2006
OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68661) and later discussed in the
CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66765). The
proposed furnishing fee update is based
on the percentage increase in the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) for medical
care for the 12-month period ending
with June of the previous year. Because
the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases
the applicable CPI data after the PFS
and OPPS/ASC proposed rules are
published, we were not able to include
the actual updated furnishing fee in the
proposed rules. Therefore, in
accordance with our policy, as finalized
in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (72 FR 66765), we
proposed to announce the actual figure
for the percent change in the applicable
CPI and the updated furnishing fee
calculated based on that figure through
applicable program instructions and
posting on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Part-B-Drugs/
McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/
index.html.
Comment: Commenters supported
CMS’ proposal to continue to pay for
blood clotting factors at ASP+6 percent
plus a blood clotting factor furnishing
fee in the hospital outpatient
department.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to provide payment for
blood clotting factors under the same
methodology as other separately payable
drugs and biologicals under the OPPS
and to continue payment of an updated
furnishing fee. We will announce the
actual figure of the percent change in
the applicable CPI and the updated
furnishing fee calculation based on that
figure through the applicable program
instructions and posting on the CMS
website.
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5. Payment for Nonpass-Through Drugs,
Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
With HCPCS Codes But Without OPPS
Hospital Claims Data
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to use the same payment policy as in CY
2019 for nonpass-through drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
with HCPCS codes but without OPPS
hospital claims data, which describes
how we determine the payment rate for
drugs, biologicals, or
radiopharmaceuticals without an ASP.
For a detailed discussion of the payment
policy and methodology, we refer
readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70442
through 70443). The proposed CY 2020
payment status of each of the nonpassthrough drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals with HCPCS
codes but without OPPS hospital claims
data is listed in Addendum B to the
proposed rule, which is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
We did not receive any comments on
our proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing our CY 2020 proposal without
modification, including our proposal to
assign drug or biological products status
indicator ‘‘K’’ and pay for them
separately for the remainder of CY 2020
if pricing information becomes
available. The CY 2020 payment status
of each of the nonpass-through drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
with HCPCS codes but without OPPS
hospital claims data is listed in
Addendum B to this final rule with
comment period, which is available via
the internet on the CMS website.
6. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Methodology
for 340B Purchased Drugs
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (82 FR 33558 through 33724), we
proposed changes to the Medicare Part
B drug payment methodology for 340B
hospitals. We proposed these changes to
better, and more accurately, reflect the
resources and acquisition costs that
these hospitals incur. We believe that
such changes would allow Medicare
beneficiaries (and the Medicare
program) to pay a more appropriate
amount when hospitals participating in
the 340B Program furnish drugs to
Medicare beneficiaries that are
purchased under the 340B Program.
Subsequently, in the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (82
FR 59369 through 59370), we finalized
our proposal and adjusted the payment
rate for separately payable drugs and
biologicals (other than drugs on passthrough payment status and vaccines)
acquired under the 340B Program from
average sales price (ASP) plus 6 percent
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to ASP minus 22.5 percent. We stated
that our goal was to make Medicare
payment for separately payable drugs
more aligned with the resources
expended by hospitals to acquire such
drugs, while recognizing the intent of
the 340B Program to allow covered
entities, including eligible hospitals, to
stretch scarce resources in ways that
enable hospitals to continue providing
access to care for Medicare beneficiaries
and other patients. Critical access
hospitals are not included in this 340B
policy change because they are paid
under section 1834(g) of the Act. We
also excepted rural sole community
hospitals, children’s hospitals, and PPSexempt cancer hospitals from the 340B
payment adjustment in CY 2018. In
addition, as stated in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, this policy change does not
apply to drugs on pass-through payment
status, which are required to be paid
based on the ASP methodology, or
vaccines, which are excluded from the
340B Program.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79699
through 79706), we implemented
section 603 of the Bipartisan Budget Act
of 2015. As a general matter, applicable
items and services furnished in certain
off-campus outpatient departments of a
provider on or after January 1, 2017 are
not considered covered outpatient
services for purposes of payment under
the OPPS and are paid ‘‘under the
applicable payment system,’’ which is
generally the Physician Fee Schedule
(PFS). However, consistent with our
policy to pay separately payable,
covered outpatient drugs and biologicals
acquired under the 340B Program at
ASP minus 22.5 percent, rather than
ASP+6 percent, when billed by a
hospital paid under the OPPS that is not
excepted from the payment adjustment,
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59015
through 59022), we finalized a policy to
pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340Bacquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS. We adopted
this payment policy effective for CY
2019 and for subsequent years.
As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37125),
another topic that was brought to our
attention since we finalized the
payment adjustment for 340B-acquired
drugs in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period was whether
drugs that do not have ASP pricing but
instead receive WAC or AWP pricing
are subject to the 340B payment
adjustment. We did not receive public
comments on this topic in response to
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the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
However, we later heard from
stakeholders that there had been some
confusion about this issue. We clarified
in the CY 2019 proposed rule that the
340B payment adjustment applies to
drugs that are priced using either WAC
or AWP, and it has been our policy to
subject 340B-acquired drugs that use
these pricing methodologies to the 340B
payment adjustment since the policy
was first adopted. The 340B payment
adjustment for WAC-priced drugs is
WAC minus 22.5 percent and AWPpriced drugs have a payment rate of
69.46 percent of AWP when the 340B
payment adjustment is applied. The
69.46 percent of AWP is calculated by
first reducing the original 95 percent of
AWP price by 6 percent to generate a
value that is similar to ASP or WAC
with no percentage markup. Then we
apply the 22.5 percent reduction to
ASP/WAC-similar AWP value to obtain
the 69.46 percent of AWP, which is
similar to either ASP minus 22.5
percent or WAC minus 22.5 percent.
The number of separately payable drugs
receiving WAC or AWP pricing that are
affected by the 340B payment
adjustment is small—consisting of less
than 10 percent of all separately payable
Medicare Part B drugs in April 2018.
Furthermore, data limitations
previously inhibited our ability to
identify which drugs were acquired
under the 340B Program in the Medicare
OPPS claims data. This lack of
information within the claims data has
limited researchers’ and our ability to
precisely analyze differences in
acquisition cost of 340B and non-340B
acquired drugs with Medicare claims
data. Accordingly, in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR 33633),
we stated our intent to establish a
modifier, to be effective January 1, 2018,
for hospitals to report with separately
payable drugs that were not acquired
under the 340B Program. Because a
significant portion of hospitals paid
under the OPPS participate in the 340B
Program, we stated our belief that it is
appropriate to presume that a separately
payable drug reported on an OPPS claim
was purchased under the 340B Program,
unless the hospital identifies that the
drug was not purchased under the 340B
Program. We stated in the CY 2018
proposed rule that we intended to
provide further details about this
modifier in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period and/or
through subregulatory guidance,
including guidance related to billing for
dually eligible beneficiaries (that is,
beneficiaries covered under Medicare
and Medicaid) for whom covered
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entities do not receive a discount under
the 340B Program. As discussed in the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59369 through
59370), to effectuate the payment
adjustment for 340B-acquired drugs,
CMS implemented modifier ‘‘JG’’,
effective January 1, 2018. Hospitals paid
under the OPPS, other than a type of
hospital excluded from the OPPS (such
as critical access hospitals or those
hospitals paid under the Maryland
waiver), or excepted from the 340B drug
payment policy for CY 2018, are
required to report modifier ‘‘JG’’ on the
same claim line as the drug HCPCS code
to identify a 340B-acquired drug. For CY
2018, rural sole community hospitals,
children’s hospitals and PPS-exempt
cancer hospitals are excepted from the
340B payment adjustment. These
hospitals are required to report
informational modifier ‘‘TB’’ for 340Bacquired drugs, and continue to be paid
ASP+6 percent.
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59353 through 59370) for
a full discussion and rationale for the
CY 2018 policies and use of modifier
‘‘JG’’.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (83 FR 37125), for CY 2019, we
proposed to continue the 340B Program
policies that were implemented in CY
2018 with the exception of the way we
calculate payment for 340B-acquired
biosimilars (that is, we proposed to pay
for nonpass-through 340B-acquired
biosimilars at ASP minus 22.5 percent
of the biosimilar’s ASP, rather than of
the reference product’s ASP). More
information on our revised policy for
the payment of biosimilars acquired
through the 340B Program is available
in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
For CY 2019, we proposed, in
accordance with section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act, to pay
for separately payable Medicare Part B
drugs (assigned status indicator ‘‘K’’),
other than vaccines and drugs on passthrough payment status, that meet the
definition of ‘‘covered outpatient drug’’
as defined in section 1927(k) of the Act,
that are acquired through the 340B
Program at ASP minus 22.5 percent
when billed by a hospital paid under
the OPPS that is not excepted from the
payment adjustment. Medicare Part B
drugs or biologicals excluded from the
340B payment adjustment include
vaccines (assigned status indicator ‘‘F’’,
‘‘L’’ or ‘‘M’’) and drugs with OPPS
transitional pass-through payment
status (assigned status indicator ‘‘G’’).
As discussed in section V.B.2.c. of the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
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proposed to pay nonpass-through
biosimilars acquired under the 340B
Program at the biosimilar’s ASP minus
22.5 percent of the biosimilar’s ASP. We
also proposed for CY 2019 that
Medicare would continue to pay for
drugs or biologicals that were not
purchased with a 340B discount at
ASP+6 percent.
As stated earlier, to effectuate the
payment adjustment for 340B-acquired
drugs, CMS implemented modifier ‘‘JG’’,
effective January 1, 2018. For CY 2019,
we proposed that hospitals paid under
the OPPS, other than a type of hospital
excluded from the OPPS, or excepted
from the 340B drug payment policy for
CY 2018, continue to be required to
report modifier ‘‘JG’’ on the same claim
line as the drug HCPCS code to identify
a 340B-acquired drug. We also proposed
for CY 2019 that rural sole community
hospitals, children’s hospitals, and PPSexempt cancer hospitals would continue
to be excepted from the 340B payment
adjustment. We proposed for CY 2019
that these hospitals be required to report
informational modifier ‘‘TB’’ for 340Bacquired drugs, and continue to be paid
ASP+6 percent. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58981), after consideration of the
public comments we received, we
finalized our proposals without
modification.
Our CY 2018 and 2019 OPPS payment
policies for 340B-acquired drugs are the
subject of ongoing litigation. On
December 27, 2018, in the case of
American Hospital Association et al. v.
Azar et al., the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia
(hereinafter referred to as ‘‘the district
court’’) concluded in the context of
reimbursement requests for CY 2018
that the Secretary exceeded his statutory
authority by adjusting the Medicare
payment rates for drugs acquired under
the 340B Program to ASP minus 22.5
percent for that year.67 In that same
decision, the district court recognized
the ‘‘‘havoc that piecemeal review of
OPPS payment could bring about’ in
light of the budget neutrality
requirement,’’ and ordered
supplemental briefing on the
appropriate remedy.68 On May 6, 2019,
after briefing on remedy, the district
court issued an opinion that reiterated
that the 2018 rate reduction exceeded
the Secretary’s authority, and declared
that the rate reduction for 2019 (which
had been finalized since the Court’s
initial order was entered) also exceeded
67 American Hosp. Ass’n, et al. v. Azar, et al., No.
1:18–cv–2084 (D.D.C. Dec. 27, 2018).
68 Id. at 35 (quoting Amgen, Inc. v. Smith, 357
F.3d 103, 112 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (citations omitted)).
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his authority.69 Rather than ordering
HHS to pay plaintiffs their alleged
underpayments, however, the district
court recognized that crafting a remedy
is ‘‘no easy task, given Medicare’s
complexity,’’ 70 and initially remanded
the issue to HHS to devise an
appropriate remedy while also retaining
jurisdiction. The district court
acknowledged that ‘‘if the Secretary
were to retroactively raise the 2018 and
2019 340B rates, budget neutrality
would require him to retroactively
lower the 2018 and 2019 rates for other
Medicare Part B products and
services.’’ 71 Id. at 19. ‘‘And because
HHS has already processed claims
under the previous rates, the Secretary
would potentially be required to recoup
certain payments made to providers; an
expensive and time-consuming
prospect.’’ 72
CMS respectfully disagreed with the
district court’s understanding of the
scope of its adjustment authority. On
July 10, 2019, the district court entered
final judgment, and the agency has filed
its appeal. Nonetheless, CMS is taking
the steps necessary to craft an
appropriate remedy in the event of an
unfavorable decision on appeal.
Notably, after the proposed rule was
issued, CMS announced in the Federal
Register (84 FR 51590) its intent to
conduct a 340B hospital survey to
collect drug acquisition cost data for CY
2018 and 2019. Such survey data may
be used in setting the Medicare payment
amount for drugs acquired by 340B
hospitals for cost years going forward,
and also may be used to devise a
remedy for prior years if the district
court’s ruling is upheld on appeal. The
district court itself acknowledged that
CMS may base the Medicare payment
amount on average acquisition cost
when survey data are available. See 348
F. Supp. 3d at 82. No 340B hospital
disputed in the rulemakings for CY 2018
and 2019 that the ASP minus 22.5
percent formula was a conservative
adjustment that represented the
minimum discount that hospitals
receive for drugs acquired through the
340B program—a significant omission
because 340B hospitals have their own
data regarding their drug acquisition
costs. We thus anticipate that survey
data collected for CY 2018 and 2019
will confirm that the ASP minus 22.5
percent rate is a conservative measure
that overcompensates 340B hospitals. A
69 See May 6, 2019 Memorandum Opinion,
Granting in Part Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Permanent
Injunction; Remanding the 2018 and 2019 OPPS
Rules to HHS at 10–12.
70 Id. at 13.
71 Id. at 19.
72 Id. (citing Declaration of Elizabeth Richter).
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remedy that relies on such survey data
could avoid the remedial complexities
discussed below and in the proposed
rule.
Recognizing Medicare’s complexity in
formulating an appropriate remedy, any
changes to the OPPS must be budget
neutral, and reversal of the policy
change, which raised rates for non-drug
items and services by an estimated $1.6
billion for 2018 alone, could have a
significant economic impact on the
approximate 3,900 facilities that are
paid for outpatient items and services
covered under the OPPS. Second, any
remedy that increases payments to 340B
hospitals is likely to significantly affect
beneficiary cost-sharing. The items and
services that could be affected by the
remedy were provided to millions of
Medicare beneficiaries, who, by statute,
are required to pay cost-sharing for such
items and services, which is usually 20
percent of the total Medicare payment
rate.
CMS solicited initial public
comments on how to formulate a
solution that would account for all of
the complexities the district court
recognized in the event of an
unfavorable decision on appeal. A
summary of the public comments
received on a potential remedy is
included later in this section. In the
event 340B hospital survey data are not
used to devise a remedy, we intend to
consider this public input to further
inform the steps that are required under
the Administrative Procedure Act to
provide adequate notice and an
opportunity for meaningful comment on
our proposed policies, which would
entail devising the specific remedy
itself, presenting the specific budget
neutrality implications of that remedy
in the proposed rule, and potentially
calculating all the different payment
rates under the OPPS for 340B-acquired
drugs, as well as all other items and
services under the OPPS. (In essence,
we would need to provide hospitals
with sufficient notice of the impact of
the remedy on their rates to enable them
to comment meaningfully on the
proposed rule.) Our own best practices
for preparing notices of proposed
rulemaking dictate that we begin policy
development in the year before the
proposed rule is issued, and that we
begin the rule drafting process in the
first quarter of each year.
In the event of an unfavorable
decision on appeal, if 340B hospital
survey data are not used to devise a
remedy, as we stated in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we anticipate
proposing the specific remedy for CYs
2018 and 2019 in the CY 2021 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule in the event of an
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unfavorable decision on appeal. Those
potential proposals for CY 2021 would
be informed by the comments that CMS
solicited in the CY 2020 proposed rule.
Thus, for CY 2020, we proposed to
continue to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent
for 340B-acquired drugs, including
when furnished in nonexcepted offcampus PBDs paid under the PFS. We
proposed to continue the 340B policies
that were implemented in CY 2018 with
the exception of the way we are
calculating payment for 340B-acquired
biosimilars, which is discussed in
section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, as
well as the policy we finalized in CY
2019 to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for
340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39504), we also solicited
public comment on the appropriate
OPPS payment rate for 340B-acquired
drugs, including whether a rate of
ASP+3 percent could be an appropriate
remedial payment amount for these
drugs, both for CY 2020 and for
purposes of determining the remedy for
CYs 2018 and 2019. This amount would
result in payment rates that are well
above the actual costs hospitals incur in
purchasing 340B drugs, and we
proposed it solely because of the court
decision. However, to the extent the
courts are limiting the size of the
payment reduction the agency can
permissibly apply, the agency believes it
could be appropriate to apply a payment
reduction that is at the upper end of that
limit, to the extent it has been or could
be clearly defined, given the substantial
discounts that hospitals receive through
the 340B program. For example, absent
further guidance from the Court of
Appeals on what it believes is an
appropriate ‘‘adjustment’’ amount, CMS
could look to the district court’s
December 27, 2018 opinion, which cites
to payment reductions of 0.2 percent
and 2.9 percent as ‘‘not significant
enough’’ to fall outside of the
Secretary’s authority to ‘‘adjust’’ ASP.73
This payment rate would apply to 340Bacquired drugs and biologicals billed by
a hospital paid under the OPPS that are
not excepted from the payment
adjustment and to 340B-acquired drugs
and biologicals furnished in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid
under the PFS. We welcomed public
comments on payment rates other than
73 348 F. Supp. 3d 62, 81 (D.D.C. 2018) (citing to
payment reductions of 0.2 percent and 2.9 percent
that other decisions have recognized as being
within the agency’s adjustment authority for
Medicare rates under the inpatient prospective
payment system).
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ASP+3 percent that commenters believe
would be appropriate for purposes of
addressing CY 2020 payment as an
alternative to our proposal above, as
well as for potential future rulemaking
related to CY 2018 and 2019.
Comments on the Appropriate Payment
Rate for 340B-Acquired Drugs in CY
2020
Comment: Several commenters
supported the continuation of the 340B
Program policy of ASP minus 22.5
percent for CY 2020. One commenter
believed the 340B program’s recent
growth may be contributing to the
consolidation of community oncology
practices. This commenter and others
asserted that the growth of the 340B
program has resulted in a shift in the
site of service for chemotherapy
administration from the physician-office
setting to the more costly hospital
outpatient setting, since hospitals are
able to acquire drugs, including
oncologic drugs, at a significant
discount under the 340B program.
Another commenter believed that the
340B program is no longer serving its
intended purpose to help America’s
most vulnerable patients access the
drugs they need. They further asserted
that instead, 340B profits are being used
for hospitals to make larger profits.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We note that
comments related to the 340B program
itself are outside the scope of this rule,
however, we note that we adopted the
340B payment policy so that our
payment policy would be more in line
with the acquisition costs hospitals
incur, and thereby lower drug
expenditures for Medicare beneficiaries
and the Medicare Trust Fund.
Comment: Many commenters, the
majority of which represented hospitals
or hospital associations, opposed CMS’
proposal to continue to pay ASP minus
22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs in
CY 2020. Many of these commenters
believe the proposal undermines the
intent and goals of the 340B program
and will have negative impacts on
patients and 340B hospitals. One
commenter asserted that CMS should
pay hospitals participating in the 340B
program the statutory default payment
of ASP+6 percent. Another commenter
opposed the proposal on the belief that
it undermines the Public Health Service
Act (PHSA), which authorized the 340B
program and exceeds CMS’ statutory
authority. Furthermore, a hospital
organization commented that the
application of the reduced payment for
the 340B policy has resulted in negative
consequences for patients and providers
and does not save any money for
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Medicare because the policy is
implemented in a budget-neutral
manner.
Several commenters who opposed the
continuation of the 340B program
payment policy stated that the district
court’s ruling showed that the payment
reduction is illegal and exceeded the
Administration’s authority. These
commenters recommended CMS refrain
from ‘‘doing more damage’’ to impacted
hospitals by continuing the ASP minus
22.5 percent policy and return to the
payment rate of ASP+6 percent for CY
2020.
Response: As noted in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we continue to believe that ASP
minus 22.5 percent for drugs acquired
through the 340B Program represents
the average minimum discount that
340B enrolled hospitals receive and
better represents acquisition costs.
We disagree with commenters that the
340B payment policy has had a negative
impact on Medicare patients; we are not
aware of any access issues related to the
implementation of this policy. Further,
we note that under the current policy,
Medicare patients who receive 340B
drugs for which the Medicare program
paid ASP minus 22.5 percent have
much lower cost sharing than if these
beneficiaries received 340B drugs for
which the Medicare program paid
ASP+6 percent. As a result, we continue
to believe that ASP minus 22.5 percent
is a reasonable payment rate for these
drugs.
In regards to the commenters’ belief
that CMS lacks the legal authority to
continue paying a reduced amount for
drugs and biologicals obtained through
the 340B Program and that we should
pay the statutory default amount of
ASP+6 percent, we refer commenters to
our detailed response regarding our
statutory authority to require payment
reductions for drugs and biologicals
obtained through the 340B Program in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59359 through
59364), as well as our statements in the
proposed rule regarding our appeal of
the district court’s decision.
After considering these public
comments and the comments
summarized below, and in light of the
fact that we are awaiting a decision on
our appeal in the litigation, for CY 2020,
we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to pay ASP minus 22.5
percent for 340B-acquired drugs
including when furnished in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid
under the PFS. Our finalized proposal
continues the 340B policies that were
implemented in CY 2018 with the
exception of the way we are calculating
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payment for 340B-acquired biosimilars,
which is discussed in section V.B.2.c. of
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, and would continue
the policy we finalized in CY 2019 to
pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340Bacquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS.
As noted in the proposed rule (84 FR
39504), we are appealing the district
court’s decision and are awaiting a
decision from the Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit.
Because we hope to prevail on appeal
and have our 340B policy upheld, we
believe it is appropriate to finalize our
proposal of ASP minus 22.5 percent
rather than an alternative payment
amount of either ASP+3 percent or
ASP+6 percent, and to maintain the
other payment policies we adopted for
340B-acquired drugs in the CY 2018 and
2019 OPPS final rules with comment
period. In the event of an adverse
decision on appeal, we solicited public
comments on the appropriate remedy
for use in the CY 2021 rulemaking.
Those comments are summarized
below. We note that in the event 340B
hospital survey data are not used to
devise a remedy, we intend to consider
the following comments to develop an
appropriate remedy to propose in next
year’s rulemaking.
Comments on the CY 2020 Payment
Policy for 340B-Aquired Drugs to NonExcepted Off-Campus Provider Based
Departments (PBDs)
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with CMS’ assertion that 340B
hospitals will move drug administration
services for 340B-acquired drugs to nonexcepted off-campus PBDs if CMS does
not continue to pay for drugs furnished
in these settings at the adjusted amount,
and recommended CMS study hospital’s
drug administration behavior pre- and
post-implementation of the CY 2018
final rule to confirm this presumption
before finalizing the proposal to
continue paying ASP minus 22.5
percent for 340B drugs furnished by
non-excepted PBDs. Several
commenters asserted that CMS should
not continue with this policy for CY
2020 for non-excepted PBDs and stated
that continuing to do so would be
unlawful.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ input on the proposal to
continue to pay at ASP minus 22.5
percent under the PFS for 340B drugs
furnished in non-excepted off-campus
PBDs. As we stated in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment (83
FR 59017), because hospitals can, in
some cases, acquire drugs and
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biologicals under the 340B Program for
use in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs,
we believe that not adjusting payment
exclusively for these departments would
present a significant incongruity
between the payment amounts for these
drugs depending on where they are
furnished. This incongruity would
distort the relative accuracy of the
resource-based payment amounts under
the site-specific PFS rates and could
result in significant perverse incentives
for hospitals to acquire drugs and
biologicals under the 340B Program and
avoid Medicare payment adjustments
that account for the discount by
providing these drugs to patients
predominantly in nonexcepted offcampus PBDs. In light of the significant
payment differences between excepted
and nonexcepted off-campus PBDs, in
combination with the potential
eligibility for discounts, which result in
reduced costs under the 340B Program
for both kinds of departments, a
different payment policy for 340B drugs
in the two settings could undermine the
use of the OPPS payment structure in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. In order
to avoid such perverse incentives and
the potential resulting distortions in
drug payment, pursuant to our authority
at section 1833(t)(21)(c) of the Act we
adopted a policy to identify the PFS as
the ‘‘applicable payment system for
340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
and, accordingly, to pay under the PFS
instead of under section 1847A/1842(o)
of the Act an amount equal to ASP
minus 22.5 percent for drugs and
biologicals acquired under the 340B
Program that are furnished by
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. We
continue to believe this payment policy
is necessary to avoid the significant
incongruity between the payment
amounts that would exist for these
drugs depending upon whether they are
furnished by excepted off-campus PBDs
or nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. We
believe we have discretion under
section 1833(t)(21)(c) of the Act to
continue to adjust payments for
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs.
Comments on Use of ASP Plus 3 Percent
for CY 2020
Comment: Many commenters opposed
a payment amount of ASP+3 percent as
a potential remedial payment for 340Bacquired drugs furnished in CY 2018
and CY 2019 as well as for CY 2020
payments. These commenters believe
CMS did not provide a rationale to
support the proposed ASP+3 percent
adjustment and stated that CMS does
not have statutory authority to pay one
group of hospitals at ASP+3 percent and
all other hospitals at ASP+6 percent.
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Some commenters stated that section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) requires CMS to
pay hospitals for covered outpatient
drugs at ASP+6 percent and that CMS
does not have the legal authority to
change that payment amount to ASP+3
percent. Furthermore, some commenters
stated that although CMS has some
authority to make adjustments, the
agency’s stated rationale of imposing a
payment reduction at the upper end of
the court’s ‘‘limit [on] the size of the
payment reduction the agency can
permissibly apply . . . given the
substantial discounts that hospitals
receive under the 340B program’’ would
be inconsistent with the law itself and
therefore, reducing payment for 340Bacquired drugs to ASP+3 percent would
be unlawful.
However, a few commenters
supported the proposal to pay ASP+3
percent for 340B-acquired drugs in CY
2020, rather than to continue to pay
ASP minus 22.5 percent. One
commenter supported the approach of
paying ASP+3 percent for 340Bacquired drugs if CMS receives an
adverse decision on appeal.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support of CMS’ suggestion to pay at
ASP+3 percent if we are unsuccessful in
the Appeals Court. As explained above,
we are finalizing our proposal to
continue to pay for 340B-acquired drugs
at ASP minus 22.5 percent. In the event
of an adverse decision on appeal, we
will take these comments into
consideration in crafting an appropriate
remedy.
Comment: One commenter believed a
rate closer to ASP+6 percent, such as
ASP+3 percent, would mitigate
remediation efforts should the Agency
not ultimately prevail on appeal and
have to return the difference in
payments between ASP minus 22.5
percent and ASP+6 percent based on a
negative court decision.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its feedback. As explained above, we
are finalizing our proposal to continue
to pay for 340B-acquired drugs at ASP
minus 22.5 percent. In the event of an
adverse decision on appeal, we will take
these comments into consideration in
crafting an appropriate remedy.
Comments on Use of Hospital
Acquisition Costs
Comment: Several commenters,
including a large medical association,
suggested that CMS gather hospitals’
acquisition costs for drugs. One
commenter stated that ‘‘since CMS has
the authority to base reimbursement
rates on the hospitals’ acquisition cost
(340B price) if the Agency considers
hospital acquisition cost survey data, we
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urge CMS to collect such data.’’ Another
commenter urged CMS to gather
additional data to better understand
340B acquisition costs and the impact of
payment reductions on 340B providers
prior to making payment changes that
the commenter believes jeopardizes
access and 340B program participation.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestion and note that
we announced in the Federal Register
(84 FR 51590) our intent to conduct a
340B hospital survey to collect drug
acquisition cost data for CY 2018 and
2019. We have no evidence that the
current 340B policy has limited patient
access to 340B drugs or program
participation. For the reasons explained
above, we believe it is appropriate to
continue our 340B payment policies for
CY 2020.
Thus, for CY 2020, we are finalizing
our proposal, without modification, to
pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340Bacquired drugs including when
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS. Our finalized
proposal continues the 340B Program
policies that were implemented in CY
2018 with the exception of the way we
are calculating payment for 340Bacquired biosimilars, which is discussed
in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
and continues the policy we finalized in
CY 2019 to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent
for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs paid under the PFS.
Comments on a Potential Remedy for
CYs 2018 and 2019
In addition to comments on the
appropriate payment amount for
calculating the remedy for CYs 2018 and
2019 and for use for CY 2020, we sought
public comment on how to structure the
remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019. This
request for public comment included
whether such a remedy should be
retrospective in nature (for example,
made on a claim-by-claim basis),
whether such a remedy could be
prospective in nature (for example, an
upward adjustment to 340B claims in
the future to account for any
underpayments in the past), and
whether there is some other mechanism
that could produce a result equitable to
hospitals that do not acquire drugs
through the 340B program while
respecting the budget neutrality
mandate.
We stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that one potential remedy
for alleged underpayments in 2018 and
2019 would involve making additional
payments to the parties who have
demonstrated harm from the alleged
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61325
underpayments (which could be defined
as hospitals that submitted a claim for
drug payment with the ‘‘JG’’ modifier in
CYs 2018 and 2019) outside the normal
claims process. Under this approach, we
would calculate the amount that such
hospitals should have been paid and
would utilize our Medicare contractors
to make one payment to each affected
hospital. This approach—one additional
payment made to each affected hospital
by our contractors—is a different
approach than reprocessing each and
every claim submitted by plaintiff
hospitals for 2018 and 2019. Then,
depending on when a final decision is
rendered, the Secretary would propose
to budget-neutralize those additional
expenditures for each of CYs 2018 and
2019. For example, if the Court of
Appeals were to render a decision in
February of 2020, we might propose
those additional payments and an
appropriate budget neutrality
adjustment for each of CYs 2018, 2019,
and, if necessary, 2020, in time for the
CY 2021 rule. We noted that we would
need to receive a final decision from the
Court of Appeals sufficiently early in
CY 2020 (likely no later than March 1,
2020) to make it potentially possible for
us to propose and finalize an
appropriate remedy and budget
neutrality adjustments in the CY 2021
rulemaking. We solicited public
comment on this approach as well as
other suggested approaches from
commenters.
In considering these potential future
proposals, we noted that we would rely
on our statutory authority under section
1833(t)(14) for determining the OPPS
payment rates for drugs and biologicals
as well as section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the
Act to review certain components of the
OPPS not less often than annually and
to revise the groups, relative payment
weights, and other adjustments. In
addition, we noted that under section
1833(t)(14)(H) of the Act, any
adjustments made by the Secretary to
payment rates using the statutory
formula outlined in section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act are
required to be taken into account under
the budget neutrality requirements
outlined in section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the
Act. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39505), we
solicited public comments on the best,
most appropriate way to maintain
budget neutrality, either under a
retrospective claim-by-claim approach,
with a prospective approach, or any
other proposed remedy. We also
solicited comments on whether,
depending on the amount of those
additional expenditures, we should
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consider spreading out the relevant
budget neutrality adjustment across
multiple years. We appreciated all the
public comments that we received on
the advantages and disadvantages of
such an approach.
We also sought public comments on
the best, most appropriate treatment of
Medicare beneficiary cost-sharing
responsibilities under any proposed
remedy. We stated that the statutory
budget neutrality requirement and
beneficiary cost-sharing are extremely
difficult to balance, and we sought
stakeholder comments as we continue to
review the viability of alternative
remedies in the event of an adverse
decision from the Court of Appeals.
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59369 through 59370) and
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58976 through
58977 and 59015 through 59022) for
more detail on the policies implemented
in CY 2018 and CY 2019 for drugs
acquired through the 340B Program.
We also note that since the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule was
published, we announced in the Federal
Register (84 FR 51590) our intent to
conduct a 340B hospital survey to
collect drug acquisition cost data for CY
2018 and 2019. As noted above, we may
use this survey data to devise a remedy
for prior years if the district court’s
ruling is upheld on appeal. A remedy
that relies on such survey data could
avoid the remedial complexities
discussed below and in the proposed
rule. If, however, 340B hospital survey
data are not used to devise a remedy, we
intend to consider the comments
summarized below to inform a remedy
we would propose in the CY 2021
OPPS/ASC proposed rule in the event of
an adverse decision upon appeal.
Comments on Potential Remedy
Structure
Comment: On the issue of a remedy
structure, many commenters supported
a retrospective remedy on a claim-byclaim basis over a prospective
adjustment of prior 340B claims. Several
commenters believe it is CMS’
responsibility to remedy the policy by
requiring as little effort as possible on
the part of affected hospitals, thus
avoiding any additional injuries to the
parties. Many commenters believe that
CMS should repay the difference
between ASP+6 percent and ASP minus
22.5 percent plus interest for all claims
for 340B-acquired drugs for CYs 2018
and 2019. They asserted that CMS can
calculate the amount owed to the
affected 340B hospitals by using the JG
modifier that identifies the claims for
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340B drugs. One commenter suggested
identifying the total amount paid to a
hospital for drugs with the status
indicator ‘‘K’’ and multiplying by
1.3677 (that is ASP+6 percent/ASP
minus 22.5 percent = 1.06/0.775).
Another commenter stated that the
percentage of claims that each hospital
was underpaid is the same in each case
and that we can calculate the total
payment for each hospital and multiply
that number by a factor, in order to
determine how much each hospital
should have been paid. Some
commenters supported a lump-sum
payment. One commenter supported
either a lump-sum payment or a
prospective payment segmented out
over multiple years. One commenter
compared this case to those remedies
that the courts and agency have adopted
to handle past cases. This commenter
believed the affected parties should
receive a supplemental payment for
those affected claims in an amount
equal to the difference between ASP
minus 22.5 percent and ASP+6 percent.
Another commenter believed that the
remedy should be decided by a federal
judge.
Additionally, some commenters
supported a prospective remedy,
pointing out that a retrospective process
would be too complex and
administratively burdensome. Several
commenters supported an aggregate
payment for each affected 340B entity
outside the normal claims process rather
than a retrospective adjustment. One
commenter suggested applying an
increase factor of 26.89 percent that
would pay the affected entities at an
amount that would approximate ASP+6
percent. Another commenter supported
an upward adjustment to future claims,
which they believed would reduce
administrative burden.
Another commenter believed that
CMS should publish a proposed
methodology for conducting the lookback and issuing the payment. Further,
they believed that providers should
have opportunity for public comment,
and that CMS should revise and issue a
final methodology in CY 2020 outside of
the normal OPPS rulemaking cycle,
with the applicable data set and
calculation instructions posted on the
CMS web page. Other commenters
believed the remedy does not
necessitate rulemaking.
One commenter offered three remedy
suggestions. Two suggestions involved
staggered methods of payment. Under
the first suggested remedy, this
commenter believed that CMS could
pay for 340B drugs at the following
amounts over three years, which the
commenter believed would make
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affected providers whole: Beginning
January 1, 2021, CMS would pay
ASP+14.25 percent plus an additional 2
percent; beginning January 1, 2022
would pay ASP+14.25 percent plus an
additional 1 percent; and finally,
beginning January 1, 2023, CMS would
pay ASP+6 percent going forward.
The same commenter suggested a
second approach under which CMS
would pay affected hospitals set
amounts plus interest as follows:
The first payment would be for claims
submitted between January 1, 2018 and
June 30, 2018 and would be paid out by
July 1, 2020. The second payment
would be for claims submitted between
July 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018 and
would be paid out January 1, 2021. The
third payment would be for claims
submitted between January 1, 2019 and
June 30, 2019 and would be paid out
July 1, 2021. The final payment would
be for claims submitted between July 1,
2019 and December, 31, 2019 and
would be paid out January 1, 2022.
Alternatively, the same commenter
suggested a third method of making
remedy payments under which CMS
could recalculate the payments for all
claims paid for CYs 2018 and 2019 and
pay affected 340B hospitals the
difference (between ASP+6 and ASP
minus 22.5 percent) in one lump-sum
payment plus interest by January 1,
2021. The commenter suggested that
CMS would provide affected 340B
hospitals notice on or before July 1,
2021 of the calculated payment amount
owed to the hospital. The commenter
suggested that the repayment amounts
should be placed in a 340B-specified
account to be redistributed to eligible
hospitals and distributed in equal
payments over a two-year period
beginning January 2021 for covered
entities that demonstrate ‘‘responsible
program integrity’’ as determined in
collaboration with HRSA. The
commenters suggested that funds not
able to be distributed will be used to
provide funding to CMS and HRSA to
collaborate with industry stakeholders
to identify and implement solutions for
duplicate discount prevention.
Comments on Budget Neutrality
On the issue of budget neutrality,
many commenters asserted that budget
neutrality is not necessary given prior
court precedents involving
underpayments: Cape Cod Hospital v.
Sebelius (DC Cir. 2011), H. Lee Moffitt
Cancer Center & Research Institute, Inc.
vs. Azar, (D.D.C. 2018), Shands
Jacksonville Medical Center v. Burwell,
(D.D.C. 2015). Other commenters
asserted that neither (t)(9)(B) nor any
other provision of the OPPS statue
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authorizes the agency to revisit budget
neutrality if its estimates of money
owed for a prior year turn out to be
incorrect. They view the statute as
directing CMS to make estimates for the
purposes of setting prospective payment
rates only, and not authorizing the
agency to recalibrate those estimates
after the fact if its predictions turn out
to be incorrect. These commenters
believe that the Congress drafted the
OPPS statute to prohibit the agency
from revisiting its budget-neutrality
determinations after it first makes them
on a prospective basis for a given year.
They further asserted that CMS should
exercise discretion in using its budget
neutrality authority in seeking payments
back from providers.
Some commenters supported a
prospective payment rate reduction on
OPPS non-drug items and services to
maintain budget neutrality from any
remedy. Other commenters supported a
gradual rate reduction of the payment
amounts for OPPS non-drug items and
services ranging from a minimum of two
to six years to lessen the impact of rate
reduction to the affected entities.
Several commenters supported a modest
reduction in future OPPS payment by
reducing the conversion factor.
Comments on Beneficiary Coinsurance
Additionally, many commenters
asserted that there is no law that
requires hospitals to adjust
beneficiaries’ coinsurance for 340Bacquired drugs. They stated that neither
the False Claims nor the anti-kickback
statutes would apply because
beneficiaries did not receive any
inducements to seek services. These
commenters believe that beneficiaries
already fully paid for the hospital care
months or years ago and should not
have to pay any additional payments.
They requested that CMS clearly state in
this final rule that there is no
requirement for any beneficiary copay
adjustments. One commenter offered
estimates on what they believe are the
percentage of patients who are impacted
by any adjustment on the patient’s
copay citing 29 percent with Medigap,
22 percent enrolled in Medicaid (dually
eligible), and 19 percent without a
supplemental plan, with the remaining
30 percent enrolled in a Medicare
Advantage plan. Thus, this commenter
believed that only 19 percent of patients
would be impacted directly by costsharing implications and CMS would
need to calculate payment owed to
Medicare for these beneficiaries.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments on the appropriate
remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019. As
noted above, we may use the survey
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data for 2018 and 2019 that we plan to
collect from 340B hospitals to devise a
remedy for prior years if the district
court’s ruling is upheld on appeal. A
remedy that relies on such survey data
could avoid the remedial complexities
discussed above and in the proposed
rule. If, however, 340B hospital survey
data are not used to devise a remedy in
the event of an adverse decision from
the Court of Appeals, we intend to
consider all of these suggestions in
determining the appropriate remedy to
propose in the CY 2021 OPPS
rulemaking. To the extent commenters
made legal arguments relating to the
False Claims Act or anti-kickback
statutes, CMS offers no opinion.
7. High Cost/Low Cost Threshold for
Packaged Skin Substitutes
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 74938), we
unconditionally packaged skin
substitute products into their associated
surgical procedures as part of a broader
policy to package all drugs and
biologicals that function as supplies
when used in a surgical procedure. As
part of the policy to finalize the
packaging of skin substitutes, we also
finalized a methodology that divides the
skin substitutes into a high cost group
and a low cost group, in order to ensure
adequate resource homogeneity among
APC assignments for the skin substitute
application procedures (78 FR 74933).
Skin substitutes assigned to the high
cost group are described by HCPCS
codes 15271 through 15278. Skin
substitutes assigned to the low cost
group are described by HCPCS codes
C5271 through C5278. Geometric mean
costs for the various procedures are
calculated using only claims for the skin
substitutes that are assigned to each
group. Specifically, claims billed with
HCPCS code 15271, 15273, 15275, or
15277 are used to calculate the
geometric mean costs for procedures
assigned to the high cost group, and
claims billed with HCPCS code C5271,
C5273, C5275, or C5277 are used to
calculate the geometric mean costs for
procedures assigned to the low cost
group (78 FR 74935).
Each of the HCPCS codes described
above are assigned to one of the
following three skin procedure APCs
according to the geometric mean cost for
the code: APC 5053 (Level 3 Skin
Procedures): HCPCS codes C5271,
C5275, and C5277); APC 5054 (Level 4
Skin Procedures): HCPCS codes C5273,
15271, 15275, and 15277); or APC 5055
(Level 5 Skin Procedures): HCPCS code
15273). In CY 2019, the payment rate for
APC 5053 (Level 3 Skin Procedures) was
$482.89, the payment rate for APC 5054
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(Level 4 Skin Procedures) was
$1,548.96, and the payment rate for APC
5055 (Level 5 Skin Procedures) was
$2,766.13. This information also is
available in Addenda A and B of the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
We have continued the high cost/low
cost categories policy since CY 2014,
and we proposed to continue it for CY
2020. Under this current policy, skin
substitutes in the high cost category are
reported with the skin substitute
application CPT codes, and skin
substitutes in the low cost category are
reported with the analogous skin
substitute HCPCS C-codes. For a
discussion of the CY 2014 and CY 2015
methodologies for assigning skin
substitutes to either the high cost group
or the low cost group, we refer readers
to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 74932
through 74935) and the CY 2015 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (79
FR 66882 through 66885).
For a discussion of the high cost/low
cost methodology that was adopted in
CY 2016 and has been in effect since
then, we refer readers to the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70434 through 70435).
For CY 2020, consistent with our policy
since CY 2016, we proposed to continue
to determine the high cost/low cost
status for each skin substitute product
based on either a product’s geometric
mean unit cost (MUC) exceeding the
geometric MUC threshold or the
product’s per day cost (PDC) (the total
units of a skin substitute multiplied by
the mean unit cost and divided by the
total number of days) exceeding the PDC
threshold. For CY 2020, as we did for
CY 2019, we proposed to assign each
skin substitute that exceeds either the
MUC threshold or the PDC threshold to
the high cost group. In addition, as
described in more detail later in this
section, for CY 2020, as we did for CY
2019, we proposed to assign any skin
substitute with a MUC or a PDC that
does not exceed either the MUC
threshold or the PDC threshold to the
low cost group. For CY 2020, we
proposed that any skin substitute
product that was assigned to the high
cost group in CY 2019 would be
assigned to the high cost group for CY
2020, regardless of whether it exceeds or
falls below the CY 2020 MUC or PDC
threshold. This policy was established
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59346
through 59348).
For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final
rule, consistent with the methodology as
established in the CY 2014 through CY
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2018 final rules with comment period,
we analyzed CY 2018 claims data to
calculate the MUC threshold (a
weighted average of all skin substitutes’
MUCs) and the PDC threshold (a
weighted average of all skin substitutes’
PDCs). The final CY 2020 MUC
threshold is $48 per cm 2 (rounded to
the nearest $1) (proposed at $49 per
cm 2) and the final CY 2020 PDC
threshold is $790 (rounded to the
nearest $1) (proposed at $789).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign skin substitutes with passthrough payment status to the high cost
category. We proposed to assign skin
substitutes with pricing information but
without claims data to calculate a
geometric MUC or PDC to either the
high cost or low cost category based on
the product’s ASP+6 percent payment
rate as compared to the MUC threshold.
If ASP is not available, we proposed to
use WAC+3 percent to assign a product
to either the high cost or low cost
category. Finally, if neither ASP nor
WAC is available, we would use 95
percent of AWP to assign a skin
substitute to either the high cost or low
cost category. We proposed to continue
to use WAC+3 percent instead of
WAC+6 percent to conform to our
proposed policy described in section
V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule to establish
a payment rate of WAC+3 percent for
separately payable drugs and biologicals
that do not have ASP data available.
New skin substitutes without pricing
information would be assigned to the
low cost category until pricing
information is available to compare to
the CY 2020 MUC threshold. For a
discussion of our existing policy under
which we assign skin substitutes
without pricing information to the low
cost category until pricing information
is available, we refer readers to the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70436).
Some skin substitute manufacturers
have raised concerns about significant
fluctuation in both the MUC threshold
and the PDC threshold from year to
year. The fluctuation in the thresholds
may result in the reassignment of
several skin substitutes from the high
cost group to the low cost group which,
under current payment rates, can be a
difference of approximately $1,000 in
the payment amount for the same
procedure. In addition, these
stakeholders were concerned that the
inclusion of cost data from skin
substitutes with pass-through payment
status in the MUC and PDC calculations
would artificially inflate the thresholds.
Skin substitute stakeholders requested
that CMS consider alternatives to the
current methodology used to calculate
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the MUC and PDC thresholds and also
requested that CMS consider whether it
might be appropriate to establish a new
cost group in between the low cost
group and the high cost group to allow
for assignment of moderately priced
skin substitutes to a newly created
middle group.
We share the goal of promoting
payment stability for skin substitute
products and their related procedures as
price stability allows hospitals using
such products to more easily anticipate
future payments associated with these
products. We have attempted to limit
year-to-year shifts for skin substitute
products between the high cost and low
cost groups through multiple initiatives
implemented since CY 2014, including:
Establishing separate skin substitute
application procedure codes for lowcost skin substitutes (78 FR 74935);
using a skin substitute’s MUC calculated
from outpatient hospital claims data
instead of an average of ASP+6 percent
as the primary methodology to assign
products to the high cost or low cost
group (79 FR 66883); and establishing
the PDC threshold as an alternate
methodology to assign a skin substitute
to the high cost group (80 FR 70434
through 70435).
To allow additional time to evaluate
concerns and suggestions from
stakeholders about the volatility of the
MUC and PDC thresholds, in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR
33627), we proposed that a skin
substitute that was assigned to the high
cost group for CY 2017 would be
assigned to the high cost group for CY
2018, even if it does not exceed the CY
2018 MUC or PDC thresholds. We
finalized this policy in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59347). We stated in the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that
the goal of our proposal to retain the
same skin substitute cost group
assignments in CY 2018 as in CY 2017
was to maintain similar levels of
payment for skin substitute products for
CY 2018 while we study our skin
substitute payment methodology to
determine whether refinement to the
existing policies are consistent with our
policy goal of providing payment
stability for skin substitutes.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59347) that we would continue to study
issues related to the payment of skin
substitutes and take these comments
into consideration for future
rulemaking. We received many
responses to our request for comments
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule about possible refinements to the
existing payment methodology for skin
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substitutes that would be consistent
with our policy goal of providing
payment stability for these products. In
addition, several stakeholders have
made us aware of additional concerns
and recommendations since the release
of the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period. As discussed in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58967 through
58968), we identified four potential
methodologies that have been raised to
us that we encouraged the public to
review and provide comments on. We
stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period that we were
especially interested in any specific
feedback on policy concerns with any of
the options presented as they relate to
skin substitutes with differing per day
or per episode costs and sizes and other
factors that may differ among the dozens
of skin substitutes currently on the
market. We also specified in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period that we were interested
in any new ideas that are not
represented below along with an
analysis of how different skin substitute
products would fare under such ideas.
Finally, we stated that we intend to
explore the full array of public
comments on these ideas for the CY
2020 rulemaking, and we indicated that
we will consider the feedback received
in response to our requests for
comments in developing proposals for
CY 2020.
a. Discussion of CY 2019 Comment
Solicitation for Episode-Based Payment
and Solicitation of Additional
Comments for CY 2020
The methodology that commenters
discussed most in response to our
comment solicitation in CY 2019 and
that stakeholders raised in subsequent
meetings we have had with the wound
care community has been a lump-sum
‘‘episode-based’’ payment for a wound
care episode. Commenters that
supported an episode-based payment
believe that it would allow health care
professionals to choose the best skin
substitute to treat a patient’s wound and
would give providers flexibility with the
treatments they administer. These
commenters also believe an episodebased payment helps to reduce
incentives for providers to use excessive
applications of skin substitute products
or use higher cost products to generate
more payment for the services they
furnish. In addition, they believe that
episode-based payment could help with
innovations with skin substitutes by
encouraging the development of
products that require fewer
applications. These commenters noted
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that episode-based payment would
make wound care payment more
predictable for hospitals and provide
incentives to manage the cost of care
that they furnish. Finally, commenters
for an episode-based payment believe
that workable quality metrics can be
developed to monitor the quality of care
administered under the payment
methodology and limit excessive
applications of skin substitutes.
However, many commenters opposed
establishing an episode-based payment.
One of the main concerns of
commenters who opposed episodebased payment was that wound care is
too complex and variable to be covered
through such a payment methodology.
These commenters stated that every
patient and every wound is different;
therefore, it would be very challenging
to establish a standard episode length
for coverage. They noted that it would
be too difficult to risk-stratify and
specialty-adjust an episode-based
payment, given the diversity of patients
receiving wound care and their
providers who administer treatment, as
well as the variety of pathologies
covered in treatment. Also, these
commenters questioned how episodes
would be defined for patients when they
are having multiple wounds treated at
one time or have another wound
develop while the original wound was
receiving treatment. These commenters
expressed concerns that episode-based
payment would be burdensome both
operationally and administratively for
providers. They believe that CMS will
need to create a large number of new
APCs and HCPCS codes to account for
all of the patient situations that would
be covered with an episode-based
payment, which would increase
burdens on providers. Finally, these
commenters had concerns about the
impacts of episode-based payment on
the usage of higher cost skin substitute
products. They believe that a single
payment could discourage the use of
higher-cost products because of the
large variability in the cost of skin
substitute products, which could limit
innovations for skin substitute products.
The wide array of views on episodebased payment for skin substitute
products and the unforeseen issues that
may arise from the implementation of
such a policy make us reluctant to
present a proposal for this CY 2020
proposed rule without more review of
the issues involved with episode-based
payment. Therefore, we sought further
comments from stakeholders and other
interested parties regarding skin
substitute payment policies that could
be applied in future years to address
concerns about excessive utilization and
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spending on skin substitute products,
while avoiding administrative issues
such as establishing additional HCPCS
codes to describe different treatment
situations. One possible policy
construct that we sought comments on
was whether to establish a payment
period for skin substitute application
services (CPT codes 15271 through
15278 and HCPCS codes C5271 through
C5278) between 4 weeks and 12 weeks.
Under this option, we could also assign
CPT codes 15271, 15273, 15275, and
15277, and HCPCS codes C5271, C5273,
C5275, and C5277 to comprehensive
APCs with the option for a complexity
adjustment that would allow for an
increase in the standard APC payment
for more resource-intensive cases. Our
research has found that most wound
care episodes require one to three skin
substitute applications. Those cases
would likely receive the standard APC
payment for the comprehensive
procedure. Then the complexity
adjustment could be applied for the
relatively small number of cases that
require more intensive treatments.
Comment: Several commenters were
in favor of establishing a comprehensive
APC with either an option for a
complexity adjustment or outlier
payments to pay for higher cost skin
substitute application procedures. The
commenters supported the idea of
having a traditional comprehensive APC
payment for standard wound care cases
with a complexity adjustment or outlier
payment to handle complicated or
costly cases. However, they also
expressed concerns about how many
payment levels would be available in
the skin substitute procedures APC
group since a complexity adjustment
can only be used if there is an existing
higher-paying APC to which the service
receiving the complexity adjustment
may be assigned. A couple of
commenters wanted more opportunities
for services to receive a complexity
adjustment through using clusters of
procedure codes that reflect the full
range of wound care services a
beneficiary receives instead of using
code pairs to determine if a complexity
adjustment should apply. A few
commenters suggested that episodic
payments be risk-adjusted to account for
clinical conditions and co-morbidities
of beneficiaries with outlier payments
and that complexity adjustments be
linked to beneficiaries with more comorbidities.
Some commenters opposed the idea
of a complexity adjustment for skin
substitute application procedures. The
commenters believe there was not
enough detail in the comment
solicitation to understand how a
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61329
complexity adjustment would work
with an episodic payment arrangement.
Commenters also expressed concerns
that payment rates for comprehensive
APCs may not be representative of the
wound care services that would be paid
within those APCs. One commenter
stated that payment policy is not the
right way to resolve issues with the
over-utilization and inappropriate use of
skin substitutes because they are
concerned that major changes in
payment methodology, such as episodic
payment, could lead to serious issues
with the care beneficiaries receive.
Regarding the topic of episodic
payment, commenters brought up some
of the same issues they had mentioned
in response to last year’s comment
solicitation. Supporters of episodic
payments believe the policy idea would
give providers more flexibility with the
treatments they administer to their
patients, and will help encourage
innovation by encouraging the
development of graft skin substitute
products that require fewer
applications.
Some commenters supported
developing an episodic payment model
first in the CMS Innovation Center
before adopting episodic payment in the
OPPS. One commenter wrote about the
need for quality measures as a part of
episodic payment to ensure providers
render appropriate care during a
treatment episode. However, another
commenter wanted to ensure that
quality measures would not prevent
providers from using a medically
necessary product. Commenters also
discussed episode length with a couple
of commenters supporting a 12-week
payment episode as mentioned in the
comment solicitation, and another
commenter suggesting that an episode
be based not only on the length of time
but the number of allowed skin
substitute applications during that time
period. Commenters also favored
establishing a separate payment episode
for each wound receiving treatment.
Commenters who oppose episodic
payment expressed similar concerns as
they did in response to last year’s
comment solicitation. Many
commenters believe that wound care is
too complex and variable to be covered
through episodic payment even with an
option for a complexity adjustment. For
example, one commenter noted that the
care regimen for diabetic foot ulcers is
very different than the care regimen for
pressure wounds. A few commenters
expressed concerns about the
complexities associated with episodic
payment, claiming that CMS will have
to established several new HCPCS codes
and clinical APCs to be able to have
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payment rates for all of the care
scenarios covered by episodic payment.
Commenters also believe it would take
several years to implement an episodebased payment system and such system
would be operationally and
administratively burdensome for
providers. Other commenters were
concerned about financial incentives
created by episodic payment that may
discourage providers from rendering the
best quality of care and encourage
providers to use skin substitute
products that may not be the most
clinically appropriate for their patients.
Finally, commenters had concerns about
establishing the length of a payment
episode, stating there was no clear
evidence on what the appropriate
episode length should be. These
commenters believe it also would be
difficult to establish separate payment
episodes when a patient was being
treated for multiple wounds at the same
time.
Commenters also discussed which
services should be included with an
episodic payment. Commenters were
divided over whether an episode should
be limited to application of skin
substitute products or encompass other
related wound care treatments including
hyperbaric oxygen and negativepressure treatment. Some commenters
were concerned that episodic payment
may discourage the treatment of large or
complicated wounds. There also was
one commenter who wanted episodic
payment to cover tissue repair products
used in surgical procedures.
Response: We appreciate all of the
feedback we received from commenters,
and we will use the feedback as we
consider potential refinements to how
we pay for skin substitute products and
procedures under the OPPS.
b. Potential Revisions to the OPPS
Payment Policy for Skin Substitutes:
Comment Solicitation for CY 2020
In addition to possible future
rulemaking based on the responses to
the comment solicitations in the
preceding section, we noted that we
were considering adopting for CY 2020
another payment methodology that
generated significant public comments
in response to the CY 2019 comment
solicitation. That option would be to
eliminate the high cost and low cost
categories for skin substitutes and have
only one payment category and set of
procedure codes for the application of
all graft skin substitute products. Under
this option, the only available procedure
codes to bill for skin substitute graft
procedures would be CPT codes 15271
through 15278. HCPCS codes C5271
through C5278 would be eliminated.
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Providers would bill CPT codes 15271
through 15278 without having to
consider either the MUC or PDC of the
graft skin substitute product used in the
procedure. There would be only one
APC for the graft skin substitute
application procedures described by
CPT codes 15271 (Skin sub graft trnk/
arm/leg), 15273 (Skin sub grft t/arm/lg
child), 15275 (Skin sub graft face/nk/hf/
g), and 15277 (Skn sub grft f/n/hf/g
child). The payment rate would be the
geometric mean of all graft skin
substitutes procedures for a given CPT
code that are covered through the OPPS.
For example, under the current skin
substitute payment policy, there are two
procedure codes (CPT code 15271 and
HCPCS code C5271) that are reported
for the procedure described as
‘‘application of skin substitute graft to
trunk, arms, legs, total wound surface
area up to 100 sq cm; first 25 sq cm or
less wound surface area’’. The geometric
mean cost for CPT code 15271 was
$1,572.17 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule and the geometric mean
cost for HCPCS code C5271 was $728.28
in the proposed rule. We stated in the
proposed rule that if this policy option
was implemented, only CPT code 15271
would be available in the OPPS, and the
geometric mean cost using data from the
CY 2020 proposed rule for the
procedure code would be $1,465.18.
Commenters that supported this
option believe it would remove the
incentives for manufacturers to develop
and providers to use high cost skin
substitute products and would lead to
the use of lower-cost, quality products.
Commenters noted that lower Medicare
payments for graft skin substitute
procedures would lead to lower
copayments for beneficiaries. In
addition, commenters believe a single
payment category would reduce
incentives to apply skin substitute
products in excessive amounts.
Commenters also believe a single
payment category is clinically justified
because they stated that many studies
have shown that no one skin substitute
product is superior to another. Finally,
supporters of a single payment category
believe it would simplify coding for
providers and reduce administrative
burden.
There were also commenters that
raised concerns that a single payment
category would not offer providers
incentives to furnish high quality care
and would reduce the use of higher-cost
skin substitute products (which they
seemed to imply are of higher quality
than lower cost products). They argued
that eliminating the high cost and low
cost payment categories also does not
maintain homogeneity among APC
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assignments for services using skin
substitutes according to opponents of
the single payment category.
Commenters stated that instead of
having categories grouped by the
relative cost of products, there would be
only one category to cover the payment
of products with a mean unit cost
ranging from less than $1 to over $750.
Commenters believe a single payment
category would favor inexpensive
products, which could limit innovation,
and could eliminate all but the most
inexpensive products from the market.
Finally, opponents of a single payment
category believe a single payment
category would discourage the treatment
of wounds that are difficult and costly
to treat.
The responses to the comment
solicitation show the potential of a
single payment category to reduce the
cost of wound care services for graft
skin substitute procedures for both
beneficiaries and Medicare in general.
In addition, a single payment category
may help to lower administrative
burden for providers. Conversely, we
are cognizant of other commenters’
concerns that a single payment category
may hinder innovation of new graft skin
substitute products and cause some
products that are currently well-utilized
to leave the market. Nonetheless, we are
persuaded that a single payment
category could potentially provide a
more equitable payment for many
products used with graft skin substitute
procedures, while recognizing that
procedures performed with expensive
skin substitute products would likely
receive substantially lower payment.
We believe a more equitable payment
rate for graft skin substitute procedures
could substantially reduce the amount
Medicare pays for these procedures. We
welcomed suggestions or other
information regarding the possibility of
utilizing a single payment category to
pay for skin substitute products under
the OPPS, and, depending on the
information we received in response to
this request, we noted we may consider
modifying our skin substitute payment
policy in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period.
We believe some of the concerns
commenters who oppose a single
payment category for skin substitute
products raised might be mitigated if
stakeholders have a period of time to
adjust to the changes inherent in
establishing a single payment category.
Accordingly, we solicited public
comments that provide additional
information about how commenters
believe we should transition from the
current low cost/high cost payment
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methodology to a single payment
category.
Such suggestions to facilitate the
payment transition from a low cost/high
cost payment methodology to a single
payment category methodology could
include, but are not limited to—
• Delaying implementation of a single
category payment for 1 or 2 years after
the payment methodology is adopted;
and
• Gradually lowering the MUC and
PDC thresholds over 2 or more years to
add more graft skin substitute
procedures into the current high cost
group until all graft skin substitute
procedures are assigned to the high cost
group and it becomes a single payment
category.
We sought commenters’ feedback on
these ideas, or other approaches, to
mitigate challenges that could impact
providers, manufacturers, and other
stakeholders if we establish a single
payment category, which we indicated
we might include as part of a final skin
substitute payment policy that we
would adopt in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for a single payment
category for the application of skin
substitute products. These commenters
supported the payment methodology
because they believe it would remove
incentives for manufacturers to develop
and providers to use high-cost products.
These commenters maintained that a
single payment category would
encourage product innovations that
maintain the quality of care for
beneficiaries while bringing down the
cost of skin substitute products, which
will help to reduce the co-payments
beneficiaries pay for skin substitute
application services. Commenters
supported more payment homogeneity
because they believe most skin
substitute products perform in a similar
manner and no product or group of
products is clinically superior over
other skin substitute products. One
commenter noted that the device passthrough payment pathway continues to
be available for manufacturers to receive
additional payment if a superior skin
substitute product is developed.
Several commenters in favor of a
single payment category believe it
would simplify coding for providers and
reduce administrative burden. They also
believe a single payment category
provides adequate payment for
providers based on the case mix of
smaller, easier to treat wounds and
larger, more complex wounds. Also, a
single payment category would promote
cost stability by eliminating the large
payment fluctuation for skin substitutes
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who are close to the cost-group
thresholds in the current high-cost/lowcost payment methodology for skin
substitutes.
The vast majority of commenters were
opposed to a single payment category
for skin substitute products.
Commenters stated that the large
difference in resource costs between
higher cost and lower cost skin
substitute products would mean only
the most inexpensive products would be
used to provide care, which would hurt
both product innovation and the quality
of care beneficiaries receive.
Commenters were concerned that a
single payment category would
encourage providers to choose financial
benefit over clinical efficacy when
determining which skin substitute
products to use.
These commenters also stated that a
single payment category would increase
incentives for providers to use cheaper
products that require more applications
to generate more revenue. A couple of
commenters believe that overall
Medicare spending on skin substitutes
would be higher with a single payment
category than under the current
payment methodology which has
separate payment for higher cost and
lower cost skin substitutes. The reason
spending would go up according to the
commenters is the overpayment for low
cost skin substitutes by Medicare would
exceed the savings Medicare would
receive on reduced payments for higher
cost skin substitutes.
Further, commenters stated that a
single payment rate would lead to too
much heterogeneity in the products
receiving payment through the skin
substitute application procedures. The
same payment rate would apply to skin
substitute products whether they cost
less than $10 per cm2 or over $200 per
cm2 and regardless of the type of wound
they treat. Commenters would prefer to
have multiple payment categories where
the payment rate is more reflective of
the cost of the product. Commenters
believe that a single payment category
would discourage providers from
treating more complicated wounds.
Some commenters stated that CMS
should not implement a single payment
category methodology in CY 2020
because it only sought comments and
did not propose it and that CMS should
formally propose the methodology to
allow commenters a meaningful
opportunity to comment on the precise
proposal before implementing it.
There also were comments about the
idea of having a transition period of 1
to 2 years before the full
implementation of a single category
payment methodology. Those
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61331
commenters in favor of a single payment
category did not see a need for a
transition period or wanted only a oneyear transition period. Conversely, those
commenters opposed to a single
payment category either who did
mention the idea of a transition period
wanted it to last multiple years with one
commenter suggesting a transition
period of four years.
Response: We appreciate the
comments we received for this comment
solicitation, and we will use the
feedback to help inform our
development of our payment
methodology for skin substitute
application procedures in future
rulemaking.
c. Proposals for Packaged Skin
Substitutes for CY 2020
To allow stakeholders time to analyze
and comment on the issues discussed
above, we proposed for CY 2020 to
continue our policy established in CY
2018 to assign skin substitutes to the
low cost or high cost group.
Specifically, we proposed to assign a
skin substitute with a MUC or a PDC
that does not exceed either the MUC
threshold or the PDC threshold to the
low cost group, unless the product was
assigned to the high cost group in CY
2019, in which case we would assign
the product to the high cost group for
CY 2020, regardless of whether it
exceeds the CY 2020 MUC or PDC
threshold. We also proposed to assign to
the high cost group any skin substitute
product that exceeds the CY 2020 MUC
or PDC thresholds and assign to the low
cost group any skin substitute product
that does not exceed the CY 2020 MUC
or PDC thresholds and was not assigned
to the high cost group in CY 2019. We
proposed to continue to use payment
methodologies including ASP+6 percent
and 95 percent of AWP for skin
substitute products that have pricing
information but do not have claims data
to determine if their costs exceed the CY
2020 MUC. In addition, we proposed to
use WAC+3 percent for skin substitute
products that do not have ASP pricing
information or have claims data to
determine if those products’ costs
exceed the CY 2020 MUC. We proposed
to continue our established policy to
assign new skin substitute products
without pricing information to the low
cost group.
Table 19 of the proposed rule
displayed the proposed CY 2020 cost
category assignment for each skin
substitute product.
Comment: Most commenters
supported our proposal to continue our
policy to assign skin substitutes to the
low cost or high cost group, mainly
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because they still want more
information on both episode-based
payment for skin substitutes and the
possibility of creating a single payment
category for skin substitutes. These
commenters do not currently support
either potential payment methodology
and prefer to keep the current high-cost
and low-cost payment methodology
until an alternative methodology for
skin substitutes is better developed.
Response: We appreciate the support
of the commenters of our CY 2020
proposal for the payment of skin
substitute application services.
Comment: One commenter was
opposed to our proposal. This
commenter requested that we no longer
assign to the high-cost group skin
substitute products that do not meet
either the MUC or PDC thresholds in CY
2020 because the skin substitute
product had previous been assigned to
the high-cost group in CY 2019. The
commenter believes skin substitute
products should be assigned to the cost
group that for which they qualify based
on current MUC and PDC thresholds
because the commenter believes that
Medicare payment should reflect to
some extent the relative cost of a skin
substitute product compared to all other
skin substitute products.
Response: We disagree with
commenter. Requiring products to
potentially switch annually between the
high-cost and low-cost group leads to
payment instability for skin substitute
products (82 FR 59346–59347). The
payment rate for a skin substitute
application procedure may change by
several hundred dollars depending on if
a skin substitute product is assigned to
the high-cost or low-cost group, which
can make it challenging for
manufacturers to estimate the payment
their products will generate when used
by providers. The policy to continue to
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assign skin substitute products to the
high-cost group once they qualify for the
group promotes payment stability and
allows manufacturers and providers to
know over a long period of time the
payment rate of the procedures used
with each skin substitute product.
Comment: For the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, a
commenter, the manufacturer, requested
that HCPCS code Q4184 (Cellesta, per
square centimeter) be assigned to the
high-cost skin substitute group because
the ASP+6 percent price of HCPCS code
Q4184 for Quarter 1 of 2019 was
$110.02 per cm2 which was
substantially higher than the MUC
threshold for CY 2019 of $49 per cm2.
Response: HCPCS code Q4184
(Cellesta, per square centimeter) has
been assigned to the high-cost group
since April 1, 2019 and we proposed
assigning the skin substitute product
again to the high-cost group in CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter, the
manufacturer, has requested that HCPCS
codes Q4122 (Dermacell, per square
centimeter) and Q4150 (Allowrap ds or
dry, per square centimeter) continue to
be assigned to the high-cost skin
substitute group.
Response: HCPCS codes Q4122
(Dermacell, per square centimeter) and
Q4150 (Allowrap ds or dry, per square
centimeter) were both assigned to the
high-cost group in CY 2019 and also
were proposed to the high-cost group for
CY 2020. Per our proposal, a skin
substitute that has been proposed in the
high-cost group in a proposed rule will
remain in the high-cost group in the
final rule. Also, any skin substitute
assigned to the high-cost group in CY
2019 will continue to be assigned to the
high-cost group in CY 2020 even if MUC
and PDC for the skin substitute product
is below the overall MUC and PDC
thresholds for all skin substitute
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products. Accordingly, we are finalizing
our proposal to assign HCPCS codes
Q4122 and Q4150 to the high-cost group
in CY 2020.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal to assign a skin
substitute with a MUC or a PDC that
does not exceed either the MUC
threshold or the PDC threshold to the
low cost group, unless the product was
assigned to the high cost group in CY
2019, in which case we would assign
the product to the high cost group for
CY 2020, regardless of whether it
exceeds the CY 2020 MUC or PDC
threshold. We also are finalizing our
proposal to assign to the high cost group
any skin substitute product that exceeds
the CY 2020 MUC or PDC thresholds
and assign to the low cost group any
skin substitute product that does not
exceed the CY 2020 MUC or PDC
thresholds and was not assigned to the
high cost group in CY 2019. We are
finalizing our proposal to continue to
use payment methodologies including
ASP+6 percent and 95 percent of AWP
for skin substitute products that have
pricing information but do not have
claims data to determine if their costs
exceed the CY 2020 MUC. In addition,
we are finalizing our proposal to
continue to use WAC+3 percent instead
of WAC+6 percent for skin substitute
products that do not have ASP pricing
information or claims data to determine
if those products’ costs exceed the CY
2020 MUC. We also are finalizing our
proposal to retain our established policy
to assign new skin substitute products
with pricing information to the low cost
group. Table 45 below displays the final
CY 2020 cost category assignment for
each skin substitute product.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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VI. Estimate of OPPS Transitional PassThrough Spending for Drugs,
Biologicals, Radiopharmaceuticals, and
Devices
A. Background
Section 1833(t)(6)(E) of the Act limits
the total projected amount of
transitional pass-through payments for
drugs, biologicals,
radiopharmaceuticals, and categories of
devices for a given year to an
‘‘applicable percentage,’’ currently not
to exceed 2.0 percent of total program
payments estimated to be made for all
covered services under the OPPS
furnished for that year. If we estimate
before the beginning of the calendar
year that the total amount of passthrough payments in that year would
exceed the applicable percentage,
section 1833(t)(6)(E)(iii) of the Act
requires a uniform prospective
reduction in the amount of each of the
transitional pass-through payments
made in that year to ensure that the
limit is not exceeded. We estimate the
pass-through spending to determine
whether payments exceed the
applicable percentage and the
appropriate prorata reduction to the
conversion factor for the projected level
of pass-through spending in the
following year to ensure that total
estimated pass-through spending for the
prospective payment year is budget
neutral, as required by section
1833(t)(6)(E) of the Act.
For devices, developing a proposed
estimate of pass-through spending in CY
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2020 entails estimating spending for two
groups of items. The first group of items
consists of device categories that are
currently eligible for pass-through
payment and that will continue to be
eligible for pass-through payment in CY
2020. The CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (72 FR 66778)
describes the methodology we have
used in previous years to develop the
pass-through spending estimate for
known device categories continuing into
the applicable update year. The second
group of items consists of items that we
know are newly eligible, or project may
be newly eligible, for device passthrough payment in the remaining
quarters of CY 2019 or beginning in CY
2020. The sum of the proposed CY 2020
pass-through spending estimates for
these two groups of device categories
equaled the proposed total CY 2020
pass-through spending estimate for
device categories with pass-through
payment status. We based the device
pass-through estimated payments for
each device category on the amount of
payment as established in section
1833(t)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, and as
outlined in previous rules, including the
CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75034 through
75036). We note that, beginning in CY
2010, the pass-through evaluation
process and pass-through payment
methodology for implantable biologicals
newly approved for pass-through
payment beginning on or after January
1, 2010, that are surgically inserted or
implanted (through a surgical incision
or a natural orifice) use the device pass-
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61335
through process and payment
methodology (74 FR 60476). As has
been our past practice (76 FR 74335), in
the proposed rule, we proposed to
include an estimate of any implantable
biologicals eligible for pass-through
payment in our estimate of pass-through
spending for devices. Similarly, we
finalized a policy in CY 2015 that
applications for pass-through payment
for skin substitutes and similar products
be evaluated using the medical device
pass-through process and payment
methodology (76 FR 66885 through
66888). Therefore, as we did beginning
in CY 2015, for CY 2020, we also
proposed to include an estimate of any
skin substitutes and similar products in
our estimate of pass-through spending
for devices.
For drugs and biologicals eligible for
pass-through payment, section
1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act establishes the
pass-through payment amount as the
amount by which the amount
authorized under section 1842(o) of the
Act (or, if the drug or biological is
covered under a competitive acquisition
contract under section 1847B of the Act,
an amount determined by the Secretary
equal to the average price for the drug
or biological for all competitive
acquisition areas and year established
under such section as calculated and
adjusted by the Secretary) exceeds the
portion of the otherwise applicable fee
schedule amount that the Secretary
determines is associated with the drug
or biological. Our estimate of drug and
biological pass-through payment for CY
2020 for this group of items is $224.1
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million, as discussed below, because we
proposed to pay for most nonpassthrough separately payable drugs and
biologicals under the CY 2020 OPPS at
ASP+6 percent with the exception of
340B-acquired separately payable drugs
that are paid at ASP minus 22.5 percent,
and because we proposed to pay for CY
2020 pass-through payment drugs and
biologicals at ASP+6 percent, as we
discuss in section V.A. of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We refer
readers to section V.B.6 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule where we
discuss the comments we solicited on
an appropriate remedy in litigation
involving our OPPS payment policy for
340B purchased drugs, which would
inform CY 2021 rulemaking in the event
of an adverse decision on appeal in that
litigation.
Furthermore, payment for certain
drugs, specifically diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals and contrast
agents without pass-through payment
status, is packaged into payment for the
associated procedures, and these
products will not be separately paid. In
addition, we policy-package all
nonpass-through drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as
supplies when used in a diagnostic test
or procedure and drugs and biologicals
that function as supplies when used in
a surgical procedure, as discussed in
section II.A.3. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule and this final rule
with comment period. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39511),
we proposed that all of these policypackaged drugs and biologicals with
pass-through payment status would be
paid at ASP+6 percent, like other passthrough drugs and biologicals, for CY
2020. Therefore, our estimate of passthrough payment for policy-packaged
drugs and biologicals with pass-through
payment status approved prior to CY
2020 was not $0, as discussed below. In
section V.A.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we discussed our
policy to determine if the costs of
certain policy-packaged drugs or
biologicals are already packaged into the
existing APC structure. If we determine
that a policy-packaged drug or
biological approved for pass-through
payment resembles predecessor drugs or
biologicals already included in the costs
of the APCs that are associated with the
drug receiving pass-through payment,
we proposed to offset the amount of
pass-through payment for the policypackaged drug or biological. For these
drugs or biologicals, the APC offset
amount is the portion of the APC
payment for the specific procedure
performed with the pass-through drug
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or biological, which we refer to as the
policy-packaged drug APC offset
amount. If we determine that an offset
is appropriate for a specific policypackaged drug or biological receiving
pass-through payment, we proposed to
reduce our estimate of pass-through
payments for these drugs or biologicals
by this amount.
Similar to pass-through spending
estimates for devices, the first group of
drugs and biologicals requiring a passthrough payment estimate consists of
those products that were recently made
eligible for pass-through payment and
that will continue to be eligible for passthrough payment in CY 2020. The
second group contains drugs and
biologicals that we know are newly
eligible, or project will be newly
eligible, in the remaining quarters of CY
2019 or beginning in CY 2020. The sum
of the CY 2020 pass-through spending
estimates for these two groups of drugs
and biologicals equals the total CY 2020
pass-through spending estimate for
drugs and biologicals with pass-through
payment status.
B. Estimate of Pass-Through Spending
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39511 through 39512), we
proposed to set the applicable passthrough payment percentage limit at 2.0
percent of the total projected OPPS
payments for CY 2020, consistent with
section 1833(t)(6)(E)(ii)(II) of the Act
and our OPPS policy from CY 2004
through CY 2019 (82 FR 59371 through
59373).
For the first group, consisting of
device categories that are currently
eligible for pass-through payment and
will continue to be eligible for passthrough payment in CY 2020, there is
one active category for CY 2020. The
active category is described by HCPCS
code C1823 (Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), nonrechargeable, with
transvenous sensing and stimulation
leads). Based on the information from
the device manufacturer, we estimated
that 100 devices will receive payment in
the OPPS in CY 2020 at an estimated
cost of $5,655 per device. Therefore, we
proposed an estimate for the first group
of devices of $565,500. We did not
receive any public comments on the
proposal. Therefore, we are finalizing
the proposed estimate for the first group
of devices of $565,500 for CY 2020.
In estimating our proposed CY 2020
pass-through spending for device
categories in the second group, we
included: Device categories that we
knew at the time of the development of
the proposed rule will be newly eligible
for pass-through payment in CY 2020;
additional device categories that we
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estimated could be approved for passthrough status after the development of
the proposed rule and before January 1,
2020; and contingent projections for
new device categories established in the
second through fourth quarters of CY
2020. For CY 2020, we proposed to use
the general methodology described in
the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66778), while
also taking into account recent OPPS
experience in approving new passthrough device categories. For the
proposed rule, the proposed estimate of
CY 2020 pass-through spending for this
second group of device categories was
$10 million.
We did not receive any public
comments on this proposal. As stated
earlier in this final rule with comment
period, we are approving five devices
for pass-through payment status:
Surefire® SparkTM Infusion System;
Optimizer® System; AquaBeam®
System; AUGMENT® Bone Graft and
ARTIFICIALIris® . The manufacturers of
these systems provided utilization and
cost data that indicate the spending for
the devices would be approximately
$116.25 million for Surefire® SparkTM
Infusion System, $46 million for
Optimizer® System, $11.25 million for
AquaBeam® System, $ 72.2 million for
AUGMENT® Bone Graft, and $500,500
for ARTIFICIALIris®. Therefore, we are
finalizing an estimate of $246.2 million
for this second group of devices for CY
2020.
To estimate proposed CY 2020 passthrough spending for drugs and
biologicals in the first group,
specifically those drugs and biologicals
recently made eligible for pass-through
payment and continuing on passthrough payment status for at least one
quarter in CY 2020, we proposed to use
the most recent Medicare hospital
outpatient claims data regarding their
utilization, information provided in the
respective pass-through applications,
historical hospital claims data,
pharmaceutical industry information,
and clinical information regarding those
drugs or biologicals to project the CY
2020 OPPS utilization of the products.
For the known drugs and biologicals
(excluding policy-packaged diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents,
drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as
supplies when used in a diagnostic test
or procedure, and drugs and biologicals
that function as supplies when used in
a surgical procedure) that will be
continuing on pass-through payment
status in CY 2020, we estimated the
pass-through payment amount as the
difference between ASP+6 percent and
the payment rate for nonpass-through
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drugs and biologicals that will be
separately paid. Separately payable
drugs are paid at a rate of ASP+6
percent with the exception of 340Bacquired drugs that are paid at ASP
minus 22.5 percent. Therefore, the
payment rate difference between the
pass-through payment amount and the
nonpass-through payment amount is
$224.1 million for this group of drugs.
Because payment for policy-packaged
drugs and biologicals is packaged if the
product was not paid separately due to
its pass-through payment status, we
proposed to include in the CY 2020
pass-through estimate the difference
between payment for the policypackaged drug or biological at ASP+6
percent (or WAC+6 percent, or 95
percent of AWP, if ASP or WAC
information is not available) and the
policy-packaged drug APC offset
amount, if we determine that the policypackaged drug or biological approved
for pass-through payment resembles a
predecessor drug or biological already
included in the costs of the APCs that
are associated with the drug receiving
pass-through payment, which we
estimate for CY 2020 to be $17.0
million. For the proposed rule, using the
proposed methodology described above,
we calculated a CY 2020 proposed
spending estimate for this first group of
drugs and biologicals that includes
drugs currently on pass-through
payment status that would otherwise be
separately payable or policy-packaged of
approximately $241.1 million. We did
not receive any public comments on our
proposal. Using our methodology for
this final rule with comment period, we
calculated a CY 2020 spending estimate
for this first group of drugs and
biologicals of approximately $399.6
million.
To estimate proposed CY 2020 passthrough spending for drugs and
biologicals in the second group (that is,
drugs and biologicals that we knew at
the time of development of the proposed
rule were newly eligible for passthrough payment in CY 2020, additional
drugs and biologicals that we estimated
could be approved for pass-through
status subsequent to the development of
the proposed rule and before January 1,
2020 and projections for new drugs and
biologicals that could be initially
eligible for pass-through payment in the
second through fourth quarters of CY
2020), we proposed to use utilization
estimates from pass-through applicants,
pharmaceutical industry data, clinical
information, recent trends in the per
unit ASPs of hospital outpatient drugs,
and projected annual changes in service
volume and intensity as our basis for
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making the CY 2020 pass-through
payment estimate. We also proposed to
consider the most recent OPPS
experience in approving new passthrough drugs and biologicals. Using
our proposed methodology for
estimating CY 2020 pass-through
payments for this second group of
drugs, we calculated a proposed
spending estimate for this second group
of drugs and biologicals of
approximately $17.1 million.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we are continuing to use
the general methodology described
above. For this final rule with comment
period, we calculated a CY 2020
spending estimate for this second group
of drugs and biologicals of
approximately $26 million.
In summary, in accordance with the
methodology described earlier in this
section, for this final rule with comment
period, we estimate that total passthrough spending for the device
categories and the drugs and biologicals
that are continuing to receive passthrough payment in CY 2020 and those
device categories, drugs, and biologicals
that first become eligible for passthrough payment during CY 2020 is
approximately $698.4 million
(approximately $246.8 million for
device categories and approximately
$451.6 million for drugs and biologicals)
which represents 0.88 percent of total
projected OPPS payments for CY 2020
(approximately $79 billion). Therefore,
we estimate that pass-through spending
in CY 2020 will not amount to 2.0
percent of total projected OPPS CY 2020
program spending.
VII. OPPS Payment for Hospital
Outpatient Visits and Critical Care
Services
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
with our current clinic and emergency
department (ED) hospital outpatient
visits payment policies. For a
description of the current clinic and ED
hospital outpatient visits policies, we
refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70448). We also proposed to continue
our payment policy for critical care
services for CY 2020. For a description
of the current payment policy for
critical care services, we refer readers to
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70449), and for
the history of the payment policy for
critical care services, we refer readers to
the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75043). In the
proposed rule, we sought public
comments on any changes to these
codes that we should consider for future
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rulemaking cycles. We continue to
encourage commenters to provide the
data and analysis necessary to justify
any suggested changes.
Comment: We received two public
comments, one from a health system
and another from a health information
management association, in response to
our CY 2020 proposal. Commenters
suggested that CMS should adopt the
recommendation of the Medicare
Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC) for the development and
implementation of a set of national
guidelines for coding hospital
emergency department (ED) visits under
the OPPS. They argued that national
guidelines would provide hospitals with
a clear set of rules for coding ED visits.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their responses. We will consider
these comments for future rulemaking.
After consideration of the public
comments received, we are finalizing
our CY 2020 proposal to continue our
current clinic and ED hospital
outpatient visits and critical care
services payment policies without
modifications.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59004
through 59015), we adopted a method to
control unnecessary increases in the
volume of covered outpatient
department services under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act by utilizing a
Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (PFS)equivalent payment rate for the hospital
outpatient clinic visit (HCPCS code
G0463) when it is furnished by excepted
off-campus provider-based departments
(PBDs). As discussed in section X.D of
the proposed rule and the CY 2019 final
rule (FR 58818 through 59179), CY 2020
will be the second year of the 2-year
transition of this policy, and in CY
2020, these departments will be paid the
site-specific PFS rate for the clinic visit
service. For a full discussion of this
policy, we refer readers to the CY 2020
final rule with comment period and
section X.C of this final rule with
comment period.
VIII. Payment for Partial
Hospitalization Services
A. Background
A partial hospitalization program
(PHP) is an intensive outpatient
program of psychiatric services
provided as an alternative to inpatient
psychiatric care for individuals who
have an acute mental illness, which
includes, but is not limited to,
conditions such as depression,
schizophrenia, and substance use
disorders. Section 1861(ff)(1) of the Act
defines partial hospitalization services
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as the items and services described in
paragraph (2) prescribed by a physician
and provided under a program
described in paragraph (3) under the
supervision of a physician pursuant to
an individualized, written plan of
treatment established and periodically
reviewed by a physician (in
consultation with appropriate staff
participating in such program), which
sets forth the physician’s diagnosis, the
type, amount, frequency, and duration
of the items and services provided
under the plan, and the goals for
treatment under the plan. Section
1861(ff)(2) of the Act describes the items
and services included in partial
hospitalization services. Section
1861(ff)(3)(A) of the Act specifies that a
PHP is a program furnished by a
hospital to its outpatients or by a
community mental health center
(CMHC), as a distinct and organized
intensive ambulatory treatment service,
offering less than 24-hour-daily care, in
a location other than an individual’s
home or inpatient or residential setting.
Section 1861(ff)(3)(B) of the Act defines
a CMHC for purposes of this benefit.
Section 1833(t)(1)(B)(i) of the Act
provides the Secretary with the
authority to designate the outpatient
department (OPD) services to be covered
under the OPPS. The Medicare
regulations that implement this
provision specify, at 42 CFR 419.21, that
payments under the OPPS will be made
for partial hospitalization services
furnished by CMHCs as well as
Medicare Part B services furnished to
hospital outpatients designated by the
Secretary, which include partial
hospitalization services (65 FR 18444
through 18445).
Section 1833(t)(2)(C) of the Act
requires the Secretary, in part, to
establish relative payment weights for
covered OPD services (and any groups
of such services described in section
1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act) based on
median (or, at the election of the
Secretary, mean) hospital costs using
data on claims from 1996 and data from
the most recent available cost reports. In
pertinent part, section 1833(t)(2)(B) of
the Act provides that the Secretary may
establish groups of covered OPD
services, within a classification system
developed by the Secretary for covered
OPD services, so that services classified
within each group are comparable
clinically and with respect to the use of
resources. In accordance with these
provisions, we have developed the PHP
APCs. Since a day of care is the unit that
defines the structure and scheduling of
partial hospitalization services, we
established a per diem payment
methodology for the PHP APCs,
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effective for services furnished on or
after July 1, 2000 (65 FR 18452 through
18455). Under this methodology, the
median per diem costs were used to
calculate the relative payment weights
for the PHP APCs. Section 1833(t)(9)(A)
of the Act requires the Secretary to
review, not less often than annually,
and revise the groups, the relative
payment weights, and the wage and
other adjustments described in section
1833(t)(2) of the Act to take into account
changes in medical practice, changes in
technology, the addition of new
services, new cost data, and other
relevant information and factors.
We began efforts to strengthen the
PHP benefit through extensive data
analysis, along with policy and payment
changes finalized in the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72
FR 66670 through 66676). In that final
rule with comment period, we made
two refinements to the methodology for
computing the PHP median: The first
remapped 10 revenue codes that are
common among hospital-based PHP
claims to the most appropriate cost
centers; and the second refined our
methodology for computing the PHP
median per diem cost by computing a
separate per diem cost for each day
rather than for each bill.
In CY 2009, we implemented several
regulatory, policy, and payment
changes, including a two-tier payment
approach for partial hospitalization
services under which we paid one
amount for days with 3 services under
PHP APC 0172 (Level 1 Partial
Hospitalization) and a higher amount
for days with 4 or more services under
PHP APC 0173 (Level 2 Partial
Hospitalization) (73 FR 68688 through
68693). We also finalized our policy to
deny payment for any PHP claims
submitted for days when fewer than 3
units of therapeutic services are
provided (73 FR 68694). Additionally,
for CY 2009, we revised the regulations
at 42 CFR 410.43 to codify existing basic
PHP patient eligibility criteria and to
add a reference to current physician
certification requirements under 42 CFR
424.24 to conform our regulations to our
longstanding policy (73 FR 68694
through 68695). We also revised the
partial hospitalization benefit to include
several coding updates (73 FR 68695
through 68697).
For CY 2010, we retained the two-tier
payment approach for partial
hospitalization services and used only
hospital-based PHP data in computing
the PHP APC per diem costs, upon
which PHP APC per diem payment rates
are based. We used only hospital-based
PHP data because we were concerned
about further reducing both PHP APC
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per diem payment rates without
knowing the impact of the policy and
payment changes we made in CY 2009.
Because of the 2-year lag between data
collection and rulemaking, the changes
we made in CY 2009 were reflected for
the first time in the claims data that we
used to determine payment rates for the
CY 2011 rulemaking (74 FR 60556
through 60559).
In the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (75 FR 71994), we
established four separate PHP APC per
diem payment rates: Two for CMHCs
(APC 0172 (for Level 1 services) and
APC 0173 (for Level 2 services)) and two
for hospital-based PHPs (APC 0175 (for
Level 1 services) and APC 0176 (for
Level 2 services)), based on each
provider type’s own unique data. For
CY 2011, we also instituted a 2-year
transition period for CMHCs to the
CMHC APC per diem payment rates
based solely on CMHC data. Under the
transition methodology, CMHC APCs
Level 1 and Level 2 per diem costs were
calculated by taking 50 percent of the
difference between the CY 2010 final
hospital-based PHP median costs and
the CY 2011 final CMHC median costs
and then adding that number to the CY
2011 final CMHC median costs. A 2-year
transition under this methodology
moved us in the direction of our goal,
which is to pay appropriately for partial
hospitalization services based on each
provider type’s data, while at the same
time allowing providers time to adjust
their business operations and protect
access to care for Medicare
beneficiaries. We also stated that we
would review and analyze the data
during the CY 2012 rulemaking cycle
and, based on these analyses, we might
further refine the payment mechanism.
We refer readers to section X.B. of the
CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (75 FR 71991 through
71994) for a full discussion.
In addition, in accordance with
section 1301(b) of the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(HCERA 2010), we amended the
description of a PHP in our regulations
to specify that a PHP must be a distinct
and organized intensive ambulatory
treatment program offering less than 24hour daily care other than in an
individual’s home or in an inpatient or
residential setting. In accordance with
section 1301(a) of HCERA 2010, we
revised the definition of a CMHC in the
regulations to conform to the revised
definition now set forth under section
1861(ff)(3)(B) of the Act (75 FR 71990).
For CY 2012, as discussed in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74348 through
74352), we determined the relative
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payment weights for partial
hospitalization services provided by
CMHCs based on data derived solely
from CMHCs and the relative payment
weights for partial hospitalization
services provided by hospital-based
PHPs based exclusively on hospital
data.
In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we finalized our
proposal to base the relative payment
weights that underpin the OPPS APCs,
including the four PHP APCs (APCs
0172, 0173, 0175, and 0176), on
geometric mean costs rather than on the
median costs. We established these four
PHP APC per diem payment rates based
on geometric mean cost levels
calculated using the most recent claims
and cost data for each provider type. For
a detailed discussion on this policy, we
refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR
68406 through 68412).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (78 FR 43621 through 43622), we
solicited comments on possible future
initiatives that may help to ensure the
long-term stability of PHPs and further
improve the accuracy of payment for
PHP services, but proposed no changes.
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75050
through 75053), we summarized the
comments received on those possible
future initiatives. We also continued to
apply our established policies to
calculate the four PHP APC per diem
payment rates based on geometric mean
per diem costs using the most recent
claims data for each provider type. For
a detailed discussion on this policy, we
refer readers to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR
75047 through 75050).
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66902
through 66908), we continued to apply
our established policies to calculate the
four PHP APC per diem payment rates
based on PHP APC geometric mean per
diem costs, using the most recent claims
and cost data for each provider type.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70455
through 70465), we described our
extensive analysis of the claims and cost
data and ratesetting methodology. We
found aberrant data from some hospitalbased PHP providers that were not
captured using the existing OPPS ±3
standard deviation trims for extreme
cost-to-charge ratios (CCRs) and
excessive CMHC charges resulting in
CMHC geometric mean costs per day
that were approximately the same as or
more than the daily payment for
inpatient psychiatric facility services.
Consequently, we implemented a trim
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to remove hospital-based PHP service
days that use a CCR that was greater
than five to calculate costs for at least
one of their component services, and a
trim on CMHCs with a geometric mean
cost per day that is above or below 2
(±2) standard deviations from the mean.
We stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70456) that, without using a trimming
process, the data from these providers
would inappropriately skew the
geometric mean per diem cost for Level
2 CMHC services.
In addition, in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70459 through 70460), we corrected
a cost inversion that occurred in the
final rule data with respect to hospitalbased PHP providers. We corrected the
cost inversion with an equitable
adjustment to the actual geometric mean
per diem costs by increasing the Level
2 hospital-based PHP APC geometric
mean per diem costs and decreasing the
Level 1 hospital-based PHP APC
geometric mean per diem costs by the
same factor, to result in a percentage
difference equal to the average percent
difference between the hospital-based
Level 1 PHP APC and the Level 2 PHP
APC for partial hospitalization services
from CY 2013 through CY 2015.
Finally, we renumbered the PHP
APCs, which were previously APCs
0172 and 0173 for CMHCs’ partial
hospitalization Level 1 and Level 2
services, and APCs 0175 and 0176 for
hospital-based partial hospitalization
Level 1 and Level 2 services to APCs
5851 and 5852 for CMHCs’ partial
hospitalization Level 1 and Level 2
services, and APCs 5861 and 5862 for
hospital-based partial hospitalization
Level 1 and Level 2 services,
respectively. For a detailed discussion
of the PHP ratesetting process, we refer
readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70462
through 70467).
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79687
through 79691), we continued to apply
our established policies to calculate the
PHP APC per diem payment rates based
on geometric mean per diem costs using
the most recent claims and cost data for
each provider type. However, we
finalized a policy to combine the Level
1 and Level 2 PHP APCs for CMHCs and
to combine the Level 1 and Level 2
APCs for hospital-based PHPs because
we believed this would best reflect
actual geometric mean per diem costs
going forward, provide more predictable
per diem costs, particularly given the
small number of CMHCs, and generate
more appropriate payments for these
services, for example by avoiding the
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61339
cost inversions for hospital-based PHPs
addressed in the CY 2016 and CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rules with comment
period (80 FR 70459 and 81 FR 79682).
We also implemented an eight-percent
outlier cap for CMHCs to mitigate
potential outlier billing vulnerabilities
by limiting the impact of inflated CMHC
charges on outlier payments. We stated
that we will continue to monitor the
trends in outlier payments and consider
policy adjustments as necessary.
For a comprehensive description of
PHP payment policy, including a
detailed methodology for determining
PHP per diem amounts, we refer readers
to the CY 2016 and CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rules with comment period (80 FR
70453 through 70455 and 81 FR 79678
through 79680).
In the CYs 2018 and 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rules with comment period (82 FR
59373 through 59381, and 83 FR 58983
through 58998, respectively), we
continued to apply our established
policies to calculate the PHP APC per
diem payment rates based on geometric
mean per diem costs using the most
recent claims and cost data for each
provider type. We also continued to
designate a portion of the estimated 1.0
percent hospital outpatient outlier
threshold specifically for CMHCs,
consistent with the percentage of
projected payments to CMHCs under the
OPPS, excluding outlier payments. In
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58997 through
58998), we also included proposed
updates to the PHP allowable HCPCS
codes. Specifically, we proposed to
delete six psychological and
neuropsychological testing CPT codes,
which affect PHPs, and to add nine new
codes as replacements. We refer readers
to section VIII.D. of the proposed rule
for a discussion of those proposed
updates and the applicability for CY
2020.
B. Final PHP APC Update for CY 2020
1. Final PHP APC Geometric Mean Per
Diem Costs
In summary, for CY 2020, we are
finalizing our proposal as proposed to
use the CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost calculated in accordance
with our existing methodology, but with
a cost floor equal to the CY 2019 final
geometric mean per diem cost for
CMHCs of $121.62 (83 FR 58991), as the
basis for developing the CY 2020 CMHC
APC per diem rate. We are also
finalizing our proposal to use the CY
2020 hospital-based PHP geometric
mean per diem cost of $233.52,
calculated in accordance with our
existing methodology for hospital-based
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PHPs, as the basis for developing the CY
2020 hospital-based APC per diem rate.
We are finalizing our proposal to use the
most recent updated claims and cost
data to calculate CY 2020 geometric
mean per diem costs in this final rule
with comment period.
Also, we are finalizing our proposal to
continue to use CMHC APC 5853
(Partial Hospitalization (3 or More
Services Per Day)) and hospital-based
PHP APC 5863 (Partial Hospitalization
(3 or More Services Per Day)). These
proposals, which we are finalizing as
proposed in this final rule with
comment period, are discussed in more
detail.
2. Development of the Final PHP APC
Geometric Mean Per Diem Costs
In preparation for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, we followed the PHP
ratesetting methodology described in
section VIII.B.2. of the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70462 through 70466) to calculate
the PHP APCs’ geometric mean per
diem costs and payment rates for APCs
5853 and 5863, incorporating the
modifications made in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period. As discussed in section VIII.B.1.
of the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79680
through 79687), the geometric mean per
diem cost for hospital-based PHP APC
5863 is based upon actual hospitalbased PHP claims and costs for PHP
service days providing 3 or more
services. Similarly, the geometric mean
per diem cost for CMHC APC 5853 is
based upon actual CMHC claims and
costs for CMHC service days providing
three or more services.
The CMHC or hospital-based PHP
APC per diem costs are the providertype specific costs derived from the
most recent claims and cost data. The
CMHC or hospital-based PHP APC per
diem payment rates are the national
unadjusted payment rates calculated
from the CMHC or hospital-based PHP
APC geometric mean per diem costs,
after applying the OPPS budget
neutrality adjustments described in
section II.A.4. of this final rule with
comment period.
As previously stated, in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed
to apply our established methodologies
in calculating the CY 2020 geometric
mean per diem costs and payment rates,
including the application of a ±2
standard deviation trim on costs per day
for CMHCs and a CCR greater than 5
hospital service day trim for hospitalbased PHP providers. These two trims
were finalized in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
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FR 70455 through 70462) for CY 2016
and subsequent years.
a. CMHC Data Preparation: Data Trims,
Exclusions, and CCR Adjustments
For this CY 2020 final rule with
comment period, prior to calculating the
final geometric mean per diem cost for
CMHC APC 5853, we prepared the data
by first applying trims and data
exclusions, and assessing CCRs as
described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70463 through 70465), so that
ratesetting is not skewed by providers
with extreme data. Before any trims or
exclusions were applied, there were 44
CMHCs in the PHP claims data file.
Under the ±2 standard deviation trim
policy, we excluded any data from a
CMHC for ratesetting purposes when the
CMHC’s geometric mean cost per day
was more than ±2 standard deviations
from the geometric mean cost per day
for all CMHCs. In applying this trim for
CY 2020 ratesetting, no CMHCs had
geometric mean costs per day below the
trim’s lower limit of $20.58 or had
geometric mean costs per day above the
trim’s upper limit of $520.48. Therefore,
we did not exclude any CMHCs because
of the ±2 standard deviation trim.
In accordance with our PHP
ratesetting methodology, we also
remove service days with no wage index
values, because we use the wage index
data to remove the effects of geographic
variation in costs prior to APC
geometric mean per diem cost
calculation (80 FR 70465). For this CY
2020 final rule with comment period
ratesetting, no CMHC was missing wage
index data for all of its service days and,
therefore, no CMHC was excluded.
However, one CMHC had no days with
Medicare payment, and it was excluded
from ratesetting.
In addition to our trims and data
exclusions, before calculating the PHP
APC geometric mean per diem costs, we
also assess CCRs (80 FR 70463). Our
longstanding PHP OPPS ratesetting
methodology defaults any CMHC CCR
greater than one to the statewide
hospital CCR (80 FR 70457). For this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period ratesetting, there were
no CMHCs that showed CCRs greater
than one. Therefore, it was not
necessary to default any CMHC to its
statewide hospital CCR for ratesetting.
In summary, these data preparation
steps did not adjust the CCR for any
CMHCs with a CCR greater than one
during our ratesetting process. We also
did not exclude any CMHCs for other
missing data or for failing the ±2
standard deviation trim, but excluded
one CMHC for having no Medicare
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payment data, resulting in the inclusion
of 43 CMHCs. There were 319 CMHC
claims removed during data preparation
steps because they either had no PHPallowable codes or had zero payment
days, leaving 12,265 CMHC claims in
our CY 2020 final rule ratesetting
modeling.
After applying all of the previously
listed trims, exclusions, and
adjustments, we followed the
methodology described in the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70464 through 70465) and
modified in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR
79687 through 79688, and 79691) to
calculate a CMHC APC geometric mean
per diem cost.74 The calculated CY 2020
geometric mean per diem cost for all
CMHCs for providing 3 or more services
per day (CMHC APC 5853) is $103.50,
a decrease from $121.62 calculated last
year for CY 2019 ratesetting (83 FR
58986 through 58989). This final
calculated per diem cost for CMHCs is
almost the same as the $103.42
geometric mean per diem cost
calculated for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39515 to 39516).
Due to this fluctuation from the CY
2019 final CMHC geometric mean per
diem cost, we investigated why the CY
2020 final calculated CMHC APC
geometric mean per diem cost had
decreased from the prior year, and
found that two large providers reported
lower costs per day than those reported
for the CY 2019 final rule ratesetting;
those two providers heavily influenced
the calculated geometric mean per diem
cost. Because these providers had a high
number of paid PHP days, and because
the CMHC data set is so small (n=43),
these providers had a significant
influence on the calculated CY 2020
CMHC APC geometric mean per diem
74 Each revenue code on the CMHC claim must
have a HCPCS code and charge associated with it.
We multiply each claim service line’s charges by
the CMHC’s overall CCR from the OPSF (or
statewide CCR, where the overall CCR was greater
than 1) to estimate CMHC costs. Only the claims
service lines containing PHP allowable HCPCS
codes and PHP allowable revenue codes from the
CMHC claims remaining after trimming are retained
for CMHC cost determination. The costs, payments,
and service units for all service lines occurring on
the same service date, by the same provider, and for
the same beneficiary are summed. CMHC service
days must have 3 or more services provided to be
assigned to CMHC APC 5853. The final geometric
mean per diem cost for CMHC APC 5853 is
calculated by taking the nth root of the product of
n numbers, for days where 3 or more services were
provided. CMHC service days with costs ±3
standard deviations from the geometric mean costs
within APC 5853 are deleted and removed from
modeling. The remaining PHP service days are used
to calculate the final geometric mean per diem cost
for each PHP APC by taking the nth root of the
product of n numbers for days where 3 or more
services were provided.
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cost. In the case of PHPs provided by
CMHCs, we have a low number of PHP
providers in our ratesetting dataset (43
CMHCs compared to 374 hospital-based
PHPs) that provide a small volume of
services and, therefore, account for a
limited amount of payments, relative to
the rest of OPPS payments (total CY
2018 CMHC payments are estimated to
be approximately 0.02 percent of all
OPPS payments).
As noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39516), we are
concerned that a final calculated CMHC
APC geometric mean per diem cost of
$103.50 would not support ongoing
access to PHPs in CMHCs. This cost is
nearly a 15 percent decrease from the
final CY 2019 CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost. We believe access to
partial hospitalization services and
PHPs is better supported when the
geometric mean per diem cost does not
fluctuate greatly. In addition, while the
CMHC APC 5853 is described as
providing 3 or more partial
hospitalization services per day (81 FR
79680), 95 percent of CMHC paid days
in CY 2018 were for providing 4 or more
services per day. To be eligible for a
PHP, a patient must need at least 20
hours of therapeutic services per week,
as evidenced in the patient’s plan of
care (42 CFR 410.43(c)(1)). To meet
those patient needs, most PHP provider
paid days are for providing 4 or more
services per day (we refer readers to
Table 22.—Percentage of PHP Days by
Service Unit Frequency of the proposed
rule). Therefore, the CMHC APC 5853 is
actually heavily weighted to the cost of
providing 4 or more services. The per
diem costs for CMHC APC 5853 have
been calculated as $124.92, $143.22,
and $121.62 for CY 2017 (81 FR 79691),
CY 2018 (82 FR 59378), and CY 2019
(83 FR 58991), respectively. We do not
believe it is likely that the actual cost of
providing partial hospitalization
services through a PHP by CMHCs has
suddenly declined when costs generally
increase over time. We are concerned by
this fluctuation, which we believe is
influenced by data from two large
providers.
Therefore, rather than simply
finalizing the calculated CY 2020 CMHC
APC geometric mean per diem cost of
$103.50 for CY 2020 ratesetting, we are
instead finalizing our proposal as
proposed, to use the CY 2020 CMHC
APC geometric mean per diem cost,
calculated in accordance with our
existing methodology, but with a cost
floor equal to the CY 2019 final
geometric mean per diem cost for
CMHCs of $121.62 (83 FR 58991), as the
basis for developing the final CY 2020
CMHC APC per diem rate. We believe
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using the CY 2019 CMHC geometric
mean per diem cost as the floor is
appropriate because it is based on very
recent CMHC PHP claims and cost data
and would help to protect provider
access by preventing wide fluctuation in
the per diem costs for CMHC APC 5853.
As we proposed, in this final rule with
comment period, we used the most
recent updated claims and cost data to
calculate CY 2020 CMHC geometric
mean per diem cost, which was $103.50.
Because the final CY 2020 CMHC
calculated geometric mean per diem
cost of $103.50 is less than the proposed
cost floor (which equals the final CY
2019 CMHC APC geometric mean per
diem cost of $121.62), the final CY 2020
CMHC geometric mean per diem cost is
$121.62. Implementing the cost floor for
CY 2020 will protect CMHCs since the
final CY 2020 calculated per diem cost
of $103.50 still results in an amount that
is less than $121.62. We believe
finalizing the CMHC cost floor amount
of $121.62 as the final CY 2020 CMHC
APC geometric mean per diem cost
allows us to use the most recent or very
recent CMHC claims and cost reporting
data while still protecting provider
access. To be clear, this policy would
only apply for the CY 2020 ratesetting.
As we noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39516), we
also considered proposing a 3-year
rolling average calculated using the final
PHP geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, from CY 2018 (82 FR
59378), CY 2019 (83 FR 58991), and the
calculated CY 2020 geometric mean per
diem cost from that proposed rule of
$103.42 for CMHCs, and the calculated
CY 2020 geometric mean per diem costs
for hospital-based PHPs discussed in
section VIII.B.2.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. The 3-year rolling
averages discussed in that proposed rule
resulted in geometric mean per diem
costs that would have been $122.75 for
CMHCs, and $209.79 for hospital-based
PHPs. While we believe this option
would have avoided the fluctuation in
the geometric mean per diem cost and,
therefore, supported access to PHPs
provided by CMHCs, it would have
maintained the fluctuation in the
geometric mean per diem costs used to
derive the hospital-based PHP APC per
diem payment rates. This is further
discussed in the hospital-based PHP
section VIII.B.2.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule and section
VIII.B.2.b. of this final rule. In addition,
we believe that it is necessary to
recalculate the CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost for this final rule with
comment period using updated claims
and cost data, and simply proposing to
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61341
use a 3-year rolling average for the
CMHC geometric mean per diem cost for
CY 2020 would not have allowed us to
do so. Therefore, we believe that it is
more appropriate to use the final CY
2019 geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, as the cost floor for use
with the final calculated CY 2020 PHP
geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, because those CY 2019
per diem costs are based on very recent
CMHC and hospital-based PHP claims
and cost data, are the easiest to
understand, and would result in
proposed geometric mean per diem
costs which would support access for
both CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs.
We estimate the aggregate difference
in the (prescaled) CMHC geometric
mean per diem costs for CY 2020 from
finalizing the CMHC cost floor amount
of $121.62 rather than the calculated
CMHC geometric mean per diem cost of
$103.50 to be $1.7 million. We refer
readers to section XXVII. of this final
rule with comment period for payment
impacts, which are budget neutral.
We received 6 comments, with those
focused on CMHC rate setting
summarized as follows:
Comment: Nearly all commenters
supported our proposal to calculate
updated per diem costs with a cost
floor, to avoid fluctuations in CMHC
payments and help protect access.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. For CY 2020, we are
finalizing the CY 2020 CMHC geometric
mean per diem cost as $121.62, which
is the cost floor amount, rather than the
calculated geometric mean per diem
cost of $103.50.
Comment: Two commenters
recommended that CMS pay CMHCs the
same rate as hospital-based PHPs, since
these two provider types provide the
same services and have the same
qualified clinical staff. One commenter
objected to CMS’ continuing use of the
single-tier payment system for CMHCs,
stating that it adversely affects the
quality and intensity of PHP services.
Response: The OPPS pays for
outpatient services, including partial
hospitalization services, based on the
costs of providing services using
provider data from claims and cost
reports, in accordance with statute.
Section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act provides
that the Secretary may establish groups
of covered OPD services, within a
classification system developed by the
Secretary for covered OPD services, so
that services classified within each
group are comparable clinically and
with respect to the use of resources.
While CMHCs and hospital-based
CMHCs provide the same clinical
services, their resource use differs,
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because these two provider types have
different cost structures. We see this
difference in cost structures reflected
when we calculate the geometric mean
cost per day for CMHCs versus for
hospital-based PHPs, where CMHC costs
per day are consistently lower than
hospital-based PHP costs per day. For
example, the final CY 2020 calculated
geometric mean costs for providing PHP
services were $103.50 per day for
CMHCs, but were $233.52 per day for
hospital-based PHPs. In this final rule
and in prior rulemaking, commenters
and CMS have noted that hospitals tend
to have higher costs than CMHCs,
particularly higher overhead (83 FR
58986; 82 FR 59377; 81 FR 79686 to
69687). Therefore, we do not believe we
can pay CMHCs the same APC rate as
hospital-based PHPs, and should
calculate a CMHC APC rate based on the
CMHC costs which providers supply on
their cost reports. We strongly
encourage CMHCs to review cost
reporting instructions to be sure they are
reporting their costs correctly. These
instructions are available in chapter 45
of the Provider Reimbursement Manual,
Part 2, available on the CMS website at
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/PaperBased-Manuals.html.
We believe our policy to replace the
existing Level 1 and Level 2 PHP APCs
for both provider types with a single
PHP APC, by provider type, is
supported by the statute and regulations
and will continue to pay for partial
hospitalization services appropriately
based upon actual provider costs (81 FR
79683). Regarding the commenter’s
concern about the small number of
providers and the use of a single-tier
payment system, we refer the
commenter to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR
79682 to 79685), where we discussed
our rationale for implementing the
single-tier payment system for CMHCs.
A key reason behind implementing the
single tier for CMHCs was to reduce cost
fluctuations and bring more stability to
CMHC APC rates, especially given the
small number of providers (81 FR
79683). We also noted that the costs of
providing a Level 1 CMHC day were
nearly the same as the cost of providing
a Level 2 CMHC day (81 FR 79684). In
accordance with the regulations at 42
CFR 419.31, we could not justify
continuing to separate these services
into two APCs, but combined clinically
similar services with similar resource
use into a single APC (81 FR 79683 to
79684).
We do not believe the intensity of
PHP services provided in hospitals and
in CMHCs has been affected by using a
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single-tier payment system. Based on
the utilization data found in Table 22 of
this final rule, the percentage of paid
PHP days which have only three
services has been relatively stable over
time. As we note in section VIII.B.3.b,
with only 2 years of claims data
reflecting the single-tiered payment
system, we do not have enough data yet
to identify any trends in utilization that
could be associated with the change
from two-tiered to single-tiered
payment. We continue to monitor the
percentage of 3-service days and are also
monitoring the provision of 20 hours
per week of PHP services, to ensure
there are no unintended consequences
of a single-tier payment system on PHP
intensity. We are unable to determine
the effects of the single-tier payment on
CMHC quality, because there are no
quality measures for CMHCs, nor is
quality reporting required of CMHCs.
However, we do not believe that a
single-tier payment system would affect
the quality of care provided in a CMHC.
Comment: One commenter noted that,
in the past, CMS stated that CMHCs
provide fewer services and have less
costly staff than hospitals.
Response: We believe that the
commenter may be referring to the CY
2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (75 FR 71991), which
states that we believe that CMHCs have
a lower cost structure than their
hospital-based PHP counterparts
because the data showed that CMHCs
provide fewer PHP services in a day and
use less costly staff than hospital-based
PHPs. Those statements were based on
CY 2009 claims and cost data, which
differ from more recent claims and cost
data. Each year, we calculate geometric
mean per diem costs based on updated
claims and cost reports. We do not have
detailed labor cost data to make a direct
comparison of CMHC versus hospitalbased PHP staff costs, so we could not
comment on whether CMHCs have
lower labor costs than hospital-based
PHPs. But we note that both provider
types use similar types of clinical staff
(see personnel qualifications in 42 CFR
485.904 for CMHCs, and in 42 CFR
482.12, 482.23, and 482.62 for
hospitals). Regarding the level of
services provided, we refer the
commenter to the utilization data in
section VIII.B.3.b. of this CY 2020 final
rule with comment period for details on
current level of services CMHCs
provide, based on CY 2018 claims data.
Table 22 shows that CMHCs provide
more days with four or more services
than hospital-based PHPs.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern about the decline in
the number of CMHCs and hospital-
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based PHPs, and the effects on
beneficiary access to care. Two
commenters wrote that the current
payment methodology has resulted in
reductions in provider access rather
than protection of access. Commenters
noted that these declines have occurred
while the need for mental health
services has increased; that the demand
for mental health services is on track to
outpace the supply of behavioral health
care providers; and that as the number
of PHPs declines, it may become even
more difficult to calculate the
appropriate per diems. A few
commenters noted that decreased access
to PHP services could result in
increasing instances of patient
recidivism and more inpatient
psychiatric admissions. One commenter
noted that beneficiaries would have
their treatment alternatives limited if
CMHCs closed, and therefore, be forced
to use more costly hospital-based PHPs,
with higher beneficiary co-payments.
A commenter expressed concerns
about CMHC rate setting being based on
only 41 providers, and wrote that the
data are skewed, the calculations are
incorrect, and the proposed low
payment rates would result in the
remaining CMHCs closing. This
commenter noted that setting CMHCs’
payment rates based on a small number
of CMHCs does not reflect the actual
cost of providing these services and
expressed concern that by using the
mean or median costs, more CMHCs
would close. The same commenter also
stated that CMHCs incur extra costs to
meet the CMHC conditions of
participation (CoPs), have experienced
an increase in bad debt expense, and the
effects of sequestration.
Response: We appreciate the work
PHPs do to care for a particularly
vulnerable population with serious
mental illnesses and believe that having
PHPs available to beneficiaries helps
prevent patient recidivism and inpatient
psychiatric admissions. We share the
commenters’ concerns about the decline
in the number of PHPs, particularly at
CMHCs, and the effect on access. Our
goal is to protect access to both provider
types, so beneficiaries have choices
regarding where to receive treatment.
We want to ensure that CMHCs remain
a viable option as providers of mental
health care in the beneficiary’s own
community. We agree that beneficiaries
receiving care at a CMHC instead of a
hospital-based PHP would have lower
out-of-pocket costs.
We disagree that the CMHC data are
skewed and that the calculations are
incorrect. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule (80 FR 70456 to 70459), we
implemented a ±2 standard deviation
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trim on CMHC costs per day to remove
aberrant data that could skew costs up
or down inappropriately. We recognize
that with a small number of providers,
such as the 43 CMHCs used for this final
rule rate setting, the calculations can be
influenced by large providers. That
occurred in this CY 2020 final rule rate
setting, as discussed previously in this
section, and we proposed and are
finalizing a cost floor in CY 2020 to help
protect CMHCs from this fluctuation
and possible effects on access.
We are confident that the per diem
costs we calculate follow the
methodology we discussed in the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70462 to 70466)
and in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79691).
Those costs are geometric mean per
diem costs, rather than arithmetic mean
or median per diem costs; in the CY
2013 OPPS final rule (77 FR 68409), we
discussed the advantages of using
geometric means rather than medians to
calculate PHP costs, and noted that the
geometric mean more accurately
captures the full range of service costs
(including outliers) than the median
cost and promotes more stability in the
payment system.
We believe that providing payment
that is based upon actual providerreported costs will not lead to provider
closures. As we have noted in prior
rulemaking (76 FR 74350; 79 FR 66906),
the closure of PHPs may be due to any
number of reasons, such as business
management or marketing decisions,
competition, oversaturation of certain
geographic areas, and Federal and State
fraud and abuse efforts, among others. It
does not directly follow that closure
could be due to reduced per diem
payment rates alone, especially when
the per diem payment rates reflect the
costs of PHP providers, as stated in
claims and cost data.
Furthermore, most (if not all) of the
costs associated with adhering to CoPs
should be captured in the cost report
data used in ratesetting and, therefore,
are accounted for when computing the
geometric mean per diem costs. The
reduction to bad debt reimbursement
was a result of provisions of section
3201 of the Middle Class Tax Extension
and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Pub. L.
112–96). The reduction to bad debt
reimbursement impacted all providers
eligible to receive bad debt
reimbursement, as discussed in the CY
2013 End-Stage Renal Disease final rule
(77 FR 67518). Medicare currently
reimburses bad debt for eligible
providers at 65 percent. Because this
percentage was enacted by Congress,
CMS does not have the authority to
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change the percentage. In contrast to the
Medicare bad debt reimbursement
policy, private sector insurers typically
do not reimburse providers for any
amounts of enrollees’ unpaid
deductibles or coinsurance. In light of
budgetary constraints and the steady
increase in bad debt claims over the
years, a reduction in bad debt
reimbursement is necessary to protect
the Medicare Trust Fund and preserve
beneficiary access to care without
imposing an undue burden on hospitals.
Finally, the reduction in payments
due to sequestration has been mandated
by Congress, and we are unable to
remove or modify it. This mandatory
payment reduction was established by
the Budget Control Act of 2011 (Pub. L.
112–25) and amended by the American
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (Pub. L.
112–240). Sequestration is discussed in
a Medicare Fee-for-Service Provider
eNews article available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Outreach/FFSProvPartProg/Downloads/
2013-03-08-standalone.pdf.
Sequestration is outside the scope of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and
this final rule with comment period.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS use value-based purchasing
for paying CMHCs instead of a costbased system. This commenter
recommended that CMS look at the
value provided by the quality of
provided services. This commenter
believed that rewarding providers for
higher-quality care, as measured by
selected standards, instead of rewarding
providers for increasing costs, is a better
way to improve the quality of any
service.
Response: We responded to a similar
public comment in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70462) and refer readers to a
summary of that comment and our
response. Currently, there is no
statutory language authorizing valuebased purchasing for CMHCs or for
outpatient hospital-based PHPs. To
reiterate, sections 1833(t)(2) and
1833(t)(9) of the Act set forth the
requirements for establishing and
adjusting OPPS payment rates, which
are based on costs, and which include
PHP payment rates.
We note that section 1833(t)(17) of the
Act authorizes the Hospital Outpatient
Quality Reporting (OQR) Program,
which applies a payment reduction to
subsection (d) hospitals that fail to meet
program requirements. In the CY 2015
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (79 FR 41040),
we considered future inclusion of, and
requested comments on, the following
quality measures addressing PHP issues
that would apply in the hospital
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61343
outpatient setting: (1) 30-Day
Readmission; (2) Group Therapy; and
(3) No Individual Therapy. We refer
readers to the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (79 FR 66957
through 66958) for a more detailed
discussion of PHP measures considered
for inclusion in the Hospital OQR
Program in future years, and of the
comments received as a result of the
solicitation. However, the Hospital OQR
Program does not apply to CMHCs, and
there are no quality measures applied to
CMHCs.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that more work be done
to establish PHP rates accurately, that
CMS reconsider its PHP policy positions
to determine how to rebuild PHP
services, or that CMS establish a task
force to review and discuss the
availability of PHPs for Medicare
beneficiaries.
Response: We will continue to
explore policy options for strengthening
the PHP benefit and increasing access to
the valuable services provided by
CMHCs as well as by hospital-based
PHPs. As part of that process, we
regularly review our methodology to
ensure that it is appropriately capturing
the cost of care reported by providers.
For example, for the CY 2016
ratesetting, we extensively reviewed the
methodology used for PHP ratesetting.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70462
through 70466), we also included a
detailed description of the ratesetting
process to help all PHP providers record
costs correctly so that we can more fully
capture PHP costs in ratesetting. In this
CY 2020 ratesetting, we proposed and
are finalizing a policy to calculate the
CY 2020 per diem costs with a cost
floor. We believe that policy helps to
support access, particularly for CMHCs,
whose calculated costs were still below
the cost floor when we ran the
calculations with updated data for this
final rule with comment period.
We also recognize that as the number
of providers decreases, the ratesetting
calculations can be more strongly
influenced by the costs of large
providers. We are regularly evaluating
our rate setting methodology to ensure
that it is as accurate as possible, and
captures provider cost data fully.
However, our rate setting methodology
must comply with requirements given
in statute at 1833(t)(2) and 1833(t)(9),
and depends heavily on providerreported costs. As noted previously, we
strongly encourage CMHCs to review
cost reporting instructions to be sure
they are reporting their costs correctly.
These instructions are available in
chapter 45 of the Provider
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Reimbursement Manual, Part 2,
available on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/PaperBased-Manuals.html. We also strongly
encourage those CMHCs that do not file
full cost reports to consider doing so, to
help us in more fully capturing CMHC
costs in rate setting.
We maintain positive working
relationships with various industry
leaders representing both CMHCs and
hospital-based PHP providers with
whom we have consistently met over
the years to discuss industry concerns
and ideas. These relationships have
provided significant and valued input
regarding PHP ratesetting. We also hold
Hospital Outpatient Open Door Forum
calls monthly, in which all individuals
are welcome to participate and/or
submit questions regarding specific
issues, including questions related to
PHPs. Furthermore, we initiate
rulemaking annually, through which we
receive public comments on proposals
set forth in a proposed rule and respond
to those comments in a final rule. All
individuals are provided an opportunity
to comment, and we give consideration
to each comment that we receive. Given
the relationships that we have
established with various industry
leaders and the various means for us to
receive comments and
recommendations, we believe that we
receive adequate input regarding
ratesetting and take that input into
consideration when establishing the
payment rates. We continue to welcome
any input and information that the
public is willing to provide.
After consideration of the comments,
we are finalizing our proposal as
proposed. Because the final CY 2020
calculated CMHC geometric mean per
diem cost of $103.50 is less than the
cost floor amount of $121.62, the final
CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean per
diem cost is $121.62.
b. Hospital-Based PHP Data Preparation:
Data Trims and Exclusions
For this CY 2020 final rule with
comment period, we prepared data
consistent with our policies as
described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70463 through 70465) for hospital-based
PHP providers, which is similar to that
used for CMHCs. The CY 2018 PHP
claims included data for 436 hospitalbased PHP providers for our
calculations in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
Consistent with our policies as stated
in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70463
through 70465), we prepared the data by
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applying trims and data exclusions. We
applied a trim on hospital service days
for hospital-based PHP providers with a
CCR greater than 5 at the cost center
level. To be clear, the CCR greater than
5 trim is a service day-level trim in
contrast to the CMHC ±2 standard
deviation trim, which is a provider-level
trim. Applying this CCR greater than 5
trim removed affected service days from
one hospital-based PHP provider with a
CCR of 6.398 from our final ratesetting.
However, 100 percent of the service
days for this one hospital-based PHP
provider had at least one service
associated with a CCR greater than 5, so
the trim removed this provider entirely
from our final ratesetting. In addition,
59 hospital-based PHPs were removed
for having no PHP costs and, therefore,
no days with PHP payment. Two
hospital-based PHPs were removed
because none of their days included
PHP-allowable HCPCS codes. No
hospital-based PHPs were removed for
missing wage index data, nor were any
hospital-based PHPs removed by the
OPPS ±3 standard deviation trim on
costs per day. (We refer readers to the
OPPS Claims Accounting Document,
available online at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/Downloads/CMS-1695FC-2019-OPPS-FR-ClaimsAccounting.pdf.)
Overall, we removed 62 hospitalbased PHP providers [(1 with all service
days having a CCR greater than 5) + (59
with zero daily costs and no PHP
payment) + (2 with no PHP-allowable
HCPCS codes)], resulting in 374 (436
total ¥ 62 excluded) hospital-based
PHP providers in the data used for
calculating ratesetting. In addition, no
hospital-based PHP providers were
defaulted to their overall hospital
ancillary CCRs due to outlier cost center
CCR values.
After completing these data
preparation steps, we calculated the
final CY 2020 geometric mean per diem
cost for hospital-based PHP APC 5863
for hospital-based partial hospitalization
services by following the methodology
described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70464 through 70465) and modified in
the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79687 and
79691).75 The final calculated CY 2020
75 Each revenue code on the hospital-based PHP
claim must have a HCPCS code and charge
associated with it. We multiply each claim service
line’s charges by the hospital’s department-level
CCR; in CY 2020 and subsequent years, that CCR
is determined by using the PHP-only revenue-codeto-cost-center crosswalk. Only the claims service
lines containing PHP-allowable HCPCS codes and
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hospital-based PHP APC geometric
mean per diem cost for hospital-based
PHP providers that provide 3 or more
services per service day (hospital-based
PHP APC 5863) is $233.52, which is an
increase of 4.8 percent from $222.76
calculated last year for CY 2019
ratesetting (83 FR 58989 through 58991).
The increase in the final CY 2020
calculated hospital-based PHP APC
geometric mean per diem cost from the
prior year is influenced by two large
providers with updated cost data, whose
costs per day increased. We believe that
a hospital-based PHP APC geometric
mean per diem cost of $233.52 supports
ongoing access to hospital-based PHPs.
This cost is nearly a 5 percent increase
from the final CY 2019 hospital-based
PHP geometric mean per diem cost.
In the CY 2020 OPPS proposed rule
(84 FR 39516 to 39518), the calculated
CY 2020 hospital-based PHP APC
geometric mean per diem cost for
hospital-based PHP providers that
provide 3 or more services per service
day (hospital-based PHP APC 5863) was
$198.53, which was a decrease from
$222.76 calculated last year for CY 2019
ratesetting (83 FR 58989 through 58991).
We stated that we believe access is
better supported when the geometric
mean per diem cost does not fluctuate
greatly. In addition, while the hospitalbased PHP APC 5863 is described as
providing payment for the cost of 3 or
more services per day (81 FR 79680), 89
percent of hospital-based PHP paid
service days in CY 2018 were for
providing 4 or more services per day. To
be eligible for a PHP, a patient must
need at least 20 hours of therapeutic
services per week, as evidenced in the
patient’s plan of care (42 CFR
410.43(c)(1)). To meet those patient
needs, most PHP paid service days
provide 4 or more services (we refer
readers to Table 22.—Percentage of PHP
Days by Service Unit Frequency in the
proposed rule). Therefore, the hospitalbased PHP APC 5863 is actually heavily
weighted to the cost of providing 4 or
PHP-allowable revenue codes from the hospitalbased PHP claims remaining after trimming are
retained for hospital-based PHP cost determination.
The costs, payments, and service units for all
service lines occurring on the same service date, by
the same provider, and for the same beneficiary are
summed. Hospital-based PHP service days must
have 3 or more services provided to be assigned to
hospital-based PHP APC 5863. The final geometric
mean per diem cost for hospital-based PHP APC
5863 is calculated by taking the nth root of the
product of n numbers, for days where 3 or more
services were provided. Hospital-based PHP service
days with costs ±3 standard deviations from the
geometric mean costs within APC 5863 are deleted
and removed from modeling. The remaining
hospital-based PHP service days are used to
calculate the final geometric mean per diem cost for
hospital-based PHP APC 5863.
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more services. The per diem costs for
hospital-based PHP APC 5863 have been
calculated as $213.14, $208.09, and
$222.76 for CY 2017 (81 FR 79691), CY
2018 (82 FR 59378), and CY 2019 (83 FR
58991), respectively. We noted that we
do not believe that it is likely that the
cost of providing hospital-based PHP
services has suddenly declined when
costs generally increase over time. We
were concerned by this fluctuation,
which we believe was influenced by
data from a single large provider that
had low service costs per day.
Therefore, rather than proposing the
calculated CY 2020 hospital-based PHP
APC geometric mean per diem cost, we
instead proposed to use the CY 2020
hospital-based PHP APC geometric
mean per diem cost, calculated in
accordance with our existing
methodology, but with a cost floor equal
to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per
diem cost for hospital-based PHPs of
$222.76 (83 FR 58991), as the basis for
developing the CY 2020 hospital-based
PHP APC per diem rate. As part of this
proposal, we proposed that we would
use the most recent updated claims and
cost data to calculate CY 2020 geometric
mean per diem costs for the final rule
with comment period, just as we did for
CMHCs. We believe using the CY 2019
hospital-based PHP per diem cost as the
floor is appropriate because it is based
on very recent hospital-based PHP
claims and cost data and would help to
protect provider access by preventing
wide fluctuation in the per diem costs
for hospital-based APC 5863.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule discussion of the proposed cost
floor, we also considered proposing a 3year rolling average calculated using the
final PHP geometric mean per diem
costs, by provider type, from CY 2018
(82 FR 59378) and CY 2019 (83 FR
58991), and the calculated CY 2020
geometric mean per diem cost of
$198.53 discussed earlier in this section
for hospital-based PHPs. As discussed
previously in that proposed rule, the 3year rolling average per diem cost floor
for CMHCs would have been $122.75,
but the resulting rolling average per
diem cost floor for hospital-based PHPs
would have been $209.79. While we
believe that this option would have
supported access to CMHCs, as
discussed previously, it could have
resulted in a geometric mean per diem
cost for the hospital-based PHP APC
which still would have been a decrease
from the hospital-based PHP APC
geometric mean per diem cost of
$222.76 finalized in CY 2019 (83 FR
58991). In addition, we believed that it
was necessary to recalculate the
hospital-based PHP geometric mean per
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diem cost for the final rule using
updated claims and cost data; had we
simply proposed to use a 3-year rolling
average per diem cost floor for the
hospital-based PHP APC per diem costs
for CY 2020, we could not have done so.
We were concerned that the 3-year
rolling average per diem cost would
have continued to result in a fluctuation
in the cost of a hospital providing 3 or
more hospital-based PHP services per
day.
We believe that it is important to
support access to partial hospitalization
services in both CMHCs and in hospitalbased PHPs, and note that hospitalbased PHPs provide 80 percent of all
paid PHP service days. Therefore, we
believe that it was more appropriate to
have proposed to use the final CY 2019
geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, as the cost floor for use
with the calculated CY 2020 PHP
geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, because those CY 2019
per diem costs are based on very recent
CMHC and hospital-based PHP claims
and cost data, are the easiest to
understand, and would result in final
geometric mean per diem costs which
would help to protect provider access
by preventing wide fluctuation in the
per diem costs for both CMHCs and
hospital-based PHPs.
While the cost floor would have
protected hospital-based PHPs if the
final CY 2020 calculated hospital-based
PHP APC geometric mean per diem cost
were still less than $222.76, the final
calculated hospital-based PHP
geometric mean per diem cost of
$233.52 is greater than the floor, and
therefore, we are finalizing this
calculated CY 2020 cost for hospitalbased PHPs. We believe finalizing our
proposal for CY 2020 ratesetting allows
us to use the most recent or very recent
hospital-based PHP claims and cost
reporting data while still protecting
provider access. To be clear, this policy
of using a cost floor is only applied for
the CY 2020 ratesetting.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we estimated that the aggregate
difference in the (prescaled) hospitalbased PHP geometric mean per diem
costs for CY 2020 from proposing the
hospital-based PHP cost floor amount of
$222.76 rather than the calculated
hospital-based PHP geometric mean per
diem cost of $198.53 to be $9.3 million.
However, because we are finalizing the
CY 2020 calculated geometric mean per
diem cost for hospital-based PHPs, there
is no cost difference to Medicare from
using a cost floor. We refer readers to
section XXVII. of this final rule for
payment impacts, which are budget
neutral.
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61345
We received several comments on our
proposal.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern about the decline in
the number of CMHCs and hospitalbased PHPs, and the effects on
beneficiary access to care. Two
commenters wrote that the current
payment methodology has resulted in
reductions in provider access rather
than protection of access. Commenters
noted that these declines have occurred
while the need for mental health
services has increased; that the demand
for mental health services is on track to
outpace the supply of behavioral health
care providers; that as the number of
PHPs declines, it may become even
more difficult to calculate the
appropriate per diems; and that recent
changes in OPPS rulemaking related to
Section 603 of the Bipartisan Budget Act
of 2015 require that the per diem for
new hospital-based PHP programs must
be set equal to the lower CMHC rate,
which they said was not viable for
hospital-based PHPs and would limit
the ability to create new PHP programs.
A few commenters noted that decreased
access to PHP services could result in
increasing instances of patient
recidivism and more inpatient
psychiatric admissions.
Response: We appreciate the work
PHPs do to care for a particularly
vulnerable population with serious
mental illnesses and believe that having
PHPs available to beneficiaries helps
prevent patient recidivism and inpatient
psychiatric admissions. We share the
commenters’ concerns about the decline
in the number of PHPs and the effect on
access. Our goal is to protect access to
both provider types, so beneficiaries
have choices regarding where to receive
treatment. We also refer readers to
section VIII.B.2.a. for a similar comment
and response related to CMHCs.
Regarding the effects of Section 603 of
the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 76 on
hospital-based PHP access, we note that
this provision amended the statute at
section 1833(t) of the Act to require that
certain items and services furnished in
certain off-campus provider-based
departments (PBDs) shall not be
considered covered outpatient
department services for purposes of
OPPS, and payment for those
nonexcepted items and services shall be
made ‘‘under the applicable payment
system’’ beginning January 1, 2017 (81
FR 79720).
These amendments do not prevent
hospitals from creating new PHP
programs. Instead, they provide that
certain items and services are no longer
76 Public
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covered OPD services payable under the
OPPS, and instead must be paid under
another ‘‘applicable payment system.’’
CMS adopted the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule (MPFS) as the applicable
payment system for these services (81
FR 79717). Although, nonexcepted offcampus provider-based departments are
no longer paid under the OPPS and
payments may be lower for these
departments, the section 603 changes do
not prohibit these departments from
creating PHP programs. Excepted offcampus provider-based departments
and the main campuses of hospitals
continue to be paid under the OPPS, so
it is unclear for these locations why
entities could not create new PHPs.
Commenters were incorrect in stating
that new hospital-based PHPs are paid
at the CMHC per diem rate. Only nonexcepted off-campus PHPs are paid
through the MPFS at the CMHC rate;
new hospital-based PHPs that are oncampus are paid at the hospital-based
PHP per diem rate under the OPPS.
We believe that paying non-excepted
off-campus PHPs through the MPFS at
the CMHC APC rate is appropriate. We
note that the clinical services, staffing,
and documentation requirements are
similar for CMHCs and hospital-based
PHPs. As discussed in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79717), when a
beneficiary receives services in an offcampus department of a hospital (such
as in a hospital-based PHP), the
Medicare payment is generally higher
than when those same services are
provided in a physician’s office.
Similarly, when partial hospitalization
services are provided in a hospitalbased PHP, Medicare pays more than
when those same services are provided
by a CMHC. CMHCs are freestanding
providers that are not part of a hospital,
and that have lower cost structures than
hospital-based PHPs. This is similar to
the differences between freestanding
entities paid under the MPFS that
furnish other services also provided by
hospital-based entities. We believe that
paying for non-excepted hospital-based
partial hospitalization services at the
lower CMHC per diem rate is in
alignment with section 603 amendments
to the OPPS statute, while also
protecting access to the PHP benefit.
Furthermore, we note that our policy
of paying non-excepted off-campus
PHPs at the CMHC APC 5853 per diem
rate provides some relief to those offcampus PHPs since non-PHP mental
health services provided by nonexcepted off-campus hospital provider
departments are paid through the MPFS
at 40 percent of the OPPS APC amount
for the same service. Paying non-
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excepted off-campus hospital-based
PHPs at the CY 2020 CMHC APC 5853
payment rate results in a payment that
is 52 percent of the CY 2020 APC 5863
OPPS payment rate for hospital-based
PHPs. The final FY 2020 payment rates
for PHP APCs 5853 and 5863 are in
Addendum A to this final rule with
comment period, which is available in
the FY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
supporting documents found on our
website at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/
Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-andNotices.html.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS base PHP reimbursement on
incentives determined by documented
productivity results. This commenter
suggested we consider Measurementbased Care and Patient Satisfaction.
Response: We believe ‘‘measurementbased care’’ that the commenter cited
refers to administering a standardized
instrument to measure some aspect of
patient symptoms when he or she
begins and ends receiving PHP services.
This type of measure could inform
clinical decision-making and quality
improvement activities at minimum, but
results could theoretically be used to
adjust payment. We also believe that the
commenter is asking if CMS could
administer patient satisfaction surveys
(like HCAHPS) and then reward highperforming PHPs.
Currently, there is no statutory
language explicitly authorizing an
incentive payment methodology based
on productivity results or patient
satisfaction for CMHCs or for outpatient
hospital-based PHPs. We responded to a
similar public comment in the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70462) and refer readers
to a summary of that comment and our
response. To reiterate, sections
1833(t)(2) and 1833(t)(9) of the Act set
forth the requirements for establishing
and adjusting OPPS payment rates,
which are based on costs, and which
include PHP payment rates. We note
that section 1833(t)(17) of the Act
authorizes the Hospital Outpatient
Quality Reporting (OQR) Program,
which applies a payment reduction to
subsection (d) hospitals that fail to meet
program requirements; as finalized in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59109 to
59110), this payment reduction applies
to HCPCS codes which include PHP
services. In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (79 FR 41040), we
considered future inclusion of, and
requested comments on, the following
quality measures addressing PHP issues
that would apply in the hospital
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outpatient setting: (1) 30-Day
Readmission; (2) Group Therapy; and
(3) No Individual Therapy. We also refer
readers to the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (79 FR 66957
through 66958) for a discussion of the
comments received and of PHP
measures considered for inclusion in
the Hospital OQR Program in future
years.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that more work be done
to establish PHP rates accurately, that
CMS reconsider its PHP policy positions
to determine how to rebuild PHP
services, or that CMS establish a task
force to review and discuss the
availability of PHPs for Medicare
beneficiaries.
Response: We will continue to
explore policy options for strengthening
the PHP benefit and increasing access to
the valuable services provided by
CMHCs as well as by hospital-based
PHPs. As part of that process, we
regularly review our methodology to
ensure that it is appropriately capturing
the cost of care reported by providers.
For example, for the CY 2016
ratesetting, we extensively reviewed the
methodology used for PHP ratesetting.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70462
through 70466), we also included a
detailed description of the ratesetting
process to help all PHP providers record
costs correctly so that we can more fully
capture PHP costs in ratesetting. In this
CY 2020 ratesetting, we proposed to
calculate the CY 2020 per diem costs
with a cost floor. We believe that
proposal helped support access,
particularly for CMHCs, whose
calculated costs were still below the
cost floor when we ran the calculations
with updated data for this final rule
with comment period.
We also recognize that as the number
of providers decreases, the ratesetting
calculations can be more strongly
influenced by the costs of large
providers. We are regularly evaluating
our rate setting methodology to ensure
that it is as accurate as possible, and
captures provider cost data fully.
However, our rate setting methodology
must comply with requirements given
in statute at 1833(t)(2) and 1833(t)(9),
and depends heavily on providerreported costs. We remind hospitalbased PHPs that they are required to
record PHP costs in cost center line
9399 (‘‘Partial Hospitalization
Program’’), which was added to the cost
report in response to commenters in
prior OPPS rulemaking (81 FR 79691);
this line is the primary source of the
department-level CCR used for hospitalbased PHP ratesetting in the Revenue
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Code to Cost Center crosswalk. Line
9399 should not mix other non-PHP
mental health service costs with PHP
costs. PHP costs incorrectly recorded in
other cost centers may not be included
for PHP rate setting, thereby affecting
the hospital-based PHP per diem cost
amount.
We maintain positive working
relationships with various industry
leaders representing both CMHCs and
hospital-based PHP providers with
whom we have consistently met over
the years to discuss industry concerns
and ideas. These relationships have
provided significant and valued input
regarding PHP ratesetting. We also hold
Hospital Outpatient Open Door Forum
calls monthly, in which all individuals
are welcome to participate and/or
submit questions regarding specific
issues, including questions related to
PHPs. Furthermore, we initiate
rulemaking annually, through which we
receive public comments on proposals
set forth in a proposed rule and respond
to those comments in a final rule. All
individuals are provided an opportunity
to comment, and we give consideration
to each comment that we receive. Given
the relationships that we have
established with various industry
leaders and the various means for us to
receive comments and
recommendations, we believe that we
receive adequate input regarding
ratesetting and take that input into
consideration when establishing the
payment rates. We continue to welcome
any input and information that the
public is willing to provide.
We refer readers to section VIII.B.2.a.
for a similar comment and response
related to CMHCs.
After consideration of the comments,
we are finalizing our proposal as
proposed. Because the final CY 2020
calculated hospital-based PHP
geometric mean per diem cost of
$233.52 is greater than the cost floor
amount of $222.76, the final CY 2020
hospital-based PHP geometric mean per
diem cost is $233.52.
In summary, for CY 2020, we are
finalizing our proposal to use the
calculated CY 2020 CMHC geometric
mean per diem cost and the calculated
CY 2020 hospital-based PHP geometric
mean per diem cost, each calculated in
accordance with our existing
methodology, but with a cost floor equal
to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per
diem costs as the basis for developing
the CY 2020 PHP APC per diem rates,
as proposed. Because the final CY 2020
calculated geometric mean per diem
cost for CMHCs is less than the cost
floor amount of $121.62, we are
finalizing a CY 2020 geometric mean per
diem cost for CMHCs of $121.62. In
addition, because the CY 2020 final
calculated hospital-based PHP
geometric mean per diem cost is greater
than the hospital-based PHP cost floor
amount of $222.76, we are finalizing the
final calculated CY 2020 hospital-based
PHP geometric mean per diem cost of
$233.52. In this final rule with comment
period, we used the most recent
updated claims and cost data to
calculate CY 2020 geometric mean per
diem costs. The inclusion of a cost floor,
which is based on very recent data,
protected CMHCs as their final
calculated per diem cost was still less
than the cost floor amount, but was not
needed for hospital-based PHPs.
These final CY 2020 PHP geometric
mean per diem costs are shown in Table
45, and are used to derive the final CY
2020 PHP APC per diem rates for
CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs. The
final CY 2020 PHP APC per diem rates
are included in Addendum A to this
final rule with comment period (which
is available on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/HospitalOutpatient-Regulations-andNotices.html).77
3. PHP Service Utilization Updates
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79684
through 79685), we expressed concern
over the low frequency of individual
therapy provided to beneficiaries. The
CY 2018 claims data used for this CY
2020 final rule with comment period
revealed some changes in the provision
of individual therapy compared to CY
2015, CY 2016, and CY 2017 claims data
as shown in the Table 46.
77 As discussed in section II.A. of this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule, final OPPS APC geometric
mean per diem costs (including final PHP APC
geometric mean per diem costs) are divided by the
final geometric mean per diem costs for APC 5012
(Clinic Visits and Related Services) to calculate
each PHP APC’s unscaled relative payment weight.
An unscaled relative payment weight is one that is
not yet adjusted for budget neutrality. Budget
neutrality is required under section 1833(t)(9)(B) of
the Act, and ensures that the estimated aggregate
weight under the OPPS for a calendar year is
neither greater than nor less than the estimated
aggregate weight that would have been made
without the changes. To adjust for budget neutrality
(that is, to scale the weights), we compare the
estimated aggregated weight using the scaled
relative payment weights from the previous
calendar year at issue. We refer readers to the
ratesetting procedures described in Part 2 of the
OPPS Claims Accounting narrative and in section
II. of this final rule for more information on scaling
the weights, and for details on the final steps of the
process that leads to final PHP APC per diem
payment rates. The OPPS Claims Accounting
narrative is available on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-forService-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/HospitalOutpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html.
a. Provision of Individual Therapy
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As shown in Table 46A, the CY 2018
claims show that both CMHCs and
hospital-based PHPs have slightly
increased the provision of individual
therapy on days with 4 or more services,
compared to CY 2017 claims. However,
on days with 3 services, CMHCs and
hospital-based PHPs both decreased the
provision of individual therapy
compared to prior years.
b. Provision of 3-Service Days
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule and final rule with comment period
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(82 FR 33640 and 82 FR 59378), we
stated that we are aware that our singletier payment policy may influence a
change in service provision because
providers are able to obtain payment
that is heavily weighted to the cost of
providing four or more services when
they provide only 3 services. We
indicated that we are interested in
ensuring that providers furnish an
appropriate number of services to
beneficiaries enrolled in PHPs.
Therefore, with the CY 2017
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implementation of CMHC APC 5853 and
hospital-based PHP APC 5863 for
providing 3 or more PHP services per
day, we are continuing to monitor
utilization of days with only 3 PHP
services.
For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we used the CY
2018 claims data. Table 46A shows the
utilization findings based on the final
claims data.
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61348
As shown in Table 46A, the CY 2018
claims data used for this final rule with
comment period show that utilization of
3 service days is increasing compared to
the 3 prior claim years. Compared to CY
2017, in CY 2018 hospital-based PHPs
provided more days with 3 services
only, more days with 4 services only,
and fewer days with 5 or more services.
Compared to CY 2017, in CY 2018
CMHCs provided more days with 3
services, fewer days with 4 services, and
more days with 5 or more services.
The CY 2017 data are the first year of
claims data to reflect the change to the
single-tier PHP APCs. We hope the
increase in the percentage of days with
3 services is simply an anomaly rather
than the start of a trend, but more data
will be needed to make that
determination. As we noted in the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79685), we will
continue to monitor the provision of
days with only 3 services, particularly
now that the single-tier PHP APCs 5853
and 5863 are established for providing
3 or more services per day for CMHCs
and hospital-based PHPs, respectively.
It is important to reiterate our
expectation that days with only 3
services are meant to be an exception
and not the typical PHP day. In the CY
2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (73 FR 68694), we
clearly stated that we consider the
acceptable minimum units of PHP
services required in a PHP day to be 3
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and explained that it was never our
intention that 3 units of service
represent the number of services to be
provided in a typical PHP day. PHP is
furnished in lieu of inpatient
psychiatric hospitalization and is
intended to be more intensive than a
half-day program. We further indicated
that a typical PHP day should generally
consist of 5 to 6 units of service (73 FR
68689). We explained that days with
only 3 units of services may be
appropriate to bill in certain limited
circumstances, such as when a patient
might need to leave early for a medical
appointment and, therefore, would be
unable to complete a full day of PHP
treatment. At that time, we noted that if
a PHP were to only provide days with
3 services, it would be difficult for
patients to meet the eligibility
requirement in 42 CFR 410.43(c)(1) that
patients must require a minimum of 20
hours per week of therapeutic services
as evidenced in their plan of care (73 FR
68689).
We received 2 comments related to
PHP utilization.
Comment: Two commenters noted
that the data in Table 22 of the proposed
rule demonstrate commitment by PHPs
to comply with and exceed the 20-hour
rule. These commenters noted that the
vast majority of claim days for CMHCs
and hospital-based PHPs have 4 or more
services provided. The commenters
noted that PHPs are voluntary, and that
they cannot force patients to attend
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61349
every day. They also noted that the
typical patient profile includes
behaviors that work against attendance
and full daily participation. In addition,
the commenters wrote that there are
other challenges to providing 20 hours
of services per week that are beyond
providers’ control, such as holidays,
weather, and other medical
appointments.
Response: We appreciate that most
PHP days include 4 or more services
being provided, but the updated data for
this final rule showed an uptick in the
percentage of 3-service days. We will
continue to monitor the data over time.
The ‘‘20-hour rule’’ the commenters
mentioned is from our regulations at 42
CFR 410.43(c) (discussed at 73 FR 68694
to 68695), which require that eligible
PHP patients need at least 20 hours of
therapeutic services per week, as
evidenced in their plan of care. PHPs
are intended to be intensive programs
that are provided in lieu of inpatient
hospitalization. We appreciate the
efforts providers have made to increase
beneficiary attendance, and also
recognize the provider concerns about
circumstances beyond their control
which can affect the number of hours of
services provided each week. We did
not make any proposals related to the
20-hour requirement, and are
continuing to monitor the claims data
regarding the hours per week of services
provided, sending providers
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informational messaging without
affecting payment.
C. Outlier Policy for CMHCs
In this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, for CY 2020, we
are finalizing to continue to calculate
the CMHC outlier percentage, cutoff
point and percentage payment amount,
outlier reconciliation, outlier payment
cap, and fixed-dollar threshold
according to previously established
policies. These topics are discussed in
more detail. We refer readers to section
II.G. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule for our general policies
for hospital outpatient outlier payments
(84 CFR 39434 through 39435.
1. Background
As discussed in the CY 2004 OPPS
final rule with comment period (68 FR
63469 through 63470), we noted a
significant difference in the amount of
outlier payments made to hospitals and
CMHCs for PHP services. Given the
difference in PHP charges between
hospitals and CMHCs, we did not
believe it was appropriate to make
outlier payments to CMHCs using the
outlier percentage target amount and
threshold established for hospitals.
Therefore, beginning in CY 2004, we
created a separate outlier policy specific
to the estimated costs and OPPS
payments provided to CMHCs. We
designated a portion of the estimated
OPPS outlier threshold specifically for
CMHCs, consistent with the percentage
of projected payments to CMHCs under
the OPPS each year, excluding outlier
payments, and established a separate
outlier threshold for CMHCs. This
separate outlier threshold for CMHCs
resulted in $1.8 million in outlier
payments to CMHCs in CY 2004 and
$0.5 million in outlier payments to
CMHCs in CY 2005 (82 FR 59381). In
contrast, in CY 2003, more than $30
million was paid to CMHCs in outlier
payments (82 FR 59381).
2. CMHC Outlier Percentage
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59267
through 59268), we described the
current outlier policy for hospital
outpatient payments and CMHCs. We
note that we also discussed our outlier
policy for CMHCs in more detail in
section VIII. C. of that same final rule
(82 FR 59381). We set our projected
target for all OPPS aggregate outlier
payments at 1.0 percent of the estimated
aggregate total payments under the
OPPS (82 FR 59267). This same policy
was also reiterated in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58996). We estimate
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CMHC per diem payments and outlier
payments by using the most recent
available utilization and charges from
CMHC claims, updated CCRs, and the
updated payment rate for APC 5853. For
increased transparency, we are
providing a more detailed explanation
of the existing calculation process for
determining the CMHC outlier
percentages. As previously stated, we
proposed to continue to calculate the
CMHC outlier percentage according to
previously established policies, and we
did not propose any changes to our
current methodology for calculating the
CMHC outlier percentage for CY 2020.
To calculate the CMHC outlier
percentage, we followed three steps:
• Step 1: We multiplied the OPPS
outlier threshold, which is 1.0 percent,
by the total estimated OPPS Medicare
payments (before outliers) for the
prospective year to calculate the
estimated total OPPS outlier payments:
(0.01 × Estimated Total OPPS Payments)
= Estimated Total OPPS Outlier
Payments.
• Step 2: We estimated CMHC outlier
payments by taking each provider’s
estimated costs (based on their
allowable charges multiplied by the
provider’s CCR) minus each provider’s
estimated CMHC outlier multiplier
threshold (we refer readers to section
VIII.C.3. of this final rule with comment
period). That threshold is determined by
multiplying the provider’s estimated
paid days by 3.4 times the CMHC PHP
APC payment rate. If the provider’s
costs exceeded the threshold, we
multiplied that excess by 50 percent, as
described in section VIII.C.3. of this
final rule with comment period, to
determine the estimated outlier
payments for that provider. CMHC
outlier payments are capped at 8
percent of the provider’s estimated total
per diem payments (including the
beneficiary’s copayment), as described
in section VIII.C.5. of this final rule with
comment period, so any provider’s costs
that exceed the CMHC outlier cap will
have its payments adjusted downward.
After accounting for the CMHC outlier
cap, we summed all of the estimated
outlier payments to determine the
estimated total CMHC outlier payments.
(Each Provider’s Estimated Costs—Each
Provider’s Estimated Multiplier
Threshold) = A. If A is greater than
0, then (A × 0.50) = Estimated
CMHC Outlier Payment (before cap)
= B. If B is greater than (0.08 ×
Provider’s Total Estimated Per Diem
Payments), then cap-adjusted B =
(0.08 × Provider’s Total Estimated
Per Diem Payments); otherwise, B =
B. Sum (B or cap-adjusted B) for
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Each Provider = Total CMHC
Outlier Payments.
• Step 3: We determined the
percentage of all OPPS outlier payments
that CMHCs represent by dividing the
estimated CMHC outlier payments from
Step 2 by the total OPPS outlier
payments from Step 1:
(Estimated CMHC Outlier Payments/
Total OPPS Outlier Payments).
In CY 2019, we designated
approximately 0.01 percent of that
estimated 1.0 percent hospital
outpatient outlier threshold for CMHCs
(83 FR 58996), based on this
methodology. In the CY 2020 proposed
rule (84 FR 39521), we proposed to
continue to use the same methodology
for CY 2020. Therefore, based on our CY
2020 payment estimates, CMHCs are
projected to receive 0.02 percent of total
hospital outpatient payments in CY
2020, excluding outlier payments. We
proposed to designate approximately
less than 0.01 percent of the estimated
1.0 percent hospital outpatient outlier
threshold for CMHCs. This percentage is
based upon the formula given in Step 3.
CMS did not receive any comments
on the CMHC outlier percentage, so we
are finalizing the proposal as proposed.
3. Cutoff Point and Percentage Payment
Amount
As described in the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (82
FR 59381), our policy has been to pay
CMHCs for outliers if the estimated cost
of the day exceeds a cutoff point. In CY
2006, we set the cutoff point for outlier
payments at 3.4 times the highest CMHC
PHP APC payment rate implemented for
that calendar year (70 FR 68551). For CY
2018, the highest CMHC PHP APC
payment rate is the payment rate for
CMHC PHP APC 5853. In addition, in
CY 2002, the final OPPS outlier
payment percentage for costs above the
multiplier threshold was set at 50
percent (66 FR 59889). In CY 2018, we
continued to apply the same 50 percent
outlier payment percentage that applies
to hospitals to CMHCs and continued to
use the existing cutoff point (82 FR
59381). Therefore, for CY 2018, we
continued to pay for partial
hospitalization services that exceeded
3.4 times the CMHC PHP APC payment
rate at 50 percent of the amount of
CMHC PHP APC geometric mean per
diem costs over the cutoff point. For
example, for CY 2018, if a CMHC’s cost
for partial hospitalization services paid
under CMHC PHP APC 5853 exceeds
3.4 times the CY 2018 payment rate for
CMHC PHP APC 5853, the outlier
payment would be calculated as 50
percent of the amount by which the cost
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exceeds 3.4 times the CY 2018 payment
rate for CMHC PHP APC 5853 [0.50 ×
(CMHC Cost¥(3.4 × APC 5853 rate))].
This same policy was also reiterated in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58996 through
58997).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39521), in accordance with
our existing policy, we proposed to
continue to pay for partial
hospitalization services that exceed 3.4
times the proposed CMHC PHP APC
payment rate at 50 percent of the CMHC
PHP APC geometric mean per diem
costs over the cutoff point. That is, for
CY 2020, if a CMHC’s cost for partial
hospitalization services paid under
CMHC PHP APC 5853 exceeds 3.4 times
the payment rate for CMHC APC 5853,
the outlier payment will be calculated
as [0.50 × (CMHC Cost¥(3.4 × APC 5853
rate))].
CMS did not receive comments on the
Cutoff Point and Percentage Payment
Amount, so we are finalizing our
proposal as proposed.
4. Outlier Reconciliation
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (73 FR 68594
through 68599), we established an
outlier reconciliation policy to address
charging aberrations related to OPPS
outlier payments. We addressed
vulnerabilities in the OPPS outlier
payment system that lead to differences
between billed charges and charges
included in the overall CCR, which are
used to estimate cost and would apply
to all hospitals and CMHCs paid under
the OPPS. CMS initiated steps to ensure
that outlier payments appropriately
account for the financial risk when
providing an extraordinarily costly and
complex service, but are only being
made for services that legitimately
qualify for the additional payment.
For a comprehensive description of
outlier reconciliation, we refer readers
to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules
with comment period (83 FR 58874
through 58875 and 81 FR 79678 through
79680).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to continue these
policies for partial hospitalization
services provided through PHPs for CY
2020. The current outlier reconciliation
policy requires that providers whose
outlier payments meet a specified
threshold (currently $500,000 for
hospitals and any outlier payments for
CMHCs) and whose overall ancillary
CCRs change by plus or minus 10
percentage points or more, are subject to
outlier reconciliation, pending approval
of the CMS Central Office and Regional
Office (73 FR 68596 through 68599).
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The policy also includes provisions
related to CCRs and to calculating the
time value of money for reconciled
outlier payments due to or due from
Medicare, as detailed in the CY 2009
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period and in the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual (73 FR 68595
through 68599 and Medicare Claims
Processing Internet Only Manual,
Chapter 4, Section 10.7.2 and its
subsections, available online at: https://
www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/
Downloads/clm104c04.pdf).
CMS did not receive comments on the
Outlier Reconciliation Policy, so we are
finalizing our proposal as proposed.
5. Outlier Payment Cap
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we implemented
a CMHC outlier payment cap to be
applied at the provider level, such that
in any given year, an individual CMHC
will receive no more than a set
percentage of its CMHC total per diem
payments in outlier payments (81 FR
79692 through 79695). We finalized the
CMHC outlier payment cap to be set at
8 percent of the CMHC’s total per diem
payments (81 FR 79694 through 79695).
This outlier payment cap only affects
CMHCs, it does not affect other provider
types (that is, hospital-based PHPs), and
is in addition to and separate from the
current outlier policy and reconciliation
policy in effect. For CY 2019, we
continued this policy in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58997).
For CY 2020 and subsequent years,
we proposed to continue to apply the 8
percent CMHC outlier payment cap to
the CMHC’s total per diem payments (84
FR 39522).
CMS did not receive comments on the
CMHC outlier payment cap, so we are
finalizing our proposal as proposed.
6. Fixed-Dollar Threshold
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59267
through 59268), for the hospital
outpatient outlier payment policy, we
set a fixed-dollar threshold in addition
to an APC multiplier threshold. Fixeddollar thresholds are typically used to
drive outlier payments for very costly
items or services, such as cardiac
pacemaker insertions. CMHC PHP APC
5853 is the only APC for which CMHCs
may receive payment under the OPPS,
and is for providing a defined set of
services that are relatively low cost
when compared to other OPPS services.
Because of the relatively low cost of
CMHC services that are used to
comprise the structure of CMHC PHP
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61351
APC 5853, it is not necessary to also
impose a fixed-dollar threshold on
CMHCs. Therefore, in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we did not set a fixed-dollar
threshold for CMHC outlier payments
(82 FR 59381). This same policy was
also reiterated in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58996 through 58997.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39522), we proposed to
continue this policy for CY 2020. CMS
did not receive any comments on the
fixed-dollar threshold, so we are
finalizing our proposal as proposed.
D. Update to PHP Allowable HCPCS
Codes
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58997
through 58998), we discussed that,
during the CY 2019 rulemaking, we
received the Category I and III CPT
codes from the AMA that were new,
revised, and deleted, effective January 1,
2019. This included the deleting of the
following psychological and
neuropsychological testing CPT codes,
which affect PHPs, as of January 1,
2019:
• CPT code 96101 (Psychological
testing by psychologist/physician);
• CPT code 96102 (Psychological
testing by technician);
• CPT code 96103 (Psychological
testing administered by computer);
• CPT code 96118
(Neuropsychological testing by
psychologist/physician)
• CPT code 96119
(Neuropsychological testing by
technician); and
• CPT code 96120
(Neuropsychological test administered
w/computer).
In addition, the AMA added the
following psychological and
neuropsychological testing CPT codes to
replace the deleted codes, as of January
1, 2019:
• CPT code 96130 (Psychological
testing evaluation by physician/
qualified health care professional; first
hour);
• CPT code 93131 (Psychological
testing evaluation by physician/
qualified health care professional; each
additional hour);
• CPT code 96132
(Neuropsychological testing evaluation
by physician/qualified health care
professional; first hour);
• CPT code 96133
(Neuropsychological testing evaluation
by physician/qualified health care
professional; each additional hour);
• CPT code 96136 (Psychological/
neuropsychological testing by
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physician/qualified health care
professional; first 30 minutes);
• CPT code 96137 (Psychological/
neuropsychological testing by
physician/qualified health care
professional; each additional 30
minutes);
• CPT code 96138 (Psychological/
neuropsychological testing by
technician; first 30 minutes);
• CPT code 96139 (Psychological/
neuropsychological testing by
technician; each additional 30 minutes);
and
• CPT code 96146 (Psychological/
neuropsychological testing; automated
result only).
As we proposed in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58997 through 58998), we
included these replacement codes in
Addenda B and O. As is our usual
practice for including new and revised
Category I and III CPT codes under the
OPPS, we included interim APC
assignments and status indicators for
these codes and provided an
opportunity under the OPPS for the
public to comment on these interim
assignments. That is, we included
comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ to indicate
that the code is new for the next
calendar year or the code is an existing
code with substantial revision to its
code descriptor in the next calendar
year as compared to current calendar
year with a proposed APC assignment,
and that comments will be accepted on
the proposed APC and status indicator
assignments.
While these interim APC and status
indicator assignments under the OPPS
were included in Addendum B and
Addendum O to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule and final rule with
comment period, PHP providers may
not have been aware of those changes
because we did not also include these
in the PHP discussion presented in the
proposed rule; to be clear, PHP is a part
of the OPPS. To ensure that PHP
providers were aware of the new and
replacement codes related to CMHC and
hospital-based partial hospitalization
programs and had the opportunity to
comment on the changes, we utilized a
practice similar to the one we use under
the OPPS for new Level II HCPCS codes
that become effective after the proposed
rule is published. Therefore, in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we proposed to delete
the same 6 CPT codes listed from the
PHP-allowable code set for CMHC APC
5853 and hospital-based PHP APC 5863,
and replace them with 9 new CPT codes
as shown in Table 47 of the final rule
with comment period, effective January
1, 2019. We also refer readers to section
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III.A.4. of the proposed rule for a
detailed discussion of how we include
new and revised Category I and III CPT
codes for a related calendar year, assign
interim APC and status indicator
assignments, and allow for public
comments on these interim assignments
for finalization in the next calendar year
final rule with comment period.
We solicited public comments on
these proposals and since we did not
receive any comments, we are finalizing
our proposals as proposed.
IX. Procedures That Will Be Paid Only
as Inpatient Procedures
A. Background
We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74352 through 74353) for
a full historical discussion of our
longstanding policies on how we
identify procedures that are typically
provided only in an inpatient setting
(referred to as the inpatient only (IPO)
list) and, therefore, will not be paid by
Medicare under the OPPS, and on the
criteria that we use to review the IPO
list each year to determine whether or
not any procedures should be removed
from the list. The complete list of codes
that describe procedures that will be
paid by Medicare in CY 2020 as
inpatient only procedures is included as
Addendum E to this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
which is available via the internet on
the CMS website.
B. Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO)
List
1. Methodology for Identifying
Appropriate Changes to IPO List
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39523 through 39525), for
CY 2020, we proposed to use the same
methodology (described in the
November 15, 2004 final rule with
comment period (69 FR 65834)) of
reviewing the current list of procedures
on the IPO list to identify any
procedures that may be removed from
the list. We have established five criteria
that are part of this methodology. As
noted in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (76 FR
74353), we utilize these criteria when
reviewing procedures to determine
whether or not they should be removed
from the IPO list and assigned to an
APC group for payment under the OPPS
when provided in the hospital
outpatient setting. We note that a
procedure is not required to meet all of
the established criteria to be removed
from the IPO list. The criteria include
the following:
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• Most outpatient departments are
equipped to provide the services to the
Medicare population.
• The simplest procedure described
by the code may be performed in most
outpatient departments.
• The procedure is related to codes
that we have already removed from the
IPO list.
• A determination is made that the
procedure is being performed in
numerous hospitals on an outpatient
basis.
• A determination is made that the
procedure can be appropriately and
safely performed in an ASC and is on
the list of approved ASC procedures or
has been proposed by us for addition to
the ASC list.
2. Procedures Proposed for Removal
From the IPO List
Using the listed criteria, for the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
identified one procedure described by
CPT code 27130 (Arthroplasty,
acetabular and proximal femoral
prosthetic replacement (total hip
arthroplasty) with or without autograft
or allograft) that met the criteria for
proposed removal from the IPO list. The
procedure that we proposed to remove
from the IPO list for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, including the CPT/
HCPCS code, long descriptor, and the
proposed CY 2020 payment indicator
was displayed in Table 23 of the
proposed rule.
For a number of years, total hip
arthroplasty (THA) has been a topic of
discussion for removal from the IPO list
with both stakeholder support and
opposition. Most recently, in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR
33644 and 33645), we sought public
comment on the possible removal of
partial hip arthroplasty (PHA), CPT
code 27125 (Hemiarthroplasty, hip,
partial (for example, femoral stem
prosthesis, bipolar arthroplasty)), and
total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total hip
replacement, CPT code 27130
(Arthroplasty, acetabular and proximal
femoral prosthetic replacement (total
hip arthroplasty), with or without
autograft or allograft from the IPO list.
Both THA and PHA were placed on the
original IPO list in the CY 2001 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (65
FR 18780).
Among those commenters expressing
support in response to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which we
summarized and responded to in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 52527 through
52528)) for removal of THA from the
IPO list were several surgeons and other
stakeholders who believed that, given
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thorough preoperative screening by
medical teams with significant
experience and expertise involving hip
replacement procedures, the THA
procedure could be provided on an
outpatient basis for some Medicare
beneficiaries. These commenters noted
significant success involving same day
discharge for patients who met the
screening criteria and whose
experienced medical teams were able to
perform the procedure early enough in
the day for the patients to achieve
postoperative goals, allowing home
discharge by the end of the day. The
commenters believed that the benefits of
providing the THA procedure on an
outpatient basis include significant
enhancements in patient well-being,
improved efficiency, and cost savings to
the Medicare program, including shorter
hospital stays resulting in fewer medical
complications, improved results, and
enhanced patient satisfaction.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that, like most surgical
procedures, both PHA and THA need to
be tailored to the individual patient’s
needs. Patients with a relatively low
anesthesia risk and without significant
comorbidities who have family
members at home who can assist them
may likely be good candidates for an
outpatient PHA or THA procedure.
These patients may also be able to
tolerate outpatient rehabilitation in
either an outpatient facility or at home
postsurgery. On the other hand, patients
with multiple medical comorbidities,
aside from their osteoarthritis, would
more likely require inpatient
hospitalization and possibly postacute
care in a skilled nursing facility or other
facility. Surgeons who discussed
outpatient PHA and THA procedures in
public comments in response to our CY
2017 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (81 FR
45679) comment solicitation (which we
summarized and responded to in the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79696)) on the
TKA procedure emphasized the
importance of careful patient selection
and strict protocols to optimize
outpatient hip replacement outcomes.
These protocols typically manage all
aspects of the patient’s care, including
the at-home preoperative and
postoperative environment, anesthesia,
pain management, and rehabilitation to
maximize rapid recovery, ambulation,
and performance of activities of daily
living.
Numerous commenters representing a
variety of stakeholders, including
physicians and other care providers,
individual stakeholders, specialty
societies, hospital associations, hospital
systems, ASCs, device manufacturers,
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and beneficiaries, responded to our
solicitation of comments regarding the
removal of PHA and THA from the IPO
list (which we summarized and
responded to in CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
52527 through 52528)). The comments
were diverse and some were similar to
the comments we received on our
proposal to remove TKA from the IPO
list. Some commenters, including
hospital systems and associations, as
well as specialty societies and
physicians, stated that it would not be
clinically appropriate to remove PHA
and THA from the IPO list, indicating
that the patient safety profile of
outpatient THA and PHA in the nonMedicare population is not wellestablished. Commenters representing
orthopedic surgeons also stated that
patients requiring a hemiarthroplasty
(PHA) for fragility fractures are, by
nature, a higher risk, suffer more
extensive comorbidities, and require
closer monitoring and preoperative
optimization; therefore, it would not be
medically appropriate to remove the
PHA procedure from the IPO list.
Other commenters, including
ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs),
physicians, and beneficiaries, supported
the removal of PHA and THA from the
IPO list. These commenters stated that
the procedures were appropriate for
certain Medicare beneficiaries and most
outpatient departments are equipped to
provide THA to some Medicare
beneficiaries. They also referenced their
own personal successful experiences
with outpatient THA.
a. Removal of Total Hip Arthroplasty
From the Inpatient Only List
After reviewing the clinical
characteristics of the procedure
described by CPT code 27130,
considering the public comments
described earlier from past rules,
additional feedback from stakeholders,
and with further consultation with our
clinical advisors regarding this
procedure, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39524), we stated
our belief that this procedure meets
criterion 2 (the simplest procedure
described by the code may be performed
in most outpatient departments) and
criterion 3 (the procedure is related to
codes that we have already removed
from the IPO list). As such, we believe
that appropriately selected patients
could have this procedure performed on
an outpatient basis. Therefore, we
proposed to remove THA from the IPO
list and to assign the THA procedure
(CPT code 27130) to C–APC 5115 with
status indicator ‘‘J1’’. We sought public
comments on our conclusion that the
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61353
procedure described by CPT code 27130
meets criteria 2 and 3 and our proposal
to assign the procedure to C–APC 5115
with status indicator ‘‘J1’’. We did not
propose to remove PHA from the IPO
list because we continue to believe that
it does not meet the criteria for removal.
Comment: In response to our proposal
to remove CPT code 27130 from the IPO
list, we received many of the same type
of comments that we received in
response to our CY 2018 proposed rule
comment solicitation for removing THA.
Many commenters, including health
care providers and medical associations,
supported the proposal. The
commenters recognized that with
careful, appropriate selection, THA
could be performed in the outpatient
setting with few to no complications.
One commenter, an orthopaedic
specialty society, agreed with the
patient selection characteristics that
were noted in the proposed rule—
namely, that good candidates for
outpatient THA have relatively low
anesthesia risk, do not have significant
comorbidities, have in-home support,
and are able to tolerate post-surgical
outpatient rehabilitation in either an
outpatient facility or in the home.
One commenter suggested that a
patient that requires a revision of a prior
hip replacement, and/or has other
complicating clinical conditions,
including multiple co-morbidities such
as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, is not
a strong candidate for outpatient THA
and should be scheduled for an
inpatient stay. Furthermore, another
commenter stated that the following
social factors should be considered
when analyzing the implications of
outpatient THA: Living alone, pain,
prior hospitalization, depression,
functional status, high-risk medication,
and health literacy. Additionally, both
supporters and opponents requested
that CMS provide detailed guidance on
what those selection criteria should look
like.
Some commenters did not support the
proposal, citing both clinical and
operational concerns based on their
experience with the removal of TKA
from the IPO in 2018. Those
commenters believe that it would be
hasty to remove THA without waiting
for providers and MACs to have a better
handle on performing TKA in the
outpatient setting and developing better
skill at performing appropriate patient
selection. One commenter suggested
delaying the removal of THA from the
IPO list for a year, until CMS could
provide greater evidence, specifically, a
rigorous medical literature review, that
THA could be performed safely in the
outpatient or ASC setting, especially for
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beneficiaries with multiple comorbidities.
Some commenters, including two
major orthopaedic associations, raised
concerns about whether the THA
procedure meets the criteria required to
be removed from the IPO list. One
commenter, an orthopaedic surgery
specialty society for hips and knees,
shared that they do not believe THA
meets criterion 2 (the simplest
procedure described by the code may be
performed in most outpatient
departments)—they argued that there is
no such thing as a simple THA and that
all procedures described by CPT code
27130 have moderate risks for
complications. The commenter further
argues that criterion 3 (the procedure is
related to codes that we have already
removed from the IPO list) is also not
met since they do not believe that THA
and TKA are similar, except for the risks
associated with each in moving the site
of surgery. The commenter expressed
additional concerns regarding criterion
4 (a determination is made that the
procedure is being performed in
numerous hospitals on an outpatient
basis) and the lack of peer-reviewed
literature that would provide supportive
data. Finally, the commenter expressed
concerns regarding criterion 5 (a
determination is made that the
procedure can be appropriately and
safely performed in an ASC and is on
the list of approved ASC procedures or
has been proposed by us for addition to
the ASC list), stating that there is a lack
of peer-reviewed literature and the
ability to guarantee excellent patient
selection and education, tailored
anesthetic techniques, well-done
surgery, good medical care, and
exceptional post-operative care
coordination in the ASC setting. The
commenter conceded that performance
of THA in the outpatient setting is
possible, but does not believe that data
and guidance on appropriate patient
selection and education, patient-specific
anesthetic techniques, and postoperative care coordination are well
demonstrated in peer-reviewed
literature. This commenter did note that
appropriate patient selection for
outpatient THA candidates could
mitigate some of its concerns.
Another orthopaedic surgery specialty
society called the removal of THA from
the IPO list ‘‘rash,’’ and expressed
extensive concern that CMS would
remove a procedure from the IPO list
based on only two of the five criteria
used to determine appropriate removals
for the IPO list. The commenter further
expressed concern that the rationale
behind removing THA from the IPO
list—specifically that CMS believes it
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meets criteria 2 and 3—fails to consider
whether or not outpatient facilities are
equipped and appropriate for outpatient
THA, and whether or not THA is
performed safely in outpatient settings a
majority of the time.
Response: We thank commenters for
providing public comments on the
appropriateness of removing THA from
the IPO list and providing it in
outpatient settings. We appreciate the
support for the proposal. We also
recognize concerns for ensuring patient
health and quality care. As we have
stated numerous times, like most
surgical procedures, the appropriate site
of service for THA should be based on
the physician’s assessment of the
patient and tailored to the individual
patient’s needs. As we stated in the
proposed rule (84 FR 39524), patients
with a relatively low anesthesia risk and
without significant comorbidities who
have family members at home who can
assist them may likely be good
candidates for an outpatient THA
procedure. On one hand, it may be
determined that these patients will also
be able to tolerate outpatient
rehabilitation either in an outpatient
facility or at home postsurgery. On the
other hand, patients that require a
revision of a prior hip replacement, and/
or have other complicating clinical
conditions, including multiple comorbidities such as obesity, diabetes,
heart disease, may not be strong
candidates for outpatient THA. We also
recognize that elective THA,
necessitated, for example, by
osteoarthritis, for a generally healthy
patient with at-home support is
different than THA for a hip fracture
that is performed on either an emergent
or scheduled basis. While the former
may be appropriate for outpatient THA
if the physician believes that the patient
may be safely discharged on the same or
next day, the latter may be more
appropriate for hospital inpatient
admission.
As previously stated in the discussion
of the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule (82
FR 59383), we continue to believe that
the decision regarding the most
appropriate care setting for a given
surgical procedure is a complex medical
judgment made by the physician based
on the beneficiary’s individual clinical
needs and preferences and on the
general coverage rules requiring that any
procedure be reasonable and necessary.
We also reiterate our previous statement
that the removal of any procedure from
the IPO list does not require the
procedure to be performed only on an
outpatient basis. That is, when a
procedure is removed from the IPO, it
simply means that Medicare will pay for
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it in either the hospital inpatient or
outpatient setting; it does not mean that
the procedure must be performed on an
outpatient basis. The 2-midnight rule,
which is discussed in section X.B. of
this final rule with comment period,
provides general guidance on when
payment under Medicare Part A (that is,
hospital inpatient) may be appropriate.
However, the 2-midnight rule also
recognizes the importance of the
attending physician’s clinical judgment
regarding the appropriate setting of care
for a procedure to be performed.
While we continue to expect
providers who perform outpatient THA
on Medicare beneficiaries to use
comprehensive patient selection criteria
to identify appropriate candidates for
the procedure, we believe that the
surgeons, clinical staff, and medical
specialty societies who perform
outpatient THA and possess specialized
clinical knowledge and experience are
most suited to create such guidelines.
Therefore, we do not expect to create or
endorse specific guidelines or content
for the establishment of providers’
patient selection protocols.
With respect to certain criteria not
being met, we remind commenters that
not all criteria must be met for a service
to be removed from the IPO. We
continue to believe that THA meets
criteria 2 and 3.
Comment: Several commenters stated
concerns regarding the impact of
removing THA from the IPO list in light
of the 2-midnight rule and subsequent
RAC review. Because of past concerns
with the removal of TKA from the IPO
list and fear of RAC review, commenters
also suggested that if THA is removed
from the IPO list, that CMS should
provide a two-year exemption from siteof service denials and Recovery Audit
Contractor (RAC) referrals. Commenters
further stated that in addition to the
exemption, CMS should also educate
providers that CMS policy allows for
case-by-case exceptions to the 2midnight rule in consideration of
patient history, co-morbidities, and risk
of adverse events.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback. We will again refer
readers to the more extensive discussion
of an exemption from site-of service
denials and RAC referrals in section
X.B. of this final rule with comment
period. The case-by-case exception
under the 2-midnight rule continues to
allow for Part A payment to be made, on
a case-by-case basis, where the
physician does not expect the patient to
remain in the hospital for at least two
midnights but nonetheless determines
that inpatient admission is necessary
based on the clinical characteristics of
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the patient and that determination is
supported by the medical record.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed the removal of THA due to
potential detrimental impacts on
hospitals participating in the
Comprehensive Care for Joint
Replacement (CJR) Program and the
Bundled Payments for Care Initiative
(BCPI). Some commenters supported the
proposal, but requested that payment for
THA in the context of alternative
payment models be adjusted.
Response: We again refer readers to
the CY 2017 OPPS/ACS final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79698 through
79699) in which we originally proposed
the removal of TKA procedural codes
from the IPO list and sought comments
on how to modify the CJR and BPCI
programs to reflect the shift of some
Medicare beneficiaries from an inpatient
TKA procedure to an outpatient TKA
procedure in the BPCI and CJR model
pricing methodologies, including target
price calculations and reconciliation
processes, as we also believe it to be
applicable to THA. As in the case of the
policy change to move THAs from the
IPO list, the CMS Innovation Center
may consider making future changes to
the CJR and BPCI Models to address the
removal of THAs from the IPO list and
the performance of THA procedures in
the OPPS setting.
Additionally, CMS notes the concerns
about appropriate patient selection
raised by commenters and agrees that it
is imperative that physicians and
hospitals are mindful of factors that
affect whether a patient would be a good
candidate for outpatient THA or should
instead be admitted as a hospital
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inpatient; however, for the reasons cited
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we continue to believe that it is
appropriate to remove THA as described
by CPT code 27130 from the IPO list.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing the removal of CPT code
27130, and assigning the procedure to
C–APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal
Procedures) with status indicator ‘‘J1’’.
In addition, we are removing anesthesia
code 01214, (anesthesia for open
procedures involving hip joint; total hip
arthroplasty) as a conforming change.
As stated above, the decision
regarding the most appropriate care
setting for a given surgical procedure is
a complex medical judgment made by
the physician based on the beneficiary’s
individual clinical needs and
preferences and on the general coverage
rules requiring that any procedure be
reasonable and necessary. Further, the
removal of any procedure from the IPO
list, including THA, does not require the
procedure to be performed only on an
outpatient basis. That is, when a
procedure is removed from the IPO, it
simply means that Medicare will pay for
it in either the hospital inpatient or
outpatient setting; it does not mean that
the procedure must be performed on an
outpatient basis. The decision to admit
as an inpatient admission or to perform
the procedure on a hospital outpatient
basis is subject to the complex medical
judgment of the physician. While we
have not established patient selection
criteria for THA or any other procedure,
we reiterate our finding that patients
with a relatively low anesthesia risk and
without significant comorbidities who
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have family members at home who can
assist them may likely be (but are not
necessarily) good candidates for an
outpatient THA procedure. These
patients may be determined to be able
to tolerate outpatient rehabilitation
either in an outpatient facility or at
home postsurgery. While on the other
hand, patients that require a revision of
a prior hip replacement, and/or has
other complicating clinical conditions,
including multiple co-morbidities such
as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, may
not be strong candidates for outpatient
THA. As stated previously, we also
recognize that elective THA,
necessitated, for example, by
osteoarthritis, for a generally healthy
patient with at-home support is
different than THA for a hip fracture
that is performed on either an emergent
or scheduled basis. While the former
may be appropriate for outpatient THA
if the physician believes that the patient
may be safely discharged on the same or
next day, the latter may be more
appropriate for hospital inpatient
admission.
3. Solicitation of Public Comments on
the Potential Removal of Procedures
Described by CPT Codes 22633, 22634,
63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268 From
the IPO List
Throughout the years, we have
received several public comments on
additional CPT codes that stakeholders
believe fit our criteria and should be
removed from the IPO list. In the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
sought public comment on the removal
of the following procedures from the
IPO list in Table 47.
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We reviewed the clinical
characteristics of CPT codes 22633 and
22634 and stated that we believe they
are related to codes that we have already
removed from the IPO list. Specifically,
stakeholders have suggested that CPT
codes 22633 and 22634 are related to
CPT code 22551 (Arthrodesis, anterior
interbody, including disc space
preparation, discectomy,
osteophytectomy and decompression of
spinal cord and/or nerve roots; cervical
below c2), which is currently performed
in the outpatient hospital setting.
During the proposed rule, we sought
public comments that would provide
additional information on the safety of
performing CPT codes 22633 and 22634
in the outpatient hospital setting.
In addition, we reviewed CPT codes
63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268. Over
the years, stakeholders indicated that
this series of CPT codes should be
considered minimally invasive, arguing
that CPT codes 63265, 63266, 63267,
and 63268 meet criteria 1 and 2 for
removal from the IPO list: Most
outpatient departments are equipped to
provide the services to the Medicare
population and the simplest procedure
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described by the code may be performed
in most outpatient departments. We
sought public comment on whether CPT
codes 63265 through 63268 meet criteria
to be removed from the IPO list,
including information from commenters
to demonstrate that the codes meet these
criteria.
Comment: We received a few
comments in support of the removal of
the services described by CPT codes
22633, 22634, 63265, 63266, 63267, and
63268. Commenters agreed that these
procedures were both related to codes
that were previously removed from the
IPO list and are performed safely in
numerous hospitals on an outpatient
basis. Commenters largely provided
anecdotal experience in support of
removing these services from the IPO
list. One commenter provided a March
2019 published retrospective cohort
study of lumbar interbody fusion to treat
spinal pathology using the American
College of Surgeons National Surgical
Quality Improvement Program database.
The commenter believed that this study
provided additional insight into the
perioperative safety profile and
operative efficiency and efficacy of
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performing transforaminal lumbar
interbody fusions (TLIF) at an
outpatient facility.
Commenters in support of the
proposal argued that physicians perform
the cases regardless of the IPO list—
evaluating each patient carefully to
determine the best fit clinically for that
patient. Several ASCs commented that
they often perform all listed procedures
with few to no complications in that
setting. This commenter supported not
only removing all six procedures from
the IPO list, but also adding them to the
ASC–CPL list.
Commenters further stated that
although their current patient volume
does not constitute a large percentage of
Medicare beneficiaries, they would
expect to see similar results with
Medicare patients that are active, have
a relatively low anesthesia risk, do not
have significant comorbidities and that
also have a support system at home that
can assist them post-procedure. The
commenters specifically supported the
removal of the six procedures based on
the development of less invasive
techniques, improved perioperative
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pain management, and expedited
rehabilitation protocols.
Specifically for the services described
by CPT codes 22633 and 22634,
commenters agreed that related
procedures and similar codes such as
22551 (Arthrodesis, anterior interbody,
including disc space preparation,
discectomy, osteophytectomy and
decompression of spinal cord and/or
nerve roots; cervical below c2); 22612
(Arthrodesis, posterior or posterolateral
technique, single level; lumbar (with
lateral transverse technique, when
performed); and 22614 (Arthrodesis,
posterior or posterolateral technique,
single level; each additional vertebral
segment) were previously removed from
the IPO list. One commenter specifically
pointed out that performance of CPT
codes 22612, 22614, and 22551 are all
allowed in the ASC setting, and that
their safety was reconfirmed in the
review of procedures added to the ASC
covered procedures list in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR 59057).
In reference to the laminectomy
codes, commenters specifically
supported their removal from the IPO
list based on their perceived safe and
effective performance in the outpatient
setting, in accordance with criterion 2.
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We also received a few general
comments in opposition to the prospect
of removing the codes. Specifically,
those who opposed removing the
procedures expressed concern that all
six procedures in this comment
solicitation are complex procedures and
that very few Medicare beneficiaries are
likely to be good candidates to receive
the procedures in the outpatient setting
because of their complexity. The
commenters further stated that
removing these procedures from the IPO
list and providing them in the
outpatient setting may impact patient
safety and outcomes, which they believe
should be the primary considerations
when determining which procedures
can be removed from the IPO list.
Response: After reviewing clinical
evidence and the public comments,
including input from multiple spinal
specialty societies and ASCs we have
determined that the services described
by CPT codes 22633, 22634, 63265,
63266, 63267, and 63268 are
appropriate candidates for removal from
the IPO list. CMS notes the overall
support and for the reasons cited in the
proposed rule, we believe that it is
appropriate to remove CPT codes 22633
and 22634 from IPO list because they
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61357
meet criteria one and two: Most
outpatient departments are equipped to
provide the services to the Medicare
population and the simplest procedure
described by the code may be performed
in most outpatient departments. We also
believe that it is appropriate to remove
CPT codes 63265, 63266, 63267, and
63268 from the inpatient only list, based
on criterion one; most outpatient
departments are equipped to provide
the services to the Medicare population.
Therefore, we are finalizing the removal
of CPT codes 22633, 22634, 63265,
63266, 63267, and 63268, and assigning
the procedures as follows. The APC and
status indicator assignments are
reflected in Table 48 below.
Additional Requests for Changes to the
IPO List
Comment: CMS received two
additional comments recommending the
removal of several procedures not
originally proposed for removal from
the IPO list for CY 2020. These
recommended procedures related to
other procedures that were recently
removed from the IPO. Specifically, the
commenters referenced the following
anesthesia codes for removal:
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Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback. After consideration of
the public comments, we agree that the
recommended anesthesia CPT codes
should be removed from the IPO list, as
they meet criterion 3; the procedure is
related to codes that we have already
removed from the IPO list. Notably,
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these removed anesthesia codes will be
assigned a status indicator of ‘‘N’’.
Comment: Finally, we also received a
comment from a provider organization
that suggested that CMS eliminate the
IPO list. Specifically, the commenter
argued that the IPO list should to be
eliminated to allow patient status to be
determined by the physician based on
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the individual patient’s clinical
condition.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and will consider this
feedback for future rulemaking.
Table 49 contains the final changes
that we are making to the IPO list for CY
2020.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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X. Nonrecurring Policy Changes
A. Changes in the Level of Supervision
of Outpatient Therapeutic Services in
Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals
(CAHs)
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59390
through 59391) and in the CY 2009
OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule
with comment period (73 FR 41518
through 41519 and 73 FR 68702 through
68704, respectively), we clarified that
direct supervision is required for
hospital outpatient therapeutic services
covered and paid by Medicare that are
furnished in hospitals as well as in
provider-based departments (PBDs) of
hospitals, as set forth in the CY 2000
OPPS final rule with comment period
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(65 FR 18525). In the CY 2010 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (74
FR 60575 through 60591), we finalized
a technical correction to the title and
text of the applicable regulation at 42
CFR 410.27 to clarify that this standard
applies in critical access hospitals
(CAHs) as well as hospitals. In response
to concerns expressed by the hospital
community, in particular CAHs and
small rural hospitals, that they would
have difficulty meeting this standard, on
March 15, 2010, we instructed all MACs
not to evaluate or enforce the
supervision requirements for
therapeutic services provided to
outpatients in CAHs from January 1,
2010 through December 31, 2010, while
the agency revisited the supervision
policy during the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC
rulemaking cycle.
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Due to continued concerns expressed
by CAHs and small rural hospitals, we
extended this notice of nonenforcement
(‘‘enforcement instruction’’) as an
interim measure for CY 2011, and
expanded it to apply to small rural
hospitals having 100 or fewer beds (75
FR 72007). We continued to consider
the issue further in our annual OPPS
notice-and-comment rulemaking, and
implemented an independent review
process in 2012 to obtain advice from
the HOP Panel on this matter (76 FR
74360 through 74371). Under this
process used since CY 2012, the HOP
Panel considers and advises CMS
regarding stakeholder requests for
changes in the required minimum level
of supervision of individual hospital
outpatient therapeutic services. In
addition, we extended the enforcement
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instruction through CY 2012 and CY
2013. For the period of CY 2014 through
CY 2017, Congress took legislative
action (Pub. L. 113–198, Pub. L. 114–
112, Pub. L. 114–255, and Pub. L. 115–
123) to extend nonenforcement of the
direct supervision requirement for
hospital outpatient therapeutic services
in CAHs and small rural hospitals
having 100 or fewer beds through
December 31, 2017. Then in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59391), we
reinstated the enforcement instruction
providing for the nonenforcement of the
direct supervision requirement for
hospital outpatient therapeutic services
in CAHs and small rural hospitals
having 100 or fewer beds through
December 31, 2019. The current
enforcement instruction is available on
the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/Downloads/SupervisionMoratorium-on-Enforcement-for-CAHsand-Certain-Small-Rural-Hospitals.pdf.
As discussed in the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (82
FR 59390 through 59391), stakeholders
have consistently requested that CMS
continue the nonenforcement of the
direct supervision requirement for
hospital outpatient therapeutic services
for CAHs and small rural hospitals
having 100 or fewer beds. Stakeholders
stated that some small rural hospitals
and CAHs have insufficient staff
available to furnish direct supervision.
The primary reason stakeholders cited
for this request is the difficulty that
CAHs and small rural hospitals have in
recruiting physicians and nonphysician
practitioners to practice in rural areas.
These stakeholders noted that it is
particularly difficult to furnish direct
supervision for critical specialty
services, such as radiation oncology
services, that cannot be directly
supervised by a hospital emergency
department physician or nonphysician
practitioner because of the volume of
emergency patients or lack of specialty
expertise. In addition, we are not aware
of any supervision-related complaints
from beneficiaries or providers
regarding quality of care for services
furnished during the several years that
the enforcement instruction has been in
effect.
The upcoming expiration of the latest
enforcement instruction providing for
the nonenforcement of the direct
supervision requirement for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services for CAHs
and small rural hospitals having 100 or
fewer beds has prompted us to consider
whether to change the level of
supervision for hospital outpatient
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therapeutic services for all hospitals and
CAHs. The enforcement instructions
and legislative actions that have been in
place since 2010 have created a twotiered system of physician supervision
requirements for hospital outpatient
therapeutic services for providers in the
Medicare program, with direct
supervision required for most hospital
outpatient therapeutic services in most
hospital providers, but only general
supervision required for most hospital
outpatient therapeutic services in CAHs
and small rural hospitals with fewer
than 100 beds.
However, we have not learned of any
data or information from CAHs and
small rural hospitals indicating that the
quality of outpatient therapeutic
services has been affected by requiring
only general supervision for these
services. It is important to remember
that the requirement for general
supervision for outpatient therapeutic
services does not preclude these
hospitals from providing direct
supervision for outpatient therapeutic
services when the physicians
administering the medical procedures
decide that it is appropriate to do so.
Many outpatient therapeutic services
involve a level of complexity and risk
such that direct supervision would be
warranted even though only general
supervision is required.
In addition, CAHs and hospitals in
general continue to be subject to
conditions of participation (CoPs) that
complement the general supervision
requirements for hospital outpatient
therapeutic services to ensure that the
medical services Medicare patients
receive are properly supervised. CoPs
for hospitals require Medicare patients
to be under the care of a physician (42
CFR 482.12(c)(4))), and for the hospital
to ‘‘have an organized medical staff that
operates under bylaws approved by the
governing body, and which is
responsible for the quality of medical
care provided to patients by the
hospital’’ (42 CFR 482.22). The CoPs for
CAHs (42 CFR 485.631(b)(1)(i)) require
physicians to provide medical direction
for the CAHs’ health care activities,
consultation for, and medical
supervision of the health care staff. The
physicians’ responsibilities in hospitals
and CAHs include supervision of all
services performed at those facilities. In
addition, physicians must also follow
State laws regarding scope of practice.
Failure of an applicable physician to
provide adequate supervision in
accordance with the hospital and CAH
CoPs does not cause payment to be
denied for that individual service.
However, consistent violations of the
CoP supervision requirements can lead
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to a provider having to establish a
corrective action plan to address
supervision deficiencies, and if the
provider still fails to meet the CoP
requirements, the hospital or CAH can
be terminated from Medicare
participation.
Our experience indicates that
Medicare providers will provide a
similar quality of hospital outpatient
therapeutic services, regardless of
whether the minimum level of
supervision required under the
Medicare program is direct or general.
We have come to believe that the direct
supervision requirement for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services places
an additional burden on providers that
reduces their flexibility to provide
medical care. The issues with increased
burden and reduced flexibility to
provide medical care have a more
significant impact on CAHs and small
rural hospitals due to their recruiting
and staffing challenges, as we have
recognized over the years in providing
for nonenforcement of the policy for
these hospitals. Larger hospitals and
hospitals in urban or suburban areas are
less affected by the burden and reduced
flexibility of the direct supervision
requirement. However, given that the
direct supervision requirement has not
yet been enforced for CAHs and small
rural hospitals, we believe it is time to
end what is effectively a two-tiered
system of supervision levels for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services by
proposing a policy that sets an
appropriate and uniformly enforceable
supervision standard for all hospital
outpatient therapeutic services.
Therefore, we proposed to change the
generally applicable minimum required
level of supervision for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services from
direct supervision to general
supervision for services furnished by all
hospitals and CAHs. General
supervision, as defined in our regulation
at 42 CFR 410.32(b)(3)(i) means that the
procedure is furnished under the
physician’s overall direction and
control, but that the physician’s
presence is not required during the
performance of the procedure. This
proposal would ensure a standard
minimum level of supervision for each
hospital outpatient therapeutic service
furnished incident to a physician’s
service in accordance with the statute.
We proposed to amend the existing
regulation at § 410.27(a)(1)(iv) to
provide that the default minimum level
of supervision for each hospital
outpatient therapeutic service is
‘‘general.’’
We will continue to have the HOP
Panel provide advice on the appropriate
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supervision levels for hospital
outpatient services as described in
section I.E.2. of the proposed rule. We
will also retain the ability to consider a
change to the supervision level of an
individual hospital outpatient
therapeutic service to a level of
supervision that is more intensive than
general supervision through notice and
comment rulemaking. We solicited
public comments on this proposal.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: A majority of commenters
supported our proposal to change the
generally applicable minimum required
level of supervision for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services from
direct supervision to general
supervision when these services are
furnished by hospitals or CAHs. The
commenters appreciated that we
proposed to eliminate what is
effectively a two-tiered system of
supervision levels for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services between
CAHs and small rural hospitals and all
other hospitals by proposing a policy
that would set an appropriate and
uniformly enforceable supervision
standard for all hospital outpatient
therapeutic services. The commenters
also agreed with our observation that
the quality of outpatient therapeutic
services provided by CAHs and small
rural hospitals has not been adversely
affected by the nonenforcement
instruction. The majority of commenters
stated that our proposal would reduce
burden for outpatient hospital
providers, especially those providers in
either rural or underserved areas. The
commenters stated that our proposal
would allow CAHs and small rural
hospitals more flexibility to provide
outpatient therapeutic care for the
Medicare beneficiaries that they serve
than what CAHs and small rural
hospitals could provide when the
temporary nonenforcement instruction
for direct supervision was in effect,
because a permanent, rather than
temporary policy, would allow them to
better make long-range staffing and
budgetary plans.
Numerous commenters mentioned the
many safeguards noted in our proposal,
including our ongoing policy that gives
providers discretion to require the
appropriate amount of supervision to
ensure a therapeutic outpatient
procedure is performed without risking
a beneficiary’s safety or the quality of
the care a beneficiary receives.
Commenters also noted that outpatient
hospital and CAH CoPs and state and
federal laws and regulations are present
in addition to the requirements for
physician supervision to ensure the
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safety, health, and quality standards of
the outpatient therapeutic services that
beneficiaries receive.
Response: We appreciate the overall
support for our proposal from a majority
of the commenters. We agree with the
commenters that this policy would
support our goal of reducing burden on
providers, especially CAHs and small
rural hospitals. We also appreciate the
commenters’ point that this policy will
allow these providers to be more
flexible with their staffing and in turn
provide better care to the communities
they serve.
We also appreciate that the
commenters noted that providers and
physicians have flexibility to require a
higher level of physician supervision for
any service they render if they believe
a higher level of supervision is required
to ensure the quality and safety of the
procedure and to protect a beneficiary
from complications that might occur.
We agree with the commenters that
CoPs, state and federal laws and
regulations, and supervision
requirements will also ensure
beneficiary health and safety when
receiving outpatient therapeutic
services.
The CoPs for hospitals require a
doctor of medicine or osteopathy (MD/
DO) to be responsible for the care of
every Medicare patient with respect to
any medical or psychiatric problem that
is present on admission or develops
during hospitalization and that is not
specifically within the scope of practice
of other types of practitioners (such as
dentists, podiatrists, chiropractors, or
clinical psychologists) as that scope of
practice is defined by the medical staff
and permitted by state law (42 CFR
482.12(c)(4)). The CoPs also require a
hospital to ‘‘have an organized medical
staff that operates under bylaws
approved by the governing body, and
which is responsible for the quality of
medical care provided to patients by the
hospital’’ (42 CFR 482.22). The CoPs for
CAHs (42 CFR 485.631(b)(1)(i)) require
an MD or DO to provide medical
direction for the CAHs’ health care
activities, and consultation for, and
medical supervision of, the health care
staff. The responsibilities of an MD or
DO in hospitals and CAHs include
supervision of all services performed at
those facilities. In addition, MDs and
DOs must also follow state laws
regarding scope of practice. State scope
of practice laws are state-level
regulations that apply to physicians and
other health care practitioners that
determine the tasks they can perform
when caring for patients in healthcare
settings in that state.
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Comment: Two of the commenters,
including MedPAC, strongly encouraged
CMS to diligently monitor the impacts
of our proposal on the quality and safety
of outpatient therapeutic services that
Medicare beneficiaries receive to ensure
their quality of care is not compromised
and that beneficiaries do not experience
higher rates of medical errors. In
addition, several commenters wrote in
support of the Hospital Outpatient
Payment Panel (HOP) Panel, which
continues to evaluate and make
recommendations on supervision levels
for individual therapeutic outpatient
services. These commenters also wrote
in support of CMS’ use of the regulatory
process to set a higher minimum level
of supervision for individual
therapeutic services if needed.
Response: We agree with the
commenters and will continue to have
a system in place to change the default
minimum level of physician supervision
to a level of supervision higher than
general supervision, which we believe
will be important to the overall success
of this policy. We are also committed to
monitoring care furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries to determine if there is any
decline in the quality of therapeutic
outpatient services provided to
Medicare beneficiaries as a result of this
policy, although we believe that the
combination of the CoPs, state and
federal laws and regulations, and
supervision requirements will help
beneficiaries to receive safe and highquality care. We agree with commenters
that the work of HOP Panel is helpful
to identify individual outpatient
therapeutic procedures that may require
a higher minimum level of physician
supervision, which can assist us in
electing whether to establish higher
minimum supervision levels on case-bycase basis through notice and comment
rulemaking.
Comment: A few commenters were
entirely opposed to our proposal to
change the default level of supervision
from direct to general and either
requested that no changes be made to
our current policy (which requires the
default minimum level of physician
supervision for outpatient therapeutic
services to be direct supervision unless
we establish a different minimum level
of supervision) or requested that CMS
evaluate outpatient therapeutic services
individually to determine if the default
minimum level of supervision should
change from direct supervision to
general supervision.
Several of these commenters
appreciated the concerns from CAHs
and small rural providers about the
burden they face from the physician
supervision requirements, but these
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commenters believed those concerns
were outweighed by the need to have
qualified physicians directly supervise
services, especially in the fields of
radiation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen
treatment, and wound care. These
commenters believed the default level of
supervision for outpatient therapeutic
services should be the same for all
outpatient hospitals and CAHs.
Other commenters expressed
concerns that allowing general
supervision to be the minimum default
level of supervision for certain types of
services, including radiation therapy,
hyperbaric oxygen treatment, and
wound care, could put the health and
safety of Medicare beneficiaries
receiving these procedures at risk. These
commenters described these particular
services as requiring a high level of skill
to perform and having complications
that, while rare, can cause serious issues
for a beneficiary’s health. Therefore,
these commenters believed that the
minimum default level of supervision
for radiation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen
treatment, and wound care should be
direct supervision.
Response: We agree with the
commenters about the importance of
ensuring the quality of outpatient
therapeutic services and the health and
safety of the beneficiaries who receive
those services. We also appreciate the
concerns several commenters raised
about how this proposal will affect the
quality and safety of outpatient
therapeutic services including radiation
therapy, hyperbaric oxygen treatments,
and wound care services. We believe
our supervision requirements continue
to provide the safeguards Medicare
beneficiaries need to ensure they receive
quality care when they receive
outpatient hospital therapeutic services
and that health and safety of
beneficiaries is protected.
Providers have the flexibility to
establish what they believe is the
appropriate level of physician
supervision for these procedures, which
may well be higher than the
requirements for general supervision. In
addition, providers must adhere to the
hospital and CAH conditions of
participation, federal and state
regulations for radiation therapy,
hyperbaric oxygen treatments, and
wound care services, and state
standards for scope of practice for
medical personnel who provide these
services. We believe that the
combination of providers’ desire to
ensure the safety of their patients and
the regulations governing these
procedures discussed by the
commenters should ensure that these
procedures will be appropriately
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supervised without risking
beneficiaries’ safety or the quality of the
care beneficiaries receive, whether the
default level of physician supervision is
direct supervision or general
supervision.
We reiterate a key point that the
commenters who are in support of our
proposal mentioned, which is that
establishing general supervision as the
default level of physician supervision
for outpatient therapeutic services does
not prevent a hospital or CAH from
requiring a higher level of supervision
for a particular service if they believe
such a supervision level is necessary.
Providers and physicians have
flexibility to require a higher level of
physician supervision for any service
they furnish if they believe a higher
level of supervision is required to
ensure the quality and safety of the
procedure and to protect a beneficiary
from complications that might occur.
We believe this flexibility for individual
providers to have a higher level of
physician supervision for a given
service, which has always been present
in our supervision policies, should
address the concerns of those
commenters who believe general
supervision is not sufficient for certain
outpatient therapeutic services. In
addition, CoP, other federal and state
regulations, and state standards for
scope of work for medical personnel are
not affected by this policy, and remain
in place to ensure that hospitals provide
proper medical care to all of their
patients including Medicare
beneficiaries.
Comment: Two commenters wanted
confirmation that our proposed policy
was intended to be permanent and not
just for CY 2020.
Response: This policy will take effect
beginning in CY 2020 and will remain
in place through subsequent years
unless modified in future notice and
comment rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter wanted
more clarification on what constitutes
general supervision. The commenter
does not support Medicare requirements
for physician supervision that do not
help with patient safety.
Response: Our policies on
supervision, along with hospital
conditions of participation, state scope
of practice laws, and other state and
federal laws and regulations, all help
ensure the quality and safety of
outpatient hospital therapeutic services
Medicare beneficiaries receive. General
supervision is defined in our regulation
at 42 CFR 410.32(b)(3)(i) to mean that
the procedure is furnished under the
physician’s overall direction and
control, but that the physician’s
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presence is not required during the
performance of the procedure.
With general supervision, our
proposal would ensure a standard
minimum level of supervision for each
hospital outpatient therapeutic service
furnished incident to a physician’s
service in accordance with the statute.
General supervision ensures patient
safety as it requires a physician to
provide overall direction and control for
outpatient hospital therapeutic
procedures, which means the medical
personnel performing the procedure are
being monitored and receiving guidance
from a qualified physician even if the
physician is not physically present.
Also, a provider may voluntarily choose
to require a higher level of involvement
in the medical procedure by the
physician if the hospital believes it is
necessary for the safety of the patient
receiving the procedure.
Additionally, we solicited public
comments on whether specific types of
services, such as chemotherapy
administration or radiation therapy,
should be excepted from our proposal to
change the generally applicable
minimum required level of supervision
for hospital outpatient therapeutic
services from direct supervision to
general supervision for services
furnished by all hospitals and CAHs.
Comment: Multiple commenters
supported our proposal to have general
supervision be the minimum default
level of supervision for outpatient
hospital therapeutic chemotherapy and
radiation therapy services. One
commenter supported this policy
because they were concerned that if
direct supervision was required to be
the default minimum level of physician
supervision for chemotherapy and
radiation therapy while all other
outpatient hospital therapeutic services
have a default minimum level of general
supervision, it would be difficult to
change the minimum default level of
supervision for chemotherapy and
radiation therapy to general supervision
in the future. Another commenter
wanted to know under what
circumstances the minimum default
supervision level for chemotherapy and
radiation therapy would be direct
physician supervision if the current
policy has established general
supervision as the minimum default
level of supervision.
Response: We appreciate the feedback
we received from commenters on this
topic. Regarding the question from the
one commenter about how the default
minimum level of supervision for
chemotherapy and radiation services
could be direct supervision when the
default minimum level of supervision is
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general supervision for other outpatient
therapeutic services, we note that
because we are finalizing our proposal
to require general supervision for all
outpatient therapeutic services, the
required supervision level is the same
for all of these services, including
chemotherapy and radiation therapy
services.
After reviewing all of the public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal for CY 2020 and subsequent
years to change the generally applicable
minimum required level of supervision
for hospital outpatient therapeutic
services from direct supervision to
general supervision for services
furnished by all hospitals and CAHs
without modification. We also note all
of the policy safeguards that have been
in place to ensure the safety, health, and
quality standards of the outpatient
therapeutic services that beneficiaries
receive will continue to be in place
under our new policy. These safeguards
include allowing providers and
physicians the discretion to require a
higher level of supervision to ensure a
therapeutic outpatient procedure is
performed without risking a
beneficiary’s safety or their quality of
the care, as well as the presence
outpatient hospital and CAH CoPs, and
other state and federal laws and
regulations. We are also finalizing the
accompanying changes we proposed to
the regulatory text at § 410.27 with
several technical changes.
B. Short Inpatient Hospital Stays
1. Background on the 2-Midnight Rule
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (78 FR 50913 through 50954), we
clarified our policy regarding when an
inpatient admission is considered
reasonable and necessary for purposes
of Medicare Part A payment. Under this
policy, we established a benchmark
providing that surgical procedures,
diagnostic tests, and other treatments
would be generally considered
appropriate for inpatient hospital
admission and payment under Medicare
Part A when the physician expects the
patient to require a stay that crosses at
least 2 midnights and admits the patient
to the hospital based upon that
expectation. Conversely, when a
beneficiary enters a hospital for a
surgical procedure not designated as an
inpatient-only (IPO) procedure as
described in 42 CFR 419.22(n), a
diagnostic test, or any other treatment,
and the physician expects to keep the
beneficiary in the hospital for only a
limited period of time that does not
cross 2 midnights, the services would be
generally inappropriate for payment
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under Medicare Part A, regardless of the
hour that the beneficiary came to the
hospital or whether the beneficiary used
a bed. With respect to services
designated under the OPPS as IPO
procedures, we explained that because
of the intrinsic risks, recovery impacts,
or complexities associated with such
services, these procedures would
continue to be appropriate for inpatient
hospital admission and payment under
Medicare Part A regardless of the
expected length of stay. We also
indicated that there might be further
‘‘rare and unusual’’ exceptions to the
application of the benchmark, which
would be detailed in subregulatory
guidance.
2. Current Policy for Medical Review of
Inpatient Hospital Admissions Under
Medicare Part A
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70538
through 70549), we revised the previous
rare and unusual exceptions policy and
finalized a proposal to allow for case-bycase exceptions to the 2-midnight
benchmark, whereby Medicare Part A
payment may be made for inpatient
admissions where the admitting
physician does not expect the patient to
require hospital care spanning 2
midnights, if the documentation in the
medical record supports the physician’s
determination that the patient
nonetheless requires inpatient hospital
care.
We note that, in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
reiterated our position that the 2midnight benchmark provides clear
guidance on when a hospital inpatient
admission is appropriate for Medicare
Part A payment, while respecting the
role of physician judgment. We stated
that the following criteria will be
relevant to determining whether an
inpatient admission with an expected
length of stay of less than 2 midnights
is nonetheless appropriate for Medicare
Part A payment:
• Complex medical factors such as
history and comorbidities;
• The severity of signs and
symptoms;
• Current medical needs; and
• The risk of an adverse event.
In other words, for purposes of
Medicare payment, an inpatient
admission is payable under Part A if the
documentation in the medical record
supports either the admitting
physician’s reasonable expectation that
the patient will require hospital care
spanning at least 2 midnights, or the
physician’s determination based on
factors such as those identified above
that the patient nonetheless requires
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care on an inpatient basis. The
exceptions for procedures on the IPO
list and for ‘‘rare and unusual’’
circumstances designated by CMS as
national exceptions were unchanged by
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
As we stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period,
the decision to formally admit a patient
to the hospital is subject to medical
review. For instance, for cases where the
medical record does not support a
reasonable expectation of the need for
hospital care crossing at least 2
midnights, and for inpatient admissions
not related to a surgical procedure
specified by Medicare as an IPO
procedure under 42 CFR 419.22(n) or for
which there was not a national
exception, payment of the claim under
Medicare Part A is subject to the clinical
judgment of the medical reviewer. The
medical reviewer’s clinical judgment
involves the synthesis of all submitted
medical record information (for
example, progress notes, diagnostic
findings, medications, nursing notes,
and other supporting documentation) to
make a medical review determination
on whether the clinical requirements in
the relevant policy have been met. In
addition, Medicare review contractors
must abide by CMS’ policies in
conducting payment determinations,
but are permitted to take into account
evidence-based guidelines or
commercial utilization tools that may
aid such a decision. While Medicare
review contractors may continue to use
commercial screening tools to help
evaluate the inpatient admission
decision for purposes of payment under
Medicare Part A, such tools are not
binding on the hospital, CMS, or its
review contractors. This type of
information also may be appropriately
considered by the physician as part of
the complex medical judgment that
guides their decision to keep a
beneficiary in the hospital and
formulation of the expected length of
stay.
3. Change for Medical Review of Certain
Inpatient Hospital Admissions Under
Medicare Part A for CY 2020 and
Subsequent Years
As stated earlier in this section, the
procedures on the IPO list of procedures
under the OPPS are not subject to the 2midnight benchmark for purposes of
inpatient hospital payment. However,
the 2-midnight benchmark is applicable
once procedures have been removed
from the IPO list. Procedures that are
removed from the IPO list are also
subject to initial medical reviews of
claims for short-stay inpatient
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admissions conducted by Beneficiary
and Family-Centered Care Quality
Improvement Organizations (BFCC–
QIOs).
BFCC–QIOs may also refer providers
to the Recovery Audit Contractors
(RACs) for further medical review due
to exhibiting persistent noncompliance
with Medicare payment policies,
including, but not limited to:
• Having high denial rates;
• Consistently failing to adhere to the
2-midnight rule; or
• Failing to improve their
performance after QIO educational
intervention.
As part of our continued effort to
facilitate compliance with our payment
policy for inpatient admissions, we
proposed to establish a 1-year
exemption from certain medical review
activities for procedures removed from
the IPO list under the OPPS in CY 2020
and subsequent years. Specifically, we
proposed that procedures that have been
removed from the IPO list would not be
eligible for referral to RACs for
noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule within the first calendar year of
their removal from the IPO list. These
procedures would not be considered by
the BFCC–QIOs in determining whether
a provider exhibits persistent
noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule for purposes of referral to the RAC
nor would these procedures be reviewed
by RACs for ‘‘patient status.’’ During
this 1-year period, BFCC–QIOs would
have the opportunity to review such
claims in order to provide education for
practitioners and providers regarding
compliance with the 2-midnight rule,
but claims identified as noncompliant
would not be denied with respect to the
site-of-service under Medicare Part A.
Again, information gathered by the
BFCC–QIO when reviewing procedures
that are newly removed from the IPO
list could be used for educational
purposes and would not result in a
claim denial during the proposed 1-year
exemption period.
In the proposed rule, we stated that
we believed that a 1-year exemption
from BFCC–QIO referral to RACs and
RAC ‘‘patient status’’ review of the
setting for procedures removed from the
IPO list under the OPPS and performed
in the inpatient setting would be an
adequate amount of time to allow
providers to gain experience with
application of the 2-midnight rule to
these procedures and the
documentation necessary for Part A
payment for those patients for which the
admitting physician determines that the
procedures should be furnished in an
inpatient setting. Furthermore, we
stated our belief that this 1-year
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exemption from referrals to RACs, RAC
patient status review, and claims
denials would be sufficient to allow
providers time to update their billing
systems and gain experience with
respect to newly removed procedures
eligible to be paid under either the IPPS
or the OPPS, while avoiding potential
adverse site-of-service determinations.
Nonetheless, we solicited public
comments regarding the appropriate
period of time for this proposed
exemption. Specifically, we stated that
commenters may indicate whether and
why they believe the proposed 1-year
period is appropriate, or whether they
believe a longer or shorter exemption
period would be more appropriate.
In summary, for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, we proposed to
establish a 1-year exemption from siteof-service claim denials, BFCC–QIO
referrals to RACs, and RAC reviews for
‘‘patient status’’ (that is, site-of-service)
for procedures that are removed from
the IPO list under the OPPS beginning
on January 1, 2020. We encourage
BFCC–QIOs to review these cases for
medical necessity in order to educate
themselves and the provider community
on appropriate documentation for Part
A payment when the admitting
physician determines that it is
medically reasonable and necessary to
conduct these procedures on an
inpatient basis. We note that we will
monitor changes in site-of-service to
determine whether changes may be
necessary to certain CMS Innovation
Center models.
Comment: Numerous stakeholders
including medical professional
societies, health systems, hospital
associations, and individuals supported
the proposal of a 1-year exemption from
site-of-service claim denials under
Medicare Part A, eligibility for BFCC–
QIO referrals to RACs for
noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule, and RAC reviews for ‘‘patient
status’’ (that is, site-of-service) for
procedures that are removed from the
IPO list under the OPPS beginning on
January 1, 2020. However, many of
these commenters supported an
extension of the exemption policy past
1 year, with a majority of commenters
recommending a period of 2 years, some
commenters recommending three years
or more, and others recommending that
CMS permanently restrict RAC reviews
of patient status for procedures removed
from the IPO list in deference to
physicians’ clinical judgment. The
commenters stated that a longer period
of time is necessary for providers to
adjust patterns of practice for
procedures that have been removed
from the IPO list and to prepare for
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system-wide implementation. Some
commenters also requested that CMS
maintain consistency with the policy
finalized when total knee arthroplasty
(TKA) was removed from the IPO list
and limit RAC review for ‘‘patient
status’’ for a period of 2 years.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholders’ feedback regarding the
appropriate period of time for this
exemption. After considering the
options recommended by commenters,
we have decided to modify our proposal
and exempt procedures that are
removed from the IPO list from site-ofservice claim denials under Medicare
Part A, eligibility for BFCC–QIO
referrals to RACs for noncompliance
with the 2-midnight rule, and RAC
reviews for ‘‘patient status’’ (that is, siteof-service) for a period of 2 years
beginning in CY 2020. We agree with
the majority of commenters who stated
a two-year exemption period from
certain medical review activities for
procedures removed from the IPO list
would be more beneficial to the
provider community than a 1-year
exemption, as such a time period will be
sufficient to help hospitals and
clinicians to become used to the
availability of payment under both the
hospital inpatient and outpatient setting
for procedures newly removed from the
IPO. Further, we were persuaded by the
comments explaining that a 2-year
exemption period of exemption will
allow providers time to gather
information on procedures newly
removed from the IPO list to help
inform education and guidance for the
broader provider community, develop
patient selection criteria to identify
which patients are, and are not,
appropriate candidates for outpatient
procedures and to develop related
policy protocols. We also believe that an
extended exemption period will further
facilitate compliance with our payment
policy for inpatient admissions.
We believe that a 2-year exemption
time period is adequate to let providers
gain experience with the application of
the 2-midnight rule to these procedures.
We also believe that a 2-year exemption
of the medical review activities
discussed above for procedures removed
from the IPO list will be sufficient time
for providers and BFCC–QIOs to
understand the documentation
necessary to support Part A payment for
those patients for which the admitting
physician determines that the
procedures should be furnished in an
inpatient setting. At this time, we do not
believe it is necessary to exempt
procedures that have been removed
from the IPO list from the medical
review activities discussed above for a
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period of longer than 2 years. With
regard to comments recommending that
we permanently restrict RAC reviews of
‘‘patient status’’ in deference to
physicians’ clinical judgment, we
believe that it is necessary to allow
BFCC–QIOs to resume referring
providers to the RACs for further
medical review due to exhibiting
persistent noncompliance with
Medicare payment policies after the
two-year exemption period.
Comment: Some commenters also
requested clarifications regarding the
proposed policy with regard to BFCC–
QIO reviews. One commenter
questioned if the proposed 1-year
exemption from certain medical review
activities applied to BFCC–QIO referrals
to RACs for review of patient status only
or if it also applied to BFCC–QIO review
of medical necessity for surgery itself.
Other commenters suggested that in the
first year after a service is removed from
the IPO list, the procedure should be
exempt from both BFCC–QIO medical
review and RAC review.
Response: For clarification, as stated
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39527), this proposal does
not exempt procedures that are removed
from the IPO list from the initial
medical reviews of claims for short-stay
inpatient admissions conducted by
BFCC–QIOs. The proposal was intended
to exempt procedures that are removed
from the IPO list from eligibility for
BFCC–QIO referrals to RACs for
noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule, and RAC reviews for ‘‘patient
status’’ (that is, site-of-service) for
procedures that are removed from the
IPO list under the OPPS beginning on
January 1, 2020. We also stated in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that
we encourage BFCC–QIOs to review
these cases for medical necessity in
order to educate themselves and the
provider community on appropriate
documentation for Part A payment
when the admitting physician
determines that it is medically
reasonable and necessary to conduct
these procedures on an inpatient basis
(84 FR 39528).
Also, as stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70545), section 1154(a)(1) of the Act
authorizes BFCC–QIOs to review
whether services and items billed under
Medicare are reasonable and medically
necessary and whether services that are
provided on an inpatient basis could be
appropriately and effectively provided
on an outpatient basis. Accordingly,
BFCC–QIOs will continue to conduct
initial medical reviews for both the
medical necessity of the services, and
the medical necessity of the site-of-
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service. BFCC–QIOs will continue to be
permitted and expected to deny claims
if the service itself is determined not to
be reasonable and medically necessary.
BFCC–QIOs will not make referrals to
RACs for noncompliance with the 2midnight rule for procedures that are
removed from the IPO list within the
first two years of their removal, RACs
will not conduct reviews for ‘‘patient
status’’ (that is, site-of-service) for
procedures that are removed from the
IPO list within the first two years of
their removal, and claims with
procedures that are removed from the
IPO list that are identified as
noncompliant with the 2-midnight rule
will not be denied with respect to the
site-of-service under Medicare Part A
within the first 2 years of their removal
beginning on January 1, 2020.
After considering comments received,
we are finalizing our policy as proposed
with one modification to the time
period of the exemption. That is, for CY
2020 and subsequent years, we are
finalizing a policy to exempt procedures
that have been removed from the IPO
list from eligibility for referral to RACs
for noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule within the 2-calendar years
following their removal from the IPO
list. These procedures will not be
considered by the BFCC–QIOs in
determining whether a provider exhibits
persistent noncompliance with the 2midnight rule for purposes of referral to
the RAC nor will these procedures be
reviewed by RACs for ‘‘patient status.’’
During this 2-year period, BFCC–QIOs
will have the opportunity to review
such claims in order to provide
education for practitioners and
providers regarding compliance with
the 2-midnight rule, but claims
identified as noncompliant will not be
denied with respect to the site-of-service
under Medicare Part A.
C. Method To Control Unnecessary
Increases in the Volume of Clinic Visit
Services Furnished in Excepted OffCampus Provider-Based Departments
(PBDs)
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59004
through 59014), we adopted a method to
control unnecessary increases in the
volume of the clinic visit service
furnished in excepted off-campus
provider-based departments (PBDs) by
removing the payment differential that
drives the site-of-service decision and,
as a result, unnecessarily increases
service volume. We refer readers to the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period for a detailed
discussion of the background, legislative
provisions, and the changes in payment
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61365
policies we developed to address
increases in the volume of covered
outpatient department (OPD) services.
Below we discuss the specific policy we
finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period and its
application under the OPPS for CY
2020.
For the CY 2019 OPPS, using our
authority under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of
the Act to adopt a method to control
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered outpatient department services,
we applied an amount equal to the sitespecific Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule (PFS) payment rate for
nonexcepted items and services
furnished by a nonexcepted off-campus
PBD (the PFS payment rate) for the
clinic visit service, as described by
HCPCS code G0463, when provided at
an off-campus PBD excepted from
section 1833(t)(21) of the Act
(departments that bill the modifier ‘‘PO’’
on claim lines). However, we phased in
the application of the reduction in
payment for the clinic visit service
described by HCPCS code G0463 in the
excepted provider-based department
setting over 2 years. For CY 2019, the
payment reduction was transitioned by
applying 50 percent of the total
reduction in payment that was applied
if these departments were paid the sitespecific PFS rate for the clinic visit
service. The PFS-equivalent rate was 40
percent of the OPPS payment for CY
2019 (that is, 60 percent less than the
OPPS rate). We provided for a 2-year
phase-in of this policy under which
one-half of the total 60-percent payment
reduction (a 30-percent reduction) was
applied in CY 2019. These departments
are paid approximately 70 percent of the
OPPS rate (100 percent of the OPPS rate
minus the 30-percent payment
reduction that is applied in CY 2019) for
the clinic visit service in CY 2019.
For CY 2020, the second year of the
2-year phase-in, we stated that we
would apply the total reduction in
payment that is applied if these
departments (departments that bill the
modifier ‘‘PO’’ on claims lines) are paid
the site-specific PFS rate for the clinic
visit service described by HCPCS code
G0463. The PFS-equivalent rate for CY
2020 is 40 percent of the proposed
OPPS payment (that is, 60 percent less
than the proposed OPPS rate) for CY
2020. Under this policy, adopted in
2019, departments would be paid
approximately 40 percent of the OPPS
rate (100 percent of the OPPS rate minus
the 60-percent payment reduction that
is applied in CY 2020) for the clinic
visit service in CY 2020.
In addition, as we stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
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comment period (83 FR 59013), for CY
2020, this policy will be implemented
in a non-budget neutral manner. The
estimated payment impact of this policy
was displayed in Column 5 of Table 44–
Estimated Impact of the Proposed CY
2020 Changes for the Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment System
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. In order to effectively establish a
method for controlling the unnecessary
growth in the volume of clinic visits
furnished by excepted off-campus PBDs
that does not simply increase other
expenditures that are unnecessary
within the OPPS and drive different
service-distorting decisions, we believe
that this method must be adopted in a
non-budget neutral manner. The impact
associated with this policy is further
described in section XXVI. of this rule.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Numerous commenters,
including organizations representing
health insurance plans, physician
associations, specialty medical
associations and individual Medicare
beneficiaries, supported moving forward
with the phase-in of this proposal. Some
of these commenters commended CMS
for completing the two-year phase-in
‘‘since it increases the sustainability of
the Medicare program and reduces costs
for Medicare patients.’’ Commenters
expressed that the alignment of payment
between the outpatient and physician
office setting ‘‘is an important and
necessary reform that can help reduce
provider consolidation and thereby
provide beneficiaries with more care
options at a lower cost.’’ Commenters
continued to be supportive of the
immediate impact this policy would
have in lowering Medicare beneficiaries’
out-of-pocket costs.
With respect to the policy being
applied in a non-budget neutral manner,
one commenter expressed support for
the policy and stated that ‘‘the Agency
correctly recognized that it cannot
address the payment disparity between
the outpatient hospital and physician
office settings as long as it applies
payment changes within the OPPS in a
budget-neutral manner that effectively
‘traps’ the potential savings from the
change within the OPPS.’’
Several commenters suggested that
CMS ‘‘explore additional opportunities
to expand site neutral payments for all
clinically appropriate outpatient
services’’ beyond the clinic visit service.
They expressed that site neutral
payment policies can create incentives
for providers to make decisions that
lower the cost of care for beneficiaries
and the Medicare program.
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Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. As we stated in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59005), we
continue to share the commenters’
concern that the current payment
incentives, rather than patient acuity or
medical necessity, are affecting site-ofservice decision-making. We continue to
believe that these shifts in the sites of
service are unnecessary if the
beneficiary can safely receive the same
services in a lower cost setting but
instead receives care in a higher cost
setting due to payment incentives. We
remain concerned that this shift in care
setting increases beneficiary costsharing liability because Medicare
payment rates for the same or similar
services are generally higher in hospital
outpatient departments than in
physician offices.
We appreciate the comments
supporting the implementation of this
policy in a non-budget neutral manner.
As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59013), we believe implementing a
volume control method in a budget
neutral manner would not appropriately
reduce the overall unnecessary volume
of covered OPD services, and instead
would simply shift services within the
OPPS system because of payment rather
than medical necessity. We also
outlined in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59013) that while section 1833(t)(9)(B)
of the Act requires that certain changes
made under the OPPS be made in a
budget neutral manner, this section does
not apply to the volume control method
under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act.
As we detailed in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59005), ‘‘total spending under the
OPPS is projected to further increase by
more than $5 billion from
approximately $70 billion in CY 2018
through CY 2019 to nearly $75 billion.
This is approximately twice the total
estimated spending in CY 2008, a
decade ago.’’ And as for one of the
drivers of this volume increase, the
‘‘Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) found that, from
2011 through 2016, combined program
spending and beneficiary cost-sharing
on services covered under the OPPS
increased by 51 percent, from $39.8
billion to $60.0 billion, an average of 8.6
percent per year. In its 2018 report,
MedPAC also noted that ‘A large source
of growth in spending on services
furnished in hospital outpatient
departments (HOPDs) appears to be the
result of the shift of services from (lower
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cost) physician offices to (higher cost)
HOPDs’.’’ (83 FR 59006).
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, titled
‘‘Periodic review,’’ provides, in part,
that the Secretary must annually review
and revise the groups, the relative
payment weights, and the wage and
other adjustments described in
paragraph (2) to take into account
changes in medical practice, changes in
technology, the addition of new
services, new cost data, and other
relevant information and factors’’
(emphasis added). Section 1833(t)(9)(B)
of the Act, titled ‘‘Budget neutrality
adjustment’’ provides that if ‘‘the
Secretary makes adjustments under
subparagraph (A), then the adjustments
for a year may not cause the estimated
amount of expenditures under this part
for the year to increase or decrease from
the estimated amount of expenditures
under this part that would have been
made if the adjustments had not been
made’’ (emphasis added).
However, section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the
Act is not an ‘‘adjustment’’ under
paragraph (2). Unlike the wage
adjustment under section 1833(t)(2)(D)
of the Act and the outlier, transitional
pass-through, and equitable adjustments
under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act,
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act refers to
a ‘‘method’’ for controlling unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered OPD
services, not an adjustment. Likewise,
sections 1833(t)(2)(D) and (E) of the Act
also explicitly require the adjustments
authorized by those paragraphs to be
budget neutral, while the volume
control method authority at section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act does not.
Therefore, the volume control method
proposed under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of
the Act is not one of the adjustments
under section 1833(t)(2) of the Act that
is referenced under section 1833(t)(9)(A)
of the Act that must be included in the
budget neutrality adjustment under
section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act.
Moreover, section 1833(t)(9)(C) of the
Act specifies that, if the Secretary
determines under methodologies
described in paragraph (2)(F) that the
volume of services paid for under this
subsection increased beyond amounts
established through those
methodologies, the Secretary may
appropriately adjust the update to the
conversion factor otherwise applicable
in a subsequent year. We continue to
interpret this provision to mean that the
Secretary will have implemented a
volume control method under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act in a nonbudget
neutral manner in the year in which the
method is implemented, and that the
Secretary may then make further
adjustments to the conversion factor in
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a subsequent year to account for volume
increases that are beyond the amounts
estimated by the Secretary under the
volume control method.
As detailed later in this section, after
consideration of public comments, we
are continuing the second year of the
two-year phase-in as adopted in CY
2019 rulemaking. We will continue to
take information submitted by the
commenters into consideration for
future analysis.
Comment: MedPAC supported the
proposal to adjust the OPPS payment
rate for clinic visits that are provided in
excepted off-campus PBDs so that it is
the same as the payment rate for clinic
visits provided in nonexcepted offcampus PBDs. They note that this policy
would be consistent with past
Commission recommendations for siteneutral payments between HOPDs and
freestanding physician offices, although
the recommendations it put forth in
2012 and 2014 would have applied to
several services that met certain criteria
and would have adjusted payment so
that it equaled the total payment had the
services been furnished in a
freestanding office and did not
distinguish between on- and off-campus
services. MedPAC further noted that it
shares CMS’ concerns about the rate of
growth in volume and spending under
the OPPS. MedPAC also stated, perhaps
inadvertently, that ‘‘CMS proposes to
implement this policy in a budgetneutral manner.’’
Response: We thank MedPAC for its
comments and support of this policy. To
clarify, this policy has been phased-in
in a non-budget neutral manner.
Comment: Some commenters were
concerned about the impact this
payment change might have on rural
providers and safety net health systems.
Commenters suggested that CMS
consider policy modifications to reduce
the impact of the payment reduction.
They said this could be accomplished
by ‘‘providing the OPPS rate to
outpatient departments located in
federally designated Health Professional
Shortage Areas or Medically
Underserved Areas.’’ Some commenters
also suggested that CMS monitor for any
potential access to care issues in rural
and underserved areas.
Response: We share the commenters’
concerns about access to care, especially
in rural areas where access issues may
be more pronounced than in other areas
of the country. While we understand the
concerns regarding rural hospitals, we
believe that implementing with a phasein has helped to mitigate the immediate
impact rural hospitals might otherwise
face. We will continue to monitor trends
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for any access to care issues and may
revisit this policy in future rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter, a large
medical association, stated that while it
generally supported site neutral
payments, it did not ‘‘believe that it is
possible to sustain a high-quality health
care system if site neutrality is defined
as shrinking all payments to the lowest
amount paid in any setting.’’ The
commenter went on to state that ‘‘any
savings from site neutrality proposals
derived from OPPS should be reinvested
in improvements elsewhere in Part B,
including payments to physicians as
inflation is not a factor in annual
physician payment updates and this
contributes to the payment differential.’’
The commenter went on to underscore
its position that ‘‘CMS should not
implement site neutrality in a way that
reduces payment to the lowest common
denominator and should reinvest
savings from lowering facility payments
to other Part B services, including
payments under the physician fee
schedule.’’
Response: We thank the commenter
for its input. As we stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59005), to the
extent that similar services can be safely
provided in more than one setting, we
do not believe it is prudent for the
Medicare program to pay more for these
services in one setting than another. We
believe the increase in the volume of
clinic visits, in particular, is due to the
payment incentive that exists to provide
this service in the higher cost setting.
Because these services could likely be
safely provided in a lower cost setting,
we believe that the growth in clinic
visits paid under the OPPS is
unnecessary. Further, we believe that
setting the OPPS payment at the PFSequivalent rate would be an effective
method to control the volume of these
unnecessary services because the
payment differential that is driving the
site-of-service decision will be removed.
We note that the overall amount of
Medicare payments to physicians and
other entities made under the PFS is
determined by the PFS statute, and the
rates for individual services are
determined based on the resources
involved in furnishing these services
relative to other services paid under the
PFS. To the extent the commenter
believes that the PFS rate for a
particular service is misvalued relative
to other PFS services, we encourage the
commenter to nominate the service for
review as a potentially misvalued
service under the PFS.
Comment: We received numerous
comments urging CMS not to move
forward with the phase-in of this policy.
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Many commenters believed that the
final rule should reflect the recent
decision from the United States District
Court for the District of Columbia,
American Hospital Association, et al. v.
Azar, No. 1:18–cv–02841–RMC (D.D.C.
Sept. 17, 2019), and that CMS, at a
minimum, should maintain the 2019
payments and not complete the second
year of the phase-in. Others believed the
litigation mandated that CMS revert
back to the higher payment rates.
Commenters noted that the advisory
Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment
unanimously recommended that CMS
freeze the payment policy for clinic
visits furnished by excepted off-campus
PBDs at CY 2019 rates and evaluate
whether beneficiary access has been
compromised and whether the volume
of outpatient services has decreased.
Many commenters argued that there are
several factors in the Medicare program
(and outside of hospital control) that
could influence more services moving to
the hospital outpatient setting,
including the hospital readmissions
reduction program, hospital value-based
purchasing, and the 2-midnight rule.
Commenters reiterated their comments
from the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59005)
that, relative to patients seen in
physician offices, patients seen in
HOPDs:
• Have more severe chronic
conditions;
• Have higher prior utilization of
hospitals and EDs;
• Are more likely to live in lowincome areas;
• Are 1.8 times more likely to be
dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid;
• Are 1.4 times more likely to be
nonwhite;
• Are 1.6 times more likely to be
under age 65 and disabled; and
• Are 1.1 times more likely to be over
85 years old.
Many commenters, including
numerous state hospital associations,
stated that making additional cuts to
outpatient payment of the magnitude of
the second year of phase-in of the clinic
visit policy would be excessive and
harmful. They expressed concern that
the cuts could endanger the critical role
that HOPDs play in their communities.
Response: We continue to believe that
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act grants
the Secretary the authority to develop a
method for controlling unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered OPD
services, including a method that
controls unnecessary volume increases
by removing a payment differential that
is driving a site-of-service decision, and
as a result, is unnecessarily increasing
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service volume.78 We also continue to
believe shifts in the sites of service
described in CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR
59013), are inherently unnecessary if
the beneficiary can safely receive the
same services in a lower cost setting but
instead receives care in a higher cost
setting due to the payment incentives
created by the difference in payment
amounts. While we did receive some
data illustrating that certain HOPDs
serve unique patient populations and
provide services to medically complex
beneficiaries, we continue to believe
that this data has not demonstrated the
need for higher payment for clinic visits
furnished in excepted off-campus PBDs.
As we asserted in the 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59013), the fact that the commenters did
not supply new or additional data
supporting these assertions suggests that
the payment differential is likely the
main driver for unnecessary volume
increases in outpatient department
services, particularly clinic visits.
On September 17, 2019, the United
States District Court for the District of
Columbia (the district court) entered an
order vacating the portion of the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period that adopted the
volume control method for clinic visit
services furnished by nonexcepted offcampus PBDs and remanded the matter
to the Secretary for further proceedings
consistent with the district court’s
opinion.79 On September 23, 2019, the
Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) filed a motion
requesting that the district court modify
its order to remand the matter without
vacatur or, alternatively, to stay the
portion of the order vacating the rule for
60 days from the date of the order to
allow the Solicitor General time to
determine whether to authorize appeal.
On October 21, 2019, the district court
denied our motion to modify and
request for stay, affirmed that the
portion of the 2019 final rule that
adopted the volume control method for
clinic visits furnished by excepted offcampus PBDs is vacated, and entered
final judgment. We acknowledge that
the district court vacated the volume
control policy for CY 2019 and we are
working to ensure affected 2019 claims
for clinic visits are paid consistent with
the court’s order. We do not believe it
is appropriate at this time to make a
change to the second year of the twoyear phase-in of the clinic visit policy.
78 Available at: https://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/
ssact/title18/1833.htm.
79 American Hospital Ass’n, et al. v. Azar, No.
1:18-cv-02841–RMC (D.D.C. Sept. 17, 2019).
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The government has appeal rights, and
is still evaluating the rulings and
considering, at the time of this writing,
whether to appeal from the final
judgment.
With respect to the HOP panel,
section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act provides
that the Secretary shall consult with the
Panel on policies affecting the clinical
integrity of the ambulatory payment
classifications and their associated
weights under the OPPS. The Panel met
on August 19, 2019, and recommended
that CMS freeze the payment policy for
off-campus clinic visits at the calendar
year 2019 rates and evaluate whether
beneficiary access has been
compromised and whether the volume
of outpatient services has decreased; the
panel further recommended that CMS
report its findings back to the Panel for
review. We believe, for reasons outlined
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59013) and
in this final rule that in order to
appropriately control unnecessary
increases in the volume of clinic visits
services furnished in HOPDs, we must
move forward with phasing-in this
policy. Freezing the payment rate, even
at the 2019 rate, still ‘‘traps’’ the
unnecessary spending within the OPPS.
The HOP Panel’s recommendations,
along with public comments on
provisions of the proposed rule, have
been taken into consideration in the
development of this final rule with
comment period. While we are not
accepting the HOP Panel’s
recommendation, we will continue to
monitor and study the utilization of
outpatient services as recommended by
the Panel.
Comment: Many commenters
referenced the ongoing litigation
(described earlier in this section) in
which the district court found that CMS
exceeded its statutory authority by
reducing payments for clinic visit
services furnished in excepted offcampus PBDs as a method to control
what we believe are unnecessary
increases in the volume of those
services. Several comments suggested
that the continued implementation of
this policy should be suspended until
the ongoing litigation is adjudicated.
They stated that ‘‘CMS should not take
in further reductions in the clinic
payments for off-campus PBDs in CY
2020 or future years until the matter is
resolved.’’
Commenters also submitted
suggestions on how CMS might remedy
payments following the district court’s
order vacating the portion of the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period that adopted the
volume control method for clinic visits.
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Some suggested that CMS must ‘‘make
whole with interest’’ affected PBDs.
Others recommended that CMS ‘‘make a
lump sum payment to the facilities that
were subject to the 2019 payment cut’’
and requested that ‘‘no additional
copayment be required from patients’’
should CMS apply a retroactive remedy.
One commenter suggested that ‘‘CMS
provide as a remedy a lump sum
payment to hospitals for the difference
that would have been paid had the rule
not been implemented.’’ Some
commenters stated that ‘‘the remedy
should be completed at a hospital
specific level, on a claim by claim
basis,’’ so as to ensure hospitals are
adequately paid for clinic visits.
Several commenters wrote in urging
CMS to restore the higher payment rates
(which they believed would be
consistent with the district court
decision), promptly repay hospitals for
the 2019 payment cuts, and abandon the
second phase of the payment cut for
2020. Many noted that should the
agency move forward with the second
phase of the cut, it would cause
additional harm to many hospitals, and
they intended to continue pursuing
legal remedies.
Another commenter suggested that
while the court remanded to CMS the
issue of remediation of cuts that
occurred since January 1, 2019, they
believe ‘‘at a minimum, the final rule
should reflect the court decision and
address the 30 percent cut implemented
for calendar year 2019 and ensure the
cuts are not finalized for 2020.’’
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestions.
As noted above, on September 23,
2019, HHS filed a motion requesting
that the district court modify its order
to remand the matter without vacatur or
alternatively, to stay the portion of the
order vacating the rule for 60 days from
the date of the order to allow the
Solicitor General time to determine
whether to authorize appeal. This
motion was denied on October 21, 2019.
As we stated above, the government has
appeal rights and is still evaluating the
rulings and considering, at the time of
this writing, whether to appeal from the
final judgment. For CY 2020, CMS will
be going forward with the phase-in. We
respectfully disagree with the district
court and continue to believe the
Secretary has the authority to address
unnecessary increases in the volume of
outpatient services. CMS is still
considering how we would remedy
hospitals if we either do not appeal this
ruling or do not succeed on appeal if
one is so authorized.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that even with the recent court decision
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CMS should ‘‘explore regulatory
pathways to address site of service
payment differentials in a budget
neutral manner.’’ Commenters gave the
example of ‘‘prospectively chang[ing]
the manner in which hospitals allocate
costs to outpatient cost centers in
institutional cost reports, particularly
for cost centers where similar services
can be provided in physician offices
which have no comparable overhead
costs.’’ Another commenter expressed
that ‘‘[p]atients should not be penalized
and pay higher prices simply because a
hospital owns the medical practice
where they receive care.’’ The
commenter encouraged CMS to ‘‘pursue
a staunch defense of this proposal
including, but not limited to, the appeal
of recent court rulings that undermine
these changes.’’ The commenter went on
to say that CMS should ‘‘take the
necessary steps to protect its authority
to implement the second year of the
two-year phase-in while the Agency
takes an appeal to the D.C. Circuit.’’
Response: We thank the commenters
for their submissions and support of this
policy. After consideration of public
comments we received, we will be
completing the phase-in of the
application of the reduction in payment
for HCPCS code G0463. Specifically, for
CY 2020, we will apply the full amount
of the reduction in payment that is
applied if these departments
(departments that bill the modifier ‘‘PO’’
on claims lines) are paid the sitespecific PFS rate for the clinic visit
service described by HCPCS code
G0463. The PFS-equivalent rate for CY
2020 is 40 percent of the proposed
OPPS payment (that is, 60 percent less
than the proposed OPPS rate). Under
this policy, departments will be paid
approximately 40 percent of the OPPS
rate (100 percent of the OPPS rate minus
the 60-percent payment reduction that
is applied in CY 2020) for the clinic
visit service in CY 2020. Considering
the effects of estimated changes in
enrollment, utilization, and case-mix,
this policy results in an estimated CY
2020 savings of approximately $800
million, with approximately $640
million of the savings accruing to
Medicare, and approximately $160
million saved by Medicare beneficiaries
in the form of reduced copayments,
when compared to if the policy were not
applied. We will continue to monitor
the effect of this change in Medicare
payment policy, including the volume
of these types of OPD services. We also
will continue to evaluate this policy in
light of the litigation and judicial
decision as they may arise.
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XI. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and
Comment Indicators
A. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status
Indicator Definitions
Payment status indicators (SIs) that
we assign to HCPCS codes and APCs
serve an important role in determining
payment for services under the OPPS.
They indicate whether a service
represented by a HCPCS code is payable
under the OPPS or another payment
system, and also, whether particular
OPPS policies apply to the code.
For CY 2020, we did not propose to
make any changes to the definitions of
status indicators that were listed in
Addendum D1 to the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period
available on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/Hospital-OutpatientRegulations-and-Notices-Items/CMS1717-P.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=
10&10DLSort=2DLSortDir=descending.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed 2020
definitions of the OPPS status
indicators. We believe that the existing
definitions of the OPPS status indicators
will continue to be appropriate for CY
2020. Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposed policy without modifications.
The complete list of the payment
status indicators and their definitions
that apply for CY 2020 is displayed in
Addendum D1 to this final rule with
comment period, which is available on
the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/.
The CY 2020 payment status indicator
assignments for APCs and HCPCS codes
are shown in Addendum A and
Addendum B, respectively, to this final
rule with comment period, which are
available on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/.
B. CY 2020 Comment Indicator
Definitions
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
use four comment indicators for the CY
2020 OPPS. These comment indicators,
‘‘CH’’, ‘‘NC’’, ‘‘NI’’, and ‘‘NP’’, are in
effect for CY 2019 and we proposed to
continue their use in CY 2020. The CY
2020 OPPS comment indicators are as
follows:
• ‘‘CH’’—Active HCPCS code in
current and next calendar year, status
indicator and/or APC assignment has
changed; or active HCPCS code that will
be discontinued at the end of the
current calendar year.
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61369
• ‘‘NC’’—New code for the next
calendar year or existing code with
substantial revision to its code
descriptor in the next calendar year, as
compared to current calendar year for
which we requested comments in the
proposed rule, final APC assignment;
comments will not be accepted on the
final APC assignment for the new code.
• ‘‘NI’’—New code for the next
calendar year or existing code with
substantial revision to its code
descriptor in the next calendar year, as
compared to current calendar year,
interim APC assignment; comments will
be accepted on the interim APC
assignment for the new code.
• ‘‘NP’’—New code for the next
calendar year or existing code with
substantial revision to its code
descriptor in the next calendar year, as
compared to current calendar year,
proposed APC assignment; comments
will be accepted on the proposed APC
assignment for the new code.
The definitions of the OPPS comment
indicators for CY 2020 are listed in
Addendum D2 to this final rule with
comment period, which is available on
the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Hospital
OutpatientPPS/.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed use of
comment indicators for CY 2020. We
believe that the CY 2019 definitions of
the OPPS comment indicators continue
to be appropriate for CY 2020.
Therefore, we are continuing to use
those definitions without modification
for CY 2020.
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
The Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC) was established
under section 1805 of the Act in large
part to advise the U.S. Congress on
issues affecting the Medicare program.
As required under the statute, MedPAC
submits reports to the Congress no later
than March and June of each year that
present its Medicare payment policy
recommendations. The March report
typically provides discussion of
Medicare payment policy across
different payment systems and the June
report typically discusses selected
Medicare issues. We are including this
section to make stakeholders aware of
certain MedPAC recommendations for
the OPPS and ASC payment systems as
discussed in its March 2019 report.
A. OPPS Payment Rates Update
The March 2019 MedPAC ‘‘Report to
the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy,’’ recommended that Congress
update Medicare OPPS payment rates
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by 2 percent, with the difference
between this and the update amount
specified in current law to be used to
increase payments in a new suggested
Medicare quality program, the ‘‘Hospital
Value Incentive Program (HVIP).’’ We
refer readers to the March 2019 report
for a complete discussion on these
recommendations, which is available for
download at www.medpac.gov. We
appreciate MedPAC’s recommendations,
but as MedPAC acknowledged in its
March 2019 report, Congress would
need to change current law to enable us
to implement its recommendations.
MedPAC did not comment on the
proposed OPPS payment rate update.
Comments received from MedPAC for
other OPPS policies are discussed in the
applicable sections of this rule.
basket index does not accurately reflect
the cost of providing services in the
ASC setting.
Response: We believe providing ASCs
with the same rate update mechanism as
hospitals could encourage the migration
of appropriate services from the hospital
setting to the ASC setting and increase
the presence of ASCs in health care
markets or geographic areas where
previously there were none or few, thus
promoting better beneficiary access to
care. As published in the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42343),
based on IGI’s 2019 second quarter
forecast with historical data through the
first quarter of 2019, the hospital market
basket update is 3.0 percent, and the
MFP adjustment is 0.4 percentage point.
Therefore, for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period we are
finalizing the application of a 2.6
percent MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC
conversion factor for ASCs meeting the
quality reporting requirements to
determine the CY 2020 ASC payment
amounts, as discussed at section XXVI
of this final rule with comment period.
B. ASC Conversion Factor Update
In the March 2019 MedPAC ‘‘Report
to the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy’’, MedPAC found that, based on
its analysis of indicators of payment
adequacy, the number of Medicarecertified ASCs had increased,
beneficiaries’ use of ASCs had
increased, and ASC access to capital has
been adequate.80 As a result, for CY
2020, MedPAC stated that payments to
ASCs are adequate and recommended
that no payment update should be given
for 2020 (that is, the update factor
would be 0 percent).
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59079), we
adopted a policy, which we codified at
42 CFR 416.171(a)(2), to apply the
hospital market basket update to ASC
payment system rates for an interim
period of 5 years. We refer readers to the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period for complete details
regarding our policy to use the hospital
market basket update for the ASC
payment system. Therefore, consistent
with our policy for the ASC payment
system, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to apply a
2.7 percent MFP-adjusted hospital
market basket update factor to the CY
2019 ASC conversion factor for ASCs
meeting the quality reporting
requirements to determine the CY 2020
ASC payment amounts.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated their
previous comments in their March 2019
report; specifically, that they do not
support using the hospital market basket
index as an interim method for updating
the ASC conversion factor because
evidence indicates the hospital market
C. ASC Cost Data
In the March 2019 MedPAC ‘‘Report
to the Congress on Medicare Payment
Policy’’, MedPAC recommended that
Congress require ASCs to report cost
data to enable the Commission to
examine the growth of ASCs’ costs over
time and analyze Medicare payments
relative to the costs of efficient
providers, and that CMS could use ASC
cost data to examine whether an
existing Medicare price index is an
appropriate proxy for ASC costs or an
ASC specific market basket should be
developed. Further, MedPAC suggested
that CMS could limit the scope of the
cost reporting system to minimize
administrative burden on ASCs and the
program.81
Comment: MedPAC reiterated their
previous comments in their March 2019
report and requested that CMS use
available authority to act quickly in
gathering ASC cost data to inform ASC
input costs and determine whether an
existing Medicare price index is an
appropriate proxy for ASC costs or
whether an ASC-specific market basket
index should be developed.
Additionally, MedPAC asserts there is
sufficient evidence that ASCs are
capable of submitting cost data to CMS.
Response: We did not propose any
cost reporting requirements for ASCs in
80 Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. March
2019 Report to the Congress. Chapter 5: Ambulatory
surgical center services. Available at: https://
www.medpac.gov/docs/default-source/reports/
mar19_medpac_ch5_sec.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
81 Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. March
2019 Report to the Congress. Chapter 5: Ambulatory
surgical center services. Available at: https://
www.medpac.gov/docs/default-source/reports/
mar19_medpac_ch5_sec.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
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the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
and are not finalizing any cost reporting
requirements for ASCs in this final rule.
The full March 2019 MedPAC Report
to Congress can be downloaded from
MedPAC’s website at: https://
www.medpac.gov.
XIII. Updates to the Ambulatory
Surgical Center (ASC) Payment System
A. Background
1. Legislative History, Statutory
Authority, and Prior Rulemaking for the
ASC Payment System
For a detailed discussion of the
legislative history and statutory
authority related to payments to ASCs
under Medicare, we refer readers to the
CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74377 through
74378) and the June 12, 1998 proposed
rule (63 FR 32291 through 32292). For
a discussion of prior rulemaking on the
ASC payment system, we refer readers
to the CYs 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016,
2017, 2018 and 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rules with comment period (76 FR
74378 through 74379; 77 FR 68434
through 68467; 78 FR 75064 through
75090; 79 FR 66915 through 66940; 80
FR 70474 through 70502; 81 FR 79732
through 79753; 82 FR 59401 through
59424; and 83 FR 59028 through 59080,
respectively).
2. Policies Governing Changes to the
Lists of Codes and Payment Rates for
ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and
Covered Ancillary Services
Under 42 CFR 416.2 and 42 CFR
416.166 of the Medicare regulations,
subject to certain exclusions, covered
surgical procedures in an ASC are
surgical procedures that are separately
paid under the OPPS, that would not be
expected to pose a significant risk to
beneficiary safety when performed in an
ASC, and for which standard medical
practice dictates that the beneficiary
would not typically be expected to
require active medical monitoring and
care at midnight following the
procedure (‘‘overnight stay’’). We
adopted this standard for defining
which surgical procedures are covered
under the ASC payment system as an
indicator of the complexity of the
procedure and its appropriateness for
Medicare payment in ASCs. We use this
standard only for purposes of evaluating
procedures to determine whether or not
they are appropriate to be furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries in ASCs.
Historically, we have defined surgical
procedures as those described by
Category I CPT codes in the surgical
range from 10000 through 69999 as well
as those Category III CPT codes and
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Level II HCPCS codes that directly
crosswalk or are clinically similar to
procedures in the CPT surgical range
that we have determined do not pose a
significant safety risk, that we would
not expect to require an overnight stay
when performed in ASCs, and that are
separately paid under the OPPS (72 FR
42478).
In the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR
42495), we also established our policy
to make separate ASC payments for the
following ancillary items and services
when they are provided integral to ASC
covered surgical procedures: (1)
Brachytherapy sources; (2) certain
implantable items that have passthrough payment status under the
OPPS; (3) certain items and services that
we designate as contractor-priced,
including, but not limited to,
procurement of corneal tissue; (4)
certain drugs and biologicals for which
separate payment is allowed under the
OPPS; and (5) certain radiology services
for which separate payment is allowed
under the OPPS. In the CY 2015 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (79
FR 66932 through 66934), we expanded
the scope of ASC covered ancillary
services to include certain diagnostic
tests within the medicine range of
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT)
codes for which separate payment is
allowed under the OPPS when they are
provided integral to an ASC covered
surgical procedure. Covered ancillary
services are specified in § 416.164(b)
and, as stated previously, are eligible for
separate ASC payment. Payment for
ancillary items and services that are not
paid separately under the ASC payment
system is packaged into the ASC
payment for the covered surgical
procedure.
We update the lists of, and payment
rates for, covered surgical procedures
and covered ancillary services in ASCs
in conjunction with the annual
proposed and final rulemaking process
to update the OPPS and the ASC
payment system (§ 416.173; 72 FR
42535). We base ASC payment and
policies for most covered surgical
procedures, drugs, biologicals, and
certain other covered ancillary services
on the OPPS payment policies, and we
use quarterly change requests (CRs) to
update services covered under the
OPPS. We also provide quarterly update
CRs for ASC covered surgical
procedures and covered ancillary
services throughout the year (January,
April, July, and October). We release
new and revised Level II HCPCS codes
and recognize the release of new and
revised CPT codes by the American
Medical Association (AMA) and make
these codes effective (that is, the codes
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are recognized on Medicare claims) via
these ASC quarterly update CRs. We
recognize the release of new and revised
Category III CPT codes in the July and
January CRs. These updates implement
newly created and revised Level II
HCPCS and Category III CPT codes for
ASC payments and update the payment
rates for separately paid drugs and
biologicals based on the most recently
submitted ASP data. New and revised
Category I CPT codes, except vaccine
codes, are released only once a year, and
are implemented only through the
January quarterly CR update. New and
revised Category I CPT vaccine codes
are released twice a year and are
implemented through the January and
July quarterly CR updates. We refer
readers to Table 41 in the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC proposed rule for an
example of how this process, is used to
update HCPCS and CPT codes, which
we finalized in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (76 FR
42291; 76 FR 74380 through 74384).
In our annual updates to the ASC list
of, and payment rates for, covered
surgical procedures and covered
ancillary services, we undertake a
review of excluded surgical procedures
(including all procedures newly
proposed for removal from the OPPS
inpatient list), new codes, and codes
with revised descriptors, to identify any
that we believe meet the criteria for
designation as ASC covered surgical
procedures or covered ancillary
services. Updating the lists of ASC
covered surgical procedures and
covered ancillary services, as well as
their payment rates, in association with
the annual OPPS rulemaking cycle is
particularly important because the
OPPS relative payment weights and, in
some cases, payment rates, are used as
the basis for the payment of many
covered surgical procedures and
covered ancillary services under the
revised ASC payment system. This joint
update process ensures that the ASC
updates occur in a regular, predictable,
and timely manner.
3. Definition of ASC Covered Surgical
Procedures
Since the implementation of the ASC
prospective payment system, we have
historically defined a ‘‘surgical’’
procedure under the payment system as
any procedure described within the
range of Category I CPT codes that the
CPT Editorial Panel of the AMA defines
as ‘‘surgery’’ (CPT codes 10000 through
69999) (72 FR 42478). We also have
included as ‘‘surgical,’’ procedures that
are described by Level II HCPCS codes
or by Category III CPT codes that
directly crosswalk or are clinically
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61371
similar to procedures in the CPT
surgical range that we have determined
do not pose a significant safety risk,
would not expect to require an
overnight stay when performed in an
ASC, and that are separately paid under
the OPPS (72 FR 42478).
As we noted in the August 7, 2007
final rule that implemented the revised
ASC payment system, using this
definition of surgery would exclude
from ASC payment certain invasive,
‘‘surgery-like’’ procedures, such as
cardiac catheterization or certain
radiation treatment services that are
assigned codes outside the CPT surgical
range (72 FR 42477). We stated in that
final rule that we believed continuing to
rely on the CPT definition of surgery is
administratively straightforward, is
logically related to the categorization of
services by physician experts who both
establish the codes and perform the
procedures, and is consistent with a
policy to allow ASC payment for all
outpatient surgical procedures (72 FR
42477).
However, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59029 through 59030), after
consideration of public comments
received in response to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC proposed rule and earlier
OPPS/ASC rulemaking cycles, we
revised our definition of a surgical
procedure under the ASC payment
system. We now define a surgical
procedure under the ASC payment
system as any procedure described
within the range of Category I CPT
codes that the CPT Editorial Panel of the
AMA defines as ‘‘surgery’’ (CPT codes
10000 through 69999) (72 FR 42476), as
well as procedures that are described by
Level II HCPCS codes or by Category I
CPT codes or by Category III CPT codes
that directly crosswalk or are clinically
similar to procedures in the CPT
surgical range that we have determined
are not expected to pose a significant
risk to beneficiary safety when
performed in an ASC, for which
standard medical practice dictates that
the beneficiary would not typically be
expected to require an overnight stay
following the procedure, and are
separately paid under the OPPS.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters supported our
revised definition and recommended
that we modify our definition of an ASC
covered surgical procedure for CY 2020
and subsequent years.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. In review of the public
comments we received, we realized that
our modified definition of an ASC
covered surgical procedure was initially
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finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59029 through 59030) but that we only
referenced CY 2019 and did not
reference subsequent years. While we
did not specifically propose to continue
our modified definition of surgery for
CY 2020 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we did not propose to
remove any procedures from the ASC
list of covered surgical procedures that
we had added as a result of our
modified definition of a surgical
procedure, and, therefore, we intended
to continue our modified definition. For
this final rule with comment period,
after consideration of the public
comments we are adopting a policy to
continue to apply the modified
definition of a surgical procedure for CY
2020, which was finalized for CY 2019
in our CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59029
through 59030). We intend to address
subsequent calendar years in future
rulemaking.
B. ASC Treatment of New and Revised
Codes
1. Background on Current Process for
Recognizing New and Revised HCPCS
Codes
Payment for ASC items and services
are generally based on medical billing
codes, specifically, HCPCS codes, that
are reported on ASC claims. The HCPCS
is divided into two principal
subsystems, referred to as Level I and
Level II of the HCPCS. Level I is
comprised of CPT codes, a numeric and
alphanumeric coding system
maintained by the AMA, and includes
Category I, II, and III CPT codes. Level
II of the HCPCS, which is maintained by
CMS, is a standardized coding system
that is used primarily to identify
products, supplies, and services not
included in the CPT codes. Together,
Level I and II HCPCS codes are used to
report procedures, services, items, and
supplies under the ASC payment
system. Specifically, we recognize the
following codes on ASC claims:
• Category I CPT codes, which
describe surgical procedures, diagnostic
and therapeutic services, and vaccine
codes;
• Category III CPT codes, which
describe new and emerging
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technologies, services, and procedures;
and
• Level II HCPCS codes (also known
as alphanumeric codes), which are used
primarily to identify drugs, devices,
supplies, temporary procedures, and
services not described by CPT codes.
We finalized a policy in the August 2,
2007 final rule (72 FR 42535) to evaluate
each year all new HCPCS codes that
describe surgical procedures, and to
make preliminary determinations
during the annual OPPS/ASC
rulemaking process regarding whether
or not they meet the criteria for payment
in the ASC setting as covered surgical
procedures and, if so, whether or not
they are office-based procedures. In
addition, we identify new and revised
codes as ASC covered ancillary services
based upon the final payment policies
of the revised ASC payment system. In
prior rulemakings, we refer to this
process as recognizing new codes.
However, this process has always
involved the recognition of new and
revised codes. We consider revised
codes to be new when they have
substantial revision to their code
descriptors that necessitate a change in
the current ASC payment indicator. To
clarify, we refer to these codes as new
and revised in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
We have separated our discussion
below based on when the codes are
released and whether we solicited
public comments in the proposed rule
(and respond to those comments in this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period) or whether we are
soliciting public comments in this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (and will respond to
those comments in the CY 2021 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period).
We note that we sought public
comments in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59034 through 59035) on the new and
revised Level II HCPCS codes effective
October 1, 2018 or January 1, 2019.
These new and revised codes were
flagged with comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in
Addenda AA and BB to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period to indicate that we were
assigning them an interim payment
status and payment rate, if applicable,
which were subject to public comment
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following publication of the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we stated that we will
finalize the treatment of these codes
under the ASC payment system in this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
2. April 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which
We Solicited Public Comments in the
Proposed Rule
For the April 2019 update, there were
no new CPT codes, however, there were
several new Level II HCPCS codes. In
the April 2019 ASC quarterly update
(Transmittal 4263, CR 11232, dated
March 22, 2019), we added eight new
Level II HCPCS codes to the list of
covered ancillary services. Table 25 of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
displayed the new Level II HCPCS codes
that were implemented on April 1,
2019, along with their proposed
payment indicators for CY 2020.
We invited public comments on the
proposed payment indicators and
payment rates for the new HCPCS codes
that were recognized as ASC ancillary
services in April 2019 through the
quarterly update CRs, as listed in Table
25 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. We proposed to finalize their
payment indicators in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period.
We did not receive any public
comments on the proposed ASC
payment indicator assignments for the
new Level II HCPCS codes implemented
in April 2019. Therefore, we are
finalizing the proposed ASC payment
indicator assignments for these codes, as
indicated in Table 50 below. We note
that several of the temporary drug
HCPCS C-codes have been replaced
with permanent drug HCPCS J-codes,
effective January 1, 2020. Their
replacement codes are also listed in
Table 50. The final payment rates for
these codes can be found in Addendum
BB to this final rule with comment
period (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website). In
addition, the status indicator meanings
can be found in Addendum DD1 to this
final rule with comment period (which
is available via the internet on the CMS
website).
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1, 2019. This code was listed in Table
27 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, along with the proposed comment
indicator and payment indicator.
We invited public comments on these
proposed payment indicators for the
new Category III CPT code and Level II
HCPCS codes newly recognized as ASC
covered surgical procedures or covered
ancillary services in July 2019 through
the quarterly update CRs, as listed in
Tables 25, 26, and 27 of the proposed
rule.
We did not receive any other public
comments on the proposed ASC
payment indicator assignments for the
new Category III CPT codes or Level II
HCPCS codes implemented in July
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2019. Therefore, we are finalizing the
proposed ASC payment indicator
assignments for these codes, as
indicated in Table 51 and 52 below. We
note that several of the HCPCS C-codes
have been replaced with HCPCS J-codes,
effective January 1, 2020. Their
replacement codes are listed in Table
51. The final payment rates for these
codes can be found in Addendum AA
and BB to this final rule with comment
period (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website). In
addition, the status indicator meanings
can be found in Addendum DD1 to this
final rule with comment period (which
is available via the internet on the CMS
website).
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ER12NO19.083
3. July 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which
We Solicited Public Comments in the
Proposed Rule
In the July 2019 ASC quarterly update
(Transmittal 4076, Change Request
10788, dated June 14, 2019), we added
several separately payable Category III
CPT and Level II HCPCS codes to the
list of covered surgical procedures and
ancillary services. Table 26 of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
displayed the new HCPCS codes that
were effective July 1, 2019.
In addition, through the July 2019
quarterly update CR, we also
implemented an ASC payment for one
new Category III CPT code as an ASC
covered ancillary service, effective July
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4. October 2019 HCPCS Codes for
Which We Are Soliciting Public
Comments in This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Final Rule With Comment Period
In the past, we released new and
revised HCPCS codes that are effective
October 1 through the October OPPS
quarterly update CRs and incorporated
these new codes in the final rule with
comment period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39534), for CY 2020,
consistent with our established policy,
we proposed that the Level II HCPCS
codes that will be effective October 1,
2019 would be flagged with comment
indicator ‘‘NI’’ in Addendum BB to the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period to indicate that we
have assigned the codes an interim ASC
payment indicator for CY 2020. We did
not receive any public comments on our
proposal. As we stated that we would
do in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we are inviting public comments
in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period on the interim
ASC payment indicator for these codes
that we intend to finalize in the CY 2021
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period.
5. January 2020 HCPCS Codes
a. New Level II HCPCS Codes for Which
We Are Soliciting Public Comments in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With
Comment Period
Consistent with past practice, we are
soliciting comment on the new Level II
HCPCS codes that are effective January
1, 2020 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, thereby
updating the ASC payment system for
the calendar year. These codes are
released to the public via the CMS
HCPCS website, and also through the
January OPPS quarterly update CRs. We
note that unlike the CPT codes that are
effective January 1 and are included in
the OPPS/ASC proposed rules, and
except for the G-codes listed in
Addendum O to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, most Level II HCPCS
codes are not released until November
to be effective January 1. Because these
codes are not available until November,
we are unable to include them in the
OPPS/ASC proposed rules. Therefore,
these Level II HCPCS codes will be
released to the public through the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, January 2020 ASC
Update CR, and the CMS HCPCS
website.
In addition, for CY 2020, we proposed
to continue our established policy of
assigning comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in
Addendum AA and Addendum BB to
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the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period to the new Level II
HCPCS codes that will be effective
January 1, 2020 to indicate that we are
assigning them an interim payment
indicator, which is subject to public
comment. We are inviting public
comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period on the
payment indicator assignments, which
would then be finalized in the CY 2021
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period.
b. CPT Codes for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the Proposed Rule
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66841
through 66844), we finalized a revised
process of assigning APC and status
indicators for new and revised Category
I and III CPT codes that would be
effective January 1. Specifically, for the
new/revised CPT codes that we receive
in a timely manner from the AMA’s CPT
Editorial Panel, we finalized our
proposal to include the codes that
would be effective January 1 in the
OPPS/ASC proposed rules, along with
proposed APC and status indicator
assignments for them, and to finalize the
APC and status indicator assignments in
the OPPS/ASC final rules beginning
with the CY 2016 OPPS update. For
those new/revised CPT codes that were
received too late for inclusion in the
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we finalized
our proposal to establish and use
HCPCS G-codes that mirror the
predecessor CPT codes and retain the
current APC and status indicator
assignments for a year until we can
propose APC and status indicator
assignments in the following year’s
rulemaking cycle. We note that even if
we find that we need to create HCPCS
G-codes in place of certain CPT codes
for the PFS proposed rule, we do not
anticipate that these HCPCS G-codes
will always be necessary for OPPS
purposes. We will make every effort to
include proposed APC and status
indicator assignments for all new and
revised CPT codes that the AMA makes
publicly available in time for us to
include them in the proposed rule, and
to avoid the resort to HCPCS G-codes
and the resulting delay in utilization of
the most current CPT codes. Also, we
finalized our proposal to make interim
APC and status indicator assignments
for CPT codes that are not available in
time for the proposed rule and that
describe wholly new services (such as
new technologies or new surgical
procedures), solicit public comments,
and finalize the specific APC and status
indicator assignments for those codes in
the following year’s final rule.
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61375
For the CY 2020 OPPS update, we
received the CPT codes that will be
effective January 1, 2020 from AMA in
time to be included in the proposed
rule. The new, revised, and deleted CPT
codes were listed in Addendum AA and
Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. We note that the
new and revised CPT codes were
assigned to comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ in
Addendum AA and Addendum BB of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
to indicate that the code is new for the
next calendar year or the code is an
existing code with substantial revision
to its code descriptor in the next
calendar year as compared to current
calendar year with a proposed ASC
payment assignment, and that
comments would be accepted on the
proposed ASC payment indicator.
Further, we note that the CPT code
descriptors that appeared in Addendum
AA and BB were short descriptors and
did not accurately describe the complete
procedure, service, or item described by
the CPT code. Therefore, we included
the 5-digit placeholder codes and the
long descriptors for the new and revised
CY 2020 CPT codes in Addendum O to
the proposed rule so that the public
could adequately comment on the
proposed ASC payment indicator
assignments. The 5-digit placeholder
codes were listed in Addendum O,
specifically under the column labeled
‘‘CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule 5Digit AMA Placeholder Code’’. The final
CPT code numbers are included in this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, and can be found in
Addendum AA, Addendum BB, and
Addendum O.
For new and revised CPT codes
effective January 1, 2020 that were
received in time to be included in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed the appropriate payment
indicator assignments, and solicited
public comments on the payment
assignments. We stated we would
accept comments and finalize the
payment indicators in this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period. We note that we received
comments on the ASC payment
indicator for certain new CPT codes that
will be effective January 1, 2020. These
comments, and our responses, can be
found in section XIII.C.1.a.(2). of this
final rule with comment period.
Also, we note that we inadvertently
omitted new CPT and new HCPCS
codes effective January 1, 2020 from
Table 32 (Proposed Additions to the List
of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures for
CY 2020) of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39544), however,
we included these 12 procedures in
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Addendum AA to the proposed rule.
The procedures described by the 12 new
CPT and HCPCS codes are displayed in
Table 53 of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
Finally, shown in Table 28 of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39565) and reprinted in Table 53 below,
we summarize our process for updating
codes through our ASC quarterly update
CRs, seeking public comments, and
finalizing the treatment of these new
codes under the ASC.
C. Update to the List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures and Covered
Ancillary Services—
classification (72 FR 42512). The
procedures that were added to the ASC
CPL beginning in CY 2008 that we
determined were office-based were
identified in Addendum AA to that rule
by payment indicator ‘‘P2’’ (Officebased surgical procedure added to ASC
list in CY 2008 or later with MPFS
nonfacility PE RVUs; payment based on
OPPS relative payment weight); ‘‘P3’’
(Office-based surgical procedures added
to ASC list in CY 2008 or later with
MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs; payment
based on MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs); or
‘‘R2’’ (Office-based surgical procedure
added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later
without MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs;
payment based on OPPS relative
payment weight), depending on whether
we estimated the procedure would be
paid according to the standard ASC
payment methodology based on its
OPPS relative payment weight or at the
MPFS nonfacility PE RVU-based
amount.
Consistent with our final policy to
annually review and update the ASC
CPL to include all covered surgical
procedures eligible for payment in
ASCs, each year we identify covered
surgical procedures as either
temporarily office-based (these are new
procedure codes with little or no
utilization data that we have determined
are clinically similar to other
procedures that are permanently officebased), permanently office-based, or non
office-based, after taking into account
updated volume and utilization data.
1. Covered Surgical Procedures
a. Covered Surgical Procedures
Designated as Office-Based
(1) Background
In the August 2, 2007 ASC final rule,
we finalized our policy to designate as
‘‘office-based’’ those procedures that are
added to the ASC Covered Procedures
List (CPL) in CY 2008 or later years that
we determine are performed
predominantly (more than 50 percent of
the time) in physicians’ offices based on
consideration of the most recent
available volume and utilization data for
each individual procedure code and/or,
if appropriate, the clinical
characteristics, utilization, and volume
of related codes. In that rule, we also
finalized our policy to exempt all
procedures on the CY 2007 ASC list
from application of the office-based
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(2) Changes for CY 2020 to Covered
Surgical Procedures Designated as
Office-Based
In developing the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we followed our policy
to annually review and update the
covered surgical procedures for which
ASC payment is made and to identify
new procedures that may be appropriate
for ASC payment, including their
potential designation as office-based.
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‘‘R2’’ in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 59039
through 59040).
Our review of the CY 2018 volume
and utilization data resulted in our
identification of 9 covered surgical
procedures that we believed met the
criteria for designation as permanently
office-based. We understood the data to
indicate that these procedures are
performed more than 50 percent of the
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time in physicians’ offices, and we
believed that the services are of a level
of complexity consistent with other
procedures performed routinely in
physicians’ offices. The CPT codes that
we proposed to permanently designate
as office-based for CY 2020 were listed
in Table 29 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, which is reprinted below
as Table 54.
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We reviewed CY 2018 volume and
utilization data and the clinical
characteristics for all covered surgical
procedures that are assigned payment
indicator ‘‘G2’’ (Nonoffice-based
surgical procedure added in CY 2008 or
later; payment based on OPPS relative
payment weight) in CY 2018, as well as
for those procedures assigned one of the
temporary office-based payment
indicators, specifically ‘‘P2’’, ‘‘P3’’, or
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As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59036), the office-based utilization
for CPT codes 36902 and 36905 (dialysis
vascular access procedures) was greater
than 50 percent. However, we did not
designate CPT codes 36902 and 36905
as office-based procedures for CY 2019.
These codes became effective January 1,
2017 and CY 2017 was the first year we
had claims volume and utilization data
for CPT codes 36902 and 36905. We
shared commenters’ concerns that the
available data were not adequate to
make a determination that these
procedures should be office-based, and
believed it was premature to assign
office-based payment status to those
procedures for CY 2019. For CY 2019,
CPT codes 36902 and 36905 were
assigned payment indicators of ‘‘G2’’—
Non office-based surgical procedure
added in CY 2008 or later; payment
based on OPPS relative weight.
In reviewing the CY 2018 volume and
utilization data for CPT code 36902 we
determined that the procedure was
performed more than 50 percent of the
time in physicians’ offices based on
2018 volume and utilization data.
However, the office-based utilization
for CPT code 36902 has fallen from 62
percent based on 2017 data to 52
percent based on 2018 data. In addition,
there was a sizeable increase in claims
for this service in ASCs—from
approximately 14,000 in 2017 to 38,000
in 2018. As previously stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR
59036), when we believe that the
available data for our review process are
inadequate to make a determination that
a procedure should be office-based, we
either make no change to the
procedure’s payment status or make the
change on a temporary basis, and
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reevaluate our decision when more data
become available for our next
evaluation. In light of these changes in
utilization and due to the high
utilization of this procedure in all
settings (over 125,000 claims in 2018),
we believe it may be premature to assign
office-based payment status to CPT code
36902 at this time.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we did not
propose to designate CPT code 36902 as
an office-based procedure, but proposed
to continue to assign CPT code 36902 a
payment indicator of ‘‘G2’’—nonofficebased surgical procedure paid based on
OPPS relative weights.
The CY 2018 volume and utilization
data for CPT code 36905 show the
procedure was not performed more than
50 percent of the time in physicians’
offices. Therefore, in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we did not propose
to assign an office-based designation for
CPT code 36905. Therefore the
procedure will retain its payment
indicator of ‘‘G2’’—non office-based
surgical procedure based on OPPS
relative weights.
The comments and our responses to
the comment are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters supported our
decision to refrain from proposing to
designate CPT code 36902 as an officebased procedure and to continue to
assign both CPT codes 36902 and 36905
a payment indicator of ‘‘G2’’—
nonoffice-based surgical procedure paid
based on OPPS relative weights.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of our proposal. After
reviewing the public comments we
received, we are finalizing our proposal
to assign CPT code 36902 a payment
indicator of ‘‘G2’’—nonoffice-based
surgical procedure paid based on OPPS
relative weights.
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Comment: Some commenters
suggested that CPT codes 31634, 31647,
50727, 59414, and 61880 should not be
designated as office-based procedures
and that the level of complexity is not
consistent with other procedures
performed routinely in physicians’
offices
Response: We agree with the
commenters. We inadvertently proposed
to assign office-based designations to
CPT codes 31634, 31647, 50727, 59414,
and 61880. The volume and utilization
data for these procedures do not suggest
the procedures are performed more than
50 percent of the time in physicians’
offices, and we do not believe that the
services are of a level of complexity
consistent with other procedures
performed routinely in physicians’
offices. Therefore, CPT codes 31634,
50727, 59414, 61880 are assigned
payment indicators ‘‘G2’’—non officebased surgical procedure based on OPPS
relative weights—for CY 2020.
Additionally, as CPT code 31647
exceeds our device offset percentage
threshold of 30 percent for deviceintensive designation, we are assigning
this procedure a payment indicator of
‘‘J8’’—device-intensive procedure; paid
at adjusted rate—for CY 2020. These
procedures and their assigned payment
indicators can be found in Addendum
AA to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website).
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal with
modification, to designate the four ASC
covered surgical procedures in Table 55
as permanently office-based for CY 2020
and subsequent years.
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CPT codes for CY 2020. The procedures
for which the proposed office-based
designations for CY 2020 are temporary
are also indicated by asterisks in
Addendum AA to the proposed and
final rule (which are available via the
internet on the CMS website).
The volume and utilization data for
the one remaining procedure that has a
temporary office-based designation for
CY 2019, described by CPT code 38222
(Diagnostic bone marrow; biopsy(ies)
and aspiration(s)), are sufficient to
indicate that this covered surgical
procedures was not performed
predominantly in physicians’ offices
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and, therefore, we proposed to assign a
nonoffice-based payment indicator—
‘‘G2’’—to this code for CY 2020.
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to designate the
procedures shown in Table 56 below as
temporarily office-based. The
procedures for which the office-based
designation for CY 2020 is temporary
are indicated by an asterisk in
Addendum AA to this final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
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We also reviewed CY 2018 volume
and utilization data and other
information for 12 procedures
designated as temporarily office-based
in Tables 57 and 58 in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59039 through 59040). Of
these 12 procedures, there were very
few claims in our data and no claims
data for 11 procedures described by CPT
codes 10005, 10007, 10009, 10011,
11102, 11104, 11106, 65785, 67229,
0402T and 0512T. Consequently, we
proposed to maintain the temporary
office-based designations for these 11
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For CY 2020, we proposed to
designate 7 new CY 2020 CPT codes for
ASC covered surgical procedures as
temporarily office-based, as displayed in
Table P31X. After reviewing the clinical
characteristics, utilization, and volume
of related procedure codes, we
determined that the procedures in Table
30 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule described by the new CPT codes
would be predominantly performed in
physicians’ offices. We stated that we
believed the procedure described by
CPT codes 93X00 (Duplex scan of
arterial inflow and venous outflow for
preoperative vessel assessment prior to
creation of hemodialysis access;
complete bilateral study) and 93X01
(Duplex scan of arterial inflow and
venous outflow for preoperative vessel
assessment prior to creation of
hemodialysis access; complete
unilateral study) was clinically similar
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to HCPCS code G0365 (Vessel mapping
of vessels for hemodialysis access
(services for preoperative vessel
mapping prior to creation of
hemodialysis access using an
autogenous hemodialysis conduit,
including arterial inflow and venous
outflow)), which is currently on the list
of covered surgical procedures and
assigned a proposed payment indicator
‘‘R2’’—Office-based surgical procedure
added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later
without MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs;
payment based on OPPS relative
payment weight—for CY 2020. As such,
we proposed to add CPT codes 93X00
and 93X01 in Table 30 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule to the list of
temporarily office-based covered
surgical procedures.
Because we have no utilization data
for the procedures specifically described
by these new CPT codes, we proposed
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61381
to make the office-based designation
temporary rather than permanent, and
we will reevaluate the procedures when
data become available. The procedures
for which the proposed office-based
designation for CY 2020 is temporary
are indicated by asterisks in Addendum
AA to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website).
We did not receive any public
comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to designate the
procedures shown in Table 57 below as
temporarily office-based. The
procedures for which the office-based
designation for CY 2020 is temporary
are indicated by an asterisk in
Addendum AA to this final rule with
comment period (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website).
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b. ASC Covered Surgical Procedures To
Be Designated as Device-Intensive
(1) Background
We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59040 through 59041), for
a summary of our existing policies
regarding ASC covered surgical
procedures that are designated as
device-intensive.
(2) Changes to List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures Designated as
Device-Intensive for CY 2020
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 590401
through 59043), for CY 2019, we
modified our criteria for deviceintensive procedures to better capture
costs for procedures with significant
device costs. We adopted a policy to
allow procedures that involve surgically
inserted or implanted, high-cost, singleuse devices to qualify as deviceintensive procedures. In addition, we
modified our criteria to lower the device
offset percentage threshold from 40
percent to 30 percent. Specifically, for
CY 2019 and subsequent years, we
adopted a policy that device-intensive
procedures would be subject to the
following criteria:
• All procedures must involve
implantable devices assigned a CPT or
HCPCS code;
• The required devices (including
single-use devices) must be surgically
inserted or implanted; and
• The device offset amount must be
significant, which is defined as
exceeding 30 percent of the procedure’s
mean cost. Corresponding to this change
in the cost criterion we adopted a policy
that the default device offset for new
codes that describe procedures that
involve the implantation of medical
devices will be 31 percent beginning in
CY 2019. For new codes describing
procedures that are payable when
furnished in an ASC involving the
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implantation of a medical device, we
adopted a policy that the default device
offset would be applied in the same
manner as the policy we adopted in
section IV.B.2. of the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58944 through 58948). We amended
§ 416.171(b)(2) of the regulations to
reflect these new device criteria.
In addition, as also adopted in section
IV.B.2. of CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, to further align
the device-intensive policy with the
criteria used for device pass-through
status, we specified, for CY 2019 and
subsequent years, that for purposes of
satisfying the device-intensive criteria, a
device-intensive procedure must
involve a device that:
• Has received Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) marketing
authorization, has received an FDA
investigational device exemption (IDE)
and has been classified as a Category B
device by the FDA in accordance with
42 CFR 405.203 through 405.207 and
405.211 through 405.215, or meets
another appropriate FDA exemption
from premarket review;
• Is an integral part of the service
furnished;
• Is used for one patient only;
• Comes in contact with human
tissue;
• Is surgically implanted or inserted
(either permanently or temporarily); and
• Is not any of the following:
++ Equipment, an instrument,
apparatus, implement, or item of this
type for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered as
depreciable assets as defined in Chapter
1 of the Medicare Provider
Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15–
1); or
++ A material or supply furnished
incident to a service (for example, a
suture, customized surgical kit, scalpel,
or clip, other than a radiological site
marker).
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61383
Based on our modified deviceintensive criteria, for CY 2020, we
proposed to update the ASC CPL to
indicate procedures that are eligible for
payment according to our deviceintensive procedure payment
methodology, based on the proposed
individual HCPCS code device-offset
percentages using the CY 2018 OPPS
claims and cost report data available for
the CY 2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule.
The ASC covered surgical procedures
that we proposed to designate as deviceintensive, and therefore subject to the
device-intensive procedure payment
methodology for CY 2020, are assigned
payment indicator ‘‘J8’’ and are
included in ASC Addendum AA to the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website). The CPT code, the
CPT code short descriptor, and the
proposed CY 2020 ASC payment
indicator, and an indication of whether
the full credit/partial credit (FB/FC)
device adjustment policy would apply
because the procedure is designated as
device-intensive are also included in
Addendum AA to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website). In addition, we note
that in our CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (83 FR 37158 through
37159), we proposed to apply our
device-intensive procedure payment
methodology to device-intensive
procedures under the ASC payment
system only when the device-intensive
procedure is furnished with a
surgically-inserted or implanted device
(including single-used medical devices).
We inadvertently omitted language
finalizing this policy for CY 2019. For
CY 2020 and subsequent calendar years,
we proposed to only apply our deviceintensive procedure payment
methodology to device-intensive
procedures under the ASC payment
system when the device-intensive
procedure is furnished with a surgically
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inserted or implanted device (including
single use medical devices). The
payment rate under the ASC payment
system for device-intensive procedures
furnished with an implantable or
inserted medical device would be
calculated by applying the device offset
percentage based on the standard OPPS
APC ratesetting methodology to the
OPPS national unadjusted payment to
determine the device cost included in
the OPPS payment rate for a device
intensive ASC covered surgical
procedure, which we then set as equal
to the device portion of the national
unadjusted ASC payment rate for the
procedure. We calculate the service
portion of the ASC payment for device
intensive procedures by applying the
uniform ASC conversion factor to the
service (non-device) portion of the
OPPS relative payment weight for the
device-intensive procedure. Finally, we
sum the ASC device portion and ASC
service portion to establish the full
payment for the device-intensive
procedure under the revised ASC
payment system. (82 FR 59409)
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters continued to
support the policy we implemented last
year to lower the device offset
percentage threshold to 30 percent for
purposes of designating deviceintensive procedures.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that device implants, which
we interpret to mean surgically inserted
or implanted, single-use devices, be
included in ASC payment at invoice
price based on manufacturer reported
pricing or at device pass-through
payment as described in section IV.A of
this final rule with comment period so
that the payment rate for these deviceintensive procedures would more
appropriately reflect the cost of care and
encourage migration from the more
expensive hospital setting to the ASC
setting.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendation. As discussed
in this section, the ASC payment rate for
surgical procedures includes payment
for device costs, which are packaged
into the procedure payment. For deviceintensive procedures and procedures
using pass-through devices, the device
portion is held equal to the device
portion under the OPPS using the
standard ratesetting methodology. We
believe this methodology provides
consistency with device-intensive
policies under the OPPS and provides
an appropriate payment for the device
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costs for device-intensive procedures in
the ASC setting.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that we calculate the device portions of
a service in two ways. The first, using
the device offset from APC payment
rates developed under the
comprehensive ratesetting methodology,
and, the second using the device offset
from the APC payment rates developed
under the standard (noncomprehensive) ratesetting
methodology. Commenters requested
that we designate device-intensive
procedures using only our standard
(non-comprehensive) ratesetting
methodology for determining whether
the cost of a device exceeds our deviceintensive threshold of 30 percent as they
believed that method is more consistent
with the overall ASC payment system.
Response: As we stated in the CY
2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66924), under
42 CFR 416.167 and 416.171, most ASC
payment rates are based on the OPPS
relative payment weights, and our ASC
policy with respect to device-intensive
procedures is designed to be consistent
with the OPPS. ‘‘Device-intensive’’
identifies those procedures with
significant device costs and applies to
services that are performed both in the
hospital outpatient department and the
ASC setting. We believe that the deviceintensive methodology for ASCs should
align with the device-intensive policies
for OPPS, and, therefore, procedures
should not be device-intensive in the
ASC setting if they are not deviceintensive in the hospital outpatient
setting. The device offset percentage for
device-intensive procedures under the
OPPS are based on the comprehensive
ratesetting methodology. However, to be
assigned device-intensive status in the
ASC setting, the procedure must be
identified as device-intensive in the
hospital outpatient setting and have a
device offset percentage exceeds the 30
percent threshold as calculated using
our standard ratesetting methodology as
stated in 42 CFR 416.171(b)(2).
Additionally, for purposes of the ASC
payment system, the device amount is
calculated by applying the device offset
percentage calculated under our
standard ratesetting methodology to the
APC payment weights calculated under
our standard ratesetting methodology.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we re-evaluate the device-intensive
designation for CPT code 22869
(Insertion of interlaminar/interspinous
process stabilization/distraction device,
without open decompression or fusion,
including image guidance when
performed, lumbar; single level). The
commenter stated the ASC payment rate
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was too low to reflect the cost of the
device in ASCs in California, and,
therefore, the device offset should be
increased.
Response: After reviewing the most
recently available claims data for the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, CPT code 22869 has a
device offset percentage of 74.0 percent
and a device offset amount of $8,383.12.
The offset percentage increased by 2.9
percentage points from 71.1 percent in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
and the device offset amount increased
by 3.0 percent from $8,141.12. We note
that device cost information for CPT
code 22869 has only been available from
CY 2017 claims (for CY 2019 ratesetting)
and CY 2018 claims (for CY 2020
ratesetting) and therefore we are unable
to draw any historical comparisons to
determine if the CY 2020 device offset
is inconsistent with historical device
offsets for this procedure. For this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the device cost of
$8,383.12 for CPT code 22869 is based
on 372 claims and we believe represents
our best estimate of the cost of devices
for performing the surgical procedure in
CY 2020. Further, we note that 50
percent of the final ASC payment rate
(both the device portion and non-device
portion) is adjusted by the ASC wage
index to reflect variation in labor costs.
We believe the ASC payment rate for
CPT code 22869 provides an
appropriate payment for both device
and non-device costs for facilities in all
areas of the country.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CPT code 50590 (Lithotripsy,
extracorporeal shock wave) be assigned
device-intensive status.
Response: We thank the commenter
for its request. Based on the most
recently available claims data for this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the device offset
percentage for CPT code 50590
continues to be below the 30 percent
threshold and, therefore, is ineligible to
be assigned device-intensive status.
c. Adjustment to ASC Payments for No
Cost/Full Credit and Partial Credit
Devices
Our ASC payment policy for costly
devices implanted in ASCs at no cost/
full credit or partial credit, as set forth
in § 416.179 of our regulations, is
consistent with the OPPS policy that
was in effect until CY 2014.
Specifically, the OPPS policy that was
in effect through CY 2013 provided a
reduction in OPPS payment by 100
percent of the device offset amount
when a hospital furnishes a specified
device without cost or with a full credit
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and by 50 percent of the device offset
amount when the hospital receives
partial credit in the amount of 50
percent or more of the cost for the
specified device (77 FR 68356 through
68358). The established ASC policy
reduces payment to ASCs when a
specified device is furnished without
cost or with full credit or partial credit
for the cost of the device for those ASC
covered surgical procedures that are
assigned to APCs under the OPPS to
which this policy applies. We refer
readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (73 FR 68742
through 68744) for a full discussion of
the ASC payment adjustment policy for
no cost/full credit and partial credit
devices.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (83 FR 37159), we noted that, as
discussed in section IV.B. of the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75005 through
75006), we finalized our proposal to
modify our former policy of reducing
OPPS payment for specified APCs when
a hospital furnishes a specified device
without cost or with a full or partial
credit. Formerly, under the OPPS, our
policy was to reduce OPPS payment by
100 percent of the device offset amount
when a hospital furnished a specified
device without cost or with a full credit
and by 50 percent of the device offset
amount when the hospital received
partial credit in the amount of 50
percent or more (but less than 100
percent) of the cost for the specified
device. For CY 2014, we finalized our
proposal to reduce OPPS payment for
applicable APCs by the full or partial
credit a provider receives for a replaced
device, capped at the device offset
amount.
Although we finalized our proposal to
modify the policy of reducing payments
when a hospital furnishes a specified
device without cost or with full or
partial credit under the OPPS, in the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75076 through
75080), we finalized our proposal to
maintain our ASC policy for reducing
payments to ASCs for specified deviceintensive procedures when the ASC
furnishes a device without cost or with
full or partial credit. Unlike the OPPS,
there is currently no mechanism within
the ASC claims processing system for
ASCs to submit to CMS the actual credit
received when furnishing a specified
device at full or partial credit.
Therefore, under the ASC payment
system, we finalized our proposal for
CY 2014 to continue to reduce ASC
payments by 100 percent or 50 percent
of the device offset amount when an
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ASC furnishes a device without cost or
with full or partial credit, respectively.
All ASC covered device-intensive
procedures are subject to the no cost/
full credit and partial credit device
adjustment policy. Specifically, when a
device-intensive procedure is performed
to implant a device that is furnished at
no cost or with full credit from the
manufacturer, the ASC would append
the HCPCS ‘‘FB’’ modifier on the line in
the claim with the procedure to implant
the device. The contractor would reduce
payment to the ASC by the device offset
amount that we estimate represents the
cost of the device when the necessary
device is furnished without cost or with
full credit to the ASC. We continue to
believe that the reduction of ASC
payment in these circumstances is
necessary to pay appropriately for the
covered surgical procedure furnished by
the ASC.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59043
through 59044), for partial credit, we
adopted a policy to reduce the payment
for a device-intensive procedure for
which the ASC receives partial credit by
one-half of the device offset amount that
would be applied if a device was
provided at no cost or with full credit,
if the credit to the ASC is 50 percent or
more (but less than 100 percent) of the
cost of the new device. The ASC will
append the HCPCS ‘‘FC’’ modifier to the
HCPCS code for the device-intensive
surgical procedure when the facility
receives a partial credit of 50 percent or
more (but less than 100 percent) of the
cost of a device. To report that the ASC
received a partial credit of 50 percent or
more (but less than 100 percent) of the
cost of a new device, ASCs have the
option of either: (1) Submitting the
claim for the device replacement
procedure to their Medicare contractor
after the procedure’s performance, but
prior to manufacturer acknowledgment
of credit for the device, and
subsequently contacting the contractor
regarding a claim adjustment, once the
credit determination is made; or (2)
holding the claim for the device
implantation procedure until a
determination is made by the
manufacturer on the partial credit and
submitting the claim with the ‘‘FC’’
modifier appended to the implantation
procedure HCPCS code if the partial
credit is 50 percent or more (but less
than 100 percent) of the cost of the
replacement device. Beneficiary
coinsurance would be based on the
reduced payment amount. As finalized
in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66926), to
ensure our policy covers any situation
involving a device-intensive procedure
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where an ASC may receive a device at
no cost or receive full credit or partial
credit for the device, we apply our
‘‘FB’’/‘‘FC’’ modifier policy to all
device-intensive procedures.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we did not propose any changes to
these policies and we are finalizing
continuing our existing policies for CY
2020.
d. Additions to the List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures
(1) Additions to the List of ASC Covered
Surgical Procedures for CY 2020
As finalized in section XII.A.3. of the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59029 through
59030), we revised our definition of
‘‘surgery’’ for CY 2019 to include certain
‘‘surgery-like’’ procedures that are
assigned codes outside the CPT surgical
range. For CY 2020 and subsequent
years we proposed to adopt the
modified definition we finalized for CY
2019, to include procedures that are
described by Category I CPT codes that
are not in the surgical range but directly
crosswalk or are clinically similar to
procedures in the Category I CPT code
surgical range that we have determined
do not pose a significant safety risk,
would not be expected to require an
overnight stay when performed in an
ASC, and are separately paid under the
OPPS. We also proposed to continue to
include in our definition of surgical
procedures those procedures described
by Category I CPT codes in the surgical
range from 10000 through 69999 as well
as those Category III CPT codes and
Level II HCPCS codes that directly
crosswalk or are clinically similar to
procedures in the CPT surgical range
that we have determined do not pose a
significant safety risk, that we would
not expect to require an overnight stay
when performed in ASCs, and that are
separately paid under the OPPS.
We conducted a review of HCPCS
codes that currently are paid under the
OPPS, but not included on the ASC
CPL, and that meet our proposed
definition of surgery to determine if
changes in technology or medical
practice affected the clinical
appropriateness of these procedures for
the ASC setting. Based on this review,
we proposed to update the list of ASC
covered surgical procedures by adding
total knee arthroplasty, a knee
mosaicplasty procedure and three
coronary intervention procedures (as
well as the three associated add-on
codes for the coronary intervention
procedures) to the list for CY 2020, as
was shown in Table 32 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. After
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reviewing the clinical characteristics of
these procedures and consulting with
stakeholders and our clinical advisors,
we determined that these eight
procedures would not be expected to
pose a significant risk to beneficiary
safety when performed in an ASC and
would not be expected to require active
medical monitoring and care of the
beneficiary at midnight following the
procedure. The regulations at
§ 416.166(c) list general exclusions from
the list of ASC covered surgical
procedures based primarily on factors
relating to safety, including procedures
that generally result in extensive blood
loss, require major or prolonged
invasion of body cavities, or directly
involve major blood vessels. We
assessed each of the proposed added
procedures against the regulatory safety
criteria and determined that these
procedures meet each of the criteria.
Although the proposed coronary
intervention procedures may involve
blood vessels that could be considered
major, as stated in the August 2, 2007
ASC final rule (72 FR 42481), we believe
the involvement of major blood vessels
is best considered in the context of the
clinical characteristics of individual
procedures, and we do not believe that
it is logically or clinically consistent to
exclude certain cardiac procedures from
the list of ASC covered surgical
procedures on the basis of the
involvement of major blood vessels, yet
continue to provide ASC payment for
similar procedures involving major
blood vessels that have a history of safe
performance in ASCs, such as CPT code
36473 (Mechanicochemical destruction
of insufficient vein of arm or leg,
accessed through the skin using imaging
guidance) and CPT code 37223
(Insertion of stents into groin artery,
endovascular, accessed through the skin
or open procedure). Based on our
review of the clinical characteristics of
the procedures and their similarity to
other procedures that are currently
included on the ASC CPL, we believe
these procedures can be safely
performed in an ASC. Therefore, we
proposed to include these three
coronary intervention procedures on the
list of ASC covered surgical procedures
for CY 2020. We also proposed to add
their respective add-on procedures
which are packaged under the ASC
payment system.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we solicited public comments on
whether the total knee arthroplasty
(TKA) procedure, CPT code 27447
(Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and
plateau; medial and lateral
compartments with or without patella
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resurfacing (total knee arthroplasty)),
should be added to the ASC CPL. In the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59411 through
59412) we noted that some commenters
stated that many ASCs are equipped to
perform these procedures and
orthopedic surgeons in ASCs are
increasingly performing these
procedures safely and effectively on
non-Medicare patients and appropriate
Medicare patients. However, other
commenters noted that the majority of
ASCs were not well-equipped to safely
perform TKA procedures on patients
and that the majority of Medicare
patients are not suitable candidates to
receive joint arthroplasty procedures in
an ASC setting. For CY 2018, we did not
finalize adding TKA to the ASC covered
surgical procedures list, but noted that
we would take the suggestions and
recommendations into consideration for
future rulemaking.
In this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule,
we continue to promote site-neutrality,
where possible, between the hospital
outpatient department and ASC settings.
Further, we agree with commenters that
there is a small subset of Medicare
beneficiaries who may be suitable
candidates to receive TKA procedures
in an ASC setting based on their clinical
characteristics. For example, based on
Medicare Advantage encounter data, we
estimate over 800 TKA procedures were
performed in an ASC on Medicare
Advantage enrollees in 2016. We believe
that beneficiaries not enrolled in an MA
plan should also have the option of
choosing to receive the TKA procedure
in an ASC setting based on their
physicians’ determinations.
As we stated in the August 2, 2007
final rule (72 FR 42483 through 42484),
we exclude procedures that would
otherwise pose a significant safety risk
to the typical Medicare beneficiary.
However, we believe physicians should
continue to play an important role in
exercising their clinical judgment when
making site-of-service determinations,
including for TKA. In light of the
information commenters submitted in
support of adding TKA to the ASC CPL
in response to our CY 2018 public
comment solicitation, we proposed to
add TKA to the ASC CPL in CY 2020.
We note that TKA procedures were
still predominantly performed in the
inpatient hospital setting in CY 2018 (82
percent of the time) based on
professional claims data, and we are
cognizant of the fact that the majority of
beneficiaries may not be suitable
candidates to receive TKA in an ASC
setting. We believe that appropriate
limits are necessary to ensure that
Medicare Part B payment will only be
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made for TKA procedures performed in
the ASC setting when that setting is
clinically appropriate. Therefore, we
solicited public comment on the
appropriate approach to provide
safeguards for Medicare beneficiaries
who should not receive the TKA
procedure in an ASC setting.
Specifically, we solicited public
comment on methods to ensure
beneficiaries receive surgical procedures
in the ASC setting only as clinically
appropriate. For instance, we stated that
CMS could issue a new modifier that
indicates the physician believes that the
beneficiary would not be expected to
require active medical monitoring and
care at midnight following a particular
procedure furnished in the ASC setting.
CMS could require that such a modifier
be included on the claims line for a
surgical procedure performed in an
ASC. Alternatively, given the
importance of post-operative care in
making determinations about whether
the ASC is an appropriate setting for a
procedure, CMS could require that an
ASC has a defined plan of care for each
beneficiary following a surgical
procedure. We also stated that we could
establish certain requirements for ASCs
that choose to perform certain surgical
procedures on Medicare patients, such
as requiring an ASC to have a certain
amount of experience in performing a
procedure before being eligible for
payment for performing the procedure
under Medicare. We solicited comment
on these options, and other options, for
ensuring that beneficiaries receive
surgical procedures, including TKA,
that do not pose a significant safety risk
when performed in an ASC.
In light of the information we
received from commenters in support of
adding TKA to the ASC CPL in response
to our comment solicitation in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
stated our belief that TKA would meet
our regulatory requirements established
under §§ 416.2 and 416.166(b) for
covered surgical procedures in the ASC
setting. Therefore, we proposed to add
TKA to the ASC CPL as shown in Table
32 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. At that time we stated our intent
to consider appropriate safeguards and
limitations for surgical procedures
furnished in the ASC setting based on
public comments we receive.
As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (83 FR 59054
through 59055), section 1833(i)(1) of the
Act requires us, in part, to specify, in
consultation with appropriate medical
organizations, surgical procedures that
are appropriately performed on an
inpatient basis in a hospital, but can be
safely performed in an ASC, and to
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review and update the ASC covered
surgical procedures list at least every 2
years.
We also solicited comment on how
CMS should think about the role of the
ASC CPL compared to state regulations
and market forces in providing payment
for certain surgical procedures in an
ASC and whether any modifications
should be made to the ASC CPL.
Comments on this topic could help
formulate the basis for future policy
development regarding how we
determine what procedures are payable
for Medicare fee-for-service
beneficiaries in the ASC setting and
maintain the balance between safety and
access. Finally, we solicited comment
on how our proposed additions to the
list of ASC covered surgical procedures
might affect rural hospitals to the extent
rural hospitals rely on providing such
procedures.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Many commenters
supported our proposal to add three
coronary intervention procedures as
well as the additional three procedures
that represented their associated add-on
procedures to the ASC CPL. They stated
that our proposed additions meet our
criteria to be included on the ASC CPL
and that claims analyses, clinical trials,
expert consensus and clinical
guidelines, among other materials
supported the inclusion of such
coronary intervention procedures on the
ASC CPL. Further, many ASC
commenters contended that ASCs are
well-equipped to safely perform these
procedures on Medicare beneficiaries.
However, some commenters stated that
without defined criteria for risk
stratification, beneficiaries would be
exposed to significant risk if these
procedures were added to the ASC CPL.
Additionally, some commenters
believed the percutaneous coronary
intervention procedures should be
performed in a hospital setting where
there is an available on-site cardiac
surgical backup and intensive care unit
in the event of an emergency.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We assessed each of
the procedures we proposed to add to
the ASC CPL against the regulatory
safety criteria and determined that these
procedures meet each of the criteria.
Although the proposed coronary
intervention procedures may involve
blood vessels that could be considered
major, as stated in the August 2, 2007
ASC final rule (72 FR 42481), we believe
the involvement of major blood vessels
is best considered in the context of the
clinical characteristics of individual
procedures. We do not believe that it is
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appropriate to exclude certain cardiac
procedures from the list of ASC covered
surgical procedures because they
involve major blood vessels, yet
continue to provide ASC payment for
similar procedures involving major
blood vessels that have a history of safe
performance in ASCs, such as CPT code
36473 (Mechanicochemical destruction
of insufficient vein of arm or leg,
accessed through the skin using imaging
guidance) and CPT code 37223
(Insertion of stents into groin artery,
endovascular, accessed through the skin
or open procedure). Based on our
review of the clinical characteristics of
the procedures and their similarity to
other procedures that are currently
included on the ASC CPL, we believe
these three coronary intervention
procedures (CPT codes 92920, 92928,
and HCPCS code C9600) and three
associated add-on procedures (CPT code
92921, 92929, and HCPCS code C9601)
can be safely performed in the ASC
setting, for certain Medicare patients
and note that the physician should
determine whether a particular case
would be a good candidate to be
furnished in the ASC setting rather than
the hospital setting based on the clinical
assessment of the patient. We agree with
commenters who stated that expert
consensus, clinical guidelines, and
clinical studies establish that
percutaneous coronary interventions
can be safely performed in an ASC
setting. While we acknowledge that a
majority of Medicare beneficiaries may
not be suitable candidates to receive
these procedures in an ASC setting due
to factors such as age and comorbidities,
we believe it is important to make these
procedures payable in the ASC setting,
in order to ensure access to these
coronary intervention procedures for
those beneficiaries who are appropriate
candidates to receive them in an ASC
setting.
Therefore, in this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our
proposal without modification to add
three coronary intervention procedures
as well as three associated add-on
procedures. These procedures are:
• CPT code 92920 (Percutaneous
transluminal coronary angioplasty;
single major coronary artery or branch),
• CPT code 92921 (Percutaneous
transluminal coronary angioplasty; each
additional branch of a major coronary
artery (list separately in addition to code
for primary procedure)),
• CPT code 92928 (Percutaneous
transcatheter placement of intracoronary
stent(s), with coronary angioplasty
when performed; single major coronary
artery or branch),
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• CPT code 92929 (Percutaneous
transcatheter placement of intracoronary
stent(s), with coronary angioplasty
when performed; each additional
branch of a major coronary artery (list
separately in addition to code for
primary procedure)),
• CPT code C9600 (Percutaneous
transcatheter placement of drug eluting
intracoronary stent(s), with coronary
angioplasty when performed; single
major coronary artery or branch), and
• CPT code C9601 (Percutaneous
transcatheter placement of drug-eluting
intracoronary stent(s), with coronary
angioplasty when performed; each
additional branch of a major coronary
artery (list separately in addition to code
for primary procedure)) to the ASC CPL.
Comment: Many commenters
supported our proposal to add TKA to
the ASC CPL for CY 2020 and
subsequent years.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of our proposal.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we delay adding TKA to the ASC
CPL until more data can be collected on
the impact of case-mix and patient
populations for participants in the CMS
Innovation Center’s Bundled Payments
for Care Improvement Initiative.
Response: We believe there are a
small number of less medically complex
TKA patients that could appropriately
receive TKA in an ASC setting. Because
we believe this group will be small, we
do not believe our proposal would have
a substantial impact on the patient-mix
for the Bundled Payments for Care
Improvement Advanced (BPCI
Advanced) or the Initiative and
Comprehensive Care Joint Replacement
(CJR) models. Therefore, we do not
believe any delay in the implementation
of our proposed addition to the ASC
CPL is warranted.
Comment: Some commenters opposed
our proposal to add TKA to the ASC
CPL. These commenters stated that the
Medicare population would not be
suitable candidates to receive TKA in an
ASC setting and that complications
arising from TKA could be devastating
and life-threatening if not performed in
a hospital setting. Specifically, patients
could be at risk for the development of
deep vein thrombosis with the potential
to propagate lethal pulmonary embolus,
anesthesia-related risks, as well as other
risks. Some commenters also noted that
CMS eliminated the requirement that
ASCs have a written transfer agreement
with a nearby hospital and the
requirement that their physicians have
admitting privileges at a hospital.
Further, some commenters noted that in
the absence of the physician self-referral
law, which does not apply to
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procedures performed in an ASC, there
will be no other safeguard against a
physician’s profitable, but clinically
inappropriate, referral to an ASC in
which the physician has an ownership
interest.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the majority of Medicare
beneficiaries would not be suitable
candidates to receive TKA procedures
in an ASC setting. Factors such as age,
comorbidity, and body mass index are
among the many factors that must be
taken into account to determine if
performing a TKA procedure in an ASC
would be appropriate for a particular
Medicare beneficiary. However, we
believe there are a small number of less
medically complex beneficiaries that
could appropriately receive the TKA
procedure in an ASC setting and we
believe physicians should continue to
play an important role in exercising
their clinical judgment when making
site-of-service determinations, including
for TKA. While we acknowledge that
the physician self-referral law does not
apply to TKA performed in an ASC,
physicians should be aware of other
Federal and state laws that may
potentially limit this activity, such as
the Anti-Kickback Statute.
Comment: Commenters also noted
that beneficiary coinsurance for TKA
procedures could be higher in the ASC
setting and therefore did not support
our proposal, or recommended that we
notify beneficiaries that the coinsurance
for a TKA procedure could be lower in
a hospital outpatient setting.
Response: We are aware that
beneficiaries may incur greater costsharing for TKA procedures in an ASC
setting under our proposal. However,
this would not be an occurrence that is
unique to TKA. Section 1833(t)(8)(C)(i)
of the Act limits the amount of
beneficiary copayment that may be
collected for a procedure paid under the
OPPS (including items such as drugs
and biologicals) performed in a year to
the amount of the inpatient hospital
deductible for that year. We note that
this section of the Act does not apply to
the ASC payment system. Rather, ASC
cost-sharing is described by 1833(a)(4)
of the Act and there may be instances
where beneficiary cost-sharing in an
ASC may be higher than beneficiary
cost-sharing in a hospital outpatient
department for the same procedure. We
note that the ASC payment rate for a
TKA procedure is $8,609.17 for CY 2020
while the CY 2020 OPPS payment rate
is $11,899.39. This means that ASC
coinsurance would be $1,721.83 while
hospital OPPS coinsurance would have
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been $2,379.88, but for the statutory cap
limiting it to the inpatient deductible
amount ($1,364 in CY 2019). However,
the payment rates are publicly available
and despite the higher cost-sharing,
some beneficiaries, especially those
with supplemental insurance, may still
choose to have their procedure
performed in the ASC setting.
In addition, as we stated in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59389), section
4011 of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub.
L. 114–255) requires the Secretary to
make available to the public via a
searchable website, with respect to an
appropriate number of items and
services, the estimated payment amount
for the item or service under the OPPS
and ASC payment system and the
estimated beneficiary liability
applicable to the item or service. We
implemented this provision by
providing our Outpatient Procedure
Price Lookup tool available via the
internet at https://www.medicare.gov/
procedure-price-lookup. This web page
allows beneficiaries to compare their
potential cost-sharing liability for
procedures performed in the hospital
outpatient setting versus the ASC
setting. We believe this tool allows
beneficiaries to be informed of potential
cost-sharing amounts and therefore
mitigates the commenters’ concern
about providing payment for procedures
in an ASC setting even if the beneficiary
cost-sharing in an ASC would be greater
than in the hospital outpatient
department setting.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that CMS work closely with
specialty societies regarding best
practices and any appropriate
limitations or conditions for Medicare
Part B payment for TKA in the ASC
setting. Other commenters stated that
our suggestions, such as requiring a
modifier or a plan of care, were
unnecessary and would increase
administrative burden by complicating
the processes for scheduling, performing
and billing for ASCs, without improving
beneficiary safety because physicians
are best-equipped to determine the
clinical appropriateness of the site of
service for their patients. Some
commenters did not support our
suggested approaches and believed that
such requirements would be
superfluous and provide no beneficial
oversight to ensure patient safety. Two
orthopedic specialty societies supported
the concept of having defined plans of
care for each beneficiary following a
surgical procedure. One orthopedic
specialty society requested that we re-
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establish the requirement that ASCs
have formal arrangements with a nearby
hospital in case a patient is unable to go
home following a procedure. Other
commenters suggested that a defined
plan of care requirement is already an
existing Condition for Coverage for
ASCs.
Response: We agree with commenters
that ASCs are currently required to
follow the discharge protocols following
a surgical procedure, as set out at 42
CFR 416.52(c). For example, our
regulations require that each patient be
provided written discharge instructions
and overnight supplies; prescription
and physician contact information; and
post-operative instructions; and that
patients be discharged in the company
of a responsible adult, except those
patients exempted by the attending
physician.
We remind ASCs that beneficiaries
should receive discharge care
instructions that meet our requirements
following a TKA procedure as well as
other surgical procedures. ASCs should
also review our State Operations
Manual for further guidance on this
condition for coverage, as well as others.
With respect to reinstating the
requirement that ASCs have a formal
transfer agreement with a nearby
hospital, we note that such issue is
related to Conditions for Coverage and
is outside the scope of this final rule
with comment.
After considering the public
comments we received, and in response
to commenters’ support for this
proposal, we are finalizing our proposal
without modification to add TKA, CPT
code 27447 (Arthroplasty, knee, condyle
and plateau; medial and lateral
compartments with or without patella
resurfacing (total knee arthroplasty)), to
the ASC CPL for CY 2020 and
subsequent years.
Based on the public comments we
received, we are not finalizing any of
the additional requirements on which
we sought comment, such as adding a
modifier or requiring an ASC to have a
certain amount of experience in
performing a procedure before being
eligible for payment for performing the
procedure under Medicare.
Comment: Commenters who
responded to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule also requested that CMS
add several additional procedures to the
ASC CPL, which we had not proposed
to add to the ASC CPL in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. These
additional procedures are listed in Table
58.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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27412, 57282, 57283, 57425, 62365,
62367, and 62368, we will continue to
review whether these procedures meet
the criteria to be added to the ASC CPL
and take commenters input into
consideration in future rulemaking.
(2) Comment Solicitation on Coronary
Intervention Procedures
For CY 2020, as discussed above, we
proposed to add three coronary
intervention procedures (along with the
codes describing their respective add-on
procedures) that involve major blood
vessels that we believe can be safely
performed in an ASC setting and would
not pose a significant safety risk to
beneficiaries if performed in an ASC
setting. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, in addition to the three
coronary intervention procedures (and
their three add-on codes) we proposed
to add to the ASC CPL, we also
reviewed several other coronary
intervention procedures. While we did
not believe the procedures included in
Table P33 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule met our criteria for
inclusion on the ASC CPL at that time,
and we did not propose to add such
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procedures to the ASC CPL for CY 2020,
we solicited public comments on
whether stakeholders believe these
procedures can be safely performed in
an ASC setting. Additionally, we
requested that commenters provide any
materials supporting their position, in
particular information and data that
specifically address the requirements in
our regulations at §§ 416.2 and 416.166
(84 FR 39544). For example, we
requested that commenters provide
information that supports their position
as to whether each of these procedures
would be expected to pose a significant
risk to beneficiary safety when
performed in an ASC, whether standard
medical practice dictates that the
beneficiary would typically be expected
to require active medical monitoring
and care at midnight following the
procedure (‘‘overnight stay’’), and
whether the procedure would fall under
our general exclusions for covered
surgical procedures at § 416.166(c) (for
example, would it generally result in
extensive blood loss). We stated that we
would consider public comments we
receive in future rulemaking cycles.
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Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendations. We
reviewed all of the services that
commenters requested that we add to
the ASC CPL. Of these procedures, we
did not consider procedures that are
unconditionally packaged under the
OPPS (identified by status indicator ‘‘N’’
in addendum B of this final rule with
comment period) as such procedures
would not meet our requirement for
ASC covered surgical procedures at
§ 416.166(b) that the procedure be
separately paid under the OPPS.
Of the procedures listed in Table 58,
CPT codes 57267, 62290, 62291, 92938,
92973, 92978, 92979, 93463, 93563,
93564, 93565, 93566, 93567, 93568,
93571, 93572, and C9605 are
unconditionally packaged under the
ASC payment system. For the
procedures identified by CPT codes
92960, 93312, 93313, 93315, and 93530,
we do not believe these procedures meet
our criteria as established under
§ 416.166(b) and would pose a
significant safety risk to beneficiaries if
performed in an ASC setting. For the
procedures identified by CPT codes
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Comment: Some commenters
supported adding all of the procedures
listed in Table 33 of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. Other commenters
recommended adding CPT codes 92937,
92938, 92973, C9604, and C9605. These
commenters stated these percutaneous
transluminal revascularization
procedures through coronary artery
bypass graft meet our established
criteria for addition to the ASC CPL and
that claims data, clinical trials, and
clinical guidelines support their
addition.
Other commenters did not support
adding any of the procedures list in
Table 59 as listed above. The
commenters stated that these
procedures often carry the risk of
serious possible complications, such as
in-facility death, damage to or
perforations of coronary arteries, and
intramural hematoma, among others.
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Therefore, commenters indicated, such
procedures should only be performed in
hospital settings that include rapid
access to on-site cardiac surgery as well
as intensive care units.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ feedback and
recommendations. Additionally, we
note that we had the incorrect long
descriptor for CPT 92973 displayed in
our CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
In the proposed rule, we had the long
descriptor as ‘‘Percutaneous
transcatheter placement of drug eluting
intracoronary stent(s), with coronary
angioplasty when performed; single
major coronary artery or branch.’’ The
correct long descriptor for CPT 92973
should be ‘‘Percutaneous transluminal
coronary thrombectomy mechanical (list
separately in addition to code for
primary procedure)’’ and is displayed in
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Table 59 of this final rule with comment
period.
Based on the public comments we
received, we believe the procedures
listed in Table 59 would expose
beneficiaries to significant safety risk if
performed in an ASC setting at this time
and would not meet our criteria
established under § 416.166(b).
Specifically, we believe that
transluminal revascularization of a
bypass graft carries an inherent higher
risk of complication and may require
the assistance of on-site cardiac surgical
backup. Additionally, we believe
atherectomy procedures carry a greater
risk of complication than coronary
intervention procedures without an
atherectomy procedure. Therefore, at
this time, we believe that adding any of
the procedures identified in Table 59 of
this final rule with comment period to
the ASC CPL would expose
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beneficiaries to significant risk. We
believe that such procedures should be
performed in a hospital setting with an
immediate response available in case of
emergencies.
We received no comments on our
proposal to add CPT code 29867
(Arthroscopy, knee, surgical;
osteochondral allograft (for example,
mosaicplasty)) to the ASC CPL for CY
2020 and subsequent years.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal without
modification to add CPT codes: 27447,
29867, 92920, 92921, 92928, 92929, and
HCPCS codes C9600 and C9601 to the
ASC CPL. We have determined these
procedures would not be expected to
pose a significant risk to beneficiary
safety when performed in an ASC, that
standard medical practice would not
dictate that the beneficiary would
typically be expected to require active
medical monitoring and care at
midnight following the procedure, and
are separately paid under the OPPS. The
8 procedures we are adding to the ASC
CPL, including the long descriptors and
the final CY 2020 payment indicators,
are displayed in Table 60.
Additionally, we note that we
inadvertently omitted new CPT and new
HCPCS codes effective January 1, 2020
from Table 32, Proposed Additions to
the List of ASC Covered Surgical
Procedures for CY 2020, of our CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39544);
however, we included these 12
procedures in Addendum AA to our
proposed rule. The procedures
described by the 12 new CPT and
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HCPCS codes meet our criteria
established under §§ 416.2 and 416.166
for addition to the ASC CPL and are
displayed in Table 60. These 12
procedures include—
• CPT code 15769 (Grafting of
autologous soft tissue, other, harvested
by direct excision (for example, fat,
dermis, fascia));
• CPT code 15771 (Grafting of
autologous fat harvested by liposuction
technique to trunk, breasts, scalp, arms,
and/or legs; 50 cc or less injectate);
• CPT code 15773 (Grafting of
autologous fat harvested by liposuction
technique to face, eyelids, mouth, neck,
ears, orbits, genitalia, hands, and/or feet;
25 cc or less injectate);
• CPT code 33016
(Pericardiocentesis, including imaging
guidance, when performed);
• CPT code 46948
(Hemorrhoidectomy, internal, by
transanal hemorrhoidal
dearterialization, 2 or more hemorrhoid
columns/groups, including ultrasound
guidance, with mucopexy, when
performed);
• CPT code 62328 (Spinal puncture,
lumbar, diagnostic; with fluoroscopic or
CT guidance);
• CPT code 62329 (Spinal puncture,
therapeutic, for drainage of
cerebrospinal fluid (by needle or
catheter); with fluoroscopic or CT
guidance);
• CPT Code 64451 (Injection(s),
anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid;
nerves innervating the sacroiliac joint,
with image guidance (that is,
fluoroscopy or computed tomography));
• CPT Code 64625 (Radiofrequency
ablation, nerves innervating the
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sacroiliac joint, with image guidance
(that is, fluoroscopy or computed
tomography));
• CPT Code 66987 (Extracapsular
cataract removal with insertion of
intraocular lens prosthesis (1-stage
procedure), manual or mechanical
technique (for example, irrigation and
aspiration or phacoemulsification),
complex, requiring devices or
techniques not generally used in routine
cataract surgery (for example, iris
expansion device, suture support for
intraocular lens, or primary posterior
capsulorrhexis) or performed on
patients in the amblyogenic
developmental stage; with endoscopic
cyclophotocoagulation);
• CPT Code 66988 (Extracapsular
cataract removal with insertion of
intraocular lens prosthesis (1 stage
procedure), manual or mechanical
technique (for example, irrigation and
aspiration or phacoemulsification); with
endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation); and
• CPT code 0587T (Percutaneous
implantation or replacement of
integrated single device
neurostimulation system including
electrode array and receiver or pulse
generator, including analysis,
programming, and imaging guidance
when performed, posterior tibial nerve).
We did not receive comments on the
addition of these codes to the ASC CPL
and are finalizing without modification.
The table below shows all additions to
the ASC CPL for CY 2020, these
additions are also reflected in
Addendum AA.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
2. Covered Ancillary Services
Consistent with the established ASC
payment system policy (72 FR 42497),
we proposed to update the ASC list of
covered ancillary services to reflect the
payment status for the services under
the CY 2020 OPPS. We stated in the
proposed rule that maintaining
consistency with the OPPS may result
in proposed changes to ASC payment
indicators for some covered ancillary
services because of changes that are
being proposed under the OPPS for CY
2020. For example, if a covered
ancillary service was separately paid
under the ASC payment system in CY
2019, but is proposed for packaged
status under the CY 2020 OPPS, to
maintain consistency with the OPPS, we
would also propose to package the
ancillary service under the ASC
payment system for CY 2020. We
proposed to continue this reconciliation
of packaged status for subsequent
calendar years. Comment indicator
‘‘CH’’, which is discussed in section
XIII.F. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, is used in Addendum BB
to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website) to indicate covered
ancillary services for which we
proposed a change in the ASC payment
indicator to reflect a proposed change in
the OPPS treatment of the service for CY
2020.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we add CPT code 91040
(Esophageal balloon distension study,
diagnostic, with provocation when
performed) to our list of covered
ancillary services. Commenter stated
that esophageal balloon distension
studies are often performed in
conjunction with
esophagogastroduodenoscopy
procedures.
Response: Services listed in our list of
covered ancillary services must be
integral to the performance of a covered
surgical procedure. Based on the
description of the procedure, we do not
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believe this service is integral to the
performance of the surgical procedures
identified by the commenter,
specifically CPT codes 43235
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; diagnostic, including
collection of specimen(s) by brushing or
washing, when performed (separate
procedure)), 43236
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; with directed submucosal
injection(s), any substance), or 43239
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; with biopsy, single or
multiple), or other surgical procedures.
Therefore, we are not adding CPT code
91040 to the list of ASC covered
ancillary services for CY 2020.
All ASC covered ancillary services
and their proposed payment indicators
for CY 2020 are included in Addendum
BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website).
D. Update and Payment for ASC
Covered Surgical Procedures and
Covered Ancillary Services
1. ASC Payment for Covered Surgical
Procedures
a. Background
Our ASC payment policies for
covered surgical procedures under the
revised ASC payment system are fully
described in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR
66828 through 66831). Under our
established policy, we use the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology of
multiplying the ASC relative payment
weight for the procedure by the ASC
conversion factor for that same year to
calculate the national unadjusted
payment rates for procedures with
payment indicators ‘‘G2’’ and ‘‘A2’’.
Payment indicator ‘‘A2’’ was developed
to identify procedures that were
included on the list of ASC covered
surgical procedures in CY 2007 and,
therefore, were subject to transitional
payment prior to CY 2011. Although the
4-year transitional period has ended and
payment indicator ‘‘A2’’ is no longer
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required to identify surgical procedures
subject to transitional payment, we
retained payment indicator ‘‘A2’’
because it is used to identify procedures
that are exempted from the application
of the office-based designation.
The rate calculation established for
device-intensive procedures (payment
indicator ‘‘J8’’) is structured so only the
service portion of the rate is subject to
the ASC standard ratesetting
methodology. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59028 through 59080), we updated
the CY 2018 ASC payment rates for ASC
covered surgical procedures with
payment indicators of ‘‘A2’’, ‘‘G2’’, and
‘‘J8’’ using CY 2017 data, consistent
with the CY 2019 OPPS update. We also
updated payment rates for deviceintensive procedures to incorporate the
CY 2019 OPPS device offset percentages
calculated under the standard APC
ratesetting methodology, as discussed
earlier in this section.
Payment rates for office-based
procedures (payment indicators ‘‘P2’’,
‘‘P3’’, and ‘‘R2’’) are the lower of the
PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based amount
or the amount calculated using the ASC
standard rate setting methodology for
the procedure. In the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we
updated the payment amounts for
office-based procedures (payment
indicators ‘‘P2’’, ‘‘P3’’, and ‘‘R2’’) using
the most recent available MPFS and
OPPS data. We compared the estimated
CY 2018 rate for each of the office-based
procedures, calculated according to the
ASC standard rate setting methodology,
to the PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based
amount to determine which was lower
and, therefore, would be the CY 2018
payment rate for the procedure under
our final policy for the revised ASC
payment system (§ 416.171(d)).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75081), we
finalized our proposal to calculate the
CY 2014 payment rates for ASC covered
surgical procedures according to our
established methodologies, with the
exception of device removal procedures.
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For CY 2014, we finalized a policy to
conditionally package payment for
device removal procedures under the
OPPS. Under the OPPS, a conditionally
packaged procedure (status indicators
‘‘Q1’’ and ‘‘Q2’’) describes a HCPCS
code where the payment is packaged
when it is provided with a significant
procedure but is separately paid when
the service appears on the claim without
a significant procedure. Because ASC
services always include a covered
surgical procedure, HCPCS codes that
are conditionally packaged under the
OPPS are always packaged (payment
indicator ‘‘N1’’) under the ASC payment
system. Under the OPPS, device
removal procedures are conditionally
packaged and, therefore, would be
packaged under the ASC payment
system. There would be no Medicare
payment made when a device removal
procedure is performed in an ASC
without another surgical procedure
included on the claim; therefore, no
Medicare payment would be made if a
device was removed but not replaced.
To ensure that the ASC payment system
provides separate payment for surgical
procedures that only involve device
removal—conditionally packaged in the
OPPS (status indicator ‘‘Q2’’)—we
continued to provide separate payment
since CY 2014 and assigned the current
ASC payment indicators associated with
these procedures.
b. Update to ASC Covered Surgical
Procedure Payment Rates for CY 2020
We proposed to update ASC payment
rates for CY 2020 and subsequent years
using the established rate calculation
methodologies under § 416.171 and
using our definition of device-intensive
procedures, as discussed in section
XII.C.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. Because the proposed
OPPS relative payment weights are
generally based on geometric mean
costs, the ASC system would generally
use geometric means to determine
proposed relative payment weights
under the ASC standard methodology.
We proposed to continue to use the
amount calculated under the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology for
procedures assigned payment indicators
‘‘A2’’ and ‘‘G2’’.
We proposed to calculate payment
rates for office-based procedures
(payment indicators ‘‘P2’’, ‘‘P3’’, and
‘‘R2’’) and device-intensive procedures
(payment indicator ‘‘J8’’) according to
our established policies and, for deviceintensive procedures, using our
modified definition of device-intensive
procedures, as discussed in section
XII.C.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. Therefore, we proposed
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to update the payment amount for the
service portion of the device-intensive
procedures using the ASC standard rate
setting methodology and the payment
amount for the device portion based on
the proposed CY 2020 OPPS device
offset percentages that have been
calculated using the standard OPPS
APC ratesetting methodology. Payment
for office-based procedures would be at
the lesser of the proposed CY 2020
MPFS nonfacility PE RVU-based
amount or the proposed CY 2020 ASC
payment amount calculated according
to the ASC standard ratesetting
methodology.
As we did for CYs 2014 through 2019,
for CY 2020, we proposed to continue
our policy for device removal
procedures, such that device removal
procedures that are conditionally
packaged in the OPPS (status indicators
‘‘Q1’’ and ‘‘Q2’’) would be assigned the
current ASC payment indicators
associated with these procedures and
would continue to be paid separately
under the ASC payment system.
Our responses to the comments are set
forth below.
Comment: We received several
comments from professional societies
expressing concern about assigning CPT
codes 36465, 36466, and 31298 to a P2
payment indicator and CPT code 36482
to a P3 payment indicator. Commenters
also expressed concerns with the
appropriateness of the ASC payment
policy to assign procedures to the
lowest published payment rate across
multiple payment systems, based upon
CMS’s determination that the level of
complexity for a procedure is consistent
with procedures performed in a
physician’s office. Commenters agreed
with the proposal not designate CPT
code 36902 as an office-based procedure
and continue to assign CPT code 36902
a payment indicator of ‘‘G2’’—
nonoffice-based surgical procedure paid
based on OPPS relative weights.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ input. Based on our
analysis of the latest hospital outpatient
and ASC claims data used for this final
rule with comment period, we are
updating ASC payment rates for CY
2020 using the established rate
calculation methodologies under
§ 416.171 of the regulations and using
our finalized modified definition of
device-intensive procedures, as
discussed in section XIII.C.1.b of this
final rule with comment period. We do
not generally make additional payment
adjustments to specific procedures. As
such, we are finalizing the proposed
APC assignment and payment indicators
for CPT codes 36465, 36466, 31298,
36482, and 36902 as discussed in
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XIII.C.1.A of this final rule with
comment period.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the proposed CY 2020
ASC payment rates for the surgical
procedures described by the following
CPT/HCPCS codes, requesting that CMS
increase payment in the ASC setting:
• HCPCS code C9754 (Creation of
arteriovenous fistula, percutaneous;
direct, any site, including all imaging
and radiologic supervision and
interpretation, when performed and
secondary procedures to redirect blood
flow)
• HCPCS code C9755 (Creation of
arteriovenous fistula, percutaneous
using magnetic-guided arterial and
venous catheters and radiofrequency
energy, including flow-directing
procedures (for example, vascular coil
embolization with radiologic
supervision and interpretation, when
performed) and fistulogram(s),
angiography, venography, and/or
ultrasound, with radiologic supervision
and interpretation, when performed)
• CPT code 37243 (Vascular
embolization or occlusion, inclusive of
all radiological supervision and
interpretation, intraprocedural
roadmapping, and imaging guidance
necessary to complete the intervention;
for tumors, organ ischemia, or
infarction)
• CPT code 53854 (Transurethral
destruction of prostate tissue by
radiofrequency generated water vapor
thermotherapy)
• CPT code 22869 (Insertion of
interlaminar/interspinous process
stabilization/distraction device, without
open decompression or fusion,
including image guidance when
performed, lumbar; single level)
• CPT code 22870 (Insertion of
interlaminar/interspinous process
stabilization/distraction device, without
open decompression or fusion,
including image guidance when
performed, lumbar; second level (List
separately in addition to code for
primary procedure)
Response: We update the data on
which we establish payment rates each
year through rulemaking and note that
ASC rates are derived from OPPS
payment rates which are required to be
reviewed and updated at least annually
under section 1833(t)(9) of the Act. ASC
payment is dependent upon the APC
assignment for each procedure. Based
on our analysis of the latest hospital
OPPS and ASC claims data used for this
final rule with comment period, we are
updating ASC payment rates for CY
2020 using the established rate
calculation methodologies under
§ 416.171 of the regulations and our
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definition of device-intensive
procedures, as discussed in section
XII.C.1.b. of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. We do
not generally make additional payment
adjustments to specific procedures.
Therefore, we are finalizing the payment
indicators for HCPCS codes C9754 and
C9755 and CPT codes 37243, 53854,
22869, and 22870 for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS eliminate the
prohibition against billing for services
using an unlisted CPT surgical
procedure code.
Response: Under § 416.166(c)(7),
covered surgical procedures do not
include procedures that can only be
reported using a CPT unlisted surgical
procedure code. Therefore, such
procedures are not currently payable
under the ASC payment system. As
discussed in the August 2, 2008 final
rule (72 FR 42484 through 42486), it is
not possible to know what specific
procedure would be represented by an
unlisted code. We are required to
evaluate each surgical procedure for
potential safety risk and the expected
need for overnight monitoring and to
exclude such procedures from ASC
payment. It is not possible to evaluate
procedures reported by unlisted CPT
codes according to these criteria.
Therefore, we are not accepting this
recommendation.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposed policies without
modification, to calculate the CY 2020
payment rates for ASC covered surgical
procedures according to our established
methodologies using the modified
definition of device-intensive
procedures. For covered office-based
surgical procedures, the payment rate is
the lesser of the final CY 2020 MPFS
nonfacility PE RVU-based amount or the
final CY 2020 ASC payment amount
calculated according to the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology, the
final payment indicators and rates set
forth in this final rule with comment
period are based on a comparison using
the PFS PE RVUs and the conversion
factor effective January 1, 2020. For a
discussion of the PFS rates, we refer
readers to the CY 2020 PFS final rule
with comment period.
c. Limit on ASC Payment Rates for Low
Volume Device-Intensive Procedures
As stated in section XIII.D.1.b. of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, the
ASC payment system generally uses
OPPS geometric mean costs under the
standard methodology to determine
proposed relative payment weights
under the standard ASC ratesetting
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methodology. However, for low-volume
device-intensive procedures, the
proposed relative payment weights are
based on median costs, rather than
geometric mean costs, as discussed in
section IV.B.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule.
While we believe this policy generally
helps to provide more appropriate
payment for low-volume deviceintensive procedures, these procedures
can still have data anomalies as a result
of the limited data available for these
procedures in our ratesetting process.
For the Level 5 Intraocular APC, which
includes only HCPCS code 0308T (insj
ocular telescope prosth), based on the
CY 2018 claims data available for the
proposed rule, the geometric mean cost
and median cost under the standard
ASC ratesetting methodology is
$67,946.51 and $111,019.30,
respectively. As described in section
IV.B.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, a device-intensive
procedure that is assigned to a clinical
APC with fewer than 100 total claims
for all procedures is considered ‘‘lowvolume’’ and the cost of the procedure
is based on calculations using the APC’s
median cost instead of the APC’s
geometric mean cost. Since this APC
meets the criteria for low-volume
device-intensive procedure designation,
the ASC relative weight would be based
on the median cost rather than the
geometric mean cost. We note that this
median cost for this APC is significantly
higher than either the OPPS geometric
mean cost or median cost based on the
OPPS comprehensive ratesetting
methodology, which are $28,122.51 and
$19,269.55, respectively. This very large
difference in cost calculations between
these two settings is largely attributable
to the APC’s low claims volume and to
the comprehensive methodology used
under the OPPS which is not utilized in
ratesetting under the ASC payment
system. The cost calculation for this
APC under the ASC payment system is
primarily based on charges from one
hospital with a significantly higher
device cost center cost-to-charge ratio
and significantly higher charges when
compared to other hospitals providing
the procedure.
If the ASC payment system were to
base the CY 2020 payment rate for
HCPCS code 0308T on the median cost
of $111,019.30, the ASC payment rate
would be several times greater than the
OPPS payment rate for HCPCS code
0308T. We note that the median cost
under the OPPS ratesetting methodology
based on CY 2018 claims data is closer
to the historical average for the median
cost of HCPCS code 0308T
(approximately $19,000). In addition,
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given that the outpatient hospital setting
is generally considered to have higher
costs than the ASC setting and that the
payment rates for both settings are based
on hospital outpatient cost data, we do
not believe there should be a scenario
where the payment rate for a lowvolume device-intensive procedure
under the ASC payment system is
significantly greater than payment
under the OPPS.
Therefore, for CY 2020 and
subsequent years, we proposed to limit
the ASC payment rate for low-volume
device-intensive procedures to a
payment rate equal to the OPPS
payment rate for that procedure. Under
this proposal, where the ASC payment
rate based on the standard ASC
ratesetting methodology for low volume
device-intensive procedures would
exceed the rate paid under the OPPS for
the same procedure, we proposed to
establish an ASC payment rate for such
procedures equal to the OPPS payment
rate for the same procedure. In the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
noted that this policy would only affect
HCPCS code 0308T, which has very low
claims volume (7 claims used for
ratesetting in the OPPS). We proposed
to amend § 416.171(b) of the regulations
to reflect the proposed new limit on
ASC payment rates for low-volume
device-intensive procedures. CMS’
existing regulation at § 416.171(b)(2)
requires the payment of the device
portion of a device-intensive procedure
at an amount derived from the payment
rate for the equivalent item under the
OPPS using our standard ratesetting
methodology. We proposed to add
paragraph (b)(4) to § 416.171 to require
that, notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2),
low volume device-intensive procedures
where the otherwise applicable payment
rate calculated based on the standard
methodology for device-intensive
procedures would exceed the payment
rate for the equivalent procedure set
under the OPPS, the payment rate for
the procedure under the ASC payment
system would be equal to the payment
rate for the same procedure under the
OPPS.
Covered surgical procedures and their
proposed payment rates for CY 2020 are
listed in Addendum AA of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is
available via the internet on the CMS
website).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS consider adopting a consistent
payment methodology for low volume
procedures, regardless of whether a
procedure is assigned to a clinical or
New Technology APC. The commenter
noted that 0308T is one of only two
procedures to which CMS has applied
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either of the low volume payment
methodologies. The commenter
suggested CMS could determine the
payment rate for low volume, deviceintensive procedures in clinical APCs
by using 4 years of claims data and
gathering input through the public
comment period on whether arithmetic
mean, geometric mean, or median
should be the basis for the payment
amount.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholder’s comments regarding
changes in estimated costs based on the
claims data available for ratesetting. In
our CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79660 through
79661), we finalized our policy that the
payment rate for any device-intensive
procedure that is assigned to a clinical
APC with fewer than 100 total claims
for all procedures in the APC be
calculated using the median cost instead
of the geometric mean cost. We believe
using the median cost instead of the
geometric mean cost has generally
provided an appropriate payment for
low-volume device-intensive
procedures in cases where there are no
data anomalies. However, we note that
we are adding paragraph (b)(4) to
§ 416.171 to require that,
notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2), low
volume device-intensive procedures
where the otherwise applicable ASC
payment rate calculated based on the
standard methodology for deviceintensive procedures would exceed the
payment rate for the equivalent
procedure set under the OPPS, the
payment rate for the procedure under
the ASC payment system would be
equal to the payment rate for the same
procedure under the OPPS to address
such data anomalies in the future.
Additionally, as we noted in our CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39453–39454), one of the objectives of
establishing New Technology APCs is to
generate sufficient claims data for a new
procedure so that it can be assigned to
an appropriate clinical APC. In cases
where procedures are assigned to New
Technology APCs have very low annual
volume, we may use up to 4 years of
claims data in calculating the applicable
payment rate for the prospective year.
We believe our payment policy for lowvolume new technology procedures
provides an appropriate payment for
new technology procedures so that they
may be assigned to an appropriate
clinical APC in the future. Further, we
believe this payment policy should only
be applicable to procedures assigned to
New Technology APCs and not to all
clinical APCs since we believe it would
be less common for a clinical APC to
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have fewer than 100 total claims than a
new technology APC.
After consideration of the public
comment we received, we are finalizing
our proposed policy without
modification, to limit the ASC payment
rate for a low-volume device-intensive
procedure to a payment rate equal to the
OPPS payment rate for that procedure,
including our proposed regulation text
at § 416.171(b)(4).
2. Payment for Covered Ancillary
Services
a. Background
Our payment policies under the ASC
payment system for covered ancillary
services generally vary according to the
particular type of service and its
payment policy under the OPPS. Our
overall policy provides separate ASC
payment for certain ancillary items and
services integrally related to the
provision of ASC covered surgical
procedures that are paid separately
under the OPPS and provides packaged
ASC payment for other ancillary items
and services that are packaged or
conditionally packaged (status
indicators ‘‘N’’, ‘‘Q1’’, and ‘‘Q2’’) under
the OPPS. In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
rulemaking (77 FR 45169 and 77 FR
68457 through 68458), we further
clarified our policy regarding the
payment indicator assignment of
procedures that are conditionally
packaged in the OPPS (status indicators
‘‘Q1’’ and ‘‘Q2’’). Under the OPPS, a
conditionally packaged procedure
describes a HCPCS code where the
payment is packaged when it is
provided with a significant procedure
but is separately paid when the service
appears on the claim without a
significant procedure. Because ASC
services always include a surgical
procedure, HCPCS codes that are
conditionally packaged under the OPPS
are generally packaged (payment
indictor ‘‘N1’’) under the ASC payment
system (except for device removal
procedures, as discussed in section IV.
of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule). Thus, our policy generally aligns
ASC payment bundles with those under
the OPPS (72 FR 42495). In all cases, in
order for those ancillary services also to
be paid, ancillary items and services
must be provided integral to the
performance of ASC covered surgical
procedures for which the ASC bills
Medicare.
Our ASC payment policies generally
provide separate payment for drugs and
biologicals that are separately paid
under the OPPS at the OPPS rates and
package payment for drugs and
biologicals for which payment is
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packaged under the OPPS. However, as
discussed in section XIII.D.3. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, for CY
2019, we finalized a policy to
unpackage and pay separately at ASP +
6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as
surgical supplies when furnished in the
ASC setting, even though payment for
these drugs continues to be packaged
under the OPPS. We generally pay for
separately payable radiology services at
the lower of the PFS nonfacility PE
RVU-based (or technical component)
amount or the rate calculated according
to the ASC standard ratesetting
methodology (72 FR 42497). However,
as finalized in the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (75 FR
72050), payment indicators for all
nuclear medicine procedures (defined
as CPT codes in the range of 78000
through 78999) that are designated as
radiology services that are paid
separately when provided integral to a
surgical procedure on the ASC list are
set to ‘‘Z2’’ so that payment is made
based on the ASC standard ratesetting
methodology rather than the MPFS
nonfacility PE RVU amount (‘‘Z3’’),
regardless of which is lower (42 CFR
416.171(d)(1)).
Similarly, we also finalized our policy
to set the payment indicator to ‘‘Z2’’ for
radiology services that use contrast
agents so that payment for these
procedures will be based on the OPPS
relative payment weight using the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology and,
therefore, will include the cost for the
contrast agent (§ 416.171(d)(2)).
ASC payment policy for
brachytherapy sources mirrors the
payment policy under the OPPS. ASCs
are paid for brachytherapy sources
provided integral to ASC covered
surgical procedures at prospective rates
adopted under the OPPS or, if OPPS
rates are unavailable, at contractorpriced rates (72 FR 42499). Since
December 31, 2009, ASCs have been
paid for brachytherapy sources provided
integral to ASC covered surgical
procedures at prospective rates adopted
under the OPPS.
Our ASC policies also provide
separate payment for: (1) Certain items
and services that CMS designates as
contractor-priced, including, but not
limited to, the procurement of corneal
tissue; and (2) certain implantable items
that have pass-through payment status
under the OPPS. These categories do not
have prospectively established ASC
payment rates according to ASC
payment system policies (72 FR 42502
and 42508 through 42509; § 416.164(b)).
Under the ASC payment system, we
have designated corneal tissue
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acquisition and hepatitis B vaccines as
contractor-priced. Corneal tissue
acquisition is contractor-priced based
on the invoiced costs for acquiring the
corneal tissue for transplantation.
Hepatitis B vaccines are contractorpriced based on invoiced costs for the
vaccine.
Devices that are eligible for passthrough payment under the OPPS are
separately paid under the ASC payment
system and are contractor-priced. Under
the revised ASC payment system (72 FR
42502), payment for the surgical
procedure associated with the passthrough device is made according to our
standard methodology for the ASC
payment system, based on only the
service (non-device) portion of the
procedure’s OPPS relative payment
weight if the APC weight for the
procedure includes other packaged
device costs. We also refer to this
methodology as applying a ‘‘device
offset’’ to the ASC payment for the
associated surgical procedure. This
ensures that duplicate payment is not
provided for any portion of an
implanted device with OPPS passthrough payment status.
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66933
through 66934), we finalized that,
beginning in CY 2015, certain diagnostic
tests within the medicine range of CPT
codes for which separate payment is
allowed under the OPPS are covered
ancillary services when they are integral
to an ASC covered surgical procedure.
We finalized that diagnostic tests within
the medicine range of CPT codes
include all Category I CPT codes in the
medicine range established by CPT,
from 90000 to 99999, and Category III
CPT codes and Level II HCPCS codes
that describe diagnostic tests that
crosswalk or are clinically similar to
procedures in the medicine range
established by CPT. In the CY 2015
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we also finalized our policy to
pay for these tests at the lower of the
PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based (or
technical component) amount or the
rate calculated according to the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology (79 FR
66933 through 66934). We finalized that
the diagnostic tests for which the
payment is based on the ASC standard
ratesetting methodology be assigned to
payment indicator ‘‘Z2’’ and revised the
definition of payment indicator ‘‘Z2’’ to
include a reference to diagnostic
services and those for which the
payment is based on the PFS nonfacility
PE RVU-based amount be assigned
payment indicator ‘‘Z3,’’ and revised the
definition of payment indicator ‘‘Z3’’ to
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include a reference to diagnostic
services.
b. Payment for Covered Ancillary
Services for CY 2020
We proposed to update the ASC
payment rates and to make changes to
ASC payment indicators, as necessary,
to maintain consistency between the
OPPS and ASC payment system
regarding the packaged or separately
payable status of services and the
proposed CY 2020 OPPS and ASC
payment rates and subsequent year
payment rates. We also proposed to
continue to set the CY 2020 ASC
payment rates and subsequent year
payment rates for brachytherapy sources
and separately payable drugs and
biologicals equal to the OPPS payment
rates for CY 2020 and subsequent year
payment rates.
We note that stakeholders requested
that we propose to add CPT code 91040
(Esophageal balloon distension study,
diagnostic, with provocation when
performed) to the ASC Covered
Procedures List (CPL) and ASC list of
covered ancillary services as it is
integral to the performance of covered
surgical procedures such as CPT code
43235 (Esophagogastroduodenoscopy,
flexible, transoral; diagnostic, including
collection of specimen(s) by brushing or
washing, when performed (separate
procedure)) and 43239
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; with biopsy, single or
multiple). Based on available data and
other information related to CPT code
91040, we do not believe this diagnostic
test is integral to the covered surgical
procedures of CPT codes 43235 or
43239. Therefore, we did not propose to
add CPT code 91040 as a covered
ancillary service.
Covered ancillary services and their
proposed payment indicators for CY
2020 are listed in Addendum BB of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on
the CMS website). For those covered
ancillary services where the payment
rate is the lower of the proposed rates
under the ASC standard rate setting
methodology and the PFS final rates, the
proposed payment indicators and rates
set forth in the proposed rule are based
on a comparison using the proposed
PFS rates effective January 1, 2020. For
a discussion of the PFS rates, we refer
readers to the CY 2020 PFS proposed
rule, which is available on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/PhysicianFeeSched/PFSFederal-Regulation-Notices.html.
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3. CY 2020 ASC Packaging Policy for
Non-Opioid Pain Management
Treatments
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59066
through 59072), we finalized the policy
to unpackage and pay separately at
ASP+6 percent for the cost of nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies when they
are furnished in the ASC setting for CY
2019. We also finalized conforming
changes to § 416.164(a)(4) to exclude
non-opioid pain management drugs that
function as a supply when used in a
surgical procedure from our policy to
package payment for drugs and
biologicals for which separate payment
is not allowed under the OPPS into the
ASC payment for the covered surgical
procedure. We added a new
§ 416.164(b)(6) to include non-opioid
pain management drugs that function as
a supply when used in a surgical
procedure as covered ancillary services
that are integral to a covered surgical
procedure. Finally, we finalized a
change to § 416.171(b)(1) to exclude
non-opioid pain management drugs that
function as a supply when used in a
surgical procedure from our policy to
pay for ASC covered ancillary services
an amount derived from the payment
rate for the equivalent item or service
set under the OPPS.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we noted that we
will continue to analyze the issue of
access to non-opioid alternatives in the
OPPS and ASC settings as we
implement section 6082 of the
Substance Use–Disorder Prevention that
Promotes Opioid Recovery and
Treatment for Patients and Communities
Act (SUPPORT for Patients and
Communities Act or SUPPORT Act)
(Pub. L. 115–271), enacted on October
24, 2018. We also discussed our policy
to unpackage and pay separately at
ASP+6 percent for the cost of nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies when
furnished in the ASC setting in section
II.A.3.b. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 58854
through 58860). As required under
section 6082(b) of the SUPPORT Act, we
will continue to review and revise ASC
payments for non-opioid alternatives for
pain management, as appropriate. For
more information on our
implementation of section 6082 of the
SUPPORT for Patients and Communities
Act and related proposals, we refer
readers to section II.A.3.b. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
The comments and our responses are
set forth below.
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Comment: Multiple commenters,
including individual stakeholders,
hospital and physician groups, national
medical associations, device
manufacturers, and groups representing
the pharmaceutical industry, supported
the proposal to continue unpackage and
pay separately for the cost of non-opioid
pain management drugs that function as
surgical supplies, such as Exparel, in
the ASC setting for CY 2020. These
commenters believed that packaged
payment for non-opioid alternatives
presents a barrier to care and that
separate payment for non-opioid pain
management drugs would be an
appropriate response to the opioid drug
abuse epidemic.
Other commenters, including
MedPAC, did not support this proposal
and stated that the policy was counter
to the OPPS packaging policies created
to increase the size of payment bundles
in the OPPS, which increases incentives
for efficient delivery of care. MedPAC
noted that they prefer a policy that
maintains the packaging of drugs that
function as supplies in surgical
procedures.
Response: We appreciate these
comments. After reviewing the
information provided by the
commenters, we continue to believe the
separate payment is appropriate for nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies when
furnished in the ASC setting for CY
2020. We note that preliminary data
suggest that utilization of Exparel has
increased significantly in the ASC
setting in 2019. We intend to continue
to monitor Exparel utilization in the
ASC setting and monitor whether there
is an associated decrease under Part B
or D in opioids once more data are
available.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the assignment of status
indicator ‘‘K’’ (Nonpass-Through Drugs
and Nonimplantable Biologicals,
Including Therapeutic
Radiopharmaceuticals) and continuing
to pay separately for the drug Prialt
(HCPCS J2278, injection, ziconitide), a
non-narcotic pain reliever administered
via intrathecal injection. The
commenters discussed data indicating
that Prialt potentially could lower
opioid use, including opioids such as
morphine. In addition to continued
separate payment, several commenters
recommended CMS reduce or eliminate
the coinsurance for the drug in order to
increase beneficiary access. The
commenters noted due to the drug’s
significant cost, the 20 percent
coinsurance would put the drug out of
reach for beneficiaries. Additionally, the
commenters discussed that there is not
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enough financial incentive for providers
to use Prialt in their patients compared
to lower cost opioids. Commenters
claimed that Prialt is only paid at
invoice costs, which they believe
discourages provider use.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback and for their support of
the continued assignment of status
indicator ‘‘K’’ to HCPCS J2278. The
corresponding ASC payment indicator
for HCPCS J2278 would be ‘‘K2’’. Prialt
is paid at its average sales price (ASP)
plus 6 percent according to the ASP
methodology under the OPPS, and
therefore, is also paid at ASP plus 6
percent in the ASC setting. We note that
under 1833(a)(1)(G) of the Act, the
payment is subject to applicable
deductible and coinsurance, and we are
unaware of statutory authority to alter
beneficiary coinsurance for payments
made in the ASC setting. We note that
because the dollar value of beneficiary
coinsurance is directly proportionate to
the payment rate (which is ASP+6
percent for HCPCS code J2278), a lower
sales price for the drug (which would
lead to a lower Medicare payment rate
under the current policy) would be
necessary for beneficiaries to have a
lower coinsurance amount.
Comment: Many commenters
requested that the drug Omidria (HCPCS
code C9447, injection, phenylephrine
ketorolac), be excluded from the
packaging policy once its pass-through
status expires on September 30, 2020.
Omidria is indicated for maintaining
pupil size by preventing intraoperative
miosis and reducing postoperative
ocular pain in cataract or intraocular
surgeries. The commenters stated that
the available data and multiple peerreviewed articles on Omidria support
the packaging exclusion. Commenters
asserted the use of Omidria decreases
patients’ need for fentanyl during
surgeries and another commenter
believes that Omidria reduces opioid
use after cataract surgeries. In addition,
commenters asserted that the OPPS and
ASC payment system do not address the
cost of packaged products used by small
patient populations. Therefore, the
OPPS and ASC payment structures for
packaged supplies creates an access
barrier and patients are forced to use
inferior products that have increased
complication risk and require the
continued use of opioids to manage
pain. One commenter referenced the
results of a study that Omidria reduces
the need for opioids during cataract
surgery by nearly 80 percent while
decreasing pain scores by more than 50
percent.
Response: We thank commenters for
their feedback on Omidria. Omidria
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received pass-through status for a 3-year
period from 2015 to 2017. After
expiration of its pass-through status, it
was packaged under both the OPPS and
ASC payment system. Subsequently,
Omidria’s pass-through status under the
OPPS was reinstated in October 2018
through September 30, 2020 as required
by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as
added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018 (Pub. L. 115–141), which means
that Omidria continues to be paid
separately under the ASC payment
system through September 30, 2020.
While our analysis supports the
commenter’s assertion that there was a
decrease in the utilization of Omidria in
2018 following its pass-through
expiration, we note that there could be
many reasons that utilization declines
after the pass-through period, including
the availability of other alternatives on
the market (many of which had been
used for several years before Omidria
came on the market and are sold for a
lower price), the lack of separate
payment being available, or physician
preference.
Further, our clinical advisors’ review
of the clinical evidence submitted
concluded that the study the commenter
submitted was not sufficiently
compelling or authoritative to overcome
contrary evidence. Moreover, the results
of a CMS analysis of cataract procedures
performed on Medicare beneficiaries in
the OPPS between January 2015 and
July 2019 comparing procedures
performed with Omidria to procedures
performed without Omidria did not
demonstrate a significant decrease in
fentanyl utilization during the cataract
surgeries in the OPPS when Omidria
was used. Our findings also did not
suggest any decrease in opioid
utilization post-surgery for procedures
involving Omidria. As a result, we do
not have compelling evidence to
exclude Omidria from packaging after
its current pass-through expires on
September 30, 2020. While we were not
able to perform similar analysis using
ASC data, we expect that the results
may be similar. We will continue to
analyze the evidence and monitor
utilization of this drug.
Comment: One commenter requested
that MKO Melt, a non FDA-approved,
compounded drug comprised of
midazolam/ketamine/ondansetron for
exclusion from the packaging policy per
section 1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of the Act. The
commenter contended that MKO Melt is
a drug functioning as surgical supply in
the ASC setting. The commenter
provided a reference to a study titled,
‘‘Anesthesia for opioid addicts:
Challenges for perioperative physician’’
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by Goyal et al., on the need for pain
management in the opioid-dependent
patient. The commenter also referenced
a review article, ‘‘Perioperative
Management of Acute Pain in the
Opioid-dependent Patient,’’ by Mitra et
al., on the special needs of opioiddependent patients in surgeries and the
potential opioid relapse in those
patients who are recovering from opioid
use disorder. Additionally, the
commenter referenced a clinical trial
registered in clinicaltrials.gov
(NCT03653520) that supports sublingual
MKO Melt for use during cataract
surgeries to replace opioids. The study
looked at 611 patients that were divided
into three arms: (1) MKO melt arm, (2)
diazepam/tramadol/ondansetron arm,
(3) diazepam only arm. The study
concluded that the MKO melt arm had
the lowest incidence for supplemental
injectable anesthesia to control pain.
Response: We thank the commenter
for the comment. Based on information
submitted, we are not able to validate
that MKO Melt reduces the use of
opioids. We note that ketamine, one
component of MKO melt, exhibits some
addictive properties. Moreover, we did
not identify any evidence that MKO
Melt is effective for patients with a prior
opioid addiction nor did we receive any
data demonstrating that the current ASC
packaging policy incentivized providers
to use opioids over MKO Melt. In
accordance with section 1833(i)(8) of
the Act, the fact that there is no HPCPS
code for the drug, and lack of FDA
approval, we were not able to identify
any compelling evidence that MKO Melt
should be excluded from packaged
payment.
Comment: Several commenters,
including individual physicians,
medical associations, and device
manufacturers commented supporting
separate payment for continuous
peripheral nerve blocks as they
significantly reduce opioid use. One
commenter suggested that CMS provide
separate payment for HCPCS code
A4306 (Disposable drug delivery
system, flow rate of less than 50 ml per
hour) in the hospital outpatient
department setting and the ASC setting
because packaging represents a cost
barrier for providers. The commenter
contended that continuous nerve block
procedures have been shown in high
quality clinical studies to reduce the use
of opioids, attaching studies for review.
They believe that separate payment for
A4306 will remove the financial
disincentive for HOPDs and ASCs,
encouraging continuous nerve blocks as
a non-opioid alternative for postsurgical pain management.
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Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion. We examined
the data for A4306 and noted an overall
trend of increasing utilization from CY
2014 through CY 2017. Additionally,
the geometric mean cost for A4306 was
approximately $30 each year during that
four-year period. We acknowledge that
use of these items may help in the
reduction of opioid use. However, we
note that packaged payment of such an
item does not prevent the use of these
items. We do not believe that the
current utilization trends for HCPCS
code A4306 in the ASC setting suggest
that the packaged payment is preventing
use and remind readers that payment for
packaged items is included in the
payment for the primary service. We
share the commenter’s concern about
the need to reduce opioid use and will
take the commenter’s suggestion
regarding the need for separate payment
for HCPCS code A4306 in the ASC
setting into consideration for future
rulemaking.
Comment: Multiple commenters
identified other non-opioid pain
management alternatives that they
believe decrease the dose, duration,
and/or number of opioid prescriptions
beneficiaries receive during and
following an outpatient visit or
procedure (especially for beneficiaries at
high-risk for opioid addiction) and may
warrant separate payment for CY 2020.
Commenters representing various
stakeholders requested separate
payments for various non-opioid pain
management treatments, such as
continuous nerve blocks
(neuromodulation, radiofrequency
ablation, implants for lumbar stenosis,
protocols (ERAS®) IV acetaminophen,
IV ibuprofen, Polar ice devices for
postoperative pain relief, THC oil,
acupuncture, and dry needling
procedures.
For neuromodulation, several
commenters noted that spinal cord
stimulators (SCS) may lead to a
reduction in the use of opioids for
chronic pain patients. One manufacturer
of SCS devices commented that SCS
provides the opportunity to potentially
stabilize or decrease opioid usage and
that neuromodulation retains its efficacy
over multiple years. Regarding barriers
to access, the commenter noted that
Medicare beneficiaries often do not have
access to SCS until after they have
exhausted other treatments, which often
includes opioids. The commenter
presented evidence from observational
studies that use of SCS earlier in a
patient’s treatment could help reduce
opioid use while controlling pain, and
suggested that CMS look for ways to
incorporate SCS earlier in the treatment
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continuum, suggesting CMS develop
additional education and outreach
efforts and incentives for appropriate
referrals of patients with chronic pain to
comprehensive pain management
practices for consultation and
evaluation prior to the administration of
opioids. The commenter suggested that
CMS could provide alerts to providers
regarding the benefits of pain
management consultation with a
qualified pain management professional
prior to the administration of opioids for
chronic conditions.
Another commenter asserted that the
standard endpoints, such as a greater
than 50 percent reduction in pain, that
are used to determine if a
neuromodulation-based non-opioid pain
alternative therapy is effective are wellestablished and validated in all types of
clinical trials and that CMS should
establish a general, national coverage
determination for neuromodulationbased non-opioid pain therapy based on
these endpoints, rather than taking the
time to create and process specific
national coverage determinations or
local coverage determinations. The
commenter suggested that this would be
a much faster and streamlined process
for enhancing Medicare beneficiary
access to neuromodulation-based pain
management therapies.
One manufacturer of a high-frequency
SCS device stated that additional
payment was warranted for non-opioid
pain management treatments because
they provide an alternative treatment
option to opioids for patients with
chronic leg or back pain. The
commenter provided supporting studies
which claimed that patients treated with
their high-frequency SCS device
reported a statistically significant
average decrease in opioid use
compared to the control group. This
commenter also submitted data that
showed a decline in the mean daily
dosage of opioid medication taken and
that fewer patients were relying on
opioids at all to manage their pain when
they used the manufacturer’s device.
Other commenters wrote regarding
their personal experiences in regards to
radiofrequency ablation for sacral iliac
joints and knees. One commenter
referenced several studies, one of which
found a decrease in analgesic
medications associated with
radiofrequency ablation; however, it did
not provide evidence regarding a
decrease in opioid usage.
One national hospital association
commenter recommended that while
‘‘certainly not a solution to the opioid
epidemic, unpackaging appropriate nonopioid therapies, like Exparel, is a lowcost tactic that could change long-
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standing practice patterns without major
negative consequences.’’ This same
commenter suggested that Medicare
consider separate payment for IV
acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, and Polar
ice devices for postoperative pain relief
after knee procedures. The commenter
also noted that therapeutic massage,
topically applied THC oil, acupuncture,
and dry needling procedures are very
effective therapies for relief of both
postoperative pain and long-term and
chronic pain. Several other commenters
expressed support for IV
acetaminophen.
Response: We appreciate the detailed
responses from commenters on this
topic. At this time, we have not found
compelling evidence for other nonopioid pain management alternatives
described above to warrant separate
payment under the OPPS or ASC
payment systems for CY 2020, however
we plan to take these comments and
suggestions into consideration for future
rulemaking. We agree that providing
incentives to avoid or reduce opioid
prescriptions may be one of several
strategies for addressing the opioid
epidemic. To the extent that the items
and services mentioned by the
commenters are effective alternatives to
opioid drugs, we encourage providers to
use them when medically appropriate.
We note that some of the items and
services mentioned by commenters are
not covered by Medicare, and we do not
intend to establish payment for
noncovered items and services. We look
forward to working with stakeholders as
we further consider suggested
refinements to the OPPS and the ASC
payment system that will encourage use
of medically necessary items and
services that have demonstrated efficacy
in decreasing opioid prescriptions or
opioid abuse or misuse during or after
an outpatient visit or procedure.
After reviewing the non-opioid pain
management alternatives suggested by
the commenters as well as the studies
and other data provided to support the
request for separate payment, we have
not determined that separate payment is
warranted at this time for most of the
non-opioid pain management
alternatives discussed above. However,
we continue to believe the separate
payment is appropriate for non-opioid
pain management drugs that function as
surgical supplies, like Exparel, when
furnished in the ASC setting and are
finalizing this policy for CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed payment barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid pain
management treatments previously
discussed throughout this section.
Several commenters disagreed with
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CMS’s assessment that current payment
policies do not represent barriers to
access for certain non-opioid pain
management alternatives. One
commenter encouraged CMS to provide
timely insurance coverage for evidenceinformed interventional procedures
early in the course of treatment when
clinically appropriate, noting that they
hope CMS will reconsider its position
and provide mechanisms for separate
payment and patient access to evidencebased, FDA approved and cleared
medical device enabled interventions
that would provide alternatives to
opioid pain management interventions.
Several other commenters encouraged
CMS to more broadly evaluate all of its
packaging policies to help ensure
patient access to appropriate therapies
and to assess how packaging affects the
utilization of a medicine and use the
results of that evaluation to guide future
policy development.
Response: We appreciate the various,
insightful comments we received from
stakeholders regarding barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid alternatives
for pain treatment and management in
order to more effectively address the
opioid epidemic. We will take these
comments into consideration for future
consideration. Many of these comments
have been previously addressed
throughout this section.
After consideration of the public
comments that we received, we are
finalizing the policy to continue to
unpackage and pay separately at ASP + 6
percent for the cost of non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as
surgical supplies when they are
furnished in the ASC setting for CY
2020 as proposed. We will continue to
analyze the issue of access to nonopioid alternatives in the OPPS and
ASC settings as we implement section
6082 of the SUPPORT Act and section
1833(i)(8). This policy is also discussed
in section II.A.3.b. of this final rule with
comment period.
E. New Technology Intraocular Lenses
(NTIOLs)
New Technology Intraocular Lenses
(NTIOLs) are intraocular lenses that
replace a patient’s natural lens that has
been removed in cataract surgery and
that also meet the requirements listed in
42 CFR 416.195.
1. NTIOL Application Cycle
Our process for reviewing
applications to establish new classes of
NTIOLs is as follows:
• Applicants submit their NTIOL
requests for review to CMS by the
annual deadline. For a request to be
considered complete, we require
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submission of the information that is
found in the guidance document
entitled ‘‘Application Process and
Information Requirements for Requests
for a New Class of New Technology
Intraocular Lenses (NTIOLs) or
Inclusion of an IOL in an Existing
NTIOL Class’’ posted on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/ASCPayment/NTIOLs.html.
• We announce annually, in the
proposed rule updating the ASC and
OPPS payment rates for the following
calendar year, a list of all requests to
establish new NTIOL classes accepted
for review during the calendar year in
which the proposal is published. In
accordance with section 141(b)(3) of
Public Law 103–432 and our regulations
at § 416.185(b), the deadline for receipt
of public comments is 30 days following
publication of the list of requests in the
proposed rule.
• In the final rule updating the ASC
and OPPS payment rates for the
following calendar year, we—
++ Provide a list of determinations
made as a result of our review of all new
NTIOL class requests and public
comments;
++ When a new NTIOL class is
created, identify the predominant
characteristic of NTIOLs in that class
that sets them apart from other IOLs
(including those previously approved as
members of other expired or active
NTIOL classes) and that is associated
with an improved clinical outcome.
++ Set the date of implementation of
a payment adjustment in the case of
approval of an IOL as a member of a
new NTIOL class prospectively as of 30
days after publication of the ASC
payment update final rule, consistent
with the statutory requirement.
++ Announce the deadline for
submitting requests for review of an
application for a new NTIOL class for
the following calendar year.
2. Requests To Establish New NTIOL
Classes for CY 2020
We did not receive any requests for
review to establish a new NTIOL class
for CY 2020 by March 1, 2019, the due
date published in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59072).
3. Payment Adjustment
The current payment adjustment for a
5-year period from the implementation
date of a new NTIOL class is $50 per
lens. Since implementation of the
process for adjustment of payment
amounts for NTIOLs in 1999, we have
not revised the payment adjustment
amount, and we did not proposing to
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revise the payment adjustment amount
for CY 2020.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Two commenters requested
that we re-evaluate our payment
adjustment for new NTIOL class.
Commenters noted that our $50
payment adjustment has not been
adjusted since CY 1999 and that the
stagnant payment adjustment has been a
barrier to intraocular lens innovation.
One commenter requested that the $50
be inflated to 2020 dollars and updated
by inflation in subsequent years.
Another commenter requested that we
updated the $50 payment adjustment to
$100, which is the approximate dollar
amount of our $50 payment adjustment
had we increased the adjustment based
on the increase in CPI–U for medical
care.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendation. We did not
propose revising the payment
adjustment amount for CY 2020.
However, we will take commenters
recommendations into consideration in
future rulemaking.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal to maintain the
payment adjustment of a new NTIOL
class at $50 per lens for CY 2020
without modification.
F. ASC Payment and Comment
Indicators
1. Background
In addition to the payment indicators
that we introduced in the August 2,
2007 final rule, we created final
comment indicators for the ASC
payment system in the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72
FR 66855). We created Addendum DD1
to define ASC payment indicators that
we use in Addenda AA and BB to
provide payment information regarding
covered surgical procedures and
covered ancillary services, respectively,
under the revised ASC payment system.
The ASC payment indicators in
Addendum DD1 are intended to capture
policy-relevant characteristics of HCPCS
codes that may receive packaged or
separate payment in ASCs, such as
whether they were on the ASC CPL
prior to CY 2008; payment designation,
such as device-intensive or office-based,
and the corresponding ASC payment
methodology; and their classification as
separately payable ancillary services,
including radiology services,
brachytherapy sources, OPPS passthrough devices, corneal tissue
acquisition services, drugs or
biologicals, or NTIOLs.
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We also created Addendum DD2 that
lists the ASC comment indicators. The
ASC comment indicators included in
Addenda AA and BB to the proposed
rules and final rules with comment
period serve to identify, for the revised
ASC payment system, the status of a
specific HCPCS code and its payment
indicator with respect to the timeframe
when comments will be accepted. The
comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ is used in the
OPPS/ASC final rule to indicate new
codes for the next calendar year for
which the interim payment indicator
assigned is subject to comment. The
comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ also is assigned
to existing codes with substantial
revisions to their descriptors such that
we consider them to be describing new
services, and the interim payment
indicator assigned is subject to
comment, as discussed in the CY 2010
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (74 FR 60622).
The comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ is used
in the OPPS/ASC proposed rule to
indicate new codes for the next calendar
year for which the proposed payment
indicator assigned is subject to
comment. The comment indicator ‘‘NP’’
also is assigned to existing codes with
substantial revisions to their
descriptors, such that we consider them
to be describing new services, and the
proposed payment indicator assigned is
subject to comment, as discussed in the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70497).
The ‘‘CH’’ comment indicator is used
in Addenda AA and BB to the proposed
rule (which are available via the internet
on the CMS website) to indicate that the
payment indicator assignment has
changed for an active HCPCS code in
the current year and the next calendar
year, for example if an active HCPCS
code is newly recognized as payable in
ASCs; or an active HCPCS code is
discontinued at the end of the current
calendar year. The ‘‘CH’’ comment
indicators that are published in the final
rule with comment period are provided
to alert readers that a change has been
made from one calendar year to the
next, but do not indicate that the change
is subject to comment.
2. ASC Payment and Comment
Indicators for CY 2020
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed new and revised
Category I and III CPT codes as well as
new and revised Level II HCPCS codes.
Therefore, proposed Category I and III
CPT codes that are new and revised for
CY 2020 and any new and existing
Level II HCPCS codes with substantial
revisions to the code descriptors for CY
2020 compared to the CY 2019
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61405
descriptors are included in ASC
Addenda AA and BB to this proposed
rule were labeled with proposed
comment indicator ‘‘NP’’ to indicate
that these CPT and Level II HCPCS
codes were open for comment as part of
the proposed rule. Proposed comment
indicator ‘‘NP’’ meant a new code for
the next calendar year or an existing
code with substantial revision to its
code descriptor in the next calendar
year, as compared to current calendar
year; and denoted that comments would
be accepted on the proposed ASC
payment indicator for the new code.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we stated that we would respond
to public comments on ASC payment
and comment indicators and finalize
their ASC assignment in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period. We referred readers to Addenda
DD1 and DD2 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which are available via
the internet on the CMS website) for the
complete list of ASC payment and
comment indicators proposed for the CY
2020 update. We did not receive any
public comments on the ASC payment
and comment indicators. Therefore, we
are finalizing their use as proposed
without modification. Addenda DD1
and DD2 to this final rule with comment
period (which are available via the
internet on the CMS website) contain
the complete list of ASC payment and
comment indicators for CY 2020.
G. Calculation of the ASC Payment
Rates and the ASC Conversion Factor
1. Background
In the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR
42493), we established our policy to
base ASC relative payment weights and
payment rates under the revised ASC
payment system on APC groups and the
OPPS relative payment weights.
Consistent with that policy and the
requirement at section 1833(i)(2)(D)(ii)
of the Act that the revised payment
system be implemented so that it would
be budget neutral, the initial ASC
conversion factor (CY 2008) was
calculated so that estimated total
Medicare payments under the revised
ASC payment system in the first year
would be budget neutral to estimated
total Medicare payments under the prior
(CY 2007) ASC payment system (the
ASC conversion factor is multiplied by
the relative payment weights calculated
for many ASC services in order to
establish payment rates). That is,
application of the ASC conversion factor
was designed to result in aggregate
Medicare expenditures under the
revised ASC payment system in CY
2008 being equal to aggregate Medicare
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expenditures that would have occurred
in CY 2008 in the absence of the revised
system, taking into consideration the
cap on ASC payments in CY 2007, as
required under section 1833(i)(2)(E) of
the Act (72 FR 42522). We adopted a
policy to make the system budget
neutral in subsequent calendar years (72
FR 42532 through 42533; § 416.171(e)).
We note that we consider the term
‘‘expenditures’’ in the context of the
budget neutrality requirement under
section 1833(i)(2)(D)(ii) of the Act to
mean expenditures from the Medicare
Part B Trust Fund. We do not consider
expenditures to include beneficiary
coinsurance and copayments. This
distinction was important for the CY
2008 ASC budget neutrality model that
considered payments across the OPPS,
ASC, and MPFS payment systems.
However, because coinsurance is almost
always 20 percent for ASC services, this
interpretation of expenditures has
minimal impact for subsequent budget
neutrality adjustments calculated within
the revised ASC payment system.
In the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (72 FR 66857
through 66858), we set out a step-bystep illustration of the final budget
neutrality adjustment calculation based
on the methodology finalized in the
August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42521
through 42531) and as applied to
updated data available for the CY 2008
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period. The application of that
methodology to the data available for
the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period resulted in a budget
neutrality adjustment of 0.65.
For CY 2008, we adopted the OPPS
relative payment weights as the ASC
relative payment weights for most
services and, consistent with the final
policy, we calculated the CY 2008 ASC
payment rates by multiplying the ASC
relative payment weights by the final
CY 2008 ASC conversion factor of
$41.401. For covered office-based
surgical procedures, covered ancillary
radiology services (excluding covered
ancillary radiology services involving
certain nuclear medicine procedures or
involving the use of contrast agents, as
discussed in section XII.D.2. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule), and
certain diagnostic tests within the
medicine range that are covered
ancillary services, the established policy
is to set the payment rate at the lower
of the MPFS unadjusted nonfacility PE
RVU-based amount or the amount
calculated using the ASC standard
ratesetting methodology. Further, as
discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR
66841 through 66843), we also adopted
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alternative ratesetting methodologies for
specific types of services (for example,
device-intensive procedures).
As discussed in the August 2, 2007
final rule (72 FR 42517 through 42518)
and as codified at § 416.172(c) of the
regulations, the revised ASC payment
system accounts for geographic wage
variation when calculating individual
ASC payments by applying the pre-floor
and pre-reclassified IPPS hospital wage
indexes to the labor-related share,
which is 50 percent of the ASC payment
amount based on a GAO report of ASC
costs using 2004 survey data. Beginning
in CY 2008, CMS accounted for
geographic wage variation in labor costs
when calculating individual ASC
payments by applying the pre-floor and
pre-reclassified hospital wage index
values that CMS calculates for payment
under the IPPS, using updated Core
Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) issued
by OMB in June 2003.
The reclassification provision in
section 1886(d)(10) of the Act is specific
to hospitals. We believe that using the
most recently available pre-floor and
pre-reclassified IPPS hospital wage
indexes results in the most appropriate
adjustment to the labor portion of ASC
costs. We continue to believe that the
unadjusted hospital wage indexes,
which are updated yearly and are used
by many other Medicare payment
systems, appropriately account for
geographic variation in labor costs for
ASCs. Therefore, the wage index for an
ASC is the pre-floor and pre-reclassified
hospital wage index under the IPPS of
the CBSA that maps to the CBSA where
the ASC is located.
Generally, OMB issues major
revisions to statistical areas every 10
years, based on the results of the
decennial census. On February 28, 2013,
OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 13–01,
which provides the delineations of all
Metropolitan Statistical Areas,
Metropolitan Divisions, Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, Combined Statistical
Areas, and New England City and Town
Areas in the United States and Puerto
Rico based on the standards published
on June 28, 2010 in the Federal Register
(75 FR 37246 through 37252) and 2010
Census Bureau data. (A copy of this
bulletin may be obtained at: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/
2013/b13-01.pdf.) In the FY 2015 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49951
through 49963), we implemented the
use of the CBSA delineations issued by
OMB in OMB Bulletin 13–01 for the
IPPS hospital wage index beginning in
FY 2015.
OMB occasionally issues minor
updates and revisions to statistical areas
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in the years between the decennial
censuses. On July 15, 2015, OMB issued
OMB Bulletin No. 15–01, which
provides updates to and supersedes
OMB Bulletin No. 13–01 that was issued
on February 28, 2013. OMB Bulletin No.
15–01 made changes that are relevant to
the IPPS and ASC wage index. We refer
readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR
79750) for a discussion of these changes
and our implementation of these
revisions. (A copy of this bulletin may
be obtained at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/
2015/15-01.pdf.)
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued
OMB Bulletin No. 17–01, which
provided updates to and superseded
OMB Bulletin No. 15–01 that was issued
on July 15, 2015. We refer readers to the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58864 through
58865) for a discussion of these changes
and our implementation of these
revisions. (A copy of this bulletin may
be obtained at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/
2017/b-17-01.pdf.)
For CY 2020, the proposed CY 2020
ASC wage indexes fully reflect the OMB
labor market area delineations
(including the revisions to the OMB
labor market delineations discussed
above, as set forth in OMB Bulletin Nos.
15–01 and 17–01).
We note that, in certain instances,
there might be urban or rural areas for
which there is no IPPS hospital that has
wage index data that could be used to
set the wage index for that area. For
these areas, our policy has been to use
the average of the wage indexes for
CBSAs (or metropolitan divisions as
applicable) that are contiguous to the
area that has no wage index (where
‘‘contiguous’’ is defined as sharing a
border). For example, for CY 2014, we
applied a proxy wage index based on
this methodology to ASCs located in
CBSA 25980 (Hinesville-Fort Stewart,
GA) and CBSA 08 (Rural Delaware).
When all of the areas contiguous to
the urban CBSA of interest are rural and
there is no IPPS hospital that has wage
index data that could be used to set the
wage index for that area, we determine
the ASC wage index by calculating the
average of all wage indexes for urban
areas in the state (75 FR 72058 through
72059). (In other situations, where there
are no IPPS hospitals located in a
relevant labor market area, we continue
our current policy of calculating an
urban or rural area’s wage index by
calculating the average of the wage
indexes for CBSAs (or metropolitan
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divisions where applicable) that are
contiguous to the area with no wage
index.)
2. Calculation of the ASC Payment Rates
a. Updating the ASC Relative Payment
Weights for CY 2020 and Future Years
We update the ASC relative payment
weights each year using the national
OPPS relative payment weights (and
PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based amounts,
as applicable) for that same calendar
year and uniformly scale the ASC
relative payment weights for each
update year to make them budget
neutral (72 FR 42533). Consistent with
our established policy, we proposed to
scale the CY 2020 relative payment
weights for ASCs according to the
following method. Holding ASC
utilization, the ASC conversion factor,
and the mix of services constant from
CY 2018, we proposed to compare the
total payment using the CY 2019 ASC
relative payment weights with the total
payment using the CY 2020 ASC
relative payment weights to take into
account the changes in the OPPS
relative payment weights between CY
2019 and CY 2020. We proposed to use
the ratio of CY 2019 to CY 2020 total
payments (the weight scalar) to scale the
ASC relative payment weights for CY
2020. The proposed CY 2020 ASC
weight scalar is 0.8452 and scaling
would apply to the ASC relative
payment weights of the covered surgical
procedures, covered ancillary radiology
services, and certain diagnostic tests
within the medicine range of CPT codes,
which are covered ancillary services for
which the ASC payment rates are based
on OPPS relative payment weights.
Scaling would not apply in the case
of ASC payment for separately payable
covered ancillary services that have a
predetermined national payment
amount (that is, their national ASC
payment amounts are not based on
OPPS relative payment weights), such
as drugs and biologicals that are
separately paid or services that are
contractor-priced or paid at reasonable
cost in ASCs. Any service with a
predetermined national payment
amount would be included in the ASC
budget neutrality comparison, but
scaling of the ASC relative payment
weights would not apply to those
services. The ASC payment weights for
those services without predetermined
national payment amounts (that is,
those services with national payment
amounts that would be based on OPPS
relative payment weights) would be
scaled to eliminate any difference in the
total payment between the current year
and the update year.
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For any given year’s ratesetting, we
typically use the most recent full
calendar year of claims data to model
budget neutrality adjustments. At the
time of the proposed rule, we had
available 98 percent of CY 2018 ASC
claims data.
The comments and our responses to
the comments are set forth below.
Comment: A majority of commenters
believe that CMS needs to reduce the
disparity in payments between ASCs
and HOPDs. Commenters stated that
ASC payment rates are less than 50
percent of the HOPD payment rates for
some high volume procedures. Many of
these same commenters support the
discontinuation of the ASC weight
scalar, which they believe is the cause
of the payment gap between ASCs and
HOPDs. Commenters suggested that the
ASC weight scalar as currently applied
may make it economically infeasible for
ASC facilities to continue to perform
Medicare cases, which would hurt
beneficiaries and limit their access to
high-quality outpatient surgical care.
They suggested that eliminating the
secondary rescaling that is currently
applied to ASC payments would allow
ASCs to continue to provide quality
surgical care for Medicare patients.
Several commenters requested that
CMS apply the same OPPS relative
weights to ASC services and
discontinue rescaling the ASC relative
weights. They provided that while they
understand the additional scaling factor
that CMS applies to the ASC APC
weight maintains budget neutrality
within the ASC payment system, this
scaling contributes to the large payment
differentials for similar services between
the ASC and HOPD systems.
Response: We note that applying the
weight scalar in calculation of ASC
payment rates, for this final rule with
comment period it is 0.8550, ensures
that the ASC payment system remains
budget neutral. We understand the
commenters do not believe that
calculation of the weight scalar in the
ASC is necessary and their belief that its
application leads to large payment
differentials for similar services between
the OPPS and ASC payment systems.
However, as noted in previous
rulemaking (83 FR 59076), we do not
believe that the ASC cost structure is
identical to the hospital cost structure.
Further, we do not collect cost data from
ASCs, and therefore we are unsure of
the actual differences in costs between
the two sites of service. We have not
witnessed beneficiary access issues
when it comes to receiving care in an
ASC and note that there are more ASCs
than there are hospitals; we do not agree
that the current ASC payment
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methodology has created an access to
care issue for ASCs. Additionally, the
ASC payment system was not designed
to mirror that of the OPPS; a large part
of the value of ASCs is that they provide
a lower cost option for surgical
procedures than some other settings.
To create an analytic file to support
calculation of the weight scalar and
budget neutrality adjustment for the
wage index (discussed below), we
summarized available CY 2017 ASC
claims by ASC and by HCPCS code. We
used the National Provider Identifier for
the purpose of identifying unique ASCs
within the CY 2018 claims data. We
used the supplier zip code reported on
the claim to associate state, county, and
CBSA with each ASC. This file,
available to the public as a supporting
data file for the proposed rule, is posted
on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Dataand-Systems/Files-for-Order/
LimitedDataSets/
ASCPaymentSystem.html.
b. Updating the ASC Conversion Factor
Under the OPPS, we typically apply
a budget neutrality adjustment for
provider level changes, most notably a
change in the wage index values for the
upcoming year, to the conversion factor.
Consistent with our final ASC payment
policy, for the CY 2017 ASC payment
system and subsequent years, in the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79751 through
79753), we finalized our policy to
calculate and apply a budget neutrality
adjustment to the ASC conversion factor
for supplier level changes in wage index
values for the upcoming year, just as the
OPPS wage index budget neutrality
adjustment is calculated and applied to
the OPPS conversion factor. For CY
2020, we calculated the proposed
adjustment for the ASC payment system
by using the most recent CY 2018 claims
data available and estimating the
difference in total payment that would
be created by introducing the proposed
CY 2020 ASC wage indexes.
Specifically, holding CY 2018 ASC
utilization, service-mix, and the
proposed CY 2020 national payment
rates after application of the weight
scalar constant, we calculated the total
adjusted payment using the CY 2019
ASC wage indexes and the total
adjusted payment using the proposed
CY 2020 ASC wage indexes. We used
the 50-percent labor-related share for
both total adjusted payment
calculations. We then compared the
total adjusted payment calculated with
the CY 2019 ASC wage indexes to the
total adjusted payment calculated with
the proposed CY 2020 ASC wage
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indexes and applied the resulting ratio
of 1.0008 (the proposed CY 2020 ASC
wage index budget neutrality
adjustment) to the CY 2019 ASC
conversion factor to calculate the
proposed CY 2020 ASC conversion
factor.
Section 1833(i)(2)(C)(i) of the Act
requires that, if the Secretary has not
updated amounts established under the
revised ASC payment system in a
calendar year, the payment amounts
shall be increased by the percentage
increase in the Consumer Price Index
for all urban consumers (CPI–U), U.S.
city average, as estimated by the
Secretary for the 12-month period
ending with the midpoint of the year
involved. The statute does not mandate
the adoption of any particular update
mechanism, but it requires the payment
amounts to be increased by the CPI–U
in the absence of any update. Because
the Secretary updates the ASC payment
amounts annually, we adopted a policy,
which we codified at § 416.171(a)(2)(ii)),
to update the ASC conversion factor
using the CPI–U for CY 2010 and
subsequent calendar years.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59075
through 59080), we finalized our
proposal to apply the hospital market
basket update to ASC payment system
rates for an interim period of 5 years
(CY 2019 through CY 2023), during
which we will assess whether there is
a migration of the performance of
procedures from the hospital setting to
the ASC setting as a result of the use of
a hospital market basket update, as well
as whether there are any unintended
consequences, such as less than
expected migration of the performance
of procedures from the hospital setting
to the ASC setting. In addition, we
finalized our proposal to revise our
regulations under § 416.171(a)(2), which
address the annual update to the ASC
conversion factor. During this 5-year
period, we intend to assess the
feasibility of collaborating with
stakeholders to collect ASC cost data in
a minimally burdensome manner and
could propose a plan to collect such
information. We refer readers to that
final rule for a detailed discussion of the
rationale for these policies.
As stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39552), the
hospital market basket update for CY
2020 was to be 3.2 percent, as published
in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule (84 FR 19402), based on
IHS Global Inc.’s (IGI’s) 2018 fourth
quarter forecast with historical data
through the third quarter of 2018. For
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, as published in the FY
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2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42343), based on IGI’s 2019 second
quarter forecast with historical data
through the first quarter of 2019, the
hospital market basket update for CY
2020 is 3.0 percent.
We finalized the methodology for
calculating the MFP adjustment in the
CY 2011 PFS final rule with comment
period (75 FR 73394 through 73396) and
revised it in the CY 2012 PFS final rule
with comment period (76 FR 73300
through 73301) and the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70500 through 70501). As stated in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39553), the proposed MFP
adjustment for CY 2020 was projected to
be 0.5 percentage point, as published in
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (84 FR 19402) based on IGI’s 2018
fourth quarter forecast. For this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, as published in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42343)
based on IGI’s 2019 second quarter
forecast, the final MFP adjustment for
CY 2020 is 0.4 percentage point.
For CY 2020, we proposed to utilize
the hospital market basket update of 3.2
percent minus the MFP adjustment of
0.5 percentage point, resulting in an
MFP-adjusted hospital market basket
update factor of 2.7 percent for ASCs
meeting the quality reporting
requirements. Therefore, we proposed to
apply a 2.7 percent MFP-adjusted
hospital market basket update factor to
the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor for
ASCs meeting the quality reporting
requirements to determine the CY 2020
ASC payment amounts. The ASCQR
Program affected payment rates
beginning in CY 2014 and, under this
program, there is a 2.0 percentage point
reduction to the update factor for ASCs
that fail to meet the ASCQR Program
requirements. We referred readers to
section XIV.E. of the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59138 through 59139) and section
XIV.E. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule for a detailed discussion
of our policies regarding payment
reduction for ASCs that fail to meet
ASCQR Program requirements. We
proposed to utilize the hospital market
basket update of 3.2 percent reduced by
2.0 percentage points for ASCs that do
not meet the quality reporting
requirements and then subtract the 0.5
percentage point MFP adjustment.
Therefore, we proposed to apply a 0.7
percent MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC
conversion factor for ASCs not meeting
the quality reporting requirements. We
also proposed that if more recent data
are subsequently available (for example,
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a more recent estimate of the hospital
market basket update and MFP), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2020 ASC update for
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
For CY 2020, we proposed to adjust
the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor
($46.532) by the proposed wage index
budget neutrality factor of 1.0008 in
addition to the MFP-adjusted hospital
market basket update factor of 2.7
percent discussed above, which results
in a proposed CY 2020 ASC conversion
factor of $47.827 for ASCs meeting the
quality reporting requirements. For
ASCs not meeting the quality reporting
requirements, we proposed to adjust the
CY 2019 ASC conversion factor
($46.532) by the proposed wage index
budget neutrality factor of 1.0008 in
addition to the quality reporting/MFPadjusted hospital market basket update
factor of 0.7 percent discussed above,
which results in a proposed CY 2020
ASC conversion factor of $46.895.
The comments and our responses are
set forth below.
Comment: The majority of
commenters supported continued use of
the hospital market basket for updating
ASC payments on an annual basis.
Some commenters suggested that
aligning the update factors between the
OPPS and ASC settings will encourage
the migration of care to the ASC setting
by making ASC payment more
competitive with hospital payment,
while other commenters supported the
decision as it would promote siteneutrality between the two settings of
care through more competitive payment.
However, other commenters, despite
their support for the use of the hospital
market basket to update ASC payment
rates, believed that the migration of
services to ASCs would be limited due
to the ASC budget neutrality
adjustments. Commenters stated that
CMS’ current approach to maintaining
budget neutrality in the ASC payment
system caused increasing differentials in
payment for services provided in the
ASC and HOPD settings, and there was
no evidence of corresponding changes
in capital and operating costs between
the ASC and HOPD settings to support
this growing payment differential.
Commenters noted that widening the
gap in payments could make it
economically difficult for ASCs to
perform certain procedures,
discouraging ASCs from furnishing
those procedures and thereby
discouraging the migration of services
from the HOPD to the ASC setting.
MedPAC did not support using the
hospital market basket index as an
interim method for updating the ASC
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conversion factor, noting that evidence
has indicated the hospital market basket
index does not accurately reflect the
costs of ASCs. MedPAC noted the
differences in cost structure between the
HOPD and ASC settings could be
attributed to a number of factors,
including different patient populations,
expenses, employee compensation, and
regulations.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We believe
providing ASCs with the same rate
update as hospitals encourages the
migration of services from the hospital
setting to the ASC setting and could
increase the presence of ASCs in health
care markets or geographic areas where
previously there were none or few. The
migration of services from the higher
cost hospital outpatient setting to the
ASC setting is likely to result in savings
to beneficiaries and the Medicare
program. This policy also gives both
physicians and beneficiaries greater
choice in selecting the best care setting.
In addition, we acknowledge
MedPAC’s comment regarding the
collection of ASC cost data and
differences in cost structure between the
HOPD and ASC settings. We appreciate
these comments and will take these
comments into consideration in future
policy development.
Comment: Multiple commenters
expressed their opposition to collecting
ASC cost data, due to the anticipated
administrative burden associated with
collecting this data. Commenters
suggested that collecting ASC cost data
would prevent ASCs from providing
efficient low-cost care. MedPAC
suggested that CMS begin collecting
ASC cost data immediately, forgoing the
final four years of its planned five-year
period to assess the feasibility of
collaborating with stakeholders to
collect ASC cost data in a minimally
burdensome manner and potentially to
propose a plan to collect such
information. MedPAC suggested that
CMS use its existing authority and
resources to act quickly in gathering
ASC cost data. MedPAC noted that
beneficial information could be gathered
to inform ASC payment updates and
asserted that there is sufficient evidence
that ASC can capably submit cost data.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. As discussed in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we intend to assess the
feasibility of collaborating with
stakeholders to collect ASC cost data in
a minimally burdensome manner and
potentially propose a plan to collect
such information over a 5-year period
(83 FR 59077). We will continue to
assess the feasibility of collaborating
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with stakeholders to collect ASC cost
data in a minimally burdensome
manner for future policy development.
After consideration of the public
comments we received, consistent with
our proposal that if more recent data are
subsequently available (for example, a
more recent estimate of the hospital
market basket update and MFP), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2020 ASC update for
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we are incorporating
more recent data to determine the final
CY 2020 ASC update. Therefore, for this
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the hospital market
basket update for CY 2020 is 3.0
percent, as published in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42343), based on IGI’s 2019 second
quarter forecast with historical data
through the first quarter of 2019. The
MFP adjustment for this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period is
0.4 percentage point, as published in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42343) based on IGI’s 2019 second
quarter forecast.
For CY 2020, we are finalizing the
hospital market basket update of 3.0
percent minus the MFP adjustment of
0.4 percentage point, resulting in an
MFP-adjusted hospital market basket
update factor of 2.6 percent for ASCs
meeting the quality reporting
requirements. Therefore, we apply a 2.6
percent MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC
conversion factor for ASCs meeting the
quality reporting requirements to
determine the CY 2020 ASC payment
rates.
3. Display of Final CY 2020 ASC
Payment Rates
Addenda AA and BB to this final rule
(which are available on the CMS
website) display the final updated ASC
payment rates for CY 2020 for covered
surgical procedures and covered
ancillary services, respectively. For
those covered surgical procedures and
covered ancillary services where the
payment rate is the lower of the
proposed rates under the ASC standard
ratesetting methodology and the MPFS
final rates, the final payment indicators
and rates set forth in this final rule are
based on a comparison using the
finalized PFS rates that would be
effective January 1, 2020. For a
discussion of the PFS rates, we refer
readers to the CY 2020 PFS final rule
that is available on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-FederalRegulation-Notices.html.
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The final payment rates included in
addenda AA and BB to this final rule
reflect the full ASC payment update and
not the reduced payment update used to
calculate payment rates for ASCs not
meeting the quality reporting
requirements under the ASCQR
Program. These addenda contain several
types of information related to the
proposed CY 2020 payment rates.
Specifically, in Addendum AA, a ‘‘Y’’ in
the column titled ‘‘To be Subject to
Multiple Procedure Discounting’’
indicates that the surgical procedure
would be subject to the multiple
procedure payment reduction policy. As
discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR
66829 through 66830), most covered
surgical procedures are subject to a 50percent reduction in the ASC payment
for the lower-paying procedure when
more than one procedure is performed
in a single operative session.
Display of the comment indicator
‘‘CH’’ in the column titled ‘‘Comment
Indicator’’ indicates a change in
payment policy for the item or service,
including identifying discontinued
HCPCS codes, designating items or
services newly payable under the ASC
payment system, and identifying items
or services with changes in the ASC
payment indicator for CY 2020. Display
of the comment indicator ‘‘NI’’ in the
column titled ‘‘Comment Indicator’’
indicates that the code is new (or
substantially revised) and that
comments will be accepted on the
interim payment indicator for the new
code. Display of the comment indicator
‘‘NP’’ in the column titled ‘‘Comment
Indicator’’ indicates that the code is new
(or substantially revised) and that
comments will be accepted on the ASC
payment indicator for the new code.
The values displayed in the column
titled ‘‘Final CY 2020 Payment Weight’’
are the proposed relative payment
weights for each of the listed services
for CY 2020. The proposed relative
payment weights for all covered surgical
procedures and covered ancillary
services where the ASC payment rates
are based on OPPS relative payment
weights were scaled for budget
neutrality. Therefore, scaling was not
applied to the device portion of the
device-intensive procedures, services
that are paid at the MPFS nonfacility PE
RVU-based amount, separately payable
covered ancillary services that have a
predetermined national payment
amount, such as drugs and biologicals
and brachytherapy sources that are
separately paid under the OPPS, or
services that are contractor-priced or
paid at reasonable cost in ASCs. This
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includes separate payment for nonopioid pain management drugs.
To derive the final CY 2020 payment
rate displayed in the ‘‘Final CY 2020
Payment Rate’’ column, each ASC
payment weight in the ‘‘Final CY 2020
Payment Weight’’ column was
multiplied by the final CY 2020
conversion factor of $47.747. The
conversion factor includes a budget
neutrality adjustment for changes in the
wage index values and the annual
update factor as reduced by the
productivity adjustment. The final CY
2020 ASC conversion factor uses the CY
2020 MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor of 2.6 percent
(which is equal to the projected hospital
market basket update of 3.0 percent
minus a projected MFP adjustment of
0.4 percentage point).
In Addendum BB, there are no
relative payment weights displayed in
the ‘‘Final CY 2020 Payment Weight’’
column for items and services with
predetermined national payment
amounts, such as separately payable
drugs and biologicals. The ‘‘Final CY
2020 Payment’’ column displays the
proposed CY 2020 national unadjusted
ASC payment rates for all items and
services. The proposed CY 2020 ASC
payment rates listed in Addendum BB
for separately payable drugs and
biologicals are based on ASP data used
for payment in physicians’ offices in
2019.
Addendum EE provides the HCPCS
codes and short descriptors for surgical
procedures that are proposed to be
excluded from payment in ASCs for CY
2020.
XIV. Requirements for the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR)
Program
A. Background
1. Overview
CMS seeks to promote higher quality
and more efficient healthcare for
Medicare beneficiaries. Consistent with
these goals, CMS has implemented
quality reporting programs for multiple
care settings including the quality
reporting program for hospital
outpatient care, known as the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR)
Program, formerly known as the
Hospital Outpatient Quality Data
Reporting Program (HOP QDRP). The
Hospital OQR Program is generally
aligned with the quality reporting
program for hospital inpatient services
known as the Hospital Inpatient Quality
Reporting (IQR) Program, formerly
known as the Reporting Hospital
Quality Data for Annual Payment
Update (RHQDAPU) Program.
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We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58820 through 58822)
where we discuss our Meaningful
Measures Initiative and our approach in
evaluating quality program measures.
2. Statutory History of the Hospital OQR
Program
We refer readers to the CY 2011
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (75 FR 72064 through 72065) for
a detailed discussion of the statutory
history of the Hospital OQR Program.
3. Regulatory History of the Hospital
OQR Program
We refer readers to the CY 2008
through 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules
with comment period (72 FR 66860
through 66875; 73 FR 68758 through
68779; 74 FR 60629 through 60656; 75
FR 72064 through 72110; 76 FR 74451
through 74492; 77 FR 68467 through
68492; 78 FR 75090 through 75120; 79
FR 66940 through 66966; 80 FR 70502
through 70526; 81 FR 79753 through
79797; 82 FR 59424 through 59445; and
83 FR 59080 through 59110) for the
regulatory history of the Hospital OQR
Program. We have codified certain
requirements under the Hospital OQR
Program at 42 CFR 419.46.
B. Hospital OQR Program Quality
Measures
1. Considerations in the Selection of
Hospital OQR Program Quality
Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74458 through 74460) for
a detailed discussion of the priorities we
consider for the Hospital OQR Program
quality measure selection. We did not
propose any changes to these policies in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39554).
2. Retention of Hospital OQR Program
Measures Adopted in Previous Payment
Determinations
We previously adopted a policy to
retain measures from a previous year’s
Hospital OQR Program measure set for
subsequent years’ measure sets in the
CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68471) whereby
quality measures adopted in a previous
year’s rulemaking are retained in the
Hospital OQR Program for use in
subsequent years unless otherwise
specified. For more information
regarding this policy, we refer readers to
that final rule with comment period. We
codified this policy at 42 CFR
419.46(h)(1) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59082). We did not propose any changes
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to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
3. Removal of Quality Measures From
the Hospital OQR Program Measure Set
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (74 FR 60635), we
finalized a process to use the regular
rulemaking process to remove a measure
for circumstances for which we do not
believe that continued use of a measure
raises specific patient safety concerns.82
We codified this policy at 42 CFR
419.46(h)(3) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59082). We did not propose any changes
to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
a. Considerations in Removing Quality
Measures From the Hospital OQR
Program
(1) Immediate Removal
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (74 FR 60634
through 60635), we finalized a process
for immediate retirement, which we
later termed ‘‘removal,’’ of Hospital
OQR Program measures, based on
evidence that the continued use of the
measure as specified raises patient
safety concerns.83 We codified this
policy at 42 CFR 419.46(h)(2) in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59082). We did
not propose any changes to these
policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
(2) Consideration Factors for Removing
Measures
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59083
through 59085), we clarified, finalized,
and codified at 42 CFR 419.46(h)(2) and
(3) an updated set of factors 84 and
policies for determining whether to
remove measures from the Hospital
OQR Program. We refer readers to that
final rule with comment period for a
detailed discussion of our policies
regarding measure removal. The factors
are:
• Factor 1. Measure performance
among hospitals is so high and
82 We initially referred to this process as
‘‘retirement’’ of a measure in the 2010 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, but later changed it to ‘‘removal’’
during final rulemaking.
83 We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR 68472
through 68473) for a discussion of our reasons for
changing the term ‘‘retirement’’ to ‘‘removal’’ in the
Hospital OQR Program.
84 We note that we previously referred to these
factors as ‘‘criteria’’ (for example, 77 FR 68472
through 68473); we now use the term ‘‘factors’’ in
order to align the Hospital OQR Program
terminology with the terminology we use in other
CMS quality reporting and pay-for-performance
(value-based purchasing) programs.
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unvarying that meaningful distinctions
and improvements in performance can
no longer be made (‘‘topped out’’
measures).
• Factor 2. Performance or
improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
• Factor 3. A measure does not align
with current clinical guidelines or
practice.
• Factor 4. The availability of a more
broadly applicable (across settings,
populations, or conditions) measure for
the topic.
• Factor 5. The availability of a
measure that is more proximal in time
to desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic.
• Factor 6. The availability of a
measure that is more strongly associated
with desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic.
• Factor 7. Collection or public
reporting of a measure leads to negative
unintended consequences other than
patient harm.
• Factor 8. The costs associated with
a measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program.
b. Removal of Quality Measure From the
Hospital OQR Program Measure Set:
OP–33: External Beam Radiotherapy
(NQF# 1822)
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39554 through 39556), we
proposed to remove one measure from
the Hospital OQR Program for the CY
2022 payment determination as
discussed below. Specifically, beginning
with the CY 2022 payment
determination, we proposed to remove
OP–33: External Beam Radiotherapy for
Bone Metastases under removal Factor
8, the costs associated with a measure
outweigh the benefit of its continued
use in the program.
We refer readers to the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70507 through 70510),
where we adopted OP–33: External
Beam Radiotherapy (NQF# 1822),
beginning with the CY 2018 payment
determination and for subsequent years.
This measure assesses the ‘‘percentage
of patients (all-payer) with painful bone
metastases and no history of previous
radiation who receive External Beam
Radiotherapy (EBRT) with an acceptable
dosing schedule.’’ 85 We adopted this
measure to address the performance gap
in EBRT treatment variation, ensure
appropriate use of EBRT, and prevent
the overuse of radiation therapy (80 FR
70508).
We believe that removing OP–33 from
the Hospital OQR Program is
85 80
FR 70508.
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appropriate at this time because the
costs associated with this measure
outweigh the benefit of its continued
use in the program (removal Factor 8).
The Hospital OQR Program
implemented the OP–33 measure using
‘‘radiation delivery’’ Current Procedural
Terminology (CPT) codes, which are
appropriate for hospital-level
measurement. We have identified issues
with reporting this measure, finding that
more questions are received about how
to report the OP–33 measure than about
any other measure in the program. In
addition, the measure steward has
received feedback on data collection of
the measure in the outpatient setting,
and has indicated new and significant
concerns regarding the ‘‘radiation
delivery’’ CPT coding used to report the
OP–33 measure in the Hospital OQR
Program including complicated measure
exclusions, sampling concerns, and
administrative burden.
‘‘Radiation delivery’’ CPT codes
require complicated measure
exclusions, and the use of ‘‘radiation
delivery’’ CPT codes causes the
administration of EBRT to different
anatomic sites to be considered separate
cases for this measure. The numerator
for this measure includes all patients,
regardless of age, with painful bone
metastases, and no previous radiation to
the same anatomic site who receive
EBRT with any of the following
recommended fractionation schemes:
30Gy/10fxns, 24Gy/6fxns, 20Gy/5fxns,
and 8Gy/1fxn. The denominator for this
measure includes all patients with
painful bone metastases and no
previous radiation to the same anatomic
site who receive EBRT.86 As noted
above, each anatomic site is considered
a different case, and as a result it is
necessary to determine when EBRT has
been administered to different anatomic
sites. This determination is not possible
without completing a detailed manual
review of the patient’s record, creating
burden and difficulty in determining
which sites and instances of EBRT
administration are considered cases and
should be included in the denominator
for the measure. These challenges in
determining which cases are included
in the denominator for the measure
result in difficulty in determining if
sample size requirements for the
measure are being met.
Further, current information systems
do not automatically calculate the total
dose provided, so manual review of
patient records by practice staff is also
86 National
Quality Forum. NQF #1822 External
Beam Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases. Available
at: https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/
linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=70374.
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61411
required in order to determine the total
dose and fractionation scheme, which in
turn is used to determine which cases
fall into the numerator for this measure.
This manual review of patient records is
a labor-intensive process that
contributes to burden and difficulty in
reporting this measure. As a result, we
believe that the complexity of reporting
this measure places substantial
administrative burden on facilities. This
also reflects observations made by the
measure steward that implementing the
measure in the outpatient setting has
proven overly burdensome, given that
facilities have noted confusion
regarding when the administration of
EBRT to different numbers and
locations of bone metastases are
considered separate cases. These issues
identifying cases have led to questions
about sampling and difficulty
determining if sample size requirements
are met. Additional burdens associated
with this measure have come to our
attention, including complicated
measure exclusions, sampling concerns,
and administrative burden. These
challenges cause difficulty in tracking
and reporting data for this measure and
additional administrative burden, as
evidenced by numerous questions about
how to report this measure received by
CMS and its contractors.
This EBRT measure was also adopted
into another CMS quality reporting
program, the PPS-Exempt Cancer
Hospital Quality Reporting (PCHQR)
Program (79 FR 50278 through 50279).
That program initially used ‘‘radiation
planning’’ CPT codes billable at the
physician level, but beginning in March
2016, the PCHQR program updated the
measure to enable the use of ‘‘radiation
delivery’’ CPT codes.87 In the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42513), we finalized the removal of the
measure from the PCHQR Program
because the burden associated with the
measure outweighs the value of its
inclusion in the PCHQR Program.
Specifically, the PCHQR Program
removed the measure because it is
overly burdensome and because the
measure steward is no longer
maintaining the measure. As such, the
PCHQR Program stated it can no longer
ensure that the measure is in line with
clinical guidelines and standards (84 FR
42513). We note that while the version
of the measure using ‘‘radiation
planning’’ CPT codes is less
burdensome, Hospital Outpatient
87 QualityNet. 2018 EBRT Measure Information
Form. Available at: https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/
ContentServer?cid=122877
4479863&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%
2FQnetTier4&c=Page.
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Departments (HOPDs) do not have
access to physician billing data, and so
it is not operationally feasible to use
‘‘radiation planning’’ CPT codes (as
opposed to the current ‘‘radiation
delivery’’ CPT codes) for the EBRT
measure in the Hospital OQR Program.
This measure was originally adopted
to address the performance gap in EBRT
treatment variation, ensure appropriate
use of EBRT, and prevent the overuse of
radiation therapy. While we still believe
that these goals are important, the
benefits of this measure have
diminished. Stakeholder feedback has
shown that this measure is burdensome
and difficult to report. Since the
measure steward is no longer
maintaining this measure,88 we no
longer believe that we can ensure that
the measure is in line with clinical
guidelines and standards. Thus,
considering these circumstances, we
believe the costs associated with this
measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program (removal
Factor 8).
Therefore, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39554 through
39556), we proposed to remove the
measure beginning with October 2020
encounters used in the CY 2022
payment determination and for
subsequent years. We wish to clarify
here in this final rule that the measure
would be removed beginning with CY
2020 encounters (January 2020) used in
the CY 2022 payment determination and
for subsequent years rather than
beginning in October 2020 as incorrectly
noted in the proposed rule. We refer
readers to our response to comments
below. We considered removing this
measure beginning with the CY 2021
payment determination, but we decided
to propose to delay removal until the CY
2022 payment determination to be
sensitive to facilities’ planning and
operational procedures given that data
collection for this measure began during
CY 2019 for the CY 2021 payment
determination. We believe that this
proposed removal date balances
reporting burden while recognizing that
HOPDs must use resources to modify
information systems and reporting
processes to discontinue reporting the
measure.
In summary, we proposed to remove
OP–33: External Beam Radiotherapy for
Bone Metastases (NQF #1822) from the
Hospital OQR Program beginning with
the CY 2022 payment determination and
88 See language about measure steward no longer
maintaining this measure in the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule at 84 FR 19502 through
19503.
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for subsequent years under removal
Factor 8.
We provided a summary of the
comments received and our responses to
those comments.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposal to remove EBRT
for Bone Metastases (OP–33) from the
Hospital OQR Program beginning in CY
2022. Several commenters stated that
they support the removal of OP–33 from
the Hospital OQR Program for the
reasons CMS outlined in the proposed
rule. Specifically, several commenters
stated that they support the removal of
OP–33 from the Hospital OQR Program
because the measure is burdensome and
because it is no longer being maintained
by the measure steward so it may no
longer be aligned with clinical
guidelines. A few commenters stated
that they support the removal of OP–33
to align with the removal of the measure
from PCHQR and because the measure
is no longer endorsed by the National
Quality Forum (NQF).
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support to remove EBRT for
Bone Metastases (OP–33) from the
Hospital OQR Program due to burden
and alignment issues. While NQF
endorsement is not a requirement for
measure inclusion in the Hospital OQR
Program, it can be considered when
assessing a measure (section
1833(t)(17)(C)(i) of the Act).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS clarify the last
reporting date for EBRT for Bone
Metastases (OP–33) if it is removed and
recommended that removal should
begin with January 1, 2020 encounters
rather than October 2020 encounters. A
few commenters requested that the
removal of OP–33 begin with the
Calendar Year 2021 payment
determination rather than the Calendar
Year 2022 payment determination due
to the significant burden of the reporting
requirements. One commenter
recommended CMS to remove OP–33 as
soon as possible.
Response: Regarding the timeframe
for measure removal, in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554
through 39556), we proposed to remove
OP–33: External Beam Radiotherapy for
Bone Metastases (NQF #1822) from the
Hospital OQR Program beginning with
the CY 2022 payment determination and
for subsequent years under removal
Factor 8. We chose this timeframe to be
sensitive to facilities’ planning and
operational procedures given that data
collection for this measure began during
CY 2019 for the CY 2021 payment
determination. We realize that in our
proposal on pages 84 FR 39554 through
39556, we inadvertently stated that we
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wished to remove the measure
beginning with October 2020 encounters
used in the CY 2022 payment
determination and for subsequent years.
We refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70521 through 70522) where we
finalized that beginning with the CY
2017 payment determination, hospitals
must report data submitted via a Webbased tool between January 1 and May
15 of the year prior to the payment
determination with respect to the
encounter period of January 1 to
December 31 of 2 years prior to the
payment determination year. For the CY
2022 payment determination, the data
submission window for this measure
would then be January 1, 2021 to May
15, 2021 for the January 1, 2020 through
December 31, 2020 encounter period.
Thus, as OP–33 is a Web-based measure,
its removal from the Hospital OQR
Program beginning with the CY 2022
payment determination would also
begin with January 1, 2020 encounters
rather than October 2020 encounters.
So, we are finalizing a modification of
what was proposed to correct that we
are removing the measure beginning
with January 2020 encounters used for
the CY 2022 payment determination and
for subsequent years. For the OP–33
measure, the final data submission of
data collected for CY 2019 encounters
will be required by May 15, 2020 for use
toward CY 2021 payment
determinations; hospitals would not be
required to collect data for OP–33 as of
January 1, 2020 encounters.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern about the proposal to
remove EBRT for Bone Metastases (OP–
33) from the Hospital OQR Program.
One commenter stated that the OP–33
measure gives valuable information for
monitoring hospital performance
improvement. One commenter stated
that the OP–33 measure is valuable
because it gauges overuse of health
services in a setting where overuse
exposes people unnecessarily to
radiation, putting patients at risk of
harm. This commenter stated that
though one of the reasons provided for
the removal of OP–33 is that it is
difficult and burdensome for healthcare
providers to report; the commenter
recommends that CMS adopt a
measurement framework that prioritizes
consumer needs over industry
preference. The commenter also stated
that because the measure steward is no
longer maintaining the measure, CMS
should either continue to maintain the
measure or identify an entity to act as
the measure steward to allow the
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burdensome for which to collect data.
Our Meaningful Measures Initiative
provides a measurement framework that
prioritizes patient and consumer needs
while limiting provider burden.
Consistent with this framework, we note
that the Hospital OQR Program
continues to have quality measures that
assess appropriate use of radiation (OP–
8: MRI Lumbar Spine for Low Back
Pain, OP–10: Abdomen CT—Use of
Contrast Material, OP–13: Cardiac
Imaging for Preoperative Risk
Assessment for Non-Cardiac, Low-Risk
Surgery, and OP–23: Head CT or MRI
Scan Results for Acute Ischemic Stroke
or Hemorrhagic Stroke who Received
Head CT or MRI Scan Interpretation
Within 45 minutes of ED Arrival).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing a
modification of what was proposed for
the removal of OP–33 from the Hospital
OQR Program. Instead of removing the
measure beginning with October 2020
encounters as inadvertently stated, we
are finalizing removal beginning with
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January 2020 encounters used in the CY
2022 payment determination and for
subsequent years.
4. Summary of Hospital OQR Program
Measure Sets for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination
We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59099 through 59102) for
a summary of the previously finalized
Hospital OQR Program measure sets for
the CY 2020 and CY 2021 payment
determinations and subsequent years.
We did not propose to add any
measures; however, we did propose and
are finalizing the removal of one
measure for the CY 2022 payment
determination and subsequent years for
the Hospital OQR Program. Table 61
summarizes the finalized Hospital OQR
Program measure set for the CY 2022
payment determination and subsequent
years (including previously adopted
measures and excluding one measure
finalized for removal in this final rule).
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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ER12NO19.102
measure to remain in the Hospital OQR
Program.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these suggestions regarding EBRT for
Bone Metastases (OP–33). We agree that
ensuring appropriate use of EBRT and
preventing the overuse of radiation
therapy which were goals of the OP–33
measure are important for safeguarding
patients and consumers. We proposed to
remove OP–33 under removal Factor 8,
the costs associated with a measure
outweigh the benefit of its continued
use in the program as stakeholder
feedback has shown that this measure is
burdensome and difficult to report.
Regarding measure maintenance, as
stated, the measure steward is no longer
maintaining this measure and there are
issues with the measure as specified.
We do not seek to become the steward
for this measure as we do not believe
that we can maintain this measure in
the Hospital OQR Program in a way that
ensures that the measure is in line with
clinical guidelines and standards and
has specifications that are not overly
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5. Hospital OQR Program Measures and
Topics for Future Consideration
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39557), we requested
comment on the potential future
adoption of four patient safety measures
as well as future outcome measures
generally.
a. Request for Comment on the Potential
Future Adoption of Four Patient Safety
Measures
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39557) we sought comment
on the potential future adoption of four
patient safety measures for the Hospital
OQR Program that were previously
adopted for the ASCQR Program: ASC–
1: Patient Burn; ASC–2: Patient Fall;
ASC–3: Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant; and ASC–4:
All-Cause Hospital Transfer/
Admission.89 We refer readers to the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74497 through
74499), where we adopted these
measures (referred to as NQF #0263,
NQF #0266, NQF #0267, and NQF
#0265 at the time) in the ASCQR
Program. We note that data collection
for these measures was suspended in
89 ASCQR Specifications Manual, discussing
these measures, available at: https://qualitynet.org/
dcs/ContentServer?c=Page
&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage
%2FQnetTier2&cid=1228772475754.
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the ASCQR Program due to concerns
with their data submission method
using quality data codes (QDCs) in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59117 through
59123; 59134 through 59135); however,
we refer readers to section XV.B.5. of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39567), in which the ASCQR
Program requested public comment on
updating the submission method for
these measures in the future. We
requested public comment on
potentially adding these measures with
the updated submission method using a
CMS online data submission tool, to the
Hospital OQR Program in future
rulemaking. These measures are
currently specified for the ASC setting.
If specified for the hospital outpatient
setting, we would seek collaboration
with the measure steward.
We believe these measures could be
valuable to the Hospital OQR Program
because they would allow us to monitor
these types of events and prevent their
occurrence to ensure that they remain
rare, and because they provide critical
data to beneficiaries and further
transparency for care provided in the
outpatient setting that could be useful in
choosing a HOPD. In addition, these
measures address an important
Meaningful Measure Initiative quality
priority, Making Care Safer by Reducing
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Harm Caused in the Delivery of Care.90
There has been broad stakeholder
support for these measures in the ASC
setting; stakeholders believe these
measures provide important data for
facilities and patients because they are
serious and the occurrence of these
events should be zero (83 FR 59118). A
few commenters noted in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period that it would be beneficial to also
include these ASCQR Program measures
in the Hospital OQR Program in order
to provide patients with more
meaningful data to compare sites of
service (83 FR 59119). The future
addition of these measures would
further align the Hospital OQR and
ASCQR Programs, which would benefit
patients because these are two
outpatient settings that patients may be
interested in comparing, especially if
they are able to choose in which of these
two settings they receive care.
Although NQF endorsement for these
ASC measures was removed (in
February 2016 for the All-Cause
Hospital Transfer/Admission
measure; 91 in May 2016 for the Patient
90 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Meaningful Measures Hub. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/
MMF/General-info-Sub-Page.html.
91 National Quality Forum. 0265 All-Cause
Hospital Transfer/Admission. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0265.
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Burn 92 and the Wrong Site, Wrong Side,
Wrong Patient, Wrong Procedure,
Wrong Implant 93 measures; and in June
2018 for the Patient Fall measure 94), as
one commenter pointed out in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the NQF endorsement
of the ASC measures was removed as
endorsement was allowed to lapse by
the measure steward, not because they
failed the endorsement maintenance
process (83 FR 59119). If specified for
the HOPD setting, we plan to coordinate
with the measure steward to seek NQF
endorsement for those measures. These
measures are discussed in more detail
below.
(1) Patient Burn
The ASCQR Patient Burn measure
assesses the percentage of admissions
experiencing a burn prior to discharge.
The numerator for this measure is
defined as ASC admissions
experiencing a burn prior to discharge
and the denominator is defined as all
ASC admissions.95 We believe this
measure, if specified for the hospital
outpatient setting, would allow HOPDs,
Medicare beneficiaries, and other
stakeholders to develop a better
understanding of the incidence of these
events. In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (76 FR 74497
through 74498), we adopted this
measure for the ASCQR Program
because ASCs serve surgical patients
who may face the risk of burns during
ambulatory surgical procedures and we
believe monitoring patient burns is
valuable to patients and other
stakeholders. HOPDs also serve surgical
patients who may face the risk of burns
during outpatient procedures, so we
believe this measure would be valuable
for the HOPD setting. Further, we have
reviewed studies demonstrating the
high impact of monitoring patient burns
because patient burns are serious
reportable events in healthcare 96 and
92 National Quality Forum. 0263 Patient Burn.
Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/
0263.
93 National Quality Forum. 0267 Wrong Site,
Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong Procedure,
Wrong Implant. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0267.
94 National Quality Forum. 0266 Patient Fall.
Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/
0266.
95 ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures
developed and tested by the ASC Quality
Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/
documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
96 National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable
Events in Healthcare 2006 Update. Washington, DC:
NQF, 2007. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/
Serious_Reportable_Events_in_Healthcare%
E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
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because patient burns are
preventable.97 98
(2) Patient Fall
The ASCQR Program Patient Fall
measure assesses the percentage of
admissions experiencing a fall. The
numerator for this measure is defined as
ASC admissions experiencing a fall
within the confines of the ASC and
excludes ASC admissions experiencing
a fall outside the ASC. The denominator
is defined as all ASC admissions and
excludes ASC admissions experiencing
a fall outside the ASC.99 We believe this
measure, if specified for the hospital
outpatient setting, would enable HOPDs
to take steps to reduce the risk of falls.
In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (76 FR 74498), we
adopted this measure for the ASCQR
Program because falls, particularly in
the elderly, can cause injury and loss of
functional status; because the use of
anxiolytics, sedatives, and anesthetic
agents may put patients undergoing
outpatient surgery at increased risk for
falls; and because falls in healthcare
settings can be prevented through the
assessment of risk, care planning, and
patient monitoring. These same risks for
patient falls are a concern in the HOPD
setting. Further, we have reviewed
studies demonstrating the high impact
of monitoring patient burns because
patient falls are serious reportable
events in healthcare 100 and because
patient falls are preventable.101
(3) Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong
Patient, Wrong Procedure, Wrong
Implant
The ASCQR Program Wrong Site,
Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant measure
assesses the percentage of admissions
experiencing a wrong site, wrong side,
wrong patient, wrong procedure, or
wrong implant. The numerator for this
measure is defined as ASC admissions
experiencing a wrong site, a wrong side,
97 ECRI Institute. New clinical guide to surgical
fire prevention. Health Devices 2009
Oct;38(10):314–32.
98 170. National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA). NFPA 99: Standard for health care
facilities. Quincy (MA): NFPA; 2005.
99 ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures
developed and tested by the ASC Quality
Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/
documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
100 National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable
Events in Healthcare—2006 Update: A Consensus
Report. March 2007. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/
Serious_Reportable_Events_in_
Healthcare%E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
101 Boushon B, Nielsen G, Quigley P, Rutherford
P, Taylor J, Shannon D. Transforming Care at the
Bedside How-to Guide: Reducing Patient Injuries
from Falls. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare
Improvement; 2008.
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61415
a wrong patient, a wrong procedure, or
a wrong implant, and the denominator
is defined as all ASC admissions.102 We
believe this measure, if specified for the
hospital outpatient setting, would
provide important HOPD information
about surgeries and procedures
performed on the wrong site/side, and
wrong patient. In the CY 2012 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (76
FR 74498 through 74499), we adopted
this measure for the ASCQR Program
because surgeries and procedures
performed on the wrong site/side, and
wrong patient can result in significant
impact on patients, including
complications, serious disability or
death. We also stated that while the
prevalence of such serious errors may be
rare, such events are considered serious
reportable events. These same
significant impacts on patients apply for
the HOPD setting. Further, we have
reviewed studies demonstrating the
high impact of monitoring wrong site,
wrong side, wrong patient, wrong
procedure, wrong implant procedures
and surgeries because these types of
errors are serious reportable events in
healthcare 103 and because these errors
are preventable.104
(4) All-Cause Hospital Transfer/
Admission
The All-Cause Hospital Transfer/
Admission measure assesses the rate of
admissions requiring a hospital transfer
or hospital admission upon discharge.
The numerator for this measure is
defined as ASC admissions requiring a
hospital transfer or hospital admission
upon discharge from the ASC and the
denominator is defined as all ASC
admissions.105 We believe this measure,
if specified for the hospital outpatient
setting, would be valuable for HOPDs.
In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (76 FR 74499), we
adopted this measure for ASCs because
the transfer or admission of a surgical
patient from an outpatient setting to an
acute care setting can be an indication
of a complication, serious medical error,
102 ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures
developed and tested by the ASC Quality
Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/
documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
103 National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable
Events in Healthcare—2006 Update: A Consensus
Report. March 2007. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/
Serious_Reportable_Events_in_Healthcare
%E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
104 American College of Obstetricians and
Gynecologists. ACOG committee opinion #464:
patient safety in the surgical environment. Obstet
Gynecol. 2010;116(3):786–790.
105 ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures
developed and tested by the ASC Quality
Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/
documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
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or other unplanned negative patient
outcome. We also stated that while
acute intervention may be necessary in
these circumstances, a high rate of such
incidents may indicate suboptimal
practices or patient selection criteria.
These same potential negative patient
outcomes apply to the HOPD setting.
Further, we have reviewed studies
demonstrating the high impact of
monitoring patient transfers and
admissions because facilities can take
steps to prevent and reduce these types
of events.106 107
We have provided a summary of the
comments received and our responses to
those comments.
Comment: Many commenters were
supportive of the potential future
specification of ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3,
and ASC–4 for the hospital outpatient
setting and the potential future addition
of these measures to the Hospital OQR
Program. Several commenters stated
that these four measures should be
adopted in the Hospital OQR Program in
order to align with the ASCQR Program
and to provide meaningful data for
patients to compare performance in
ASCs and HOPDs. A few commenters
stated that these four patient safety
measures should be adopted in the
Hospital OQR Program because they
focus on areas of critical importance. A
few commenters supported the plan for
CMS to work with the measure
developer to improve the data
submission methods and to ensure the
measures are appropriately specified for
the hospital outpatient setting. A few
commenters recommended expedited
development and implementation of
these measures in the hospital
outpatient setting.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support for the potential future
specification of ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3,
and ASC–4 for the hospital outpatient
setting and the potential future addition
of these measures to the Hospital OQR
Program.
Comment: Many commenters
provided recommendations regarding
potentially specifying ASC–1, ASC–2,
ASC–3, and ASC–4 for the hospital
outpatient setting and potentially
adding these measures to the Hospital
OQR Program in the future. Several
commenters stated that decisions made
106 Coley KC, Williams BA, DaPos SV, Chen C,
Smith RB. Retrospective evaluation of
unanticipated admissions and readmissions after
same day surgery and associated costs. J Clin
Anesth. 2002 Aug; 14(5):349–53.
107 Junger A, Klasen J, Benson M, Sciuk G,
Hartmann B, Sticher J, Hempelmann G. Factors
determining length of stay of surgical day-case
patients. Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2001 May;18(5):314–
21.
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by the NQF about these measures
should be considered and prioritized by
CMS. Several commenters suggested
that these measures should be specified
for the HOPD setting, field tested,
reliability tested, and reviewed by the
Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP) before inclusion in the Hospital
OQR Program. Several commenters
suggested that, with respect to ASC–4,
CMS should consider overlap with OP–
36 Hospital Visits after Hospital
Outpatient Surgery and should assess
the need for clinical risk adjustment in
the HOPD setting. A few commenters
provided recommendations about
potential data submission methods for
these measures in the Hospital OQR
Program, with some specifically
supporting the use of an online data
submission tool such as QualityNet.
However, several commenters did not
support using the QualityNet online tool
(or a similar online tool) for submission,
and one commenter suggested that if a
manual abstraction process is required,
hospitals should be provided ample
time to test and implement the
measures. One commenter
recommended that CMS work with
HOPDs and ASCs to identify current
forums where these safety issues are
documented, discussed, and remedied.
One commenter recommended that
these measures should apply to all adult
patients, not just Medicare fee-forservice patients.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations regarding
potentially specifying ASC–1, ASC–2,
ASC–3, and ASC–4 for the hospital
outpatient setting, interface with
existing ASCQR Program measures, data
submission methods, risk adjustment
issues, and potentially adding these
measures to the Hospital OQR Program
in the future. We note that as currently
specified, these measures apply to all
patients and they are not limited to feefor-service Medicare patients.108
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concern to the potential
future specification of ASC–1, ASC–2,
ASC–3, and ASC–4 for the hospital
outpatient setting and the potential
future addition of these measures to the
Hospital OQR Program. Several
expressed concern that the measures are
not endorsed by the National Quality
Forum. A few commenters stated that
they believe because these measures
were designed specifically for ASCs,
they would not be appropriate for use in
the hospital outpatient setting. Several
commenters expressed concern about
108 ASCQR Specifications Manuals are available
at https://www.qualitynet.org/asc/specificationsmanuals.
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adding these measures to the Hospital
OQR Program because the events of
interest are already rare, and a few
pointed out that hospitals are already
required to implement policies and
processes to mitigate the risk of these
events and several states have
mandatory reporting of these types of
events. A few commenters stated
concerns about the burden that would
be created if these measures are added
to the Hospital OQR Program. One
commenter stated that because these
events are rare in the outpatient setting,
the data is at risk of becoming
identifiable if disclosed and publicly
reported. One commenter stated that
adding these measures to the Hospital
OQR Program would not contribute to
the CMS Meaningful Measurement goal.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations and raising
these important concerns regarding the
use of the ASC–1 through ASC–4
measures for the Hospital OQR Program.
We will take these suggestions into
consideration as we consider adding
these measures to the Hospital OQR
Program in the future.
b. Future Outcome Measures
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39558), we also requested
public comment on future measure
topics for the Hospital OQR Program.
Specifically, we requested public
comment on any outcome measures that
would be useful to add as well as
feedback on any process measures that
should be eliminated from the Hospital
OQR Program to further our goal of
developing a comprehensive set of
quality measures for informed decisionmaking and quality improvement in
HOPDs. We are moving towards greater
use of outcome measures and away from
use of clinical process measures across
our Medicare quality reporting programs
to better assess the results of care. The
current measure set for the Hospital
OQR Program includes measures that
assess process of care, imaging
efficiency patterns, care transitions,
(Emergency Department) ED throughput
efficiency, Health Information
Technology (health IT) use, care
coordination, and patient safety.
Measures are of various types, including
those of process, structure, outcome,
and efficiency. Through future
rulemaking, we intend to propose new
measures that support our goal of
achieving better health care and
improved health for Medicare
beneficiaries who receive health care in
the HOPD setting, while aligning quality
measures across the Medicare program
to the extent possible.
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6. Maintenance of Technical
Specifications for Quality Measures
CMS maintains technical
specifications for previously adopted
Hospital OQR Program measures. These
specifications are updated as we modify
the Hospital OQR Program measure set.
The manuals that contain specifications
for the previously adopted measures can
be found on the QualityNet website at:
https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/
ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=
QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid
=1196289981244. We refer readers to
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we finalized a
policy to align the initial data
submission timeline for all hospitals
that did not participate in the previous
year’s Hospital OQR Program and made
conforming revisions at 42 CFR
419.46(c)(3). We did not propose any
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comment period (83 FR 59104 through
59105), where we changed the
frequency of the Hospital OQR Program
Specifications Manual release beginning
with CY 2019 and for subsequent years,
such that we will release a manual once
every 12 months and release addenda as
necessary. We did not propose any
changes to these policies in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39558).
7. Public Display of Quality Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2014 and
CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rules with
comment period (78 FR 75092 and 81
FR 79791 respectively) for our
previously finalized policies regarding
public display of quality measures. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39558), we did not propose any
changes to our previously finalized
public display policies.
C. Administrative Requirements
1. QualityNet Account and Security
Administrator
The previously finalized QualityNet
security administrator requirements,
including setting up a QualityNet
account and the associated timelines,
are described in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR
75108 through 75109). We codified
these procedural requirements at 42
CFR 419.46(a) in that final rule with
comment period. We did not propose
any changes to our requirements for the
QualityNet account and security
administrator in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
changes to these policies in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
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2. Requirements Regarding Participation
Status
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75108 through 75109), the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70519) and the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59103 through
59104) for requirements for
participation and withdrawal from the
Hospital OQR Program. We codified
these procedural requirements regarding
participation status at 42 CFR 419.46(a)
and (b). We did not propose any
changes to our participation status
policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submitted for the Hospital OQR
Program
1. Hospital OQR Program Annual
Payment Determinations
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75110
through 75111) and the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70519 through 70520), we specified
our data submission deadlines. We
codified these submission requirements
at 42 CFR 419.46(c).
We refer readers to the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70519 through 70520),
where we finalized our proposal to shift
the quarters upon which the Hospital
OQR Program payment determinations
are based beginning with the CY 2018
payment determination. The deadlines
for the CY 2022 payment determination
and subsequent years are illustrated in
Table 62.
2. Requirements for Chart-Abstracted
Measures Where Patient-Level Data Are
Submitted Directly to CMS for the CY
2022 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68481 through 68484) for
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ER12NO19.104
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add more
measures to the Hospital OQR Program
that would align with the ASCQR
Program. One commenter suggested that
CMS incorporate patient experience,
safety and reliability, clinical quality,
and provider engagement measures in
the Hospital OQR Program. One
commenter recommended that CMS
include the Adult Immunization Status
measure in the Hospital OQR Program.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these recommendations for
additional measures for the Hospital
OQR Program. We agree that alignment
with the ASCQR Program is an
important consideration; to that end, as
discussed in section XIV.B.a of this final
rule with comment period, we requested
comment on the use of the ASCQR
Program’s ASC–1 through ASC–4
measures for the Hospital OQR Program.
We thank the commenters for their
responses and will take these
suggestions into consideration as we
develop future Hospital OQR Program
measures and topics.
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a discussion of the form, manner, and
timing for data submission requirements
of chart-abstracted measures for the CY
2014 payment determination and
subsequent years. We did not propose
any changes to these policies in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39559).
The following previously finalized
Hospital OQR Program chart-abstracted
measures will require patient-level data
to be submitted for the CY 2022
payment determination and subsequent
years:
• OP–2: Fibrinolytic Therapy
Received Within 30 Minutes of ED
Arrival (NQF #0288);
• OP–3: Median Time to Transfer to
Another Facility for Acute Coronary
Intervention (NQF #0290);
• OP–18: Median Time from ED
Arrival to ED Departure for Discharged
ED Patients (NQF #0496); and
• OP–23: Head CT Scan Results for
Acute Ischemic Stroke or Hemorrhagic
Stroke Patients who Received Head CT
Scan Interpretation Within 45 Minutes
of ED Arrival (NQF #0661).
3. Claims-Based Measure Data
Requirements for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
Currently, the following previously
finalized Hospital OQR Program claimsbased measures are required for the CY
2022 payment determination and
subsequent years:
• OP–8: MRI Lumbar Spine for Low
Back Pain (NQF #0514);
• OP–10: Abdomen CT—Use of
Contrast Material;
• OP–13: Cardiac Imaging for
Preoperative Risk Assessment for NonCardiac, Low Risk Surgery (NQF #0669);
• OP–32: Facility 7-Day RiskStandardized Hospital Visit Rate after
Outpatient Colonoscopy (NQF #2539);
• OP–35: Admissions and Emergency
Department Visits for Patients Receiving
Outpatient Chemotherapy; and
• OP–36: Hospital Visits after
Hospital Outpatient Surgery (NQF
#2687).
We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59106 through 59107),
where we established a 3-year reporting
period for OP–32: Facility 7-Day RiskStandardized Hospital Visit Rate after
Outpatient Colonoscopy beginning with
the CY 2020 payment determination and
for subsequent years. In that final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59136
through 59138), we established a similar
policy under the ASCQR Program. We
did not propose any changes to these
policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
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4. Data Submission Requirements for
the OP–37a–e: Outpatient and
Ambulatory Surgery Consumer
Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (OAS CAHPS) Survey-Based
Measures for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79792 through 79794) for
a discussion of the previously finalized
requirements related to survey
administration and vendors for the OAS
CAHPS Survey-based measures. In
addition, we refer readers to the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59432 through
59433), where we finalized a policy to
delay implementation of the OP–37a–e
OAS CAHPS Survey-based measures
beginning with the CY 2020 payment
determination (2018 reporting period)
until further action in future
rulemaking. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39560), we did not
propose any changes to the previously
finalized requirements related to survey
administration and vendors for the OAS
CAHPS Survey-based measures.
5. Data Submission Requirements for
Measures for Data Submitted Via a WebBased Tool for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75112 through 75115) and
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70521) and the
CMS QualityNet website (https://
www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?
c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic
%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=
1205442125082) for a discussion of the
requirements for measure data
submitted via the CMS QualityNet
website for the CY 2017 payment
determination and subsequent years. In
addition, we refer readers to the CY
2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75097 through
75100) for a discussion of the
requirements for measure data
submitted via the CDC NHSN website.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39560), we did not propose
any changes to our policies regarding
the submission of measure data
submitted via a web-based tool.
However, as discussed in section
XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule, we are
finalizing our proposal with
modification to remove OP–33: EBRT
for Bone Metastases beginning with the
CY 2022 payment determination and for
subsequent years; so the following
previously finalized quality measures
will require data to be submitted via a
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web-based tool for the CY 2022 payment
determination and subsequent years
with the exception of OP–31: Cataracts:
Improvement in Patient’s Visual
Function within 90 Days Following
Cataract Surgery (NQF #1536): for
which data submission remains
voluntary:
• OP–22: Left Without Being Seen
(NQF #0499) (via CMS’ QualityNet
website);
• OP–29: Endoscopy/Polyp
Surveillance: Appropriate Follow-up
Interval for Normal Colonoscopy in
Average Risk Patients (NQF #0658) (via
CMS’ QualityNet website); and
• OP–31: Cataracts: Improvement in
Patient’s Visual Function within 90
Days Following Cataract Surgery (NQF
#1536) (via CMS’ QualityNet website).
6. Population and Sampling Data
Requirements for the CY 2021 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2011
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (75 FR 72100 through 72103) and
the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74482 through
74483) for discussions of our population
and sampling requirements. We did not
propose any changes to our population
and sampling requirements for chartabstracted measures in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560).
7. Hospital OQR Program Validation
Requirements
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68484 through 68487), the
CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66964 through
66965), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR
70524), and the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59441 through 59443), and 42 CFR
419.46(e) for our policies regarding
validation. We did not propose any
changes to these policies in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560).
8. Extraordinary Circumstances
Exception (ECE) Process for the CY 2021
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68489), the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75119 through 75120), the
CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66966), the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70524), the CY
2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79795), the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
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comment period (82 FR 59444), and 42
CFR 419.46(d) for a complete discussion
of our extraordinary circumstances
exception (ECE) process under the
Hospital OQR Program. We did not
propose any changes to our ECE policy
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39560).
9. Hospital OQR Program
Reconsideration and Appeals
Procedures for the CY 2021 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68487 through 68489), the
CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75118 through
75119), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR
70524), the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR
79795), and 42 CFR 419.46(f) for our
reconsideration and appeals procedures.
We did not propose any changes to our
reconsideration and appeals procedures
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39560).
E. Payment Reduction for Hospitals
That Fail To Meet the Hospital OQR
Program Requirements for the CY 2020
Payment Determination
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(17) of the Act, which
applies to subsection (d) hospitals (as
defined under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of
the Act), states that hospitals that fail to
report data required to be submitted on
measures selected by the Secretary, in
the form and manner, and at a time,
specified by the Secretary will incur a
2.0 percentage point reduction to their
Outpatient Department (OPD) fee
schedule increase factor; that is, the
annual payment update factor. Section
1833(t)(17)(A)(ii) of the Act specifies
that any reduction applies only to the
payment year involved and will not be
taken into account in computing the
applicable OPD fee schedule increase
factor for a subsequent year.
The application of a reduced OPD fee
schedule increase factor results in
reduced national unadjusted payment
rates that apply to certain outpatient
items and services provided by
hospitals that are required to report
outpatient quality data in order to
receive the full payment update factor
and that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program requirements. Hospitals that
meet the reporting requirements receive
the full OPPS payment update without
the reduction. For a more detailed
discussion of how this payment
reduction was initially implemented,
we refer readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/
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ASC final rule with comment period (73
FR 68769 through 68772).
The national unadjusted payment
rates for many services paid under the
OPPS equal the product of the OPPS
conversion factor and the scaled relative
payment weight for the APC to which
the service is assigned. The OPPS
conversion factor, which is updated
annually by the OPD fee schedule
increase factor, is used to calculate the
OPPS payment rate for services with the
following status indicators (listed in
Addendum B to the proposed rule,
which is available via the internet on
the CMS website): ‘‘J1’’, ‘‘J2’’, ‘‘P’’,
‘‘Q1’’, ‘‘Q2’’, ‘‘Q3’’, ‘‘R’’, ‘‘S’’, ‘‘T’’, ‘‘V’’,
or ‘‘U’’. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR
79796), we clarified that the reporting
ratio does not apply to codes with status
indicator ‘‘Q4’’ because services and
procedures coded with status indicator
‘‘Q4’’ are either packaged or paid
through the Clinical Laboratory Fee
Schedule and are never paid separately
through the OPPS. Payment for all
services assigned to these status
indicators will be subject to the
reduction of the national unadjusted
payment rates for hospitals that fail to
meet Hospital OQR Program
requirements, with the exception of
services assigned to New Technology
APCs with assigned status indicator ‘‘S’’
or ‘‘‘T’’. We refer readers to the CY 2009
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (73 FR 68770 through 68771) for
a discussion of this policy.
The OPD fee schedule increase factor
is an input into the OPPS conversion
factor, which is used to calculate OPPS
payment rates. To reduce the OPD fee
schedule increase factor for hospitals
that fail to meet reporting requirements,
we calculate two conversion factors—a
full market basket conversion factor
(that is, the full conversion factor), and
a reduced market basket conversion
factor (that is, the reduced conversion
factor). We then calculate a reduction
ratio by dividing the reduced
conversion factor by the full conversion
factor. We refer to this reduction ratio as
the ‘‘reporting ratio’’ to indicate that it
applies to payment for hospitals that fail
to meet their reporting requirements.
Applying this reporting ratio to the
OPPS payment amounts results in
reduced national unadjusted payment
rates that are mathematically equivalent
to the reduced national unadjusted
payment rates that would result if we
multiplied the scaled OPPS relative
payment weights by the reduced
conversion factor. For example, to
determine the reduced national
unadjusted payment rates that applied
to hospitals that failed to meet their
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61419
quality reporting requirements for the
CY 2010 OPPS, we multiplied the final
full national unadjusted payment rate
found in Addendum B of the CY 2010
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period by the CY 2010 OPPS final
reporting ratio of 0.980 (74 FR 60642).
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (73 FR 68771
through 68772), we established a policy
that the Medicare beneficiary’s
minimum unadjusted copayment and
national unadjusted copayment for a
service to which a reduced national
unadjusted payment rate applies would
each equal the product of the reporting
ratio and the national unadjusted
copayment or the minimum unadjusted
copayment, as applicable, for the
service. Under this policy, we apply the
reporting ratio to both the minimum
unadjusted copayment and national
unadjusted copayment for services
provided by hospitals that receive the
payment reduction for failure to meet
the Hospital OQR Program reporting
requirements. This application of the
reporting ratio to the national
unadjusted and minimum unadjusted
copayments is calculated according to
§ 419.41 of our regulations, prior to any
adjustment for a hospital’s failure to
meet the quality reporting standards
according to § 419.43(h). Beneficiaries
and secondary payers thereby share in
the reduction of payments to these
hospitals.
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (73 FR 68772), we
established the policy that all other
applicable adjustments to the OPPS
national unadjusted payment rates
apply when the OPD fee schedule
increase factor is reduced for hospitals
that fail to meet the requirements of the
Hospital OQR Program. For example,
the following standard adjustments
apply to the reduced national
unadjusted payment rates: The wage
index adjustment; the multiple
procedure adjustment; the interrupted
procedure adjustment; the rural sole
community hospital adjustment; and the
adjustment for devices furnished with
full or partial credit or without cost.
Similarly, OPPS outlier payments made
for high cost and complex procedures
will continue to be made when outlier
criteria are met. For hospitals that fail to
meet the quality data reporting
requirements, the hospitals’ costs are
compared to the reduced payments for
purposes of outlier eligibility and
payment calculation. We established
this policy in the OPPS beginning in the
CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (74 FR 60642). For a
complete discussion of the OPPS outlier
calculation and eligibility criteria, we
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refer readers to section II.G. of the
proposed rule.
2. Reporting Ratio Application and
Associated Adjustment Policy for CY
2020
We proposed to continue our
established policy of applying the
reduction of the OPD fee schedule
increase factor through the use of a
reporting ratio for those hospitals that
fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program
requirements for the full CY 2020
annual payment update factor. For the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39560), the proposed reporting ratio
was 0.980, which when multiplied by
the proposed full conversion factor of
$81.398 equaled a proposed conversion
factor for hospitals that fail to meet the
requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program (that is, the reduced conversion
factor) of $79.770. We proposed to
continue to apply the reporting ratio to
all services calculated using the OPPS
conversion factor. For the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560),
we proposed to apply the reporting
ratio, when applicable, to all HCPCS
codes to which we have proposed status
indicator assignments of ‘‘J1’’, ‘‘J2’’, ‘‘P’’,
‘‘Q1’’, ‘‘Q2’’, ‘‘Q3’’, ‘‘R’’, ‘‘S’’, ‘‘T’’, ‘‘V’’,
and ‘‘U’’ (other than new technology
APCs to which we have proposed status
indicator assignment of ‘‘S’’ and ‘‘T’’).
We proposed to continue to exclude
services paid under New Technology
APCs. We proposed to continue to apply
the reporting ratio to the national
unadjusted payment rates and the
minimum unadjusted and national
unadjusted copayment rates of all
applicable services for those hospitals
that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program reporting requirements. We
also proposed to continue to apply all
other applicable standard adjustments
to the OPPS national unadjusted
payment rates for hospitals that fail to
meet the requirements of the Hospital
OQR Program. Similarly, we proposed
to continue to calculate OPPS outlier
eligibility and outlier payment based on
the reduced payment rates for those
hospitals that fail to meet the reporting
requirements.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule,
the final reporting ratio is 0.981, which
when multiplied by the final full
conversion factor of 80.784 equals a
final conversion factor for hospitals that
fail to meet the requirements of the
Hospital OQR Program (that is, the
reduced conversion factor) of 79.250.
We also are finalizing the remainder of
our proposals regarding the payment
reduction for hospitals that fail to meet
the Hospital OQR Program requirements
for CY 2019 payment.
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XV. Requirements for the Ambulatory
Surgical Center Quality Reporting
(ASCQR) Program
any changes to these policies in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39562).
A. Background
2. Policies for Retention and Removal of
Quality Measures From the ASCQR
Program
1. Overview
We refer readers to section XIV.A.1. of
this final rule with comment period for
a general overview of our quality
reporting programs and to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58820 through 58822)
where we discuss our Meaningful
Measures Initiative and our approach in
evaluating quality program measures.
2. Statutory History of the ASCQR
Program
We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74492 through 74494) for
a detailed discussion of the statutory
history of the ASCQR Program.
3. Regulatory History of the ASCQR
Program
We seek to promote higher quality
and more efficient health care for
beneficiaries. This effort is supported by
the adoption of widely accepted quality
of care measures. We have collaborated
with relevant stakeholders to define
such measures in most healthcare
settings and currently measure some
aspect of care for almost all settings of
care available to Medicare beneficiaries.
These measures assess structural aspects
of care, clinical processes, patient
experiences with care, and clinical
outcomes. We have implemented
quality measure reporting programs for
multiple healthcare settings. To measure
the quality of ASC services and to make
such information publicly available, we
implemented the ASCQR Program. We
refer readers to the CYs 2014 through
2019 OPPS/ASC final rules with
comment period (78 FR 75122; 79 FR
66966 through 66987; 80 FR 70526
through 70538; 81 FR 79797 through
79826; 82 FR 59445 through 59476; and
83 FR 59110 through 59139,
respectively) for an overview of the
regulatory history of the ASCQR
Program. We have codified certain
requirements under the ASCQR Program
at 42 CFR, part 16, subpart H (42 CFR
416.300 through 416.330).
B. ASCQR Program Quality Measures
1. Considerations in the Selection of
ASCQR Program Quality Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68493 through 68494) for
a detailed discussion of the priorities we
consider for ASCQR Program quality
measure selection. We did not propose
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a. Retention of Previously Adopted
ASCQR Program Measures
We previously finalized a policy that
quality measures adopted for an ASCQR
Program measure set for a previous
payment determination year be retained
in the ASCQR Program for measure sets
for subsequent payment determination
years, except when they are removed,
suspended, or replaced as indicated (76
FR 74494 and 74504; 77 FR 68494
through 68495; 78 FR 75122; and 79 FR
66967 through 66969). We did not
propose any changes to this policy in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(83 FR 39562).
b. Removal Factors for ASCQR Program
Measures
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59111
through 59115), we clarified, finalized
and codified at 42 CFR 416.320 an
updated set of factors 109 and the
process for removing measures from the
ASCQR Program. The factors are:
• Factor 1. Measure performance
among ASCs is so high and unvarying
that meaningful distinctions and
improvements in performance can no
longer be made (‘‘topped-out’’
measures).
• Factor 2. Performance or
improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
• Factor 3. A measure does not align
with current clinical guidelines or
practice.
• Factor 4. The availability of a more
broadly applicable (across settings,
populations, or conditions) measure for
the topic.
• Factor 5. The availability of a
measure that is more proximal in time
to desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic.
• Factor 6. The availability of a
measure that is more strongly associated
with desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic.
• Factor 7. Collection or public
reporting of a measure leads to negative
unintended consequences other than
patient harm.
109 We note that we previously referred to these
factors as ‘‘criteria’’ (for example, 79 FR 66967
through 66969); we now use the term ‘‘factors’’ in
order to align the ASCQR Program terminology with
the terminology we use in other CMS quality
reporting and pay-for-performance (value-based
purchasing) programs.
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• Factor 8. The costs associated with
a measure outweigh the benefit of its
continued use in the program.
We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59111 through 59115) for
a detailed discussion of our process
regarding measure removal.
3. Proposal to Adopt ASC–19: FacilityLevel 7-Day Hospital Visits after General
Surgery Procedures Performed at
Ambulatory Surgical Centers (NQF
#3357) for the ASCQR Program Measure
Set
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39562 through 39567), we
proposed one new quality measure for
the ASCQR Program for the CY 2024
payment determination and subsequent
years; ASC–19: Facility-Level 7-Day
Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory
Surgical Centers (NQF #3357).
a. Background
Ambulatory surgery in the outpatient
setting is common in the United States.
Nearly 70 percent of all surgeries in the
United States are performed in an
outpatient setting with an expanding
number and variety of procedures being
performed at stand-alone ASCs.110 111
General surgery procedures are
commonly performed at ASCs. Based on
an analysis of Medicare fee-for-service
(FFS) claims for patients aged 65 years
and older, from January 1, 2015 through
December 31, 2015, 3,251 ASCs
performed 149,468 general surgery
procedures. These procedures include
abdominal, alimentary tract, breast,
skin/soft tissue, wound, and varicose
vein stripping procedures. Of the 3,251
ASCs that performed general surgery
procedures, 1,157 (35.5 percent)
performed at least 25 such procedures
during this time period. Because of the
large number of general surgery
procedures that occur in the ambulatory
setting, we believe that adopting ASC–
19: Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital Visits
after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers in the ASCQR Program will
provide beneficiaries with transparent
quality data that can be utilized in
choosing healthcare facilities.
110 Cullen KA, Hall MJ, Golosinskiy A, Statistics
NCfH. Ambulatory surgery in the United States,
2006. US Department of Health and Human
Services, Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics;
2009.
111 Medicare Payment Advisory Committee.
Report for the Congress: Medicare Payment Policy,
March 2019. https://medpac.gov/docs/defaultsource/reports/mar19_medpac_entirereport_
sec.pdf?sfvrsn=0. Accessed May 24, 2019.
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While ambulatory surgery is
considered low risk for complications,
there are well-described and potentially
preventable adverse events that can
occur after ambulatory surgery leading
to unplanned care at a hospital, such as
emergency department (ED) visits,
observation stays, or hospital
admissions. These events include
uncontrolled pain, urinary retention,
infection, bleeding, and venous
thromboembolism.112 113
Hospital visits following same-day
surgery are an important and broadly
accepted patient-centered outcome
reported in the
literature.114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121
National estimates of hospital visit rates
following outpatient surgery vary from
0.5 to 9.0 percent, based on the type of
surgery, outcome measured (admissions
alone or admissions and ED visits), and
length of time between the surgery and
the hospital
visit.122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 The
112 Coley KC, Williams BA, DaPos SV, Chen C,
Smith RB. Retrospective evaluation of
unanticipated admissions and readmissions after
same day surgery and associated costs. Journal of
clinical anesthesia. 2002;14(5):349–353.
113 Bain J, Kelly H, Snadden D, Staines H. Day
surgery in Scotland: Patient satisfaction and
outcomes. Quality in Health Care. 1999;8(2):86–91.
114 Majholm BB. Is day surgery safe? A Danish
multicentre study of morbidity after 57,709 day
surgery procedures. Acta anaesthesiologica
Scandinavica. 2012;56(3):323–331.
115 Whippey A, Kostandoff G, Paul J, Ma J,
Thabane L, Ma HK. Predictors of unanticipated
admission following ambulatory surgery: A
retrospective case-control study. Canadian Journal
of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d’anesthe´sie.
2013;60(7):675–683.
116 Fleisher LA, Pasternak LR, Herbert R,
Anderson GF. Inpatient hospital admission and
death after outpatient surgery in elderly patients:
Importance of patient and system characteristics
and location of care. Arch Surg. 2004;139(1):67–72.
117 Coley KC, Williams BA, DaPos SV, Chen C,
Smith RB. Retrospective evaluation of
unanticipated admissions and readmissions after
same day surgery and associated costs. Journal of
clinical anesthesia. 2002;14(5):349–353.
118 Hollingsworth JMJM. Surgical quality among
Medicare beneficiaries undergoing outpatient
urological surgery. The Journal of urology.
2012;188(4):1274–1278.
119 Bain J, Kelly H, Snadden D, Staines H. Day
surgery in Scotland: Patient satisfaction and
outcomes. Quality in Health Care. 1999;8(2):86–91.
120 Fortier J, Chung F, Su J. Unanticipated
admission after ambulatory surgery—a prospective
study. Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal
canadien d’anesthesie. 1998;45(7):612–619.
121 Aldwinckle R, Montgomery J. Unplanned
admission rates and postdischarge complications in
patients over the age of 70 following day case
surgery. Anaesthesia. 2004;59(1):57–59.
122 Coley KC, Williams BA, DaPos SV, Chen C,
Smith RB. Retrospective evaluation of
unanticipated admissions and readmissions after
same day surgery and associated costs. Journal of
clinical anesthesia. 2002;14(5):349–353.
123 Hollingsworth JMJM. Surgical quality among
Medicare beneficiaries undergoing outpatient
urological surgery. The Journal of urology.
2012;188(4):1274–1278.
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frequency of such events also varies
among ASCs, suggesting variation in
quality of pre-surgical assessment,
surgical care, post-surgical care, and the
care and support provided to patients
post-discharge.131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138
We calculated the national unadjusted
rate of hospital visits (ED visits,
observation stays, or hospital
admissions) following any general
surgery procedure at an ASC. In a
Medicare FFS dataset of claims for
services during CY 2015 (January 1,
2015–December 31, 2015), the
distribution of unadjusted outcome rates
was skewed, suggesting variation in
quality of care. Among 1,153 ASCs with
at least 25 qualifying general surgery
cases in the Medicare FFS CY 2015
dataset, the unadjusted rate of
unplanned hospital visits ranged from
124 Baugh RR. Safety of outpatient surgery for
obstructive sleep apnea. Otolaryngology—head and
neck surgery. 2013;148(5):867–872.
125 Bhattacharyya N. Ambulatory sinus and nasal
surgery in the United States: Demographics and
perioperative outcomes. The Laryngoscope.
2010;120(3):635–638.
126 Bhattacharyya NN. Unplanned revisits and
readmissions after ambulatory sinonasal surgery.
The Laryngoscope. 2014;124(9):1983–1987.
127 Bhattacharyya NN. Revisits and postoperative
hemorrhage after adult tonsillectomy. The
Laryngoscope. 2014;124(7):1554–1556.
128 Hansen DG, Abbott LE, Johnson RM, Fox JP.
Variation in hospital-based acute care within 30
days of outpatient plastic surgery. Plastic and
reconstructive surgery (1963). 2014;134(3):370e–
378e.
129 Mahboubi HH. Ambulatory laryngopharyngeal
surgery: Evaluation of the national survey of
ambulatory surgery. JAMA otolaryngology— head &
neck surgery. 2013;139(1):28–31.
130 Orosco RKRK. Ambulatory thyroidectomy: A
multistate study of revisits and complications.
Otolaryngology—head and neck surgery.
2015;152(6):1017–1023.
131 Baugh RR. Safety of outpatient surgery for
obstructive sleep apnea. Otolaryngology—head and
neck surgery. 2013;148(5):867–872.
132 Bhattacharyya N. Ambulatory sinus and nasal
surgery in the United States: Demographics and
perioperative outcomes. The Laryngoscope.
2010;120(3):635–638.
133 Bhattacharyya NN. Unplanned revisits and
readmissions after ambulatory sinonasal surgery.
The Laryngoscope. 2014;124(9):1983–1987.
134 Bhattacharyya NN. Revisits and postoperative
hemorrhage after adult tonsillectomy. The
Laryngoscope. 2014;124(7):1554–1556.
135 Hansen DG, Abbott LE, Johnson RM, Fox JP.
Variation in hospital-based acute care within 30
days of outpatient plastic surgery. Plastic and
reconstructive surgery (1963). 2014;134(3):370e–
378e.
136 Mahboubi HH. Ambulatory laryngopharyngeal
surgery: Evaluation of the national survey of
ambulatory surgery. JAMA otolaryngology— head &
neck surgery. 2013;139(1):28–31.
137 Menachemi. Quality of care differs by patient
characteristics: Outcome disparities after
ambulatory surgical procedures. American journal
of medical quality. 2007;22(6):395–401.
138 Orosco RKRK. Ambulatory thyroidectomy: A
multistate study of revisits and complications.
Otolaryngology—head and neck surgery.
2015;152(6):1017–1023.
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0.0 percent to 13.2 percent. These
results suggest opportunity for ASCs to
improve the quality of care for patients
seeking general surgery procedures.
ASCs may be unaware of patients’
subsequent unplanned hospital visits
given that patients tend to present to the
ED or to hospitals unaffiliated with the
ASC. In addition, information on the
rate of patients’ subsequent unplanned
hospital visits would provide
transparent data to beneficiaries that
could be utilized when choosing
ambulatory surgery sites of care. Quality
measurement of the number of
unplanned hospital visits following
general surgery procedures performed at
ASCs, coupled with transparency
through public reporting would make
these outcomes more visible to both
ASCs and beneficiaries. Therefore, we
expect that this would encourage ASCs
to incorporate quality improvement
activities to reduce the number of
unplanned hospital visits and track
quality improvement over time.
Therefore, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39562 through
39567), we proposed to adopt ASC–19:
Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital Visits after
General Surgery Procedures Performed
at Ambulatory Surgical Centers (NQF
#3357) (hereafter referred to as the
proposed ASC–19 measure) into the
ASCQR Program for the CY 2024
payment determination and subsequent
years.
The proposed ASC–19 measure was
developed in conjunction with two
other measures adopted for the ASCQR
Program beginning with the CY 2022
payment determination as finalized in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period: ASC–17: Hospital
Visits After Orthopedic Ambulatory
Surgical Center Procedures (82 FR
59455) and ASC–18: Hospital Visits
After Urology Ambulatory Surgical
Center Procedures (82 FR 59463). All
three measures assess the same patient
outcome for care provided in the ASC
setting and use the same risk-adjustment
methodology. These three measures
differ in surgical procedures considered
(orthopedic, urological, or general
surgery), specific risk variables
included, and reporting of the outcome,
unplanned hospital visits. The proposed
ASC–19 measure reports the outcome as
a risk-standardized ratio because the
diverse mix of procedures included in
the proposed ASC–19 measure can have
varying levels of risk of unplanned
hospital visits; while the ASC–17 and
ASC–18 measures report a riskstandardized rate that reflects clinically
specific cohorts with fairly comparable
mixes of procedures. We refer readers to
section XV.B.3.d. of this final rule with
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comment period for a full discussion on
the measure outcome calculation.
b. Overview of Measure
The proposed ASC–19 measure is a
risk-adjusted outcome measure of acute,
unplanned hospital visits within 7 days
of a general surgery procedure
performed at an ASC among Medicare
FFS patients aged 65 years and older.
We define an unplanned hospital visit
as including an ED visit, observation
stay, or unplanned inpatient admission.
The measure aligns with the
Admissions and Readmissions to
Hospitals and Preventable Healthcare
Harm Meaningful Measure areas of our
Meaningful Measures Initiative.139 This
measure was developed with input from
a national Technical Expert Panel (TEP)
consisting of patients, surgeons,
methodologists, researchers, and
providers. We also held a three-week
public comment period soliciting
stakeholder input on the measure
methodology, and publicly posted a
summary of the comments received as
well as our responses (available in the
Downloads section at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/MMS/PC-Updates-onPrevious-Comment-Periods.html).
During the measure development
public comment period, we received
public comment recommending the
removal of two specific procedures (CPT
29893 endoscopic plantar and CPT
69222 clean out mastoid cavity) deemed
outside the scope of general surgery and
to review the cohort procedure list with
general surgeons to ensure
appropriateness. In response to this
feedback, we reviewed the cohort of
procedures incorporating feedback from
general surgeons and removed 15
individual skin/soft tissue and wound
procedure codes from the measure that
are outside the scope of general surgery
practice. These procedures include
those specifically suggested for removal
(that is, endoscopic plantar and clean
out mastoid cavity) as well as chemical
peels, dermabrasions, and nerve
procedures.
Section 1890A of the Act requires the
Secretary to establish a pre-rulemaking
process with respect to the selection of
certain categories of quality and
efficiency measures. Under section
1890A(a)(2) of the Act, the Secretary
must make available to the public by
December 1 of each year a list of quality
and efficiency measures that the
Secretary is considering. The ASC–19:
Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital Visits after
General Surgery Procedures Performed
139 83
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Frm 00282
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at Ambulatory Surgical Centers measure
was included on a publicly available
document entitled ‘‘List of Measures
under Consideration for December 1,
2017.’’ 140 The Measures Applications
Partnership (MAP) reviewed this
measure (MUC17–233) and provided
conditional support for rulemaking,
pending NQF review and endorsement,
with the recognition that this measure
assesses an important outcome for
patients receiving care at ASCs.141 The
MAP had some concerns about the
attribution model of the measure, noting
that hospital visits after ASC procedures
are relatively rare events and could
disproportionately affect low-income or
rural ASCs and that the measure may
need risk adjustment for social risk
factors. At the time of the MAP’s review,
this measure was still undergoing field
testing.
Since the MAP’s conditional
support,142 we completed testing for the
proposed ASC–19 measure by
estimating risk-standardized scores
using two full years of Medicare FFS
claims data (CYs 2014 and 2015)
containing 286,999 procedures. The
results showed score variation across
ASCs, from a minimum riskstandardized ratio of 0.42 to a maximum
of 2.13; the median was 0.97 and the
25th and 75th percentiles were 0.90 and
1.10, respectively. After adjusting for
case and procedure mixes of ASCs,
these results suggest there are
underlying differences in the quality of
care and opportunities for quality
improvement. The reliability testing
found an intraclass correlation
coefficient (ICC) score of 0.530,
indicating moderate measure score
reliability.143 We considered the face
validity of the measure score among
TEP members. Among the 14 TEP
members, 12 agreed that the measure
scores are valid and useful measures of
ASC quality of care for general surgery
procedures and will provide ASCs with
information that can be used to improve
their quality of care. Detailed testing
results are available in the technical
report for this measure, located at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-Assessment140 National Quality Forum. List of Measures
under Consideration for December 1, 2017.
Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/
WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=
id&ItemID=86526.
141 National Quality Forum. MAP 2018
Considerations for Implementing Measures:
Hospitals—Final Report. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?
LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=87096.
142 Ibid.
143 Landis JR, Koch GG. The Measurement of
Observer Agreement for Categorical Data.
Biometrics. 1977;33(1):159–174.
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Instruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
On June 6, 2018, the NQF’s Consensus
Standards Approval Committee
endorsed ASC–19: Facility-Level 7-Day
Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory
Surgical Centers (NQF #3357).144 The
proposed ASC–19 measure is consistent
with the information submitted to the
NQF and the MAP, supporting its
scientific acceptability for use in quality
reporting programs. We note that we
have made minor annual coding
updates to the measure to incorporate
changes to the CPT and ICD–10 coding
systems and to incorporate clinical
input to remove select procedures
outside the scope of general surgery as
noted above, endoscopic plantar, clean
out mastoid cavity, chemical peels,
dermabrasions, and nerve procedures.
For the current list of codes that define
the proposed ASC–19 measure and a
description of updates since
development, we refer readers to the zip
file labeled ‘‘Version 1.0 Hospital Visits
General Surgery ASC Procedures
Measure Technical Report’’ located at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
We believe this proposed measure
reflects consensus among stakeholders
because it was developed with
stakeholder input from a TEP convened
by a CMS contractor as well as from the
measure development public comment
period.145 During the measure
development processes and the MAP
meeting, the majority of public
commenters supported the measure’s
focus on assessing patient outcomes
after general surgery procedures
performed in ASC setting of care. Most
commenters supported MAP’s
conditional support of the measure,
noting it should be further developed
and NQF-endorsed before
implementation in the ASCQR Program.
Importantly, the proposed ASC–19
measure addresses the MAP-identified
priority measure area of addressing
preventable healthcare harm, such as
surgical complications, for the ASCQR
Program.146 Therefore, we believe it is
144 National
Quality Forum. Facility-Level 7-Day
Hospital Visits after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical Centers.
Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/
3357.
145 National Quality Forum. ‘‘MAP 2018
Considerations for Implementing Measures in
Federal Programs: Hospitals.’’ Report. 2017.
Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/map/
under ‘‘Hospitals—Final Report.’’
146 The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services Center for Clinical Standards and Quality.
‘‘2018 Measures under Consideration List: Program-
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appropriate to incorporate this proposed
measure into the ASCQR Program
measure set because collecting and
publicly reporting these data would
increase transparency, inform patients
and ASCs, and foster quality
improvement efforts.
c. Data Sources
The proposed ASC–19 measure is
claims-based using Part A and Part B
Medicare administrative claims and
Medicare enrollment data to calculate
the measure.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39562 through 39567), we
proposed that the data collection period
for the proposed ASC–19 measure
would be the 2 calendar years ending 2
years prior to the applicable payment
determination year. For example, for the
CY 2024 payment determination, the
data collection period would be CYs
2021 to 2022. Because the measure data
are collected via claims, ASCs will not
need to submit any additional data
directly to CMS. We refer readers to
section XV.D.4. of this final rule with
comment period for a more detailed
discussion of the requirements for data
submitted via claims.
d. Measure Calculation
The measure outcome is all-cause,
unplanned hospital visits within 7 days
of any general surgery procedure
performed at an ASC. For the purposes
of this measure, ‘‘hospital visits’’
include emergency department visits,
observation stays, and unplanned
inpatient admissions. The outcome of
hospital visits is limited to 7 days since
existing literature suggests that the vast
majority of adverse events after
outpatient surgery occur within the first
7 days following the surgery.147 148
When there are two or more qualifying
surgical procedures within a 7-day
period, the measure considers all
procedures as index procedures;
however, the timeframe for outcome
assessment is defined as the interval
between procedures (including the day
Specific Measure Needs and Priorities’’. Available
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/
QualityMeasures/Downloads/2018-CMSMeasurement-Priorities-and-Needs.pdf. Accessed
February 28, 2019.
147 Fleisher LA, Pasternak LR, Herbert R,
Anderson GF. Inpatient hospital admission and
death after outpatient surgery in elderly patients:
importance of patient and system characteristics
and location of care. Arch Surg. 2004;139(1):67–72.
148 Mattila K, Toivonen J, Janhunen L, Rosenberg
PH, Hynynen M. Postdischarge symptoms after
ambulatory surgery: First-week incidence, intensity,
and risk factors. Anesthesia and analgesia.
2005;101(6):1643–1650.
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61423
of the next procedure) and then 7 days
after the last procedure.
The facility-level score is a riskstandardized hospital visit ratio
(RSHVR), an approach that accounts for
the clustering of patients within ASCs
and variation in sample size across
ASCs. The proposed ASC–19 measure
reports the outcome as a riskstandardized ratio because the diverse
mix of procedures included in the
proposed measure can have varying
levels of risk of unplanned hospital
visits. The RSHVR is calculated as the
ratio of the predicted to the expected
number of unplanned hospital visits
among ASC patients. For each ASC, the
numerator of the ratio is the number of
hospital visits predicted for the ASC’s
patients accounting for its observed rate,
the number of the general surgery
procedures performed at the ASC, the
case-mix, and the surgical complexity
mix. The denominator of the ratio is the
number of hospital visits expected
nationally given the ASC’s case-mix and
surgical complexity mix. To calculate an
ASC’s predicted-to-expected (P/E) ratio,
the measure uses a two-level
hierarchical logistic regression model.
The log-odds of the outcome for an
index procedure is modeled as a
function of the patient demographic,
comorbidity, procedure characteristics,
and a random ASC-specific intercept. A
ratio of less than one indicates the ASC
facility’s patients were estimated as
having fewer post-surgical visits than
expected compared to ASCs with
similar surgical complexity and
patients; and a ratio of greater than one
indicates the ASC facility’s patients
were estimated as having more visits
than expected. This approach is
analogous to an observed-to-expected
ratio, but the method accounts for
within-facility correlation of the
observed outcome and sample size
differences, accommodates the
assumption that underlying differences
in quality across ASCs lead to
systematic differences in outcomes, and
is tailored to and appropriate for a
publicly reported outcome measure as
articulated in published scientific
guidelines.149 150 151 For more
149 Krumholz HM, Brindis RG, Brush JE, et al.
Standards for Statistical Models Used for Public
Reporting of Health Outcomes An American Heart
Association Scientific Statement From the Quality
of Care and Outcomes Research Interdisciplinary
Writing Group: Cosponsored by the Council on
Epidemiology and Prevention and the Stroke
Council Endorsed by the American College of
Cardiology Foundation. Circulation.
2006;113(3):456–462.
150 Normand S-LT, Shahian DM. Statistical and
clinical aspects of hospital outcomes profiling.
Statistical Science. 2007;22(2):206–226.
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information on measure calculations,
we refer readers to: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
e. Cohort
The patient cohort for the proposed
ASC–19 measure includes all Medicare
beneficiaries ages 65 and older
undergoing outpatient general surgery
procedures at an ASC who have 12 prior
months of Medicare FFS (Medicare
Parts A and B) enrollment. The target
group of procedures includes those that:
(1) Are routinely performed at ASCs; (2)
involve some increased risk of postsurgery hospital visits; and (3) are
within the scope of general surgery
training. These include the following
types of procedures: Abdominal (for
example, hernia repair), alimentary tract
(for example, hemorrhoid procedures),
breast (for example, mastectomies),
skin/soft tissue (for example, skin
grafting), wound (for example, incision
and drainage of skin and subcutaneous
tissue), and varicose vein stripping. The
proposed ASC–19 measure does not
include gastrointestinal endoscopy,
endocrine, or vascular procedures, other
than varicose vein procedures, because
for these procedures, reasons for
hospital visits are typically related to
patients’ underlying comorbidities.
The scope of general surgery overlaps
with that of other specialties (for
example, vascular surgery and plastic
surgery). For this measure, we targeted
surgeries that general surgeons are
trained to perform with the
understanding that other subspecialists
may also be performing many of these
surgeries at ASCs. Since the type of
surgeon performing a particular
procedure may vary across ASCs in
ways that affect quality, the measure is
neutral to surgeons’ specialty training.
Procedures included in the measure
cohort are on CMS’ list of covered ASC
procedures.152 We developed this list to
identify surgeries that have a low-tomoderate risk profile. Surgeries on the
ASC list of covered procedures do not
involve or require major or prolonged
invasion of body cavities, extensive
blood loss, major blood vessels, or care
that is either urgent or life threatening.
151 National Quality Forum. Measure Evaluation
Criteria and Guidance for Evaluating Measures for
Endorsement. 2015. Available at: https://
www.qualityforum.org/Measuring_Performance/
Submitting_Standards/2015_Measure_Evaluation_
Criteria.aspx. Accessed July 26, 2016.
152 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
‘‘Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Payment:
Addenda Updates.’’ Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-servicepayment/ascpayment/11_addenda_updates.html.
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We annually review and update this list,
which includes a transparent public
comment submission and review
process for addition and/or removal of
procedures codes.153 The current list is
accessible in the Downloads section at:
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
medicare-fee-for-service-payment/
ascpayment/11_addenda_updates.html.
In addition, the measure includes
only ‘‘major’’ and ‘‘minor’’ procedures,
as indicated by the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule global surgery indicator
(GSI) values of 090 and 010,
respectively, to focus the measure only
on the subset of surgeries on CMS’ list
of covered ASC procedures that impose
a meaningful risk of post-procedure
hospital visits. This list of GSI values is
publicly available for CY 2015 at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-FederalRegulation-Notices-Items/CMS-1612FC.html (download PFS Addenda,
Addendum B). Moreover, to identify the
subset of ASC procedures within the
scope of general surgery, we used the
Clinical Classifications Software (CCS)
developed by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ).154 We
identified and included CCS categories
within the scope of general surgery, and
only included individual procedures
within the CCS categories at the
procedure (CPT code) level if they were
within the scope of general surgery
practice. For more cohort details, we
refer readers to the measure technical
report located at: https://www.cms.gov/
medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/Hospital
QualityInits/Measure-Methodology
.html.
To ensure that all patients included
under this measure have full data
available for outcome assessment, the
measure excludes patients who survived
at least 7 days following general surgery
procedures at an ASC, but were not
continuously enrolled in Medicare FFS
(Medicare Parts A and B) during the 7
days after surgery. There are no
additional patient inclusion or
exclusion criteria for the proposed
ASC–19 measure. Additional
methodology and measure development
details are available at: https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
153 Ibid.
154 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project.
Clinical Classifications Software for Services and
Procedures. Available at: https://www.hcupus.ahrq.gov/toolssoftware/ccs_svcsproc/
ccssvcproc.jsp.
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f. Risk Adjustment
The statistical risk-adjustment model
includes clinically relevant riskadjustment variables that are strongly
associated with risk of hospital visits
within 7 days following ASC general
surgery procedures. Accordingly, only
comorbidities that convey information
about the patient at that time or in the
12 months prior, and not complications
that arise during the course of the index
procedure, are included in the risk
adjustment. The measure risk adjusts for
age, 18 comorbidities, procedure type
(abdomen vs. alimentary tract vs. breast
vs. skin/soft tissue vs. wound vs.
varicose vein), a variable for work
Relative Value Units (RVUs) to adjust
for surgical complexity, and an
interaction term of procedure type and
surgical complexity.155
To select the final set of variables for
the risk-adjustment model, candidate
risk variables were entered into logistic
regression analyses 156 predicting the
outcome of hospital visits within 7 days.
To develop a parsimonious risk model,
non-significant variables were
iteratively removed from the model
using a stepwise selection approach
described by Hosmer and Lemeshow.157
All variables significant at p < 0.05 were
retained in the final model. We also
tested interaction terms and retained
those that were both significant at p <
0.05 and demonstrated a clinically
plausible relationship to the outcome.
Finally, after reviewing TEP and public
comments, as well as the statistically
selected variables for face validity, we
settled upon the model variables. We
retained one additional variable (opioid
use) for the final risk model because
experts advised it was an important risk
predictor and expressed a strong
preference for including it in the model
even though it was not statistically
selected. Additional details on risk
model development and testing are
available in the technical report at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
g. Public Reporting
We proposed that if the proposed
ASC–19 measure is adopted, we would
publicly report results only for facilities
155 S. Coberly. The Basics; Relative Value Units
(RVUs). National Health Policy Forum. January 12,
2015. Available at: https://www.nhpf.org/library/thebasics/Basics_RVUs_01-12-15.pdf.
156 Hosmer DW, Lemeshow S. Introduction to the
logistic regression model. Applied Logistic
Regression, Second Edition. 2000:1–30.
157 Hosmer DW, Lemeshow S. Introduction to the
logistic regression model. Applied Logistic
Regression, Second Edition. 2000:1–30.
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with sufficient case numbers to meet
moderate reliability standards.158 We
would determine the case size cutoff for
meeting moderate reliability standards
by calculating reliability at different
case sizes using the ratio of true
variance to observed variance during the
measure dry run (discussed below).159
We would provide confidential
performance data directly to all facilities
including those which do not meet the
criteria for sufficient case numbers for
reliability considerations so that all
facilities can benefit from seeing their
measure results and individual patientlevel outcomes. We believe that the
measure will provide beneficiaries with
information about the quality of care for
general surgery procedures in the ASC
setting. In addition, we believe that
these performance data may help ASCs
track their patient outcomes and
provide information on their cases that
facilities can use to improve quality of
care.
h. Provision of Facility-Specific
Information Prior to Public Reporting
If this proposed measure is finalized,
we intend to conduct a dry run before
the official data collection period or any
public reporting. A dry run is a period
of confidential reporting and feedback
during which ASCs may review their
dry run measure results, and in
addition, further familiarize themselves
with the measure methodology and ask
questions. For the dry run, we intend to
use the most current 2-year set of
complete claims (usually 12 months
prior to the start date) available at the
time of dry run. For example, if the dry
run began in June 2020, the most
current 2-year set of data available
would likely be July 2017 to June 2019.
Because we use paid, final action
Medicare claims, ASCs would not need
to submit any additional data for the dry
run. The dry run would generate
confidential feedback reports for ASCs,
including patient-level data indicating
whether the patient had a hospital visit
and, if so, the type of visit (emergency
department visit, observation stay, or
unplanned inpatient admission), the
admitting facility, and the principal
discharge diagnosis. Further, the dry
run would enable ASCs to see their dry
run measure results prior to the measure
being implemented. General
information about the dry run as well as
confidential facility-specific reports
would be made available for ASCs to
review on their accounts at: https://
158 Ibid.
159 Snijders TA, Bosker RJ. Multilevel Analysis:
An introduction to basic and advanced multilevel
modeling. SAGE Publications. 2000. London.
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www.qualitynet.org. We plan to
continue to generate these reports for
ASCs after we implement the proposed
measure if it is finalized so ASCs can
use the information to identify
performance gaps and develop quality
improvement strategies.
These confidential dry run results are
not publicly reported and do not affect
payment. We expect the dry run to take
approximately 1 month to conduct,
during which facilities would be
provided the confidential report and the
opportunity to review their performance
and provide feedback to us. After the
dry run, measure results would have a
payment impact and would be publicly
reported as discussed above beginning
with the CY 2024 payment
determination and for subsequent years.
We have provided a summary of the
public comments and responses to those
comments.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to adopt ASC–
19: Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital Visits
after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers for the ASCQR Program
beginning with the CY 2024 payment
determination and for subsequent years.
Some commenters noted that this
measure will provide valuable
information and does not add reporting
burden.
Response: We thank the commenters
for supporting the adoption of this
measure for the ASCQR Program. We
agree that measuring quality of care
associated with procedures performed at
ASCs within the scope of general
surgery training will provide useful
information for facilities as well as
beneficiaries and other stakeholders
while limiting facility burden.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that we adopt the
measure sooner than the CY 2024
payment determination. One commenter
requested that dry run reports be
provided as early as 2020 to allow
sufficient time for ASCs to review their
performance and ask questions. One
commenter recommended that the dry
run process include 2 months of data.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ input on the timing and
data collection for the dry run and
desires for earlier supply of their data,
but we disagree that the measure should
be adopted sooner. We note that the
timeline proposed for implementation
of this measure was to allow adequate
time to conduct a dry run with at least
2 years of data and to collect data with
sufficient reliability prior to the measure
being used toward payment
determinations and believe that the CY
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2024 payment determination best fits
these needs.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that because the
measure assesses mainly skin and soft
tissue procedures, it assesses only a
small subset of the procedures
performed in ASCs. One commenter
recommended that several exclusions be
removed to enable the measure to reflect
more procedures.
Response: We thank commenters for
their thoughtful evaluation of the cohort
specifications of ASC–19. The intent of
ASC–19 is to assess the quality of care
for surgical procedures that (1) are
routinely performed at ASCs, (2) involve
risk of post-surgery hospital visits, and
(3) are within the scope of general
surgery training. The measure cohort
includes a set of procedures informed
by a group of clinical consultants and a
national TEP consisting of patients,
clinicians, methodologists, researchers,
and providers.160 To identify eligible
ASC general surgery procedures, we
first identified a list of procedures from
Medicare’s 2014 and 2015 ASC lists of
covered procedures. This list of surgical
procedures is publicly available at:
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
medicare-fee-for-service-payment/
ascpayment/11_addenda_updates.html.
Using an existing, defined list of
surgeries, rather than defining surgeries
de novo, is useful for long-term measure
maintenance.
Ambulatory procedures include a
heterogeneous mix of non-surgical
procedures, minor surgeries, and more
substantive surgeries. The measure is
not intended to include very low-risk
(minor) surgeries or non-surgical
procedures, which typically have a high
volume and a very low adverse outcome
rate. To focus the measure only on the
subset of surgeries on Medicare’s list of
covered ASC procedures that impose a
meaningful risk of post-procedure
hospital visits; the measure includes
only ‘‘major’’ and ‘‘minor’’ procedures,
as indicated by the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule GSI values of 090 and 010,
respectively.52 The GSI code reflects the
number of post-operative days that are
included in a given procedure’s global
surgical payment and identifies surgical
procedures of greater complexity and
follow-up care.161 This list of GSI values
160 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
(2017). 2017 Measure Technical Report: FacilityLevel 7-Day Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/MeasureMethodology.html.
161 Medicare Learning Network. (2018) Global
Surgery Booklet: United States, 2017. Retrieved
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is publicly available for CY 2014 at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-FederalRegulation-Notices-Items/CMS-1600FC.html and for CY 2015 at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/Physician
FeeSched/PFS-Federal-RegulationNotices-Items/CMS-1612-FC.html
(download PFS Addenda, Addendum
B).
To identify the final subset of ASC
general surgery procedures to be
included in the measure, we reviewed
with general surgeons and TEP members
the CCS categories of procedures
developed by the AHRQ. We identified
and included CCS categories within the
scope of general surgery, and only
included individual procedures within
the CCS categories at the procedure
(CPT® code) level if they were within
the scope of general surgery practice.
We did not include in the measure
calculations, gastrointestinal endoscopy,
endocrine, or vascular procedures, other
than varicose vein procedures, because
reasons for hospital visits are typically
related to patients’ underlying
comorbidities.
The sole patient characteristic
measure exclusion criterion is
‘‘Medicare coverage: beneficiaries who
survived at least 7 days, but without
continuous enrollment in Medicare FFS
Parts A and B in the 7 days after
surgery;’’ these beneficiaries are
excluded to ensure all patients have full
data available for outcome assessment.
We will continue to evaluate whether
there are additional procedures that are
clinically appropriate for inclusion or
exclusion in the cohort definition as
part of measure reevaluation.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that for certain procedure
categories (such as ‘‘Other therapeutic
procedures, hemic and lymphatic
system’’ and ‘‘Lumpectomy,
quadrantectomy of breast and
Mastectomy’’ procedures), the top 10
primary diagnoses include diagnoses
that reflect patients’ underlying
condition rather than the quality of care
received. This commenter expressed
concern that facilities will be held
accountable for these outcomes and
recommended that the measure
specifications be updated to ensure that
these diagnoses are not to be used as
quality signals or included in the
measure results.
from Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
website: https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-andEducation/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/
MLNProducts/Downloads/GloballSurgeryICN907166.pdf.
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Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s review of the top
diagnoses associated with a hospital
visit within 7 days of general surgery
procedures. Although the top reasons
for hospitals visits are likely due to
complications of care, as the commenter
points out, some hospital visits post
procedure may be due to a patient’s
underlying condition. As discussed in
section XV.B.3.f. of this final rule with
comment period, the measure is
adjusted to account for variation in
patients’ underlying risk of using the
hospital within 7 days of a procedure.
Therefore, the measure score is designed
to reflect differences in quality rather
than differences in pre-procedure
patient risk and we believe the measure
specifications account for such primary
diagnoses that reflect patients’
underlying conditions.
Further, the measure is designed to
include only unplanned inpatient
admissions occurring after general
surgery procedures performed at ASCs.
For the purposes of this measure, a
planned admission is defined as a nonacute admission for a scheduled
procedure (for example, total hip
replacement or cholecystectomy). Postdischarge admissions for an acute
illness or for complications of care are
never considered planned. In contrast,
‘‘planned’’ admissions are those
scheduled in advance for anticipated
medical treatment or procedures that
must be provided in the inpatient
setting. To identify admissions as
planned or unplanned, we applied an
algorithm previously developed for
CMS’s hospital readmission measures,
the CMS Planned Readmission
Algorithm Version 4.0.162 In brief, the
algorithm uses the procedure codes and
principal discharge diagnosis codes on
each hospital claim to identify
admissions that are typically planned.54
A few specific, limited types of care are
always considered planned (for
example, major organ transplant,
rehabilitation, or maintenance
chemotherapy).
For more information on the measure
calculation in regard to planned versus
unplanned admissions, we refer readers
to: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Quality-Initiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/HospitalQualityInits/
Measure-Methodology.html.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the reliability of the
measure, which has an ICC of 0.530, is
162 Horwitz, L.I., Grady, J.N., Cohen, D.B., Lin, Z.,
Volpe, M., Ngo, C.K., . . . Bernheim, S.M. (2015).
Development and Validation of an Algorithm to
Identify Planned Readmissions From Claims Data.
Journal of hospital medicine, 10(10), 670–677.
doi:10.1002/jhm.2416.
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not adequate, due to the number of lowvolume ASCs. The commenter stated
that the reliability of a measure
intended for public reporting should be
at least ‘‘substantial’’ (ICC between 0.61
and 0.80). This commenter
recommended that the minimum
number of qualifying procedures be
increased to improve reliability.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their comment regarding reliability
of the measure. We tested the reliability
of the measure score by calculating the
ICC. The ICC evaluates the agreement
between the risk-standardized hospital
visit ratios (RSHVRs) calculated in two
randomly selected patient samples.
Since we measured the underlying
quality of general surgery procedures
performed at the ASC using patient
outcomes, we anticipated that two
independent, random samples of
patients from an ASC would generate
scores that are similar. We calculated
measure score reliability for a 2-year
reporting period and found that the
agreement between the two RSHVR
values for each ASC was calculated for
2 years to be ICC [2,1] = 0.526,
indicating moderate measure score
reliability. Thus, we do not believe that
it is necessary increase the minimum
number of qualifying procedures for
reliability purposes as we view the
measure as having a sufficient level of
reliability for adoption by the ASCQR
Program.
In addition, the results of reliability
testing for this measure are consistent
with current ASCQR Program claimsbased measures of hospital visits postspecified procedures in the ASC setting
as well as with similar outcome
measures endorsed by NQF; this
measure was endorsed by NQF in June
2018. The measure evaluation criteria of
NQF committees are considered to be
rigorous and these committees typically
require moderate or high reliability to
achieve endorsement.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the risk adjusted outcome
rates show little variability between
ASCs and that as a result there is little
opportunity for ASCs to use the data for
quality improvement or for patients to
discern differences in quality. The
commenter expressed concern that the
measure would be considered toppedout. Some commenters expressed
concern that many ASCs will not meet
the minimum volume threshold for the
measure, because it covers such a
specific range of procedures. A few
commenters expressed concern that
measure results will not be shared with
ASCs until months after patient visits,
which will limit the usefulness of the
information.
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Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns about the ability
of ASC–19 to discern differences in
quality of care; however, we believe the
distribution of the estimates of the
measure rates for individual facilities
convey meaningful variation for
discerning differences between facilities
and for use in quality improvement
efforts. As presented in the measure
technical report using Medicare FFS
CYs 2014 and 2015 data, we found that
the facility RSHVR ranged from 0.42 to
2.13, with a median RSHVR of 0.97 (the
25th and 75th percentiles were 0.90 and
1.10, respectively) (measure technical
report available in the Downloads
section at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/Hospital
QualityInits/MeasureMethodology.html).
As the commenter pointed out, the
descriptive approach categorized few
facilities as outliers; in our measure
development calculations, we identified
15 ASCs that had better than the
national average and 16 ASCs that
performed worse than the national
average. We believe this indicates few
facilities are outliers, evidencing very
high or very low measure rates. The
approach to categorizing facility outliers
is very conservative using 95 percent
confidence interval estimates
(indicating a 95 percent certainty that
the range of values determined by the
measure calculation contains the true
mean of the population of facilities) to
identify outliers so as to limit
erroneously designating facilities as
having extreme measure rates.
Regarding the specific range of
procedures for this measure, as
discussed previously in this section, we
focused the measure only on the subset
of surgeries on Medicare’s list of
covered ASC procedures that impose a
meaningful risk of post-procedure
hospital visits.
Regarding the concern that many
small-volume ASCs will not meet the
minimum criteria threshold for
reporting; we have sought to include as
many procedures on Medicare’s list of
covered ASC procedures that impose a
meaningful risk of post-procedure
hospital visits in the measure as
possible that fit within the scope of
general surgery practice. In a national
Medicare FFS claims dataset for CY
2014 and 2015 that included 286,999
procedures,52 1,642 ASCs were found to
be performing at least 25 procedures
during the data collection time period;
these 1,642 ASCs had facility measure
scores ranging from 0.42 to 2.13, with a
median RSHVR of 0.97 (the 25th and
75th percentiles were 0.90 and 1.10,
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respectively). Thus, we believe that the
measure as specified utilizing 2 years of
claims data provides sufficient numbers
of ASCs meeting the minimum volume
threshold.
These findings also show that based
upon the variation in the measure,
while measure rates could be
considered high, they are not
sufficiently unvarying to not distinguish
between facilities and, thus, would not
be considered ‘‘topped out’’. During
measure development testing using a
very conservative approach of a 95
percent confidence level, ASC–19
measure calculations identified 31
outliers and sufficient variation in the
RSHVRs to distinguish facilities.
Irrespective of claim volumes, all
facilities will receive reports with any
detected cases with patient-level
information to inform quality
improvement activities. To support
continuous improvement across the full
distribution of performance scores, we
typically provide measure scores and
patient-level reports to facilities that
indicate whether their patients had a
hospital visit within 7 days, and the
diagnoses and locations of visits, and
intend to provide these reports to ASCs
once ASC–19 is implemented. Facilities
can use these data to reduce hospital
visits for important procedure-related
outcomes that may be preventable,
including urinary retention, pain,
nausea, vomiting, syncope, and other
surgery-related complications.
We will continue to monitor the data
used for measure score calculation prior
to and during any implementation of the
measure. We will continue our
multiyear assessment to weigh the
tradeoffs between having an adequate
number of cases for the greatest number
of facilities and ensure that data are
timely and actionable.
Regarding the availability of data for
ASC–19, our goal is to provide ASCs
with the timeliest claims data available.
The expedience of the Medicare claims
submission and processing timelines
provide constraints to the timeliness of
measure production. We continue to
investigate the timeliness of claims data
in efforts to increase timeliness of
measure production without
compromising accuracy.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that additional analyses
be performed on high and low
performing ASCs to determine if risk
adjustment washes out differences and
to determine what diagnoses were
associated with ASCs that showed poor
performance.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their attention to risk adjustment for
the measure. We agree that risk
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61427
adjustment obscuring differences can be
a concern. However, we believe the
current approach to risk adjustment for
the ASC–19 measure is appropriate. As
part of our standard process for measure
reevaluation, we will continue to
monitor measure calculations as
additional years of data become
available.
Comment: Some commenters believed
that the title of the measure, which
refers to General Surgery Procedures,
will mislead beneficiaries by suggesting
that the score reflects the practice of
general surgery. One commenter
recommended clarifying the name of the
measure to specify ‘‘abdominal,
alimentary tract, breast, skin/soft tissue,
wound, and varicose vein stripping
procedures’’. A few commenters
expressed concern that the measure
name, Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital
Visits after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers, inaccurately suggests that it is
assessing hospital visits that are 7 days
in duration. Commenters recommended
that the name be clarified.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ thoughtful
recommendations for the measure title.
We agree that it is important for the
measure title to accurately reflect the
focus of the measure. The scope of the
measure was defined by the scope of
practice of general surgeons, which
includes abdominal, alimentary tract,
breast, skin/soft tissue, wound, and
varicose vein stripping procedures. In
response to stakeholder input received
during the public comment period in
2017 (available in the Downloads
section at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-PatientAssessment-Instruments/MMS/PCUpdates-on-Previous-CommentPeriods.html), we revised the measure’s
title from ‘‘Hospital Visits after General
Surgery Ambulatory Surgical Center
Procedures’’ to, ‘‘Facility-Level 7-Day
Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory
Surgical Centers’’ to clarify the scope of
the procedures included in the
measure’s cohort.
We have chosen not to further revise
the measure title as ‘‘7-Day’’ represents
the duration of hospital visits that
define the outcome, and the title format
is consistent with other CMS outcome
measure titles (for example, ‘‘Hospital
30-day all-cause risk-standardized
readmission rate following acute
myocardial infarction hospitalization’’).
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the measure may harm
patients by discouraging necessary care,
for example in a situation where an
unforeseen clinical issue is discovered
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during a procedure and sound clinical
judgement calls for a provider to
recommend hospitalization or
observation.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s considerations of potential
unintended consequences of
implementing ASC–19. We believe that
adverse impact on clinical decisions
will be minimal due to risk adjustment.
Risk adjustment ensures that ASCs are
given credit for providing care for more
complex patients who are at greater risk
of hospital visits. A team of clinical
consultants and the national TEP
provided input on the measure riskadjustment model at multiple points
during development,52 and the measure
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passed the NQF surgery committee’s
scientific acceptability criteria.163
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to adopt ASC–19: FacilityLevel 7-Day Hospital Visits after General
Surgery Procedures Performed at
Ambulatory Surgical Centers (NQF
#3357) for the CY 2024 payment
determination and subsequent years as
proposed.
163 National Quality Forum. (2017). Surgery, Fall
2017 Cycle: CDP Report, 2017. Retrieved from
https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2018/
08/Surgery_Final_Report_-_Fall_2017_Cycle.aspx.
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4. Summary of ASCQR Program Quality
Measure Set Finalized for the CY 2024
Payment Determination and for
Subsequent Years
As discussed above, we are finalizing
our proposal to add one measure
beginning with the CY 2024 payment
determination and for subsequent years
to the ASCQR Program. We refer readers
to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59129
through 59132) for previously finalized
ASCQR Program measure sets.
Table 63 summarizes the finalized
ASCQR Program measure set for the CY
2024 payment determination and
subsequent years (including previously
adopted measures).
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In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39567 through 39568), we
considered one topic for future
implementation: Updates to the
submission method for ASC–1: Patient
Burn, ASC–2: Patient Fall, ASC–3:
Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong Patient,
Wrong Procedure, Wrong Implant, and
ASC–4: All-Cause Hospital Transfer/
Admission measures.
ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and ASC–4
were adopted into the ASCQR Program
in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period beginning with
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the CY 2014 payment determination (76
FR 74496 through 74500). These
measures were developed by the ASC
Quality Collaboration (ASC QC). The
ASC QC is a cooperative effort of
organizations and companies formed in
2006 with a common interest in
ensuring that ASC quality data is
measured and reported in a meaningful
way.164 Stakeholders in the ASC QC
include ASC corporations, ASC
164 ASC Quality Collaboration. ASC Quality
Measures Implementation Guide Version 6.1 March
2019. Available at: https://ascquality.org/
documents/ASC-QC-Implementation-Guide-6.1March-2019.pdf.
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associations, professional societies and
accrediting bodies that focus on ASC
quality and safety.165 The ASC QC
initiated a process of standardizing ASC
quality measure development through
evaluation of existing nationally
endorsed quality measures to determine
which could be directly applied to the
outpatient surgery facility setting.166
The ASC QC developed and pilottested ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and
ASC–4 at the facility-level for feasibility
and usability (76 FR 74496). These
measures are calculated via quality data
165 Ibid.
166 Ibid.
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5. ASCQR Program Measures and
Topics for Future Consideration
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codes (QDCs), as described in section
XV.D.1. of this final rule with comment
period. ASCs were formerly required to
submit the appropriate QDCs on
individual Medicare FFS claims billed
by the facility (78 FR 75135). In the FY
2013 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR
53640 through 53641), we finalized our
policy that the minimum threshold for
successful reporting be that at least 50
percent of claims meeting measure
specifications contain QDCs. At that
time, we believed that 50 percent was a
reasonable minimum threshold for the
initial implementation years of the
ASCQR Program, because ASCs were
not yet familiar with how to report
quality data under the ASCQR Program
and because many ASCs are relatively
small and may have needed more time
to set up reporting systems (77 FR
53641). We stated in that final rule that
we intended to propose to increase this
percentage for subsequent years’
payment determinations as ASCs
become more familiar with reporting
requirements for the ASCQR Program.
We have assessed this reporting
threshold annually and have found that
over 78 percent of reporting ASCs report
data for at least 90 percent of eligible
claims.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59117
through 59123), we expressed concern
that the data submission method for
these measures may impact the
completeness and accuracy of the data
due to the inability of ASCs to correct
errors in submitted QDCs that are used
to calculate these measures. An ASC
that identifies an erroneous or missing
QDC is unable to correct or add a QDC
if the claim has already been submitted
to Medicare and been processed. We
also stated that we believe that revising
the data submission method for the
measures, such as via QualityNet,
would address this issue and allow
ASCs to correct any data submissions
errors, resulting in more complete and
accurate data. In that final rule with
comment period, we explained that we
agree it is important to continue to
monitor the types of events included in
these measures considering the
potential negative impacts to patients’
morbidity and mortality, in order to
continue to prevent their occurrence
and ensure that they remain rare. We
acknowledged that these measures
provide critical data to beneficiaries and
further transparency for care provided
in the ASC setting that would be useful
in choosing an ASC for care, and that
these measures are valuable to the ASC
community.
As such, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
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59117 through 59123; 59134 through
59135), we retained these measures in
the ASCQR Program, but suspended
their data submission until further
action in rulemaking with the goal of
updating their data submission method.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39567 through 39568), we
requested comment about potential
future updates to the data submission
method for ASC–1: Patient Burn, ASC–
2: Patient Fall, ASC–3: Wrong Site,
Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant, and ASC–4:
All-Cause Hospital Transfer/Admission.
Specifically, we have considered
updating the data submission method to
a CMS online data submission tool. We
refer readers to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59473) (and the previous rulemakings
cited therein) and 42 CFR 416.310(c)(1)
for our requirements regarding data
submitted via a CMS online data
submission tool. We are currently using
the QualityNet website (https://
www.qualitynet.org) as our CMS online
data submission tool.
To submit measures via an online
data submission tool to the QualityNet
website, ASCs and any agents
submitting data on an ASC’s behalf
would have to maintain a QualityNet
account (§ 416.310(c)(1)). A QualityNet
security administrator would be
necessary to set up such an account for
the purpose of submitting this
information (§ 416.310(c)(1)). We
believe that using a CMS online data
collection tool would address our
concern about the ability of ASCs to
correct data submission errors because
ASCs would simply report their data via
the online tool. If data for these
measures were submitted via
QualityNet, ASCs would still submit
claims for reimbursement to CMS, but
would not be required to include QDCs.
As specified at § 416.310(c)(ii), the data
collection time period for quality
measures for which data are submitted
via a CMS online data submission tool
is for services furnished during the
calendar year 2 years prior to the
payment determination year. ASCs
would then submit their data for ASC–
1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and ASC–4 via
QualityNet during the data submission
period, January 1 through May 15 in the
year prior to the payment determination
year. ASCs would be able to submit and
modify their data throughout the data
submission period and could correct
any errors during this period. We are
seeking comments on whether updating
the data submission method for ASC–1,
ASC–2, ASC–3, and ASC–4 to a CMS
online data submission tool would be
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appropriate for these measures in the
future.
We are committed to work with
stakeholders to ensure the ASCQR
Program measure set does not place an
inappropriate amount of burden on
facilities while addressing and
providing information about these types
of patient safety, adverse, rare events to
patients and other consumers. We
recognize that updating the data
submission method to a CMS online
data submission tool would add some
burden to the ASCQR Program due to
the additional time for submitting any of
these four measures via QualityNet for
each payment determination year. Thus,
we are also seeking comment about the
burden associated with potentially
updating the data submission method
for ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and ASC–4
to a CMS online data submission tool
(for example, the QualityNet website) in
future years.
The comments and our responses to
the comments regarding the ASCQR
Program Measures and Topics for
Future Consideration are set forth
below.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the inclusion of these
measures in the ASCQR Program.
Commenters also specifically supported
the potential future updates to the data
collection method for ASC–1: Patient
Fall, ASC–2: Patient Burn, ASC–3:
Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant, and ASC–4:
All-Cause Hospital Transfers/
Admissions and noted that the measure
steward has noted that the measures are
suitable for submission through the
QualityNet site. Commenters noted that
the change would reduce cost and
burden and limit the delay that results
from QDC reporting.
Several commenters supported the
inclusion of these four patient safety
measures in both the ASCQR and HOQR
Programs; these commenters cited
supporting reasons, stating that these
measures are outcome measures
important to beneficiaries and the
Medicare program and that their
inclusion in both of these quality
reporting programs would facilitate
meaningful comparisons between ASCs
and HOPDs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the inclusion of the
ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and ASC–4
measures in the ASCQR Program and for
their support for submission of data for
these measures through the QualityNet
site.
Comment: Some commenters did not
support the inclusion of the ASC–1 to
ASC–4 measures in the ASCQR
Program. These commenters cited: That
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the measures lacked NQF endorsement,
stating concerns about the usefulness of
measuring rare events or being ‘‘topped
out’’; that there could be data
submission systems issues; and
concerns about burden. A few
commenters recommended that we
continue the suspension of these
measures rather than revise the data
collection method. One commenter
noted that CMS should not change the
data collection method for these
measures if it would increase burden or
require manual data abstraction. One
commenter suggested we work with
HOPDs and ASCs to identify current
forums or internal hospital portals
where these safety issues are
documented, discussed and remedied.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their views, expressing their
concerns and suggesting alternatives
regarding the inclusion of the ASC–1 to
ASC–4 measures in the ASCQR
Program. We will take them into
consideration as we determine future
updates to ASC–1, ASC–2, ASC–3, and
ASC–4 in the ASCQR Program.
6. Maintenance of Technical
Specifications for Quality Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74513 through 74514),
where we finalized our proposal to
follow the same process for updating the
ASCQR Program measures that we
adopted for the Hospital OQR Program
measures, including the subregulatory
process for updating adopted measures.
In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (77 FR 68496
through 68497), the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR
75131), and the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR
66981), we provided additional
clarification regarding the ASCQR
Program policy in the context of the
previously finalized Hospital OQR
Program policy, including the processes
for addressing nonsubstantive and
substantive changes to adopted
measures. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70531), we provided clarification
regarding our decision to not display the
technical specifications for the ASCQR
Program on a CMS website, but stated
that we will continue to display the
technical specifications for the ASCQR
Program on the QualityNet website. In
addition, our policies regarding the
maintenance of technical specifications
for the ASCQR Program are codified at
42 CFR 416.325. In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39568
through 39569), we did not propose any
changes to our policies regarding the
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maintenance of technical specifications
for the ASCQR Program.
7. Public Reporting of ASCQR Program
Data
In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (76 FR 74514
through 74515), we finalized a policy to
make data that an ASC submitted for the
ASCQR Program publicly available on a
CMS website after providing an ASC an
opportunity to review the data to be
made public. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR
70531 through 70533), we finalized our
policy to publicly display data by the
National Provider Identifier (NPI) when
the data are submitted by the NPI and
to publicly display data by the CCN
when the data are submitted by the
CCN. In addition, we codified our
policies regarding the public reporting
of ASCQR Program data at 42 CFR
416.315 (80 FR 70533). In the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79819 through 79820), we
formalized our current public display
practices regarding timing of public
display and the preview period by
finalizing our proposals to: Publicly
display data on the Hospital Compare
website, or other CMS website as soon
as practicable after measure data have
been submitted to CMS; to generally
provide ASCs with approximately 30
days to review their data before publicly
reporting the data; and to announce the
timeframes for each preview period
starting with the CY 2018 payment
determination on a CMS website and/or
on our applicable listservs. In the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59455 through
59470), we discussed specific public
reporting policies associated with two
measures beginning with the CY 2022
payment determination: ASC–17:
Hospital Visits after Orthopedic
Ambulatory Surgical Center Procedures,
and ASC–18: Hospital Visits after
Urology Ambulatory Surgical Center
Procedures. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Proposed Rule (84 FR 39569), we did
not propose any changes to our public
reporting policies.
C. Administrative Requirements
1. Requirements Regarding QualityNet
Account and Security Administrator
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75132 through 75133) for
a detailed discussion of the QualityNet
security administrator requirements,
including setting up a QualityNet
account, and the associated timelines,
for the CY 2014 payment determination
and subsequent years. In the CY 2016
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OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70533), we codified the
administrative requirements regarding
maintenance of a QualityNet account
and security administrator for the
ASCQR Program at § 416.310(c)(1)(i). In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39569), we did not propose any
changes to these policies.
2. Requirements Regarding Participation
Status
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75133 through 75135) for
a complete discussion of the
participation status requirements for the
CY 2014 payment determination and
subsequent years. In the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70533 through 70534), we codified
these requirements regarding
participation status for the ASCQR
Program at 42 CFR 416.305. In the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39569), we did not propose any changes
to these policies.
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data
Submitted for the ASCQR Program
1. Requirements Regarding Data
Processing and Collection Periods for
Claims-Based Measures Using Quality
Data Codes (QDCs)
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75135) for a complete
summary of the data processing and
collection periods for the claims-based
measures using QDCs for the CY 2014
payment determination and subsequent
years. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR
70534), we codified the requirements
regarding data processing and collection
periods for claims-based measures using
QDCs for the ASCQR Program at 42 CFR
416.310(a)(1) and (2).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39569) we did not propose
any changes to these requirements. We
note that data submission for the
following claims-based measures using
QDCs was suspended in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59117 through 59123;
59134 through 59135) until further
action in rulemaking:
• ASC–1: Patient Burn;
• ASC–2: Patient Fall;
• ASC–3: Wrong Site, Wrong Side,
Wrong Patient, Wrong Procedure,
Wrong Implant; and
• ASC–4: Hospital Transfer/
Admission.
We also note that we are requesting
comment on updating the submission
method for the above measures in
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section XV.B.5. of this final rule with
comment period.
These data processing and collection
period requirements will remain in the
ASCQR Program for application to any
future claims-based measures using
QDCs adopted by the ASCQR Program.
2. Minimum Threshold, Minimum Case
Volume, and Data Completeness for
Claims-Based Measures Using QDCs
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59472) (and the previous
rulemakings cited therein), as well as 42
CFR 416.310(a)(3) and 42 CFR
416.305(c) for our policies about
minimum threshold, minimum case
volume, and data completeness for
claims-based measures using QDCs. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39569), we did not propose any
changes to these policies.
3. Requirements for Data Submitted via
an Online Data Submission Tool
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59472) (and the previous
rulemakings cited therein) and 42 CFR
416.310(c) for our previously finalized
policies for data submitted via an online
data submission tool. For more
information on data submission using
QualityNet, we refer readers to: https://
www.qualitynet.org.
a. Requirements for Data Submitted via
a Non-CMS Online Data Submission
Tool
We refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75139 through 75140) and
the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66985 through
66986) for our requirements regarding
data submitted via a non-CMS online
data submission tool (that is, the CDC
NHSN website). We codified our
existing policies regarding the data
collection time periods for measures
involving online data submission and
the deadline for data submission via a
non-CMS online data submission tool at
42 CFR 416.310(c)(2).
As we noted in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59135), no measures submitted via a
non-CMS online data submission tool
remain in the ASCQR Program
beginning with the CY 2020 payment
determination. In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39569
through 39570), we did not propose any
changes to our non-CMS online data
submission tool reporting requirements;
these requirements would apply to any
future non-CMS online data submission
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tool measures adopted in the ASCQR
Program.
b. Requirements for Data Submitted via
a CMS Online Data Submission Tool
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59473) (and the previous
rulemakings cited therein) and
§ 416.310(c)(1) for our requirements
regarding data submitted via a CMS
online data submission tool. We are
currently using the QualityNet website
to host our CMS online data submission
tool: https://www.qualitynet.org. We
note that in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR
59473), we finalized expanded
submission via the CMS online tool to
also allow for batch data submission
and made corresponding changes to the
§ 416.310(c)(1)(i).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39570), we did not propose
any changes to this policy. The
following previously finalized measures
require data to be submitted via a CMS
online data submission tool for the CY
2021 payment determination and
subsequent years:
• ASC–9: Endoscopy/Polyp
Surveillance: Appropriate Follow-Up
Interval for Normal Colonoscopy in
Average Risk Patients
• ASC–11: Cataracts: Improvement in
Patients’ Visual Function within 90
Days Following Cataract Surgery
• ASC–13: Normothermia Outcome
• ASC–14: Unplanned Anterior
Vitrectomy
4. Requirements for Non-QDC Based,
Claims-Based Measure Data
We did not propose any changes to
our requirements for non-QDC based,
claims-based measures in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39570).
We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59136 through 59138, where we
established a 3-year reporting period for
the previously adopted measure, ASC–
12: Facility 7-Day Risk-Standardized
Hospital Visit Rate after Outpatient
Colonoscopy. In that final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59106 through
59107), we established a similar policy
under the Hospital OQR Program.
We also note that we are finalizing
our proposal to adopt ASC–19: FacilityLevel 7-Day Hospital Visits after General
Surgery Procedures Performed at
Ambulatory Surgical Centers (NQF
#3357) in section XV.B.3. of this final
rule with comment period to which
these requirements for non-QDC based,
claims-based measures apply.
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5. Requirements for Data Submission for
ASC–15a–e: Outpatient and Ambulatory
Surgery Consumer Assessment of
Healthcare Providers and Systems (OAS
CAHPS) Survey-Based Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79822 through 79824) for
our previously finalized policies
regarding survey administration and
vendor requirements for the CY 2020
payment determination and subsequent
years. In addition, we codified these
policies at 42 CFR 416.310(e). However,
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59450
through 59451), we delayed
implementation of the ASC–15a–e: OAS
CAHPS Survey-based measures
beginning with the CY 2020 payment
determination (CY 2018 data
submission) until further action in
future rulemaking, and we refer readers
to that discussion for more details. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39570), we did not propose any
changes to this policy.
6. Extraordinary Circumstances
Exception (ECE) Process for the CY 2020
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59474 through 59475)
(and the previous rulemakings cited
therein) and 42 CFR 416.310(d) for the
ASCQR Program’s policies for
extraordinary circumstance exceptions
(ECE) requests.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59474
through 59475), we: (1) Changed the
name of this policy from ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances extensions or exemption’’
to ‘‘extraordinary circumstances
exceptions’’ for the ASCQR Program,
beginning January 1, 2018; and (2)
revised 42 CFR 416.310(d) of our
regulations to reflect this change. We
also clarified that we will strive to
complete our review of each request
within 90 days of receipt. In the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39570), we did not propose any changes
to these policies.
7. ASCQR Program Reconsideration
Procedures
We refer readers to the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59475) (and the previous
rulemakings cited therein) and 42 CFR
416.330 for the ASCQR Program’s
reconsideration policy. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39570),
we did not propose any changes to this
policy.
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E. Payment Reduction for ASCs That
Fail To Meet the ASCQR Program
Requirements
1. Statutory Background
We refer readers to the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68499) for a detailed
discussion of the statutory background
regarding payment reductions for ASCs
that fail to meet the ASCQR Program
requirements.
2. Policy Regarding Reduction to the
ASC Payment Rates for ASCs That Fail
To Meet the ASCQR Program
Requirements for a Payment
Determination Year
The national unadjusted payment
rates for many services paid under the
ASC payment system are equal to the
product of the ASC conversion factor
and the scaled relative payment weight
for the APC to which the service is
assigned. For CY 2020, the ASC
conversion factor is equal to the
conversion factor calculated for the
previous year updated by the
multifactor productivity (MFP)-adjusted
hospital market basket update factor.
The MFP adjustment is set forth in
section 1833(i)(2)(D)(v) of the Act. The
MFP-adjusted hospital market basket
update is the annual update for the ASC
payment system for a 5-year period (CY
2019 through CY 2023). Under the
ASCQR Program in accordance with
section 1833(i)(7)(A) of the Act and as
discussed in the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR
68499), any annual increase shall be
reduced by 2.0 percentage points for
ASCs that fail to meet the reporting
requirements of the ASCQR Program.
This reduction applied beginning with
the CY 2014 payment rates (77 FR
68500). For a complete discussion of the
calculation of the ASC conversion factor
and our finalized proposal to update the
ASC payment rates using the inpatient
hospital market basket update for CYs
2019 through 2023, we refer readers to
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59073 through
59080).
In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (77 FR 68499
through 68500), in order to implement
the requirement to reduce the annual
update for ASCs that fail to meet the
ASCQR Program requirements, we
finalized our proposal that we would
calculate two conversion factors: A full
update conversion factor and an ASCQR
Program reduced update conversion
factor. We finalized our proposal to
calculate the reduced national
unadjusted payment rates using the
ASCQR Program reduced update
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conversion factor that would apply to
ASCs that fail to meet their quality
reporting requirements for that calendar
year payment determination. We
finalized our proposal that application
of the 2.0 percentage point reduction to
the annual update may result in the
update to the ASC payment system
being less than zero prior to the
application of the MFP adjustment.
The ASC conversion factor is used to
calculate the ASC payment rate for
services with the following payment
indicators (listed in Addenda AA and
BB to the proposed rule, which are
available via the internet on the CMS
website): ‘‘A2’’, ‘‘G2’’, ‘‘P2’’, ‘‘R2’’ and
‘‘Z2’’, as well as the service portion of
device-intensive procedures identified
by ‘‘J8’’ (77 FR 68500). We finalized our
proposal that payment for all services
assigned the payment indicators listed
above would be subject to the reduction
of the national unadjusted payment
rates for applicable ASCs using the
ASCQR Program reduced update
conversion factor (77 FR 68500).
The conversion factor is not used to
calculate the ASC payment rates for
separately payable services that are
assigned status indicators other than
payment indicators ‘‘A2’’, ‘‘G2’’, ‘‘J8’’,
‘‘P2’’, ‘‘R2’’ and ‘‘Z2.’’ These services
include separately payable drugs and
biologicals, pass-through devices that
are contractor-priced, brachytherapy
sources that are paid based on the OPPS
payment rates, and certain office-based
procedures, radiology services and
diagnostic tests where payment is based
on the PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based
amount, and a few other specific
services that receive cost-based payment
(77 FR 68500). As a result, we also
finalized our proposal that the ASC
payment rates for these services would
not be reduced for failure to meet the
ASCQR Program requirements because
the payment rates for these services are
not calculated using the ASC conversion
factor and, therefore, not affected by
reductions to the annual update (77 FR
68500).
Office-based surgical procedures
(generally those performed more than 50
percent of the time in physicians’
offices) and separately paid radiology
services (excluding covered ancillary
radiology services involving certain
nuclear medicine procedures or
involving the use of contrast agents) are
paid at the lesser of the PFS nonfacility
PE RVU-based amounts or the amount
calculated under the standard ASC
ratesetting methodology. Similarly, in
the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66933 through
66934), we finalized our proposal that
payment for certain diagnostic test
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61433
codes within the medical range of CPT
codes for which separate payment is
allowed under the OPPS will be at the
lower of the PFS nonfacility PE RVUbased (or technical component) amount
or the rate calculated according to the
standard ASC ratesetting methodology
when provided integral to covered ASC
surgical procedures. In the CY 2013
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68500), we finalized our
proposal that the standard ASC
ratesetting methodology for this type of
comparison would use the ASC
conversion factor that has been
calculated using the full ASC update
adjusted for productivity. This is
necessary so that the resulting ASC
payment indicator, based on the
comparison, assigned to these
procedures or services is consistent for
each HCPCS code, regardless of whether
payment is based on the full update
conversion factor or the reduced update
conversion factor.
For ASCs that receive the reduced
ASC payment for failure to meet the
ASCQR Program requirements, we
believe that it is both equitable and
appropriate that a reduction in the
payment for a service should result in
proportionately reduced coinsurance
liability for beneficiaries (77 FR 68500).
Therefore, in the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR
68500), we finalized our proposal that
the Medicare beneficiary’s national
unadjusted coinsurance for a service to
which a reduced national unadjusted
payment rate applies will be based on
the reduced national unadjusted
payment rate.
In that final rule with comment
period, we finalized our proposal that
all other applicable adjustments to the
ASC national unadjusted payment rates
would apply in those cases when the
annual update is reduced for ASCs that
fail to meet the requirements of the
ASCQR Program (77 FR 68500). For
example, the following standard
adjustments would apply to the reduced
national unadjusted payment rates: the
wage index adjustment; the multiple
procedure adjustment; the interrupted
procedure adjustment; and the
adjustment for devices furnished with
full or partial credit or without cost (77
FR 68500). We believe that these
adjustments continue to be equally
applicable to payment for ASCs that do
not meet the ASCQR Program
requirements (77 FR 68500).
In the CY 2015, CY 2016, CY 2017, CY
2018, and CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rules with comment period (79 FR
66981 through 66982; 80 FR 70537
through 70538; 81 FR 79825 through
79826; 82 FR 59475 through 59476; and
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83 FR 59138 through 59139,
respectively), we did not make any
other changes to these policies. We did
not propose any changes to these
policies for CY 2020 in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39570
through 39571), did not receive any
public comments on these policies, and
are finalizing the continuation of these
policies for CY 2020.
XVI. Requirements for Hospitals To
Make Public a List of Their Standard
Charges and Request for Information
(RFI): Quality Measurement Relating to
Price Transparency for Improving
Beneficiary Access to Provider and
Supplier Charge Information
In the CY 2020 Medicare Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment System
and Ambulatory Surgical Center
Payment System Proposed Rule (84 FR
39398), we proposed requirements for
hospitals to make public a list of their
standard charges pursuant to 2718(e) of
the Public Health Service (PHS) Act. We
received over 1,400 comments on our
proposed requirements for hospitals to
make public their standard charges. We
intend to summarize and respond to
public comments on the proposed
policies in a forthcoming final rule.
In addition, to inform our future
efforts to develop policies related to
transparency in health care charges, we
published a Request for Information that
sought stakeholder input on a number of
related quality of health care issues. We
received over 63 comments. We
appreciate the feedback we received and
will take it into account as we further
consider our future policies.
XVII. Organ Procurement
Organizations (OPOs) Conditions for
Coverage (CfCs): Proposed Revision of
the Definition of ‘‘Expected Donation
Rate’’
A. Revision of the Definition of
‘‘Expected Donation Rate’’
To be an OPO, an entity must meet
the applicable requirements of both the
Act and the Public Health Service Act
(the PHS Act). Section 1138(b) of the
Act provides the statutory qualifications
and requirements that an OPO must
meet in order for organ procurement
costs to be paid under the Medicare
program or the Medicaid program.
Section 1138(b)(1)(A) of the Act
specifies that an OPO must operate
under a grant made under section 371(a)
of the PHS Act or must be certified or
recertified by the Secretary as meeting
the standards to be a qualified OPO
within a certain time period. Congress
has provided that payment may be made
for organ procurement cost ‘‘only if’’ the
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OPO meets the performance-related
standards prescribed by the Secretary.
To receive payment under the Medicare
program or the Medicaid program for
organ procurement costs, the entity
must have an agreement with, or be
designated by, the Secretary (section
1138(b)(1)(F) of the Act and 42 CFR
486.304).
Pursuant to section 371(b)(1)(D)(ii)(II)
of the PHS Act, the Secretary is required
to establish outcome and process
performance measures for OPOs to meet
based on empirical evidence, obtained
through reasonable efforts, of organ
donor potential and other related factors
in each service area of the qualified
OPO. An OPO also must be a member
of and abide by the rules and
requirements of the OPTN that have
been approved by the Secretary (section
1138(b)(1)(D) of the Act). We established
Conditions for Coverage (CfCs) for OPOs
to be able to receive payments from the
Medicare and Medicaid programs at 42
CFR part 486, subpart G, to implement
the statutory requirements. These
regulations set forth the certification
and recertification processes, outcome
requirements, and process performance
measures for OPOs and were effective
on July 31, 2006 (71 FR 30982).
We proposed to harmonize the CMS
definition of ‘‘expected donation rate’’
with the Scientific Registry for
Transplant Recipient’s (SRTR)
definition of the term. The SRTR
operates under contract from the Health
Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA) and is responsible for providing
statistical and other analytic support to
the Organ Procurement and
Transplantation Network (OPTN) for
purposes including the formulation and
evaluation of organ allocation and other
OPTN policies.167 As we noted in the
proposed rule (84 FR 39596), in 2009
the SRTR determined that a more
precise method to calculate an OPO’s
expected donation rate would be to base
it on the national experience for OPOs
serving similar eligible donor
populations and donation service areas
(DSAs) and then adjust for patient
characteristics, that is age, sex, race, and
cause of death among eligible deaths.
We agree with the SRTR’s assessment
for this specific measure and we
proposed to revise such definition to
state that the expected donation rate per
100 eligible deaths would be the rate
expected for an OPO based on the
national experience for OPOs serving
similar eligible donor populations and
DSAs. We proposed that this rate would
be adjusted for the distributions of age,
167 https://www.srtr.org/about-srtr/mission-visionand-values/.
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sex, race, and cause of death among
eligible deaths.
We noted that if we finalize this
proposal, this change would take effect
on the effective date of the final rule
with comment period, which would
occur during the 2022 recertification
cycle. Because the final regulation
change would be prospective from the
final rules’ effective date in order to give
OPOs adequate time to comply with the
change to the definition for ‘‘expected
donation rate,’’ we also proposed to
change the time period for the observed
donation rate for the second outcome
measure for the 2022 recertification
cycle only. As a result, we proposed to
revise § 486.318(a)(2), (b)(2), and (c)(1)
to reduce the time period for this
outcome measure. We proposed to
calculate the expected donation rate
using 12 of the 24 months of data
following the effective date of the final
rule with comment period (using data
from January 1, 2020 through December
31, 2021). After the 2022 recertification
cycle, and if there were no other
changes to the OPO outcome measures,
we would return to assess OPO
performance based on 36 months of
data.
Comment: We received public
comments from a wide range of
individuals, OPOs, national associations
and coalitions, and the Organ
Procurement and Transplantation
Network/United Network for Organ
Sharing (OPTN/UNOS). The vast
majority of comments were supportive
of the proposed change to the definition
of ‘‘expected donation rate’’.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for our proposal
and we thank them for their feedback.
Our proposal to align our definition of
‘‘expected donation rate’’ with the
SRTR’s definition will enable us to
continue to enforce our second outcome
measure, eliminate provider confusion,
and provide consistency between the
CMS requirements and the SRTR’s data.
We therefore are finalizing our proposal
to revise the definition of ‘‘expected
donation rate’’ to align with the SRTR’s
definition, without modification.
Specifically, the revised definition will
state that the expected donation rate per
100 eligible deaths is the rate expected
for an OPO based on the national
experience for OPOs serving similar
eligible donor populations and DSAs.
This rate would be adjusted for the
distributions of age, sex, race, and cause
of death among eligible deaths.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with the proposed change to
the timeframe, which would reduce the
time period for this outcome measure
for the 2022 recertification cycle only.
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The commenters stated that reducing
the time period may have unintended
consequences and distort, in a positive
or negative way, an OPO’s performance.
Some also stated that this proposal
would affect OPOs with smaller
volumes, and those that may be
sensitive to random variability over
short periods of time. In summary, the
commenters stated that this change
would not provide adequate time period
for a statistically meaningful set of data
and may incorrectly identify OPOs as
failing the metric due to normal random
fluctuation in activity, rather than
underlying performance concerns. The
commenters requested that the new
definition of ‘‘expected donation rate’’
therefore apply to the next
recertification cycle, after the
completion of the current cycle.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
proposed change to the time period for
this second outcome measure and we
are sensitive as to how such a change
might negatively impact OPOs. We note
that it was not our intention to unfairly
penalize OPOs or undermine our goals
of accurately measuring OPO
performance. Rather, given the fact that
the finalization of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule would occur during
the 2022 recertification cycle, we
attempted to mitigate any timing issues
with regards to the use of data for
purposes of determining the second
outcome measure by applying the same
standard to all OPOs for the identical
time period once the rule was effective.
We believed that a 12-month period of
the 24 months of data following the
effective date of the final rule with
comment period would be sufficient to
determine an OPO’s performance on
this measure. However, we agree that
using 12 out of the 24 months of data
may have unintended consequences on
OPOs and the recertification process,
and therefore we are not finalizing this
proposal.
In order to ensure fairness for OPOs
and in order to finalize our change to
the definition of ‘‘expected donation
rate’’ after the effective date of the final
rule, we are finalizing a policy that
would not require all OPOs to meet the
standards of the second outcome
measure for the 2022 recertification
cycle only. We are requiring OPOs to
meet one of the two other outcome
measures in order to be recertified (the
OPO’s donation rate measure and
aggregate donor yield measure) for the
2022 recertification cycle only. By
deferring the use of the new standard,
we would ensure that no OPOs would
be prejudiced by the limited time period
and OPOs that may not be able to meet
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the second measure due to limitations of
the data or other variables as described
by the commenters would not be
decertified based only on the changed
regulation. If no subsequent changes are
made to the outcome measure
requirements via rulemaking, the new
definition of ‘‘expected donation rate’’
will apply after the 2022 recertification
cycle. OPOs must continue to comply
with the other CfCs and continue their
quality improvement efforts through
their Quality Assurance and
Performance Improvement (QAPI)
program, as required by our rules at
§ 486.348.
B. Request for Information Regarding
Potential Changes to the Organ
Procurement Organization and
Transplant Center Regulations
In the proposed rule (84 FR 39597),
we stated that we were considering a
comprehensive proposal to update the
CfCs for OPOs and possibly the CoPs for
transplant centers, and that we were
therefore seeking public input regarding
what revisions may be appropriate for
the current CfCs for OPOs, set forth at
42 CFR 486.301 through 486.360, and
the current CoPs for transplant centers,
set forth at 42 CFR 482.68 through
482.104.
We also solicited comments on
whether the following two potential
OPO outcome measures would be valid
measures and would be consistent with
statutory requirements. We noted that
we were especially interested in public
comments about the validity and
reliability of these possible measures.
The first potential measure would be
the actual deceased donors as a
percentage of inpatient deaths among
patients 75 years of age or younger with
a cause of death consistent with organ
donation. The data on inpatient deaths,
including additional related
demographic data, would be derived
from the Center for Disease Control
(CDC) Detailed Mortality File and the
National Center for Health Statistic’s
National Vital Statistics Report.
The second potential measure is the
actual organs transplanted as a
percentage of inpatient deaths among
patients 75 years of age or younger with
a cause of death consistent with organ
donation.
Comment: We received a wide range
of comments on the RFI. Most
commenters supported changing the
OPO and transplant center CfCs and
CoPs, and offered specific suggestions
on potential changes to these
requirements. Some of those suggestions
included, but were not limited to:
Recommendations that CMS work with
the Health Resources and Services
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61435
Administration (HRSA) and the OPTN
to develop combined OPO and
transplant center metrics; support for
the development of best practices
regarding donation after cardiac death
(DCD) and regulations to require
support for DCD; support for a cause,
age, and, location consistent (CALC)
deaths metric, recommendations to
develop metrics that include donor
hospitals and transplant centers;
recommendations that referral and
notifications of imminent death and
potential donors be improved; support
for addressing issues that OPOs in noncontiguous states and territories face;
requests to improve reimbursement for
transplant centers and OPOs; and
suggestions to better align definitions
and terminology.
Additional suggestions included: A
recommendation that CMS not use the
observed versus expected measure to
evaluate OPOs and that the yield
measure should ultimately be replaced
or supplemented with a combined OPO
and transplant center metric that
measures how they interact to maximize
organ transplants; a recommendation
that CMS take into consideration an
OPO’s work and commitment to
research and development, deceased
donor research, and participation in
such projects/practices as the HOPE
Project, Donor Hypothermia Study and
Stanford Donor Heart Study; a
recommendation that an in-patient
assessment of ICU deaths be conducted;
a recommendation that CMS eliminate
or revise the transplant center outcomes
and that the SRTR star ratings or
denominator for metrics or adjustments
be eliminated; that CMS should
prioritize national databases for
regulatory purposes; and a
recommendation that CMS, HRSA,
OPTN, SRTR and the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) form a taskforce
to examine publically available data
sources that would evaluate sources and
identify the practicality of identifying
ventilated patient who die in hospitals/
emergency departments.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their responses to our RFI. We will
continue to review the public comments
on the RFI for future rulemaking and
potential revisions to the CfCs for OPOs
and the CoPs for transplant centers.
C. Miscellaneous Comments
Although not specifically discussed in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we wanted to address the multiple
commenters who urged us to finalize
our proposal on the transplant center
CoPs. We note that, in response to
public comments that we received on
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
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we finalized our proposals to remove
the Medicare re-approval requirements
for transplant centers. We refer readers
to the Medicare and Medicaid Programs;
Regulatory Provisions To Promote
Program Efficiency, Transparency, and
Burden Reduction; Fire Safety
Requirements for Certain Dialysis
Facilities; Hospital and Critical Access
Hospital (CAH) Changes To Promote
Innovation, Flexibility, and
Improvement in Patient Care final rule
(84 FR 51732) for more information.
XVIII. Clinical Laboratory Fee
Schedule: Revisions to the Laboratory
Date of Service Policy
A. Background on the Medicare Part B
Laboratory Date of Service Policy
The date of service (DOS) is a
required data field on all Medicare
claims for laboratory services. However,
a laboratory service may take place over
a period of time—the date the laboratory
test is ordered, the date the specimen is
collected from the patient, the date the
laboratory accesses the specimen, the
date the laboratory performs the test,
and the date results are produced may
occur on different dates. In the final rule
on coverage and administrative policies
for clinical diagnostic laboratory
services published in the Federal
Register on November 23, 2001 (66 FR
58791 through 58792), we adopted a
policy under which the DOS for clinical
diagnostic laboratory services generally
is the date the specimen is collected. In
that final rule, we also established a
policy that the DOS for laboratory tests
that use an archived specimen is the
date the specimen was obtained from
storage (66 FR 58792).
In 2002, we issued Program
Memorandum AB–02–134, which
permitted contractors discretion in
making determinations regarding the
length of time a specimen must be
stored to be considered ‘‘archived.’’ In
response to comments requesting that
we issue a national standard to clarify
when a stored specimen can be
considered ‘‘archived,’’ in the
Procedures for Maintaining Code Lists
in the Negotiated National Coverage
Determinations for Clinical Diagnostic
Laboratory Services final notice,
published in the Federal Register on
February 25, 2005 (70 FR 9357), we
defined an ‘‘archived’’ specimen as a
specimen that is stored for more than 30
calendar days before testing. Specimens
stored for 30 days or less continued to
have a DOS of the date the specimen
was collected.
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B. Medicare DOS Policy and the ‘‘14Day Rule’’
In the final rule with comment period
entitled, in relevant part, ‘‘Revisions to
Payment Policies, Five-Year Review of
Work Relative Value Units, Changes to
the Practice Expense Methodology
Under the Physician Fee Schedule, and
Other Changes to Payment Under Part
B’’ published in the Federal Register on
December 1, 2006 (December 1, 2006
MPFS final rule) (71 FR 69705 through
69706), we added a new § 414.510 in
title 42 of the CFR regarding the clinical
laboratory DOS requirements and
revised our DOS policy for stored
specimens. We explained in that MPFS
final rule that the DOS of a test may
affect payment for the test, especially in
situations in which a specimen that is
collected while the patient is being
treated in a hospital setting (for
example, during a surgical procedure) is
later used for testing after the patient
has been discharged from the hospital.
We noted that payment for the test is
usually bundled with payment for the
hospital service, even when the results
of the test did not guide treatment
during the hospital stay. To address
concerns raised for tests related to
cancer recurrence and therapeutic
interventions, we finalized
modifications to the DOS policy in
§ 414.510(b)(2)(i) for a test performed on
a specimen stored less than or equal to
30 calendar days from the date it was
collected (a non-archived specimen), so
that the DOS is the date the test was
performed (instead of the date of
collection) if the following conditions
are met:
• The test is ordered by the patient’s
physician at least 14 days following the
date of the patient’s discharge from the
hospital;
• The specimen was collected while
the patient was undergoing a hospital
surgical procedure;
• It would be medically inappropriate
to have collected the sample other than
during the hospital procedure for which
the patient was admitted;
• The results of the test do not guide
treatment provided during the hospital
stay; and
• The test was reasonable and
medically necessary for the treatment of
an illness.
As we stated in the December 1, 2006
MPFS final rule, we established these
five criteria, which we refer to as the
‘‘14-day rule,’’ to distinguish laboratory
tests performed as part of posthospital
care from the care a beneficiary receives
in the hospital. When the 14-day rule
applies, laboratory tests are not bundled
into the hospital stay, but are instead
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paid separately under Medicare Part B
(as explained in more detail below).
We also revised the DOS requirements
for a chemotherapy sensitivity test
performed on live tissue. As discussed
in the December 1, 2006 MPFS final rule
(71 FR 69706), we agreed with
commenters that these tests, which are
primarily used to determine
posthospital chemotherapy care for
patients who also require hospital
treatment for tumor removal or
resection, appear to be unrelated to the
hospital treatment in cases where it
would be medically inappropriate to
collect a test specimen other than at the
time of surgery, especially when the
specific drugs to be tested are ordered
at least 14 days following hospital
discharge. As a result, we revised the
DOS policy for chemotherapy
sensitivity tests, based on our
understanding that the results of these
tests, even if they were available
immediately, would not typically affect
the treatment regimen at the hospital.
Specifically, we modified the DOS for
chemotherapy sensitivity tests
performed on live tissue in
§ 414.510(b)(3) so that the DOS is the
date the test was performed if the
following conditions are met:
• The decision regarding the specific
chemotherapeutic agents to test is made
at least 14 days after discharge;
• The specimen was collected while
the patient was undergoing a hospital
surgical procedure;
• It would be medically inappropriate
to have collected the sample other than
during the hospital procedure for which
the patient was admitted;
• The results of the test do not guide
treatment provided during the hospital
stay; and
• The test was reasonable and
medically necessary for the treatment of
an illness.
We explained in the December 1,
2006 MPFS final rule that, for
chemotherapy sensitivity tests that meet
this DOS policy, Medicare would allow
separate payment under Medicare Part
B; that is, separate from the payment for
hospital services.
C. Billing and Payment for Laboratory
Services Under the OPPS
As we explained in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39599),
the DOS requirements at 42 CFR
414.510 are used to determine whether
a hospital bills Medicare for a clinical
diagnostic laboratory test (CDLT) or
whether the laboratory performing the
test bills Medicare directly. Separate
regulations at 42 CFR 410.42(a) and
411.15(m) generally provide that
Medicare will not pay for a service
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furnished to a hospital patient during an
encounter by an entity other than the
hospital unless the hospital has an
arrangement (as defined in 42 CFR
409.3) with that entity to furnish that
particular service to its patients, with
certain exceptions and exclusions.
These regulations, which we refer to as
the ‘‘under arrangements’’ provisions in
this discussion, require that if the DOS
falls during an inpatient or outpatient
stay, payment for the laboratory test is
usually bundled with the hospital
service.
Under our current rules, if a test
meets all DOS requirements in
§ 414.510(b)(2)(i), (b)(3), or (b)(5) (an
additional exception finalized in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period that we describe later
in this section), the DOS is the date the
test was performed. In this situation, the
laboratory would bill Medicare directly
for the test and would be paid under the
Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule
(CLFS) directly by Medicare. However,
if the test does not meet the DOS
requirements in § 414.510(b)(2)(i), (b)(3),
or (b)(5), the DOS would be the date the
specimen was collected from the
patient. In that case, the hospital would
bill Medicare for the test and then
would pay the laboratory that performed
the test, if the laboratory provided the
test under arrangement.
In recent rulemakings, we have
reviewed appropriate payment under
the OPPS for certain diagnostic tests
that are not commonly performed by
hospitals. In CY 2014, we finalized a
policy to package certain CDLTs under
the OPPS (78 FR 74939 through 74942
and 42 CFR 419.2(b)(17) and 419.22(l)).
In CYs 2016 and 2017, we made some
modifications to this policy (80 FR
70348 through 70350; 81 FR 79592
through 79594). Under our current
policy, certain CDLTs that are listed on
the CLFS are packaged as integral,
ancillary, supportive, dependent, or
adjunctive to the primary service or
services provided in the hospital
outpatient setting during the same
outpatient encounter and billed on the
same claim. Specifically, we
conditionally package most CDLTs and
only pay separately for a laboratory test
when it is: (1) The only service provided
to a beneficiary on a claim; (2)
considered a preventive service; (3) a
molecular pathology test; or (4) an
advanced diagnostic laboratory test
(ADLT) that meets the criteria of section
1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act (78 FR 74939
through 74942; 80 FR 70348 through
70350; and 81 FR 79592 through 79594).
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we excluded all
molecular pathology laboratory tests
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from packaging because we believed
these relatively new tests may have a
different pattern of clinical use, which
may make them generally less tied to a
primary service in the hospital
outpatient setting than the more
common and routine laboratory tests
that are packaged.
For similar reasons, in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79592 through 79594), we
extended the exclusion to also apply to
all ADLTs that meet the criteria of
section 1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act,
which we describe below. We stated
that we will assign status indicator ‘‘A’’
(Separate payment under the CLFS) to
ADLTs once a laboratory test is
designated an ADLT under the CLFS.
Laboratory tests that are separately
payable and are listed on the CLFS are
paid at the CLFS payment rates outside
the OPPS.
D. ADLTs Under the New Private Payor
Rate-Based CLFS
Section 1834A of the Act, as
established by section 216(a) of Public
Law 113–93, the Protecting Access to
Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA), required
significant changes to how Medicare
pays for CDLTs under the CLFS. Section
216(a) of PAMA also established a new
subcategory of CDLTs known as ADLTs,
with separate reporting and payment
requirements under section 1834A of
the Act. In the CLFS final rule
published in the Federal Register on
June 23, 2016, entitled ‘‘Medicare
Program; Medicare Clinical Diagnostic
Laboratory Tests Payment System Final
Rule’’ (81 FR 41036), we implemented
the requirements of section 1834A of the
Act.
As defined in § 414.502, an ADLT is
a CDLT covered under Medicare Part B
that is offered and furnished only by a
single laboratory, and cannot be sold for
use by a laboratory other than the single
laboratory that designed the test or a
successor owner. Also, an ADLT must
meet either Criterion (A), which
implements section 1834A(d)(5)(A) of
the Act, or Criterion (B), which
implements section 1834A(d)(5)(B) of
the Act, as follows:
• Criterion (A): The test is an analysis
of multiple biomarkers of
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA),
ribonucleic acid (RNA), or proteins;
when combined with an empirically
derived algorithm, yields a result that
predicts the probability a specific
individual patient will develop a certain
condition(s) or respond to a particular
therapy(ies); provides new clinical
diagnostic information that cannot be
obtained from any other test or
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combination of tests; and may include
other assays.
Or:
• Criterion (B): The test is cleared or
approved by the Food and Drug
Administration.
Generally, under the revised CLFS,
ADLTs are paid using the same
methodology based on the weighted
median of private payor rates as other
CDLTs. However, updates to ADLT
payment rates occur annually instead of
every 3 years. The payment
methodology for ADLTs is detailed in
the June 23, 2016 CLFS final rule (81 FR
41076 through 41083). For additional
information regarding ADLTs, we refer
readers to the CMS website: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/
ClinicalLabFeeSched/PAMAregulations.html.
E. Additional Laboratory DOS Policy
Exception for the Hospital Outpatient
Setting
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59393
through 59400), we established an
additional exception at § 414.510(b)(5)
for the hospital outpatient setting so that
the DOS for molecular pathology tests
and certain ADLTs that are excluded
from the OPPS packaging policy is the
date the test was performed (instead of
the date of specimen collection) if
certain conditions are met. Under the
exception that we finalized at
§ 414.510(b)(5), in the case of a
molecular pathology test or a test
designated by CMS as an ADLT under
paragraph (1) of the definition of an
ADLT in § 414.502, the DOS of the test
must be the date the test was performed
only if:
• The test was performed following a
hospital outpatient’s discharge from the
hospital outpatient department;
• The specimen was collected from a
hospital outpatient during an encounter
(as both are defined in 42 CFR 410.2);
• It was medically appropriate to
have collected the sample from the
hospital outpatient during the hospital
outpatient encounter;
• The results of the test do not guide
treatment provided during the hospital
outpatient encounter; and
• The test was reasonable and
medically necessary for the treatment of
an illness.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59397), we
explained that we believed the
laboratory DOS policy in effect prior to
CY 2018 created administrative
complexities for hospitals and
laboratories with regard to molecular
pathology tests and laboratory tests
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expected to be designated by CMS as
ADLTs that meet the criteria of section
1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act. We noted
that under the laboratory DOS policy in
effect prior to CY 2018, if the tests were
ordered less than 14 days following a
hospital outpatient’s discharge from the
hospital outpatient department,
laboratories generally could not bill
Medicare directly for the molecular
pathology test or ADLT. In those
circumstances, the hospital had to bill
Medicare for the test, and the laboratory
had to seek payment from the hospital.
We noted that commenters informed us
that because ADLTs are performed by
only a single laboratory and molecular
pathology tests are often performed by
only a few laboratories, and because
hospitals may not have the technical
ability to perform these complex tests,
the hospital may be reluctant to bill
Medicare for a test it would not
typically (or never) perform. The
commenters also stated that as a result,
the hospital might delay ordering the
test until at least 14 days after the
patient is discharged from the hospital
outpatient department, or even cancel
the order to avoid the DOS policy,
which may restrict a patient’s timely
access to these tests. In addition, we
noted that we had heard from
commenters that the laboratory DOS
policy in effect prior to CY 2018 may
have disproportionately limited access
for Medicare beneficiaries under
Medicare Parts A and B, because
Medicare Advantage plans under
Medicare Part C and other private
payors allow laboratories to bill directly
for tests they perform.
We also recognized that greater
consistency between the laboratory DOS
rules and the current OPPS packaging
policy would be beneficial and would
address some of the administrative and
billing issues created by the DOS policy
in effect prior to CY 2018. We noted that
we exclude all molecular pathology
tests and ADLTs under section
1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act from the
OPPS packaging policy because we
believe these tests may have a different
pattern of clinical use, which may make
them generally less tied to a primary
service in the hospital outpatient setting
than the more common and routine
laboratory tests that are packaged, and
we had already established exceptions
to the DOS policy that permit the DOS
to be the date of performance for certain
tests that we believe are not related to
the hospital treatment and are used to
determine posthospital care. We stated
that we believed a similar exception is
justified for the molecular pathology
tests and ADLTs excluded from the
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OPPS packaging policy, which we
understood are used to guide and
manage the patient’s care after the
patient is discharged from the hospital
outpatient department. We noted that
we believed that, like the other tests
currently subject to DOS exceptions,
these tests can legitimately be
distinguished from the care the patient
receives in the hospital, and thus we
would not be unbundling services that
are appropriately associated with
hospital treatment. Moreover, we
reiterated that these tests are already
paid separately outside of the OPPS at
CLFS payment rates. Therefore, we
agreed with the commenters that the
laboratory performing the test should be
permitted to bill Medicare directly for
these tests, instead of relying on the
hospital to bill Medicare on behalf of
the laboratory under arrangements.
A list of the specific laboratory tests
currently subject to the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) is available
on the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/ClinicalLabFee
Sched/Clinical-Lab-DOS-Policy.html.
Following publication of the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we issued Change Request (CR)
10419, Transmittal 4000, the claims
processing instruction implementing the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5), with an effective date of
January 1, 2018 and an implementation
date of July 2, 2018. After issuing CR
10419, we heard from stakeholders that
many hospitals and laboratories were
having administrative difficulties
implementing the DOS exception set
forth at § 414.510(b)(5). On July 3, 2018,
we announced that, for a 6-month
period, we would exercise enforcement
discretion with respect to the laboratory
DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(5). We
explained that stakeholder feedback
suggested many providers and suppliers
would not be able to implement the
laboratory DOS exception by the July 2,
2018 implementation date established
by CR 10419, and that such entities
required additional time to develop the
systems changes necessary to enable the
performing laboratory to bill for tests
subject to the exception. We noted that
this enforcement discretion applies to
all providers and suppliers with regard
to ADLTs and molecular pathology tests
subject to the laboratory DOS exception
policy, and that during the enforcement
discretion period, hospitals may
continue to bill for these tests that
would otherwise be subject to the
laboratory DOS exception.
We then extended the enforcement
discretion period for two additional,
consecutive 6-month periods, after
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learning through communications with
representatives of providers and
suppliers affected by the policy that
there are still many entities who will
not be able to implement the laboratory
DOS exception and will need additional
time to come into compliance. The
enforcement discretion period is
currently in effect until January 2, 2020.
The latest enforcement discretion
announcement as well as CR 10419,
Transmittal 4000 is available on the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/ClinicalLabFeeSched/ClinicalLab-DOS-Policy.html.
As we explained in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39600),
during this time of enforcement
discretion, we have continued to gage
the industry’s readiness to implement
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). Stakeholders, including
representatives of hospitals, have
informed us that hospitals, in particular,
are having difficulty with developing
the systems changes necessary to
provide the performing laboratory with
the patient’s hospital outpatient status,
beneficiary demographic information,
and insurance information, such as
whether the beneficiary is enrolled in
original fee-for-service Medicare or a
specific Medicare Advantage plan.
According to stakeholders, the
performing laboratory requires this
information so that it can bill Medicare
directly for the test instead of seeking
payment from the hospital.
In addition, stakeholders, including
representatives of laboratories, have
noted that some entities performing
molecular pathology testing subject to
the laboratory DOS exception, such as
blood banks and blood centers, may not
be enrolled in the Medicare program
and may not have established a
mechanism to bill Medicare directly.
According to these stakeholders, blood
banks and blood centers that are not
currently enrolled in the Medicare
program would need to establish a
billing mechanism so that they can bill
Medicare directly when the
requirements of § 414.510(b)(5) are met.
Stakeholders have asserted that
establishing a billing mechanism is
labor intensive and that blood banks
and blood centers currently lack the
financial resources and expertise to take
on this task.
We also noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule that protein-based
Multianalyte Assays with Algorithmic
Analysis (MAAAs) that are not
considered molecular pathology tests
and are not designated as ADLTs under
paragraph (1) of the definition of ADLT
in § 414.502, are also conditionally
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packaged under the OPPS at this time.
Several stakeholders have suggested that
they believe that the pattern of clinical
use of some of these protein-based
MAAAs make them relatively
unconnected to the primary hospital
outpatient service, though they do not
currently qualify for the DOS exception
at § 414.510(b)(5) solely because they
are MAAAs. We stated that a proteinbased MAAA that is designated by CMS
as an ADLT under paragraph (1) of the
definition of an ADLT in § 414.502
would be eligible for the DOS exception
at § 414.510(b)(5), and we intend to
consider policies regarding MAAAs for
future rulemaking.
F. Potential Revisions to Laboratory
DOS Policy and Request for Public
Comments
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39601), we stated that in
response to the implementation
concerns raised by stakeholders, we
were considering making additional
changes to the laboratory DOS policy.
We reiterated that, under the
exception that we finalized at
§ 414.510(b)(5), for a molecular
pathology test or a test designated by
CMS as an ADLT under paragraph (1) of
the definition of an ADLT in § 414.502,
the DOS of the test must be the date the
test was performed only if: (i) The test
was performed following a hospital
outpatient’s discharge from the hospital
outpatient department; (ii) the specimen
was collected from a hospital outpatient
during an encounter (as both are defined
in 42 CFR 410.2); (iii) it was medically
appropriate to have collected the sample
from the hospital outpatient during the
hospital outpatient encounter; (iv) the
results of the test do not guide treatment
provided during the hospital outpatient
encounter; and (v) the test was
reasonable and medically necessary for
the treatment of an illness. When all
conditions under the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) are met, the
DOS is the date of test performance,
instead of the date of specimen
collection, which effectively unbundles
the test from the hospital outpatient
encounter. As such, the test is not
considered a hospital outpatient service
for which the hospital must bill
Medicare and for which the performing
laboratory must seek payment from the
hospital, but rather a laboratory test
under the CLFS for which the
performing laboratory must bill
Medicare directly. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule we considered
three options for potential changes to
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5), and we requested
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comment on these changes. Specifically,
we sought comment on:
• Changing the test results
requirement at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5)(iv);
• Limiting the laboratory DOS
exception at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5) to
ADLTs; and/or
• Excluding blood banks and blood
centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5).
These potential revisions are
discussed below.
1. Changing the Test Results
Requirement at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5)(iv)
We explained in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule that, since finalizing
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5), we have continued to
review and analyze the factors we use
to determine whether a molecular
pathology test or Criterion (A) ADLT is
unrelated to the hospital treatment and
used to determine posthospital care, and
therefore should have a DOS that is the
date of performance rather than the date
of specimen collection. One such factor,
in § 414.510(b)(5)(iv), is that the results
of the test must not guide treatment
provided during the hospital outpatient
encounter—meaning, the encounter in
which the specimen was collected. We
stated in the proposed rule that we were
no longer convinced that the
determination as to whether a molecular
pathology test or ADLT is separable
from a hospital service should be based
on whether the test results guide
treatment during the specific hospital
outpatient encounter in which the
specimen was collected. We suggested
that a molecular pathology test or an
ADLT that is performed on a specimen
collected during a hospital outpatient
encounter, in which the results of the
test are intended to guide treatment
during a future hospital outpatient
encounter, is a hospital service, and
therefore should be billed by the
hospital that collected the specimen
under arrangements, just like if the test
does not meet one of the other prongs
of § 414.510(b)(5). In contrast, if the
results of the test are not intended to
guide treatment during a hospital
outpatient encounter, and if all other
requirements in § 414.510(b)(5) are met,
the test is separable from a hospital
service and therefore, should be
considered a laboratory service and the
performing laboratory should bill for the
test.
We noted that a test’s relationship to
a hospital outpatient encounter depends
on many factors, including the patient’s
current diagnosis (or lack of a current
diagnosis), the procedure(s) being
considered for the patient, the patient’s
current and previous medical history,
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61439
and other factors and that the ordering
physician would be aware of these
beneficiary characteristics. As such, we
indicated that it should be the role of
the ordering physician to determine
whether the results of a molecular
pathology test or ADLT are or are not
intended to guide treatment during a
hospital outpatient encounter.
Therefore, we considered a revision to
our current laboratory DOS policy at
§ 414.510(b)(5)(iv) to specify that the
ordering physician would determine
whether the results of the ADLT or
molecular pathology test are intended to
guide treatment provided during a
hospital outpatient encounter, if the
other four requirements under
§ 414.510(b)(5) are met. We noted that,
under this approach, the test would be
considered a hospital service unless the
ordering physician determines that the
test does not guide treatment during a
hospital outpatient encounter. If the
ordering physician determines that the
test results are not intended to guide
treatment during the hospital outpatient
encounter from which the specimen was
collected or during a future hospital
outpatient encounter, for purposes of
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5), the DOS service of the
test would be the date of test
performance. In this situation, we
stated, the test would not be considered
a hospital service and the performing
laboratory would be required to bill for
the test.
We noted that, conversely, if the other
four requirements under § 414.510(b)(5)
are met but the ordering physician
determines that the results of the
laboratory test are intended to guide
treatment during a hospital outpatient
encounter, the DOS would be the date
of specimen collection. As a result, the
hospital that collected the specimen
would bill for the laboratory test under
arrangements and the laboratory would
seek payment from the hospital for the
test. We stated that this potential
revision to the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) would be
consistent with our belief that a
molecular pathology test or a Criterion
(A) ADLT is a hospital service when the
results of the test are intended to guide
treatment during a hospital outpatient
encounter.
We requested comments from
hospitals, laboratories, physicians and
non-physician practitioners, and other
interested stakeholders regarding this
potential revision to the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5). In
particular we sought comments
regarding our view that when the results
of molecular pathology testing and
Criterion (A) ADLTs are intended to
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guide treatment during a future hospital
outpatient encounter, the test is a
hospital service. We also requested
public comments regarding the
administrative aspects of requiring the
ordering physician to determine when
the test results are not intended to guide
the treatment during a hospital
outpatient encounter, as well as the
process for the ordering physician to
document this decision and provide
notification to the hospital that
collected the specimen for billing
purposes. We noted that we would
consider finalizing this potential
revision to the laboratory DOS policy as
a result of our review of the comments
received on this topic.
We also noted that we were only
soliciting comments on potential
changes to the laboratory DOS exception
at § 414.510(b)(5), and not the 14-day
rule DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(2) or
the chemotherapy sensitivity test DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(3). We stated
that these exceptions would continue to
include the requirement that the results
of the test do not guide treatment
provided during the hospital stay,
meaning the hospital stay in which the
specimen was collected. Although we
recognized that the considerations about
how a hospital service is determined
under § 414.510(b)(5) discussed
previously may also be applicable to the
14-day rule DOS exception and
chemotherapy sensitivity test DOS
exception, we explained that we were
only considering revisions to the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) at that time. Because of
the administrative issues raised by
stakeholders regarding the
implementation of the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5), we stated
that we believed a cautious and
incremental approach to making
changes to laboratory DOS policy is
warranted. As such, any potential
changes to the 14-day rule DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(2) and the
chemotherapy sensitivity test DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(3) would be
addressed in future rulemaking.
A summary of the public comments
received on this potential revision and
our responses are provided below.
Comment: Many commenters stated
that the current laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) has
improved beneficiary access to
precision testing like molecular
pathology testing and ADLTs and urged
us not to make any changes that would
jeopardize beneficiary access to such
testing. They asserted that this
exception to laboratory DOS policy has
limited delays in ordering precision
diagnostic tests for patients seeking care
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during a hospital outpatient encounter
and has afforded physicians more
consistent and timely access to
precision diagnostic information to
guide clinical decision-making. A few
commenters also submitted a summary
analysis of Medicare Part B claims data
comparing the utilization of molecular
pathology testing in CY 2018, which
reflects the first year of the laboratory
DOS exception, to CY 2017, which was
the last year before that exception
became effective. The analysis found
that the total number of molecular
pathology test claims following a
hospital outpatient encounter increased
from 43,012 claims in 2017 to 66,637
claims in 2018, which represents an
increase of about 55 percent. The
commenters noted that despite the CMS
announcement of enforcement
discretion with respect to the laboratory
DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(5), even
in its first year this exception for the
hospital outpatient setting has improved
beneficiary access to timely diagnostic
information and more effective targeted
therapy and/or clinical management. As
such, they urged us not to make any
changes to the current laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5), except for
the change that would exclude blood
banks and centers.
Response: We appreciate these
comments and the claims analysis
supporting the commenters’ statements
about increased beneficiary access to
molecular pathology testing since the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) became effective. As
discussed later in this section, because
of the concerns and objections raised by
commenters, we are not finalizing the
potential change to the test results
requirement at § 414.510(b)(5)(iv) or the
potential revision that would limit
§ 414.510(b)(5) to ADLTs approved
under Criterion (A).
Comment: The overwhelming
majority of commenters urged us not to
finalize the potential change to the test
results requirement at § 414.510(b)(5)(iv)
because doing so would be inconsistent
with current clinical practice and
administratively burdensome, and may
lead to beneficiary access issues. A few
stakeholders also contended that this
potential change to the laboratory DOS
exception would be inconsistent with
longstanding policy related to services
performed outside the hospital
outpatient setting. We discuss these
comments in more detail below.
Many stakeholders stated that
requiring the ordering physician to
determine whether the test results are
intended to guide treatment during a
future hospital encounter is unworkable
because it would be inconsistent with
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current clinical practice. They noted
that the very reason why the physician
is ordering the test is to determine the
next clinical intervention steps for the
patient. However, the ordering
physician cannot be expected to
reasonably predict how he or she will
use the test results because the
physician lacks the information to make
that prediction at the time of ordering.
They also noted that the physician
ordering the testing may not be the only
physician who treats the patient based
on the test results. For example, patients
with complex or chronic conditions,
like cancer, often have multidisciplinary
care teams that coordinate various
aspects of the patients’ treatment plan.
In addition, the patient, and the
patient’s family are frequently involved
in the treatment decision, which is
informed by the results of the test.
Therefore, commenters expressed that it
is impossible for the ordering physician
to predict the treatment preferences
and/or site of treatment of the entire
care team, as well as the preferences of
the patient and the patient’s family.
Many stakeholders also pointed out
the administrative complexities
associated with requiring the ordering
physician to predict the future use of
the test results, which would also
require documentation in the
beneficiary’s medical record and
coordination with the hospital and
performing laboratory to ensure that the
correct entity bills for the test. They
contended that this potential policy
change would result in a significant
amount of ongoing administrative
burden. For example, the hospital
would need to develop a mechanism to
ensure that the ordering physician
actually makes a determination as to
whether the test results guide treatment
during a hospital outpatient encounter
for each molecular pathology test and
ADLT that meets the requirements of
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). The hospital would then
need to extract that determination from
the beneficiary’s medical record and
reflect it in the hospital’s billing system,
and make certain not to bill for a test
that is not intended to guide treatment
during the current hospital outpatient
encounter or a future hospital outpatient
encounter. In turn, the hospital would
need to add this data element to the
other data elements that it already must
convey to the performing laboratory (for
example, beneficiary demographic and
insurance information) so that the
performing laboratory can bill Medicare
directly for the test.
Additionally, many commenters
asserted that changing the test results
requirement may lead to delayed
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beneficiary access to molecular
pathology testing and ADLTs. For
instance, several commenters noted that
the performing laboratory would be
permitted to bill and be paid directly by
Medicare only when the ordering
physician determines that the test
results do not guide treatment during
any hospital outpatient encounter. They
noted that if the ordering physician
cannot make a prediction about the
future use of the test results, which as
discussed above, they believed is likely
to be the case, the default date of service
would be the date of specimen
collection and the hospital would be
required to bill for the test. Therefore,
they suggested test orders would most
likely be delayed until at least 14 days
following the patient’s discharge from
the hospital outpatient department to
allow the performing laboratory to bill
Medicare directly for the test. As a
result, they contended that changing the
test results requirement would once
again lead to the same beneficiary
access issues that prompted us to
establish the laboratory DOS exception
under § 414.510(b)(5) in the first place.
Finally, a few commenters stated that
the potential change to the test results
requirement would be inconsistent with
longstanding policy related to services
performed outside the hospital
outpatient setting. For example, they
noted that in the final rule with
comment period entitled, ‘‘Office of
Inspector General; Medicare Program;
Prospective Payment System for
Hospital Outpatient Services, Final
Rule’’ published in the Federal Register
on April 7, 2000 (65 FR 18440 through
18441), the agency stated that ‘‘[a] freestanding entity, that is, one that is not
provider-based, may bill for services
furnished to beneficiaries who do not
meet the definition of a hospital
outpatient at the time the service is
furnished’’. . . and that ‘‘[o]ur bundling
requirements apply to services
furnished to a ‘hospital outpatient,’ as
defined in § 410.2, during an
‘encounter,’ also defined in § 410.2.’’ As
such, they suggested the potential
revision to the test results requirement
would not be consistent with this
longstanding policy position because it
could require the hospital to bill for
testing furnished days, and sometimes
weeks, after the patient’s hospital
outpatient encounter. Therefore, they
urged us not to finalize the change to
the test results requirement discussed in
the CY 2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule.
Response: We appreciate the
stakeholder feedback regarding the
various problems that could arise if we
were to finalize the potential revision to
the test results requirement under the
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laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5)(iv) that we discussed in
the CY 2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule.
Based on the comments received on this
potential revision, we agree that
requiring the ordering physician to
predict whether the results of the test
will guide treatment during a future
hospital outpatient encounter may be
overly burdensome and inconsistent
with clinical practice. As noted by the
commenters, the results of the test are
unknown at the time the test is ordered
and, therefore, the ordering physician
cannot be expected to reasonably
predict how he or she will use those test
results. In addition, we understand that
the ordering physician typically will
consult with other physicians and
practitioners of the patient’s care team,
as well as the patient, to determine the
future treatment of a patient and/or the
site of service for that treatment. As
such, we understand from commenters
that it would be difficult for the
ordering physician alone to determine
whether the test results will or will not
guide treatment during a future hospital
outpatient encounter. We also agree that
changing the test results requirement at
§ 414.510(b)(5)(iv) as discussed in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule may
be administratively burdensome for the
ordering physician, hospital, and
performing laboratory and may lead to
beneficiary access concerns. As the
commenters pointed out, if the ordering
physician does not make a
determination as to whether the test
results guide treatment during the
current hospital outpatient encounter or
a future hospital outpatient encounter,
the default laboratory DOS would be the
date of specimen collection and the
hospital would be required to bill
Medicare directly for the test. We agree
with commenters that these
circumstances could once again lead to
delayed test ordering which may result
in similar beneficiary access issues that
existed prior to the implementation of
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b(5). We also acknowledge the
concerns about the potential change to
the test results requirement being
inconsistent with longstanding CMS
policy. For these reasons, after
considering the many concerns and
objections raised by commenters, we are
not finalizing the change to the test
results requirement at
§ 414.510(b)(5)(iv).
2. Limiting the Laboratory DOS
Exception at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5) to
ADLTs
As discussed previously in this
section, we established the laboratory
DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(5), in
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61441
part, because of stakeholder concerns
that the laboratory DOS policy in effect
prior to CY 2018 created beneficiary
access issues with regard to molecular
pathology tests and laboratory tests
expected to be designated by CMS as
ADLTs that meet the criteria of section
1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act. In the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR
33653), we considered revising the DOS
rule to create an exception only for
ADLTs that meet the criteria in section
1834A(d)(5)(A) of the Act because
ADLTs are offered and furnished only
by a single laboratory (as defined in 42
CFR 414.502). We noted that a hospital,
or another laboratory that is not the
single laboratory (as defined in 42 CFR
414.502), cannot furnish the ADLT, and
there may be additional beneficiary
concerns for these ADLTs that may not
apply to the molecular pathology tests.
For example, a hospital may not have an
arrangement with the single laboratory
that furnishes a particular ADLT, which
could lead the hospital to delay the
order for the ADLT until 14 days after
the patient’s discharge to avoid financial
risk and thus potentially delay
medically necessary care for the
beneficiary. We solicited comments as
to whether molecular pathology tests
present the same concerns of delayed
access to medically necessary care as
ADLTs, noting that molecular pathology
tests are not required to be furnished by
a single laboratory and that there may be
‘‘kits’’ for certain molecular pathology
tests that a hospital can purchase,
allowing the hospital to perform the
test. In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (82 FR
59399) we agreed with commenters that
limiting the new laboratory DOS
exception to include only ADLTs (and
not molecular pathology tests) would be
inconsistent with the OPPS packaging
policy and that relatively few
laboratories may perform certain
molecular pathology testing. We also
acknowledged that hospitals may not
currently have the technical expertise or
certification requirements necessary to
perform molecular pathology testing
and therefore must rely on independent
laboratories to perform the test.
Therefore, we concluded that similar
beneficiary access concerns that apply
to ADLTs may also apply to molecular
pathology tests, and we decided not to
limit the exception at 42 CFR
414.510(b)(5) to ADLTs only.
However, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we stated that after
further review of this issue, we no
longer believed the same beneficiary
access concerns that apply to ADLTs
also apply to molecular pathology tests.
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In particular, unlike ADLTs, molecular
pathology tests are not required by
statute to be furnished by a single
laboratory, so hospital laboratories and
independent laboratories are not
prevented from performing molecular
pathology testing. In addition, we stated
that we understood a number of kits
have recently been developed and
approved by FDA that would allow a
hospital to more easily perform some of
these molecular pathology tests. As
such, we were no longer convinced that
molecular pathology tests present the
same concerns of delayed access to
medically necessary care as ADLTs,
which must be performed by a single
laboratory. We noted that we believed a
hospital’s laboratory can develop the
expertise to perform a molecular
pathology test or establish an
arrangement with an independent
laboratory to perform the test. Therefore,
we believed that any incentives that
may exist to delay ordering until at least
14 days following a patient’s discharge
from the hospital outpatient department
do not apply to molecular pathology
tests.
We also recognized in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule that limiting
the laboratory DOS exception to ADLTs
is not consistent with OPPS packaging
policy. As discussed previously in this
section of the final rule, we exclude all
molecular pathology laboratory tests
from OPPS packaging because we
believe these tests may have a different
pattern of clinical use, which may make
them generally less tied to a primary
service in the hospital outpatient setting
than the more common and routine
laboratory tests that are packaged (80 FR
70348 through 70350). However, we
stated in the proposed rule that
consistency with the OPPS packaging
policy only formed part of the basis for
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). We noted that
beneficiary access concerns were the
primary reason for establishing this
laboratory DOS exception and we no
longer believed the access concerns are
sufficiently compelling for the
molecular pathology tests. In light of the
billing and enrollment concerns raised
by the blood banks and blood centers
and administrative issues raised by
other stakeholders, we expressed that
the policy reasons for removing these
tests from the laboratory DOS exception
at § 414.510(b)(5) outweigh the
difference it creates with the OPPS
packaging policy.
Therefore, as discussed in the
proposed rule, we considered a
potential revision that would limit the
laboratory DOS provisions of
§ 414.510(b)(5) to tests designated by
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CMS as an ADLT under paragraph (1) of
the definition of an ADLT in § 414.502.
Molecular pathology tests would be
removed from the provisions of
§ 414.510(b)(5). However, we noted that
molecular pathology tests would still be
subject to the laboratory DOS provisions
of § 414.510(b)(2) and (3).
We requested comments on
potentially limiting the laboratory DOS
exception policy at § 414.510(b)(5) to
laboratory tests that have been granted
Criterion (A) ADLT status by CMS. We
also noted that we would consider
finalizing this approach as a result of
the public comments received.
A summary of the public comments
received on this potential revision and
our response is provided below.
Comment: Many stakeholders
objected to this potential change to the
laboratory DOS exception because
molecular pathology tests continue to
have similar beneficiary access issues as
ADLTs. For example, they asserted that
many molecular pathology tests that do
not meet the clinical requirements of an
ADLT under Criterion (A), are
performed by a single laboratory (or
very few laboratories) for specific
clinical indications and that very few
‘‘kits’’ have been approved by the FDA.
They noted that the vast majority of
molecular pathology tests are performed
by the laboratories that developed and
validated them and therefore, hospitals
rarely perform molecular pathology
tests. A few commenters explained that
about 50 test kits are available for
purchase, but that many of them are
redundant and test for the same analyte,
leaving no more than 15–20 unique kits
available for molecular testing that
might be used by a hospital laboratory.
In addition, these commenters stated
that many hospitals would not have the
capability to perform such specialized
testing and the cost of bringing this
specialized testing capability in-house
may be prohibitive for many hospitals,
particularly if the volume of testing is
expected to be low, as would be the case
for smaller and rural hospitals.
Several stakeholders pointed out that
molecular pathology tests approved for
ADLT status under Criterion (B), which
requires FDA clearance or approval, are
also statutorily required to be performed
by a single laboratory and therefore have
similar beneficiary access issues as
Criterion (A) ADLTs. They contended
that there is no reason why a sole-source
molecular pathology test that is FDA
cleared or approved should be excluded
from the laboratory DOS exception,
while sole-source testing approved as an
ADLT under Criterion (A) are included.
They noted that if the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) was limited
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to tests granted ADLT status under
Criterion (A), the performing laboratory
would not be permitted to bill Medicare
directly for any other molecular
pathology testing performed on
specimens collected during a hospital
outpatient encounter, including those
sole source tests approved as an ADLT
under Criterion (B), unless the test
meets the 14-day rule requirements
under § 414.510(b)(2)(i). Therefore,
these commenters maintained that
limiting the laboratory DOS policy
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) to ADLTs
approved by CMS under Criterion (A)
would once again lead to delayed test
orders and timely beneficiary access
concerns.
Response: We appreciate stakeholder
feedback on the beneficiary access
concerns related to molecular pathology
testing that are not Criterion (A) ADLTs.
As noted previously in this section of
this final rule with comment period, we
considered limiting the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) to Criterion
(A) ADLTs based on our belief that the
beneficiary access concerns were no
longer the same for molecular pathology
testing, largely because they are not
statutorily required to be performed by
a single laboratory and we believed
more kits are now available for hospitals
to perform these tests. In addition, we
noted this change could help address
the billing and enrollment concerns
raised by the blood banks and centers
and administrative issues raised by
other stakeholders. However, after
reviewing the comments received on
this topic, we no longer believe that
limiting the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) to ADLTs would be
appropriate at this time. Commenters
have informed us that many molecular
pathology tests are performed by very
few laboratories (or even by a single
laboratory) and therefore, have similar
beneficiary access concerns as ADLTs.
In addition, based on the comments
received, we understand that very few
unique molecular pathology test kits are
available for hospitals to use for
molecular testing. We also acknowledge
the comments that molecular pathology
tests approved as ADLTs under
Criterion (B) are also required by law to
be performed by a single laboratory, and
therefore, have similar beneficiary
access issues as tests granted ADLT
status under Criterion (A). As discussed
later in this section of this final rule
with comment period, we are finalizing
the exclusion of molecular pathology
testing performed by blood banks or
centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5). As such,
we are no longer considering limiting
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the exception to ADLTs as a mechanism
for addressing the billing and
enrollment concerns raised by the blood
bank and center industry. In summary,
because of the concerns raised by
commenters, we are not finalizing this
potential revision to limit the laboratory
DOS policy exception at § 414.510(b)(5)
to laboratory tests that have been
granted Criterion (A) ADLT status by
CMS.
Comment: Several stakeholders
contended that limiting the laboratory
DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(5) to
Criterion (A) ADLTs would result in
additional administrative burden for
hospitals, laboratories and CMS. For
example, they noted that because many
molecular pathology tests are solesource tests, we would receive a large
number of requests for ADLT status
under Criterion (A) so that the
performing laboratory may bill for the
test directly when performed on a
specimen collected during a hospital
outpatient encounter. As a result, they
asserted that hospitals and laboratories
may be required to reverse their billing
policies multiple times over the course
of a few years, or even a few months.
For example, if the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) were
limited to ADLTs, the performing
laboratory would no longer be permitted
to bill for molecular pathology tests that
are not currently Criterion (A) ADLTs,
and therefore, the hospital and
laboratory would be required to reverse
its current billing practices so that the
hospital bills Medicare directly for the
test, instead of the performing
laboratory. Stakeholders explained that
for those molecular pathology tests that
eventually receive approval as a
Criterion (A) ADLT, the performing
laboratory and hospital would again be
required to reverse their billing policies
and perhaps reverse those billing
policies another time if the molecular
pathology test ever loses its Criterion
(A) ADLT status. They contended that
this potential fluctuation in billing
requirements would be administratively
burdensome for hospitals and
laboratories and urged us not to finalize
this change to the laboratory DOS
policy.
Response: We agree that if we were to
finalize this change, potential
fluctuation in billing may occur as a
result of molecular pathology testing
being granted Criterion (A) ADLT status
in the future, and this could result in
additional burden on hospitals and
performing laboratories. As noted
previously, because of the concerns
raised by commenters, we are not
finalizing the potential revision to limit
the laboratory DOS policy exception at
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§ 414.510(b)(5) to laboratory tests that
have been granted Criterion (A) ADLT
status by CMS.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the revision that would limit
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) to Criterion (A) ADLTs
as discussed in the proposed rule. They
contended that removing molecular
pathology tests from the exception
would greatly reduce the administrative
burden associated with ensuring that
the appropriate entity bill Medicare
directly and would therefore allow work
to be devoted to actual beneficiary care.
Response: As discussed previously in
this section, as a result of our review of
public comments on this topic, we
believe that limiting the laboratory DOS
exception to ADLTs could lead to a
delay in test ordering and therefore,
result in similar beneficiary access
issues that prompted us to establish the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). For this and other
reasons discussed previously, we are
not finalizing this change.
3. Excluding Blood Banks and Blood
Centers From the Laboratory DOS
Exception at 42 CFR 414.510(b)(5)
As we discussed in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39603),
following publication of the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, stakeholders informed us that
blood banks and blood centers perform
some of the molecular pathology test
codes that are subject to the laboratory
DOS exception at § 414.510(b)(5). We
noted that, based on information from
stakeholders, it was our understanding
that blood banks and centers are entities
whose primary function is the
collection, storage and dissemination of
blood products and are typically
accredited by the AABB (formally
known as the American Association of
Blood Banks). We explained that
representatives of blood banks and
centers contend that while these entities
may perform the same molecular
pathology tests that are performed and
billed by other laboratories that are not
blood banks and centers, the blood
banks and centers perform these tests
for different reasons. Specifically, they
assert that the blood banks and centers
perform molecular pathology testing
primarily to identify the most
compatible blood product for a patient,
whereas other laboratories typically
provide molecular pathology testing for
diagnostic purposes. We stated that,
according to these stakeholders, the
patient has already been diagnosed with
a specific disease or condition before
the blood sample is provided to the
blood bank or center, which are then
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tasked with providing compatible blood
products and assessing risks of
incompatibility for hospitals. In other
words, blood banks and centers perform
molecular pathology testing for patients
to enable hospitals to prevent adverse
conditions associated with blood
transfusions, rather than perform
molecular pathology testing for
diagnostic purposes. We provided
examples of molecular pathology testing
performed by blood banks and centers,
including red blood cell phenotyping, as
described by HCPCS code 81403, red
blood cell antigen testing as described
by HCPCS code 0001U, and platelet
antigen testing as described by HCPCS
code 81105.
As discussed previously, when a test
meets all of the conditions in the
current laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5), the DOS of the test must
be the date the test was performed, and
the laboratory that performed the test
must bill Medicare directly for the test.
This would include circumstances
when a laboratory that is a blood bank
or blood center performs the test.
However, given the different purpose of
molecular pathology testing performed
by the blood banks and centers, that is,
blood compatibility testing, in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
questioned whether the molecular
pathology testing performed by blood
banks and centers is appropriately
separable from the hospital stay, given
that it typically informs the same
patient’s treatment during a future
hospital stay. We stated that we were
concerned that our current policy may
unbundle molecular testing performed
by a blood bank or center for a hospital
patient. We stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule that based on our
concern and the comments we had
received from stakeholders, we were
considering a regulatory change that
would exclude blood banks and centers
from the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). Under this potential
revision, the DOS for molecular
pathology testing performed by blood
banks and centers on specimens
collected from a hospital outpatient
during a hospital outpatient encounter
would be the date of specimen
collection unless another exception to
the DOS policy applies. As a result, the
hospital would bill for the molecular
pathology test under arrangements and
the blood bank or center performing the
test would seek payment from the
hospital. In addition, we noted that for
purposes of excluding blood banks and
centers from the provisions of
§ 414.510(b)(5), we would define a
blood bank and center as an entity
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whose primary function is the
collection, storage and dissemination of
blood products. We stated that we
believed this potential definition of a
blood bank and center describes the
primary responsibility of all blood
banks and centers, which distinguishes
these entities from other laboratory
types. We further noted that in
developing a definition of blood banks
and centers we were distinguishing
blood banks and blood centers from
non-blood bank and blood center
laboratories that perform the same
molecular pathology test codes but for
different reasons, that is, for diagnostic
purposes rather than for blood
compatibility testing. We requested
comments from hospitals, blood banks
and centers, and other interested
stakeholders regarding a potential
revision to laboratory DOS policy that
would exclude blood banks and centers
from the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). We also requested
specific comments as to how a blood
bank and blood center may be defined
in the context of this provision, and
particularly how to distinguish blood
banks and centers from other clinical
laboratories. We noted that we would
consider finalizing a revision to the
laboratory DOS policy that excludes
blood banks and centers from the
provisions of § 414.510(b)(5) as a result
of comments received on this topic.
A summary of the public comments
received on this potential revision and
our responses are provided below.
Comment: Many stakeholders strongly
supported the potential revision to
exclude blood banks and centers from
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) because this change
would ensure beneficiary access to
timely specialized molecular testing
performed by blood banks and centers.
They concurred with our reasoning that
blood banks and centers typically
perform molecular pathology testing to
identify the most compatible blood
product for the patient, which enables
hospitals to prevent adverse conditions
associated with blood transfusions and
is inherently tied to a hospital service.
They also noted that excluding blood
banks and centers makes sense from a
policy perspective because blood banks
and centers are typically not Medicare
enrolled entities, and therefore cannot
bill Medicare directly. Therefore, the
commenters stated that requiring blood
banks and centers to comply with the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) would create
considerable burden and has the
potential to cause delays in testing for
blood compatibility and jeopardize
Medicare beneficiaries’ access to care.
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As such, stakeholders overwhelmingly
supported the exclusion of blood banks
and centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) so that the
hospital is required to bill for molecular
pathology testing performed by blood
banks and centers.
In addition, a few commenters
asserted that the potential definition of
a blood bank and center, as discussed in
the proposed rule, that is, ‘‘an entity
whose primary function is the
collection, storage and dissemination of
blood products’’ omits ‘‘processing’’ and
‘‘testing’’ which are two critical, unique
functions performed by blood banks and
centers. Therefore, they recommended
revisions to the potential definition of
blood bank and blood center so that it
clearly defines the role of blood banks
and blood centers and better
distinguishes these entities from other
types of laboratories. Specifically, these
commenters suggested that we define a
blood bank and center as ‘‘an entity
whose primary function is the
performance or responsibility for the
performance of, the collection,
processing, testing, storage and/or
distribution of blood or blood
components intended for transfusion
and transplantation.’’ They noted that
the suggested revisions are consistent
with the definition used by the AABB,
which accredits the activities conducted
by blood centers and blood banks.
Response: For the reasons discussed
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, and based on the support received
from stakeholders, we are finalizing the
revision to exclude blood banks and
centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5). In addition,
we agree with commenters that their
suggested revised definition of blood
banks and centers clearly defines the
primary role of blood banks and centers
and better distinguishes blood banks
and centers from other types of
laboratories. To effectuate this policy
change, we are revising § 414.510(b)(5)
to exclude molecular pathology tests
when performed by a laboratory that is
a blood bank or center. We are defining
the term ‘‘blood bank or center’’ instead
of ‘‘blood bank and center’’ to reflect
that a molecular pathology test is
excluded when performed by either a
blood bank or blood center. We are also
defining ‘‘blood bank or center’’ at
§ 414.502 as an entity whose primary
function is the performance or
responsibility for the performance of,
the collection, processing, testing,
storage and/or distribution of blood or
blood components intended for
transfusion and transplantation.
Comment: A few commenters urged
us to clarify that all molecular testing
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performed by blood banks and blood
centers, including molecular testing for
red blood cells, white blood cells and
platelets, is excluded from the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). They noted that most
blood banks and centers do not
currently bill Medicare directly as
laboratories and lack the infrastructure,
resources and expertise to engage in
direct billing. They also reiterated that
requiring blood banks and centers to
comply with the laboratory DOS
exception would create considerable
administrative burden on the blood
bank and blood center industry. One
stakeholder stated that requiring
hospitals to ‘‘tease out’’ different
purposes for molecular pathology tests
performed by blood banks or centers
would add even more complexity to the
laboratory DOS policy exception.
However, a few commenters that
supported excluding blood banks and
centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) believe that
only molecular pathology testing
performed for blood compatibility
purposes should be excluded from the
laboratory DOS exception; otherwise,
blood banks or centers should be
required to bill Medicare directly.
Response: We clarify that this policy
change categorically excludes molecular
pathology testing performed by
laboratories that are blood banks or
blood centers from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5). Under our
final policy, molecular pathology testing
performed by blood banks or centers on
a specimen collected during a hospital
outpatient encounter is never subject to
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). We believe that the
burden on hospitals will be mitigated
with the policy we are finalizing.
Comment: One commenter contended
that excluding molecular pathology
testing from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) would be
consistent with existing CMS policy.
The commenter noted that the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual, chapter 16,
section 100.2, already states that ‘‘codes
for procedures, services, blood
products[,] auto- transfusions . . . codes
such as whole blood, various red blood
cell products, platelets, plasma, and
cryoprecipitate,’’ along with ‘‘[o]ther
codes for tests primarily associated with
the provision of blood products’’ are
‘‘not clinical laboratory tests and are
therefore never subject to [clinical
laboratory] fee schedule limitations.’’
The commenter noted that this is
because ‘‘[s]uch tests identify various
characteristics of blood products, but
are not diagnostic in nature.’’ The
commenter suggested that this Manual
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guidance already excludes molecular
pathology tests performed by blood
banks and centers from the laboratory
DOS policy exception at § 414.510(b)(5),
because paragraph (b)(5), like the rest of
§ 414.510, applies to the date of service
for ‘‘a clinical laboratory test.’’ However,
the commenter stated that it would be
appropriate to clarify that molecular
pathology testing performed by blood
banks and centers must be billed by the
hospital.
Response: The Medicare Claims
Processing Manual, chapter 16, section
100.2, describes laboratory test codes
that are never subject to the CLFS
because they are not clinical laboratory
tests. They include test codes for
procedures, services, blood products
and auto-transfusions, and other test
codes primarily associated with the
provision of blood products. However,
as discussed previously in this section,
blood banks and centers also perform
some of the same molecular pathology
test codes that are performed and billed
by other laboratories that are not blood
banks or centers, and these molecular
pathology test codes are subject to the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). These molecular
pathology test codes are not addressed
in the manual guidance discussed by
the commenter. Since blood banks and
centers perform some of the same
molecular pathology test codes as other
laboratories that are not blood banks or
centers, we believe that a regulatory
revision is necessary to exclude these
entities from the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5).
4. Additional Comments
Comment: One commenter submitted
two alternative policy proposals. The
first alternative policy proposal involves
allowing hospitals the flexibility to
negotiate with independent laboratories
to determine which entity is responsible
for billing Medicare for tests that are
subject to the laboratory DOS exception
at § 414.510(b)(5). Under this approach,
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) would only apply if the
hospital and the performing laboratory
have not agreed that the hospital will
bill for the test. For instance, the
hospital and laboratory would affirm
their agreement that the hospital will
always bill for a molecular pathology
test or ADLT performed on a specimen
collected during a hospital outpatient
encounter. If the hospital and a specific
performing laboratory do not agree to
this condition, the DOS would be the
date of test performance and the
performing laboratory would bill
Medicare directly for the test. However,
only one bill for the molecular
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pathology test or ADLT would be
permitted. That is, under no
circumstances would both the hospital
and performing laboratory be permitted
to bill for the same test for the same
beneficiary with the same date of
service. The same commenter suggested
another alternative policy approach that
would involve amending the referring
laboratory billing for referred laboratory
testing provision. The commenter stated
that when a test does not guide
treatment during a hospital outpatient
encounter, the hospital laboratory is
acting as a referring laboratory in
accordance with section 1833(h)(5)(A)
of the Act. Under this statutory
provision, a referring laboratory may bill
for a referred laboratory test subject to
certain conditions. The commenter
asserted that it would be reasonable for
CMS to amend its current policy, which
only permits independent clinical
laboratories to bill claims for referred
laboratory services, to also include the
hospital laboratory when the
requirements of the laboratory DOS
policy exception at § 414.510(b)(5) are
met.
The commenter asserted that these
alternative policies would serve as a
permanent solution that would address
the many operational difficulties
experienced by some hospitals and
performing laboratories with respect to
the DOS policy. The commenter urged
us to finalize these suggested policy
approaches effective January 1, 2020. Or
in the alternative, the commenter
requested that we extend the current
enforcement discretion through CY
2020. The commenter contended that
the additional time of enforcement
discretion would allow us to address
this issue in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule so that we could solicit
stakeholder input on another solution.
Response: We are not adopting these
suggestions for CY 2020. However, we
will consider the commenter’s
suggestions as we continue to review,
evaluate and refine the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5).
Comment: Two commenters
recommended us to articulate a final
implementation date for the laboratory
DOS policy exception at § 414.510(b)(5).
They explained that some hospitals
have incurred significant cost to
implement this change, however, due to
CMS’s announcements of enforcement
discretion, some performing laboratories
have refused to implement the change,
which has forced hospitals to have
different billing practices depending on
the performing laboratory. They
requested that CMS implement the
revised laboratory DOS policy exception
at § 414.510(b)(5), which was effective
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61445
January 1, 2018, so that hospitals and
performing laboratories can proceed
with implementing this change.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s feedback on this topic.
However, we wish to clarify that we
have implemented the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5). The
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5) is currently in effect;
however, we have announced that we
will exercise enforcement discretion,
which has allowed hospitals to continue
to bill for tests that would otherwise be
subject to the exception. As discussed
previously in this final rule with
comment period, we heard from
stakeholders that many hospitals and
laboratories were experiencing
administrative difficulties implementing
the laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). Therefore, we issued
consecutive enforcement discretions to
allow more time for hospitals and
laboratories to make the necessary
systems changes to enable the
performing laboratory to bill Medicare
directly.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we apply the same laboratory DOS
exception for ADLTs and molecular
pathology laboratory tests in the
hospital outpatient setting to tests
ordered for hospital inpatients. The
commenter stressed the importance of
having consistent policies across all care
settings and asserted that allowing the
same laboratory DOS exception to apply
in the inpatient setting would improve
CMS’ ability to track the provision of
molecular pathology tests and ADLTs
using HCPCS codes, which would be
useful for analyzing how specific tests
contribute to episode cost, outcomes,
and survival rates.
Response: As discussed in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule (82 FR
59398) we believe that a similar
laboratory DOS exception for ADLTs
approved under Criterion (A) and
molecular pathology tests performed on
specimens collected from hospital
inpatients would have broader policy
implications for the IPPS that need to be
carefully considered. We also note that
we did not discuss revising the
laboratory DOS policy for the inpatient
setting or to improve CMS’ ability to
evaluate patient outcomes in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
However, we intend to continue
studying the laboratory DOS exception
and, if warranted, consider changes to
the laboratory DOS policy for laboratory
tests performed on specimens collected
during an inpatient hospital stay in
future rulemaking.
Comment: Several stakeholders
requested that we add the technical
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component of physician pathology
services, such as in situ hybridization
(ISH), and flow cytometry, to the list of
test codes subject to the laboratory DOS
exception at § 414.510(b)(5) because,
like molecular pathology tests and
ADLTs, timely access to these services
are essential to determine the best
course of clinical care. They also
requested that molecular tests furnished
as technical components of physician
pathology services be excluded from
OPPS packaging policy and paid at the
Medicare physician fee schedule rate.
Response: We will consider the
suggestions raised by commenters as we
continue to review, evaluate and refine
OPPS packaging policy and the
laboratory DOS policy exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5).
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS clarify that the date
of performance is the date of a
laboratory’s final report. They suggested
this clarification would avoid any
ambiguity regarding the date of
performance of the test.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestion. However, as
discussed in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule (82 FR 59398 through 59399)
we continue to have concerns with this
approach because we believe there is no
clear and consistent definition of ‘‘final
report’’ that applies to all laboratories
and all types of specimens collected;
that is, liquid-based, cellular, or tissue
samples. Therefore, we are not making
this clarification.
XIX. Prior Authorization Process and
Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
A. Background
As part of our responsibility to protect
the Medicare Trust Funds, we routinely
analyze data associated with all facets of
the Medicare program. This
responsibility includes monitoring the
total amount or types of claims
submitted by providers and suppliers;
analyzing the claims data to assess the
growth in the number of claims
submitted over time (for example,
monthly and annually, among other
intervals); and conducting comparisons
of the data with other relevant data,
such as the total number of Medicare
beneficiaries served by providers to help
ensure the continued appropriateness of
payment for services furnished in the
hospital outpatient department (OPD).
In line with this responsibility, we
noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that we recently
completed an analysis of the volume of
covered OPD services provided and
determined that CMS has experienced
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significant increases in the utilization
volume of some covered OPD services.
In conducting the analysis, we targeted
services that represent procedures that
are likely to be cosmetic surgical
procedures and/or are directly related to
cosmetic surgical procedures that are
not covered by Medicare, but may be
combined with or masquerading as
therapeutic services.168 We also
recognized the need to establish
baseline measures for comparison
purposes, including, but not limited to,
the yearly rate-of-increase in the number
of OPD claims submitted and the
average annual rate-of-increase in
Medicare allowed amounts. Our
analysis included the review of over 1.1
billion claims related to OPD services
during the 11-year period from 2007
through 2017 169 and detailed that the
overall rate of OPD claims submitted for
payment to the Medicare program
increased each year by an average rate
of 3.2 percent. This equated to an
increase from approximately 90 million
OPD claims submitted for payment in
2007 to approximately 118 million
claims submitted for payment in 2017.
Our analysis also showed an average
annual rate-of-increase in the Medicare
allowed amount (the amount that
Medicare would pay for services
regardless of external variables, such as
beneficiary plan differences,
deductibles, and appeals) of 8.2 percent.
We found that the total Medicare
allowed amount for the OPD services
claims processed in 2007 was
approximately $31 billion and increased
to $65 billion in 2017, while during this
same 11-year period, the average annual
increase in the number of Medicare
beneficiaries per year was only 1.1
percent. The 8.2 percent increase
exceeded the average annual increase of
5.8 percent per year in overall health
care spending during that same time
period (2007–2017), according to the
analysis of the U.S. Bureau of Labor and
Statistics Consumer Price Index for
medical care.170
Upon reviewing specific OPD
categories of services in comparison to
168 Medicare Benefit Policy Manual. Internet
Only. Publication 100–02, Chapter 16, § 120.
169 The data reviewed are maintained in the CMS
Integrated Data Repository (IDR). The IDR is a highvolume data warehouse integrating Medicare Parts
A, B, C, and D, and DME claims, beneficiary and
provider data sources, along with ancillary data
such as contract information and risk scores.
Additional information is available at: https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-andSystems/Computer-Data-and-Systems/IDR/
index.html.
170 The 5.8 percent average increase per year in
overall health care spending was arrived at using
data publicly available on the Bureau of Labor and
Statistics web page, located at: https://www.bls.gov/
cpi/factsheets/medical-care.htm.
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these figures, we found higher than
expected volume increases for several
services. Many of these services fell
within the following five general
categories of services: (1)
Blepharoplasty; (2) botulinum toxin
injections; (3) panniculectomy; (4)
rhinoplasty; and (5) vein ablation.
As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59004 through 59015), and
addressed again in section X.D. of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
have developed many payment policies
with the goal in mind of managing the
growth in Medicare spending for OPD
services, and most recently, to control
unnecessary increases in the volume of
OPD services using our authority under
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act. Section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act authorizes CMS
to develop a method for controlling
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered OPD services. We believe the
increases in volume associated with
certain covered OPD services described
earlier in this section are unnecessary
because the data show that the volume
of utilization of these services far
exceeds what would be expected in
light of the average rate-of-increase in
the number of Medicare beneficiaries;
these procedures are often considered
cosmetic and, in those instances, would
not be covered by Medicare; and we are
unaware of other factors that might
contribute to clinically valid increases
in volume. Therefore, these aboveaverage increases in volume suggest an
increase in unnecessary utilization. As
discussed in detail below, we proposed
to use the authority under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act to require prior
authorization for certain covered OPD
services as a condition of Medicare
payment.
B. Prior Authorization Process for
Certain OPD Services
We believe a prior authorization
process for certain OPD services would
ensure that Medicare beneficiaries
continue to receive medically necessary
care while protecting the Medicare
Trust Funds from improper payments,
and at the same time keeping the
medical necessity documentation
requirements unchanged for providers.
We believe prior authorization for these
services will be an effective method for
controlling increases in the volume of
these services because we expect that it
will reduce the instances in which
Medicare pays for these services when
they are merely cosmetic and not
medically necessary. As a method for
controlling unnecessary increases in the
volume of certain covered OPD services,
we proposed to use our authority under
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section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act to
establish a process through which
providers would submit a prior
authorization request for a provisional
affirmation of coverage before a covered
OPD service is furnished to the
beneficiary and before the claim is
submitted for processing. We proposed
to establish a new subpart I under 42
CFR part 419 to codify the conditions
and requirements for the proposed prior
authorization for certain covered OPD
services to help control unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered OPD
services. This subpart would establish
the conditions of payment for OPD
services that require prior authorization;
establish the submission requirements
for prior authorization requests,
including methods for expedited review
of prior authorization requests; and
provide for suspension of the prior
authorization process generally, or for
particular services. In order to allow
time for providers to better understand
this proposed prior authorization
process, for CMS to ensure sufficient
time is allowed for outreach and
education to affected stakeholders, and
for contractor operational updates to be
in place, we proposed that this
requirement would begin for dates of
service on or after July 1, 2020. We note
that we proposed to pattern some of the
provisions for prior authorization for
covered OPD services after the prior
authorization program that we have
already established for certain durable
medical equipment, prosthetics,
orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS)
under 42 CFR 414.234.
As we noted, CMS routinely analyzes
data as part of its oversight of the
Medicare program, and our analysis was
used as a basis for the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. Moreover, the
Medicare program is continuing to
incorporate advancements in health
information technology (health IT) into
its program operations. This includes
improvements in interoperability, the
secure electronic transmission of
clinical data, and the potential
incorporation of artificial intelligence
into the claims review process. As these
advancements in health IT continue, we
are committed to ensuring that these
efficiencies and enhancements will be
considered, whenever possible, to
reduce the burden placed on providers.
As stated earlier, we proposed to
establish a new subpart I under part 419
(containing §§ 419.80 through 419.89
(§§ 419.84 through 419.89 would be
reserved)) to codify the following
proposed policies for prior
authorization for certain covered OPD
services.
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1. Basis, Scope, and Definitions for
Proposed New Subpart I Under Part 419
We proposed to specify the basis and
scope of the proposed subpart under
proposed new § 419.80, using section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act as our authority
to establish the prior authorization
process and requirements.
We proposed to define key terms
associated with the proposed prior
authorization process for certain
covered OPD services under proposed
new § 419.81. We proposed to define
‘‘prior authorization’’ to mean a process
through which a request for provisional
affirmation of coverage is submitted to
CMS or its contractors for review before
the service is provided to the
beneficiary and before the claim is
submitted. We proposed to define
‘‘provisional affirmation’’ to mean a
preliminary finding that a future claim
for the service will meet Medicare’s
coverage, coding, and payment rules. As
previously mentioned, we patterned
these proposed definitions after the
prior authorization process for certain
DMEPOS under 42 CFR 414.234. Lastly,
we proposed to define the ‘‘list of
hospital outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization’’ as the list
of outpatient department services CMS
publishes in accordance with proposed
new § 419.83(a) that require prior
authorization as a condition of payment.
2. Prior Authorization as a Method for
Controlling Unnecessary Increases in
the Volume of Covered Outpatient
Services (Proposed New § 419.82)
In proposed new § 419.82(a), we
proposed that, as a condition of
Medicare payment, a provider must
submit a prior authorization request for
services on the list of hospital
outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization to CMS
that meets the requirements of the
proposed new § 419.82(c); namely, that
the prior authorization request includes
all documentation necessary to show
that the service meets applicable
Medicare coverage, coding, and
payment rules, and that the request be
submitted before the service is provided
to the beneficiary and before the claim
is submitted. We proposed that claims
submitted for services that require prior
authorization that have not received a
provisional affirmation of coverage from
CMS or its contractors would be denied,
unless the provider is exempt under
§ 419.83(c) (proposed new in
§ 419.82(b)(1)). This would include the
denial of any claims associated with the
denial of a service listed in proposed
§ 419.83(a)(1), including services such
as anesthesiology services, physician
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services, and/or facility services.
Moreover, we proposed that even when
a provisional affirmation has been
received, a claim for services may be
denied based on either technical
requirements that can only be evaluated
after the claim has been submitted for
formal processing or information not
available at the time the prior
authorization request is received
(proposed new § 419.82(b)(2)(i) and (ii)).
We proposed that a provider must
submit a prior authorization request for
any service on the list of outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization that would be published
by CMS (proposed new § 419.82(c)). As
noted earlier, we proposed that, in
submitting a prior authorization request,
the provider must include all relevant
documentation necessary to show that
the service meets applicable Medicare
coverage, coding, and payment rules
and that the request be submitted before
the service is provided to the
beneficiary and before the claim is
submitted (proposed new
§ 419.82(c)(1)(i) and (ii)). We also
proposed that providers have an
opportunity to submit prior
authorization requests for expedited
review when a delay could seriously
jeopardize the beneficiary’s life, health,
or ability to regain maximum function
(proposed new § 419.82(c)(2).
Documentation that the beneficiary’s
life, health, or ability to regain
maximum function is in serious
jeopardy must be submitted with this
request.
We proposed that CMS or its
contractor will review a prior
authorization request for compliance
with applicable Medicare coverage,
coding, and payment rules (proposed
new § 419.82(d)). If the request meets
the applicable Medicare coverage,
coding, and payment rules, CMS or its
contractor would issue a provisional
affirmation to the requesting provider
(proposed new § 419.82(d)(1)(i)). If the
request does not meet the applicable
Medicare coverage, coding, and
payment rules, CMS or its contractor
would issue a non-affirmation decision
to the requesting provider (proposed
new § 419.82(d)(1)(ii)). In proposed new
§ 419.82(d)(iii), we proposed that CMS
or its contractor would issue a decision
(affirmative or non-affirmative) within
10 business days.
We proposed that, if the provider
receives a non-affirmation decision, we
would allow the provider to resubmit a
prior authorization request with any
applicable additional relevant
documentation. This would include the
resubmission of requests for expedited
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reviews (proposed new § 419.82(e)(1)
and (2)).
We proposed that CMS or its
contractor would initiate an expedited
review of a prior authorization request
when requested by a provider and
where CMS or its contractor determines
that a delay could seriously jeopardize
the beneficiary’s life, health or ability to
regain maximum function (proposed
new § 419.82(d)(2)). Upon making this
determination, we proposed that CMS
or its contractor would issue a
provisional affirmation or nonaffirmation in accordance with
proposed new § 419.82(d)(1) using an
expedited timeframe of two business
days.
As part of the requirements for the
DMEPOS prior authorization process,171
under 42 CFR 405.926(t), we specified
that a prior authorization request that is
non-affirmed is not an initial
determination on a claim for payment
for services provided and, therefore,
would not be appealable. We proposed
to apply this same provision to the OPD
services prior authorization process.
Therefore, we proposed to revise
§ 405.926(t) so that OPD prior
authorization requests that are
determined non-affirmed also would not
be considered an initial determination
and, therefore, would not be appealable.
However, the provider will still have the
opportunity to resubmit a prior
authorization request under proposed
new § 419.82(e) provided the claim has
not yet been submitted and denied.
If a claim is submitted for the services
listed in proposed new § 419.83(a)(1)
without a provisional affirmation, it will
be denied. The claim denial is an initial
determination and a redetermination
request may be submitted in accordance
with 42 CFR 405.940. Consistent with
current medical review and claims
processing guidance, we also proposed
in proposed new § 419.82(b)(3) that any
claims associated with or related to a
service listed in proposed new
§ 419.83(a)(1) for which a claim denial
is issued will be denied as well since
these services would be unnecessary if
the service listed in proposed new
§ 419.83(a)((1) had not been provided.
These associated services include, but
are not limited to, services such as
anesthesiology services, physician
services, and/or facility services. The
associated claims would be denied
whether a non-affirmation was received
for a service listed in proposed new
§ 419.83(a)(1) or the provider did not
request a prior authorization request. A
contractor is not required to request
medical documentation from the
171 80
FR 81674 (December 30, 2015).
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provider who billed the associated
claims before making such a denial. We
requested public comments on whether
the requirement in proposed new
§ 419.82(b)(3) should remain in 42 CFR
part 419 or be co-located with the
regulatory provisions governing initial
determinations located in 42 CFR part
405.
3. Proposed List of Outpatient
Department Services That Would
Require Prior Authorization (Proposed
New § 419.83)
We proposed that the list of covered
OPD services that would require prior
authorization are those identified by the
CPT codes in Table 38. For ease of
review, we are only including the five
categories of services within which
these CPT codes fall in proposed new
§ 419.83(a)(1). The five categories of
services would be: Blepharoplasty;
botulinum toxin injections;
panniculectomy; rhinoplasty; and vein
ablation. In proposed new
§ 419.83(a)(2), we proposed that
technical updates, such as corrections or
conforming changes to the names of the
services or CPT codes, may be made on
the CMS web page.
Also, we proposed that CMS may
elect to exempt a provider from the
prior authorization process in proposed
new § 419.82 upon a provider’s
demonstration of compliance with
Medicare coverage, coding, and
payment rules and that this exemption
would remain in effect until CMS elects
to withdraw the exemption (proposed
new § 419.83(c)). We would exempt
providers that achieve a prior
authorization provisional affirmation
threshold of at least 90 percent during
a semiannual assessment. We anticipate
that an exemption will take
approximately 90 calendar days to
effectuate. We believe that, by achieving
this percentage of provisional
affirmations, the provider would be
demonstrating an understanding of the
requirements for submitting accurate
claims. We do not believe it is necessary
for a provider to achieve 100 percent
compliance to qualify for an exemption
because innocent and sporadic errors
could occur that are not deliberate or
systematic attempts to submit claims
that are not payable. In addition, we
propose that we might withdraw an
exemption if evidence becomes
available based on a review of claims
that the provider has begun to submit
claims that are not payable based on
Medicare’s billing, coding, or payment
requirements. If the rate of nonpayable
claims submitted becomes higher than
10 percent during a semiannual
assessment, we will consider
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withdrawing the exemption. We
anticipate that withdrawing the
exemption may also take approximately
90 calendar days to effectuate.
Moreover, we proposed that CMS may
suspend the outpatient department
services prior authorization process
requirements generally or for a
particular service(s) at any time by
issuing notification on CMS’ web page
(proposed new § 419.83(d)). While we
believe this is unlikely to occur, we
nonetheless believe it is necessary for us
to retain flexibility in the event of
certain circumstances, such as where
the cost of the prior authorization
program exceeds the savings it
generates.
C. List of Outpatient Department
Services Requiring Prior Authorization
As mentioned earlier, we have
identified a list of specific services
(Table 38) that, based on review and
analysis of claims data for the 11-year
period from 2007 through 2017, show
higher than expected, and therefore, we
believe, unnecessary increases in the
volume of service utilization. These
services fall within the following five
categories: Blepharoplasty; botulinum
toxin injections; panniculectomy;
rhinoplasty; and vein ablation. In
making the decision to propose to
include the specific services in the
proposed list of hospital outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization as shown in Table 38, we
first considered that these services are
most often considered cosmetic and,
therefore, are only covered by Medicare
in very rare circumstances. We then
viewed the current volume of utilization
of these services and determined that
the utilization far exceeds what would
be expected in light of the average rateof-increase in the number of Medicare
beneficiaries. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we noted that we are
unaware of other factors that might
contribute to increases in volume of
services that indicate that the services
are increasingly medically necessary,
such as clinical advancements or
expanded coverage criteria that would
have led to the increases. Below we
describe what we believe are the
unnecessary increases in volume of each
of the categories of services for which
we proposed to require prior
authorization:
• Botulinum Toxin Injections: In
reviewing CMS data available through
the Integrated Data Repository (IDR), we
determined that destruction of nerves to
muscles of the face via botulinum toxin
injections had an overall average annual
increase in the number of unique claims
of approximately 19.3 percent from
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2007 through 2017, with an average
annual increase in financial expense to
the Medicare program as a result of
allowed amounts in service costs and
payments of approximately 27.8 percent
and an average annual increase in the
number of unique patients of
approximately 17.9 percent. Based on
analysis and comparisons of claims
data, these increases in service
utilization volume, financial expense,
and the number of Medicare patients far
exceed the typical baseline rates or
trends we identified.
• Panniculectomy: Our analysis of
IDR data showed that panniculectomy
had an average annual increase in the
number of unique claims of
approximately 9.2 percent from 2007
through 2017, with an average annual
increase in financial expense to the
Medicare program as a result of allowed
amounts in service costs and payments
of approximately 13.9 percent and an
average annual increase in the number
of unique patients of approximately 9.2
percent. Based on analysis and
comparisons of claims data, these
increases in service utilization volume,
financial expense to the Medicare
program, and the number of Medicare
patients also far exceed the typical
baseline rates or trends we identified
(that is, the 9.2 percent average annual
increase in the rate of Medicare
beneficiaries receiving a
panniculectomy is significantly higher
than the 1.1 percent average annual
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increase in the Medicare beneficiaries
who received outpatient services over
that 11-year period). Additionally, some
panniculectomy services were reported
on claims by providers in combination
with procedures performed on the
patient’s chest region, in addition to
abdominal procedures.
• Vein Ablation: In reviewing the
available data from the IDR, vein
ablation had an average annual increase
in the number of unique claims of
approximately 11.1 percent from 2007
through 2017, with an average annual
increase in financial expense to the
Medicare program as a result of allowed
amounts in service costs and payments
of approximately 11.5 percent and an
average annual increase in the number
of unique patients of approximately 9.5
percent. Based on analysis and
comparisons of claims data, these
increases in service utilization volume,
financial expense to the Medicare
program, and the number of Medicare
patients also far exceed the typical
baseline rates or trends we identified
(that is, the 9.5 percent average annual
increase in the rate of Medicare
beneficiaries receiving vein ablation is
significantly higher than the 1.1 percent
average annual increase in the Medicare
beneficiaries who received outpatient
services over that 11-year period).
• Rhinoplasty: In reviewing available
IDR data, rhinoplasty had an average
annual increase in the number of unique
patients of approximately 1.9 percent.
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61449
This represents a 64.1 percent increase
in comparison to the 1.1 percent rate of
increase for unique patients for all OPPS
services for that same time period. Even
though this category of services includes
some procedures that had annual
increases in service utilization volume
far exceeding what we would expect
based on the typical rate, this was not
true for all services within the category.
One example that did exceed the
expected rate was the number of unique
claims for the procedure of widening of
the nasal passage. This rate increased
significantly more than the expected
rate and was as much as 34.8 percent
from 2016 through 2017.
• Blepharoplasty: In reviewing the
IDR data, blepharoplasty, like
rhinoplasty, had overall statistics that
were similar to the rate increases
expected for outpatient services.
However, some procedures had annual
increases in service utilization volume
that far exceeded these expected rates.
As an example, the number of unique
claims for the procedure of repairing of
the upper eyelid muscle to correct
drooping or paralysis increased as high
as 48.9 percent from 2011 through 2012,
which far exceeds the rate we would
expect for such a service.
Table 38 lists the specific procedures
within the five categories of services
that we proposed for the proposed list
of hospital outpatient department
services requiring prior authorization.
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4. Summary of the Public Comments
and Responses to Comments on the
Proposed Rule
The proposed rule, titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; Proposed Changes to Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment and
Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment
Systems and Quality Reporting
Programs; Price Transparency of
Hospital Standard Charges; Proposed
Revisions of Organ Procurement
Organizations Conditions of Coverage;
Proposed Prior Authorization Process
and Requirements for Certain Covered
Outpatient Department Services;
Potential Changes to the Laboratory Date
of Service Policy; Proposed Changes to
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Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals’’ (84 FR 39398 through
39644), hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,’’
was published in the Federal Register
on August 6, 2019, with a comment
period that ended on September 27,
2019. In that rule, for prior
authorization, we received 96 public
comments on our proposals, including
comments from healthcare providers,
professional and trade organizations,
drug manufacturers, beneficiary
advocacy organizations, and health care
systems. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: We received several
comments in support of prior
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61451
authorization, with some adding they
were ‘‘intrigued’’ by the promise prior
authorization has in Fee-For-Service
Medicare. Others commented that CMS
is underestimating the amount of time
and education providers will require in
learning the new process. Some
commenters suggested that CMS delay
implementation of prior authorization
beyond July 1, 2020, while others
suggested that CMS proceed cautiously
and roll out prior authorization on a
limited basis and then scale nationally,
similar to how the DMEPOS prior
authorization process was implemented.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. We appreciate the
positive responses to our proposed prior
authorization process. In assessing the
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operational implementation schedule
for prior authorization, we believe that
the July 1, 2020 implementation date is
reasonable and will allow enough time
to educate and prepare stakeholders to
be able to submit the necessary
documentation for prior authorization
for these services. No new
documentation requirements are created
as a result of this process. Instead,
currently needed documents are
submitted earlier in the process.
Comment: Some commenters
questioned whether section 1833(t)(2)(F)
of the Act grants CMS the authority to
establish a prior authorization process
and noted that when Congress intended
to give CMS authority to implement a
prior authorization process, it has done
so explicitly. Still others suggested the
development of the new process is
‘‘arbitrary and capricious’’ because the
commenters believed that CMS has not
demonstrated that increases in the
volume of services for which we
proposed to require prior authorization
are unnecessary. Several commenters
quoted a recent decision from the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia,172 in which the
court invalidated the policy we adopted
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period to reduce
payment for clinic visits furnished in
excepted off-campus provider-based
departments to a Physician Fee
Schedule-equivalent amount as a
method to control unnecessary increases
in the volume of clinic visits furnished
in these settings. In its decision the
court stated with respect to this policy,
which we also adopted under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, that ‘‘Congress
did not intend CMS to use an
untethered ‘method’ to directly alter
expenditures independent of other
processes.’’ These commenters quoted
the court as going on to state that, ‘‘. . .
Congress directed any ‘methods’
developed under paragraph (t)(2)(F) be
implemented through other provisions
of the statute.’’ The commenters
contended that we cannot point to any
other provision of the OPPS statute that
would authorize a prior authorization
requirement, which the commenters
believed we must do following the
court’s decision. Still others compared
CMS’ attempts to establish a prior
authorization process to the ‘‘functional
equivalence’’ initiative that CMS
previously undertook, which Congress
later prohibited.
Response: We disagree with the
commenters’ contentions. We believe
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act gives us
172 AHA et al. v. Azar, No. 18–CV–2841, at *25
(D.D.C. Sept. 17, 2019).
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discretion to determine the appropriate
methods to control unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered OPD
services. We believe that where, as here,
we have determined that there have
been unnecessary increases in services
that are often cosmetic, section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act gives us
authority to utilize prior authorization
as a method to control those
unnecessary increases. We carefully
considered all available options in
choosing to propose the prior
authorization process, which has
already been shown to be an effective
tool in Fee-for-Service Medicare, and
which we believe will be effective at
controlling unnecessary increases for
those procedures that are often cosmetic
and for which we have identified
unnecessary volume increases. We also
believe that the description of our
extensive data analysis in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, comparing
trends for the procedures discussed
against 1.1 billion OPD claims over 11
years, demonstrated that there have
been unnecessary increases for all
services for which we proposed to
require prior authorization and that
there have not been other, legitimate
reasons for the sustained increases.
We also disagree with the commenters
who believe the District Court’s decision
in the clinic visit litigation decision
forecloses our ability to adopt a method
to control unnecessary increases in the
volume of covered outpatient
department services under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act without tying
that method to another provision of the
OPPS statute. Rather, we believe that,
unlike the clinic visit policy at issue in
that decision, the prior authorization
policy does not have an immediate
impact on the amount of payment or the
budget neutrality calculations for the
OPPS, and therefore, we believe it is
distinguishable from the clinic visit
policy that the court invalidated and
does not need to be adopted under
separate authority in addition to section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned why ambulatory surgical
centers (ASCs) and other provider types
are exempt from this prior authorization
process. The commenters believed the
prior authorization process should not
be implemented until CMS can also
establish a prior authorization process
for ASCs because they believe
physicians will simply provide the
affected services in ASCs instead of
hospitals, thereby avoiding the OPPS
prior authorization process altogether.
Still others believed that physicians
should be required to obtain prior
authorization instead of hospitals, and
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that CMS should adopt regulations
under the Physician Fee Schedule to
require physicians to adhere to the
documentation and related
requirements for prior authorization.
Response: This prior authorization
process is being adopted under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, which is
specific to the OPPS, which provides
payment only to hospital outpatient
departments. As such, we cannot extend
the process to ASCs or other healthcare
provider types, including physicians
outside of the outpatient department
setting, because these entities are paid
under other payment systems. We thank
the commenters for noting the potential
to shift these services to ASCs and will
monitor these data and may consider
additional program integrity oversight if
such shifts are realized.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that prior authorization is not
an effective method for controlling fraud
and that other tools, such as CMS’
development of National Coverage
Decisions (NCDs) and Local Coverage
Determinations (LCDs), prepayment and
post-payment reviews, provider
outreach and education, and law
enforcement actions are more effective
methods to control unnecessary
increases in volume. In fact, some
commenters suggested that we place
providers on 100 percent pre-payment
review in lieu of establishing the new
prior authorization process. Others
commented that prior authorization is
nothing more than a ‘‘blunt
instrument;’’ is contrary to some LCDs
which clearly convey certain services
are not covered; and that CMS needs to
ensure coverage criteria are more easily
identifiable and searchable so that
hospitals can more readily comply with
the requirements. One commenter
questioned how to give input on
establishing medical necessity and how
medical necessity criteria will be set
and another commenter specifically
lauded CMS’ not-yet-completed
development of the documentation
requirements look-up service (DRLS).
Response: We note that we have a
variety of tools that can be used in
making reasonable and necessary
determinations for several procedures
on the list of outpatient department
services requiring prior authorization.
For procedures that do not have specific
LCDs or NCDs, contractors may make
individual claim determinations to
assess whether or not the services are
reasonable and necessary, per section
1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act. This prior
authorization process does not make
any changes to current documentation
requirements. While we recognize the
utility of NCDs and LCDs and the
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importance of conducting prepayment
and post-payment reviews, we also
believe that a broad program integrity
strategy must use a variety of tools to
best account for potential fraud, waste
and abuse, including unnecessary
increases in volume. Prior authorization
has already proven to be an effective
method for controlling improper
payments and decreasing the volume of
potentially improperly billed services
for certain DMEPOS items. Thus, we
believe that the use of prior
authorization in the OPD context will be
an effective tool in controlling
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered OPD services by ensuring that
the correct payments are made for
medically necessary OPD services,
while also being consistent with our
overall strategy of protecting the
Medicare Trust Fund from improper
payments, reducing the number of
Medicare appeals, and improving
provider compliance with Medicare
program requirements. We will continue
to work toward enhancing our overall
program integrity strategy in meaningful
ways. We also appreciate the positive
input regarding the DRLS, and we agree
that, once available, it will facilitate
overall transparency in coverage
requirements, which should benefit all
parties.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that prior authorization processes add
burden, can result in unnecessary
delays in care, and interfere with the
physician-patient care decision or
otherwise negatively affect patient care.
Some commenters specifically
mentioned problems associated with
prior authorization processes within
Medicare Advantage Plans while others
conveyed that prior authorization is
contrary to CMS’ Patients Over
Paperwork initiative.
Response: The process we are
establishing specifically relates to
Medicare FFS, not Medicare Advantage,
and we have had demonstrated success
in implementing prior authorization
processes in the Medicare FFS for
DMEPOS. As with our other prior
authorization processes, we believe that
the OPD prior authorization process for
certain discrete, often cosmetic
procedures can be implemented without
the referenced delays in patient care.
This is because we are establishing
timeframes for contractors to render
decisions on prior authorization
requests as well as an expedited review
process when the regular review
timeframe could seriously jeopardize
the beneficiary’s health that we believe
will enable hospitals to receive timely
provisional affirmations. Additionally,
we note that our prior authorization
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policy does not create any new
documentation or administrative
requirements. Instead, it will just
require the same documents that are
currently required to be submitted
earlier in the process. Resources should
not need to be diverted from patient
care. We note that prior authorization
has the added benefit of giving hospitals
some assurance of payment for services
for which they received a provisional
affirmation. In addition, beneficiaries
will have information regarding
coverage prior to receiving the service,
and will benefit by knowing in advance
of receiving a service if they will incur
financial liability for non-covered
services. We believe that some
assurance of payment and some
protection from future audits will
ultimately reduce burdens associated
with denied claims and appeals.
Comment: We received comments
with general questions regarding the
proposed process such as who will be
responsible for obtaining the prior
authorization, that is, the physician or
the hospital, and whether all related
claims will be denied if prior
authorization is not obtained. Some
commenters expressed concern that
physicians could be denied payment for
services rendered if a hospital fails to
submit a prior authorization request or
fails to notify the physician of a denial.
Response: As noted above, this prior
authorization process is being adopted
under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act,
which is specific to OPD services,
which provides payment only to
hospital outpatient departments. In light
of the different arrangements that could
exist in different hospitals, we
determined that enabling either the
physician or the hospital to submit the
prior authorization request on behalf of
the hospital outpatient department was
the best approach, though the hospital
ultimately remains responsible for
ensuring this condition of payment is
met. Physicians and the hospitals are in
the best position to account for the
various relationships and obligations
that exist and should account for the
prior authorization process. Part of that
process should be communication of
prior authorization decisions between
entities, as a unique tracking number
(UTN) corresponding to the prior
authorization decision must be included
on the OPD claim for these services.
Consistent with all Medicare Fee-forService prior authorization and preclaim review processes, when a prior
authorization request is submitted, the
request will be assigned a UTN. The
UTN must be included on any claim
submitted for the services listed, which
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will be used to verify compliance with
the prior authorization process.
Additionally, we stated that any
claims associated with or related to a
service that requires prior authorization
for which a claim denial is issued
would also be denied. These associated
services include, but are not limited to,
services such as anesthesiology services,
physician services, and/or facility
services. Consistent with current
medical review and claims processing
guidance (for example, Program
Integrity Manual (internet Only
Manuals, No. 100–08 chapter 3, section
3.2.3 et seq. and chapter 7, section
7.2.2.2), and in accordance with new
§ 419.82(b)(3), these related claims
would be denied if the service listed in
§ 419.83(a)(1) had also been denied.
Claims for physicians’ services outside
of the OPD setting will not be affected
if the hospital fails to submit a prior
authorization request for the OPD
service.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that even when a
provisional affirmation is obtained, the
claim could ultimately be denied and
that the requirement should be changed
so that no claim could be denied for
which a provisional affirmation was
obtained. Still others asked for
clarification regarding whether all
claims would be denied in situations
where a provisional affirmation was
received but the corresponding claim
was later denied. Others expressed
concern that no appeal rights exist for
those instances where a non-affirmation
is received and that CMS should
determine the cost of care to
beneficiaries who are negatively
impacted by the receipt of a nonaffirmation or who have care denied.
Response: Having a provisional
affirmation shows that a claim likely
meets Medicare’s coverage and payment
rules and is likely to be paid. Absent
evidence of fraud or gaming, a provider
can anticipate payment as long as other
payment requirements are met. We
anticipate that most, if not all, claims for
which a provisional affirmation is
obtained would not be denied on the
basis of medical necessity. However, it
is possible the claim could be denied
because it did not meet a coding or
billing requirement (examples include,
but are not limited to, when there are
duplicate claims submitted, when some
element of the claim form is incorrectly
completed, or if a modifier is placed on
a claim that prevents it from processing
appropriately). In addition, The
Improper Payments Elimination and
Recovery Improvement Act of 2012
(IPERIA) (Pub. L. 112–248), requires all
federal agencies to evaluate their
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programs for improper payments. The
CMS Comprehensive Error Rate Testing
(CERT) program reviews a stratified,
random sample of claims annually to
identify and measure improper
payments. It is possible for a claim
subject to prior authorization to fall
within the sample. In this situation, the
subject claim would not be protected
from the CERT audit. In addition, the
Office of Inspector General’s (OIG)
authority to audit claims is not
impacted by the protection from future
audits provided by the provisional
affirmation prior authorization decision.
While we appreciate that there is
concern over the lack of appeal rights
for non-affirmations, we note that
providers are not limited in the number
of times they can resubmit requests that
were previously non-affirmed, and that
appeal rights still exist once a claim is
actually denied. Lastly, with regard to
the impact on care for those
beneficiaries for which hospitals receive
non-affirmations, we note that we
specifically chose services that are often
cosmetic and believe that it is
appropriate to deny such services in the
case of a non-affirmation, because a
non-affirmation would indicate that
Medicare’s coverage, coding, and/or
payment rules for the service are not
being met. Consistent with current
Medicare Fee-for-Service prior
authorization and pre-claim review
processes, the provider will receive a
detailed explanation as to why the
request was non-affirmed and will be
afforded an unlimited number of request
resubmissions. Our experience in our
other prior authorization and pre-claim
review processes has been that
approximately 95 percent of
submissions are affirmed within two
requests, and that the impact of nonaffirmation decisions has been minimal
for necessary, covered services.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS decrease the
ten business day time frame for issuing
provisional affirmations and nonaffirmations, because the commenters
believed there could be occasions where
the decision ultimately takes 15 days in
light of weekends and holidays being
excluded from the ten business day
calculation. Still others commented that
providers should be exempt from having
to complete the prior authorization
process in emergency situations or that
retroactive provisional affirmations
should be issued in these
circumstances; the expedited review
process should be completed within 24
hours if urgent circumstances exist; and
the need to submit a request for an
expedited review be eliminated and
instead the judgment of the physician
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should suffice in triggering the
expedited processing time frame.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in response to our proposed
process. While we recognize the desire
to obtain provisional affirmations as
quickly as possible, given that these
services are typically cosmetic and
would be provided in the outpatient
hospital department setting, we believe
the identified time frames adequately
balance program integrity, provider
burden, and beneficiary concerns. In
those circumstances where approval is
needed more expeditiously, an
expedited request can be requested and
if granted, will result in a provisional
affirmation or non-affirmation being
issued within two business days of the
expedited request, which we believe is
sufficient where expedition is
necessary. With respect to the OPD
services selected for this program, we
believe that requests for expedited
review will be minimal, and note that
this prior authorization process does not
remove or alter the clinical judgment
process in any way. We are only
requesting currently required
documentation earlier in the process. As
the OPD is ultimately responsible for
this condition of payment to be met
through the prior authorization process,
we respectfully disagree with the
commenter’s suggestion to allow the
OPD to be waived from their
requirement to submit the prior
authorization request solely on a
physician’s recommendation. All
requests for expedited reviews will be
considered based upon the
documentation submitted by the OPD,
including any justification provided by
physicians on behalf of the OPD, and
the timeframes designed into the
process are intended to ensure that
beneficiaries receive necessary care for
these services when appropriate.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that certain provisions, including the
exemption rate and the notice of
exemption and/or withdrawal of an
exemption, should be explicitly
accounted for within the regulations
located in Part 419. Still other
commenters suggested that CMS
determine the rate of compliance with
the coverage requirements prior to the
implementation of this prior
authorization process so that certain
providers could begin the new process
with an exemption in place for attaining
or exceeding the requisite 90 percent
compliance rate. Alternatively, one
commenter suggested that CMS use
existing data to identify egregious
providers to reduce burden on
historically compliant providers.
Finally, one commenter suggested
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exempting providers from prior
authorization if the providers
participate in standardized data
collection and are willing to share their
data.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these suggestions. We believe we
have accounted for the exemption rate
in the preamble and intend to maintain
the 90 percent rate. With regard to the
notice of exemption and/or withdrawal
of an exemption, we agree that the
regulations should account for this
process in more detail. We had initially
stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39606) that we
anticipate that an exemption will take
approximately 90 calendar days to
effectuate. In the interest of helping
ensure providers incur the least burden
possible, we will formalize the ability to
notify providers before our anticipated
90-day period (that is, at least 60 days).
As such, we have revised § 419.83(c) to
redesignate the last sentence of
proposed paragraph (c)—‘‘An
exemption will remain in effect until
CMS elects to withdraw the exemption’’
—as new subparagraph (1). We are
adding a new provision at new
paragraph (c)(2), which will account for
the notice of an exemption or
withdrawal of an exemption being
delivered at least 60 calendar days prior
to the implementation date. Because we
are unable to determine a compliance or
non-compliance rate prior to the
initiation of the process because most
claims have not undergone full medical
review and were likely paid or denied
based upon the completeness of the
elements on the face of the claim, we
cannot exempt certain providers or only
require prior authorization for certain
providers in advance of implementing
the new process. Lastly, we do not
believe it is sufficient to exempt
providers who provide data. Through
the prior authorization process, we are
best able to identify problems before
they occur and control for unnecessary
increases in the volume of these
procedures, while ensuring that
beneficiaries receive medically
necessary services.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that MACs do not have the
clinical review capabilities to
sufficiently handle prior authorization
requests and suggested that CMS require
specific credentials of the MAC medical
reviewers to ensure the accuracy of
MAC decisions. Still other commenters
related several principles of prior
authorization with which they believed
we should comply as we implement the
new prior authorization process. These
principles include selective application
of prior authorization to only ‘‘outliers,’’
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review/adjustment of prior
authorization lists to remove services/
drugs that represent low-value prior
authorization; transparency of prior
authorization requirements and their
clinical basis to patients and physicians;
protections of patient continuity of care;
and automation to improve prior
authorization and process efficiency.
Response: In all Medicare Fee-forService medical review programs we
require that MACs utilize clinicians,
specifically, registered nurses, when
reviewing medical documentation. We
also require the oversight of a Medical
Director and additional clinician
engagement if necessary. We are
confident that MACs have the requisite
expertise to effectively administer the
prior authorization process, and we
maintain a robust oversight process to
ensure the accuracy and consistency of
their review decisions. Further, we
believe the prior authorization process
we are adopting aligns with the
principles outlined by the commenters.
Of note, we have included a process to
exempt providers who consistently
demonstrate compliance with Medicare
rules through this prior authorization
process. We also are focusing initially
on procedures that are not urgent and
likely cosmetic and of high value, and
we have included an expedited process
if circumstances warrant. Along with
our contractors, we will continue to
analyze the value of the services that we
target for prior authorization to be sure
that services are selected that are
appropriate for this process. As the
process matures and CMS implements
new technologies, such as the DRLS or
other industry standards, we will
effectuate improvements to the prior
authorization process and coverage
requirements.
Comment: Some commenters asked
for clarification regarding how CMS
would carry out certain provisions of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
such as establishing standardized prior
authorization protocols, including
timely resolution of clinical reviews and
clearly articulated decision criteria and
rationale in an effort to minimize case
delays and encourage effective
communication changes between
providers and health plans. Other
commenters requested that CMS adopt a
required response period for initial and
repeat prior authorization requests,
noted CMS’ lack of experience in using
prior authorization in Medicare Fee-ForService, and referenced a lack of
administrative structure and guidelines
as well as the need for a wellfunctioning portal through which prior
authorization requests could be
submitted.
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Response: In developing this prior
authorization process, we indicated that
we were building upon our already
established prior authorization program
established for certain DMEPOS under
42 CFR 414.234, and included more
detailed requirements, such as decision
timeframes for both regular and
expedited reviews, as well as the
percentages needed to demonstrate
continued compliance with Medicare
coverage, coding and payment rules in
order to be exempt from the prior
authorization process. We have
considerable experience in light of the
DMEPOS prior authorization program
and are leveraging this experience
accordingly. As we indicated in our
prior responses, we are making
additional changes, including adding
specific regulatory provisions, to ensure
the program’s administrative
requirements are clear. Once finalized,
CMS and our contractors will provide
additional educational and outreach
materials to all stakeholders.
Comments: Some commenters
requested changes that are out of the
scope of this rule related to Medicare
Advantage plans.
Response: This prior authorization
policy is specific to Medicare FFS, so
we are not able to respond to comments
that raise concerns regarding Medicare
Advantage prior authorization
programs.
Comments: One commenter pointed
out that we had used U.S. Bureau of
Labor and Statistics (BLS) data when
attempting to compare overall health
care costs against the OPD payments
trending data when other spending data
may be more appropriate.
Response: We thank this commenter
and have evaluated U.S. Bureau of
Economic Analysis (BEA) data, which
we agree may be more appropriate. We
had compared the 8.2 percent average
annual increase for OPD services over
the 11-year period of 2007 through 2017
to the 5.8 percent average annual
spending calculated from the BLS data;
however, after consulting with both
bureaus, the BEA data better aligns with
our analytic process (that is, comparing
overall expenditures for OPPS services
via CMS data against overall
expenditures for health care services via
BEA data to as opposed to comparing
overall expenditures for OPPS services
via CMS data against the cost of health
care services for the typical consumer
via BLS data). The BEA data reflected a
2.3 percent average annual increase per
year in overall health care spending
using data publicly available on the
BEA web page, located at: https://
apps.bea.gov/iTable/iTable.cfm?
reqid=51&step=2&isuri=1https.
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Comment: We received comments
that the growth in utilization of a
procedure/product class exceeding the
baseline growth rates in the Medicare
population is not a sufficient basis for
inferring that utilization is
inappropriate or that utilization growth
is unwarranted and that CMS should
analyze readily available clinical
information that would explain changes
in utilization before the agency adopts
broad-based interventions such as
imposing prior authorization on
outpatient hospitals. The same
commenter suggested that the increases
seen in CPT codes 64612 and 64615 are
likely due to other factors such as FDA’s
approval of BOTOX® in 2010, increased
support for BOTOX® as a migraine
treatment, and the addition of chronic
migraine to the list of covered
indications for BOTOX® in Medicare
contractor LCDs. This commenter also
recommended that if CMS chooses to
move forward with implementing this
prior authorization process that CMS
expand the prior authorization
requirements to apply to all four FDAapproved botulinum toxin therapeutic
products to include DYSPORT® (J0586)
and XEOMIN® (J0588) in addition to
BOTOX® and MYOBLOC® so as not to
create distortion in the marketplace and
incentivize providers to administer
those botulinum toxin therapeutic
products that are not subject to prior
authorization. One commenter also
expressed concern that the prior
authorization process could impact
women and veterans more significantly
than other categories because these
groups tend to experience migraines at
higher rates than other categories and
this could ultimately lead to an increase
in opioid abuse within these groups. We
received several comments asking
whether a provisional affirmation for
botulinum toxin injections would be per
injection or for a specific course of
treatment over a period of time, such as
twelve months. We also received
comments to add codes to the list for
alternative treatment options for
varicose veins, such as phlebectomy and
sclerotherapy.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. In determining the
specific services to which this prior
authorization process would apply, we
considered all available data and believe
that comparing the utilization rate to the
baseline growth rate is an appropriate
method for identifying potentially
unnecessary increases in volume. By
identifying trends over the 11-year
period for OPD services, we are able to
contrast and compare specific services
as targets for increases in volume versus
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our expectations. Moreover, in making
our decision we did consider the impact
of changes in the use of these items and
available clinical information. Of note,
we determined that the increased
utilization of botulinum toxin injections
was not solely attributable to the Food
and Drug Administration’s approval for
the treatment of migraines. We
conducted additional analysis of the
additional botulinum toxin products
suggested by the commenter and
determined that these too had similar
increases in volume. As noted in the
preamble, our statistical analysis of the
botulinum toxin injection codes
originally proposed showed an overall
average annual increase in the number
of unique claims of approximately 19.3
percent from 2007 through 2017, an
annual average increase in costs and
payments of approximately 27.8
percent, and an average annual increase
in the number of unique patients of
approximately 17.9 percent. When
adding these two additional codes to
our statistical analyses, utilizing the
same methodology, we have identified
that the overall average annual increase
in the number of unique claims is now
approximately 19.4 percent from 2007
through 2017, the annual average
increase in payments is now
approximately 26.1 percent, and the
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average annual increase in the number
of unique patients is approximately 18.0
percent. Moreover, although we did
observe some increases of the original
botulinum toxin codes after the 2010
FDA clearance for chronic migraines,
we noted an average annual increase in
claims volume of 16.6 percent for J0585,
23.6 percent for J0586, 12.2 percent for
J0587, and 17.9 percent for J0588. These
statistics are for the period 2010 through
2017 for all four codes except J0588,
which only had data beginning 2012
(with data for interim years within the
four codes reflecting increases as high as
65.9 percent). These sustained and
persistent increases above expected
volumes are not explained by the new
FDA approval in 2010. So as not to
create distortion in the marketplace and
incentivize providers to administer
those botulinum toxin therapeutic
products that are not subject to prior
authorization, as the commenter
suggests, we are including the two
additional botulinum toxin codes on the
final list, since they also show similar
unnecessary increases in volume.
We acknowledge that circumstances
exist where a prior authorization could
apply for a specific course of treatment
for the botulinum toxin injection
procedures, such as a number of
treatments over a specific period of
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time, and will allow for such prior
authorization requests.
We performed similar data analysis
on vein treatments and saw several of
the procedures had similar unnecessary
increases in volume; however, these
procedures account for a different
approach in treatment for varicose veins
than the vein ablation procedures we
discussed in the proposed rule. Since
these are procedures and not products,
we do not have the same concern about
marketplace distortion and are not
adding them to the list at this time. We
will continue to monitor these and other
OPD procedures for unnecessary
increases in volume and will propose
additional procedures through
rulemaking.
In sum, we are finalizing our
proposed prior authorization policy as
proposed, including our proposed
regulation text, with the following
modifications: We are adding additional
language at § 419.83(c) regarding the
notice of exemption or withdraw of an
exemption. We are including in this
process the two additional botulinum
toxin injections codes, J0586 and J0588.
See Table 64 below for the final list of
outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
4. Summary of the Public Comments
and Responses to Comments on the
Proposed Rule
The proposed rule, titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; Proposed Changes to Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment and
Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment
Systems and Quality Reporting
Programs; Price Transparency of
Hospital Standard Charges; Proposed
Revisions of Organ Procurement
Organizations Conditions of Coverage;
Proposed Prior Authorization Process
and Requirements for Certain Covered
Outpatient Department Services;
Potential Changes to the Laboratory Date
of Service Policy; Proposed Changes to
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals’’ (84 FR 39398 through
39644), hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,’’
was published in the Federal Register
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on August 6, 2019, with a comment
period that ended on September 27,
2019. In that rule, for prior
authorization, we received 96 public
comments on our proposals, including
comments from healthcare providers,
professional and trade organizations,
drug manufacturers, beneficiary
advocacy organizations, and health care
systems. The following is a summary of
the comments we received and our
responses.
Comment: We received several
comments in support of prior
authorization, with some adding they
were ‘‘intrigued’’ by the promise prior
authorization has in Fee-For-Service
Medicare. Others commented that CMS
is underestimating the amount of time
and education providers will require in
learning the new process. Some
commenters suggested that CMS delay
implementation of prior authorization
beyond July 1, 2020, while others
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suggested that CMS proceed cautiously
and roll out prior authorization on a
limited basis and then scale nationally,
similar to how the DMEPOS prior
authorization process was implemented.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their comments. We appreciate the
positive responses to our proposed prior
authorization process. In assessing the
operational implementation schedule
for prior authorization, we believe that
the July 1, 2020 implementation date
will reasonably allow enough time to
educate and prepare stakeholders to be
able to submit the necessary
documentation for prior authorization
for these services. No new
documentation requirements are created
as a result of this process. Instead,
currently needed documents are
submitted earlier in the process.
Comment: Some commenters
questioned whether section 1833(t)(2)(F)
of the Act grants CMS the authority to
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establish a prior authorization process
and noted that when Congress intended
to give CMS authority to implement a
prior authorization process, it has done
so explicitly. Still others suggested the
development of the new process is
‘‘arbitrary and capricious’’ because the
commenters believed that CMS has not
demonstrated that increases in the
volume of services for which we
proposed to require prior authorization
are unnecessary. Several commenters
quoted a recent decision from the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia,173 in which the
court invalidated the policy we adopted
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period to reduce
payment for clinic visits furnished in
excepted off-campus provider-based
departments to a Physician Fee
Schedule-equivalent amount as a
method to control unnecessary increases
in the volume of clinic visits furnished
in these settings. In its decision the
court stated with respect to this policy,
which we also adopted under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, that ‘‘Congress
did not intend CMS to use an
untethered ‘method’ to directly alter
expenditures independent of other
processes.’’ These commenters quoted
the court as going on to state that, ‘‘. . .
Congress directed any ‘methods’
developed under paragraph (t)(2)(F) be
implemented through other provisions
of the statute.’’ The commenters
contended that we cannot point to any
other provision of the OPPS statute that
would authorize a prior authorization
requirement, which the commenters
believed we must do following the
court’s decision. Still others compared
CMS’ attempts to establish a prior
authorization process to the ‘‘functional
equivalence’’ initiative that CMS
previously undertook, which Congress
later prohibited.
Response: We disagree with the
commenters’ contentions. We believe
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act gives us
significant discretion to determine the
appropriate methods to control
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered OPD services. We believe that
where, as here, we have determined that
there have been unnecessary increases
in services that are often cosmetic,
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act gives us
authority to utilize prior authorization
as a method to control those
unnecessary increases. We carefully
considered all available options in
choosing to propose the prior
authorization process, which has
173 AHA et al. v. Azar, No. 18–CV–2841, at *25
(D.D.C. Sept. 17, 2019). [Do we want to mention the
motion to modify?]
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already been shown to be an effective
tool in Fee-for-Service Medicare, and
which we believe will be effective at
controlling unnecessary increases for
those procedures that are often cosmetic
and for which we have identified
unnecessary volume increases. We also
believe that the description of our
extensive data analysis in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, comparing
trends for the procedures discussed
against 1.1 billion OPD claims over 11
years, demonstrated that there have
been unnecessary increases for all
services for which we proposed to
require prior authorization and that
there have not been other, legitimate
reasons for the sustained increases.
We also disagree with the commenters
who believe the District Court’s decision
in the clinic visit litigation decision
forecloses our ability to adopt a method
to control unnecessary increases in the
volume of covered outpatient
department services under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act without tying
that method to another provision of the
OPPS statute. Rather, we believe that,
unlike the clinic visit policy at issue in
that decision, the prior authorization
policy does not have an immediate
impact on the amount of payment or the
budget neutrality calculations for the
OPPS, and therefore, we believe it is
distinguishable from the clinic visit
policy that the court invalidated and
does not need to be adopted under
separate authority in addition to section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters
questioned why ambulatory surgical
centers (ASCs) and other provider types
are exempt from this prior authorization
process. The commenters believed the
prior authorization process should not
be implemented until CMS can also
establish a prior authorization process
for ASCs because they believe
physicians will simply provide the
affected services in ASCs instead of
hospitals, thereby avoiding the OPPS
prior authorization process altogether.
Still others believed that physicians
should be required to obtain prior
authorization instead of hospitals, and
that CMS should adopt regulations
under the Physician Fee Schedule to
require physicians to adhere to the
documentation and related
requirements for prior authorization.
Response: This prior authorization
process is being adopted under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, which is
specific to the OPPS, which provides
payment only to hospital outpatient
departments. As such, we cannot extend
the process to ASCs or other healthcare
provider types, including physicians
outside of the outpatient department
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setting, because these entities are paid
under other payment systems. We thank
the commenters for noting the potential
to shift these services to ASCs and will
monitor these data and may consider
additional program integrity oversight if
such shifts are realized.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that prior authorization is not
an effective method for controlling fraud
and that other tools, such as CMS’
development of National Coverage
Decisions (NCDs) and Local Coverage
Determinations (LCDs), prepayment and
post-payment reviews, provider
outreach and education, and law
enforcement actions are more effective
methods to control unnecessary
increases in volume. In fact, some
commenters suggested that we place
providers on 100 percent pre-payment
review in lieu of establishing the new
prior authorization process. Others
commented that prior authorization is
nothing more than a ‘‘blunt
instrument;’’ is contrary to some LCDs
which clearly convey certain services
are not covered; and that CMS needs to
ensure coverage criteria are more easily
identifiable and searchable so that
hospitals can more readily comply with
the requirements. One commenter
questioned how to give input on
establishing medical necessity and how
medical necessity criteria will be set
and another commenter specifically
lauded CMS’ not-yet-completed
development of the documentation
requirements look-up service (DRLS).
Response: We note that we have a
variety of tools that can be used in
making reasonable and necessary
determinations. for several procedures
on the list of outpatient department
services requiring prior authorization.
For other procedures that do not have
specific LCDs or NCDs, contractors may
make individual claim determinations
to assess whether or not the services are
reasonable and necessary, per section
1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act. This prior
authorization process does not make
any changes to current documentation
requirements. While we recognize the
utility of NCDs and LCDs and the
importance of conducting of
prepayment and post-payment reviews,
we also believe that a broad program
integrity strategy must use a variety of
tools to best account for potential fraud,
waste and abuse, including unnecessary
increases in volume. Prior authorization
has already proven to be an effective
method for controlling improper
payments and decreasing the volume of
potentially improperly billed services
for certain DMEPOS items. Thus, we
believe that the use of prior
authorization in the OPD context twill
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be an effective tool in controlling
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered OPD services by ensuring that
the correct payments are made for
medically necessary OPD services,
while also being consistent with our
overall strategy of protecting the
Medicare Trust Fund from improper
payments, reducing the number of
Medicare appeals, and improving
provider compliance with Medicare
program requirements. We will continue
to work toward enhancing our overall
program integrity strategy in meaningful
ways. We also appreciate the positive
input regarding the DRLS, and we agree
that, once available, it will facilitate
overall transparency in coverage
requirements, which should benefit all
parties.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that prior authorization processes add
burden, can result in unnecessary
delays in care, and interfere with the
physician-patient care decision or
otherwise negatively affect patient care.
Some commenters specifically
mentioned problems associated with
prior authorization processes within
Medicare Advantage Plans while others
conveyed that prior authorization is
contrary to CMS’ Patients Over
Paperwork initiative.
Response: The process we are
establishing specifically relates to
Medicare FFS, not Medicare Advantage,
and we have had demonstrated success
in implementing prior authorization
processes in the Medicare FFS for
DMEPOS. As with our other prior
authorization processes, we believe that
the OPD prior authorization process for
certain discrete, often cosmetic
procedures can be implemented without
the referenced delays in patient care.
This is because we are establishing
timeframes for contractors to render
decisions on prior authorization
requests as well as an expedited review
process when the regular review
timeframe could seriously jeopardize
the beneficiary’s health that we believe
will enable hospitals to receive timely
provisional affirmations. Additionally,
we note that our prior authorization
policy does not create any new
documentation or administrative
requirements. Instead, it will just
require the same documents that are
currently required to be submitted
earlier in the process. Resources should
not need to be diverted from patient
care. We note that prior authorization
has the added benefit of giving hospitals
some assurance of payment for services
for which they received a provisional
affirmation. In addition, beneficiaries
will have information regarding
coverage prior to receiving the service,
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and will benefit by knowing in advance
of receiving a service if they will incur
financial liability for non-covered
services. We believe that some
assurance of payment and some
protection from future audits will
ultimately reduce burdens associated
with denied claims and appeals.
Comment: We received comments
with general questions regarding the
proposed process such as who will be
responsible for obtaining the prior
authorization, that is, the physician or
the hospital, and whether all related
claims will be denied if prior
authorization is not obtained. Some
commenters expressed concern that
physicians could be denied payment for
services rendered if a hospital fails to
submit a prior authorization request or
fails to notify the physician of a denial.
Response: As noted above, this prior
authorization process is being adopted
under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act,
which is specific to OPD services,
which provides payment only to
hospital outpatient departments. In light
of the different arrangements that could
exist with physicians in different
hospitals, we determined that enabling
either the physician or the hospital to
submit the prior authorization on behalf
of the hospital outpatient department
was the best approach. Physicians and
the hospitals are in the best position to
account for the various relationships
and obligations that exist and should
account for the prior authorization
process. Part of that process should be
communication of prior authorization
decisions between entities, as a unique
tracking number (UTN) corresponding
to the prior authorization decision must
be included on the OPD claim for these
services. Consistent with all Medicare
Fee-for-Service prior authorization and
pre-claim review processes, when a
prior authorization request is submitted,
the request will be assigned a UTN. The
UTN must be included on any claim
submitted for the services listed, which
will be used to verify compliance with
the prior authorization process.
Additionally, we stated that any
claims associated with or related to a
service that requires prior authorization
for which a claim denial is issued
would also be denied. These associated
services include, but are not limited to,
services such as anesthesiology services,
physician services, and/or facility
services. Consistent with current
medical review and claims processing
guidance (for example, Program
Integrity Manual (internet Only
Manuals, Pub. L. 100–08 chapter 3,
section 3.2.3 et sec and chapter 7,
section 7.2.2.2), and in accordance with
new § 419.82(b)(3), these related claims
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would be denied as well if the service
listed in § 419.83(a)(1) had also been
denied. If the prior authorization is not
submitted by the hospital and the
physician submits a claim for the
service, it cannot be processed as an
OPD service as this program requires
prior authorization of the OPD service
as a condition of payment.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that even when a
provisional affirmation is obtained, the
claim could ultimately be denied and
that the requirement should be changed
so that no claim could be denied for
which a provisional affirmation was
obtained. Still others asked for
clarification regarding whether all
claims would be denied in situations
where a provisional affirmation was
received but the corresponding claim
was later denied. Others expressed
concern that no appeal rights exist for
those instances where a non-affirmation
is received and that CMS should
determine the cost of care to
beneficiaries who are negatively
impacted by the receipt of a nonaffirmation or who have care denied.
Response: Having a provisional
affirmation shows that a claim likely
meets Medicare’s coverage and payment
rules and is likely to be paid. Absent
evidence of fraud or gaming, a provider
can anticipate payment as long as other
payment requirements are met. We
anticipate that most, if not all, claims for
which a provision affirmation is
obtained would not be denied on the
basis of medical necessity. However, it
is possible the claim could be denied
because it did not meet a coding or
billing requirement (examples include,
but are not limited to, when there are
duplicate claims submitted, when some
element of the claim form is incorrectly
completed, or if a modifier is placed on
a claim that prevents it from processing
appropriately). In addition, The
Improper Payments Elimination and
Recovery Improvement Act of 2012
(IPERIA) (Pub. L. 112–248), requires all
federal agencies to evaluate their
programs for improper payments. The
CMS Comprehensive Error Rate Testing
(CERT) program reviews a stratified,
random sample of claims annually to
identify and measure improper
payments. It is possible for a claim
subject to prior authorization to fall
within the sample. In this situation, the
subject claim would not be protected
from the CERT audit. In addition, the
Office of Inspector General’s (OIG)
authority to audit claims is not
impacted by the protection from future
audits provided by the provisional
affirmation prior authorization decision.
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While we appreciate that there is
concern over the lack of appeal rights
for non-affirmations, we note that
providers are not limited in the number
of times they can resubmit requests that
were previously non-affirmed, and that
appeal rights still exist once a claim is
actually denied. Lastly, with regard to
the impact on care for those
beneficiaries for which hospitals receive
non-affirmations, we note that we
specifically chose services that are often
cosmetic and believe that it is
appropriate to deny such services in the
case of a non-affirmation, because a
non-affirmation would indicate that
Medicare’s coverage, coding, and/or
payment rules for the service are not
being met. Consistent with current
Medicare Fee-for-Service prior
authorization and pre-claim review
processes, the provider will receive a
detailed explanation as to why the
request was non-affirmed and will be
afforded an unlimited number of request
resubmissions. Our experience in our
other prior authorization and pre-claim
review processes has been that
approximately 95 percent of
submissions are affirmed within two
requests, and that the impact of nonaffirmation decisions has been minimal
for necessary, covered services.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS decrease the
ten business day time frame for issuing
provisional affirmations and nonaffirmations, because the commenters
believed there could be occasions where
the decision ultimately takes 15 days in
light of weekends and holidays being
excluded from the ten business day
calculation. Still others commented that
providers should be exempt from having
to complete the prior authorization
process in emergency situations or that
retroactive provisional affirmations
should be issued in these
circumstances; the expedited review
process should be completed within 24
hours if urgent circumstances exist; and
the need to submit a request for an
expedited review be eliminated and
instead the judgment of the physician
should suffice in triggering the
expedited processing time frame.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in response to our proposed
process. While we recognize the desire
to obtain provisional affirmations as
quickly as possible, given that these are
services are typically cosmetic and
would be provided in the outpatient
hospital department setting, we believe
the identified time frames adequately
balance program integrity, provider
burden, and beneficiary concerns. In
those circumstances where approval is
needed more expeditiously, an
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expedited request can be requested and
if granted, will result in a in a
provisional affirmation or nonaffirmation being issued within two
business days of the expedited request,
which we believe is sufficient where
expedition is necessary. With respect to
clinical judgement, the prior
authorization process does not remove
or alter the clinical judgement process
in any way. We are only requesting
currently required documentation
earlier in the process. Physicians remain
fully capable and responsible to support
the reasonableness and necessity of the
proposed services.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that certain provisions, including the
exemption rate and the notice of
exemption and/or withdrawal of an
exemption, should be explicitly
accounted for within the regulations
located in Part 419. Still other
commenters suggested that CMS
determine the rate of compliance with
the coverage requirements prior to the
implementation of this prior
authorization process so that certain
providers could begin the new process
with an exemption in place for attaining
or exceeding the requisite 90 percent
compliance rate. Alternatively, one
commenter suggested that CMS use
existing data to identify egregious
providers to reduce burden on
historically compliant providers.
Finally, one commenter suggested
exempting providers from prior
authorization if the providers
participate in standardized data
collection and are willing to share their
data.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these suggestions. We believe we
have accounted for the exemption rate
in the preamble and intend to maintain
the 90 percent rate. With regard to the
notice of exemption and/or withdrawal
of an exemption, we agree that the
regulations should account for this
process in more detail. We had initially
stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39606) that we
anticipate that an exemption will take
approximately 90 calendar days to
effectuate. In the interest of helping
ensure providers incur the least burden
possible, we have offered to formalize
the ability to notify providers before our
anticipated 90-day period (that is, at
least 60 days) if and when possible. As
such, we have revised § 419.83(c) to
redesignate the last sentence of
proposed paragraph (c)—‘‘An
exemption will remain in effect until
CMS elects to withdraw the
exemption’’—as new subparagraph (1).
We are adding a new provision at new
paragraph (c)(2), which will account for
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the notice of an exemption or
withdrawal of an exemption being
delivered at least 60 calendar days prior
to the implementation date. Because we
are unable to determine a compliance or
non-compliance rate prior to the
initiation of the process because most
claims have not undergone full medical
review and were likely paid or denied
based upon the completeness of the
elements on the face of the claim, we
cannot exempt certain providers or only
require prior authorization for certain
providers in advance of implementing
the new process. Lastly, we do not
believe it is sufficient to exempt
providers who provide data. Through
the prior authorization process, we are
best able to identify problems before
they occur and control for unnecessary
increases in the volume of these
procedures, while ensuring that
beneficiaries receive medically
necessary services.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that MACs do not have the
clinical review capabilities to
sufficiently handle prior authorization
requests and suggested that CMS require
specific credentials of the MAC medical
reviewers, to ensure the accuracy of
MAC decisions. Still other commenters
related several principles of prior
authorization with which they believed
we should comply as we implement the
new prior authorization process. These
principles include selective application
of prior authorization to only ‘‘outliers,’’
review/adjustment of prior
authorization lists to remove services/
drugs that represent low-value prior
authorization; transparency of prior
authorization requirements and their
clinical basis to patients and physicians;
protections of patient continuity of care;
and automation to improve prior
authorization and process efficiency.
Response: In all Medicare Fee-forService medical review programs we
require that MACs utilize clinicians,
specifically, registered nurses, when
reviewing medical documentation. We
also require the oversight of a Medical
Director and additional clinician
engagement if necessary. We are
confident that MACs have the requisite
expertise to effectively administer the
prior authorization process, and we
maintain a robust oversight process to
ensure the accuracy and consistency of
their review decisions. Further, we
believe the prior authorization process
we are adopting aligns with the
principles outlined by the commenters.
Of note, we have included a process to
exempt providers who consistently
demonstrate compliance with Medicare
rules through this prior authorization
process. We also are focusing initially
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on procedures that are not urgent and
likely cosmetic and of high value, and
we have included an expedited process
if circumstances warrant. Along with
our contractors, we will continue to
analyze the value of the services that we
target for prior authorization to be sure
that services are selected that are
appropriate for this process. As the
process matures and CMS implements
new technologies, such as the DRLS or
other industry standards, we will
effectuate improvements to the prior
authorization process and coverage
requirements.
Comment: Some commenters asked
for clarification regarding how CMS
would carry out certain provisions of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
such as establishing standardized prior
authorization protocols, including
timely resolution of clinical reviews and
clearly articulated decision criteria and
rationale in an effort to minimize case
delays and encourage effective
communication changes between
providers and health plans. Other
commenters requested that CMS adopt a
required response period for initial and
repeat prior authorization requests,
noted CMS’ lack of experience in using
prior authorization in Medicare Fee-ForService, and referenced a lack of
administrative structure and guidelines
as well as the need for a wellfunctioning portal through which prior
authorization requests could be
submitted.
Response: In developing this prior
authorization process, we indicated that
we were building upon our already
established prior authorization program
established for certain DMEPOS under
42 CFR 414.234, and included more
detailed requirements, such as decision
timeframes for both regular and
expedited reviews, as well as the
percentages needed to demonstrate
continued compliance with Medicare
coverage, coding and payment rules in
order to be exempt from the prior
authorization process. We have
considerable experience in light of the
DMEPOS prior authorization program
and are leveraging this experience
accordingly. As we indicated in our
prior responses, we are making
additional changes, including adding
specific regulatory provisions, to ensure
the program’s administrative
requirements are clear. Once finalized,
CMS and our contractors will provide
additional educational and outreach
materials to all stakeholders.
Comments: Some commenters
requested changes that are out of the
scope of this rule related to Medicare
Advantage plans.
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Response: This prior authorization
policy is specific to Medicare FFS, so
we are not able to respond to comments
that raise concerns regarding Medicare
Advantage prior authorization
programs.
Comments: One commenter pointed
out that we had used U.S. Bureau of
Labor and Statistics data when
attempting to compare overall health
care costs against the OPD payments
trending data when other spending data
may be more appropriate.
Response: We thank this commenter
and have evaluated U.S. Bureau of
Economic Analysis (BEA) data, which
we agree may be more appropriate. We
had compared the 8.2 percent average
annual increase for OPD services over
the 11-year period of 2007 through 2017
to the 5.8 percent average annual
spending calculated from the Bureau of
Labor and Statistics data; however, after
consulting with both bureaus, the BEA
data better aligns with our analytic
process, which reflected a 2.3 percent
average annual increase per year in
overall health care spending using data
publicly available on the BEA web page,
located at: https://apps.bea.gov/iTable/
iTable.cfm?reqid=51&step=2&isuri=
1https.
Comment: We received comments
that the growth in utilization of a
procedure/product class exceeding the
baseline growth rates in the Medicare
population is not a sufficient basis for
inferring that utilization is
inappropriate or that utilization growth
is unwarranted and that CMS should
analyze readily available clinical
information that would explain changes
in utilization before the agency adopts
broad-based interventions such as
imposing prior authorization on
outpatient hospitals. The same
commenter suggested that the increases
seen in CPT codes 64612 and 64615 are
likely due to other factors such as FDA’s
approval of BOTOX in 2010, increased
support for BOTOX as a migraine
treatment, and the addition of chronic
migraine to the list of covered
indications for BOTOX in Medicare
contractor LCDs. This commenter also
recommended that if CMS chooses to
move forward with implementing this
prior authorization process that CMS
expand the prior authorization
requirements to apply to all four FDAapproved botulinum toxin therapeutic
products to include DYSPORT® (J0586)
and XEOMIN® (J0588) in addition to
BOTOX and MYOBLOC so as not to
create distortion in the marketplace and
incentivize providers to administer
those botulinum toxin therapeutic
products that are not subject to prior
authorization. One commenter also
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expressed concern that the prior
authorization process could impact
women and veterans more significantly
than other categories because these
groups tend to experience migraines at
higher rates than other categories and
this could ultimately lead to an increase
in opioid abuse within these groups. We
received several comments asking
whether a provisional affirmation for
botulinum toxin injections would be per
injection or for a specific course of
treatment over a period of time, such as
twelve months. We also received
comments to add codes to the list for
alternative treatment options for
varicose veins, such as phlebectomy and
sclerotherapy.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. In determining the
specific services to which this prior
authorization process would apply, we
considered all available data and believe
that comparing the utilization rate to the
baseline growth rate is an appropriate
method for identifying potentially
unnecessary increases in volume. By
identifying trends over the 11-year
period for OPD services, we are able to
contrast and compare specific services
as targets for increases in volume versus
our expectations. Moreover, in making
our decision we did consider the impact
of changes in the use of these items and
available clinical information. Of note,
we determined that the increased
utilization of botulinum toxin injections
was not solely attributable to the Food
and Drug Administration’s approval for
the treatment of migraines. We
conducted additional analysis of the
additional botulinum toxin injections
and determined that these too had
similar increases in volume and are
including the two additional botulinum
toxin codes on the final list. We
acknowledge that circumstances exist
where a prior authorization could apply
for a specific course of treatment for the
botulinum toxin injection procedures,
such as a number of treatments over a
specific period of time, and will allow
for such prior authorization requests.
We performed similar data analysis
on vein treatments and saw several of
the procedures had similar unnecessary
increases in volume; however, these
procedures account for a different
approach in treatment for varicose veins
than vein ablation procedures. Since
these are procedures and not products,
we do not have the same concern about
marketplace distortion and are not
adding them to the list at this time. We
will continue to monitor these and other
OPD procedures for unnecessary
increases in volume and will propose
additional procedures through
rulemaking.
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In sum, we are finalizing our
proposed prior authorization policy as
proposed, including our proposed
regulation text, with the following
modifications: We are adding additional
language at § 419.83(c) regarding the
notice of exemption or withdraw of an
exemption. We are including in this
process the two additional botulinum
toxin injections codes, J0586 and J0588.
See Table 65 below for the final list of
outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization. Further,
we had offered examples from our
statistical analysis of the botulinum
toxin injection in the preamble that
explained that we had seen an overall
average annual increase in the number
of unique claims of approximately 19.3
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percent from 2007 through 2017, an
annual average increase in costs and
payments of approximately 27.8
percent, and an average annual increase
in the number of unique patients of
approximately 17.9 percent. When
adding these two additional codes to
our statistical analyses, utilizing the
same methodology, we have identified
that the overall average annual increase
in the number of unique claims is now
approximately 19.4 percent from 2007
through 2017, the annual average
increase in payments is now
approximately 26.1 percent, and the
average annual increase in the number
of unique patients of approximately 18.0
percent. Moreover, although we did
observe some increases of the original
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61463
botulinum toxin codes after the 2010
FDA clearance for chronic migraines,
we noted an average annual increase in
claims volume of 16.6 percent for J0585,
23.6 percent for J0586, 12.2 percent for
J0587, and 17.9 percent for J0588. These
statistics are for the period 2010 through
2017 for all four codes except J0588,
which only had data beginning 2012
(with data for interim years within the
four codes reflecting increases as high as
65.9 percent). These sustained and
persistent increases above expected
volumes are not explained by the new
FDA approval in 2010, which is why
these codes, coupled with the specific
procedures, have been included in this
program.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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XX. Comments Received in Response to
Comment Solicitation on Cost
Reporting, Maintenance of Hospital
Chargemasters, and Related Medicare
Payment Issues
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39609), we included a
Request for Information (RFI) related to
the relationship of hospital
chargemasters to the Medicare cost
report and its use in setting Medicare
payment for hospital services. We
received approximately 46 timely pieces
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of correspondence on this RFI. We
appreciate the input provided by
commenters.
XXI. Changes to Requirements for
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals (HwHs)
Existing regulations at § 412.22(e)
define a hospital-within-a-hospital
(HwH) as a hospital that occupies space
in the same building as another
hospital, or in one or more entire
buildings located on the same campus
as buildings used by another hospital.
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Existing § 412.22(f) provides for the
grandfathering of HwHs that were in
existence on or before September 30,
1995, so long as the HwH continues to
operate under the same terms and
conditions, including the number of
beds. Sections 412.22(h) and 412.25(e),
relating to satellites of hospitals and
hospital units, respectively, excluded
from the IPPS, define a satellite facility
as a part of a hospital or unit that
provides inpatient services in a building
also used by another hospital, or in one
or more entire buildings located on the
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same campus as buildings used by
another hospital. Sections 412.22(h)(3)
and 412.25(e)(3) provide for the
grandfathering of excluded hospitals
and units that were structured as
satellite facilities on September 30,
1999, to the extent that they operate
under the same terms and conditions in
effect on that date. While these rules
initially only applied to LTCHs, in 1997,
CMS expanded the scope of these rules
to all hospitals excluded from the IPPS
(including children’s hospitals) because
the underlying policy concern of
hospitals creating new entities that were
separate in name only (essentially
operating as units of the hospital) in
order to increase Medicare revenue was
not unique to LTCHs. For example, we
have expressed our concerns that an
HwH’s ‘‘configuration could result in
patient admission, treatment, and
discharge patterns that are guided more
by attempts to maximize Medicare
payments than by patient welfare’’ and
that ‘‘the unregulated linking of an IPPS
hospital and a hospital excluded from
the IPPS could lead to two Medicare
payments for what was essentially one
episode of patient care’’ (69 FR 48916
and 49191). HwHs which are
grandfathered are not required to
comply with the separateness and
control requirements applicable to other
HwHs.
In the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule (82 FR 38292 through 38294), we
finalized a change to our HwH
regulations at § 412.22(e) to only
require, as of October 1, 2017, that IPPSexcluded HwHs that are co-located with
IPPS hospitals comply with the
separateness and control requirements
in those regulations. We adopted this
change because we believe that the
policy concerns that underlay the
previous HwH regulations are
sufficiently moderated in situations
where IPPS-excluded hospitals are colocated with each other, in large part
due to changes that have been made to
the way most types of IPPS-excluded
hospitals are paid under Medicare. (We
note that non-grandfathered HwHs,
whether children’s hospitals or not,
which are co-located with IPPS
hospitals must comply with
separateness and control requirements.
For more information we refer readers to
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the FY 2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(82 FR 38292 through 38294)). As part
of our ongoing efforts to reduce
regulatory burdens, we have continued
to examine areas in which the rules for
co-located entities are no longer
necessary. As a result of this
examination, we believe that there is no
Medicare payment policy rationale for
prohibiting grandfathered children’s
HwHs from increasing their number of
beds. Given the low number of Medicare
claims submitted by these children’s
hospitals, which results in a minimal
level of Medicare payment to them
relative to the payments they receive
from other payers, we believe that such
a regulatory change would allow these
hospitals to address changing
community needs for services without
any increased incentive for
inappropriate patient shifting to
maximize Medicare payments.
Additionally, we do not believe that
allowing grandfathered children’s HwHs
to increase their bed size would impart
an economic advantage to these
hospitals relative to other hospitals.
However, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to revise
§ 412.22(f)(1) and (2) to allow a
grandfathered children’s HwH to
increase its number of beds without
resulting in the loss of grandfathered
status. Additionally, we solicited
comments on whether the proposal
could create unintended or inadvertent
consequences.
Comment: We received several
comments on our proposal, all of which
supported it. Some commenters also
agreed with our assessment that
allowing grandfathered children’s HwHs
to increase their beds would not impart
an economic advantage to these
hospitals.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
In light of the comments received, we
are finalizing our proposal without
modification.
XXII. Notice of Closure of Two
Teaching Hospitals and Opportunity To
Apply for Available Slots
a. Background
Section 5506 of the Affordable Care
Act (Pub. L. 111–148) added subsection
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(vi) to section 1886(h)(4)(H) of the Act
and modified language at section
1886(d)(5)(B)(v) of the Act, to instruct
the Secretary to establish a process to
redistribute residency slots after a
hospital that trained residents in an
approved medical residency program
closes. Specifically, the Secretary is
instructed to increase the full-time
equivalent (FTE) resident caps for
teaching hospitals based upon the FTE
resident caps in teaching hospitals that
closed ‘‘on or after a date that is 2 years
before the date of enactment’’ (that is,
March 23, 2008). In the CY 2011 OPPS
final rule with comment period (75 FR
72212), we established regulations at 42
CFR 413.79(o) and an application
process for qualifying hospitals to apply
to CMS to receive direct graduate
medical education (DGME) and indirect
medical education (IME) FTE resident
cap slots from the hospital that closed.
We made certain modifications to those
regulations in the FY 2013 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (77 FR 53434), and we
made changes to the section 5506
application process in the FY 2015
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 50122
through 50134). The procedures we
established apply both to teaching
hospitals that closed on or after March
23, 2008, and on or before August 3,
2010, and to teaching hospitals that
close after August 3, 2010.
b. Notice of Closure of Hahnemann
University Hospital, Located in
Philadelphia, PA, and the Application
Process—Round 16
CMS has learned of the closure of
Hahnemann University Hospital,
located in Philadelphia, PA (CCN
390290). Accordingly, this notice serves
to notify the public of the closure of this
teaching hospital and initiate another
round of the section 5506 application
and selection process. This round will
be the 16th round (‘‘Round 16’’) of the
application and selection process. Table
66 below contains the identifying
information and IME and DGME FTE
resident caps for the closed teaching
hospital, which are part of the Round 16
application process under section 5506
of the Affordable Care Act.
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CMS has learned of the closure of
Ohio Valley Medical Center, located in
d. Application Process for Available
Resident Slots
The application period for hospitals
to apply for slots under section 5506 of
the Affordable Care Act is 90 days
following notice to the public of a
hospital closure (77 FR 53436).
Therefore, hospitals that wish to apply
for and receive slots from the above
hospitals’ FTE resident caps, must
submit applications (Section 5506
Application Form posted on Direct
Graduate Medical Education (DGME)
website as noted at the end of this
section) directly to the CMS Central
Office no later than January 30, 2020.
The mailing address for the CMS
Central Office is included on the
application form. Applications must be
received by the CMS Central Office by
the January 30, 2020 deadline date. It is
not sufficient for applications to be
postmarked by this date.
After an applying hospital sends a
hard copy of a section 5506 slot
application to the CMS Central Office
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Wheeling, WV (CCN 510039).
Accordingly, this notice serves to notify
the public of the closure of this teaching
hospital and initiate another round of
the section 5506 application and
selection process. This round will be the
17th round (‘‘Round 17’’) of the
application and selection process. Table
67 below contains the identifying
information and IME and DGME FTE
resident caps for the closed teaching
hospital, which are part of the Round 17
application process under section 5506
of the Affordable Care Act.
mailing address, the hospital is
encouraged to notify the CMS Central
Office of the mailed application by
sending an email to:
ACA5506application@cms.hhs.gov. In
the email, the hospital should state: ‘‘On
behalf of [insert hospital name and
Medicare CCN#], I, [insert your name],
am sending this email to notify CMS
that I have mailed to CMS a hard copy
of a section 5506 application under
Round [16 or 17] due to the closure of
[Hahnemann University Hospital or
Ohio Valley Medical Center]. If you
have any questions, please contact me at
[insert phone number] or [insert your
email address].’’ An applying hospital
should not attach an electronic copy of
the application to the email. The email
will only serve to notify the CMS
Central Office to expect a hard copy
application that is being mailed to the
CMS Central Office.
We have not established a deadline by
when CMS will issue the final
determinations to hospitals that receive
slots under section 5506 of the
Affordable Care Act. However, we
review all applications received by the
deadline and notify applicants of our
determinations as soon as possible.
We refer readers to the CMS Direct
Graduate Medical Education (DGME)
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/AcuteInpatientPPS/
DGME.html to download a copy of the
section 5506 application form (Section
5506 Application Form) that hospitals
must use to apply for slots under section
5506 of the Affordable Care Act.
Hospitals should also access this same
website for a list of additional section
5506 guidelines for the policy and
procedures for applying for slots, and
the redistribution of the slots under
sections 1886(h)(4)(H)(vi) and
1886(d)(5)(B)(v) of the Act
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XXIII. Files Available to the Public via
the Internet
The Addenda to the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules and the final rules with
comment period are published and
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c. Notice of Closure of Ohio Valley
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WV, and the Application Process—
Round 17
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available via the internet on the CMS
website. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR
59154), for CY 2019, we changed the
format of the OPPS Addenda A, B, and
C, by adding a column entitled
‘‘Copayment Capped at the Inpatient
Deductible of $1,364.00’’ where we flag,
through use of an asterisk, those items
and services with a copayment that is
equal to or greater than the inpatient
hospital deductible amount for any
given year (the copayment amount for a
procedure performed in a year cannot
exceed the amount of the inpatient
hospital deductible established under
section 1813(b) of the Act for that year).
For CY 2020, we are retaining these
columns, updated to reflect the amount
of the 2020 inpatient deductible.
To view the Addenda to this final rule
with comment period pertaining to CY
2020 payments under the OPPS, we
refer readers to the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
HospitalOutpatientPPS/HospitalOutpatient-Regulations-andNotices.html; select ‘‘1717–FC’’ from the
list of regulations. All OPPS Addenda to
this final rule with comment period are
contained in the zipped folder entitled
‘‘2020 NFRM OPPS Addenda’’ at the
bottom of the page. To view the
Addenda to this final rule with
comment period pertaining to CY 2020
payments under the ASC payment
system, we refer readers to the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/ASCPayment/ASCRegulations-and-Notices.html; select
‘‘1717–FC’’ from the list of regulations.
All ASC Addenda to this final rule with
comment period are contained in a
zipped folder entitled ‘‘Addendum AA,
BB, DD1, DD2, and EE.’’
XXV. Collection of Information
Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for
Solicitation of Comments
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, we are required to provide 60day notice in the Federal Register and
solicit public comment before a
collection of information requirement is
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval. In order to fairly evaluate
whether an information collection
should be approved by OMB, section
3506(c)(2)(A) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 requires that we
solicit comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
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• The accuracy of our estimate of the
information collection burden.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Recommendations to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including automated
collection techniques.
In the final rule with comment period,
we are soliciting public comment on
each of these issues for the following
sections of this document that contain
information collection requirements
(ICRs).
B. ICRs for the Hospital OQR Program
1. Background
The Hospital OQR Program is
generally aligned with the CMS quality
reporting program for hospital inpatient
services known as the Hospital IQR
Program. We refer readers to the CY
2011 through CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rules with comment periods (75 FR
72111 through 72114; 76 FR 74549
through 74554; 77 FR 68527 through
68532; 78 FR 75170 through 75172; 79
FR 67012 through 67015; 80 FR 70580
through 70582; 81 FR 79862 through
79863; 82 FR 59476 through 59479; and
83 FR 59155 through 59156,
respectively) for detailed discussions of
Hospital OQR Program information
collection requirements we have
previously finalized. The information
collection requirements associated with
the Hospital OQR Program are currently
approved under OMB control number
0938–1109 which expires on March 31,
2021. Below we discuss only the
changes in burden that will result from
the finalized policies in this final rule
with comment period.
In section XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule
with comment period, we are finalizing
our proposal with modification to
remove one measure from the Hospital
OQR Program for the CY 2022 payment
determination; OP–33: External Beam
Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases. The
reduction in burden associated with this
measure removal is discussed below.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59477), we
finalized a proposal to utilize the
median hourly wage rate, in accordance
with the Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS), to calculate our burden estimates
for the Hospital OQR Program. The BLS
describes Medical Records and Health
Information Technicians as those
responsible for organizing and managing
health information data; therefore, we
believe it is reasonable to assume that
these individuals will be tasked with
abstracting clinical data for submission
for the Hospital OQR Program. In the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
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comment period (83 FR 59156), we
utilized a median hourly wage of $18.29
per hour. Since then, more recent wage
data have become available and we are
updating the wage rate used in these
calculations. The latest data (May 2018)
from the BLS reflects a median hourly
wage of $19.40 174 per hour for a
Medical Records and Health
Information Technician professional.
We have finalized a policy to calculate
the cost of overhead, including fringe
benefits, at 100 percent of the mean
hourly wage (82 FR 59477). This is
necessarily a rough adjustment, both
because fringe benefits and overhead
costs vary significantly from employerto-employer and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely from
study-to-study. Nonetheless, we believe
that doubling the hourly wage rate
($19.40 × 2 = $38.80) to estimate total
cost is a reasonably accurate estimation
method and allows for a conservative
estimate of hourly costs. This approach
is consistent with our previously
finalized burden calculation
methodology (82 FR 59477).
Accordingly, we calculate cost burden
to facilities using a wage plus benefits
estimate of $38.80 per hour throughout
the discussion below for the Hospital
OQR Program.
2. Finalized Removal of OP–33 for the
CY 2022 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
In section XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule
with comment period, we are finalizing
our proposal with modification to
remove one measure submitted via a
web-based tool beginning with the CY
2022 payment determination and for
subsequent years: OP–33: External Beam
Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we inadvertently stated that we were
proposing to remove this measure
beginning with October 2020 encounters
for CY 2022 payment determination and
subsequent years (84 FR 39554 through
39556). As discussed in section
XXVI.B.2. of this final rule with
comment period, we intended to remove
this measure beginning with the CY
2022 payment determination and
subsequent years, but starting with
January 2020 encounters, not October.
Because we are finalizing removal of
this measure beginning with the same
CY 2022 payment determination, as was
proposed, the estimated effects remain
the same as discussed in the proposed
rule. As we stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/
174 Occupational Employment and Wages, May
2018. Available at: https://www.bls.gov/ooh/
healthcare/medical-records-and-healthinformation-technicians.htm. Accessed May 7,
2019.
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ASC final rule with comment period (80
FR 70582), we estimate that hospitals
spend approximately 10 minutes, or
0.167 hours, per measure to report webbased measures. Accordingly, we
believe that the removal of OP–33 for
the CY 2022 payment determination
will reduce burden by 0.167 hours per
hospital, resulting in a burden reduction
of 551 hours (0.167 hours × 3,300
hospitals) and $21,379 (551 hours ×
$38.80) across 3,300 hospitals.
C. ICRs for the ASCQR Program
1. Background
We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74554), the FY 2013 IPPS/
LTCH PPS final rule (77 FR 53672), and
the CY 2013, CY 2014, CY 2015, CY
2016, CY 2017, CY 2018, and CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rules with comment
period (77 FR 68532 through 68533; 78
FR 75172 through 75174; 79 FR 67015
through 67016; 80 FR 70582 through
70584; 81 FR 79863 through 79865; 82
FR 59479 through 59481; and 83 FR
59156 through 59157, respectively) for
detailed discussions of the ASCQR
Program information collection
requirements we have previously
finalized. The information collection
requirements associated with the
ASCQR Program are currently approved
under OMB control number 0938–1270
which expires on January 31, 2022. As
discussed below, there are only nominal
changes in burden that will result from
the finalized policies in this final rule
with comment period.
2. Adoption of ASC–19: Facility-Level
7–Day Hospital Visits After General
Surgery Procedures Performed at
Ambulatory Surgical Centers (NQF
#3357)
In section XV.B.3. of this this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal, beginning with
the CY 2024 payment determination and
for subsequent years, to adopt one
measure collected via Medicare claims:
ASC–19: Facility-Level 7–Day Hospital
Visits after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers (NQF #3357). Data used to
calculate scores for this measure are
collected via Medicare Part A and Part
B administrative claims and Medicare
enrollment data; therefore, ASCs will
not be required to report any additional
data. Because this measure does not
require ASCs to submit any additional
data, we believe there will be only a
nominal change in other costs
experienced by ASCs associated with
this measure adoption due to having to
review and track confidential feedback
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and reports related to the finalized
ASC–19 measure.
D. ICRs for Revision of the Definition of
‘‘Expected Donation Rate’’ for Organ
Procurement Organizations
We are finalizing our proposal to
revise the definition of ‘‘expected
donation rate’’ in the OPO CfCs. This
change would allow OPOs to receive
payment for organ donor costs under the
Medicare and Medicaid programs using
a definition that is consistent with the
definition used by the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients
(SRTR). Because we will be using data
from the OPTN and the SRTR in
assessing whether OPOs have satisfied
the outcome measures of 42 CFR
486.318(b), we are adopting the
definition currently used by the OPTN
and SRTR in their statistical evaluation
of OPO performance. This revision
would not change the data that are
already collected by the OPTN and
SRTR, and therefore it will not affect the
information collection burden on OPOs.
E. ICR for Prior Authorization Process
and Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
In section XX. of the proposed rule,
we proposed to establish a prior
authorization process for certain
hospital outpatient services as a
condition for Medicare payment. We
proposed to use our authority under
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, which
authorizes CMS to develop a method for
controlling unnecessary increases in the
volume of covered OPD services, to
establish the prior authorization
process. We believe a prior
authorization process for OPD services
will ensure beneficiaries receive
medically necessary care while
minimizing the risk of improper
payments without changing the
documentation requirements for
providers and, therefore, will protect the
Medicare Trust fund.
We proposed that providers would be
required to obtain prior authorization
from CMS for five groups of services
and their related services before the
services are provided to Medicare
beneficiaries and before the provider
could submit claims for payment under
Medicare for these services. The five
groups of services proposed are:
Blepharoplasty, Botulinum Toxin
Injections, Panniculectomy,
Rhinoplasty, and Vein Ablation. The
ICRs associated with prior authorization
requests for these covered outpatient
department services would be the
required documentation submitted by
providers. We proposed that a prior
authorization request must include all
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relevant documentation necessary to
show that the service meets applicable
Medicare coverage, coding, and
payment rules and that the request be
submitted before the service is provided
to the beneficiary and before the claim
is submitted for processing. The burden
associated with this finalized process is
the time and effort necessary for the
submitter to locate and obtain the
relevant supporting documentation to
show that the service meets applicable
coverage, coding, and payment rules,
and to forward the information to CMS
or its contractor (MAC) for review and
determination of a provisional
affirmation. We expect that this
information will generally be
maintained by providers within the
normal course of business and that this
information will be readily available.
We estimate that the average time for
office clerical activities associated with
this task will be 30 minutes, which is
equivalent to that for normal
prepayment or post payment medical
review. We anticipate that most prior
authorization requests would be sent by
means other than mail. However, we
estimate a cost of $5 per request for
mailing medical records. Due to a July
start date, the first year of the prior
authorization will only include 6
months. Based on calendar year (CY)
2018 data, we estimate that for those
first 6 months at a minimum there will
be 15,191 initial requests mailed during
that timeframe. In addition, we estimate
there will be 4,987 resubmissions of a
request mailed following a non-affirmed
decision. Therefore, the total mailing
cost is estimated to be $100,890 (20,178
mailed requests × $5). Based on CY 2018
data, we estimate that annually at a
minimum there will be 30,381 initial
requests mailed during a year. In
addition, we estimate there will be
9,971 resubmissions of a request mailed
following a non-affirmed decision.
Therefore, the total mailing cost is
estimated to be $201,762 (40,352 mailed
requests × $5). We also estimate that an
additional 3 hours would be required
for attending educational meetings and
reviewing training documents. While
there may be an associated burden on
beneficiaries while they wait for the
prior authorization decision, we are
unable to quantify that burden.
The average labor costs (including 100
percent fringe benefits) used to estimate
the costs were calculated using data
available from the BLS. Based on the
BLS information, we estimate an
average hourly rate of $16.63 with a
loaded rate of $33.26. The prior
authorization program does not create
any new documentation or
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administrative requirements. Instead, it
just requires the currently required
documents to be submitted earlier in the
claim process. Therefore, the estimate
uses the clerical rate as we do not
believe that clinical staff would need to
spend more time on completing the
documentation than would be needed in
the absence of the demonstration. The
hourly rate reflects the time needed for
the additional clerical work of
submitting the prior authorization
request itself. Therefore, we estimate
that the total burden for the first year (6
months), allotted across all providers,
would be 50,826 hours (.5 hours ×
67,260, submissions plus 3 hours ×
5,732 providers for education). The
burden cost for the first year (6 months)
is $1,791,363 (50,826 hours × $33.26
plus $100,890 for mailing costs). In
addition, we estimate that the total
annual burden hours, allotted across all
providers, would be 84,450 hours (.5
hours × 134,508 submissions plus 3
hours × 5,732 providers for education).
The annual burden cost would be
$3,010,569 (84,450 hours × $33.26 plus
$201,762 for mailing costs). For the total
burden and associated costs, we
estimate the annualized burden to be
73,242 hours and $2,604,167 million.
The annualized burden is based on an
average of 3 years, that is, 1 year at the
6-month burden and 2 years at the 12month burden. The information
collection request is under development
and will be submitted to OMB for
approval.
F. Revision to Laboratory Date of Service
(DOS) Policy
In section XIX. of this final rule with
comment period, we discuss our
comment solicitation regarding
potential revisions to the laboratory date
of service (DOS) provisions at
§ 414.510(b)(5) for a molecular
pathology test or a test designated by
CMS as an ADLT under paragraph (1) of
the definition of an ‘‘advanced
diagnostic laboratory test’’ in § 414.502.
As a result of our evaluation of public
comments, we are finalizing a revision
to exclude blood banks or centers from
the laboratory DOS policy exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). This revision to our
laboratory DOS policy does not impose
any information collection
requirements. Consequently, review by
the Office of Management and Budget
under the authority of the PRA is not
required.
XXV. Response to Comments
Because of the large number of public
comments we normally receive on
Federal Register documents, we are not
able to acknowledge or respond to them
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individually. We will consider all
comments we receive by the date and
time specified in the DATES section of
this final rule with comment period,
and, when we proceed with a
subsequent document(s), we will
respond to those comments in the
preamble to that document.
XXVI. Economic Analyses
A. Statement of Need
This final rule with comment period
is necessary to make updates to the
Medicare hospital OPPS rates. It is
necessary to make changes to the
payment policies and rates for
outpatient services furnished by
hospitals and CMHCs in CY 2020. We
are required under section
1833(t)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act to update
annually the OPPS conversion factor
used to determine the payment rates for
APCs. We also are required under
section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act to
review, not less often than annually,
and revise the groups, the relative
payment weights, and the wage and
other adjustments described in section
1833(t)(2) of the Act. We must review
the clinical integrity of payment groups
and relative payment weights at least
annually. We are revising the APC
relative payment weights using claims
data for services furnished on and after
January 1, 2018, through and including
December 31, 2018, and processed
through June 30, 2019, and updated cost
report information.
We note that we are completing the
phase-in of our method, as described
below, to control unnecessary increases
in the volume of covered outpatient
department services by paying for clinic
visits furnished at off-campus PBDs at
an amount equal to the site-specific PFS
payment rate for nonexcepted items and
services furnished by a nonexcepted offcampus PBD (the PFS payment rate).
The site-specific PFS payment rate for
clinic visits furnished in excepted offcampus PBDs is the OPPS rate reduced
to the amount paid for clinic visits
furnished by nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs under the PFS, which is 40
percent of the OPPS rate. In the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59013 through 59014), we
implemented this policy with a 2-year
phase-in. In CY 2019, the payment
reduction was transitioned by applying
50 percent of the total reduction in
payment that would apply if these offcampus PBDs were paid the site-specific
PFS payment rate for the clinic visit
service. In other words, these excepted
off-campus PBDs were paid 70 percent
of the OPPS rate for the clinic visit
service in CY 2019. In CY 2020, we are
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completing the transition of paying the
PFS-equivalent amount for clinic visits
furnished in excepted off-campus PBDs.
In other words, these excepted offcampus PBDs will be paid the full
reduced payment, or 40 percent of the
OPPS rate for the clinic visit service in
CY 2020. We acknowledge that the
United States District Court for the
District of Columbia vacated the volume
control policy for CY 2019 and we are
working to ensure affected 2019 claims
for clinic visits are paid consistent with
the court’s order. We do not believe it
is appropriate at this time to make a
change to the second year of the twoyear phase-in of the clinic visit policy.
The government has appeal rights, and
is still evaluating the rulings and
considering, at the time of this writing,
whether to appeal from the final
judgment.
This final rule with comment period
also is necessary to make updates to the
ASC payment rates for CY 2020,
enabling CMS to make changes to
payment policies and payment rates for
covered surgical procedures and
covered ancillary services that are
performed in an ASC in CY 2020.
Because ASC payment rates are based
on the OPPS relative payment weights
for most of the procedures performed in
ASCs, the ASC payment rates are
updated annually to reflect annual
changes to the OPPS relative payment
weights. In addition, we are required
under section 1833(i)(1) of the Act to
review and update the list of surgical
procedures that can be performed in an
ASC, not less frequently than every 2
years.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59075
through 59079), we finalized a policy to
update the ASC payment system rates
using the hospital market basket update
instead of the CPI–U for CY 2019
through 2023. We believe that this
policy will help stabilize the differential
between OPPS payments and ASC
payments, given that the CPI–U has
been generally lower than the hospital
market basket, and encourage the
migration of services to lower cost
settings as clinically appropriate.
B. Overall Impact for Provisions of This
Final Rule With Comment Period
We have examined the impacts of this
final rule with comment period, as
required by Executive Order 12866 on
Regulatory Planning and Review
(September 30, 1993), Executive Order
13563 on Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review (January 18, 2011),
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Social Security
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Act, section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
(March 22, 1995, Pub. L. 104–4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999), the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), and
Executive Order 13771 on Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs (January 30, 2017). This section of
this final rule with comment period
contains the impact and other economic
analyses for the provisions we are
finalizing for CY 2020.
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This final
rule with comment period has been
designated as an economically
significant rule under section 3(f)(1) of
Executive Order 12866 and a major rule
under the Congressional Review Act.
Accordingly, this final rule with
comment period has been reviewed by
the Office of Management and Budget.
We have prepared a regulatory impact
analysis that, to the best of our ability,
presents the costs and benefits of the
provisions of this final rule with
comment period. In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39398), we
solicited public comments on the
regulatory impact analysis in the
proposed rule, and we address any
public comments we received in this
final rule with comment period, as
appropriate.
We estimate that the total increase in
Federal Government expenditures under
the OPPS for CY 2020, compared to CY
2019, due only to the changes to the
OPPS in this final rule with comment
period, will be approximately $1.21
billion. Taking into account our
estimated changes in enrollment,
utilization, and case-mix for CY 2020,
we estimate that the OPPS expenditures,
including beneficiary cost-sharing, for
CY 2020 will be approximately $79.0
billion, which is approximately $6.3
billion higher than estimated OPPS
expenditures in CY 2019. We note that
these spending estimates include the CY
2020 completion of the phase-in,
finalized in CY 2019, to control for
unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered outpatient department services
by paying for clinic visits furnished at
excepted off-campus PBDs in CY 2020
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at a rate that will be 40 percent of the
OPPS rate for a clinic visit service.
Because the provisions of the OPPS are
part of a final rule that is economically
significant, as measured by the
threshold of an additional $100 million
in expenditures in 1 year, we have
prepared this regulatory impact analysis
that, to the best of our ability, presents
its costs and benefits. Table 68 of this
final rule with comment period displays
the distributional impact of the CY 2020
changes in OPPS payment to various
groups of hospitals and for CMHCs.
As noted in section V.B.5 of this final
rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal for CY 2020 to
pay for separately payable drugs and
biological products that do not have
pass-through payment status and are not
acquired under the 340B program at
WAC+3 percent instead of WAC+6
percent, if ASP data are unavailable for
payment purposes. If WAC data are not
available for a drug or biological
product, we will continue our policy to
pay separately payable drugs and
biological products at 95 percent of the
AWP. We note that under our CY 2020
policy, drugs and biologicals that are
acquired under the 340B Program would
continue to be paid at ASP minus 22.5
percent, WAC minus 22.5 percent, or
69.46 percent of AWP, as applicable.
We note that in the impact tables as
displayed in this impact analysis, we
have modeled current and prospective
payments as if separately payable drugs
acquired under the 340B program from
hospitals not excepted from the policy
are paid in CY 2020 under the OPPS at
ASP–22.5 percent.
We estimate that the update to the
conversion factor and other adjustments
(not including the effects of outlier
payments, the pass-through payment
estimates, the application of the frontier
State wage adjustment for CY 2020, and
the completion of the phase-in to
control for unnecessary increases in the
volume of covered outpatient
department services described in
section X.D. of this final rule with
comment period) will increase total
OPPS payments by 1.3 percent in CY
2020. The changes to the APC relative
payment weights, the changes to the
wage indexes, the continuation of a
payment adjustment for rural SCHs,
including EACHs, and the payment
adjustment for cancer hospitals will not
increase OPPS payments because these
changes to the OPPS are budget neutral.
However, these updates will change the
distribution of payments within the
budget neutral system. We estimate that
the total change in payments between
CY 2019 and CY 2020, considering all
budget neutral payment adjustments,
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61471
changes in estimated total outlier
payments, pass-through payments, the
application of the frontier State wage
adjustment, and the completion of the
phase-in to control unnecessary
increases in the volume of outpatient
services as described in section X.D. of
this final rule with comment period, in
addition to the application of the OPD
fee schedule increase factor after all
adjustments required by sections
1833(t)(3)(F), 1833(t)(3)(G), and
1833(t)(17) of the Act, will increase total
estimated OPPS payments by 1.3
percent.
We estimate the total increase (from
changes to the ASC provisions in this
final rule with comment period as well
as from enrollment, utilization, and
case-mix changes) in Medicare
expenditures (not including beneficiary
cost-sharing) under the ASC payment
system for CY 2020 compared to CY
2019, to be approximately $180 million.
Because the provisions for the ASC
payment system are part of a final rule
that is economically significant, as
measured by the $100 million threshold,
we have prepared a regulatory impact
analysis of the changes to the ASC
payment system that, to the best of our
ability, presents the costs and benefits of
this portion of this final rule with
comment period. Tables 42 and 43 of
this final rule with comment period
display the redistributive impact of the
CY 2020 changes regarding ASC
payments, grouped by specialty area
and then grouped by procedures with
the greatest ASC expenditures,
respectively.
C. Detailed Economic Analyses
1. Estimated Effects of OPPS Changes in
This Final Rule With Comment Period
a. Limitations of Our Analysis
The distributional impacts presented
here are the projected effects of the CY
2020 policy changes on various hospital
groups. We post on the CMS website our
hospital-specific estimated payments for
CY 2020 with the other supporting
documentation for this final rule with
comment period. To view the hospitalspecific estimates, we refer readers to
the CMS website at: https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatient
PPS/. At the website, select
‘‘regulations and notices’’ from the left
side of the page and then select ‘‘CMS–
1717–FC’’ from the list of regulations
and notices. The hospital-specific file
layout and the hospital-specific file are
listed with the other supporting
documentation for this final rule with
comment period. We show hospitalspecific data only for hospitals whose
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claims were used for modeling the
impacts shown in Table 41. We do not
show hospital-specific impacts for
hospitals whose claims we were unable
to use. We refer readers to section II.A.
of this final rule with comment period
for a discussion of the hospitals whose
claims we do not use for ratesetting and
impact purposes.
We estimate the effects of the
individual policy changes by estimating
payments per service, while holding all
other payment policies constant. We use
the best data available, but do not
attempt to predict behavioral responses
to our policy changes in order to isolate
the effects associated with specific
policies or updates, but any policy that
changes payment could have a
behavioral response. In addition, we
have not made adjustments for future
changes in variables, such as service
volume, service-mix, or number of
encounters.
b. Estimated Effects of the CY 2020
Completion of Phase-in to Control for
Unnecessary Increases in the Volume of
Outpatient Services
In section X.D. of this final rule with
comment period, we discuss the CY
2020 completion of the phase-in of our
CY 2019 finalized method to control for
unnecessary increases in the volume of
outpatient department services by
paying for clinic visits furnished at an
off-campus PBD at an amount equal to
the site-specific PFS payment rate for
nonexcepted items and services
furnished by a nonexcepted off-campus
PBD (the PFS payment rate).
Specifically, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
59013 through 59014), we finalized our
proposal to pay for HCPCS code G0463
(Hospital outpatient clinic visit for
assessment and management of a
patient) when billed with modifier
‘‘PO’’ at an amount equal to the sitespecific PFS payment rate for
nonexcepted items and services
furnished by a nonexcepted off-campus
PBD (the PFS payment rate), with a 2year transition period. For a discussion
of the PFS payment amount for
outpatient clinic visits furnished at
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs, we refer
readers to the CY 2018 PFS final rule
with comment period discussion (82 FR
53023 through 53024), as well as the CY
2019 PFS final rule and the CY 2020
PFS proposed rule.
To develop an estimated impact of
this policy, we began with CY 2018
outpatient claims data used in
ratesetting for the CY 2020 OPPS. We
then flagged all claim lines for HCPCS
code G0463 that contained modifier
‘‘PO’’ because the presence of this
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modifier indicates that such claims were
billed for services furnished by an offcampus department of a hospital paid
under the OPPS. Next, we excluded
those that were billed as a component
of C–APC 8011 (Comprehensive
Observation Services) or packaged into
another C–APC because, in those
instances, OPPS payment is made for a
broader package of services. We then
simulated payment for the remaining
claim lines as if they were paid at the
PFS-equivalent rate. An estimate of the
policy that includes the effects of
estimated changes in enrollment,
utilization, and case-mix based on the
FY 2020 Midsession Review
approximates the estimated decrease in
total payment under the OPPS at $800
million, with Medicare OPPS payments
decreasing by $640 million and
beneficiary copayments decreasing by
$160 million. We note that the
additional impact specifically as a result
of completing the phase-in in CY 2020,
is $400 million, with Medicare
payments decreasing by $320 million
and beneficiary copayments decreasing
by $80 million. This estimate is utilized
for the accounting statement displayed
in Table 42 of this final rule with
comment period because the impact of
this CY 2020 policy, which is not
budget neutral, is combined with the
impact of the OPD update, which is also
not budget neutral, to estimate changes
in Medicare spending under the OPPS
as a result of the changes in this final
rule with comment period.
We note that our estimates may differ
from the actual effect of the proposed
policy due to offsetting factors, such as
changes in provider behavior. We note
that, by removing this payment
differential that may influence site-ofservice decision-making, we anticipate
an associated decrease in the volume of
clinic visits provided in the excepted
off-campus PBD setting. In the proposed
rule, we reminded readers that this
estimate could change in the final rule
with comment period based on factors
such as the availability of updated data.
Finally, we acknowledge that the United
States District Court for the District of
Columbia vacated the volume control
policy for CY 2019 and we are working
to ensure affected 2019 claims for clinic
visits are paid consistent with the
court’s order. Our estimates may differ
from the actual effect of this policy
depending on the outcome of this
litigation.
c. Estimated Effects of OPPS Changes on
Hospitals
Table 41 shows the estimated impact
of this final rule with comment period
on hospitals. Historically, the first line
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of the impact table, which estimates the
change in payments to all facilities, has
always included cancer and children’s
hospitals, which are held harmless to
their pre-BBA amount. We also include
CMHCs in the first line that includes all
providers. We include a second line for
all hospitals, excluding permanently
held harmless hospitals and CMHCs.
We present separate impacts for
CMHCs in Table 41, and we discuss
them separately below, because CMHCs
are paid only for partial hospitalization
services under the OPPS and are a
different provider type from hospitals.
In CY 2020, we are finalizing our
proposal to pay CMHCs for partial
hospitalization services under APC 5853
(Partial Hospitalization for CMHCs), and
finalizing our proposal to pay hospitals
for partial hospitalization services under
APC 5863 (Partial Hospitalization for
Hospital-Based PHPs).
The estimated increase in the total
payments made under the OPPS is
determined largely by the increase to
the conversion factor under the
statutory methodology. The
distributional impacts presented do not
include assumptions about changes in
volume and service-mix. The
conversion factor is updated annually
by the OPD fee schedule increase factor,
as discussed in detail in section II.B. of
this final rule with comment period.
Section 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) of the Act
provides that the OPD fee schedule
increase factor is equal to the market
basket percentage increase applicable
under section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iii) of the
Act, which we refer to as the IPPS
market basket percentage increase. The
IPPS market basket percentage increase
for FY 2020 is 3.0 percent. Section
1833(t)(3)(F)(i) of the Act reduces that
3.0 percent by the multifactor
productivity adjustment described in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act,
which is 0.4 percentage point for FY
2020 (which is also the MFP adjustment
for FY 2020 in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (84 FR 19411)), resulting
in the OPD fee schedule increase factor
of 2.6 percent. We are using the OPD fee
schedule increase factor of 2.6 percent
in the calculation of the CY 2020 OPPS
conversion factor. Section 10324 of the
Affordable Care Act, as amended by
HCERA, further authorized additional
expenditures outside budget neutrality
for hospitals in certain frontier States
that have a wage index less than 1.0000.
The amounts attributable to this frontier
State wage index adjustment are
incorporated in the CY 2020 estimates
in Table 41 of this final rule with
comment period.
To illustrate the impact of the CY
2020 changes, our analysis begins with
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a baseline simulation model that uses
the CY 2019 relative payment weights,
the FY 2019 final IPPS wage indexes
that include reclassifications, and the
final CY 2019 conversion factor. Table
41 shows the estimated redistribution of
the increase or decrease in payments for
CY 2020 over CY 2019 payments to
hospitals and CMHCs as a result of the
following factors: the impact of the APC
reconfiguration and recalibration
changes between CY 2019 and CY 2020
(Column 2); the wage indexes and the
provider adjustments (Column 3); the
combined impact of all of the changes
described in the preceding columns
plus the 2.6 percent OPD fee schedule
increase factor update to the conversion
factor (Column 4); the finalized offcampus PBD clinic visits payment
policy (Column 5), and the estimated
impact taking into account all payments
for CY 2020 relative to all payments for
CY 2019, including the impact of
changes in estimated outlier payments,
and changes to the pass-through
payment estimate (Column 6).
We did not model an explicit budget
neutrality adjustment for the rural
adjustment for SCHs because we are
maintaining the current adjustment
percentage for CY 2020. Because the
updates to the conversion factor
(including the update of the OPD fee
schedule increase factor), the estimated
cost of the rural adjustment, and the
estimated cost of projected pass-through
payment for CY 2020 are applied
uniformly across services, observed
redistributions of payments in the
impact table for hospitals largely
depend on the mix of services furnished
by a hospital (for example, how the
APCs for the hospital’s most frequently
furnished services will change), and the
impact of the wage index changes on the
hospital. However, total payments made
under this system and the extent to
which this final rule with comment
period will redistribute money during
implementation also will depend on
changes in volume, practice patterns,
and the mix of services billed between
CY 2019 and CY 2020 by various groups
of hospitals, which CMS cannot
forecast.
Overall, we estimate that the rates for
CY 2020 will increase Medicare OPPS
payments by an estimated 1.3 percent.
Removing payments to cancer and
children’s hospitals because their
payments are held harmless to the preOPPS ratio between payment and cost
and removing payments to CMHCs
results in an estimated 1.3 percent
increase in Medicare payments to all
other hospitals. These estimated
payments will not significantly impact
other providers.
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Column 1: Total Number of Hospitals
The first line in Column 1 in Table 41
shows the total number of facilities
(3,732), including designated cancer and
children’s hospitals and CMHCs, for
which we were able to use CY 2018
hospital outpatient and CMHC claims
data to model CY 2019 and CY 2020
payments, by classes of hospitals, for
CMHCs and for dedicated cancer
hospitals. We excluded all hospitals and
CMHCs for which we could not
plausibly estimate CY 2019 or CY 2020
payment and entities that are not paid
under the OPPS. The latter entities
include CAHs, all-inclusive hospitals,
and hospitals located in Guam, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana
Islands, American Samoa, and the State
of Maryland. This process is discussed
in greater detail in section II.A. of this
final rule with comment period. At this
time, we are unable to calculate a DSH
variable for hospitals that are not also
paid under the IPPS because DSH
payments are only made to hospitals
paid under the IPPS. Hospitals for
which we do not have a DSH variable
are grouped separately and generally
include freestanding psychiatric
hospitals, rehabilitation hospitals, and
long-term care hospitals. We show the
total number of OPPS hospitals (3,625),
excluding the hold-harmless cancer and
children’s hospitals and CMHCs, on the
second line of the table. We excluded
cancer and children’s hospitals because
section 1833(t)(7)(D) of the Act
permanently holds harmless cancer
hospitals and children’s hospitals to
their ‘‘pre-BBA amount’’ as specified
under the terms of the statute, and
therefore, we removed them from our
impact analyses. We show the isolated
impact on the 41 CMHCs at the bottom
of the impact table (Table 41) and
discuss that impact separately below.
Column 2: APC Recalibration—All
Changes
Column 2 shows the estimated effect
of APC recalibration. Column 2 also
reflects any changes in multiple
procedure discount patterns or
conditional packaging that occur as a
result of the changes in the relative
magnitude of payment weights. As a
result of APC recalibration, we estimate
that urban hospitals will experience a
0.1 percent increase, with the impact
ranging from a decrease of 0.1 percent
to an increase of 0.4 depending on the
number of beds. Rural hospitals will
experience a decrease of up to 0.9
percent depending on the number of
beds. Major teaching hospitals will
experience no change.
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Column 3: Wage Indexes and the Effect
of the Provider Adjustments
Column 3 demonstrates the combined
budget neutral impact of the APC
recalibration; the updates for the wage
indexes with the FY 2020 IPPS postreclassification wage indexes; the rural
adjustment; the frontier adjustment, and
the cancer hospital payment adjustment.
We modeled the independent effect of
the budget neutrality adjustments and
the OPD fee schedule increase factor by
using the relative payment weights and
wage indexes for each year, and using
a CY 2019 conversion factor that
included the OPD fee schedule increase
and a budget neutrality adjustment for
differences in wage indexes.
Column 3 reflects the independent
effects of the proposed updated wage
indexes, including the application of
budget neutrality for the rural floor
policy on a nationwide basis, as well as
the CY 2020 proposed changes in wage
index policy discussed in section II.C. of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
We did not model a budget neutrality
adjustment for the rural adjustment for
SCHs because we are continuing the
rural payment adjustment of 7.1 percent
to rural SCHs for CY 2020, as described
in section II.E. of this final rule with
comment period. We also modeled a
budget neutrality adjustment for the
cancer hospital payment adjustment
because we are using a payment-to-cost
ratio target for the cancer hospital
payment adjustment in CY 2020 of .90,
which is higher than the ratio that was
reported for the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR
58873). We note that, in accordance
with section 16002 of the 21st Century
Cures Act, we are applying a budget
neutrality factor calculated as if the
cancer hospital adjustment target
payment-to-cost ratio was 0.90, not the
0.89 target payment-to-cost ratio we are
applying in section II.F. of this final rule
with comment period.
We modeled the independent effect of
updating the wage indexes by varying
only the wage indexes, holding APC
relative payment weights, service-mix,
and the rural adjustment constant and
using the CY 2020 scaled weights and
a CY 2019 conversion factor that
included a budget neutrality adjustment
for the effect of the changes to the wage
indexes between CY 2019 and CY 2020.
Column 4: All Budget Neutrality
Changes Combined With the Market
Basket Update
Column 4 demonstrates the combined
impact of all of the changes previously
described and the update to the
conversion factor of 2.6 percent.
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Overall, these changes will increase
payments to urban hospitals by 2.7
percent and to rural hospitals by 2.8
percent. The increase for classes of rural
hospitals will vary with sole community
hospitals receiving a 2.8 percent
increase and other rural hospitals
receiving an increase of 2.7 percent.
Column 5: Off-Campus PBD Visits
Payment Policy
Column 5 displays the estimated
effect of our finalized CY 2020 volume
control method, finalized in CY 2019, to
pay for clinic visit HCPCS code G0463
(Hospital outpatient clinic visit for
assessment and management of a
patient) when billed with modifier
‘‘PO’’ by an excepted off-campus PBD at
a rate that will be 40 percent of the
OPPS rate for a clinic visit service for
CY 2020. We note that the numbers
provided in this column isolate the
estimated effect of this policy
adjustment relative to the numerator of
Column 4. Therefore, the numbers
reported in Column 5 show how much
of the difference between the estimates
in Column 4 and the estimates in
Column 6 are a result of the finalized
off-campus PBD visits policy for CY
2020, as finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59013 through 59014).
Column 6: All Changes for CY 2020
Column 6 depicts the full impact of
the CY 2020 policies on each hospital
group by including the effect of all
changes for CY 2020 and comparing
them to all estimated payments in CY
2019. Column 6 shows the combined
budget neutral effects of Columns 2
through 3; the OPD fee schedule
increase; the effect of the CY 2020 offcampus PBD visits policy finalized in
CY 2019, the impact of estimated OPPS
outlier payments, as discussed in
section II.G. of this final rule with
comment period; the change in the
Hospital OQR Program payment
reduction for the small number of
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hospitals in our impact model that
failed to meet the reporting
requirements (discussed in section XIV.
of this final rule with comment period);
and the difference in total OPPS
payments dedicated to transitional passthrough payments.
Of those hospitals that failed to meet
the Hospital OQR Program reporting
requirements for the full CY 2019
update (and assumed, for modeling
purposes, to be the same number for CY
2020), we included 24 hospitals in our
model because they had both CY 2018
claims data and recent cost report data.
We estimate that the cumulative effect
of all changes for CY 2020 will increase
payments to all facilities by 1.3 percent
for CY 2020. We modeled the
independent effect of all changes in
Column 6 using the final relative
payment weights for CY 2019 and the
relative payment weights for CY 2020.
We used the final conversion factor for
CY 2019 of $79.490 and the final CY
2020 conversion factor of $80.784
discussed in section II.B. of this final
rule with comment period.
Column 6 contains simulated outlier
payments for each year. We used the 1year charge inflation factor used in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42629) of 5.4 percent (1.05404) to
increase individual costs on the CY
2018 claims, and we used the most
recent overall CCR in the July 2019
Outpatient Provider-Specific File
(OPSF) to estimate outlier payments for
CY 2019. Using the CY 2018 claims and
a 5.4 percent charge inflation factor, we
currently estimate that outlier payments
for CY 2019, using a multiple threshold
of 1.75 and a fixed-dollar threshold of
$4,825, will be approximately 1.0
percent of total payments. The
estimated current outlier payments of
1.0 percent are incorporated in the
comparison in Column 6. We used the
same set of claims and a charge inflation
factor of 11.1 percent (1.11100) and the
CCRs in the July 2019 OPSF, with an
adjustment of 0.97615, to reflect relative
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changes in cost and charge inflation
between CY 2018 and CY 2020, to
model the final CY 2020 outliers at 1.0
percent of estimated total payments
using a multiple threshold of 1.75 and
a fixed-dollar threshold of $5,075. The
charge inflation and CCR inflation
factors are discussed in detail in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84
FR 42629).
Overall, we estimate that facilities
will experience an increase of 1.3
percent under this final rule with
comment period in CY 2020 relative to
total spending in CY 2019. This
projected increase (shown in Column 6)
of Table 68 reflects the 2.6 percent OPD
fee schedule increase factor, minus 0.6
percent for the off-campus PBD visits
policy, minus 0.74 percent for the
change in the pass-through payment
estimate between CY 2019 and CY 2020,
plus no difference in estimated outlier
payments between CY 2019 (1.00
percent) and CY 2020 (1.00 percent). We
estimate that the combined effect of all
final changes for CY 2020 will increase
payments to urban hospitals by 1.3
percent. Overall, we estimate that rural
hospitals will experience a 1.1 percent
increase as a result of the combined
effects of all the changes for CY 2020.
Among hospitals, by teaching status,
we estimate that the impacts resulting
from the combined effects of all changes
will include an increase of 0.9 percent
for major teaching hospitals and an
increase of 1.5 percent for nonteaching
hospitals. Minor teaching hospitals will
experience an estimated increase of 1.3
percent.
In our analysis, we also have
categorized hospitals by type of
ownership. Based on this analysis, we
estimate that voluntary hospitals will
experience an increase of 1.1 percent,
proprietary hospitals will experience an
increase of 2.1 percent, and
governmental hospitals will experience
an increase of 1.3 percent.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
d. Estimated Effects of OPPS Changes on
CMHCs
The last line of Table 68 demonstrates
the isolated impact on CMHCs, which
furnish only partial hospitalization
services under the OPPS. In CY 2019,
CMHCs are paid under APC 5853
(Partial Hospitalization (3 or more
services) for CMHCs). We modeled the
impact of this APC policy assuming
CMHCs will continue to provide the
same number of days of PHP care as
seen in the CY 2018 claims used for
ratesetting in the proposed rule. We
excluded days with 1 or 2 services
because our policy only pays a per diem
rate for partial hospitalization when 3 or
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more qualifying services are provided to
the beneficiary. We estimate that
CMHCs will experience an overall 3.7
percent increase in payments from CY
2019 (shown in Column 6). We note that
this includes the trimming methodology
as well as the final CY 2020 floor on
geometric mean costs used for
developing the PHP payment rates
described in section VIII.B. of this final
rule. The CY 2020 proposal to establish
a floor based on geometric mean costs,
rather than based on a predetermined
payment rate, makes the OPPS budget
neutrality adjustments for both the
weight scaler and the conversion factor
applicable.
Column 3 shows that the estimated
impact of adopting the final FY 2020
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wage index values will result in an
increase of 0.5 percent to CMHCs.
Column 4 shows that combining this
proposed OPD fee schedule increase
factor, along with final changes in APC
policy for CY 2020 and the final FY
2020 wage index updates, will result in
an estimated increase of 4.5 percent.
Column 5 shows that the off-campus
PBD clinic visits payment policy has no
estimated effect on CMHCs. Column 6
shows that adding the final changes in
outlier and pass-through payments will
result in a total 3.7 percent increase in
payment for CMHCs. This reflects all
final changes for CMHCs for CY 2020.
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e. Estimated Effect of OPPS Changes on
Beneficiaries
For services for which the beneficiary
pays a copayment of 20 percent of the
payment rate, the beneficiary’s payment
will increase for services for which the
OPPS payments will rise and will
decrease for services for which the
OPPS payments will fall. For further
discussion on the calculation of the
national unadjusted copayments and
minimum unadjusted copayments, we
refer readers to section II.I. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. In all
cases, section 1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the Act
limits beneficiary liability for
copayment for a procedure performed in
a year to the hospital inpatient
deductible for the applicable year.
We estimate that the aggregate
beneficiary coinsurance percentage will
be 18.1 percent for all services paid
under the OPPS in CY 2020. The
estimated aggregate beneficiary
coinsurance reflects general system
adjustments, including the final CY
2020 comprehensive APC payment
policy discussed in section II.A.2.b. of
this final rule.
f. Estimated Effects of OPPS Changes on
Other Providers
The relative payment weights and
payment amounts established under the
OPPS affect the payments made to
ASCs, as discussed in section XIII of the
final rule. No types of providers or
suppliers other than hospitals, CMHCs,
and ASCs will be affected by the final
changes in the final rule.
g. Estimated Effects of OPPS Changes on
the Medicare and Medicaid Programs
The effect on the Medicare program is
expected to be an increase of $1.21
billion in program payments for OPPS
services furnished in CY 2020. The
effect on the Medicaid program is
expected to be limited to copayments
that Medicaid may make on behalf of
Medicaid recipients who are also
Medicare beneficiaries. We estimate that
the final changes in the final rule will
increase these Medicaid beneficiary
payments by approximately $45 million
in CY 2020. Currently, there are
approximately 10 million dual-eligible
beneficiaries, which represents
approximately one third of Medicare
Part B fee-for-service beneficiaries. The
impact on Medicaid was determined by
taking one-third of the beneficiary costsharing impact. The national average
split of Medicaid payments is 57
percent Federal payments and 43
percent State payments. Therefore, for
the estimated $80 million Medicaid
increase, approximately $45 million
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will be from the Federal Government
and $35 million will be from State
governmenwe dis. Alternative OPPS
Policies Considered
Alternatives to the OPPS changes we
proposed and the reasons for our
selected alternatives are discussed
throughout the final rule.
• Alternatives Considered for the
Methodology for Assigning Skin
Substitutes to High or Low Cost Groups
We refer readers to section V.B.7. of
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
for a discussion of our policy to assign
any skin substitute product that was
assigned to the high cost group in CY
2019 to the high cost group in CY 2020,
regardless of whether the product’s
mean unit cost (MUC) or the product’s
per day cost (PDC) exceeds or falls
below the overall CY 2020 MUC or PDC
threshold. We will continue to assign
products that exceed either the overall
CY 2020 MUC or PDC threshold to the
high cost group. We also considered, but
are not proposing, reinstating our
methodology from CY 2017 and
assigning skin substitutes to the high
cost group based on whether an
individual product’s MUC or PDC
exceeded the overall CY 2020 MUC or
PDC threshold based on calculations
done for either the proposed rule or the
final rule with comment period.
• Alternatives Considered for the
Methodology for Payment for NonOpioid Pain Management Treatments
We refer readers to sections II.A.3.b.
and XIII.D.3. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39425 for a
discussion of our packaging policy for
certain drugs when administered in the
ASC setting and policy of providing
separate payment for non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as a
supply when used in a surgical
procedure when the procedure is
performed in an ASC. In those sections
of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we discuss our proposal to
continue paying separately at ASP+6
percent for the cost of non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as
surgical supplies in the performance of
surgical procedures when they are
furnished in the ASC setting and
continue to package payment for nonopioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies in the
performance of surgical procedures in
the hospital outpatient department
setting for CY 2020. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we discuss the comments we
received on whether we should pay
separately for various non-opioid
treatments for pain under the OPPS and
the ASC payment system and also
finalize the policy for non-opioid pain
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management drugs that function as
surgical supplies.
• Alternatives Considered for the
Proposed Changes in the Level of
Supervision of Outpatient Therapeutic
Services in Hospitals and Critical
Access Hospitals (CAHs)
We refer readers to section X.A. of the
proposed rule for a discussion of our
proposal to change the minimum
required default level of supervision
from direct supervision to general
supervision for all hospital outpatient
therapeutic services provided by all
hospitals and CAHs. We also
considered, but did not propose,
reevaluation of the level of physician
supervision for cardiac rehabilitation
services to determine whether we
should propose to change the
supervision level from direct
supervision to general supervision.
Under this alternative, direct
supervision would have remained the
minimum required default level for
most hospital outpatient therapeutic
services with the exception of those
services that have been evaluated by the
HOP Panel and received a change in
supervision level based on those
recommendations.
2. Estimated Effects of CY 2020 ASC
Payment System Changes
Most ASC payment rates are
calculated by multiplying the ASC
conversion factor by the ASC relative
payment weight. As discussed fully in
section XIII of this final rule with
comment period, we are setting the CY
2020 ASC relative payment weights by
scaling the proposed CY 2020 OPPS
relative payment weights by the
proposed ASC scalar of 0.8550. The
estimated effects of the proposed
updated relative payment weights on
payment rates are varied and are
reflected in the estimated payments
displayed in Tables 39 and 40 below.
Beginning in CY 2011, section 3401 of
the Affordable Care Act requires that the
annual update to the ASC payment
system (which we proposed will be the
hospital market basket for CY 2020)
after application of any quality reporting
reduction be reduced by a productivity
adjustment. The Affordable Care Act
defines the productivity adjustment to
be equal to the 10-year moving average
of changes in annual economy-wide
private nonfarm business multifactor
productivity (MFP) (as projected by the
Secretary for the 10-year period, ending
with the applicable fiscal year, year,
cost reporting period, or other annual
period). For ASCs that fail to meet their
quality reporting requirements, the CY
2020 payment determinations will be
based on the application of a 2.0
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percentage point reduction to the
annual update factor, which we
proposed will be the hospital market
basket for CY 2020. We calculated the
CY 2020 ASC conversion factor by
adjusting the CY 2019 ASC conversion
factor by 1.0001 to account for changes
in the pre-floor and pre-reclassified
hospital wage indexes between CY 2019
and CY 2020 and by applying the CY
2020 MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor of 2.6 percent
(which is equal to the projected hospital
market basket update of 3.0 percent
minus an MFP adjustment of 0.4
percentage point). The proposed CY
2020 ASC conversion factor is $47.747
for ASCs that successfully meet the
quality reporting requirements.
a. Limitations of Our Analysis
Presented here are the projected
effects of the proposed changes for CY
2020 on Medicare payment to ASCs. A
key limitation of our analysis is our
inability to predict changes in ASC
service-mix between CY 2018 and CY
2020 with precision. We believe the net
effect on Medicare expenditures
resulting from the proposed CY 2020
changes will be small in the aggregate
for all ASCs. However, such changes
may have differential effects across
surgical specialty groups, as ASCs
continue to adjust to the payment rates
based on the policies of the revised ASC
payment system. We are unable to
accurately project such changes at a
disaggregated level. Clearly, individual
ASCs will experience changes in
payment that differ from the aggregated
estimated impacts presented below.
b. Estimated Effects of ASC Payment
System Policies on ASCs
Some ASCs are multispecialty
facilities that perform a wide range of
surgical procedures from excision of
lesions to hernia repair to cataract
extraction; others focus on a single
specialty and perform only a limited
range of surgical procedures, such as
eye, digestive system, or orthopedic
procedures. The combined effect on an
individual ASC of the proposed update
to the CY 2020 payments will depend
on a number of factors, including, but
not limited to, the mix of services the
ASC provides, the volume of specific
services provided by the ASC, the
percentage of its patients who are
Medicare beneficiaries, and the extent to
which an ASC provides different
services in the coming year. The
following discussion presents tables that
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display estimates of the impact of the
proposed CY 2020 updates to the ASC
payment system on Medicare payments
to ASCs, assuming the same mix of
services, as reflected in our CY 2018
claims data. Table 70 depicts the
estimated aggregate percent change in
payment by surgical specialty or
ancillary items and services group by
comparing estimated CY 2019 payments
to estimated proposed CY 2020
payments, and Table 69 shows a
comparison of estimated CY 2019
payments to estimated proposed CY
2020 payments for procedures that we
estimate will receive the most Medicare
payment in CY 2019.
In Table 70, we have aggregated the
surgical HCPCS codes by specialty
group, grouped all HCPCS codes for
covered ancillary items and services
into a single group, and then estimated
the effect on aggregated payment for
surgical specialty and ancillary items
and services groups. The groups are
sorted for display in descending order
by estimated Medicare program
payment to ASCs. The following is an
explanation of the information
presented in Table 70.
• Column 1—Surgical Specialty or
Ancillary Items and Services Group
indicates the surgical specialty into
which ASC procedures are grouped and
the ancillary items and services group
which includes all HCPCS codes for
covered ancillary items and services. To
group surgical procedures by surgical
specialty, we used the CPT code range
definitions and Level II HCPCS codes
and Category III CPT codes, as
appropriate, to account for all surgical
procedures to which the Medicare
program payments are attributed.
• Column 2—Estimated CY 2019 ASC
Payments were calculated using CY
2018 ASC utilization data (the most
recent full year of ASC utilization) and
CY 2019 ASC payment rates. The
surgical specialty and ancillary items
and services groups are displayed in
descending order based on estimated CY
2019 ASC payments.
• Column 3—Estimated CY 2020
Percent Change is the aggregate
percentage increase or decrease in
Medicare program payment to ASCs for
each surgical specialty or ancillary
items and services group that is
attributable to proposed updates to ASC
payment rates for CY 2020 compared to
CY 2019.
As shown in Table 69, for the six
specialty groups that account for the
most ASC utilization and spending, we
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estimate that the proposed update to
ASC payment rates for CY 2020 will
result in a 4-percent increase in
aggregate payment amounts for eye and
ocular adnexa procedures, a 3-percent
increase in aggregate payment amounts
for nervous system procedures, 1percent increase in aggregate payment
amounts for digestive system
procedures, a 2-percent increase in
aggregate payment amounts for
musculoskeletal system procedures, a 2percent increase in aggregate payment
amounts for genitourinary system
procedures, and a 5-percent increase in
aggregate payment amounts for
cardiovascular system procedures. We
note that these changes can be a result
of different factors, including updated
data, payment weight changes, and
proposed changes in policy. In general,
spending in each of these categories of
services is increasing due to the 2.6
percent proposed payment rate update.
After the payment rate update is
accounted for, aggregate payment
increases or decreases for a category of
services can be higher or lower than a
2.6-percent increase, depending on if
payment weights in the OPPS APCs that
correspond to the applicable services
increased or decreased or if the most
recent data show an increase or a
decrease in the volume of services
performed in an ASC for a category. For
example, we estimate a 4-percent
increase in proposed aggregate eye and
ocular adnexa procedure payments due
to an increase in hospital reported costs
for the primary payment grouping for
this category under the OPPS. This
increases the payment weights for eye
and ocular adnexa procedure payments
and, overall, is further increased by the
proposed 2.6 percent ASC rate update
for these procedures. For estimated
changes for selected procedures, we
refer readers to Table 70 provided later
in this section.
Also displayed in Table 69 is a
separate estimate of Medicare ASC
payments for the group of separately
payable covered ancillary items and
services. The payment estimates for the
covered surgical procedures include the
costs of packaged ancillary items and
services. We estimate that aggregate
payments for these items and services
will decrease by 12 percent for CY 2020.
This is largely attributed to the drug
packaging policies adopted under the
OPPS and ASC payment system.
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order by estimated CY 2019 program
payment.
• Column 1—CPT/HCPCS code.
• Column 2—Short Descriptor of the
HCPCS code.
• Column 3—Estimated CY 2019 ASC
Payments were calculated using CY
2018 ASC utilization (the most recent
full year of ASC utilization) and the CY
2019 ASC payment rates. The estimated
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CY 2019 payments are expressed in
millions of dollars.
• Column 4—Estimated CY 2020
Percent Change reflects the percent
differences between the estimated ASC
payment for CY 2019 and the estimated
payment for CY 2020 based on the
proposed update.
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Table 70 shows the estimated impact
of the updates to the revised ASC
payment system on aggregate ASC
payments for selected surgical
procedures during CY 2020. The table
displays 30 of the procedures receiving
the greatest estimated CY 2019 aggregate
Medicare payments to ASCs. The
HCPCS codes are sorted in descending
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c. Estimated Effects of ASC Payment
System Policies on Beneficiaries
We estimate that the proposed CY
2020 update to the ASC payment system
will be generally positive (that is, result
in lower cost-sharing) for beneficiaries
with respect to the new procedures we
proposed to add to the ASC list of
covered surgical procedures and for
those we proposed to designate as
office-based for CY 2020. For example,
using 2018 utilization data and
proposed CY 2020 OPPS and ASC
payment rates, we estimate that if 5
percent of coronary intervention
procedures migrate from the hospital
outpatient setting to the ASC setting as
a result of this proposed policy,
Medicare payments will be reduced by
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approximately $20 million in CY 2020
and total beneficiary copayments will
decline by approximately $5 million in
CY 2020. First, other than certain
preventive services where coinsurance
and the Part B deductible is waived to
comply with sections 1833(a)(1) and (b)
of the Act, the ASC coinsurance rate for
all procedures is 20 percent. This
contrasts with procedures performed in
HOPDs under the OPPS, where the
beneficiary is responsible for
copayments that range from 20 percent
to 40 percent of the procedure payment
(other than for certain preventive
services), although the majority of
HOPD procedures have a 20-percent
copayment. Second, in almost all cases,
the ASC payment rates under the ASC
payment system are lower than payment
rates for the same procedures under the
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61483
OPPS. Therefore, the beneficiary
coinsurance amount under the ASC
payment system will almost always be
less than the OPPS copayment amount
for the same services. (The only
exceptions will be if the ASC
coinsurance amount exceeds the
hospital inpatient deductible. The
statute requires that copayment amounts
under the OPPS not exceed the hospital
inpatient deductible.) Beneficiary
coinsurance for services migrating from
physicians’ offices to ASCs may
decrease or increase under the ASC
payment system, depending on the
particular service and the relative
payment amounts under the MPFS
compared to the ASC. While the ASC
payment system bases most of its
payment rates on hospital cost data used
to set OPPS relative payment weights,
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services that are performed a majority of
the time in a physician office are
generally paid the lesser of the ASC
amount according to the standard ASC
ratesetting methodology or at the
nonfacility practice expense based
amount payable under the PFS. For
those additional procedures that we
proposed to designate as office-based in
CY 2020, the beneficiary coinsurance
amount under the ASC payment system
generally will be no greater than the
beneficiary coinsurance under the PFS
because the coinsurance under both
payment systems generally is 20 percent
(except for certain preventive services
where the coinsurance is waived under
both payment systems).
in finalized in CY 2019 to pay for clinic
visits furnished at off-campus PBDs at a
PFS-equivalent rate. In addition, we
estimate that these OPPS changes in the
final rule will increase copayments that
Medicaid may make on behalf of
Medicaid recipients who are also
Medicare beneficiaries by
approximately $45 million in CY 2020.
The second accounting statement, Table
72, illustrates the classification of
expenditures associated with the 2.6
percent CY 2020 update to the ASC
payment system, based on the
provisions of the final rule with
comment period and the baseline
spending estimates for ASCs. Both
tables classify most estimated impacts
as transfers. The estimated costs of ICR
Burden and Regulatory Familiarization
are included in Table 73.
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3. Accounting Statements and Tables
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available on the Office of Management
and Budget website at: https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/assets/OMB/
circulars/a004/a-4.html), we have
prepared accounting statements to
illustrate the impacts of the OPPS and
ASC changes in this final rule with
comment period. The first accounting
statement, Table 71, illustrates the
classification of expenditures for the CY
2020 estimated hospital OPPS incurred
benefit impacts associated with the
proposed CY 2020 OPD fee schedule
increase. This $1.21 billion in
additional Medicare spending estimate
includes the $1.53 billion in additional
Medicare spending associated with
updating the CY 2019 OPPS payment
rates by the hospital market basket
update for CY 2020, offset by the $320
million in Medicare savings associated
with the CY 2020 completion of phase-
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4. Effects of Changes in Requirements
for the Hospital OQR Program
a. Background
We refer readers to the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59492 through 59494), for
the previously estimated effects of
changes to the Hospital OQR Program
for the CY 2018, CY 2019, and CY 2020
payment determinations. Of the
approximately 3,300 hospitals that met
eligibility requirements for the CY 2019
payment determination, we determined
that 14 hospitals did not meet the
requirements to receive the full OPD fee
schedule increase factor. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule (84 FR
39556), we did not propose to add any
quality measures to the Hospital OQR
Program measure set for the CY 2021 or
CY 2022 payment determinations.
However, we are finalizing our proposal
to remove one measure from the
program measure set, as discussed in
section XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule with
comment period. We do not believe that
this finalized policy will increase the
number of hospitals that do not receive
a full annual payment update for the CY
2021 or CY 2022 payment
determinations.
b. Estimated Effects of Finalized
Removal of OP–33 for the CY 2022
Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
In section XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule
with comment period, we are finalizing
our proposal with modification to
remove one measure submitted via a
web-based tool beginning with the CY
2022 payment determination and for
subsequent years: OP–33: External Beam
Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases. In
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we inadvertently stated that we were
proposing to remove this measure
beginning with October 2020 encounters
for CY 2022 payment determination and
subsequent years (84 FR 39554 through
39556). As discussed in section
XXVI.B.2. of this final rule with
comment period, we intended to remove
this measure beginning with the CY
2022 payment determination and
subsequent years, but starting with
January 2020 encounters, not October.
Because we are finalizing removal of
this measure beginning with the same
CY 2022 payment determination, as was
proposed, the estimated impacts and
burden reduction remain the same as
discussed in the proposed rule. As
discussed in section XXVI.B.2. of this
final rule with comment period, we
anticipate a burden reduction of 551
hours and $21,379 associated with the
removal of OP–33 for the CY 2022
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payment determination. In addition to
burden associated with information
collection, we also anticipate that
hospitals will experience a general
burden and cost reduction associated
with this removal stemming from no
longer having to implement, review,
track, and maintain program
requirements associated with this
measure.
5. Effects of Requirements for the
ASCQR Program
a. Background
In section XV.B of this final rule with
comment period, we discuss our
finalized policies affecting the ASCQR
Program. For the CY 2019 payment
determination, of the 6,393 ASCs that
met eligibility requirements for the
ASCQR Program, 203 ASCs did not
meet the requirements to receive the full
annual payment update. In section
XV.B.3. of this final rule with comment
period, we are finalizing our proposal to
adopt ASC–19: Facility-Level 7-Day
Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory
Surgical Centers to the ASCQR Program
measure set for the CY 2024 payment
determination and subsequent years. We
do not believe that adoption of the
finalized ASC–19 measure will cause
any ASCs to fail to meet the ASCQR
Program requirements. Therefore, we do
not believe this measure adoption will
increase the number of ASCs that do not
receive a full annual payment update for
the CY 2024 payment determination.
Below we discuss only the effects that
will result from the provisions finalized
in this final rule with comment period.
b. Estimated Effects of Adoption of
ASC–19: Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital
Visits After General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers (NQF #3357)
In section XV.B.3. of this final rule
with comment period, we are finalizing
our proposal, beginning with the CY
2024 payment determination and for
subsequent years, to adopt one measure:
ASC–19: Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital
Visits after General Surgery Procedures
Performed at Ambulatory Surgical
Centers (NQF #3357). As discussed in
section XXVI.C.2. of this final rule with
comment period, data used to calculate
scores for this finalized measure are
collected via Medicare Part A and Part
B administrative claims and Medicare
enrollment data. Therefore, ASCs will
not be required to report any additional
data. Because this change does not affect
ASCQR Program participation
requirements or data reporting
requirements, we do not expect this
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finalized measure to change the
information collection burden; it will
only nominally affect other costs
experienced by ASCs due to having to
review and track confidential feedback
and reports related to the finalized
ASC–19 measure.
XXVI. Economic Analyses
D. Effects of Prior Authorization Process
and Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
1. Overall Impact
As discussed in section XX. CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39556),
we proposed developing a new prior
authorization process and requirements
for certain hospital outpatient
department (OPD) services. This
proposal will use our authority in
section 1833(t)(2)(f) of the Act to require
provisional affirmation of coverage as a
condition of Medicare payment unless
the provider is exempt. This new
requirement for prior authorization of
certain covered OPD services aims to
reduce the unnecessary increases in
volume of certain covered hospital
outpatient department services.
We believe there are a number of
factors that may contribute to the
potential growth assumed in the
estimate presented below. For example,
as the provider community acclimates
to using prior authorization as part of
their billing practice, there may be
greater systemic or other processing
efficiencies to allow more extensive
implementation.
The overall economic impact on the
health care sector is dependent on the
number of claims affected. Table 74,
Overall Economic Impact to the Health
Sector, lists an estimate for the overall
economic impact to the health sector for
the services combined. The values
populating this table were obtained
from the cost reflected in Table 48,
Annual Private Sector Costs, and Table
76, Estimated Annual Medicare Costs.
Together, Tables 75 and 76 combine to
convey the overall economic impact to
the health sector, which is illustrated in
Table 74. It should be noted that due to
a July start date, year one will include
only 6 months of prior authorization
requests.
Based on the estimate, the overall
economic impact is approximately $5.7
million in the first year based on 6
months. The 5-year impact is
approximately $46.5 million, and the
10-year impact is approximately $98.7
million. The 5 and 10 year impacts
account for year one including only 6
months. Additional administrative
paperwork costs to private sector
providers and an increase in Medicare
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spending to conduct reviews combine to
create the financial impact. However,
this impact is offset by some savings.
We believe there are likely to be other
benefits and cost savings that result
from the OPD service prior
authorization requirement. However,
many of those benefits are difficult to
quantify. For instance, we expect to see
savings in the form of reduced
unnecessary utilization, fraud, waste,
and abuse, including a reduction in
improper Medicare fee-for-service
payments (we note that not all improper
payments are fraudulent).
The rationale behind requiring prior
authorization is to control unnecessary
increases in the volume of certain
covered OPD services that are often
cosmetic. We believe that the purpose of
the statute is to avoid unnecessary
utilization of OPD services. Therefore,
we do not view decreased revenues
from OPD services subject to
unnecessary utilization by providers to
be a condition that we must mitigate.
We believe that the effect will be
minimal on providers who are
compliant with Medicare coverage and
payment rules and requirements. This
policy will offer an additional
protection to a provider’s cash flow as
the provider will know in advance if the
Medicare requirements are met.
expect a decrease in the overall amount
paid for OPD services resulting from a
reduction in unnecessary utilization of
the services requiring prior
authorization.
As described previously in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39556), we have identified a list of
specific services that, based on review
and analysis of claims data, show higher
than expected, and therefore we believe
unnecessary, increases in the volume of
service utilization. In making the
decision to include the specific services
in the list of hospital outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization, we first considered that
these services are primarily cosmetic
and, therefore, are only covered by
Medicare in very rare circumstances.
We then viewed the current volume of
utilization of these services and
determined that the utilization far
exceeded what will be expected.
We have developed a list of potential
OPD services categories for inclusion in
the OPD services prior authorization
process—blepharoplasty; botulinum
toxin injections; panniculectomy;
rhinoplasty; and vein ablation. The list
includes services from each of five
categories that have demonstrated
unnecessary increases in volume and
that are likely to be cosmetic surgical
procedures and/or are directly related to
cosmetic surgical procedures that are
not covered by Medicare, but may be
combined with or masquerading as
therapeutic services.
We estimate that the private sector’s
per-case time burden attributed to
submitting documentation and
associated clerical activities in support
of a prior authorization request is
equivalent to that of submitting
documentation and clerical activities
associated for prepayment review,
which is 0.5 hours. We apply this time
burden estimate to initial submissions
and resubmissions.
2. Anticipated Specific Cost Effects
a. Private Sector Costs
We do not believe that this finalized
policy will significantly affect the
number of legitimate claims submitted
for these services. However, we do
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61486
Medicare will incur additional costs
associated with processing prior
c. Estimated Beneficiary Costs
We expect a reduction in the
utilization of Medicare OPD services
when such utilization does not comply
with one or more of Medicare’s
coverage, coding, and payment rules.
While there may be an associated
burden on beneficiaries while they wait
for the prior authorization decision, we
are unable to quantify that burden.
Although the system is designed to
permit utilization that is medically
necessary, OPD services that are not
medically necessary may still provide
convenience or usefulness for
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authorization requests. We use the range
of potentially affected cases
(submissions and resubmissions) and
multiply it by $50, the estimated cost to
review each request. The cost also
includes other elements such as
appeals, education and outreach, and
system changes.
beneficiaries; any rule-induced loss of
such convenience or usefulness
constitutes a cost of the rule that we
lack data to quantify. Additionally,
beneficiaries may have out-of-pocket
costs for those services that are
determined not to comply with
Medicare requirements and thus, are not
eligible for Medicare payment. We lack
the data to quantify these costs as well.
Medicare OPD services subject to prior
authorization. It is difficult to project
the decrease in unnecessary utilization.
However, for the first 6 months we
estimate the savings to be $6,059,950
and the net savings as $2,112,362.
Annually, the estimated savings are
$12,119,899 and the net savings are
$4,679,966. We will closely monitor
utilization and billing practices. The
expected benefits will include a
changed billing practice that also
enhances the coordination of care for
the beneficiary. For example, requiring
prior authorization for certain OPD
3. Estimated Benefits
There will be quantifiable benefits
because we expect a reduction in the
unnecessary utilization of those
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b. Medicare Costs
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services ensures that the primary care
practitioner recommending the service
and the facility collaborate more closely
to provide the most appropriate OPD
services to meet the needs of the
beneficiary. The practitioner
recommending the service evaluates the
beneficiary to determine his or her
condition and what services are needed
and medically necessary. This requires
the facility to collaborate closely with
the practitioner early on in the process
to ensure the services are truly
necessary and meet all requirements
and the documentation is complete and
correct. Improper payments made
because the practitioner did not
evaluate the patient or the patient does
not meet the Medicare requirements,
will likely be reduced by the
requirement that a provider submit
clinical documentation created by as
part of its prior authorization request.
E. Effects of Requirements Relating to
Changes in the Definition of Expected
Donation Rate for Organ Procurement
Organizations
We are finalizing our proposal to
revise the definition of ‘‘expected
donation rate’’ in the CfCs for OPOs.
This change will allow OPOs to receive
payment for organ donor costs under the
Medicare and Medicaid programs using
a definition that is consistent with the
definition used by the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients
(SRTR).
Due to comments received on the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (and
discussed in section XVIII.A of this final
rule with comment period), we are
finalizing a policy that would not
require all OPOs to meet the standards
of the second outcome measure for the
2022 recertification cycle only. As a
result, OPOs will only have to meet one
of the remaining outcome measures,
which may provide temporary relief for
a small number of OPOs that, absent
this waiver, might have faced decertification and the appeal process due
to only meeting one outcome measure.
For subsequent recertification cycles,
all 58 OPOs will once again be required
to meet two out of three outcome
measures detailed in the CfCs for OPOs
regulations at 42 CFR 486.318(a) and (b).
The second outcome measure relies on
the aforementioned ‘‘expected donation
rate’’ definition, and therefore all OPOs
will be affected by the finalized change.
This revision will eliminate the
potential for confusion in the OPO
community due to different definitions
of the same term; however, it will not
affect data collection or reporting by
OPTNs and SRTRs, nor their statistical
evaluation of OPO performance, and
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therefore it will not result in any
quantifiable impact.
F. Revisions to the Laboratory Date of
Service Policy
In section XIX of this final rule with
comment period, we discuss our
comment solicitation on potential
revisions to the laboratory date of
service (DOS) exception at 42 CFR
414.510(b)(5) for molecular pathology
tests and tests designated by CMS as an
ADLT under paragraph (1) of the
definition of advanced diagnostic
laboratory test in § 414.502. As a result
of our evaluation of public comments,
we are finalizing a revision to exclude
blood banks or centers from the
laboratory DOS exception at
§ 414.510(b)(5). Because the molecular
pathology tests performed by blood
banks or centers are excluded from our
packaging policy under the OPPS, and
are paid at the applicable rate for the
laboratory test under the CLFS,
regardless of whether the hospital or the
performing laboratory bills Medicare for
the test, this revision will not result in
net costs or savings to the Medicare
program. Accordingly, the discussion in
section XIX of this final rule with
comment period is not reflected in
Table 41 in the regulatory impact
analysis under section XXVI.C.1. of this
final rule with comment period.
G. Effect of Changes to Requirements for
Grandfathered Children’s HospitalsWithin-Hospitals (HwHs)
In section XXII. of this final rule, we
are finalizing our proposal to revise
§ 412.22(f)(1) and (2) to allow
grandfathered children’s HwHs to
increased beds while maintaining their
grandfathered status. This policy change
will allow providers to address
changing community needs for services
without any increased incentive for
inappropriate patient shifting to
maximize Medicare payments given the
low Medicare utilization in children’s
hospitals. Based on the best available
information, there are currently very
few grandfathered children’s HwHs (3
or less). For these reasons, we estimate
any impact on Medicare expenditures as
a result of this policy change will be
negligible. On average there are
approximately 50 Medicare discharges
per year from children’s hospitals at an
average cost of approximately $33,000
per discharge. There are two possible
sources for an increase, if any, in
Medicare discharges at grandfathered
children’s hospitals as a result of our
policy change—(1) either the discharges
will have been treated at another
children’s hospital; or (2) the cases will
have been treated at an IPPS hospital. In
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either case given the few number of
Medicare discharges at children’s
hospitals, the impact of this policy
change on Medicare spending is
negligible
H. Regulatory Review Costs
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret a rule,
we should estimate the cost associated
with regulatory review. Due to the
uncertainty involved with accurately
quantifying the number of entities that
will review a rule, we assumed that the
number of commenters on the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (3,853) will be
the number of reviewers of this final
rule with comment period. We
acknowledge that this assumption may
understate or overstate the costs of
reviewing this final rule with comment
period. It is possible that not all
commenters will review this final rule
with comment period in detail, and it is
also possible that some reviewers will
choose not to comment on this final rule
with comment period. Nonetheless, we
believed that the number of commenters
on the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule would be a fair estimate of the
number of reviewers of this final rule
with comment period. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39637),
we welcomed any comments on the
approach in estimating the number of
entities that will review the proposed
rule. We also recognize that different
types of entities are, in many cases,
affected by mutually exclusive sections
of the proposed rule and the final rule
with comment period, and, therefore,
for the purposes of our estimate, we
assumed that each reviewer reads
approximately 50 percent of the rule.
Using the wage information from the
2018 BLS for medical and health service
managers (Code 11–9111), we estimated
that the cost of reviewing this rule is
$109.36 per hour, including overhead
and fringe benefits (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm). Assuming an
average reading speed, we estimate that
it will take approximately 8 hours for
the staff to review half of this final rule
with comment period. For each facility
that reviewed this final rule with
comment period, the estimated cost is
$874.88 (8 hours × $109.36). Therefore,
we estimated that the total cost of
reviewing this final rule with comment
period is $3,370,913 ($874.88 × 3,853
reviewers).
I. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
Analysis
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities, if a rule has a significant impact
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on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, many
hospitals are considered small
businesses either by the Small Business
Administration’s size standards with
total revenues of $41.0 million or less in
any single year or by the hospital’s notfor-profit status. Most ASCs and most
CMHCs are considered small businesses
with total revenues of $16.5 million or
less in any single year. For details, we
refer readers to the Small Business
Administration’s ‘‘Table of Size
Standards’’ at https://www.sba.gov/
content/table-small-business-sizestandards. As its measure of significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, HHS uses a
change in revenue of more than 3 to 5
percent. We do not believe that this
threshold will be reached by the
requirements in this final rule with
comment period. As a result, the
Secretary has determined that this final
rule with comment period will not have
a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if a rule may have a
significant impact on the operations of
a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to
the provisions of section 604 of the
RFA. For purposes of section 1102(b) of
the Act, we define a small rural hospital
as a hospital that is located outside of
a metropolitan statistical area and has
100 or fewer beds. We estimate that this
final rule with comment period will
increase payments to small rural
hospitals by less than 2 percent;
therefore, it should not have a
significant impact on approximately 609
small rural hospitals. We note that the
estimated payment impact for any
category of small entity will depend on
both the services that they provide as
well as the payment policies and/or
payment systems that may apply to
them. Therefore, the most applicable
estimated impact may be based on the
specialty, provider type, or payment
system.
The analysis above, together with the
remainder of this preamble, provides a
regulatory flexibility analysis and a
regulatory impact analysis.
J. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Analysis
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. That threshold
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level is currently approximately $154
million. This final rule with comment
period does not mandate any
requirements for State, local, or tribal
governments, or for the private sector.
K. Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
Executive Order 13771, titled
Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January
30, 2017. It has been determined that
this final rule with comment period,
will be a regulatory action for the
purposes of Executive Order 13771. We
estimate that this final rule with
comment period will generate $2.5
million in annualized cost at a 7-percent
discount rate, discounted relative to
2016, over a perpetual time horizon.
L. Conclusion
The changes we are making in this
final rule with comment period will
affect all classes of hospitals paid under
the OPPS and will affect both CMHCs
and ASCs. We estimate that most classes
of hospitals paid under the OPPS will
experience a modest increase or a
minimal decrease in payment for
services furnished under the OPPS in
CY 2020. Table 68 demonstrates the
estimated distributional impact of the
OPPS budget neutrality requirements
that will result in a 1.3 percent increase
in payments for all services paid under
the OPPS in CY 2020, after considering
all of the changes to APC
reconfiguration and recalibration, as
well as the OPD fee schedule increase
factor, wage index changes, including
the frontier State wage index
adjustment, estimated payment for
outliers, the finalized off-campus
provider-based department clinic visits
payment policy, and changes to the
pass-through payment estimate.
However, some classes of providers that
are paid under the OPPS will
experience more significant gains or
losses in OPPS payments in CY 2020.
The updates to the ASC payment
system for CY 2020 will affect each of
the approximately 5,600 ASCs currently
approved for participation in the
Medicare program. The effect on an
individual ASC will depend on its mix
of patients, the proportion of the ASC’s
patients who are Medicare beneficiaries,
the degree to which the payments for
the procedures offered by the ASC are
changed under the ASC payment
system, and the extent to which the ASC
provides a different set of procedures in
the coming year. Table 69 demonstrates
the estimated distributional impact
among ASC surgical specialties of the
MFP-adjusted hospital market basket
update factor of 2.6 percent for CY 2020.
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61489
XXVII. Federalism Analysis
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
costs on State and local governments,
preempts State law, or otherwise has
federalism implications. We have
examined the OPPS and ASC provisions
included in this final rule with
comment period in accordance with
Executive Order 13132, Federalism, and
have determined that they will not have
a substantial direct effect on State, local
or tribal governments, preempt State
law, or otherwise have a federalism
implication. As reflected in Table 68 of
this final rule with comment period, we
estimate that OPPS payments to
governmental hospitals (including State
and local governmental hospitals) will
increase by 1.3 percent under this final
rule with comment period. While we do
not know the number of ASCs or
CMHCs with government ownership, we
anticipate that it is small. The analyses
we have provided in this section of this
final rule with comment period, in
conjunction with the remainder of this
document, demonstrate that this final
rule with comment period is consistent
with the regulatory philosophy and
principles identified in Executive Order
12866, the RFA, and section 1102(b) of
the Act.
This final rule with comment period
will affect payments to a substantial
number of small rural hospitals and a
small number of rural ASCs, as well as
other classes of hospitals, CMHCs, and
ASCs, and some effects may be
significant.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 405
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Health
professions, Kidney diseases, Medical
devices, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Rural
areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 410
Diseases, Health facilities, Health
professions, Laboratories, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 412
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health facilities, Medicare,
Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 414
Administrative practice and
procedure, Biologics, Drugs, Health
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facilities, Health professions, Diseases,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 416
Health facilities, Health professions,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 419
Hospitals, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 486
Definitions, Medicare, Organ
procurement.
For reasons stated in the preamble of
this document, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 405—FEDERAL HEALTH
INSURANCE FOR THE AGED AND
DISABLED
1. The authority citation for part 405
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 263a, 495(a), 1302,
1302b-12, 1395x, 1395y(a), 1395ff, 1395hh,
1395kk, 1395rr, and 1395ww(k).
2. Section 405.926 is amended by
revising paragraph (t) to read as follows:
■
of this section, subject to the following
requirements:
(A) For services furnished in the
hospital or CAH, or in an outpatient
department of the hospital or CAH, both
on and off-campus, as defined in
§ 413.65 of this chapter, general
supervision means the definition
specified at § 410.32(b)(3)(i).
(B) Certain therapeutic services and
supplies may be assigned either direct
supervision or personal supervision. For
purposes of this section, direct
supervision means that the physician or
nonphysician practitioner must be
immediately available to furnish
assistance and direction throughout the
performance of the procedure. It does
not mean that the physician or
nonphysician practitioner must be
present in the room when the procedure
is performed. Personal supervision
means the definition specified at
§ 410.32(b)(3)(iii);
*
*
*
*
*
PART 412—PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT
SYSTEMS FOR INPATIENT HOSPITAL
SERVICES
5. The authority citation for part 412
continues to read as follows:
■
§ 405.926 Actions that are not initial
determinations.
*
*
*
*
(t) A contractor’s prior authorization
determination with regard to—
(1) Durable medical equipment,
prosthetics, orthotics, and supplies
(DMEPOS)); and
(2) Hospital outpatient department
(OPD) services.
*
*
*
*
*
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh.
*
PART 410—SUPPLEMENTARY
MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI)
BENEFITS
3. The authority citation for part 410
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m,
1395hh, 1395rr, and 1395ddd.
4. Section 410.27 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(1)(iv) to read as
follows:
■
§ 410.27 Therapeutic outpatient hospital or
CAH services and supplies incident to a
physician’s or nonphysician practitioner’s
service: Conditions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) Under the general supervision (or
other level of supervision as specified
by CMS for the particular service) of a
physician or a nonphysician
practitioner as specified in paragraph (g)
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6. Section 412.22 is amended by
revising paragraphs (f)(1) and (2) to read
as follows:
■
§ 412.22 Excluded hospitals and hospital
units: General rules.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) Continues to operate under the
same terms and conditions, including
the number of beds, unless the hospital
is a children’s hospital as defined at
§ 412.23(d), and square footage
considered to be part of the hospital for
purposes of Medicare participation and
payment in effect on September 30,
1995; or
(2) In the case of a hospital that
changes the terms and conditions under
which it operates after September 30,
1995, but before October 1, 2003,
continues to operate under the same
terms and conditions, including the
number of beds, unless the hospital is
a children’s hospital as defined at
§ 412.23(d), and square footage
considered to be part of the hospital for
purposes of Medicare participation and
payment in effect on September 30,
2003.
*
*
*
*
*
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PART 414—PAYMENT FOR PART B
MEDICAL AND OTHER HEALTH
SERVICES
7. The authority citation for part 414
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395hh, and
1395rr(b)(l).
8. Section 414.502 is amended by
adding a definition for ‘‘Blood bank or
center’’ in alphabetical order to read as
follows:
■
§ 414.502
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Blood bank or center means an entity
whose primary function is the
performance or responsibility for the
performance of, the collection,
processing, testing, storage and/or
distribution of blood or blood
components intended for transfusion
and transplantation.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Section 414.510 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(5) introductory
text to read as follows:
§ 414.510 Laboratory date of service for
clinical laboratory and pathology
specimens.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(5) In the case of a molecular
pathology test performed by a laboratory
other than a blood bank or center, or a
test designated by CMS as an ADLT
under paragraph (1) of the definition of
an advanced diagnostic laboratory test
in § 414.502, the date of service of the
test must be the date the test was
performed only if—
*
*
*
*
*
PART 416—AMBULATORY SURGICAL
SERVICES
10. The authority citation for part 416
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 273, 1302, 1320b-8,
and 1395hh.
11. Section 416.171 is amended by
adding paragraph (b)(4) to read as
follows:
■
§ 416.171 Determination of payment rates
for ASC services.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2)
of this section, low volume deviceintensive procedures where the
otherwise applicable payment rate
calculated based on the standard
methodology for device intensive
procedures described in this paragraph
(b) would exceed the payment rate for
the equivalent service set under the
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
payment system established under part
419 of this chapter, for which the
payment rate will be set at an amount
equal to the amount under that payment
system.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 419—PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT
SYSTEM FOR HOSPITAL OUTPATIENT
DEPARTMENT SERVICES
12. The authority citation for part 419
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395l(t), and
1395hh.
13. Section 419.66 is amended by
revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 419.66 Transitional pass-through
payments: Medical devices.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) CMS determines either of the
following:
(i) The device to be included in the
category has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or
treatment of an illness or injury or
improve the functioning of a malformed
body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously
established category or other available
treatment; or
(ii) For devices for which passthrough payment status will begin on or
after January 1, 2020, as an alternative
pathway to paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section, the device has received FDA
marketing authorization and is part of
the FDA’s Breakthrough Devices
Program.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Subpart I, consisting of §§ 419.80
through 419.89, is added to read as
follows:
Subpart I—Prior Authorization for
Outpatient Department Services
Sec.
419.80 Basis and scope of this subpart.
419.81 Definitions.
419.82 Prior authorization for certain
covered hospital outpatient department
services.
419.83 List of hospital outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization.
419.84–419.89 [Reserved]
Subpart I—Prior Authorization for
Outpatient Department Services
§ 419.80
Basis and scope of this subpart.
(a) Basis. The provisions in this
subpart are issued under the authority
of section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act, which
authorizes the Secretary to develop a
method for controlling unnecessary
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:50 Nov 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
increases in the volume of covered
hospital outpatient department services.
(b) Scope. This subpart specifies the
process and requirements for prior
authorization for certain hospital
outpatient department services as a
condition of Medicare payment.
§ 419.81
Definitions.
As used in this subpart, unless
otherwise specified, the following
definitions apply:
List of hospital outpatient department
services requiring prior authorization
means the list of hospital outpatient
department services described in
§ 419.83(a) that CMS adopts in
accordance with § 419.83(b) that require
prior authorization as a condition of
Medicare payment.
Prior authorization means the process
through which a request for provisional
affirmation of coverage is submitted to
CMS or its contractors for review before
the service is provided to the
beneficiary and before the claim is
submitted for processing.
Provisional affirmation means a
preliminary finding that a future claim
meets the Medicare coverage, coding,
and payment rules in chapter IV of this
title or in Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act.
§ 419.82 Prior authorization for certain
covered hospital outpatient department
services.
(a) Prior authorization as condition of
payment. As a condition of Medicare
payment for the services in the
categories of services on the list of
hospital outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization as
specified in § 419.83(a), a provider must
submit to CMS or its contractors a prior
authorization request in accordance
with the requirements of paragraph (c)
of this section.
(b) Denial of claim. (1) CMS or its
contractors will deny a claim for a
service that requires prior authorization
if the provider has not received a
provisional affirmation of coverage on
the claim from CMS or its contractor
unless the provider is exempt under
§ 419.83(c).
(2) CMS or its contractor may deny a
claim that has received a provisional
affirmation based on either of the
following:
(i) Technical requirements that can
only be evaluated after the claim has
been submitted for formal processing; or
(ii) Information not available at the
time of a prior authorization request.
(3) CMS or its contractor may deny
claims for services related to services on
the list of hospital outpatient
department services for which the
provider has received a denial.
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61491
(c) Submission of prior authorization
request. A provider must submit to CMS
or its contractor a prior authorization
request for any service on the list of
outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization.
(1) Prior authorization request
requirements. A prior authorization
request must—
(i) Include all documentation
necessary to show that the service meets
applicable Medicare coverage, coding,
and payment rules in chapter IV of this
title or in Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act.
(ii) Be submitted before the service is
provided to the beneficiary and before
the claim is submitted.
(2) Request for expedited review. A
provider may submit a request for
expedited review of a prior
authorization request. The request for
expedited review must comply with the
requirements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and
(ii) of this section and include
documentation showing that the
processing of the prior authorization
request must be expedited due to the
beneficiary’s life, health, or ability to
regain maximum function being in
serious jeopardy.
(d) Reviews—(1) Review of prior
authorization request. Upon receipt of a
prior authorization request, CMS or its
contractor will review the request for
compliance with applicable Medicare
coverage, coding, and payment rules in
chapter IV of this title or in Title XVIII
of the Social Security Act.
(i) CMS or its contractor will issue a
provisional affirmation to the provider if
it is determined that applicable
Medicare coverage, coding, and
payment rules in chapter IV of this title
or in Title XVIII of the Social Security
Act are met.
(ii) CMS or its contractor will issue a
non-affirmation to the provider if it is
determined that applicable Medicare
coverage, coding, and payment rules in
chapter IV of this title or in Title XVIII
of the Social Security Act are not met.
(iii) The provisional affirmation or
non-affirmation will be issued within 10
business days of receipt of the prior
authorization request.
(2) Review of expedited review
request. Upon receipt of a request for
expedited review, CMS or its contractor
will complete an expedited review of
the prior authorization request if it is
determined that a delay could seriously
jeopardize the beneficiary’s life, health,
or ability to regain maximum function,
and issue a provisional affirmation or
non-affirmation decision in accordance
with paragraph (d)(1) of this section
within 2 business days of the expedited
review request.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
(e) Resubmission. (1) A provider may
resubmit a prior authorization request,
upon receipt of a non-affirmation,
consistent with the requirements in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
(2) A provider may resubmit a request
for expedited review consistent with the
requirements in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section.
authorization process requirements
generally or for a particular service(s) at
any time by issuing notification on the
CMS website.
§ 419.83 List of hospital outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization.
■
15. The authority citation for part 486
is revised to read as follows:
(a) Service categories for the list of
hospital outpatient department services
requiring prior authorization. (1) The
following service categories comprise
the list of hospital outpatient
department services requiring prior
authorization:
(i) Blepharoplasty.
(ii) Botulinum toxin injections.
(iii) Panniculectomy.
(iv) Rhinoplasty.
(v) Vein ablation.
(2) Technical updates to the list of
services, such as changes to the name of
the service or CPT code, will be
published on the CMS website.
(b) Adoption of the list of services.
CMS will adopt the list of hospital
outpatient department service categories
requiring prior authorization and any
updates or geographic restrictions
through formal notice-and-comment
rulemaking.
(c) Exemptions. CMS may elect to
exempt a provider from the prior
authorization process in § 419.82 upon
a provider’s demonstration of
compliance with Medicare coverage,
coding, and payment rules in chapter IV
of this title or in Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act through such prior
authorization process.
(1) An exemption will remain in effect
until CMS elects to withdraw the
exemption.
(2) Notice of an exemption or
withdraw of an exemption will be
provided at least 60 days prior to the
effective date.
(d) Suspension of prior authorization
process or services. CMS may suspend
the outpatient department services prior
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:50 Nov 08, 2019
Jkt 250001
PART 486—CONDITIONS FOR
COVERAGE OF SPECIALIZED
SERVICES FURNISHED BY
SUPPLIERS
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 273, 1302, 1320b–8,
and 1395hh.
16. Section 486.302 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘Expected
donation rate’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 486.302
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Expected donation rate means the
expected donation rate per 100 eligible
deaths that is the rate expected for an
OPO based on the national experience
for OPOs serving similar eligible donor
populations and donation service areas.
This rate is adjusted for the
distributions of age, sex, race, and cause
of death among eligible deaths.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Section 486.316 is amended by
adding paragraph (a)(3) and revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 486.316 Re-certification and competition
processes.
(a) * * *
(3) For the 2022 recertification cycle
only, an OPO is recertified for an
additional 4 years and its service area is
not opened for competition when the
OPO meets one out of the two outcome
measure requirements described in
§ 486.318(a)(1) and (3) for OPOs not
operating exclusively in the
noncontiguous States, Commonwealths,
Territories, or possessions; or
§ 486.318(b)(1) and (3) for OPOs
operating exclusively in noncontiguous
States, Commonwealths, Territories, and
possessions. An OPO is not required to
meet the second outcome measure
described in § 486.318(a)(2) or (b)(2) for
the 2022 recertification cycle.
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Sfmt 9990
(b) De-certification and competition.
(1) If an OPO does not meet two out of
the three outcome measures as
described in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section or the requirements described in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the OPO
is de-certified. If the OPO does not
appeal or the OPO appeals and the
reconsideration official and CMS
hearing officer uphold the decertification, the OPO’s service area is
opened for competition from other
OPOs. The de-certified OPO is not
permitted to compete for its open area
or any other open area. An OPO
competing for an open service area must
submit information and data that
describe the barriers in its service area,
how they affected organ donation, what
steps the OPO took to overcome them,
and the results.
(2) For the 2022 recertification cycle
only, if an OPO does not meet one of the
outcome measures as described in
paragraphs § 486.318(a)(1), (a)(3), (b)(1),
or (b)(3), or the requirements described
in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the
OPO is de-certified. If the OPO does not
appeal or the OPO appeals and the
reconsideration official and CMS
hearing officer uphold the decertification, the OPO’s service area is
opened for competition from other
OPOs. The de-certified OPO is not
permitted to compete for its open area
or any other open area. An OPO
competing for an open service area must
submit information and data that
describe the barriers in its service area,
how they affected organ donation, what
steps the OPO took to overcome them,
and the results.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: October 24, 2019.
Seema Verma,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services.
Dated: October 28, 2019
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2019–24138 Filed 11–1–19; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 12, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 61142-61492]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-24138]
[[Page 61141]]
Vol. 84
Tuesday,
No. 218
November 12, 2019
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, 412, et al.
Medicare Program: Changes to Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment
and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality Reporting
Programs; Revisions of Organ Procurement Organizations Conditions of
Coverage; Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for Certain
Covered Outpatient Department Services; Potential Changes to the
Laboratory Date of Service Policy; Changes to Grandfathered Children's
Hospitals-Within-Hospitals; Notice of Closure of Two Teaching Hospitals
and Opportunity To Apply for Available Slots; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 84 , No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2019 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 61142]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 405, 410, 412, 414, 416, 419, and 486
[CMS-1717-FC]
RIN 0938-AT74
Medicare Program: Changes to Hospital Outpatient Prospective
Payment and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality
Reporting Programs; Revisions of Organ Procurement Organizations
Conditions of Coverage; Prior Authorization Process and Requirements
for Certain Covered Outpatient Department Services; Potential Changes
to the Laboratory Date of Service Policy; Changes to Grandfathered
Children's Hospitals-Within-Hospitals; Notice of Closure of Two
Teaching Hospitals and Opportunity To Apply for Available Slots
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule with comment period.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule with comment period revises the Medicare
hospital outpatient prospective payment system (OPPS) and the Medicare
ambulatory surgical center (ASC) payment system for Calendar Year 2020
based on our continuing experience with these systems. In this final
rule with comment period, we describe the changes to the amounts and
factors used to determine the payment rates for Medicare services paid
under the OPPS and those paid under the ASC payment system. Also, this
final rule with comment period updates and refines the requirements for
the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program and the ASC
Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program. In addition, this final rule with
comment period establishes a process and requirements for prior
authorization for certain covered outpatient department services;
revise the conditions for coverage of organ procurement organizations;
and revise the regulations to allow grandfathered children's hospitals-
within-hospitals to increase the number of beds without resulting in
the loss of grandfathered status; and provides notice of the closure of
two teaching hospitals and the opportunity to apply for available slots
for purposes of indirect medical education (IME) and direct graduate
medical education (DGME) payments.
DATES:
Effective date: This final rule is effective on January 1, 2020.
Comment period: To be assured consideration, comments on the
payment classifications assigned to the interim APC assignments and/or
status indicators of new or replacement Level II HCPCS codes in this
final rule with comment period must be received at one of the addresses
provided in the ADDRESSES section no later than 5 p.m. EST on December
2, 2019.
ADDRESSES: In commenting, please refer to file code CMS-1717-FC when
commenting on the issues in this final rule with comment period.
Because of staff and resource limitations, we cannot accept comments by
facsimile (FAX) transmission.
Comments, including mass comment submissions, must be submitted in
one of the following three ways (please choose only one of the ways
listed):
1. Electronically. You may (and we encourage you to) submit
electronic comments on this regulation to https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions under the ``submit a comment'' tab.
2. By regular mail. You may mail written comments to the following
address ONLY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of
Health and Human Services, Attention: CMS-1717-FC, P.O. Box 8013,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
Please allow sufficient time for mailed comments to be received
before the close of the comment period.
3. By express or overnight mail. You may send written comments via
express or overnight mail to the following address ONLY: Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services, Department of Health and Human Services,
Attention: CMS-1717-FC, Mail Stop C4-26-05, 7500 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
b. For delivery in Baltimore, MD--Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services, Department of Health and Human Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850.
For information on viewing public comments, we refer readers to the
beginning of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
2-Midnight Rule (Short Inpatient Hospital Stays), contact Lela
Strong-Holloway via email [email protected] or at 410-786-3213.
Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment (HOP Panel), contact
the HOP Panel mailbox at [email protected].
Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Payment System, contact Scott
Talaga via email [email protected] or at 410-786-4142 or Mitali
Dayal via email [email protected] or at 410-786-4329.
Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program
Administration, Validation, and Reconsideration Issues, contact Anita
Bhatia via email [email protected] or at 410-786-7236.
Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR) Program
Measures, contact Nicole Hewitt via email [email protected] or
at 410-786-7778.
Blood and Blood Products, contact Josh McFeeters via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-9732.
Cancer Hospital Payments, contact Scott Talaga via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-4142.
CMS Web Posting of the OPPS and ASC Payment Files, contact Chuck
Braver via email [email protected] or at 410-786-6719.
Control for Unnecessary Increases in Volume of Outpatient Services,
contact Elise Barringer via email [email protected] or at
410-786-9222.
Composite APCs (Low Dose Brachytherapy and Multiple Imaging),
contact Elise Barringer via email [email protected] or at
410-786-9222.
Comprehensive APCs (C-APCs), contact Lela Strong-Holloway via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-3213, or Mitali Dayal via email
at [email protected] or at 410-786-4329.
CPT and Level II HCPCS Codes, contact Marjorie Baldo via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-4617.
Grandfathered Children's Hospitals-within-Hospitals, contact
Michele Hudson via email [email protected] or 410-786-4487.
Hospital Cost Reporting and Chargemaster Comment Solicitation,
contact Dr. Terri Postma at 410-786-4169.
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program Administration,
Validation, and Reconsideration Issues, contact Anita Bhatia via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-7236.
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program Measures,
contact Vinitha Meyyur via email [email protected] or at 410-
786-8819.
Hospital Outpatient Visits (Emergency Department Visits and
Critical Care Visits), contact Elise Barringer via email
[[Page 61143]]
[email protected] or at 410-786-9222.
Inpatient Only (IPO) Procedures List, contact Lela Strong-Holloway
via email [email protected] or at 410-786-3213, or Au'Sha
Washington via email at [email protected] or at 410-786-
3736.
New Technology Intraocular Lenses (NTIOLs), contact Scott Talaga
via email [email protected] or at 410-786-4142.
No Cost/Full Credit and Partial Credit Devices, contact Scott
Talaga via email [email protected] or at 410-786-4142.
Notice of Closure of Two Teaching Hospitals and Opportunity to
Apply for Available Slots, contact Michele Hudson via email
[email protected] or 410-786-4487.
OPPS Brachytherapy, contact Scott Talaga via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-4142.
OPPS Data (APC Weights, Conversion Factor, Copayments, Cost-to-
Charge Ratios (CCRs), Data Claims, Geometric Mean Calculation, Outlier
Payments, and Wage Index), contact Erick Chuang via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-1816, or Scott Talaga via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-4142, or Josh McFeeters via
email at [email protected] or at 410-786-9732.
OPPS Drugs, Radiopharmaceuticals, Biologicals, and Biosimilar
Products, contact Josh McFeeters via email [email protected]
or at 410-786-9732.
OPPS New Technology Procedures/Services, contact the New Technology
APC mailbox at [email protected].
OPPS Packaged Items/Services, contact Lela Strong-Holloway via
email [email protected] or at 410-786-3213, or Mitali Dayal via
email at [email protected] or at 410-786-4329.
OPPS Pass-Through Devices, contact the Device Pass-Through mailbox
at [email protected].
OPPS Status Indicators (SI) and Comment Indicators (CI), contact
Marina Kushnirova via email [email protected] or at 410-
786-2682.
Organ Procurement Organization (OPO) Conditions for Coverage
(CfCs), contact Alpha-Banu Wilson via email at
[email protected] or at 410-786-8687, or Diane Corning via
email at [email protected] or at 410-786-8486.
Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) and Community Mental Health
Center (CMHC) Issues, contact the PHP Payment Policy Mailbox at
[email protected].
Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for Certain Hospital
Outpatient Department Services, contact Thomas Kessler via email at
[email protected] or at 410-786-1991.
Rural Hospital Payments, contact Josh McFeeters via email at
[email protected] or at 410-786-9732.
Skin Substitutes, contact Josh McFeeters via email
[email protected] or at 410-786-9732.
Supervision of Outpatient Therapeutic Services in Hospitals and
CAHs, contact Josh McFeeters via email [email protected] or
at 410-786-9732.
All Other Issues Related to Hospital Outpatient and Ambulatory
Surgical Center Payments Not Previously Identified, contact Elise
Barringer via email [email protected] or at 410-786-9222.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Inspection of Public Comments: All comments received before the
close of the comment period are available for viewing by the public,
including any personally identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a comment. We post all comments
received before the close of the comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they have been received: https://www.regulations.gov/. Follow the search instructions on that website to
view public comments.
Addenda Available Only Through the Internet on the CMS Website
In the past, a majority of the Addenda referred to in our OPPS/ASC
proposed and final rules were published in the Federal Register as part
of the annual rulemakings. However, beginning with the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, all of the Addenda no longer appear in the Federal
Register as part of the annual OPPS/ASC proposed and final rules to
decrease administrative burden and reduce costs associated with
publishing lengthy tables. Instead, these Addenda are published and
available only on the CMS website. The Addenda relating to the OPPS are
available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/. The Addenda relating to the
ASC payment system are available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) Copyright Notice
Throughout this final rule with comment period, we use CPT codes
and descriptions to refer to a variety of services. We note that CPT
codes and descriptions are copyright 2018 American Medical Association.
All Rights Reserved. CPT is a registered trademark of the American
Medical Association (AMA). Applicable Federal Acquisition Regulations
(FAR and Defense Federal Acquisition Regulations (DFAR) apply.
Table of Contents
I. Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary of This Document
B. Legislative and Regulatory Authority for the Hospital OPPS
C. Excluded OPPS Services and Hospitals
D. Prior Rulemaking
E. Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment (the HOP Panel
or the Panel)
F. Public Comments Received in Response to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Proposed Rule
G. Public Comments Received on the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC Final Rule
With Comment Period
II. Updates Affecting OPPS Payments
A. Recalibration of APC Relative Payment Weights
B. Conversion Factor Update
C. Wage Index Changes
D. Statewide Average Default Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
E. Adjustment for Rural Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs) and
Essential Access Community Hospitals (EACHs) Under Section
1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act for CY 2020
F. Payment Adjustment for Certain Cancer Hospitals for CY 2020
G. Hospital Outpatient Outlier Payments
H. Calculation of an Adjusted Medicare Payment From the National
Unadjusted Medicare Payment
I. Beneficiary Copayments
III. OPPS Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC) Group Policies
A. OPPS Treatment of New and Revised HCPCS Codes
B. OPPS Changes--Variations Within APCs
C. New Technology APCs
D. APC-Specific Policies
IV. OPPS Payment for Devices
A. Pass-Through Payments for Devices
B. Device-Intensive Procedures
V. OPPS Payment Changes for Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals
A. OPPS Transitional Pass-Through Payment for Additional Costs
of Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
B. OPPS Payment for Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
Without Pass-Through Payment Status
VI. Estimate of OPPS Transitional Pass-Through Spending for Drugs,
Biologicals, Radiopharmaceuticals, and Devices
A. Background
B. Estimate of Pass-Through Spending
VII. OPPS Payment for Hospital Outpatient Visits and Critical Care
Services
[[Page 61144]]
VIII. Payment for Partial Hospitalization Services
A. Background
B. PHP APC Update for CY 2020
C. Outlier Policy for CMHCs
D. Update to PHP Allowable HCPCS Codes
IX. Procedures That Will Be Paid Only as Inpatient Procedures
A. Background
B. Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO) List
X. Nonrecurring Policy Changes
A. Changes in the Level of Supervision of Outpatient Therapeutic
Services in Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
B. Short Inpatient Hospital Stays
C. Method To Control Unnecessary Increases in the Volume of
Clinic Visit Services Furnished in Excepted Off-Campus Provider-
Based Departments (PBDs)
XI. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and Comment Indicators
A. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status Indicator Definitions
B. CY 2020 Comment Indicator Definitions
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
A. OPPS Payment Rates Update
B. ASC Conversion Factor Update
C. ASC Cost Data
XIII. Updates to the Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Payment System
A. Background
B. ASC Treatment of New and Revised Codes
C. Update to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and
Covered Ancillary Services
D. Update and Payment for ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and
Covered Ancillary Services
E. New Technology Intraocular Lenses (NTIOLs)
F. ASC Payment and Comment Indicators
G. Calculation of the ASC Payment Rates and the ASC Conversion
Factor
XIV. Requirements for the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting
(OQR) Program
A. Background
B. Hospital OQR Program Quality Measures
C. Administrative Requirements
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submitted for the Hospital
OQR Program
E. Payment Reduction for Hospitals That Fail To Meet the
Hospital OQR Program Requirements for the CY 2020 Payment
Determination
XV. Requirements for the Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality
Reporting (ASCQR) Program
A. Background
B. ASCQR Program Quality Measures
C. Administrative Requirements
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submitted for the ASCQR
Program
E. Payment Reduction for ASCs That Fail To Meet the ASCQR
Program Requirements
XVI. Requirements for Hospitals To Make Public a List of Their
Standard Charges and Request for Information (RFI): Quality
Measurement Relating to Price Transparency for Improving Beneficiary
Access to Provider and Supplier Charge Information
XVII. Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) Conditions for Coverage
(CfCs): Revision of the Definition of ``Expected Donation Rate''
A. Background
B. Revision of the Definition of ``Expected Donation Rate''
C. Request for Information Regarding Potential Changes to the
Organ Procurement Organization and Transplant Center Regulations
XVIII. Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule: Potential Revisions to the
Laboratory Date of Service Policy
A. Background on the Medicare Part B Laboratory Date of Service
Policy
B. Medicare DOS Policy and the ``14-Day Rule''
C. Billing and Payment for Laboratory Services Under the OPPS
D. ADLTs Under the New Private Payor Rate-Based CLFS
E. Additional Laboratory DOS Policy Exception for the Hospital
Outpatient Setting
F. Potential Revisions to Laboratory DOS Policy and Request for
Public Comments
XIX. Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for Certain
Hospital Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
A. Background
B. Prior Authorization Process for Certain OPD Services
C. List of Outpatient Department Services Requiring Prior
Authorization
XX. Comments Received in Response to Comment Solicitation on Cost
Reporting, Maintenance of Hospital Chargemasters, and Related
Medicare Payment Issues
XXI. Changes to Requirements for Grandfathered Children's Hospitals-
Within-Hospitals (HwHs)
XXII. Notice of Closure of Two Teaching Hospitals and Opportunity To
Apply for Available Slots
XXIII. Files Available to the Public via the Internet
XXIV. Collection of Information Requirements
A. Statutory Requirement for Solicitation of Comments
B. ICRs for the Hospital OQR Program
C. ICRs for the ASCQR Program
D. ICRs for Revision of the Definition of ``Expected Donation
Rate'' for Organ Procurement Organizations
E. ICR for Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for
Certain Hospital Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
F. Potential Revisions to Laboratory Date of Service (DOS)
Policy
G. Total Reduction in Burden Hours and in Costs
XXV. Response to Comments
XXVI. Economic Analyses
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact for the Provisions of This Final Rule
C. Detailed Economic Analyses
D. Effects of Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for
Certain Hospital Outpatient Department (OPD) Services
E. Effects of Requirement Relating to Changes in the Definition
of Expected Donation Rate for Organ Procurement Organizations
F. Potential Revisions to the Laboratory Date of Service Policy
G. Effect of Changes to Requirements for Grandfathered
Children's Hospitals-Within-Hospitals (HwHs)
H. Regulatory Review Costs
I. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) Analysis
J. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Analysis
K. Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs
L. Conclusion
XXVII. Federalism Analysis
Regulation Text
I. Summary and Background
A. Executive Summary of This Document
1. Purpose
In this final rule with comment period, we are updating the payment
policies and payment rates for services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries in hospital outpatient departments (HOPDs) and ambulatory
surgical centers (ASCs), beginning January 1, 2020. Section 1833(t) of
the Social Security Act (the Act) requires us to annually review and
update the payment rates for services payable under the Hospital
Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS). Specifically, section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to review certain
components of the OPPS not less often than annually, and to revise the
groups, the relative payment weights, and the wage and other
adjustments that take into account changes in medical practices,
changes in technologies, and the addition of new services, new cost
data, and other relevant information and factors. In addition, under
section 1833(i) of the Act, we annually review and update the ASC
payment rates. This final rule with comment period also includes
additional policy changes made in accordance with our experience with
the OPPS and the ASC payment system. We describe these and various
other statutory authorities in the relevant sections of this final rule
with comment period. In addition, this final rule with comment period
updates and refines the requirements for the Hospital Outpatient
Quality Reporting (OQR) Program and the ASC Quality Reporting (ASCQR)
Program.
In this final rule with comment period, we establish a process and
requirements for prior authorization for certain covered outpatient
department services; revise the conditions for coverage for organ
procurement organizations; and revise the regulations to allow
grandfathered children's hospitals-within-hospitals to increase
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the number of beds without resulting in the loss of grandfathered
status.
2. Summary of the Major Provisions
OPPS Update: For CY 2020, we are increasing the payment
rates under the OPPS by an Outpatient Department (OPD) fee schedule
increase factor of 2.6 percent. This increase factor is based on the
final hospital inpatient market basket percentage increase of 3.0
percent for inpatient services paid under the hospital inpatient
prospective payment system (IPPS), minus the multifactor productivity
(MFP) adjustment required by the Affordable Care Act of 0.4 percentage
point. Based on this update, we estimate that total payments to OPPS
providers (including beneficiary cost-sharing and estimated changes in
enrollment, utilization, and case-mix) for calendar year (CY) 2020 will
be approximately $79.0 billion, an increase of approximately $6.3
billion compared to estimated CY 2019 OPPS payments.
We are continuing to implement the statutory 2.0 percentage point
reduction in payments for hospitals failing to meet the hospital
outpatient quality reporting requirements, by applying a reporting
factor of 0.981 to the OPPS payments and copayments for all applicable
services.
2-Midnight Rule (Short Inpatient Hospital Stays): For CY
2020, we are establishing a 2-year exemption from Beneficiary and
Family-Centered Care Quality Improvement Organizations (BFCC-QIOs)
referrals to Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs) and RAC reviews for
``patient status'' (that is, site-of-service) for procedures that are
removed from the inpatient only (IPO) list under the OPPS beginning on
January 1, 2020.
Comprehensive APCs: For CY 2020, we are creating two new
comprehensive APCs (C-APCs). These new C-APCs include the following: C-
APC 5182 (Level 2 Vascular Procedures) and C-APC 5461 (Level 1
Neurostimulator and Related Procedures). This increases the total
number of C-APCs to 67.
Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO) List: For CY 2020, we
are removing Total Hip Arthroplasty, six spinal procedure codes, and
five anesthesia codes from the inpatient only list.
Method to Control Unnecessary Increases in the Volume of
Clinic Visit Services Furnished in Excepted Off-Campus Provider-Based
Departments (PBDs): For CY 2020, we are completing the phase-in of the
reduction in payment for the clinic visit services described by HCPCS
code G0463 furnished in expected off-campus provider based departments
as a method to control unnecessary increases in the volume of this
service. We acknowledge that the district court vacated the volume
control policy for CY 2019 and we are working to ensure affected 2019
claims for clinic visits are paid consistent with the court's order. We
do not believe it is appropriate at this time to make a change to the
second year of the two-year phase-in of the clinic visit policy. The
government has appeal rights, and is still evaluating the rulings and
considering, at the time of this writing, whether to appeal from the
final judgment.
Device Pass-Through Payment Applications: For CY 2020, we
evaluated seven applications for device pass-through payments and based
on public comments received, we are approving four of these
applications for device pass-through payment status. Additionally, we
are approving an additional application that was not discussed in the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, but has received a Breakthrough Devices
designation from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and qualifies
for the alternative pathway to the OPPS device pass-through substantial
clinical improvement criterion.
Changes to Substantial Clinical Improvement Criterion: For
CY 2020, we are finalizing an alternative pathway to the substantial
clinical improvement criterion for devices approved under the FDA
Breakthrough Devices Program to qualify for device pass-through status
beginning with determinations effective on or after January 1, 2020.
Cancer Hospital Payment Adjustment: For CY 2020, we are
continuing to provide additional payments to cancer hospitals so that a
cancer hospital's payment-to-cost ratio (PCR) after the additional
payments is equal to the weighted average PCR for the other OPPS
hospitals using the most recently submitted or settled cost report
data. However, section 16002(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act requires
that this weighted average PCR be reduced by 1.0 percentage point.
Based on the data and the required 1.0 percentage point reduction, we
are providing that a target PCR of 0.89 will be used to determine the
CY 2020 cancer hospital payment adjustment to be paid at cost report
settlement. That is, the payment adjustments will be the additional
payments needed to result in a PCR equal to 0.89 for each cancer
hospital.
Rural Adjustment: For 2020 and subsequent years, we are
continuing the 7.1 percent adjustment to OPPS payments for certain
rural SCHs, including essential access community hospitals (EACHs). We
intend to continue the 7.1 percent adjustment for future years in the
absence of data to suggest a different percentage adjustment should
apply.
340B-Acquired Drugs: We are continuing to pay ASP-22.5
percent for 340B-acquired drugs including when furnished in nonexcepted
off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS. In light of ongoing litigation, we
also summarized comments received on a potential remedy for 2018 and
2019. CMS announced in the Federal Register (84 FR 51590) its intent to
conduct a 340B hospital survey to collect drug acquisition cost data
for CY 2018 and 2019. Such survey data may be used in setting the
Medicare payment amount for drugs acquired by 340B hospitals for cost
years going forward, and also may be used to devise a remedy for prior
years in the event of an adverse decision on appeal. In the event 340B
hospital survey data are not used to devise a remedy, we intend to
consider the suggestions commenters submitted in response to the
comment solicitation in the proposed rule to propose a remedy in the CY
2021 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
ASC Payment Update: For CYs 2019 through 2023, we adopted
a policy to update the ASC payment system using the hospital market
basket update. Using the hospital market basket methodology, for CY
2020, we are increasing payment rates under the ASC payment system by
2.6 percent for ASCs that meet the quality reporting requirements under
the ASCQR Program. This increase is based on a hospital market basket
percentage increase of 3.0 percent minus a proposed multifactor
productivity adjustment required by the Affordable Care Act of 0.4
percentage point. Based on this update, we estimate that total payments
to ASCs (including beneficiary cost-sharing and estimated changes in
enrollment, utilization, and case-mix) for CY 2020 will be
approximately $4.96 billion, an increase of approximately $230 million
compared to estimated CY 2019 Medicare payments.
Changes to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures:
For CY 2020, we are adding several procedures to the ASC list of
covered surgical procedures. Additions to the list include a total knee
arthroplasty procedure, a mosaicplasty procedure, as well as six
coronary intervention procedures, as well as 12 surgical procedures
with new CPT codes for CY 2020.
Changes to the Level of Supervision of Outpatient
Therapeutic Services in Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals: For CY
2020, we are changing the
[[Page 61146]]
minimum required level of supervision from direct supervision to
general supervision for all hospital outpatient therapeutic services
provided by all hospitals and CAHs. This ensures a standard minimum
level of supervision for each hospital outpatient service furnished
incident to a physician's service.
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program: For
the Hospital OQR Program, we are removing OP-33: External Beam
Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases for the CY 2022 payment determination
and subsequent years with modification.
Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality Reporting (ASCQR)
Program: For the ASCQR Program, we are adopting one new measure, ASC-
19: Facility-Level 7-Day Hospital Visits after General Surgery
Procedures Performed at Ambulatory Surgical Centers, beginning with the
CY 2024 payment determination and for subsequent years.
Prior Authorization Process and Requirements for Certain
Hospital Outpatient Department (OPD) Services: We are finalizing a
prior authorization process using the authority at section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act as a method for controlling unnecessary
increases in the volume of the following five categories of services:
(1) Blepharoplasty, (2) botulinum toxin injections, (3) panniculectomy,
(4) rhinoplasty, and (5) vein ablation.
Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs) Conditions for
Coverage (CfCs) Revision of the Definition of ``Expected Donation
Rate.'' We are revising the definition of ``expected donation rate''
that is included in the second outcome measure to match the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR) definition. In conjunction
with this change, we are also temporarily suspending the requirement
that OPOs meet two of three outcome measures for the 2022
recertification cycle only.
Request for Information Regarding Potential Changes to the
Organ Procurement Organization and Transplant Center Regulations: We
solicited public comments regarding what revisions may be appropriate
for the current OPO CfCs and the current transplant center CoPs. In
addition, we solicited public comments on two potential outcome
measures for OPOs.
3. Summary of Costs and Benefits
In sections XXVI. and XXVII. of this final rule with comment
period, we set forth a detailed analysis of the regulatory and
federalism impacts that the changes will have on affected entities and
beneficiaries. Key estimated impacts are described below.
a. Impacts of All OPPS Changes
Table 70 in section XXV.B of this final rule with comment period
displays the distributional impact of all the OPPS changes on various
groups of hospitals and CMHCs for CY 2020 compared to all estimated
OPPS payments in CY 2019. We estimate that the policies in this final
rule with comment period will result in a 1.3 percent overall increase
in OPPS payments to providers. We estimate that total OPPS payments for
CY 2020, including beneficiary cost-sharing, to the approximately 3,732
facilities paid under the OPPS (including general acute care hospitals,
children's hospitals, cancer hospitals, and CMHCs) will increase by
approximately $1.21 billion compared to CY 2019 payments, excluding our
estimated changes in enrollment, utilization, and case-mix.
We estimated the isolated impact of our OPPS policies on CMHCs
because CMHCs are only paid for partial hospitalization services under
the OPPS. Continuing the provider-specific structure we adopted
beginning in CY 2011, and basing payment fully on the type of provider
furnishing the service, we estimate a 3.7 percent increase in CY 2020
payments to CMHCs relative to their CY 2019 payments.
b. Impacts of the Updated Wage Indexes
We estimate that our update of the wage indexes based on the FY
2020 IPPS proposed rule wage indexes will result in no estimated
payment change for urban hospitals under the OPPS and an estimated
increase of 0.7 percent for rural hospitals. These wage indexes include
the continued implementation of the OMB labor market area delineations
based on 2010 Decennial Census data, with updates, as discussed in
section II.C. of this final rule with comment period.
c. Impacts of the Rural Adjustment and the Cancer Hospital Payment
Adjustment
There are no significant impacts of our CY 2020 payment policies
for hospitals that are eligible for the rural adjustment or for the
cancer hospital payment adjustment. We are not making any change in
policies for determining the rural hospital payment adjustments. While
we are implementing the required reduction to the cancer hospital
payment adjustment required by section 16002 of the 21st Century Cures
Act for CY 2020, the target payment-to-cost ratio (PCR) for CY 2020 is
0.89, compared to 0.88 for CY 2019, and therefore has a slight impact
on budget neutrality adjustments.
d. Impacts of the OPD Fee Schedule Increase Factor
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC, we are establishing an OPD fee schedule
increase factor of 2.6 percent and applying that increase factor to the
conversion factor for CY 2020. As a result of the OPD fee schedule
increase factor and other budget neutrality adjustments, we estimate
that urban hospitals will experience an increase of approximately 2.7
percent and that rural hospitals will experience an increase of 2.8
percent. Classifying hospitals by teaching status, we estimate
nonteaching hospitals will experience an increase of 2.8 percent, minor
teaching hospitals will experience an increase of 2.9 percent, and
major teaching hospitals will experience an increase of 2.4 percent. We
also classified hospitals by the type of ownership. We estimate that
hospitals with voluntary ownership will experience an increase of 2.6
percent in payments, while hospitals with government ownership will
experience an increase of 2.8 percent in payments. We estimate that
hospitals with proprietary ownership will experience an increase of 3.2
percent in payments.
e. Impacts of the ASC Payment Update
For impact purposes, the surgical procedures on the ASC list of
covered procedures are aggregated into surgical specialty groups using
CPT and HCPCS code range definitions. The percentage change in
estimated total payments by specialty groups under the CY 2020 payment
rates, compared to estimated CY 2019 payment rates, generally ranges
between an increase of 1 and 5 percent, depending on the service, with
some exceptions. We estimate the impact of applying the hospital market
basket update to ASC payment rates will increase payments by $230
million under the ASC payment system in CY 2020.
f. Impact of the Changes to the Hospital OQR Program
Across 3,300 hospitals participating in the Hospital OQR Program,
we estimate that our requirements will result in the following changes
to costs and burdens related to information collection for the Hospital
OQR Program compared to previously adopted requirements: There is a net
reduction of one measure reported by hospitals, which results in a
minimal net reduction in burden of $21,379.
[[Page 61147]]
g. Impacts of the Revision of the Definition of ``Expected Donation
Rate'' for Organ Procurement Organizations
We are finalizing our revision to the definition of ``expected
donation rate'' used in the second outcome measure of the OPO CfCs at
42 CFR 486.318(a) and (b) to eliminate the potential for confusion in
the OPO community due to different definitions of the same term;
however, due to comments received on the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
we are finalizing a policy that would not require all OPOs to meet the
standards of the second outcome measure for the 2022 recertification
cycle only. As a result, OPOs will only have to meet one of the
remaining outcome measures, which may provide temporary relief for a
small number of OPOs that, absent this waiver, might have faced de-
certification and the appeal process due to only meeting one outcome
measure.
For subsequent recertification cycles, all 58 OPOs will once again
be required to meet two out of three outcome measures detailed in the
OPO CfCs. The revised definition of ``expected donation rate'' used in
the second outcome measure will not affect data collection or reporting
by the OPTN and SRTR, nor their statistical evaluation of OPO
performance; therefore, it will not result in any quantifiable
financial impact.
B. Legislative and Regulatory Authority for the Hospital OPPS
When Title XVIII of the Act was enacted, Medicare payment for
hospital outpatient services was based on hospital-specific costs. In
an effort to ensure that Medicare and its beneficiaries pay
appropriately for services and to encourage more efficient delivery of
care, the Congress mandated replacement of the reasonable cost-based
payment methodology with a prospective payment system (PPS). The
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105-33) added section
1833(t) to the Act, authorizing implementation of a PPS for hospital
outpatient services. The OPPS was first implemented for services
furnished on or after August 1, 2000. Implementing regulations for the
OPPS are located at 42 CFR parts 410 and 419.
The Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (BBRA) (Pub. L. 106-113) made major changes in the hospital OPPS.
The following Acts made additional changes to the OPPS: The Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000
(BIPA) (Pub. L. 106-554); the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement,
and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Pub. L. 108-173); the Deficit
Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA) (Pub. L. 109-171), enacted on February 8,
2006; the Medicare Improvements and Extension Act under Division B of
Title I of the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006 (MIEA-TRHCA)
(Pub. L. 109-432), enacted on December 20, 2006; the Medicare,
Medicaid, and SCHIP Extension Act of 2007 (MMSEA) (Pub. L. 110-173),
enacted on December 29, 2007; the Medicare Improvements for Patients
and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L. 110-275), enacted on July
15, 2008; the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-
148), enacted on March 23, 2010, as amended by the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152), enacted on
March 30, 2010 (these two public laws are collectively known as the
Affordable Care Act); the Medicare and Medicaid Extenders Act of 2010
(MMEA, Pub. L. 111-309); the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act
of 2011 (TPTCCA, Pub. L. 112-78), enacted on December 23, 2011; the
Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (MCTRJCA, Pub. L.
112-96), enacted on February 22, 2012; the American Taxpayer Relief Act
of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-240), enacted January 2, 2013; the Pathway for SGR
Reform Act of 2013 (Pub. L. 113-67) enacted on December 26, 2013; the
Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA, Pub. L. 113-93),
enacted on March 27, 2014; the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization
Act (MACRA) of 2015 (Pub. L. 114-10), enacted April 16, 2015; the
Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114-74), enacted November 2,
2015; the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Pub. L. 114-113),
enacted on December 18, 2015, the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-
255), enacted on December 13, 2016; the Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141), enacted on March 23, 2018; and the
Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery and
Treatment for Patients and Communities Act (Pub. L. 115-271), enacted
on October 24, 2018.
Under the OPPS, we generally pay for hospital Part B services on a
rate-per-service basis that varies according to the APC group to which
the service is assigned. We use the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) (which includes certain Current Procedural Terminology
(CPT) codes) to identify and group the services within each APC. The
OPPS includes payment for most hospital outpatient services, except
those identified in section I.C. of this final rule with comment
period. Section 1833(t)(1)(B) of the Act provides for payment under the
OPPS for hospital outpatient services designated by the Secretary
(which includes partial hospitalization services furnished by CMHCs),
and certain inpatient hospital services that are paid under Medicare
Part B.
The OPPS rate is an unadjusted national payment amount that
includes the Medicare payment and the beneficiary copayment. This rate
is divided into a labor-related amount and a nonlabor-related amount.
The labor-related amount is adjusted for area wage differences using
the hospital inpatient wage index value for the locality in which the
hospital or CMHC is located.
All services and items within an APC group are comparable
clinically and with respect to resource use, as required by section
1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act. In accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of
the Act, subject to certain exceptions, items and services within an
APC group cannot be considered comparable with respect to the use of
resources if the highest median cost (or mean cost, if elected by the
Secretary) for an item or service in the APC group is more than 2 times
greater than the lowest median cost (or mean cost, if elected by the
Secretary) for an item or service within the same APC group (referred
to as the ``2 times rule''). In implementing this provision, we
generally use the cost of the item or service assigned to an APC group.
For new technology items and services, special payments under the
OPPS may be made in one of two ways. Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act
provides for temporary additional payments, which we refer to as
``transitional pass-through payments,'' for at least 2 but not more
than 3 years for certain drugs, biological agents, brachytherapy
devices used for the treatment of cancer, and categories of other
medical devices. For new technology services that are not eligible for
transitional pass-through payments, and for which we lack sufficient
clinical information and cost data to appropriately assign them to a
clinical APC group, we have established special APC groups based on
costs, which we refer to as New Technology APCs. These New Technology
APCs are designated by cost bands which allow us to provide appropriate
and consistent payment for designated new procedures that are not yet
reflected in our claims data. Similar to pass-through payments, an
assignment to a New Technology APC is temporary; that is, we retain a
service within a New Technology APC until we acquire sufficient data to
assign it to a clinically appropriate APC group.
[[Page 61148]]
C. Excluded OPPS Services and Hospitals
Section 1833(t)(1)(B)(i) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to
designate the hospital outpatient services that are paid under the
OPPS. While most hospital outpatient services are payable under the
OPPS, section 1833(t)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act excludes payment for
ambulance, physical and occupational therapy, and speech-language
pathology services, for which payment is made under a fee schedule. It
also excludes screening mammography, diagnostic mammography, and
effective January 1, 2011, an annual wellness visit providing
personalized prevention plan services. The Secretary exercises the
authority granted under the statute to also exclude from the OPPS
certain services that are paid under fee schedules or other payment
systems. Such excluded services include, for example, the professional
services of physicians and nonphysician practitioners paid under the
Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS); certain laboratory services
paid under the Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule (CLFS); services for
beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) that are paid under
the ESRD prospective payment system; and services and procedures that
require an inpatient stay that are paid under the hospital IPPS. In
addition, section 1833(t)(1)(B)(v) of the Act does not include
applicable items and services (as defined in subparagraph (A) of
paragraph (21)) that are furnished on or after January 1, 2017 by an
off-campus outpatient department of a provider (as defined in
subparagraph (B) of paragraph (21). We set forth the services that are
excluded from payment under the OPPS in regulations at 42 CFR 419.22.
Under Sec. 419.20(b) of the regulations, we specify the types of
hospitals that are excluded from payment under the OPPS. These excluded
hospitals include:
Critical access hospitals (CAHs);
Hospitals located in Maryland and paid under Maryland's
All-Payer or Total Cost of Care Model;
Hospitals located outside of the 50 States, the District
of Columbia, and Puerto Rico; and
Indian Health Service (IHS) hospitals.
D. Prior Rulemaking
On April 7, 2000, we published in the Federal Register a final rule
with comment period (65 FR 18434) to implement a prospective payment
system for hospital outpatient services. The hospital OPPS was first
implemented for services furnished on or after August 1, 2000. Section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to review certain
components of the OPPS, not less often than annually, and to revise the
groups, relative payment weights, and the wage and other adjustments
that take into account changes in medical practices, changes in
technologies, and the addition of new services, new cost data, and
other relevant information and factors.
Since initially implementing the OPPS, we have published final
rules in the Federal Register annually to implement statutory
requirements and changes arising from our continuing experience with
this system. These rules can be viewed on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html.
E. Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment (the HOP Panel or the
Panel)
1. Authority of the Panel
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, as amended by section 201(h) of
Public Law 106-113, and redesignated by section 202(a)(2) of Public Law
106-113, requires that we consult with an external advisory panel of
experts to annually review the clinical integrity of the payment groups
and their weights under the OPPS. In CY 2000, based on section
1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, the Secretary established the Advisory Panel
on Ambulatory Payment Classification Groups (APC Panel) to fulfill this
requirement. In CY 2011, based on section 222 of the Public Health
Service Act, which gives discretionary authority to the Secretary to
convene advisory councils and committees, the Secretary expanded the
panel's scope to include the supervision of hospital outpatient
therapeutic services in addition to the APC groups and weights. To
reflect this new role of the panel, the Secretary changed the panel's
name to the Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment (the HOP
Panel or the Panel). The HOP Panel is not restricted to using data
compiled by CMS, and in conducting its review, it may use data
collected or developed by organizations outside the Department.
2. Establishment of the Panel
On November 21, 2000, the Secretary signed the initial charter
establishing the Panel, and, at that time, named the APC Panel. This
expert panel is composed of appropriate representatives of providers
(currently employed full-time, not as consultants, in their respective
areas of expertise) who review clinical data and advise CMS about the
clinical integrity of the APC groups and their payment weights. Since
CY 2012, the Panel also is charged with advising the Secretary on the
appropriate level of supervision for individual hospital outpatient
therapeutic services. The Panel is technical in nature, and it is
governed by the provisions of the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA). The current charter specifies, among other requirements, that
the Panel--
May advise on the clinical integrity of Ambulatory Payment
Classification (APC) groups and their associated weights;
May advise on the appropriate supervision level for
hospital outpatient services;
Continues to be technical in nature;
Is governed by the provisions of the FACA;
Has a Designated Federal Official (DFO); and
Is chaired by a Federal Official designated by the
Secretary.
The Panel's charter was amended on November 15, 2011, renaming the
Panel and expanding the Panel's authority to include supervision of
hospital outpatient therapeutic services and to add critical access
hospital (CAH) representation to its membership. The Panel's charter
was also amended on November 6, 2014 (80 FR 23009), and the number of
members was revised from up to 19 to up to 15 members. The Panel's
current charter was approved on November 19, 2018, for a 2-year period
(84 FR 26117).
The current Panel membership and other information pertaining to
the Panel, including its charter, Federal Register notices, membership,
meeting dates, agenda topics, and meeting reports, can be viewed on the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/FACA/AdvisoryPanelonAmbulatoryPaymentClassificationGroups.html.
3. Panel Meetings and Organizational Structure
The Panel has held many meetings, with the last meeting taking
place on August 19, 2019. Prior to each meeting, we publish a notice in
the Federal Register to announce the meeting and, when necessary, to
solicit nominations for Panel membership, to announce new members, and
to announce any other changes of which the public should be aware.
Beginning in CY 2017, we have transitioned to one meeting per year (81
[[Page 61149]]
FR 31941). Further information on the 2019 summer meeting can be found
in the meeting notice titled ``Medicare Program: Announcement of the
Advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment (the Panel) Meeting on
August 19 through 20, 2019'' (84 FR 26117).
In addition, the Panel has established an operational structure
that, in part, currently includes the use of three subcommittees to
facilitate its required review process. The three current subcommittees
include the following:
APC Groups and Status Indicator Assignments Subcommittee,
which advises the Panel on the appropriate status indicators to be
assigned to HCPCS codes, including but not limited to whether a HCPCS
code or a category of codes should be packaged or separately paid, as
well as the appropriate APC assignment of HCPCS codes regarding
services for which separate payment is made;
Data Subcommittee, which is responsible for studying the
data issues confronting the Panel and for recommending options for
resolving them; and
Visits and Observation Subcommittee, which reviews and
makes recommendations to the Panel on all technical issues pertaining
to observation services and hospital outpatient visits paid under the
OPPS.
Each of these subcommittees was established by a majority vote from
the full Panel during a scheduled Panel meeting, and the Panel
recommended at the August 19, 2019, meeting that the subcommittees
continue. We accepted this recommendation.
For discussions of earlier Panel meetings and recommendations, we
refer readers to previously published OPPS/ASC proposed and final
rules, the CMS website mentioned earlier in this section, and the FACA
database at https://facadatabase.gov.
Comment: One commenter supported CMS' extension of the HOP Panel
meeting presentation submission deadline when there is a truncated
submittal timeframe due to delayed publication of the OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. However, to avoid the need to modify the submission deadline in
the future, the commenter suggested that CMS revise the submission
deadline in the Federal Register notice from a firm date to a fluid 21
days from the proposed rule display date to avoid this deadline issue
in the future.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's request to modify the HOP
Panel meeting submission deadline format. However, frequency, timing,
and presentation deadlines are outside the scope of the proposed rule
and are generally announced through either a separate Federal Register
notice or subregulatory channel such as the CMS website, or both.
F. Public Comments Received in Response to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
Proposed Rule
We received over 3400 timely pieces of correspondence on the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that appeared in the Federal Register on
August 9, 2019 (84 FR 39398). We note that we received some public
comments that were outside the scope of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. Out-of-scope-public comments are not addressed in this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. Summaries of those public
comments that are within the scope of the proposed rule and our
responses are set forth in the various sections of this final rule with
comment period under the appropriate headings.
G. Public Comments Received on the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With
Comment Period
We received over 540 timely pieces of correspondence on the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that appeared in the Federal
Register on November 30, 2018 (83 FR 61567), some of which contained
comments on the interim APC assignments and/or status indicators of new
or replacement Level II HCPCS codes (identified with comment indicator
``NI'' in OPPS Addendum B, ASC Addendum AA, and ASC Addendum BB to that
final rule). Summaries of the public comments on new or replacement
Level II HCPCS codes are set forth in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule and this final rule with comment period under the appropriate
subject matter headings.
II. Updates Affecting OPPS Payments
A. Recalibration of APC Relative Payment Weights
1. Database Construction
a. Database Source and Methodology
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires that the Secretary review
not less often than annually and revise the relative payment weights
for APCs. In the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule with comment period (65
FR 18482), we explained in detail how we calculated the relative
payment weights that were implemented on August 1, 2000 for each APC
group.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39406), for CY 2020,
we proposed to recalibrate the APC relative payment weights for
services furnished on or after January 1, 2020, and before January 1,
2021 (CY 2020), using the same basic methodology that we described in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58827
through 58828), using updated CY 2018 claims data. That is, as we
proposed, we recalibrate the relative payment weights for each APC
based on claims and cost report data for hospital outpatient department
(HOPD) services, using the most recent available data to construct a
database for calculating APC group weights.
For the purpose of recalibrating the APC relative payment weights
for CY 2020, we began with approximately 164 million final action
claims (claims for which all disputes and adjustments have been
resolved and payment has been made) for HOPD services furnished on or
after January 1, 2018, and before January 1, 2019, before applying our
exclusionary criteria and other methodological adjustments. After the
application of those data processing changes, we used approximately 88
million final action claims to develop the proposed CY 2020 OPPS
payment weights. For exact numbers of claims used and additional
details on the claims accounting process, we refer readers to the
claims accounting narrative under supporting documentation for the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
Addendum N to the proposed rule (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website) included the proposed list of bypass codes
for CY 2020. The proposed list of bypass codes contained codes that
were reported on claims for services in CY 2018 and, therefore,
included codes that were in effect in CY 2018 and used for billing, but
were deleted for CY 2019. We retained these deleted bypass codes on the
proposed CY 2020 bypass list because these codes existed in CY 2018 and
were covered OPD services in that period, and CY 2018 claims data were
used to calculate CY 2020 payment rates. Keeping these deleted bypass
codes on the bypass list potentially allows us to create more
``pseudo'' single procedure claims for ratesetting purposes. ``Overlap
bypass codes'' that are members of the proposed multiple imaging
composite APCs were identified by asterisks (*) in the third column of
Addendum N to the proposed rule. HCPCS codes that we proposed to add
for CY 2020 were identified by asterisks (*) in the fourth column of
Addendum N.
Table 1 contains the list of codes that we proposed to remove from
the CY 2020 bypass list.
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b. Calculation and Use of Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
For CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39407),
we proposed to continue to use the hospital-specific overall ancillary
and departmental cost-to-charge ratios (CCRs) to convert charges to
estimated costs through application of a revenue code-to-cost center
crosswalk. To calculate the APC costs on which the CY 2020 APC payment
rates are based, we calculated hospital-specific overall ancillary CCRs
and hospital-specific departmental CCRs for each hospital for which we
had CY 2018 claims data by comparing these claims data to the most
recently available hospital cost reports, which, in most cases, are
from CY 2017. For the proposed CY 2020 OPPS payment rates, we used the
set of claims processed during CY 2018. We applied the hospital-
specific CCR to the hospital's charges at the most detailed level
possible, based on a revenue code-to-cost center crosswalk that
contains a hierarchy of CCRs used to estimate costs from charges for
each revenue code. That crosswalk is available for review and
continuous comment on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
To ensure the completeness of the revenue code-to-cost center
crosswalk, we reviewed changes to the list of revenue codes for CY 2018
(the year of claims data we used to calculate the proposed CY 2020 OPPS
payment rates) and found that the National Uniform Billing Committee
(NUBC) did not add any new revenue codes to the NUBC 2018 Data
Specifications Manual.
In accordance with our longstanding policy, we calculate CCRs for
the standard and nonstandard cost centers accepted by the electronic
cost report database. In general, the most detailed level at which we
calculate CCRs is the hospital-specific departmental level. For a
discussion of the hospital-specific overall ancillary CCR calculation,
we refer readers to the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(71 FR 67983 through 67985). The calculation of blood costs is a
longstanding exception (since the CY 2005 OPPS) to this general
methodology for calculation of CCRs used for converting charges to
costs on each claim. This exception is discussed in detail in the CY
2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period and discussed further in
section II.A.2.a.(1) of the proposed rule and this final rule with
comment period.
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 74840
through 74847), we finalized our policy of creating new cost centers
and distinct CCRs for implantable devices, magnetic resonance imaging
(MRIs), computed tomography (CT) scans, and cardiac catheterization.
However, in response to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, commenters
reported that some hospitals used a less precise ``square feet''
allocation methodology for the costs of large moveable equipment like
CT scan and MRI machines. They indicated that while CMS recommended
using two alternative allocation methods, ``direct assignment'' or
``dollar value,'' as a more accurate methodology for directly assigning
equipment costs, industry analysis suggested that approximately only
half of the reported cost centers for CT scans and MRIs rely on these
preferred methodologies. In response to concerns from commenters, we
finalized a policy for the CY 2014 OPPS to remove claims from providers
that use a cost allocation method of ``square feet'' to calculate CCRs
used to estimate costs associated with the APCs for CT and MRI (78 FR
74847). Further, we finalized a transitional policy to estimate the
imaging APC relative payment weights using only CT and MRI cost data
from providers that do not use ``square feet'' as the cost allocation
statistic. We provided that this finalized policy would sunset in 4
years to provide a sufficient time for hospitals to transition to a
more accurate cost allocation method and for the related data to be
available for ratesetting purposes (78 FR 74847). Therefore, beginning
CY 2018, with the sunset of the transition policy, we would estimate
the imaging APC relative payment weights using cost data from all
providers, regardless of the cost allocation statistic employed.
However, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
59228 and 59229) and in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58831), we finalized a policy to extend the transition
policy for 1 additional year and we continued to remove claims from
providers that use a cost allocation method of ``square feet'' to
calculate CT and MRI CCRs for the CY 2018 OPPS and the CY 2019 OPPS.
As we discussed in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59228), some stakeholders have raised concerns regarding
using claims from all providers to calculate CT and MRI CCRs,
regardless of the cost allocations statistic employed (78 FR 74840
through 74847). Stakeholders noted that providers continue to use the
``square feet'' cost allocation method and that including claims from
such providers would cause significant reductions in the imaging APC
payment rates.
Table 2 demonstrates the relative effect on imaging APC payments
after removing cost data for providers that report CT and MRI standard
cost centers using ``square feet'' as the cost allocation method by
extracting HCRIS data on Worksheet B-1. Table 3 provides statistical
values based on the CT and MRI standard cost center CCRs using the
different cost allocation methods.
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Our analysis shows that since the CY 2014 OPPS in which we
established the transition policy, the number of valid MRI CCRs has
increased by 18.8 percent to 2,207 providers and the number of valid CT
CCRs has increased by 16.0 percent to 2,291 providers. However, as
shown in Table 2, nearly all imaging APCs would see an increase in
payment rates for CY 2020 if claims from providers that report using
the ``square feet'' cost allocation method were removed. This can be
attributed to the generally lower CCR values from providers that use a
``square feet'' cost allocation method as shown in Table 2.
We noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that the CT and MRI
cost center CCRs have been available for ratesetting since the CY 2014
OPPS in which we established the transition policy. Since the initial
4-year transition, we have extended the transition an additional 2
years to offer provider flexibility in applying cost allocation
methodologies for CT and MRI cost centers other than ``square feet.''
We noted that we believed we had provided sufficient time for providers
to adopt an alternative cost allocation methodology for CT and MRI cost
centers if they intended to do so. However, many providers continue to
use the ``square feet'' cost allocation methodology, which we believe
indicates that these providers believe this methodology is a sufficient
method for attributing costs to this cost center. Additionally, we
generally believe that increasing the amount of claims data available
for use in ratesetting improves our ratesetting process. Therefore, we
proposed that for the CY 2020 OPPS we would use all claims with valid
CT and MRI cost center CCRs, including those that use a ``square feet''
cost allocation method, to estimate costs for the APCs for CT and MRI
identified in Table 2. We noted that we did not believe another
extension was warranted and expected to determine the imaging APC
relative payment weights for CY 2020 using cost data from all
providers, regardless of the cost allocation method employed.
Comment: One commenter noted that approximately half of all
hospitals paid under the OPPS had CT and/or MRI cost centers that were
reporting CCRs using the preferred methods (``dollar value'' or
``direct assignment''). This commenter further suggested that hospitals
not using these preferred methods are either unable or unwilling to
make the change to using these preferred methods. This commenter stated
that some CT and
[[Page 61152]]
MRI procedures show a significant number of CCRs that are close to
zero, and that the commenter believed that these hospitals are likely
unable to accurately reallocate these costs across hospital departments
to new CT and MRI departmental cost centers. This commenter
acknowledged that the number of valid CT and MRI CCRs has increased
over time, but noted that incorrect cost allocation has negative
effects on payment rates for almost all imaging APCs.
Several commenters recommended that CMS continue to exclude
``square feet'' cost allocation data and continue to educate hospitals
on the importance of reporting direct CT and MRI services. Several
commenters requested that CMS not use the CT and MRI-specific cost
centers and instead estimate cost using the single diagnostic radiology
cost center, believing this will solve the inaccurate reporting of
costs for CT and MR services. They further suggested that we should
advise hospitals through regulation and cost reporting instructions to
no longer report costs separately for CT and MRI cost centers and make
sure they review their diagnostic radiology cost center inclusive of CT
and MR equipment, space, labor and over factors. This same commenter
noted that the benefits of using a single diagnostic radiology cost
center include consistency across hospitals, properly accounting for
high-cost medical equipment, simplifying and standardizing cost
reporting within the diagnostic radiology cost center, eliminating
partial allocation of costs to CT and MRI cost centers, and reducing
burden. One commenter requested that we work with various hospital
organizations to help educate the hospital community on how to report
these costs on the CT and MRI CCRs in hopes to transition to this
policy over time.
Other commenters requested that we extend the transition to using
all claims for one additional year. These same commenters requested
that if extending the transition 1 additional year is not possible,
that we phase in the payment impacts of this transition over 2 years.
One commenter requested that CMS extend the transition for 2 additional
years and stated that we should study the effects of this policy even
further to better understand its payment impacts. One commenter noted
that we should continue the transition policy of removing provider
claims using the ``square feet'' cost allocation method to calculate
cost-to-charge ratios (CCRs) associated with CT and MRI procedures into
2020 and require providers to report costs via the direct assignment or
dollar value methodologies moving forward. Another commenter noted that
the use of separate CT and MRI CCRs creates unintended consequences on
the technical component of CT and MRI codes in the Medicare Physician
Fee Schedule (MPFS). The commenter noted the resulting reductions in
hospital payments would also affect the physician office practice
setting. They believed that the OPPS technical payments would fall
below the payment rates in the MPFS causing further cuts as mandated by
the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA), which mandates CMS pay the
lesser of MPFS or OPPS rate.
One commenter suggested that, because CMS has various APC groupings
for MRI and CT, the individual MRI and CT cost centers are no longer
needed. This commenter suggested that, at the time separate cost
centers for these services were established, the classification of
imaging procedures into APCs was very specific, but that CMS is now
``intermingling'' the MRI and CT costs with other imaging services.
Response: We appreciate the comments regarding the use of CT and
MRI cost center CCRs. As we stated in prior rulemaking, we recognize
the concerns with regard to the application of the CT and MRI standard
cost center CCRs and their use in the OPPS ratesetting. We understand
that there is greater sensitivity to the cost allocation method being
used on the cost report forms for these relatively new standard imaging
cost centers under the OPPS due to the limited size of the OPPS payment
bundles and because the OPPS applies the CCRs at the departmental level
for cost estimation purposes. However, it is important to note that
since we initially established the transition policy in the OPPS in CY
2014, we have continued to develop the OPPS as a prospective payment
system. This includes greater packaging and the development of
comprehensive APCs. As we have packaged a greater number of items and
services with imaging payment under the OPPS, we believe imaging
payments are somewhat less sensitive to the cost allocation method
being used than they previously were. We also note that we still find
value in obtaining more specific cost data and that the CT and MRI-
specific cost centers provide useful cost and charge data for
ratesetting purposes.
However, to address concerns in the comments about the amount of
the decrease in imaging payment in CY 2020 due to ending of the
transition period, we are finalizing a 2-year phased-in approach, as
suggested by some commenters, that will apply 50 percent of the payment
impact from ending the transition in CY 2020 and 100 percent of the
payment impact from ending the transition in CY 2021. For CY 2020, we
will calculate the imaging payment rates using both the transition
methodology (excluding providers that use a ``square feet'' cost
allocation method) and the standard methodology (including all
providers, regardless of cost allocation method) and will assign the
imaging APCs a payment rate that includes data representing 50 percent
of the transition methodology payment rate and includes data
representing 50 percent of the standard methodology payment rate.
Beginning in CY 2021, we will set the imaging APC payment rates at 100
percent of the payment rate using the standard payment methodology
(including all providers, regardless of cost allocation method). Table
4 below illustrates the estimated impact on geometric mean costs for CT
and MRI APCs under our blended approach of utilizing 50 percent of the
transitional payment methodology and 50 percent of the standard payment
methodology for CY 2020.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
As noted earlier, the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 requires
Medicare to limit Medicare payment for certain imaging services covered
by the physician fee schedule to not exceed what Medicare pays for
these services under the OPPS. As required by law, for certain imaging
series paid for under the MPFS, we cap the technical component of the
PFS payment amount for the applicable year at the OPPS payment amount
(71 FR 69659 through 69661). As we stated in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (78 FR 74845), we have noted the potential
impact the CT and MRI CCRs may have on other payment systems. We
understand that payment reductions for imaging services under the OPPS
could have significant payment impacts under the Physician Fee Schedule
(PFS) where the technical component payment for many imaging services
is capped at the OPPS payment amount. We will continue to monitor OPPS
imaging payments in the future and consider the potential impacts of
payment changes on the PFS and the ASC payment system.
2. Data Development and Calculation of Costs Used for Ratesetting
In this section of this final rule with comment period, we discuss
the use of claims to calculate the OPPS payment rates for CY 2020. The
Hospital OPPS page on the CMS website on which this final rule with
comment period is posted (https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/) provides an
accounting of claims used in the development of the final payment
rates. That accounting provides additional detail regarding the number
of claims derived at each stage of the
[[Page 61154]]
process. In addition, below in this section, we discuss the file of
claims that comprises the data set that is available upon payment of an
administrative fee under a CMS data use
agreement. The CMS website https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/, includes
information about obtaining the ``OPPS Limited Data Set,'' which now
includes the additional variables previously available only in the OPPS
Identifiable Data Set, including ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes and revenue
code payment amounts. This file is derived from the CY 2018 claims that
were used to calculate the final payment rates for this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
Previously, the OPPS established the scaled relative weights, on
which payments are based using APC median costs, a process described in
the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74188).
However, as discussed in more detail in section II.A.2.f. of the CY
2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (77 FR 68259 through
68271), we finalized the use of geometric mean costs to calculate the
relative weights on which the CY 2013 OPPS payment rates were based.
While this policy changed the cost metric on which the relative
payments are based, the data process in general remained the same,
under the methodologies that we used to obtain appropriate claims data
and accurate cost information in determining estimated service cost.
For CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39409), we
proposed to continue to use geometric mean costs to calculate the
proposed relative weights on which the CY 2020 OPPS payment rates are
based.
We used the methodology described in sections II.A.2.a. through
II.A.2.c. of this final rule with comment period to calculate the costs
we used to establish the relative payment weights used in calculating
the OPPS payment rates for CY 2020 shown in Addenda A and B to this
final rule with comment period (which are available via the internet on
the CMS website). We refer readers to section II.A.4. of this final
rule with comment period for a discussion of the conversion of APC
costs to scaled payment weights.
We note that under the OPPS, CY 2019 was the first year in which
claims data containing lines with the modifier ``PN'' were available,
which indicate nonexcepted items and services furnished and billed by
off-campus provider-based departments (PBDs) of hospitals. Because
nonexcepted services are not paid under the OPPS, in the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58832), we finalized a policy
to remove those claim lines reported with modifier ``PN'' from the
claims data used in ratesetting for the CY 2019 OPPS and subsequent
years. For the CY 2020 OPPS, we will continue to remove these claim
lines with modifier ``PN'' from the ratesetting process.
Comment: Several commenters noted a potential issue with missing
lines with the PN modifier. Specifically, these commenters believed
that the CY 2020 proposed rule data, based on CY 2018 claims, excluded
approximately 400,000 lines with Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) codes and the PN modifier. They noted that this would
mean that there was over an 80 percent decline from the CY 2017 claims
data, which had approximately 2.8 million lines with HCPCS and the PN
modifier. These commenters reviewed the 2018 Outpatient Standard
Analytic File (SAF) and noted that they found approximately 3.5 million
lines with HCPCS codes and the PN modifier. These commenters asserted
that the ratesetting data included substantially less PN modifiers than
in the SAF file for the same time period. These same commenters assert
that if the PN lines were not included in the ratesetting process then
the OPPS payment weights are accurate. They noted that, conversely, if
the PN lines were included in the payment weights then payments would
be inaccurate. These commenters wanted CMS to explain what occurred in
the proposed rule data files to ensure that the APC payment weights
correctly reflect the exclusion of PN modifier claims in the final
rule.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. First, we would
like to note that claim lines with the PN modifier are excluded from
the ratesetting process. Please note that the difference between the
2019 OPPS Final Rule and the 2020 OPPS Proposed rule is the following:
We processed the claim lines with the PN modifier differently between
the two rules, which resulted in the decrease in the number of PN lines
in the OPPS limited data set as noted above. Specifically, the programs
used for the CY 2020 proposed rule were modified to not factor in those
lines as being OPPS lines, which resulted in more lines, and
potentially, more total claims being categorized as non-OPPS claims.
Previously, even though those lines were excluded from OPPS for
ratesetting purposes, they were still considered OPPS in categorizing
the claims for the limited data set. This change in processing logic
had no effect on ratesetting and all of the lines with modifier ``PN''
are excluded from the OPPS ratesetting process for both CY 2019 and CY
2020. We are including these lines as non-OPPS claims in the CY 2020
OPPS final rule limited data set, but as discussed, are continuing to
exclude them for ratesetting purposes.
For details of the claims accounting process used in this final
rule with comment period, we refer readers to the claims accounting
narrative under supporting documentation for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
2. Final Data Development and Calculation of Costs Used for Ratesetting
a. Calculation of Single Procedure APC Criteria-Based Costs
(1) Blood and Blood Products
(a) Methodology
Since the implementation of the OPPS in August 2000, we have made
separate payments for blood and blood products through APCs rather than
packaging payment for them into payments for the procedures with which
they are administered. Hospital payments for the costs of blood and
blood products, as well as for the costs of collecting, processing, and
storing blood and blood products, are made through the OPPS payments
for specific blood product APCs.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39409), we proposed to
continue to establish payment rates for blood and blood products using
our blood-specific CCR methodology, which utilizes actual or simulated
CCRs from the most recently available hospital cost reports to convert
hospital charges for blood and blood products to costs. This
methodology has been our standard ratesetting methodology for blood and
blood products since CY 2005. It was developed in response to data
analysis indicating that there was a significant difference in CCRs for
those hospitals with and without blood-specific cost centers, and past
public comments indicating that the former OPPS policy of defaulting to
the overall hospital CCR for hospitals not reporting a blood-specific
cost center often resulted in an underestimation of the true hospital
costs for blood and blood products. Specifically, in order to address
the differences in CCRs and to better reflect hospitals' costs, we
proposed to continue to simulate blood CCRs for each hospital that does
not report a
[[Page 61155]]
blood cost center by calculating the ratio of the blood-specific CCRs
to hospitals' overall CCRs for those hospitals that do report costs and
charges for blood cost centers. We also proposed to apply this mean
ratio to the overall CCRs of hospitals not reporting costs and charges
for blood cost centers on their cost reports in order to simulate
blood-specific CCRs for those hospitals. We proposed to calculate the
costs upon which the proposed CY 2020 payment rates for blood and blood
products are based using the actual blood-specific CCR for hospitals
that reported costs and charges for a blood cost center and a hospital-
specific, simulated blood-specific CCR for hospitals that did not
report costs and charges for a blood cost center.
We continue to believe that the hospital-specific, simulated blood-
specific, CCR methodology better responds to the absence of a blood-
specific CCR for a hospital than alternative methodologies, such as
defaulting to the overall hospital CCR or applying an average blood-
specific CCR across hospitals. Because this methodology takes into
account the unique charging and cost accounting structure of each
hospital, we believe that it yields more accurate estimated costs for
these products. We stated in the proposed rule that we continue to
believe that this methodology in CY 2020 would result in costs for
blood and blood products that appropriately reflect the relative
estimated costs of these products for hospitals without blood cost
centers and, therefore, for these blood products in general.
We note that, as discussed in section II.A.2.b.(1). of the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 58837 through 58843), we
defined a comprehensive APC (C-APC) as a classification for the
provision of a primary service and all adjunctive services provided to
support the delivery of the primary service. Under this policy, we
include the costs of blood and blood products when calculating the
overall costs of these C-APCs. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39410), we proposed to continue to apply the blood-specific CCR
methodology described in this section when calculating the costs of the
blood and blood products that appear on claims with services assigned
to the C-APCs. Because the costs of blood and blood products would be
reflected in the overall costs of the C-APCs (and, as a result, in the
payment rates of the C-APCs), we proposed to not make separate payments
for blood and blood products when they appear on the same claims as
services assigned to the C-APCs (we refer readers to the CY 2015 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66796)).
We also referred readers to Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website)
for the proposed CY 2020 payment rates for blood and blood products
(which are identified with status indicator ``R''). For a more detailed
discussion of the blood-specific CCR methodology, we refer readers to
the CY 2005 OPPS proposed rule (69 FR 50524 through 50525). For a full
history of OPPS payment for blood and blood products, we refer readers
to the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66807
through 66810).
We did not receive any comments on our proposal to establish
payment rates for blood and blood products using our blood-specific CCR
methodology and we are finalizing this policy as proposed.
(b) Pathogen-Reduced Platelets Payment Rate
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70322
through 70323), we reiterated that we calculate payment rates for blood
and blood products using our blood-specific CCR methodology, which
utilizes actual or simulated CCRs from the most recently available
hospital cost reports to convert hospital charges for blood and blood
products to costs. Because HCPCS code P9072 (Platelets, pheresis,
pathogen reduced or rapid bacterial tested, each unit), the predecessor
code to HCPCS code P9073 (Platelets, pheresis, pathogen-reduced, each
unit), was new for CY 2016, there were no claims data available on the
charges and costs for this blood product upon which to apply our blood-
specific CCR methodology. Therefore, we established an interim payment
rate for HCPCS code P9072 based on a crosswalk to existing blood
product HCPCS code P9037 (Platelets, pheresis, leukocytes reduced,
irradiated, each unit), which we believed provided the best proxy for
the costs of the new blood product. In addition, we stated that once we
had claims data for HCPCS code P9072, we would calculate its payment
rate using the claims data that should be available for the code
beginning in CY 2018, which is our practice for other blood product
HCPCS codes for which claims data have been available for 2 years.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59233) that, although our standard practice for new codes
involves using claims data to set payment rates once claims data become
available, we were concerned that there may have been confusion among
the provider community about the services that HCPCS code P9072
described. That is, as early as 2016, there were discussions about
changing the descriptor for HCPCS code P9072 to include the phrase ``or
rapid bacterial tested'', which is a less costly technology than
pathogen reduction. In addition, effective January 2017, the code
descriptor for HCPCS code P9072 was changed to describe rapid bacterial
testing of platelets and, effective July 1, 2017, the descriptor for
the temporary successor code (HCPCS code Q9988) for HCPCS code P9072
was changed again back to the original descriptor for HCPCS code P9072
that was in place for 2016.
Based on the ongoing discussions involving changes to the original
HCPCS code P9072 established in CY 2016, we believed that claims from
CY 2016 for pathogen reduced platelets may have potentially reflected
certain claims for rapid bacterial testing of platelets. Therefore, we
decided to continue to crosswalk the payment amount for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 (the successor code to HCPCS code P9072
established January 1, 2018) to the payment amount for services
described by HCPCS code P9037 for CY 2018 (82 FR 59232), to determine
the payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9072. In the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37058), for CY 2019, we discussed
that we had reviewed the CY 2017 claims data for the two predecessor
codes to HCPCS code P9073 (HCPCS codes P9072 and Q9988), along with the
claims data for the CY 2017 temporary code for pathogen test for
platelets (HCPCS code Q9987), which describes rapid bacterial testing
of platelets. We found that there were over 2,200 claims billed with
either HCPCS code P9072 or Q9988 in the CY 2017 claims data available
for CY 2019 rulemaking. Accordingly, we believed that there were a
sufficient number of claims to calculate a payment rate for HCPCS code
P9073 for CY 2019 without using a crosswalk.
We also performed checks to estimate the share of claims that may
have been billed for rapid bacterial testing of platelets as compared
to the share of claims that may have been billed for pathogen-reduced,
pheresis platelets (based on when HCPCS code P9072 was an active
procedure code from January 1, 2017 to June 30, 2017). First, we found
that the geometric mean cost for pathogen-reduced, pheresis platelets,
as reported by HCPCS code Q9988 when billed separately from rapid
bacterial testing of platelets, was $453.87, and
[[Page 61156]]
that over 1,200 claims were billed for services described by HCPCS code
Q9988. Next, we found that the geometric mean cost for rapid bacterial
testing of platelets, as reported by HCPCS code Q9987 on claims, was
$33.44, and there were 59 claims reported for services described by
HCPCS code Q9987, of which 3 were separately paid.
These findings implied that almost all of the claims billed for
services reported with HCPCS code P9072 were for pathogen-reduced,
pheresis platelets. In addition, the geometric mean cost for services
described by HCPCS code P9072, which may have contained rapid bacterial
testing of platelets claims, was $468.11, which was higher than the
geometric mean cost for services described by HCPCS code Q9988 of
$453.87, which should not have contained claims for rapid bacterial
testing of platelets. Because the geometric mean for services described
by HCPCS code Q9987 was only $33.44, it would be expected that if a
significant share of claims billed for services described by HCPCS code
P9072 were for the rapid bacterial testing of platelets, the geometric
mean cost for services described by HCPCS code P9072 would be lower
than the geometric mean cost for services described by HCPCS code
Q9988. Instead, we found that the geometric mean cost for services
described by HCPCS code Q9988 was higher than the geometric mean cost
for services described by HCPCS code P9072.
However, we received many comments from providers and other
stakeholders including blood product industry stakeholder groups and
the company who developed the pathogen-reduced platelets technology
requesting that we not implement our proposal for CY 2019, and instead
that we should once again establish the payment rate for HCPCS code
P9073 by performing a crosswalk from the payment amount for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 to the payment amount for services
described by HCPCS code P9037. The commenters were concerned that the
payment rate for HCPCS code P9073 calculated by using claims data for
that service was too low. Several commenters believed the claim costs
for pathogen-reduced platelets were lower than actual costs because of
coding errors by providers, providers who did not use pathogen-reduced
platelets when billing the service, and confusion over whether to use
the hospital CCR or the blood center CCR to report charges for
pathogen-reduced platelets. We considered the comments we received and
decided not to finalize our proposal for CY 2019 to calculate the
payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9073 using claims
payment history. Instead, for CY 2019, we established the payment rate
for services described by HCPCS code P9073 by crosswalking the payment
rate for the services described by HCPCS code P9073 from the payment
rate for services described by HCPCS code P9037 (83 FR 58834).
For CY 2020 and subsequent years, we proposed to calculate the
payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9073 by using claims
payment history, which is the standard methodology used under the OPPS
to calculate payment rates for HCPCS codes with at least 2 years of
claims history. Claims for HCPCS code P9073 and its predecessor codes
have been billed under the OPPS for over 3 years and we believe
providers have had sufficient time to become familiar with the services
covered by the procedure code and the appropriate charges and CCRs used
to report the service. Also, it has been more than a year and half
since the issue in which payment for pathogen-reduced platelets and
payment for rapid bacterial testing were combined under the same code
was resolved. In our analysis of claims data from CY 2018, we found
that approximately 4,700 claims have been billed for services described
by HCPCS code P9073 and the estimated payment rate for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 based on the claims data was
approximately $585. The claims-based payment rate for services
described by HCPCS code P9073 was approximately $60 less than the
estimated crosswalked payment rate using HCPCS code P9037 of
approximately $645. The claims data show that services described by
HCPCS code P9073 have been reported regularly by providers during CY
2018 and the payment rate is close to the payment rate of the
crosswalked payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9037.
Therefore, we believe that the payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9073 can be determined using claims data without a
crosswalk from the payment rate for services described by HCPCS code
P9037.
We refer readers to Addendum B of the proposed rule for the
proposed payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9073
reportable under the OPPS. Addendum B is available via the internet on
the CMS website.
Comment: We received comments that opposed the proposal to end the
crosswalk between P9073 (Platelets, pheresis, pathogen-reduced, each
unit) and P9037 (Platelets, pheresis, leukocytes reduced, irradiated,
each unit) and calculate the payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9073 using claims payment history. The commenters stated
that the 2018 claims data used to establish the CY 2020 payment rate
for pathogen-reduced platelets continue to include erroneous claims and
is therefore inaccurate. The commenters further state, as an example of
the inaccuracies of the 2018 claims data, that approximately 30 percent
of the 2018 claims data for P9073 contain costs that are at least $100
lower than the costs of P9037, which is a less expensive technology.
The commenters requested that we continue the crosswalk between these
two codes for both CYs 2020 and 2021 to allow hospitals time to
continue to correct errors in their chargemasters and to prevent
underpayment to hospitals for pathogen-reduced platelets. The
commenters also claim that hospitals may be reluctant to adopt a
relatively new technology, such as pathogen-reduced platelets, if the
payment is too low.
Response: We continue to believe that, beginning in CY 2020, it is
appropriate to calculate the payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9073 using the standard methodology (which involves using
data from CY 2018 claims for the code). We have previously acknowledged
(83 FR 58834) that there was confusion among the provider community
surrounding the reporting and billing for P9073 and have made
exceptions to our standard methodology for calculating payment rates
for this service. At this time, we believe providers have had
sufficient time to become familiar with the services covered by the
procedure code and we believe the issue in which payment for pathogen-
reduced platelets and payment for rapid bacterial testing was combined
under the same code has been resolved. Additionally, in response to
concerns that hospitals may be reluctant to adopt the pathogen-reduced
platelet technology based on a payment rate that is too low, in our
analysis of claims data from CY 2018, we found that approximately 5,300
claims have been billed for services described by HCPCS code P9073,
which is significantly higher that the approximately 2,200 claims
billed in 2017 for services described by the predecessor codes for
HCPCS code P9073, HCPCS codes Q9988 and P9072. Also, the estimated CY
2020 payment rate for services described by HCPCS code P9073 based on
the CY 2018 claims data is approximately $600
[[Page 61157]]
which is comparable to the CY 2020 estimated crosswalked payment rate
using HCPCS code P9037 of approximately $620. These data suggest that a
crosswalk is no longer necessary. Further, we have now used a cross-
walk for P9073 and its predecessor codes for 4 years, which is longer
than the typical 2-year period for which we normally cross-walk new
HCPCS codes. We agreed with past commenters that an extended period of
cross-walking payment for P9073 was necessary to address the coding
confusion in 2016 that may have led to the claims data reflecting costs
for services not described by HCPCS code P9073. However, the above-
referenced coding issues were resolved in January 2018, so we have no
reason to believe that the data may reflect the costs for services
other than those described by P9073.
Accordingly, for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we are finalizing
the policy to calculate the payment rate for services described by
HCPCS code P9073 by using claims payment history and to end the
crosswalk between HCPCS codes P9037 and P9073.
(2) Brachytherapy Sources
Section 1833(t)(2)(H) of the Act mandates the creation of
additional groups of covered OPD services that classify devices of
brachytherapy consisting of a seed or seeds (or radioactive source)
(``brachytherapy sources'') separately from other services or groups of
services. The statute provides certain criteria for the additional
groups. For the history of OPPS payment for brachytherapy sources, we
refer readers to prior OPPS final rules, such as the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR 68240 through 68241). As we have
stated in prior OPPS updates, we believe that adopting the general OPPS
prospective payment methodology for brachytherapy sources is
appropriate for a number of reasons (77 FR 68240). The general OPPS
methodology uses costs based on claims data to set the relative payment
weights for hospital outpatient services. This payment methodology
results in more consistent, predictable, and equitable payment amounts
per source across hospitals by averaging the extremely high and low
values, in contrast to payment based on hospitals' charges adjusted to
costs. We believe that the OPPS methodology, as opposed to payment
based on hospitals' charges adjusted to cost, also would provide
hospitals with incentives for efficiency in the provision of
brachytherapy services to Medicare beneficiaries. Moreover, this
approach is consistent with our payment methodology for the vast
majority of items and services paid under the OPPS. We refer readers to
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70323
through 70325) for further discussion of the history of OPPS payment
for brachytherapy sources.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, for CY 2020, we proposed to
use the costs derived from CY 2018 claims data to set the proposed CY
2020 payment rates for brachytherapy sources because CY 2018 is the
year of data we proposed to use to set the proposed payment rates for
most other items and services that would be paid under the CY 2020
OPPS. We proposed to base the payment rates for brachytherapy sources
on the geometric mean unit costs for each source, consistent with the
methodology that we proposed for other items and services paid under
the OPPS, as discussed in section II.A.2. of the proposed rule. We also
proposed to continue the other payment policies for brachytherapy
sources that we finalized and first implemented in the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (74 FR 60537). We proposed to pay for
the stranded and nonstranded not otherwise specified (NOS) codes, HCPCS
codes C2698 (Brachytherapy source, stranded, not otherwise specified,
per source) and C2699 (Brachytherapy source, non-stranded, not
otherwise specified, per source), at a rate equal to the lowest
stranded or nonstranded prospective payment rate for such sources,
respectively, on a per source basis (as opposed to, for example, a per
mCi), which is based on the policy we established in the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66785). We also proposed to
continue the policy we first implemented in the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (74 FR 60537) regarding payment for new
brachytherapy sources for which we have no claims data, based on the
same reasons we discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66786; which was delayed until January 1, 2010 by
section 142 of Pub. L. 110-275). Specifically, this policy is intended
to enable us to assign new HCPCS codes for new brachytherapy sources to
their own APCs, with prospective payment rates set based on our
consideration of external data and other relevant information regarding
the expected costs of the sources to hospitals. The proposed CY 2020
payment rates for brachytherapy sources were included in Addendum B to
the proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website) and were identified with status indicator ``U''.
For CY 2018, we assigned status indicator ``U'' (Brachytherapy
Sources, Paid under OPPS; separate APC payment) to HCPCS code C2645
(Brachytherapy planar source, palladium-103, per square millimeter) in
the absence of claims data and established a payment rate using
external data (invoice price) at $4.69 per mm\2\. For CY 2019, in the
absence of sufficient claims data, we continued to establish a payment
rate for C2645 at $4.69 per mm\2\. For CY 2020, we proposed to continue
to assign status indicator ``U'' to HCPCS code C2645 (Brachytherapy
planar source, palladium-103, per square millimeter). Our CY 2018
claims data available for the proposed CY 2020 rule, included two
claims with over 9,000 units of HCPCS code C2645. Therefore, we stated
our belief that the CY 2018 claims data were adequate to establish an
APC payment rate for HCPCS code C2645 and to discontinue our use of
external data for this brachytherapy source. Specifically, we proposed
to set the proposed CY 2020 payment rate at the geometric mean cost of
HCPCS code C2645 based on CY 2018 claims data, which is $1.02 per
mm\2\.
Comment: One commenter stated that the reduction in the payment
rate for HCPCS code C2645 (Brachytherapy planar source, palladium-103,
per square millimeter) for CY 2020 will preclude outpatient use for an
FDA-cleared, predominantly outpatient indication, for C2645.
Additionally, the commenter argued that the two claims used to
establish the payment rate for C2645 are not a sufficient volume for
ratesetting and that the claims are most likely erroneous in that the
brachytherapy source was used for procedures on the inpatient-only
list.
Response: Claims that include brachytherapy sources along with
procedures on the inpatient-only list are sufficient and appropriate to
use for our ratesetting process as brachytherapy sources are line-item
paid. However, given the limited number of claims for HCPCS C2645 for
both CY 2020 and previous calendar years and the new FDA-approved
outpatient indication for HCPCS code C2645, we are persuaded that the
proposed CY 2020 payment rate, which is significantly lower than that
of the rate in effect in prior years, may not adequately represent the
costs associated with C2645. Therefore, we are using our equitable
adjustment authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which
states that the Secretary shall establish, in a budget neutral manner,
other adjustments as
[[Page 61158]]
determined to be necessary to ensure equitable payments, to maintain
the CY 2019 rate for this brachytherapy source, despite the lower
geometric mean costs of $1.03 per mm\2\ available in the claims data
used for this final rule with comment period. We believe this situation
is unique, given the very limited number of claims for this
brachytherapy source for both CY 2020 ratesetting purposes and previous
calendar years.
After consideration of the public comment we received, we are not
finalizing the proposed rate for C2645 and are instead assigning the
brachytherapy source described by HCPCS code C2645 a payment rate of
$4.69 mm\2\ for CY 2020 through use of our equitable adjustment
authority.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that we reevaluate our
approach to ratesetting HCPCS C2642 (Brachytherapy source, stranded,
cesium-131, per source) and stated that our proposed CY 2020 payment
rate of $67.29 per source for HCPCS code C2642 would be too low to
ensure fair and adequate reimbursement. Additionally, one provider who
billed C2642 stated there was a clerical error and that it may have
inadvertently underreported the actual costs for C2642 incurred by the
provider.
Response: Based on the most current available data for the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, the geometric mean for HCPCS
code C2642 based on 85 claims from CY 2018 is $75.06 per source. We
note that the CY 2019 payment rate for HCPCS Code C2642 was $79.94 per
source. We believe that the variation in costs for HCPCS code C2642
does not appear unusual or erroneous and that the CY 2020 geometric
mean for HCPCS code C2642 based on CY 2018 claims data is consistent
with historical payment rates for this brachytherapy source.
Comment: One commenter stated that the geometric mean cost and
payment for brachytherapy sources has fluctuated significantly since
2013. The commenter argued that such fluctuations may put financial
pressure on providers and create access barriers for beneficiaries to
receive brachytherapy. The commenter requested we review and consider
removing outliers to ensure payment stability for low-volume
brachytherapy sources in future rulemaking.
Response: We thank the commenter for their recommendation and will
take it under consideration in future rulemaking. As discussed in the
CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (77 FR 68259 through
68271), geometric mean costs better encompass the variation in costs
that occur when providing a service because, in addition to the
individual cost values that are reflected by medians, geometric means
reflect the magnitude of the cost measurements, and thus are more
sensitive to changes in the data. OPPS relative payment weights based
on geometric mean costs would better capture the range of costs
associated with providing services. Further, geometric means capture
cost changes that are introduced slowly into the system on a case-by-
case or hospital-by-hospital basis. For these reasons, we believe it
would be inappropriate to remove outliers when determining
brachytherapy geometric mean costs and payment rates.
We continue to invite hospitals and other parties to submit
recommendations to us for new codes to describe new brachytherapy
sources. Such recommendations should be directed to the Division of
Outpatient Care, Mail Stop C4-01-26, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, 7500 Security Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244. We will
continue to add new brachytherapy source codes and descriptors to our
systems for payment on a quarterly basis.
b. Comprehensive APCs (C-APCs) for CY 2020
(1) Background
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 74861
through 74910), we finalized a comprehensive payment policy that
packages payment for adjunctive and secondary items, services, and
procedures into the most costly primary procedure under the OPPS at the
claim level. The policy was finalized in CY 2014, but the effective
date was delayed until January 1, 2015, to allow additional time for
further analysis, opportunity for public comment, and systems
preparation. The comprehensive APC (C-APC) policy was implemented
effective January 1, 2015, with modifications and clarifications in
response to public comments received regarding specific provisions of
the C-APC policy (79 FR 66798 through 66810).
A C-APC is defined as a classification for the provision of a
primary service and all adjunctive services provided to support the
delivery of the primary service. We established C-APCs as a category
broadly for OPPS payment and implemented 25 C-APCs beginning in CY 2015
(79 FR 66809 through 66810). In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70332), we finalized 10 additional C-APCs to be
paid under the existing C-APC payment policy and added 1 additional
level to both the Orthopedic Surgery and Vascular Procedures clinical
families, which increased the total number of C-APCs to 37 for CY 2016.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79584
through 79585), we finalized another 25 C-APCs for a total of 62 C-
APCs. In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we did
not change the total number of C-APCs from 62. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, we created 3 new C-APCs, increasing the
total number to 65 (83 FR 58844 through 58846).
Under our C-APC policy, we designate a service described by a HCPCS
code assigned to a C-APC as the primary service when the service is
identified by OPPS status indicator ``J1''. When such a primary service
is reported on a hospital outpatient claim, taking into consideration
the few exceptions that are discussed below, we make payment for all
other items and services reported on the hospital outpatient claim as
being integral, ancillary, supportive, dependent, and adjunctive to the
primary service (hereinafter collectively referred to as ``adjunctive
services'') and representing components of a complete comprehensive
service (78 FR 74865 and 79 FR 66799). Payments for adjunctive services
are packaged into the payments for the primary services. This results
in a single prospective payment for each of the primary, comprehensive
services based on the costs of all reported services at the claim
level.
Services excluded from the C-APC policy under the OPPS include
services that are not covered OPD services, services that cannot by
statute be paid for under the OPPS, and services that are required by
statute to be separately paid. This includes certain mammography and
ambulance services that are not covered OPD services in accordance with
section 1833(t)(1)(B)(iv) of the Act; brachytherapy seeds, which also
are required by statute to receive separate payment under section
1833(t)(2)(H) of the Act; pass-through payment drugs and devices, which
also require separate payment under section 1833(t)(6) of the Act;
self-administered drugs (SADs) that are not otherwise packaged as
supplies because they are not covered under Medicare Part B under
section 1861(s)(2)(B) of the Act; and certain preventive services (78
FR 74865 and 79 FR 66800 through 66801). A list of services excluded
from the C-APC policy is included in Addendum J to this final rule with
comment period
[[Page 61159]]
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
The C-APC policy payment methodology set forth in the CY 2014 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period for the C-APCs and modified and
implemented beginning in CY 2015 is summarized as follows (78 FR 74887
and 79 FR 66800):
Basic Methodology. As stated in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, we define the C-APC payment policy as including
all covered OPD services on a hospital outpatient claim reporting a
primary service that is assigned to status indicator ``J1'', excluding
services that are not covered OPD services or that cannot by statute be
paid for under the OPPS. Services and procedures described by HCPCS
codes assigned to status indicator ``J1'' are assigned to C-APCs based
on our usual APC assignment methodology by evaluating the geometric
mean costs of the primary service claims to establish resource
similarity and the clinical characteristics of each procedure to
establish clinical similarity within each APC.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we expanded
the C-APC payment methodology to qualifying extended assessment and
management encounters through the ``Comprehensive Observation
Services'' C-APC (C-APC 8011). Services within this APC are assigned
status indicator ``J2''. Specifically, we make a payment through C-APC
8011 for a claim that:
Does not contain a procedure described by a HCPCS code to
which we have assigned status indicator ``T''
Contains 8 or more units of services described by HCPCS
code G0378 (Hospital observation services, per hour);
Contains services provided on the same date of service or
1 day before the date of service for HCPCS code G0378 that are
described by one of the following codes: HCPCS code G0379 (Direct
admission of patient for hospital observation care) on the same date of
service as HCPCS code G0378; CPT code 99281 (Emergency department visit
for the evaluation and management of a patient (Level 1)); CPT code
99282 (Emergency department visit for the evaluation and management of
a patient (Level 2)); CPT code 99283 (Emergency department visit for
the evaluation and management of a patient (Level 3)); CPT code 99284
(Emergency department visit for the evaluation and management of a
patient (Level 4)); CPT code 99285 (Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient (Level 5)) or HCPCS code G0380
(Type B emergency department visit (Level 1)); HCPCS code G0381 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 2)); HCPCS code G0382 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 3)); HCPCS code G0383 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 4)); HCPCS code G0384 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 5)); CPT code 99291 (Critical care,
evaluation and management of the critically ill or critically injured
patient; first 30-74 minutes); or HCPCS code G0463 (Hospital outpatient
clinic visit for assessment and management of a patient); and
Does not contain services described by a HCPCS code to
which we have assigned status indicator ``J1''.
The assignment of status indicator ``J2'' to a specific combination
of services performed in combination with each other allows for all
other OPPS payable services and items reported on the claim (excluding
services that are not covered OPD services or that cannot by statute be
paid for under the OPPS) to be deemed adjunctive services representing
components of a comprehensive service and resulting in a single
prospective payment for the comprehensive service based on the costs of
all reported services on the claim (80 FR 70333 through 70336).
Services included under the C-APC payment packaging policy, that
is, services that are typically adjunctive to the primary service and
provided during the delivery of the comprehensive service, include
diagnostic procedures, laboratory tests, and other diagnostic tests and
treatments that assist in the delivery of the primary procedure; visits
and evaluations performed in association with the procedure; uncoded
services and supplies used during the service; durable medical
equipment as well as prosthetic and orthotic items and supplies when
provided as part of the outpatient service; and any other components
reported by HCPCS codes that represent services that are provided
during the complete comprehensive service (78 FR 74865 and 79 FR
66800).
In addition, payment for hospital outpatient department services
that are similar to therapy services and delivered either by therapists
or nontherapists is included as part of the payment for the packaged
complete comprehensive service. These services that are provided during
the perioperative period are adjunctive services and are deemed not to
be therapy services as described in section 1834(k) of the Act,
regardless of whether the services are delivered by therapists or other
nontherapist health care workers. We have previously noted that therapy
services are those provided by therapists under a plan of care in
accordance with section 1835(a)(2)(C) and section 1835(a)(2)(D) of the
Act and are paid for under section 1834(k) of the Act, subject to
annual therapy caps as applicable (78 FR 74867 and 79 FR 66800).
However, certain other services similar to therapy services are
considered and paid for as hospital outpatient department services.
Payment for these nontherapy outpatient department services that are
reported with therapy codes and provided with a comprehensive service
is included in the payment for the packaged complete comprehensive
service. We note that these services, even though they are reported
with therapy codes, are hospital outpatient department services and not
therapy services. We refer readers to the July 2016 OPPS Change Request
9658 (Transmittal 3523) for further instructions on reporting these
services in the context of a C-APC service.
Items included in the packaged payment provided in conjunction with
the primary service also include all drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals, regardless of cost, except those drugs with pass-
through payment status and SADs, unless they function as packaged
supplies (78 FR 74868 through 74869 and 74909 and 79 FR 66800). We
refer readers to Section 50.2M, Chapter 15, of the Medicare Benefit
Policy Manual for a description of our policy on SADs treated as
hospital outpatient supplies, including lists of SADs that function as
supplies and those that do not function as supplies.
We define each hospital outpatient claim reporting a single unit of
a single primary service assigned to status indicator ``J1'' as a
single ``J1'' unit procedure claim (78 FR 74871 and 79 FR 66801). Line
item charges for services included on the C-APC claim are converted to
line item costs, which are then summed to develop the estimated APC
costs. These claims are then assigned one unit of the service with
status indicator ``J1'' and later used to develop the geometric mean
costs for the C-APC relative payment weights. (We note that we use the
term ``comprehensive'' to describe the geometric mean cost of a claim
reporting ``J1'' service(s) or the geometric mean cost of a C-APC,
inclusive of all of the items and services included in the C-APC
service payment bundle.) Charges for services that would otherwise be
separately payable are added to the charges for the primary service.
This process differs from our traditional cost accounting methodology
only in that all such services on the claim are packaged
[[Page 61160]]
(except certain services as described above). We apply our standard
data trims, which exclude claims with extremely high primary units or
extreme costs.
The comprehensive geometric mean costs are used to establish
resource similarity and, along with clinical similarity, dictate the
assignment of the primary services to the C-APCs. We establish a
ranking of each primary service (single unit only) to be assigned to
status indicator ``J1'' according to its comprehensive geometric mean
costs. For the minority of claims reporting more than one primary
service assigned to status indicator ``J1'' or units thereof, we
identify one ``J1'' service as the primary service for the claim based
on our cost-based ranking of primary services. We then assign these
multiple ``J1'' procedure claims to the C-APC to which the service
designated as the primary service is assigned. If the reported ``J1''
services on a claim map to different C-APCs, we designate the ``J1''
service assigned to the C-APC with the highest comprehensive geometric
mean cost as the primary service for that claim. If the reported
multiple ``J1'' services on a claim map to the same C-APC, we designate
the most costly service (at the HCPCS code level) as the primary
service for that claim. This process results in initial assignments of
claims for the primary services assigned to status indicator ``J1'' to
the most appropriate C-APCs based on both single and multiple procedure
claims reporting these services and clinical and resource homogeneity.
Complexity Adjustments. We use complexity adjustments to provide
increased payment for certain comprehensive services. We apply a
complexity adjustment by promoting qualifying paired ``J1'' service
code combinations or paired code combinations of ``J1'' services and
certain add-on codes (as described further below) from the originating
C-APC (the C-APC to which the designated primary service is first
assigned) to the next higher paying C-APC in the same clinical family
of C-APCs. We apply this type of complexity adjustment when the paired
code combination represents a complex, costly form or version of the
primary service according to the following criteria:
Frequency of 25 or more claims reporting the code
combination (frequency threshold); and
Violation of the 2 times rule, as stated in section
1833(t)(2) of the Act and section III.B.2. of this final rule, in the
originating C-APC (cost threshold).
These criteria identify paired code combinations that occur
commonly and exhibit materially greater resource requirements than the
primary service. The CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(81 FR 79582) included a revision to the complexity adjustment
eligibility criteria. Specifically, we finalized a policy to
discontinue the requirement that a code combination (that qualifies for
a complexity adjustment by satisfying the frequency and cost criteria
thresholds described above) also not create a 2 times rule violation in
the higher level or receiving APC.
After designating a single primary service for a claim, we evaluate
that service in combination with each of the other procedure codes
reported on the claim assigned to status indicator ``J1'' (or certain
add-on codes) to determine if there are paired code combinations that
meet the complexity adjustment criteria. For a new HCPCS code, we
determine initial C-APC assignment and qualification for a complexity
adjustment using the best available information, crosswalking the new
HCPCS code to a predecessor code(s) when appropriate.
Once we have determined that a particular code combination of
``J1'' services (or combinations of ``J1'' services reported in
conjunction with certain add-on codes) represents a complex version of
the primary service because it is sufficiently costly, frequent, and a
subset of the primary comprehensive service overall according to the
criteria described above, we promote the claim including the complex
version of the primary service as described by the code combination to
the next higher cost C-APC within the clinical family, unless the
primary service is already assigned to the highest cost APC within the
C-APC clinical family or assigned to the only C-APC in a clinical
family. We do not create new APCs with a comprehensive geometric mean
cost that is higher than the highest geometric mean cost (or only) C-
APC in a clinical family just to accommodate potential complexity
adjustments. Therefore, the highest payment for any claim including a
code combination for services assigned to a C-APC would be the highest
paying C-APC in the clinical family (79 FR 66802).
We package payment for all add-on codes into the payment for the C-
APC. However, certain primary service add-on combinations may qualify
for a complexity adjustment. As noted in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70331), all add-on codes that can be
appropriately reported in combination with a base code that describes a
primary ``J1'' service are evaluated for a complexity adjustment.
To determine which combinations of primary service codes reported
in conjunction with an add-on code may qualify for a complexity
adjustment for CY 2020, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39414), we proposed to apply the frequency and cost criteria thresholds
discussed above, testing claims reporting one unit of a single primary
service assigned to status indicator ``J1'' and any number of units of
a single add-on code for the primary ``J1'' service. If the frequency
and cost criteria thresholds for a complexity adjustment are met and
reassignment to the next higher cost APC in the clinical family is
appropriate (based on meeting the criteria outlined above), we make a
complexity adjustment for the code combination; that is, we reassign
the primary service code reported in conjunction with the add-on code
to the next higher cost C-APC within the same clinical family of C-
APCs. As previously stated, we package payment for add-on codes into
the C-APC payment rate. If any add-on code reported in conjunction with
the ``J1'' primary service code does not qualify for a complexity
adjustment, payment for the add-on service continues to be packaged
into the payment for the primary service and is not reassigned to the
next higher cost C-APC. We listed the complexity adjustments for ``J1''
and add-on code combinations for CY 2020, along with all of the other
proposed complexity adjustments, in Addendum J to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
Addendum J to the proposed rule included the cost statistics for
each code combination that would qualify for a complexity adjustment
(including primary code and add-on code combinations). Addendum J to
the proposed rule also contained summary cost statistics for each of
the paired code combinations that describe a complex code combination
that would qualify for a complexity adjustment and were proposed to be
reassigned to the next higher cost C-APC within the clinical family.
The combined statistics for all proposed reassigned complex code
combinations were represented by an alphanumeric code with the first 4
digits of the designated primary service followed by a letter. For
example, the proposed geometric mean cost listed in Addendum J for the
code combination described by complexity adjustment assignment 3320R,
which is assigned to C-APC 5224 (Level 4 Pacemaker and
[[Page 61161]]
Similar Procedures), includes all paired code combinations that were
proposed to be reassigned to C-APC 5224 when CPT code 33208 is the
primary code. Providing the information contained in Addendum J to the
proposed rule allowed stakeholders the opportunity to better assess the
impact associated with the proposed reassignment of claims with each of
the paired code combinations eligible for a complexity adjustment.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS alter the
established C-APC complexity adjustment eligibility criteria to allow
additional code combinations to qualify for complexity adjustments.
Some commenters reiterated their request to allow clusters of
procedures, consisting of a ``J1'' code-pair and multiple other
associated add-on codes used in combination with that ``J1'' code-pair
to qualify for complexity adjustments. Other commenters requested that
CMS allow procedures assigned status indicator ``S'' or ``T'' to be
eligible for complexity adjustments, to allow a C-APC to receive
payment at the C-APC rate two levels higher within the clinical family
when there is a violation of the two-times rule in the receiving C-APC
and also to account for patient characteristics such as comorbidities
and sociodemographic factors in the complexity adjustment policy. One
commenter recommended that HCPCS code 0546T--Radiofrequency
spectroscopy, real time, intraoperative margin assessment, at the time
of partial mastectomy, with report--be assigned to APC 5091--Level 1
Breast/Lymphatic Surgery and Related Procedures and designated for
complexity adjustment to APC 5092--Level 2 Breast/Lymphatic Surgery and
Related Procedures for CY 2020.
We also received a comment requesting that CMS modify its
complexity adjustment criteria and apply the complexity adjustment to
all blue light cystoscopy with Cysview procedures in the HOPD,
including eliminating the claim frequency requirement to determine
eligibility for the complexity adjustment and expanding the eligibility
for a complexity adjustment to other APCs besides C-APCs.
Response: We appreciate these comments. However, at this time, we
do not believe changes to the C-APC complexity adjustment criteria are
necessary or that we should make exceptions to the criteria to allow
claims with the code combinations suggested by the commenters to
receive complexity adjustments. As stated previously (81 FR 79582), we
continue to believe that the complexity adjustment criteria, which
require a frequency of 25 or more claims reporting a code combination
and a violation of the 2 times rule in the originating C-APC in order
to receive payment in the next higher cost C-APC within the clinical
family, are adequate to determine if a combination of procedures
represents a complex, costly subset of the primary service. If a code
combination meets these criteria, the combination receives payment at
the next higher cost C-APC. Code combinations that do not meet these
criteria receive the C-APC payment rate associated with the primary
``J1'' service. A minimum of 25 claims is already a very low threshold
for a national payment system. Lowering the minimum of 25 claims
further could lead to unnecessary complexity adjustments for service
combinations that are rarely performed.
We also do not believe that it is necessary to provide payment for
claims including qualifying code combinations at two APC levels higher
than the originating APC. As stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58842), we believe that payment at the next
higher paying C-APC is adequate for code combinations that exhibit
materially greater resource requirements than the primary service and
that, in many cases, paying the rate assigned to two levels higher may
lead to a significant overpayment. As mentioned previously, we do not
create new APCs with a comprehensive geometric mean cost that is higher
than the highest geometric mean cost C-APC in a clinical family just to
accommodate potential complexity adjustments. The highest payment for
any claim including a code combination for services assigned to a C-APC
would be the highest paying C- APC in the clinical family (79 FR
66802). Therefore, a policy to pay for claims with qualifying code
combinations at two C-APC levels higher than the originating APC is not
always feasible.
Lastly, as stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58843), we do not believe that it is necessary to adjust
the complexity adjustment criteria to allow claims that include more
than two ``J1'' procedures, procedures that are not assigned to C-APCs,
or procedures performed at certain hospitals with patients with more
comorbidities, to qualify for a complexity adjustment. As mentioned
earlier, we believe the current criteria are adequate to determine if a
combination of procedures represents a complex, costly subset of the
primary service.
With regard to the requests for further complexity adjustments for
blue light cystoscopy procedures using the drug Cysview, as discussed
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59243-
59246), we acknowledged that there are additional equipment, supplies,
operating room time, and other resources required to perform blue light
cystoscopy in addition to white light cystoscopy. We also acknowledged
stakeholder concerns that the payment for blue light cystoscopy
procedures involving Cysview[supreg] may be creating a barrier to
beneficiaries receiving access to reasonable and necessary care for
which there may not be a clinically comparable alternative. Based on
these issues, in CY 2018, we created a HCPCS C-code (C9738--Adjunctive
blue light cystoscopy with fluorescent imaging agent (list separately
in addition to code for primary procedure)) to describe blue light
cystoscopy with fluorescent imaging agent and allowed this code to be
eligible for complexity adjustments when billed with procedure codes
used to describe white light cystoscopy of the bladder, although this
code is not a ``J1'' service or an add-on code for the primary ``J1''
service. For CY 2020, there are three code combinations of six total
involving C9738 and procedure codes used to describe white light
cystoscopy that will qualify for a complexity adjustment. At this time,
we do not believe that further modifications to the C-APC policy are
necessary.
After consideration of the public comments we received on the
proposed complexity adjustment policy, we are finalizing the C-APC
complexity adjustment policy for CY 2020, as proposed, without
modification.
(2) Additional C-APCs for CY 2020
For CY 2020 and subsequent years, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39414), we proposed to continue to apply the C-APC payment
policy methodology. We refer readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79583) for a discussion of the C-APC payment
policy methodology and revisions.
Each year, in accordance with section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, we
review and revise the services within each APC group and the APC
assignments under the OPPS. As a result of our annual review of the
services and the APC assignments under the OPPS, in the proposed rule
(84 FR 39414), we proposed to add two C-APCs under the existing C-APC
payment policy in CY 2020: Proposed C-APC 5182 (Level 2
[[Page 61162]]
Vascular Procedures); and proposed C-APC 5461 (Level 1 Neurostimulator
and Related Procedures). These APCs were selected to be included in
this proposal because, similar to other C-APCs, these APCs include
primary, comprehensive services, such as major surgical procedures,
that are typically reported with other ancillary and adjunctive
services. Also, similar to other APCs that have been converted to C-
APCs, there are higher APC levels within the clinical family or related
clinical family of these APCs that have previously been assigned to a
C-APC. Table 4 of the proposed rule listed the proposed C-APCs for CY
2020. All C-APCs were displayed in Addendum J to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website). Addendum J to
the proposed rule also contained all of the data related to the C-APC
payment policy methodology, including the list of proposed complexity
adjustments and other information.
We also are considering developing an episode-of-care for skin
substitutes and are interested in comments regarding a future C-APC for
procedures using skin substitute products furnished in the hospital
outpatient department setting. We note that this comment solicitation
is discussed in section V.B.7. of the proposed rule and this final rule
with comment period.
Comment: Several commenters supported the creation of the two new
proposed C-APCs, encouraging CMS to continue to evaluate outpatient
charge and cost data for additions to the list of C-APCs during future
rulemaking periods. One commenter requested that CMS closely monitor
payments for the proposed C-APC 5461 (Level 1 Neurostimulator and
Related Products) relative to costs of the procedure to ensure accurate
compensation and availability in the ASC setting.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support and note that we
annually review the most recent data available to determine costs
associated with furnishing a service and update payment rates
accordingly.
Comment: We received comments requesting that CMS create a C-APC
for autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant similar to the C-APC
established for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant. The
commenters stated CMS' APC rate-setting process of using single and
pseudo-single procedure claims results in an inadequately low APC
payment rate for autologous stem cell transplant and believed that the
creation of a C-APC for autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant
would improve payment rates by allowing a greater number of claims to
be used in the rate setting process. The Advisory Panel on Hospital
Outpatient Payment (HOP Panel) also recommended that CMS consider
creating a comprehensive APC for autologous stem cell transplantation
and that CMS provide a rationale if it decides not to create such an
APC.
Response: We thank the commenter for this comment. In order to
determine whether it would be appropriate to create a C-APC for
autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant, we modeled this change
with APC 5242--Level 2 Blood Product Exchange and Related Services,
which includes CPT code 38241 Hematopoietic progenitor cell (hpc);
autologous transplantation as well as APC 5243--Level 3 Blood Product
Exchange and Related Services, in keeping with our practice of
converting APCs to C-APCs that have higher APC levels within the
clinical family that are assigned to a C-APC.
After analyzing the results, we found that creating a C-APC for APC
5242 would increase the number of single claims available for
ratesetting for this APC by approximately 8 percent, however creating
new C-APCs in the Stem Cell Transplant clinical family would decrease
the geometric mean cost of C-APC 5244--Level 4 Blood Product Exchange
and Related Services by approximately 75 percent due to complexity
adjustments of code combinations within the clinical family,
specifically complexity adjustments from C-APC 5243 to C-APC 5244.
Therefore, at this time we do not believe it is appropriate to create a
C-APC for autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
Comment: Two manufacturers of drugs used in ocular procedures
requested that CMS discontinue the C-APC payment policy for existing C-
APCs that include procedures involving their drugs and instead provide
separate payment for the drugs. The manufacturer commenters believed
that the C-APC packaging policy, which packages payment for certain
drugs that are adjunctive to the primary service, results in
underpayment for the drugs and violates the 2 times rule.
Response: We continue to believe that the procedures assigned to
the proposed C-APCs, including the procedures involving the drugs used
in ocular procedures mentioned by the commenters, are appropriately
paid through a C-APC and the costs of drugs (as well as other items or
services furnished with the procedures) are reflected in hospital
billing, and therefore the rates that are established for the ocular
procedures. As stated in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79584), procedures assigned to C-APCs are primary
services (mostly major surgical procedures) that are typically the
focus of the hospital outpatient stay. In addition, with regard to the
packaging of the drugs based on the C-APC policy, as stated in previous
rules (78 FR 74868 through 74869 and 74909 and 79 FR 66800), items
included in the packaged payment provided with the primary ``J1''
service include all drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals
payable under the OPPS, regardless of cost, except those drugs with
pass-through payment status. In accordance with section 1833(t)(2) of
the Act and Sec. 419.31 of the regulations, we annually review the
items and services within an APC group to determine if there are any
APC violations of the 2 times rule and whether there are any revisions
to APC assignments that may be necessary or any exceptions that should
be made.
Comment: Several commenters, including device manufacturer
associations, expressed concern that the C-APC payment rates may not
adequately reflect the costs associated with services and requested
that CMS not establish any additional C-APCs. These comments questioned
the broader C-APC payment methodology, ratesetting accuracy, the impact
of C-APCs on broader agency objectives, and recommended methodological
changes to better capture costs of providing comprehensive services
before further expansion. Some commenters were concerned that hospital
are not correctly charging for procedures assigned to C-APCs and urged
CMS to invest in policies and education for hospitals regarding correct
billing patterns. These commenters also requested that CMS provide an
analysis of the impact of the C-APC policy on affected procedures and
patient access to services.
Response: We appreciate the comments. We continue to believe that
the proposed new C-APCs for CY 2020 are appropriate to be added to the
existing C-APC payment policy. We also note that, in the CY 2018 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59246), we conducted an
analysis of the effects of the C-APC policy. The analysis looked at
data from CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, and the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, which involved claims data from CY 2014 (before C-APCs
became effective) to CY 2016. We looked at separately payable codes
that were then assigned to C-APCs and, overall, we observed an increase
in claim line frequency, units
[[Page 61163]]
billed, and Medicare payment for those procedures, which suggest that
the C-APC payment policy did not adversely affect access to care or
reduce payments to hospitals.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS discontinue the C-APC
payment policy for single session stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)
procedures, stating concerns that the C-APC methodology does not
account for the complexity of delivering radiation therapy and fails to
capture appropriately coded claims. The commenters also requested that
CMS continue to make separate payments for the 10 planning and
preparation codes related to SRS and include the HCPCS code for IMRT
planning (77301) on the list of planning and preparation codes, stating
that the service has become more common in single fraction radiosurgery
treatment planning.
Response: At this time, we do not believe that it is necessary to
discontinue the C-APCs that include single session SRS procedures. We
continue to believe that the C-APC policy is appropriately applied to
these surgical procedures for the reasons cited when this policy was
first adopted and note that the commenters did not provide any
empirical evidence to support their claims that the existing C-APC
policy does not adequately pay for these procedures. Also, we will
continue in CY 2020 to pay separately for the 10 planning and
preparation services (HCPCS codes 70551, 70552, 70553, 77011, 77014,
77280, 77285, 77290, 77295, and 77336) adjunctive to the delivery of
the SRS treatment using either the Cobalt-60-based or LINAC based
technology when furnished to a beneficiary within 1 month of the SRS
treatment for CY 2020 (82 FR 59242 and 59243).
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS discontinue the C-
APC payment policy for all surgical insertion codes required for
brachytherapy treatment. The commenters stated concerns about how the
C-APC methodology impacts radiation oncology, particularly the delivery
of brachytherapy for the treatment of cervical cancer. They also stated
that they oppose C-APC payment for cancer care given the complexity of
coding, serial billing for cancer care, and potentially different sites
of service for the initial surgical device insertion and subsequent
treatment delivery or other supportive services.
Response: While we continue to believe that the C-APC policy is
appropriately applied to these surgical procedures, we will continue to
examine these concerns and will determine if any modifications to this
policy are warranted in future rulemaking.
Comment: We received requests for clarifications related to C-APC
8011 Comprehensive Observation Services (status indicator ``J2''). One
commenter requested that CMS clarify the distinction between status
indicators for ``V'' and ``J2''. Another commenter questioned the
rationale for the established criteria for payment through C-APC 8011,
specifically the requirement that the claim does not contain a
procedure described by a HCPCS code to which we have assigned status
indicator ``T'' that is reported with a date of service on the same day
or 1 day earlier than the date of service associated with services
described by HCPCS code G0378.
Response: The comprehensive observation services C-APC (C-APC 8011)
was established in CY 2016 (80 FR 70333 through 70336) to provide
payment for extended assessment and management encounters. C-APC 8011
is paid and status indicator ``J2'' is assigned when a specific
combination of services is performed. This combination of services was
described in previous rulemaking (80 FR 70333 through 70336) in detail
and is repeated for clarity below. Specifically, we make a payment
through C-APC 8011 for a claim that:
Does not contain a procedure described by a HCPCS code to
which we have assigned status indicator ``T;''
Contains 8 or more units of services described by HCPCS
code G0378 (Hospital observation services, per hour);
Contains services provided on the same date of service or
1 day before the date of service for HCPCS code G0378 that are
described by one of the following codes: HCPCS code G0379 (Direct
admission of patient for hospital observation care) on the same date of
service as HCPCS code G0378; CPT code 99281 (Emergency department visit
for the evaluation and management of a patient (Level 1)); CPT code
99282 (Emergency department visit for the evaluation and management of
a patient (Level 2)); CPT code 99283 (Emergency department visit for
the evaluation and management of a patient (Level 3)); CPT code 99284
(Emergency department visit for the evaluation and management of a
patient (Level 4)); CPT code 99285 (Emergency department visit for the
evaluation and management of a patient (Level 5)) or HCPCS code G0380
(Type B emergency department visit (Level 1)); HCPCS code G0381 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 2)); HCPCS code G0382 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 3)); HCPCS code G0383 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 4)); HCPCS code G0384 (Type B
emergency department visit (Level 5)); CPT code 99291 (Critical care,
evaluation and management of the critically ill or critically injured
patient; first 30-74 minutes); or HCPCS code G0463 (Hospital outpatient
clinic visit for assessment and management of a patient); and
Does not contain services described by a HCPCS code to
which we have assigned status indicator ``J1'.'
The assignment of status indicator ``J2'' results in a single
prospective payment for the comprehensive observation services based on
the costs of all reported services on the claim. We make payment for
all other items and services reported on the hospital outpatient claim
as being adjunctive to the specific combination of observation
services. The assignment of status indicator ``V'' describes a clinic
or emergency department visit. It does not describe services paid
through a comprehensive APC and it will not trigger payment through C-
APC 8011.
With regard to the comment questioning the rationale for the
requirement that the claim does not contain a procedure described by a
HCPCS code to which we have assigned status indicator ``T'' that is
reported with a date of service on the same day or 1 day earlier than
the date of service associated with services described by HCPCS code
G0378 in order to be paid through C-APC 8011, this criterion was
incorrectly quoted as the final policy in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39412). This language has been updated in this final rule
with comment period. This criterion was proposed in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, however a modification of this criterion was
finalized. We refer readers to the discussion of the establishment of
C-APC 8011 in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC Final Rule with comment period (80
FR 70335-70336). In this rule, we stated in response to commenters'
concerns regarding packaging payment for potentially high-cost surgical
procedures into the payment for an observation C-APC, we finalized a
policy that claims reporting procedures assigned status indicator ``T''
should not qualify for payment through C-APC 8011, regardless of
whether the procedure assigned status indicator ``T'' was furnished
before or after observation services (described by HCPCS code G0378)
were provided. We state the final criteria for assignment for payment
through C-APC 8011 in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, including that the
[[Page 61164]]
claims must not contain a procedure described by a HCPCS code to which
we have assigned status indicator ``T'' (80 FR 70335).
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed C-APCs for CY 2020. Table 4 below lists the
final C-APCs for CY 2020. All C-APCs are displayed in Addendum J to
this final rule with comment period (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website). Addendum J to this final rule with
comment period also contains all of the data related to the C-APC
payment policy methodology, including the list of complexity
adjustments and other information for CY 2020.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.004
[[Page 61165]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.005
[[Page 61166]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.006
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
(3) Exclusion of Procedures Assigned to New Technology APCs from the C-
APC Policy
Services that are assigned to New Technology APCs are typically new
procedures that do not have sufficient claims history to establish an
accurate payment for the procedures. Beginning in CY 2002, we retain
services within New Technology APC groups until we gather sufficient
claims data to enable us to assign the service to an appropriate
clinical APC. This policy allows us to move a service from a New
Technology APC in less than 2 years if sufficient data are available.
It also allows us to retain a service in a New Technology APC for more
than 2 years if sufficient data upon which to base a decision for
reassignment have not been collected (82 FR 59277).
The C-APC payment policy packages payment for adjunctive and
secondary items, services, and procedures into the most costly primary
procedure under the OPPS at the claim level. Prior to CY 2019 when a
procedure assigned to a New Technology APC was included on the claim
with a primary procedure, identified by OPPS status indicator ``J1'',
payment for the new technology service was typically packaged into the
payment for the primary procedure. Because the new technology service
was not separately paid in this scenario, the overall number of single
claims available to determine an appropriate clinical APC for the new
service was reduced. This was contrary to the objective of the New
Technology APC payment policy, which is to gather sufficient claims
data to enable us to assign the service to an appropriate clinical APC.
For example, for CY 2017, there were seven claims generated for
HCPCS code 0100T (Placement of a subconjunctival retinal prosthesis
receiver and pulse generator, and implantation of intraocular retinal
electrode array, with vitrectomy), which involves the use of the
Argus[supreg] II Retinal Prosthesis System. However, several of these
claims were not available for ratesetting because HCPCS code 0100T was
reported with a ``J1'' procedure and, therefore, payment was packaged
into the associated C-APC payment. If these services had been
separately paid under the OPPS, there would be at least two additional
single claims available for ratesetting. As mentioned previously, the
purpose of the new technology APC policy is to ensure that there are
sufficient claims data for new services, which is particularly
important for services with a low volume such as procedures described
by HCPCS code 0100T. Another concern is the costs reported for the
claims when payment is not packaged for a new technology procedure may
not be representative of all of the services included on a claim that
is generated, which may also affect our ability to assign the new
service to the most appropriate clinical APC.
To address this issue and help ensure that there is sufficient
claims data for services assigned to New Technology APCs, in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58847), we proposed
excluded payment for any procedure that is assigned to a New Technology
APC (APCs 1491 through 1599 and APCs 1901 through 1908) from being
packaged when included on a claim with a ``J1'' service assigned to a
C-APC. For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to exclude payment for any
procedure that is assigned to a New Technology APC from being packaged
when included on a claim with a ``J1'' service assigned to a C-APC.
Some stakeholders have raised questions about whether the policy
established in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
would also apply to comprehensive observation services assigned status
indicator ``J2.'' We recognize that the policy described and adopted in
the CY 2019 rulemaking may have been ambiguous with respect to this
issue. While our intention in the CY 2019 rulemaking was only to
exclude payment for services assigned to New Technology APCs from being
bundled into the payment for a comprehensive ``J1'' service, we believe
that there may also be some instances in which it would be clinically
appropriate to provide a new technology service when providing
comprehensive observation services. We would not generally expect
[[Page 61167]]
that to be the case, because procedures assigned to New Technology APCs
typically are new or low-volume surgical procedures, or are specialized
tests to diagnosis a specific condition. In addition, it is highly
unlikely a general observation procedure would be assigned to a New
Technology APC because there are clinical APCs already established
under the OPPS to classify general observation procedures. As we stated
in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, observation
services may not be used for post-operative recovery and, as such,
observation services furnished with services assigned to status
indicator ``T'' will always be packaged (80 FR 70334). Therefore, we
proposed that payment for services assigned to a New Technology APC
when included on a claim for a service assigned status indicator ``J2''
assigned to a C-APC will be packaged into the payment for the
comprehensive service. Nonetheless, we sought public comments on
whether it would be clinically appropriate to exclude payment for any
New Technology APC procedures from being packaged into the payment for
a comprehensive ``J2'' service starting in CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters, including device manufacturers, device
manufacturer associations and physicians were opposed to our proposal
to package payment for procedures assigned to a New Technology APC into
the payment for comprehensive observation services assigned status
indicator ``J2''. The commenters stated that there were instances where
beneficiaries receiving observation services may require the types of
procedures that are assigned to new technology APCs. Several commenters
specifically mentioned the HeartFlow Analysis, and stated that it could
be performed appropriately for a patient receiving observation
services. The commenters also stated that providing separate payment
for this new technology procedure will allow CMS to collect sufficient
claims data to enable assignment of the procedure to an appropriate
clinical APC.
Response: We appreciate the stakeholders' comments regarding this
proposal and agree that, although rare, there are situations in which
it is clinically appropriate to provide a new technology service when
providing comprehensive observation services. As discussed in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58847), the purpose
of the new technology APC policy is to ensure that there are sufficient
claims data for new services to assign these procedures to an
appropriate clinical APC and therefore, we excluded procedures assigned
to New Technology APCs from packaging under the C-APC policy. In the CY
2019 final rule, we specifically stated that the exclusion policy
included circumstances when New Technology procedures were billed with
comprehensive services assigned to status indicator ``J1'', however we
believe this rationale is also applicable to comprehensive observation
services that are assigned status indicator ``J2''. Therefore, we are
modifying our policy for excluding procedures assigned to New
Technology APCs from the C-APC policy. For CY 2020, we are finalizing
our policy to continue to exclude payment for any procedure that is
assigned to a New Technology APC from being packaged when included on a
claim with a ``J1'' service assigned to a C-APC. For CY 2020, we are
also finalizing a policy to exclude payment for any procedures that are
assigned to a New Technology APC from being packaged into the payment
for comprehensive observation services assigned to status indicator
``J2'' when they are included on a claim with ``J2'' procedures.
c. Calculation of Composite APC Criteria-Based Costs
As discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(72 FR 66613), we believe it is important that the OPPS enhance
incentives for hospitals to provide necessary, high quality care as
efficiently as possible. For CY 2008, we developed composite APCs to
provide a single payment for groups of services that are typically
performed together during a single clinical encounter and that result
in the provision of a complete service. Combining payment for multiple,
independent services into a single OPPS payment in this way enables
hospitals to manage their resources with maximum flexibility by
monitoring and adjusting the volume and efficiency of services
themselves. An additional advantage to the composite APC model is that
we can use data from correctly coded multiple procedure claims to
calculate payment rates for the specified combinations of services,
rather than relying upon single procedure claims which may be low in
volume and/or incorrectly coded. Under the OPPS, we currently have
composite policies for mental health services and multiple imaging
services. (We note that, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we finalized a policy to delete the composite APC 8001
(LDR Prostate Brachytherapy Composite) for CY 2018 and subsequent
years.) We refer readers to the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66611 through 66614 and 66650 through 66652) for
a full discussion of the development of the composite APC methodology,
and the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74163)
and the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59241
through 59242 and 59246 through 52950) for more recent background.
(1) Mental Health Services Composite APC
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39398), we proposed to
continue our longstanding policy of limiting the aggregate payment for
specified less resource-intensive mental health services furnished on
the same date to the payment for a day of partial hospitalization
services provided by a hospital, which we consider to be the most
resource-intensive of all outpatient mental health services. We refer
readers to the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule with comment period (65 FR
18452 through 18455) for the initial discussion of this longstanding
policy and the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR
74168) for more recent background.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79588
through 79589), we finalized a policy to combine the existing Level 1
and Level 2 hospital-based PHP APCs into a single hospital-based PHP
APC, and thereby discontinue APCs 5861 (Level 1--Partial
Hospitalization (3 services) for Hospital-Based PHPs) and 5862 (Level--
2 Partial Hospitalization (4 or more services) for Hospital-Based PHPs)
and replace them with APC 5863 (Partial Hospitalization (3 or more
services per day)).
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule with comment
period (82 FR 33580 through 33581 and 59246 through 59247,
respectively), we proposed and finalized the policy for CY 2018 and
subsequent years that, when the aggregate payment for specified mental
health services provided by one hospital to a single beneficiary on a
single date of service, based on the payment rates associated with the
APCs for the individual services, exceeds the maximum per diem payment
rate for partial hospitalization services provided by a hospital, those
specified mental health services will be paid through composite APC
8010 (Mental Health Services Composite). In addition, we set the
payment rate for composite APC 8010 for CY 2018 at the same payment
rate that will be paid for APC 5863, which is the maximum partial
hospitalization per diem payment rate for a hospital,
[[Page 61168]]
and finalized a policy that the hospital will continue to be paid the
payment rate for composite APC 8010. Under this policy, the I/OCE will
continue to determine whether to pay for these specified mental health
services individually, or to make a single payment at the same payment
rate established for APC 5863 for all of the specified mental health
services furnished by the hospital on that single date of service. We
continue to believe that the costs associated with administering a
partial hospitalization program at a hospital represent the most
resource intensive of all outpatient mental health services. Therefore,
we do not believe that we should pay more for mental health services
under the OPPS than the highest partial hospitalization per diem
payment rate for hospitals.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39398), for CY 2020,
we proposed that when the aggregate payment for specified mental health
services provided by one hospital to a single beneficiary on a single
date of service, based on the payment rates associated with the APCs
for the individual services, exceeds the maximum per diem payment rate
for partial hospitalization services provided by a hospital, those
specified mental health services would be paid through composite APC
8010 for CY 2020. In addition, we proposed to set the proposed payment
rate for composite APC 8010 at the same payment rate that we proposed
for APC 5863, which is the maximum partial hospitalization per diem
payment rate for a hospital, and that the hospital continue to be paid
the proposed payment rate for composite APC 8010.
We did not receive any public comment on these proposals.
Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, that
when the aggregate payment for specified mental health services
provided by one hospital to a single beneficiary on a single date of
service, based on the payment rates associated with the APCs for the
individual services, exceeds the maximum per diem payment rate for
partial hospitalization services provided by a hospital, those
specified mental health services would be paid through composite APC
8010 for CY 2020. In addition, we are finalizing our proposal to set
the payment rate for composite APC 8010 for CY 2020 at the same payment
rate that we set for APC 5863, which is the maximum partial
hospitalization per diem payment rate for a hospital.
(2) Multiple Imaging Composite APCs (APCs 8004, 8005, 8006, 8007, and
8008)
Effective January 1, 2009, we provide a single payment each time a
hospital submits a claim for more than one imaging procedure within an
imaging family on the same date of service, in order to reflect and
promote the efficiencies hospitals can achieve when performing multiple
imaging procedures during a single session (73 FR 41448 through 41450).
We utilize three imaging families based on imaging modality for
purposes of this methodology: (1) Ultrasound; (2) computed tomography
(CT) and computed tomographic angiography (CTA); and (3) magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA). The
HCPCS codes subject to the multiple imaging composite policy and their
respective families are listed in Table 12 of the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR 74920 through 74924).
While there are three imaging families, there are five multiple
imaging composite APCs due to the statutory requirement under section
1833(t)(2)(G) of the Act that we differentiate payment for OPPS imaging
services provided with and without contrast. While the ultrasound
procedures included under the policy do not involve contrast, both CT/
CTA and MRI/MRA scans can be provided either with or without contrast.
The five multiple imaging composite APCs established in CY 2009 are:
APC 8004 (Ultrasound Composite);
APC 8005 (CT and CTA without Contrast Composite);
APC 8006 (CT and CTA with Contrast Composite);
APC 8007 (MRI and MRA without Contrast Composite); and
APC 8008 (MRI and MRA with Contrast Composite).
We define the single imaging session for the ``with contrast''
composite APCs as having at least one or more imaging procedures from
the same family performed with contrast on the same date of service.
For example, if the hospital performs an MRI without contrast during
the same session as at least one other MRI with contrast, the hospital
will receive payment based on the payment rate for APC 8008, the ``with
contrast'' composite APC.
We make a single payment for those imaging procedures that qualify
for payment based on the composite APC payment rate, which includes any
packaged services furnished on the same date of service. The standard
(noncomposite) APC assignments continue to apply for single imaging
procedures and multiple imaging procedures performed across families.
For a full discussion of the development of the multiple imaging
composite APC methodology, we refer readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (73 FR 68559 through 68569).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39398), we proposed to
continue to pay for all multiple imaging procedures within an imaging
family performed on the same date of service using the multiple imaging
composite APC payment methodology. We stated that we continue to
believe that this policy would reflect and promote the efficiencies
hospitals can achieve when performing multiple imaging procedures
during a single session.
The proposed CY 2020 payment rates for the five multiple imaging
composite APCs (APCs 8004, 8005, 8006, 8007, and 8008) were based on
proposed geometric mean costs calculated from CY 2018 claims available
for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that qualified for composite
payment under the current policy (that is, those claims reporting more
than one procedure within the same family on a single date of service).
To calculate the proposed geometric mean costs, we used the same
methodology that we have used to calculate the geometric mean costs for
these composite APCs since CY 2014, as described in the CY 2014 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 74918). The imaging HCPCS
codes referred to as ``overlap bypass codes'' that we removed from the
bypass list for purposes of calculating the proposed multiple imaging
composite APC geometric mean costs, in accordance with our established
methodology as stated in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 74918), were identified by asterisks in Addendum N to the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is available via the internet on
the CMS website) and were discussed in more detail in section II.A.1.b.
of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we were able to identify
approximately 700,000 ``single session'' claims out of an estimated 4.9
million potential claims for payment through composite APCs from our
ratesetting claims data, which represents approximately 14 percent of
all eligible claims, to calculate the proposed CY 2020 geometric mean
costs for the multiple imaging composite APCs. Table 5 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule listed the proposed
[[Page 61169]]
HCPCS codes that would be subject to the multiple imaging composite APC
policy and their respective families and approximate composite APC
proposed geometric mean costs for CY 2020.
We did not receive any public comments on these proposals.
Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal to continue the use of
multiple imaging composite APCs to pay for services providing more than
one imaging procedure from the same family on the same date, without
modification. Table 6 below lists the HCPCS codes that will be subject
to the multiple imaging composite APC policy and their respective
families and approximate composite APC final geometric mean costs for
CY 2020.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.007
[[Page 61170]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.008
[[Page 61171]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.009
[[Page 61172]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.010
[[Page 61173]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.011
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
3. Changes to Packaged Items and Services
a. Background and Rationale for Packaging in the OPPS
Like other prospective payment systems, the OPPS relies on the
concept of averaging to establish a payment rate for services. The
payment may be more or less than the estimated cost of providing a
specific service or a bundle of specific services for a particular
beneficiary. The OPPS packages payments for multiple interrelated items
and services into a single payment to create incentives for hospitals
to furnish services most efficiently and to manage their resources with
maximum flexibility. Our packaging policies support our strategic goal
of using larger payment bundles in the OPPS to maximize hospitals'
incentives to provide care in the most efficient manner. For example,
where there are a variety of devices, drugs, items, and supplies that
could be used to furnish a service, some of which are more costly than
others, packaging encourages hospitals to use the most cost-efficient
item that meets the patient's needs, rather than to routinely use a
more expensive item, which may occur if separate payment is provided
for the item.
Packaging also encourages hospitals to effectively negotiate with
manufacturers and suppliers to reduce the purchase price of items and
services or to explore alternative group purchasing arrangements,
thereby encouraging the most economical health care delivery.
Similarly, packaging encourages hospitals to establish protocols that
ensure that necessary services are furnished, while scrutinizing the
services ordered by practitioners to maximize the efficient use of
hospital resources. Packaging payments into larger payment bundles
promotes the predictability and accuracy of payment for services over
time. Finally, packaging may reduce the importance of refining service-
specific payment because packaged payments include costs associated
with higher cost cases requiring many ancillary items and services and
lower cost cases requiring fewer ancillary items and services. Because
packaging encourages efficiency and is an essential component of a
prospective payment system, packaging payments for items and services
that are typically integral, ancillary, supportive, dependent, or
adjunctive to a primary service has been a fundamental part of the OPPS
since its implementation in August 2000. For an extensive discussion of
the history and background of the OPPS packaging policy, we refer
readers to the CY 2000 OPPS final rule (65 FR 18434), the CY 2008 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66580), the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR 74925), the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR 66817), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR 70343), the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR 79592), the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR 59250), and the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 58854). As we continue to develop
larger payment groups that more broadly reflect services provided in an
encounter or episode of care, we have expanded the OPPS packaging
policies. Most, but not necessarily all, categories of items and
services currently packaged in the OPPS are listed in 42 CFR 419.2(b).
Our overarching goal is to make payments for all services under the
OPPS more consistent with those of a prospective payment system and
less like those of a per-service fee schedule, which pays separately
for each coded item. As a part of this effort, we have continued to
examine the payment for items and services provided under the OPPS to
determine which OPPS services can be packaged to further achieve the
objective of advancing the OPPS toward a more prospective payment
system.
For CY 2020, we examined the items and services currently provided
under the OPPS, reviewing categories of integral, ancillary,
supportive, dependent, or adjunctive items and services for which we
believe payment would be appropriately packaged into payment for the
primary service that they support. Specifically, we examined the HCPCS
code definitions (including CPT code descriptors) and outpatient
hospital billing patterns to determine whether there were categories of
codes for which packaging would be appropriate according to existing
OPPS packaging policies or a logical expansion of those existing OPPS
packaging policies. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39423
through 39424), beginning in CY 2020, we proposed to conditionally
package the costs of selected newly identified ancillary services into
payment with a primary service where we believe that the packaged item
or service is integral, ancillary, supportive, dependent, or adjunctive
to the provision of care that was reported by the primary service HCPCS
code. Below we discuss the proposed and finalized changes to the
packaging policies beginning in CY 2020.
Comment: We received several comments from patient advocates,
physicians, drug manufacturers, and professional medical societies
regarding payment for blue light cystoscopy procedures involving
Cysview[supreg] (hexaminolevulinate HCl) (described by HCPCS code
C9275). Cysview[supreg] is a drug that functions as a supply in a
diagnostic test or procedure and therefore payment for this product is
packaged with payment for the primary procedure in the OPPS and ASC
settings. Commenters stated that utilization of Cysview[supreg] is low
in the HOPD and ASC settings, which they attributed to the packaging of
Cysview as a drug that functions as a supply in a diagnostic test or
procedure. Commenters indicated that packaged payment does not
adequately pay for the blue light cystoscopy procedures, particularly
in the ASC setting where payment is generally approximately 55 percent
of the HOPD payment. Commenters believe that providers have been
deterred from the use of this technology, especially in the ASC, and as
a result a significant percentage of
[[Page 61174]]
beneficiaries are not able to access the procedure.
Commenters also stated that there has been literature published
showing that Blue Light Cystoscopy with Cysview[supreg] is more
effective than white light cystoscopy alone at detecting and
eliminating nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer tumors, leading to a
reduction in bladder cancer recurrence.
Commenters made various recommendations for payment for blue light
cystoscopy procedures involving Cysview[supreg], including to pay
separately for Cysview[supreg] when it is used with blue light
cystoscopy in the HOPD and ASC settings, to pay separately for
Cysview[supreg] when it is used with blue light cystoscopy in the ASC
setting, similar to the policy finalized for Exparel[supreg] in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58860), or to
utilize our equitable adjustment authority at section 1833(t)(2)(E) of
the Act to provide an ``add-on'' or ``drug intensive'' payment to ASCs
when using Cysview[supreg] in blue light cystoscopy procedures. Other
commenters requested separate payment for all diagnostic imaging drugs
(radiopharmaceuticals and contrast agents).
Response: We acknowledge the concerns of the numerous stakeholders
who commented on this issue and understand the importance of blue light
cystoscopy procedures involving Cysview[supreg]. Cysview has been
packaged as a drug, biological, or radiopharmaceutical that functions
as a supply in a diagnostic test or procedure since CY 2014 (78 FR
74930). As we stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59244), we recognize that blue light cystoscopy
represents an additional elective but distinguishable service as
compared to white light cystoscopy that, in some cases, may allow
greater detection of bladder tumors in beneficiaries relative to white
light cystoscopy alone. Given the additional equipment, supplies,
operating room time, and other resources required to perform blue light
cystoscopy in addition to white light cystoscopy, in CY 2018, we
created a new HCPCS C-code to describe blue light cystoscopy and since
CY 2018 have allowed for complexity adjustments to higher paying C-APCs
for qualifying white light and blue light cystoscopy code combinations.
At this time, we continue to believe that Cysview[supreg] is a drug
that functions as a supply in a diagnostic test or procedure and
payment for this drug is packaged with payment for the diagnostic
procedure. Therefore, we do not believe it is necessary to pay
separately for Cysview[supreg] when it is used with blue light
cystoscopy in either the HOPD or ASC setting. We also do not believe
that it would be appropriate to utilize our equitable adjustment
authority at section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to provide an ``add-on''
or ``drug intensive'' payment to ASCs when using Cysview[supreg] in
blue light cystoscopy procedures nor do we have any evidence to show
that separate payment for all diagnostic imaging drugs
(radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents) is required. However, we will
continue to examine payment for blue light cystoscopy procedures
involving Cysview to determine if any changes to this policy would be
appropriate in future rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters requested that we eliminate the packaging
policy for drugs that function as a supply when used in a diagnostic
test or procedure.
Response: In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period,
we established a policy to package drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when used in a
diagnostic test or procedure. In particular, we referred to drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies as a
part of a larger, more encompassing service or procedure, namely, the
diagnostic test or procedure in which the drug, biological, or
radiopharmaceutical is employed (78 FR 74927). At this time, we do not
believe it is necessary to eliminate this policy. As previously noted,
the OPPS packages payments for multiple interrelated items and services
into a single payment to create incentives for hospitals to furnish
services most efficiently and to manage their resources with maximum
flexibility. Our packaging policies support our strategic goal of using
larger payment bundles in the OPPS to maximize hospitals' incentives to
provide care in the most efficient manner.
Comment: One commenter requested separate payment for add-on codes
for Fractional Flow Reserve Studies (FFR/iFR) and Intravascular
Ultrasound (IVUS). The commenter stated that they believe the packaging
of these codes will disincentivize physicians to perform these adjunct
procedures because of cost. The codes include:
93571--Intravascular doppler velocity and/or pressure
derived coronary flow reserve measurement (coronary vessel or graft)
during coronary angiography including pharmacologically induced stress;
initial vessel (list separately in addition to code for primary
procedure);
93572--Intravascular doppler velocity and/or pressure
derived coronary flow reserve measurement (coronary vessel or graft)
during coronary angiography including pharmacologically induced stress;
each additional vessel (list separately in addition to code for primary
procedure));
92978--Endoluminal imaging of coronary vessel or graft
using intravascular ultrasound (ivus) or optical coherence tomography
(oct) during diagnostic evaluation and/or therapeutic intervention
including imaging supervision, interpretation and report; initial
vessel (list separately in addition to code for primary procedure); and
92979--Endoluminal imaging of coronary vessel or graft
using intravascular ultrasound (ivus) or optical coherence tomography
(oct) during diagnostic evaluation and/or therapeutic intervention
including imaging supervision, interpretation and report; each
additional vessel (list separately in addition to code for primary
procedure)).
Response: As stated in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66630), we continue to believe that IVUS and FFR are
dependent services that are always provided in association with a
primary service. Add-on codes represent services that are integral,
ancillary, supportive, dependent, or adjunctive items and services for
which we believe payment would be appropriately packaged into payment
for the primary service that they support. As we have noted in past
rules, add-on codes do not represent standalone procedures and are
inclusive to other procedures performed at the same time (79 FR 66818).
We continue to believe it is unnecessary to provide separate payment
for the previously mentioned add-on codes at this time.
b. Packaging Policy for Non-Opioid Pain Management Treatments
(1) Background on OPPS/ASC Non-Opioid Pain Management Packaging
Policies
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR 33588), within the
framework of existing packaging categories, such as drugs that function
as supplies in a surgical procedure or diagnostic test or procedure, we
requested stakeholder feedback on common clinical scenarios involving
currently packaged items and services described by HCPCS codes that
stakeholders believe should not be packaged under the OPPS. We also
expressed interest in stakeholder
[[Page 61175]]
feedback on common clinical scenarios involving separately payable
HCPCS codes for which payment would be most appropriately packaged
under the OPPS. Commenters who responded to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule expressed a variety of views on packaging under the OPPS.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59255),
we summarized these public comments. The public comments ranged from
requests to unpackage most items and services that are either
conditionally or unconditionally packaged under the OPPS, including
drugs and devices, to specific requests for separate payment for a
specific drug or device.
In terms of Exparel[supreg] in particular, we received several
requests to pay separately for the drug Exparel[supreg] rather than
packaging payment for it as a surgical supply. We had previously stated
that we considered Exparel[supreg] to be a drug that functions as a
surgical supply because it is indicated for the alleviation of
postoperative pain (79 FR 66874 and 66875). We had also stated before
that we considered all items related to the surgical outcome and
provided during the hospital stay in which the surgery is performed,
including postsurgical pain management drugs, to be part of the surgery
for purposes of our drug and biological surgical supply packaging
policy. (We note that Exparel[supreg] is a liposome injection of
bupivacaine, an amide local anesthetic, indicated for single-dose
infiltration into the surgical site to produce postsurgical analgesia.
In 2011, Exparel[supreg] was approved by FDA for single-dose
infiltration into the surgical site to provide postsurgical
analgesia.1 2 Exparel[supreg] had pass-through payment
status from CYs 2012 through 2014 and was separately paid under both
the OPPS and the ASC payment system during this 3-year period.
Beginning in CY 2015, Exparel[supreg] was packaged as a surgical supply
under both the OPPS and the ASC payment system.)
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\1\ 2011 product label available at: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2011/022496s000lbl.pdf.
\2\ 2011 FDA approval letter available at: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/2011/022496Orig1s000Approv.pdf.
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In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
52485, we reiterated our position with regard to payment for
Exparel[supreg], stating that we believed that payment for this drug is
appropriately packaged with the primary surgical procedure. We also
stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that CMS
would continue to explore and evaluate packaging policies under the
OPPS and consider these policies in future rulemaking.
In addition to stakeholder feedback regarding OPPS packaging
policies in response to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, the
President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid
Crisis (the Commission) had recommended that CMS examine payment
policies for certain drugs that function as a supply, specifically non-
opioid pain management treatments (83 FR 37068). The Commission was
established in 2017 to study ways to combat and treat drug abuse,
addiction, and the opioid crisis. The Commission's report \3\ included
a recommendation for CMS to ``. . . review and modify ratesetting
policies that discourage the use of non-opioid treatments for pain,
such as certain bundled payments that make alternative treatment
options cost prohibitive for hospitals and doctors, particularly those
options for treating immediate postsurgical pain . . . .'' \4\ With
respect to the packaging policy, the Commission's report states that
``. . . the current CMS payment policy for `supplies' related to
surgical procedures creates unintended incentives to prescribe opioid
medications to patients for postsurgical pain instead of administering
non-opioid pain medications. Under current policies, CMS provides one
all-inclusive bundled payment to hospitals for all `surgical supplies,'
which includes hospital administered drug products intended to manage
patients' postsurgical pain. This policy results in the hospitals
receiving the same fixed fee from Medicare whether the surgeon
administers a non-opioid medication or not.'' \5\ HHS also presented an
Opioid Strategy in April 2017 \6\ that aims in part to support cutting-
edge research and advance the practice of pain management. On October
26, 2017, the President declared the opioid crisis a national public
health emergency under Federal law \7\ and this declaration was most
recently renewed on April 19, 2019.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the
Opioid Crisis, Report (2017). Available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/images/Final_Report_Draft_11-1-2017.pdf.
\4\ Ibid, at page 57, Recommendation 19.
\5\ Ibid.
\6\ Available at: https://www.hhs.gov/about/leadership/secretary/speeches/2017-speeches/secretary-price-announces-hhs-strategy-for-fighting-opioid-crisis/.
\7\ Available at: https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2017/10/26/hhs-acting-secretary-declares-public-health-emergency-address-national-opioid-crisis.html.
\8\ Available at: https://www.phe.gov/emergency/news/healthactions/phe/Pages/default.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the CY 2019 rulemaking, we reviewed available literature with
respect to Exparel[supreg], including a briefing document \9\ submitted
for FDA Advisory Committee Meeting held February 14-15, 2018, by the
manufacturer of Exparel[supreg] that notes that ``. . . Bupivacaine,
the active pharmaceutical ingredient in Exparel[supreg], is a local
anesthetic that has been used for infiltration/field block and
peripheral nerve block for decades'' and that ``since its approval,
Exparel[supreg] has been used extensively, with an estimated 3.5
million patient exposures in the US.'' \10\ On April 6, 2018, FDA
approved Exparel[supreg]'s new indication for use as an interscalene
brachial plexus nerve block to produce postsurgical regional
analgesia.\11\ Therefore, we also stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule that, based on our review of currently available OPPS
Medicare claims data and public information from the manufacturer of
the drug, we did not believe that the OPPS packaging policy had
discouraged the use of Exparel[supreg] for either of the drug's
indications when furnished in the hospital outpatient department
setting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Food and Drug Administration, Meeting of the Anesthetic and
Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee Briefing Document (2018).
Available at: https://www.fda.gov/downloads/AdvisoryCommittees/CommitteesMeetingMaterials/Drugs/AnestheticAndAnalgesicDrugProductsAdvisoryCommittee/UCM596314.pdf.
\10\ Ibid, page 9.
\11\ 2018 updated product label available at: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2018/022496s009lbledt.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, in response to stakeholder
comments on the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
52485) and in light of the recommendations regarding payment policies
for certain drugs, we evaluated the impact of our packaging policy for
drugs that function as a supply when used in a surgical procedure on
the utilization of these drugs in both the hospital outpatient
department and the ASC setting. Our packaging policy is that the costs
associated with packaged drugs that function as a supply are included
in the ratesetting methodology for the surgical procedures with which
they are billed, and the payment rate for the associated procedure
reflects the costs of the packaged drugs and other packaged items and
services to the extent they are billed with the procedure. In our
evaluation, we used currently available data to analyze the utilization
patterns associated with
[[Page 61176]]
specific drugs that function as a supply over a 5-year time period to
determine whether this packaging policy reduced the use of these drugs.
If the packaging policy discouraged the use of drugs that function as a
supply or impeded access to these products, we would expect to see a
significant decline in utilization of these drugs over time, although
we note that a decline in utilization could also reflect other factors,
such as the availability of alternative products, or a combination
thereof.
The results of the evaluation of our packaging policies under the
OPPS and the ASC payment system showed decreased utilization for
certain drugs that function as a supply in the ASC setting, in
comparison to the hospital outpatient department setting. In light of
these results, as well as the Commission's recommendation to examine
payment policies for non-opioid pain management drugs that function as
a supply, we stated that we believe it was appropriate to pay
separately for evidence-based non-opioid pain management drugs that
function as a supply in a surgical procedure in the ASC setting to
address the decreased utilization of these drugs and to encourage use
of these types of drugs rather than prescription opioids. Therefore, in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58855
through 58860), we finalized the proposed policy to unpackage and pay
separately at ASP + 6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as surgical supplies when they are
furnished in the ASC setting for CY 2019. We also stated that we would
continue to analyze the issue of access to non-opioid alternatives in
the hospital outpatient department setting and in the ASC setting as we
implemented section 6082 of the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that
Promotes Opioid Recovery and Treatment for Patients and Communities
(SUPPORT) Act (Pub. L. 115-271) enacted on October 24, 2018 (83 FR
58860 through 58861).
(2) Evaluation and CY 2020 Proposal for Payment for Non-Opioid
Alternatives
Section 1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of the Act, as added by section 6082(a)
of the SUPPORT Act, states that the Secretary must review payments
under the OPPS for opioids and evidence-based non-opioid alternatives
for pain management (including drugs and devices, nerve blocks,
surgical injections, and neuromodulation) with a goal of ensuring that
there are not financial incentives to use opioids instead of non-opioid
alternatives. As part of this review, under section 1833(t)(22)(A)(iii)
of the Act, the Secretary must consider the extent to which revisions
to such payments (such as the creation of additional groups of covered
OPD services to separately classify those procedures that utilize
opioids and non-opioid alternatives for pain management) would reduce
the payment incentives for using opioids instead of non-opioid
alternatives for pain management. In conducting this review and
considering any revisions, the Secretary must focus on covered OPD
services (or groups of services) assigned to C-APCs, APCs that include
surgical services, or services determined by the Secretary that
generally involve treatment for pain management. If the Secretary
identifies revisions to payments pursuant to section
1833(t)(22)(A)(iii) of the Act, section 1833(t)(22)(C) of the Act
requires the Secretary to, as determined appropriate, begin making
revisions for services furnished on or after January 1, 2020. Any
revisions under this paragraph are required to be treated as
adjustments for purposes of paragraph (9)(B), which requires any
adjustments to be made in a budget neutral manner. Pursuant to these
requirements, in our evaluation of whether there are payment incentives
for using opioids instead of non-opioid alternatives, for the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we used currently available data to analyze the
payment and utilization patterns associated with specific non-opioid
alternatives, including drugs that function as a supply, nerve blocks,
and neuromodulation products, to determine whether our packaging
policies have reduced the use of non-opioid alternatives. We focused on
covered OPD services for this review, including services assigned to C-
APCs, surgical APCs, and other pain management services. We believed
that if the packaging policy discouraged the use of these non-opioid
alternatives or impeded access to these products, we would expect to
see a decline in the utilization over time, although we note that a
decline in utilization could also reflect other factors, such as the
availability of alternative products or a combination thereof.
We evaluated continuous peripheral nerve blocks and neuromodulation
alternatives to determine if the current packaging policy represented a
barrier to access. For each product, we examined the most recently
available Medicare claims data. All of the alternatives examined showed
consistent or increasing utilization in recent years, with no products
showing decreases in utilization.
We also evaluated drugs that function as surgical supplies over a
6-year time period (CYs 2013 through 2018). During our evaluation, we
did not observe significant declines in the total number of units used
in the hospital outpatient department for a majority of the drugs
included in our analysis. In fact, under the OPPS, we observed the
opposite effect for several drugs that function as surgical supplies,
including Exparel[supreg] (HCPCS code C9290). This trend indicates
appropriate packaged payments that adequately reflect the cost of the
drug and are not prohibiting beneficiary access.
From CYs 2013 through 2018, we found that there was an overall
increase in the OPPS Medicare utilization of Exparel[supreg] of
approximately 491 percent (from 2.3 million units to 13.6 million
units) during this 6-year time period. The total number of claims
reporting the use of Exparel[supreg] increased by 463 percent (from
10,609 claims to 59,724 claims) over this 6-year time period. This
increase in utilization continued, even after the expiration of the 3-
year period of pass-through payment status for this drug in 2014,
resulting in a 109-percent overall increase in the total number of
units used between CYs 2015 and 2018, from 6.5 million units to 13.6
million units. The number of claims reporting the use of
Exparel[supreg] increased by 112 percent during this time period, from
28,166 claims to 59,724 claims.
The results of our review and evaluation of our claims data do not
provide evidence to indicate that the OPPS packaging policy has had the
unintended consequence of discouraging the use of non-opioid treatments
for postsurgical pain management in the hospital outpatient department.
Therefore, based on this data evaluation, we stated in the proposed
rule that we do not believe that changes are necessary under the OPPS
for the packaged drug policy for drugs that function as a surgical
supply, nerve blocks, surgical injections, and neuromodulation products
when used in a surgical procedure in the OPPS setting at this time.
For Exparel[supreg], we reviewed claims data for development of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and, based on these data and available
literature, we concluded that there is no clear evidence that the OPPS
packaging policy discourages the use of Exparel[supreg] for either of
the drug's indications in the hospital outpatient department setting
because the use of Exparel[supreg] continues to increase in this
setting. Accordingly, we stated in the proposed rule that we continue
to believe it is appropriate to package payment for the use of
[[Page 61177]]
Exparel[supreg], as we do for other postsurgical pain management drugs,
when it is furnished in a hospital outpatient department. In addition,
our updated review of claims data for the proposed rule showed a
continued decline in the utilization of Exparel[supreg] in the ASC
setting, which we believed supports our proposal to continue paying
separately for Exparel[supreg] in the ASC setting.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we proposed to continue our policy to pay
separately at ASP+6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain management
drugs that function as surgical supplies in the performance of surgical
procedures when they are furnished in the ASC setting and to continue
to package payment for non-opioid pain management drugs that function
as surgical supplies in the performance of surgical procedures in the
hospital outpatient department setting for CY 2020. However, we invited
public comments on this proposal and asked the public to provide peer-
reviewed evidence, if any, to describe existing evidence-based non-
opioid pain management therapies used in the outpatient and ASC
setting. We also invited the public to provide detailed claims-based
evidence to document how specific unfavorable utilization trends are
due to the financial incentives of the payment systems rather than
other factors.
Multiple stakeholders, largely manufacturers of devices and drugs,
requested separate payments for various non-opioid pain management
treatments, such as continuous nerve blocks (including a disposable
elastomeric pump that delivers non-opioid local anesthetic to a
surgical site or nerve), cooled thermal radiofrequency ablation, and
local anesthetics designed to reduce postoperative pain for cataract
surgery and other procedures. These stakeholders suggested various
mechanisms through which separate payment or a higher-paying APC
assignment for the primary service could be made. The stakeholders
offered surveys, reports, studies, and anecdotal evidence of varying
degrees to support why the devices, drugs, or services offer an
alternative to or a reduction of the need for opioid prescriptions. The
majority of these stakeholder offerings lacked adequate sample size,
contained possible conflicts of interest such as studies conducted by
employees of device manufacturers, have not been fully published in
peer-reviewed literature, or have only provided anecdotal evidence as
to how the drug or device could serve as an alternative to, or reduce
the need for, opioid prescriptions.
After reviewing the data from stakeholders and Medicare claims
data, we did not find compelling evidence to suggest that revisions to
our OPPS payment policies for non-opioid pain management alternatives
are necessary for CY 2020. Additionally, MedPAC's March 2019 Report to
Congress supports our conclusion; specifically, Chapter 16 of MedPAC's
report, titled Mandated Report: Opioids and Alternatives in Hospital
Settings--Payments, Incentives, and Medicare Data, concludes that there
is no clear indication that Medicare's OPPS provides systematic payment
incentives that promote the use of opioid analgesics over non-opioid
analgesics.\12\ However, we invited public comments on whether there
were other non-opioid pain management alternatives for which our
payment policy should be revised to allow separate payment. We
requested public comments that provided evidence-based support, such as
published peer-reviewed literature, that we could use to determine
whether these products help to deter or avoid prescription opioid use
and addiction as well as evidence that the current packaged payment for
such non-opioid alternatives presents a barrier to access to care and
therefore warrants revised, including possibly separate, payment under
the OPPS. We noted that evidence that current payment policy provides a
payment incentive for using opioids instead of non-opioid alternatives
should align with available Medicare claims data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/-documents-/reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We provide a summary of the comments received and our responses to
those comments below.
Comment: Multiple commenters, including hospital associations,
medical specialty societies, and drug manufacturers, requested that we
pay separately for Exparel and other drugs that function as surgical
supply in the hospital outpatient setting. Some of these commenters
noted that Exparel is more frequently used in this setting and the use
of non-opioid pain management treatments should also be encouraged in
the hospital outpatient department. The manufacturer of Exparel, Pacira
Pharmaceuticals, presented a 5-year OPPS claims data analysis of
hospital trends in Exparel use and a 200 hospital survey on purchasing
decisions for non-opioid alternatives, concluding that Medicare's
packaging policy has led to hospitals reducing or stopping Exparel use.
Response: As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR
58856), we do not believe that there is sufficient evidence that non-
opioid pain management drugs should be paid separately in the hospital
outpatient setting at this time. The commenters did not provide
evidence that the OPPS packaging policy for Exparel (or other non-
opioid drugs) creates a barrier to use of Exparel in the hospital
setting. Further, while we received some public comments suggesting
that, as a result of using Exparel in the OPPS setting, providers may
prescribe fewer opioids for Medicare beneficiaries, we do not believe
that the OPPS payment policy presents a barrier to use of Exparel or
affects the likelihood that providers will prescribe fewer opioids in
the HOPD setting. Several drugs are packaged under the OPPS and payment
for such drugs is included in the payment for the associated primary
procedure. We were not persuaded by the information supplied by
commenters suggesting that some providers avoid use of non-opioid
alternatives (including Exparel) solely because of the OPPS packaged
payment policy. We observed increasing Exparel utilization in the HOPD
setting with the total units increasing from 9.0 million in 2017 to
13.6 million in 2018, despite the bundled payment in the OPPS setting.
This upward trend has been consistent since 2015, as the data shows
approximately 6.5 million total units in 2015 and 8.1 million total
units in 2016. Therefore, we do not believe that the current OPPS
payment methodology for Exparel and other non-opioid pain management
drugs presents a widespread barrier to their use.
In addition, higher use in the hospital outpatient setting not only
supports the notion that the packaged payment for Exparel is not
causing an access to care issue, but also that the payment rate for
primary procedures in the HOPD using Exparel adequately reflects the
cost of the drug. That is, because Exparel is commonly used and billed
under the OPPS, the APC rates for the primary procedures reflect such
utilization. Therefore, the higher utilization in the OPPS setting
should mitigate the need for separate payment. We remind readers that
the OPPS is a prospective payment system, not a cost-based system and,
by design, is based on a system of averages under which payment for
certain cases may exceed the costs incurred, while for others, it may
not. As stated earlier in this section, the OPPS packages payments for
multiple interrelated items and services into a single payment to
create incentives for hospitals to furnish
[[Page 61178]]
services most efficiently and to manage their resources with maximum
flexibility. Our packaging policies support our strategic goal of using
larger payment bundles in the OPPS to maximize hospitals' incentives to
provide care in the most efficient manner. We continue to invite
stakeholders to share evidence, such as published peer-reviewed
literature, on these non-opioid alternatives. We also intend to
continue to analyze the evidence and monitor utilization of non-opioid
alternatives in the OPD and ASC settings for potential future
rulemaking.
We also stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that, although
we found increases in utilization for Exparel when it is paid under the
OPPS, we did notice a continued decline in Exparel utilization in the
ASC setting. While several variables may contribute to this difference
in utilization and claims reporting between the hospital outpatient
department and the ASC setting, one potential explanation is that, in
comparison to hospital outpatient departments, ASCs tend to provide
specialized care and a more limited range of services. Also, ASCs are
paid, in aggregate, approximately 55 percent of the OPPS rate.
Therefore, fluctuations in payment rates for specific services may
impact these providers more acutely than hospital outpatient
departments, and as a result, ASCs may be less likely to choose to
furnish non-opioid postsurgical pain management treatments, which are
typically more expensive than opioids. Another possible contributing
factor is that ASCs do not typically report packaged items and services
and, accordingly, our analysis may be undercounting the number of
Exparel units utilized in the ASC setting.
Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal to continue to unpackage
and pay separately for the cost of non-opioid pain management drugs
that function as surgical supplies when they are furnished in the ASC
setting without modification. This policy and related comments are
addressed in section XIII.D.3. of this final rule with comment period.
As we stated previously in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59250), our packaging policies are designed to
support our strategic goal of using larger payment bundles in the OPPS
to maximize hospitals' incentives to provide clinically appropriate
care in the most efficient manner. The packaging policies established
under the OPPS also typically apply when services are provided in the
ASC setting, and the policies have the same strategic goals in both
settings. While unpackaging and paying separately for drugs that
function as surgical supplies is a departure from our overall packaging
policy for drugs, we believe that the proposed change will continue to
incentivize the use of non-opioid pain management drugs and is
responsive to the Commission's recommendation to examine payment
policies for non-opioid pain management drugs that function as a
supply, with the overall goal of combating the current opioid addiction
crisis. As previously noted, a discussion of the CY 2020 proposal for
payment of non-opioid pain management drugs in the ASC setting was
presented in further detail in section XIII.D.3 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, and we refer readers to section XIII.D.3 of this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period for further discussion of the
final policy for CY 2020. As stated above, we also requested public
comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that provide peer-
reviewed evidence, such as published peer-reviewed literature, that we
could use to determine whether these products help to deter or avoid
prescription opioid use and addiction as well as evidence that the
current packaged payment for such non-opioid alternatives presents a
barrier to access to care and therefore warrants revised, including
possibly separate, payment under the OPPS. We also stated that evidence
that current payment policy provides a payment incentive for using
opioids instead of non-opioid alternatives should align with available
Medicare claims data.
Comment: Several commenters supported the assignment of status
indicator ``K'' (Nonpass-Through Drugs and Nonimplantable Biologicals,
Including Therapeutic Radiopharmaceuticals) and continuing to pay
separately for the drug Prialt (HCPCS J2278, injection, ziconitide), a
non-narcotic pain reliever administered via intrathecal injection.
Commenters provided data indicating that Prialt potentially could lower
opioid use, including opioids such as morphine. In addition to
continued separate payment, several commenters recommended CMS reduce
or eliminate the coinsurance for the drug in order to increase
beneficiary access. Commenters stated that due to the drug's
significant cost, the 20 percent coinsurance would put the drug out of
reach for beneficiaries. Additionally, commenters stated that there is
not enough financial incentive for providers to use Prialt in their
patients compared to lower cost opioids. Commenters claim that Prialt
is only paid at invoice cost, which they believe discourages provider
use.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback and for their
support of the continued assignment of status indicator ``K'' to HCPCS
J2278. Prialt is paid at its average sales price plus 6 percent
according to the ASP methodology under the OPPS. We note that under
section 1833(t)(8) of the Act, the payment is subject to applicable
deductible and coinsurance, and we are unaware of statutory authority
to alter beneficiary coinsurance for payments made under the OPPS. We
note that because the dollar value of beneficiary coinsurance is
directly proportionate to the payment rate (which is ASP + 6 percent
for HCPCS code J2278), a lower sales price for the drug (which would
lead to a lower Medicare payment rate under current policy) would be
necessary for beneficiaries to have a lower coinsurance amount.
Comment: Many commenters requested that the drug Omidria (HCPCS
code C9447, injection, phenylephrine ketorolac) be excluded from the
packaging policy once its pass-through status expires on September 30,
2020. Omidria is indicated for maintaining pupil size by preventing
intraoperative miosis and reducing postoperative ocular pain in
cataract or intraocular surgeries. The commenters stated that the
available data and multiple peer-reviewed articles on Omidria meet the
section 6082 criteria for packaging exclusion. Commenters asserted that
the use of Omidria decreases patients' need for fentanyl during
surgeries and another commenter stated that Omidria reduces opioid use
after cataract surgeries. In addition, commenters asserted that the
OPPS and ASC payment system do not address the cost of packaged
products used by small patient populations. Therefore, the OPPS and ASC
payment structures for packaged supplies creates an access barrier and
patients are forced to use inferior products that have increased
complication risk and require the continued use of opioids to manage
pain. One commenter referenced the results of a study that showed that
Omidria reduces the need for opioids during cataract surgery by nearly
80 percent while decreasing pain scores by more than 50 percent.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback on Omidria.
Omidria received pass-through status for a 3-year period from 2015 to
2017. After expiration of its pass-through status, it was packaged per
OPPS policy. Subsequently, Omidria's pass-through status was reinstated
in October 2018
[[Page 61179]]
through September 30, 2020 as required by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the
Act, as added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141). While our analysis supports
the commenter's assertion that there was a decrease in the utilization
of Omidria in 2018 following its pass-through expiration, we note that
there could be many reasons that utilization declines after the pass-
through period ends that are unrelated to the lack of separate payment,
including the availability of other alternatives on the market (many of
which had been used for several years before Omidria came on the market
and are sold for a lower price), or physician preference among others.
Further, our clinical advisors' review of the clinical evidence
submitted concluded that the study the commenter submitted was not
sufficiently compelling or authoritative to overcome contrary evidence.
Moreover, the results of a CMS study of cataract procedures performed
on Medicare beneficiaries in the OPPS between January 2015 and July
2019 comparing procedures performed with Omidria to procedures
performed without Omidria did not demonstrate a significant decrease in
fentanyl utilization during the cataract surgeries in the OPPS when
Omidria was used. Our results also did not suggest any decrease in
opioid utilization post-surgery for procedures involving Omidria. At
this time, we do not have compelling evidence to exclude Omidria from
packaging after its current pass-through expires on September 30, 2020.
We will continue to analyze the evidence and monitor utilization of
this drug.
Comment: One commenter requested that MKO Melt, a non-FDA-approved,
compounded drug comprised of midazolam/ketamine/ondansetron be excluded
from the packaging policy under section 1833(t)(22)(A)(iii) of the Act.
The commenter contended that MKO Melt are drugs functioning as a
surgical supply in the ASC setting. The commenter provided a reference
to a study titled, ``Anesthesia for opioid addict: Challenges for
perioperative physician'' by Goyal et al., on the need for pain
management in the opioid-dependent patient. The commenter also
referenced a review article, ``Perioperative Management of Acute Pain
in the Opioid-dependent Patient,'' by Mitra et al., on the special
needs of opioid-dependent patients in surgeries and the potential
opioid relapse in those patients who are recovering from opioid use
disorder. Additionally, the commenter referenced a clinical trial
registered in clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03653520) that supports sublingual
MKO Melt for use during cataract surgeries to replace opioids. The
study looked at 611 patients that were divided into three arms: (1) MKO
melt arm, (2) diazepam/tramadol/ondansetron arm, (3) diazepam only arm.
The study concluded that the MKO melt arm had the lowest incidence for
supplemental injectable anesthesia to control pain.
Response: We thank the commenter for the comment. Based on the
information provided, we are not able to validate that MKO Melt reduces
the use of opioids. We note that ketamine, one of the components of MKO
melt, exhibits some addictive properties. Moreover, we did not identify
any compelling evidence that MKO Melt is effective for patients with a
prior opioid addiction nor did we receive any data demonstrating that
the current OPPS packaging policy incentivized providers to use opioids
over MKO Melt. In accordance with our review under section
1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of the Act, as well as the lack of HCPCS code for the
drug, and FDA approval, we were not able to establish any compelling
evidence that MKO should be excluded from packaged payment.
Comment: Several commenters, including individual physicians,
medical associations, and device manufacturers, supported separate
payment for continuous peripheral nerve blocks as the commenters
believed they significantly reduce opioid use. One commenter suggested
that CMS provide separate payment for HCPCS code A4306 (Disposable drug
delivery system, flow rate of less than 50 ml per hour) in the hospital
outpatient department setting and the ASC setting because packaging
represents a cost barrier for providers. The commenter contended that
continuous nerve block procedures have been shown in high quality
clinical studies to reduce the use of opioids, attaching studies for
review. The commenter stated that separate payment for A4306 will
remove the financial disincentive for HOPDs and ASCs to use these
items, and would encourage continuous nerve blocks as a non-opioid
alternative for post-surgical pain management.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestion. We examined the
data for A4306 and noted an overall trend of increasing utilization
from CY 2014 through CY 2017. There was a slight decrease in
utilization in CY 2018. However, we note that this slight decline may
be an outlier, given the four year trend of consistently increasing
utilization. Additionally, the geometric mean cost for HCPCS code A4306
was approximately $30 each year during that 4-year period. We
acknowledge that use of these items may help in the reduction of opioid
use. However, we note that packaged payment of such an item does not
prevent the use of these items, as we found with the overall increased
utilization of this product. We do not believe that the current
utilization trends for HCPCS code A4306 suggest that the packaged
payment is preventing use and remind readers that payment for packaged
items is included in the payment for the primary service. We share the
commenter's concern about the need to reduce opioid use and will take
the commenter's suggestion regarding the need for separate payment for
HCPCS code A4306 into consideration for future rulemaking.
Comment: Multiple commenters identified other non-opioid pain
management alternatives that they believe decrease the dose, duration,
and/or number of opioid prescriptions beneficiaries receive during and
following an outpatient visit or procedure (especially for
beneficiaries at high-risk for opioid addiction) and that may warrant
separate payment for CY 2020. Commenters representing various
stakeholders requested separate payments for various non-opioid pain
management treatments, such as continuous nerve blocks, neuromodulation
radiofrequency ablation, implants for lumbar stenosis, enhanced
recovery after surgery, IV acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, Polar ice
devices for postoperative pain relief, THC oil, acupuncture, and dry
needling procedures.
For neuromodulation, several commenters noted that spinal cord
stimulators (SCS) may lead to a reduction in the use of opioids for
chronic pain patients. One manufacturer commented that SCS provides the
opportunity to potentially stabilize or decrease opioid usage and that
neuromodulation retains its efficacy over multiple years. Regarding
barriers to access, the commenter noted that Medicare beneficiaries
often do not have access to SCS until after they have exhausted other
treatments, which often includes opioids. The commenter presented
evidence from observational studies that use of SCS earlier in a
patient's treatment could help reduce opioid use while controlling
pain, suggesting CMS look for ways to incorporate SCS earlier in the
treatment continuum.
Another commenter asserted that the standard endpoints, such as a
greater than 50 percent reduction in pain, that are used to determine
if a neuromodulation-based non-opioid pain
[[Page 61180]]
alternative therapy is effective are well-established and validated in
all types of clinical trials and that CMS should establish a general,
national coverage determination for neuromodulation-based non-opioid
pain therapy based on these endpoints, rather than taking the time to
create and process specific national coverage determinations or local
coverage determinations. The commenter suggested that this would be a
much faster and streamlined process for enhancing Medicare beneficiary
access to neuromodulation-based pain management therapies.
One of the manufacturers of a high-frequency SCS device stated that
additional payment was warranted for non-opioid pain management
treatments because they provide an alternative treatment option to
opioids for patients with chronic, leg, or back pain. The commenter
provided supporting studies that claimed that patients treated with
their high-frequency SCS device reported a statistically significant
average decrease in opioid use compared to the control group. This
commenter also submitted data that showed a decline in the mean daily
dosage of opioid medication taken and that fewer patients were relying
on opioids at all to manage their pain when they used the
manufacturer's device.
Other commenters wrote regarding their personal experiences with
radiofrequency ablation for sacral iliac joints and knees. One
commenter referenced several studies, one of which found a decrease in
analgesic medications associated with radiofrequency ablation; however,
it did not provide evidence regarding a decrease in opioid usage.
One national hospital association commenter recommended that while
``certainly not a solution to the opioid epidemic, unpackaging
appropriate non-opioid therapies, like Exparel, is a low-cost tactic
that could change long-standing practice patterns without major
negative consequences.'' This same commenter suggested that Medicare
consider separate payment for IV acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, and Polar
ice devices for postoperative pain relief after knee procedures. The
commenter also noted that therapeutic massage, topically applied THC
oil, acupuncture, and dry needling procedures are very effective
therapies for relief of both postoperative pain and long-term and
chronic pain. Several other commenters expressed support for separate
payment for IV acetaminophen.
Response: We appreciate the detailed responses from commenters on
this topic. At this time, we have not found compelling evidence for
other non-opioid pain management alternatives described above to
warrant separate payment under the OPPS or ASC payment systems for CY
2020. We plan to take these comments and suggestions into consideration
for future rulemaking. We agree that providing incentives to avoid and/
or reduce opioid prescriptions may be one of several strategies for
addressing the opioid epidemic. To the extent that the items and
services mentioned by the commenters are effective alternatives to
opioid prescriptions, we encourage providers to use them when medically
necessary. We note that some of the items and services mentioned by
commenters are not covered by Medicare, and we do not intend to
establish payment for noncovered items and services at this time. We
look forward to working with stakeholders as we further consider
suggested refinements to the OPPS and the ASC payment system that will
encourage use of medically necessary items and services that have
demonstrated efficacy in decreasing opioid prescriptions and/or opioid
abuse or misuse during or after an outpatient visit or procedure.
After reviewing the non-opioid pain management alternatives
suggested by the commenters as well as the studies and other data
provided to support the request for separate payment, we have not
determined that separate payment is warranted at this time for any of
the non-opioid pain management alternatives discussed above.
Comment: Several commenters addressed payment barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid pain management treatments discussed
throughout this section. Several commenters disagreed with CMS's
assessment that current payment policies do not represent barriers to
access for certain non-opioid pain management alternatives. Commenters
encouraged CMS to provide timely insurance coverage for evidence-
informed interventional procedures early in the course of treatment
when clinically appropriate. Several other commenters encouraged CMS to
more broadly evaluate all of its packaging policies to help ensure
patient access to appropriate therapies and to evaluate how packaging
affects the utilization of a medicine.
Response: We appreciate the various, insightful comments we
received from stakeholders regarding barriers that may inhibit access
to non-opioid alternatives for pain treatment and management in order
to more effectively address the opioid epidemic. We will take these
comments into consideration for future rulemaking. Many of these
comments have been previously addressed throughout this section. CMS
recognizes that medical exposure to opioids entails inherent risks,
which may include delayed recovery, diversion, misuse, accidental
overdose, development or re-emergence of addiction, and neonatal
abstinence syndrome. However, there are challenges in developing a
methodology to identify disincentives to use opioid alternatives. In
the context of the opioid crisis, and given the central role the
federal government plays in addressing it, these issues are of
particular concern to CMS. Because of this, CMS intends to work with an
interagency task force to review available data and to develop criteria
for revisions to payment for opioid alternatives that are effective for
pain relief or in reducing opioid use.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed policy, without modification, to unpackage and
pay separately at ASP+6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain
management drugs that function as surgical supplies when they are
furnished in the ASC setting for CY 2020. Under this policy, the only
FDA-approved drug that meets this criteria is Exparel.
We will continue to analyze the issue of access to non-opioid
alternatives in the OPPS and the ASC settings for any subsequent
reviews we conduct under section 1833(t)(22)(A)(ii). We are continuing
to examine whether there are other non-opioid pain management
alternatives for which our payment policy should be revised to allow
separate payment. We will be reviewing evidence-based support, such as
published peer-reviewed literature, that we could use to determine
whether these products help to deter or avoid prescription opioid use
and addiction as well as evidence that the current packaged payment for
such non-opioid alternatives presents a barrier to access to care and
therefore warrants revised, including possibly separate, payment under
the OPPS. This policy is also discussed in section XII.D.3 of this
final rule with comment period.
4. Calculation of OPPS Scaled Payment Weights
We established a policy in the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68283) of using geometric mean-based APC costs to
calculate relative payment weights under the OPPS. In the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58860 through 58861), we
applied this policy and calculated the relative payment weights for
each APC for CY 2019 that were shown in Addenda A
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and B to that final rule with comment period (which were made available
via the internet on the CMS website) using the APC costs discussed in
sections II.A.1. and II.A.2. of that final rule with comment period.
For CY 2020, as we did for CY 2019, we proposed to continue to apply
the policy established in CY 2013 and calculate relative payment
weights for each APC for CY 2020 using geometric mean-based APC costs.
For CY 2012 and CY 2013, outpatient clinic visits were assigned to
one of five levels of clinic visit APCs, with APC 0606 representing a
mid-level clinic visit. In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75036 through 75043), we finalized a policy that created
alphanumeric HCPCS code G0463 (Hospital outpatient clinic visit for
assessment and management of a patient), representing any and all
clinic visits under the OPPS. HCPCS code G0463 was assigned to APC 0634
(Hospital Clinic Visits). We also finalized a policy to use CY 2012
claims data to develop the CY 2014 OPPS payment rates for HCPCS code
G0463 based on the total geometric mean cost of the levels one through
five CPT E/M codes for clinic visits previously recognized under the
OPPS (CPT codes 99201 through 99205 and 99211 through 99215). In
addition, we finalized a policy to no longer recognize a distinction
between new and established patient clinic visits.
For CY 2016, we deleted APC 0634 and reassigned the outpatient
clinic visit HCPCS code G0463 to APC 5012 (Level 2 Examinations and
Related Services) (80 FR 70372). For CY 2020, as we did for CY 2019, we
proposed to continue to standardize all of the relative payment weights
to APC 5012. We believe that standardizing relative payment weights to
the geometric mean of the APC to which HCPCS code G0463 is assigned
maintains consistency in calculating unscaled weights that represent
the cost of some of the most frequently provided OPPS services. For CY
2020, as we did for CY 2019, we proposed to assign APC 5012 a relative
payment weight of 1.00 and to divide the geometric mean cost of each
APC by the geometric mean cost for APC 5012 to derive the unscaled
relative payment weight for each APC. The choice of the APC on which to
standardize the relative payment weights does not affect payments made
under the OPPS because we scale the weights for budget neutrality.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal to continue
to use the geometric mean cost of APC 5012 to standardize relative
payment weights for CY 2020. Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal
and assigning APC 5012 the relative payment weight of 1.00, and using
the relative payment weight for APC 5012 to derive the unscaled
relative payment weight for each APC for CY 2020.
We note that in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(83 FR 59004 through 59015), we discuss our policy, implemented on
January 1, 2019, to control for unnecessary increases in the volume of
covered outpatient department services by paying for clinic visits
furnished at excepted off-campus provider-based department (PBD) at a
reduced rate, and we are continuing the policy with the second year of
the two-year transition in CY 2020. While the volume associated with
these visits is included in the impact model, and thus used in
calculating the weight scalar, the policy has a negligible effect on
the scalar. Specifically, under this policy, there is no change to the
relativity of the OPPS payment weights because the adjustment is made
at the payment level rather than in the cost modeling. Further, under
this policy, the savings that will result from the change in payments
for these clinic visits will not be budget neutral. Therefore, the
impact of this policy will generally not be reflected in the budget
neutrality adjustments, whether the adjustment is to the OPPS relative
weights or to the OPPS conversion factor. We refer readers to section
X.C. of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period for
further discussion of this final policy.
Section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act requires that APC reclassification
and recalibration changes, wage index changes, and other adjustments be
made in a budget neutral manner. Budget neutrality ensures that the
estimated aggregate weight under the OPPS for CY 2020 is neither
greater than nor less than the estimated aggregate weight that would
have been calculated without the changes. To comply with this
requirement concerning the APC changes, we proposed to compare the
estimated aggregate weight using the CY 2019 scaled relative payment
weights to the estimated aggregate weight using the proposed CY 2020
unscaled relative payment weights.
For CY 2019, we multiplied the CY 2019 scaled APC relative payment
weight applicable to a service paid under the OPPS by the volume of
that service from CY 2018 claims to calculate the total relative
payment weight for each service. We then added together the total
relative payment weight for each of these services in order to
calculate an estimated aggregate weight for the year. For CY 2020, we
proposed to apply the same process using the estimated CY 2020 unscaled
relative payment weights rather than scaled relative payment weights.
We proposed to calculate the weight scalar by dividing the CY 2019
estimated aggregate weight by the unscaled CY 2020 estimated aggregate
weight.
For a detailed discussion of the weight scalar calculation, we
refer readers to the OPPS claims accounting document available on the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/. Click on the CY 2020 OPPS
final rule link and open the claims accounting document link at the
bottom of the page.
We proposed to compare the estimated unscaled relative payment
weights in CY 2020 to the estimated total relative payment weights in
CY 2019 using CY 2018 claims data, holding all other components of the
payment system constant to isolate changes in total weight. Based on
this comparison, we proposed to adjust the calculated CY 2020 unscaled
relative payment weights for purposes of budget neutrality. We proposed
to adjust the estimated CY 2020 unscaled relative payment weights by
multiplying them by a proposed weight scalar of 1.4401 to ensure that
the proposed CY 2020 relative payment weights are scaled to be budget
neutral. The proposed CY 2020 relative payment weights listed in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (which are available via the
internet on the CMS website) were scaled and incorporated the
recalibration adjustments discussed in sections II.A.1. and II.A.2. of
the proposed rule.
Section 1833(t)(14) of the Act provides the payment rates for
certain SCODs. Section 1833(t)(14)(H) of the Act provides that
additional expenditures resulting from this paragraph shall not be
taken into account in establishing the conversion factor, weighting,
and other adjustment factors for 2004 and 2005 under paragraph (9), but
shall be taken into account for subsequent years. Therefore, the cost
of those SCODs (as discussed in section V.B.2. of this final rule with
comment period) is included in the budget neutrality calculations for
the CY 2020 OPPS.
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed weight
scalar calculation. Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal to use
the calculation process described in the proposed rule, without
modification, for CY 2020. Using updated final rule claims data, we are
updating the
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estimated CY 2020 unscaled relative payment weights by multiplying them
by a weight scalar of 1.4349 to ensure that the final CY 2020 relative
payment weights are scaled to be budget neutral. The final CY 2020
relative payments weights listed in Addenda A and B to this final rule
with comment period (which are available via the internet on the CMS
website) were scaled and incorporate the recalibration adjustments
discussed in sections II.A.1. and II.A.2. of this final rule with
comment period.
B. Conversion Factor Update
Section 1833(t)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act requires the Secretary to
update the conversion factor used to determine the payment rates under
the OPPS on an annual basis by applying the OPD fee schedule increase
factor. For purposes of section 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) of the Act, subject
to sections 1833(t)(17) and 1833(t)(3)(F) of the Act, the OPD fee
schedule increase factor is equal to the hospital inpatient market
basket percentage increase applicable to hospital discharges under
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(iii) of the Act. In the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
proposed rule (84 FR 19401), consistent with current law, based on IHS
Global, Inc.'s fourth quarter 2018 forecast of the FY 2020 market
basket increase, the proposed FY 2020 IPPS market basket update was 3.2
percent. However, sections 1833(t)(3)(F) and 1833(t)(3)(G)(v) of the
Act, as added by section 3401(i) of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-148) and as amended by section
10319(g) of that law and further amended by section 1105(e) of the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-152),
provide adjustments to the OPD fee schedule increase factor for CY
2020.
Specifically, section 1833(t)(3)(F)(i) of the Act requires that,
for 2012 and subsequent years, the OPD fee schedule increase factor
under subparagraph (C)(iv) be reduced by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. Section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act defines the productivity adjustment as
equal to the 10-year moving average of changes in annual economy-wide,
private nonfarm business multifactor productivity (MFP) (as projected
by the Secretary for the 10-year period ending with the applicable
fiscal year, year, cost reporting period, or other annual period) (the
``MFP adjustment''). In the FY 2012 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (76 FR
51689 through 51692), we finalized our methodology for calculating and
applying the MFP adjustment, and then revised this methodology, as
discussed in the FY 2016 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (80 FR 49509).
According to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19402), the
proposed MFP adjustment for FY 2020 was 0.5 percentage point.
For CY 2020, we proposed that the MFP adjustment for the CY 2020
OPPS is 0.5 percentage point (84 FR 39428). We proposed that if more
recent data become subsequently available after the publication of the
proposed rule (for example, a more recent estimate of the market basket
increase and the MFP adjustment), we would use such updated data, if
appropriate, to determine the CY 2020 market basket update and the MFP
adjustment, which are components in calculating the OPD fee schedule
increase factor under sections 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) and 1833(t)(3)(F) of
the Act, in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
We note that section 1833(t)(3)(F) of the Act provides that
application of this subparagraph may result in the OPD fee schedule
increase factor under section 1833(t)(3)(C)(iv) of the Act being less
than 0.0 percent for a year, and may result in OPPS payment rates being
less than rates for the preceding year. As described in further detail
below, we proposed for CY 2020 an OPD fee schedule increase factor of
2.7 percent for the CY 2020 OPPS (which was 3.2 percent, the final
estimate of the hospital inpatient market basket percentage increase,
less the final 0.5 percentage point MFP adjustment).
We proposed that hospitals that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program reporting requirements would be subject to an additional
reduction of 2.0 percentage points from the OPD fee schedule increase
factor adjustment to the conversion factor that would be used to
calculate the OPPS payment rates for their services, as required by
section 1833(t)(17) of the Act. For further discussion of the Hospital
OQR Program, we refer readers to section XIV. of this final rule with
comment period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to amend 42 CFR
419.32(b)(1)(iv)(B) by adding a new paragraph (11) to reflect the
requirement in section 1833(t)(3)(F)(i) of the Act that, for CY 2020,
we reduce the OPD fee schedule increase factor by the MFP adjustment as
determined by CMS.
To set the OPPS conversion factor for CY 2020, we proposed to
increase the CY 2019 conversion factor of $79.490 by 2.7 percent. In
accordance with section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act, we proposed further
to adjust the conversion factor for CY 2020 to ensure that any
revisions made to the wage index and rural adjustment were made on a
budget neutral basis. We proposed to calculate an overall budget
neutrality factor of 0.9993 for wage index changes. This adjustment was
comprised of a 1.0005 proposed budget neutrality adjustment, using our
standard calculation, of comparing proposed total estimated payments
from our simulation model using the proposed FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes
to those payments using the FY 2019 IPPS wage indexes, as adopted on a
calendar year basis for the OPPS as well as a 0.9988 proposed budget
neutrality adjustment for the proposed CY 2020 5 percent cap on wage
index decreases to ensure that this transition wage index is
implemented in a budget neutral manner, consistent with the proposed FY
2020 IPPS wage index policy (84 FR 19398). We stated in the proposed
rule that we believed it was appropriate to ensure that this proposed
wage index transition policy (that is, the proposed CY 2020 5 percent
cap on wage index decreases) did not increase estimated aggregate
payments under the OPPS beyond the payments that would be made without
this transition policy. We proposed to calculate this budget neutrality
adjustment by comparing total estimated OPPS payments using the FY 2020
IPPS wage index, adopted on a calendar year basis for the OPPS, where a
5 percent cap on wage index decreases is not applied to total estimated
OPPS payments where the 5 percent cap on wage index decreases is
applied. We stated in the proposed rule that these two proposed wage
index budget neutrality adjustments would maintain budget neutrality
for the proposed CY 2020 OPPS wage index (which, as we discussed in
section II.C of the proposed rule, would use the FY 2020 IPPS post-
reclassified wage index and any adjustments, including without
limitation any adjustments finalized under the IPPS to address wage
index disparities).
We did not receive any public comments on our proposed methodology
for calculating the wage index budget neutrality adjustments discussed
earlier in this section. Therefore, for the reasons discussed above and
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39428 through 39429), we
are finalizing our methodology for calculating the wage index budget
neutrality adjustments as proposed, without modification. For CY 2020,
we are finalizing an overall budget neutrality factor of 0.9981 for
wage index changes. This adjustment is comprised of a 0.9990 budget
neutrality adjustment, using our standard
[[Page 61183]]
calculation of comparing total estimated payments from our simulation
model using the final FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes to those payments using
the FY 2019 IPPS wage indexes, as adopted on a calendar year basis for
the OPPS as well as a 0.9991 budget neutrality adjustment for the CY
2020 5 percent cap on wage index decreases to ensure that this
transition wage index is implemented in a budget neutral manner. We
note that the final wage index budget neutrality adjustment figures set
forth above differ from the figures set forth in the proposed rule due
to updated data for the final rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS, we are maintaining the current rural
adjustment policy, as discussed in section II.E. of the proposed rule.
Therefore, the proposed budget neutrality factor for the rural
adjustment is 1.0000.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to continue
previously established policies for implementing the cancer hospital
payment adjustment described in section 1833(t)(18) of the Act, as
discussed in section II.F. of the proposed rule and this final rule
with comment period. We proposed to calculate a CY 2020 budget
neutrality adjustment factor for the cancer hospital payment adjustment
by comparing estimated total CY 2020 payments under section 1833(t) of
the Act, including the proposed CY 2020 cancer hospital payment
adjustment, to estimated CY 2020 total payments using the CY 2019 final
cancer hospital payment adjustment, as required under section
1833(t)(18)(B) of the Act. The proposed CY 2020 estimated payments
applying the proposed CY 2020 cancer hospital payment adjustment were
the same as estimated payments applying the CY 2019 final cancer
hospital payment adjustment. Therefore, we proposed to apply a budget
neutrality adjustment factor of 0.9998 to the conversion factor for the
cancer hospital payment adjustment. In accordance with section 16002(b)
of the 21st Century Cures Act, we stated in the proposed rule that we
are applying a budget neutrality factor calculated as if the proposed
cancer hospital adjustment target payment-to-cost ratio was 0.90, not
the 0.89 target payment-to-cost ratio we applied as stated in section
II.F. of the proposed rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we estimated that proposed
pass-through spending for drugs, biologicals, and devices for CY 2020
would equal approximately $268.8 million, which represented 0.34
percent of total projected CY 2020 OPPS spending. Therefore, the
proposed conversion factor would be adjusted by the difference between
the 0.14 percent estimate of pass-through spending for CY 2019 and the
0.34 percent estimate of proposed pass-through spending for CY 2020,
resulting in a proposed decrease for CY 2020 of 0.20 percent. Proposed
estimated payments for outliers would remain at 1.0 percent of total
OPPS payments for CY 2020. We estimated for the proposed rule that
outlier payments would be 1.03 percent of total OPPS payments in CY
2019; the 1.00 percent for proposed outlier payments in CY 2020 would
constitute a 0.03 percent increase in payment in CY 2020 relative to CY
2019.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we also proposed that
hospitals that fail to meet the reporting requirements of the Hospital
OQR Program would continue to be subject to a further reduction of 2.0
percentage points to the OPD fee schedule increase factor. For
hospitals that fail to meet the requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program, we proposed to make all other adjustments discussed above, but
use a reduced OPD fee schedule update factor of 0.7 percent (that is,
the proposed OPD fee schedule increase factor of 2.7 percent further
reduced by 2.0 percentage points). This would result in a proposed
reduced conversion factor for CY 2020 of $79.770 for hospitals that
fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements (a difference of -
1.628 in the conversion factor relative to hospitals that met the
requirements).
In summary, for CY 2020, we proposed to amend Sec. 419.32 by
adding a new paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B)(11) to reflect the reductions to
the OPD fee schedule increase factor that are required for CY 2020 to
satisfy the statutory requirements of sections 1833(t)(3)(F) and
(t)(3)(G)(v) of the Act. We proposed to use a reduced conversion factor
of $79.770 in the calculation of payments for hospitals that fail to
meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements (a difference of -1.628 in
the conversion factor relative to hospitals that met the requirements).
For CY 2020, we proposed to use a conversion factor of $81.398 in
the calculation of the national unadjusted payment rates for those
items and services for which payment rates are calculated using
geometric mean costs; that is, the proposed OPD fee schedule increase
factor of 2.7 percent for CY 2020, the required proposed wage index
budget neutrality adjustment of approximately 0.9993, the proposed
cancer hospital payment adjustment of 0.9998, and the proposed
adjustment of -0.20 percentage point of projected OPPS spending for the
difference in pass-through spending that resulted in a proposed
conversion factor for CY 2020 of $81.398. We referred readers to
section XXVI.B. of the proposed rule for a discussion of the estimated
effect on the conversion factor of a policy to pay for 340B-acquired
drugs at ASP + 3 percent, which is a policy on which we solicited
comments for potential future rulemaking in the event of an adverse
decision on appeal in the ongoing litigation involving our payment
policy for 340B-acquired drugs.
Comment: One commenter, a state hospital association, asserts its
member hospitals receive payments from CMS that are substantially lower
than the costs their members incur to provide services. The commenter
believes underpayments occur because the CMS hospital market basket
estimate of inflation of 2.7 percent substantially underestimates
overall health care inflation which the commenter claims to be between
5.5 percent and 7 percent. The commenter also states that hospital
payments from CMS are reduced because of payment sequestration and the
policy to reduce payment rates for clinic visits at off-campus hospital
outpatient departments to 40 percent of the standard OPPS payment rate.
The commenter suggests that CMS should help hospitals in all states
regain this lost revenue by implementing a much larger annual increase
in the market basket amount. The commenter advocates a 4.7 percent
market basket adjustment in CY 2020, and even larger percentage
increases in following years.
Response: The percentage change in the hospital market basket
reflects the average change in the price of goods and services
purchased by hospitals in order to provide medical care. A general
measure of health care inflation (such as the Consumer Price Index for
Medical Care Services) would not be appropriate as it is not specific
to hospital medical services and is not reflective of the input price
changes experienced by hospitals but rather the inflation experienced
by the consumer for their medical expenses. In addition, the OPPS
conversion factor is not designed to redress payment reductions made in
a non-budget neutral manner. The policies cited by the commenter are
intended to reduce Medicare expenditures. If the conversion factor was
to be increased to offset these payment reductions, it would defeat the
intent of these policy initiatives.
Comment: A commenter expressed their support for the proposed
market basket increase of 2.7 percent.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenter.
[[Page 61184]]
After reviewing the public comments we received, we are finalizing
these proposals without modification. For CY 2020, we proposed to
continue previously established policies for implementing the cancer
hospital payment adjustment described in section 1833(t)(18) of the Act
(discussed in section II.F. of this final rule with comment period).
Based on the final rule updated data used in calculating the cancer
hospital payment adjustment in section II.F. of this final rule with
comment period, the target payment-to-cost ratio for the cancer
hospital payment adjustment, which was 0.88 for CY 2019, is 0.89 for CY
2020. As a result, we are applying a budget neutrality adjustment
factor of 0.9999 to the conversion factor for the cancer hospital
payment adjustment.
As a result of these finalized policies, the OPD fee schedule
increase factor for the CY 2020 OPPS is 2.6 percent (which reflects the
3.0 percent final estimate of the hospital inpatient market basket
percentage increase, less the final 0.4 percentage point MFP
adjustment). For CY 2020, we are using a conversion factor of $80.784
in the calculation of the national unadjusted payment rates for those
items and services for which payment rates are calculated using
geometric mean costs; that is, the OPD fee schedule increase factor of
2.6 percent for CY 2020, the required wage index budget neutrality
adjustment of approximately 0.9981, and the adjustment of 0.88
percentage point of projected OPPS spending for the difference in pass-
through spending that results in a conversion factor for CY 2020 of
$80.784.
C. Wage Index Changes
Section 1833(t)(2)(D) of the Act requires the Secretary to
determine a wage adjustment factor to adjust the portion of payment and
coinsurance attributable to labor-related costs for relative
differences in labor and labor-related costs across geographic regions
in a budget neutral manner (codified at 42 CFR 419.43(a)). This portion
of the OPPS payment rate is called the OPPS labor-related share. Budget
neutrality is discussed in section II.B. of this final rule with
comment period.
The OPPS labor-related share is 60 percent of the national OPPS
payment. This labor-related share is based on a regression analysis
that determined that, for all hospitals, approximately 60 percent of
the costs of services paid under the OPPS were attributable to wage
costs. We confirmed that this labor-related share for outpatient
services is appropriate during our regression analysis for the payment
adjustment for rural hospitals in the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with
comment period (70 FR 68553). In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39429), we proposed to continue this policy for the CY 2020 OPPS. We
refer readers to section II.H. of this final rule with comment period
for a description and an example of how the wage index for a particular
hospital is used to determine payment for the hospital. We did not
receive any public comments on this proposal. Therefore, for the
reasons discussed above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39429), we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to
continue this policy as discussed above for the CY 2020 OPPS.
As discussed in the claims accounting narrative included with the
supporting documentation for this final rule with comment period (which
is available via the internet on the CMS website), for estimating APC
costs, we standardize 60 percent of estimated claims costs for
geographic area wage variation using the same FY 2020 pre-reclassified
wage index that that is used under the IPPS to standardize costs. This
standardization process removes the effects of differences in area wage
levels from the determination of a national unadjusted OPPS payment
rate and copayment amount.
Under 42 CFR 419.41(c)(1) and 419.43(c) (published in the OPPS
April 7, 2000 final rule with comment period (65 FR 18495 and 18545)),
the OPPS adopted the final fiscal year IPPS post-reclassified wage
index as the calendar year wage index for adjusting the OPPS standard
payment amounts for labor market differences. Therefore, the wage index
that applies to a particular acute care, short-stay hospital under the
IPPS also applies to that hospital under the OPPS. As initially
explained in the September 8, 1998 OPPS proposed rule (63 FR 47576), we
believe that using the IPPS wage index as the source of an adjustment
factor for the OPPS is reasonable and logical, given the inseparable,
subordinate status of the HOPD within the hospital overall. In
accordance with section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the IPPS wage index
is updated annually.
The Affordable Care Act contained several provisions affecting the
wage index. These provisions were discussed in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (76 FR 74191). Section 10324 of the
Affordable Care Act added section 1886(d)(3)(E)(iii)(II) to the Act,
which defines a frontier State and amended section 1833(t) of the Act
to add paragraph (19), which requires a frontier State wage index floor
of 1.00 in certain cases, and states that the frontier State floor
shall not be applied in a budget neutral manner. We codified these
requirements at Sec. 419.43(c)(2) and (3) of our regulations. For the
CY 2020 OPPS, we proposed to implement this provision in the same
manner as we have since CY 2011. Under this policy, the frontier State
hospitals would receive a wage index of 1.00 if the otherwise
applicable wage index (including reclassification, the rural floor, and
rural floor budget neutrality) is less than 1.00. Because the HOPD
receives a wage index based on the geographic location of the specific
inpatient hospital with which it is associated, we stated that the
frontier State wage index adjustment applicable for the inpatient
hospital also would apply for any associated HOPD. In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39430), we referred readers to the FY 2011
through FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rules for discussions regarding
this provision, including our methodology for identifying which areas
meet the definition of ``frontier States'' as provided for in section
1886(d)(3)(E)(iii)(II) of the Act: For FY 2011, 75 FR 50160 through
50161; for FY 2012, 76 FR 51793, 51795, and 51825; for FY 2013, 77 FR
53369 through 53370; for FY 2014, 78 FR 50590 through 50591; for FY
2015, 79 FR 49971; for FY 2016, 80 FR 49498; for FY 2017, 81 FR 56922;
for FY 2018, 82 FR 38142; and for FY 2019, 83 FR 41380. We did not
receive any public comments on this proposal. Accordingly, for the
reasons discussed above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39430), we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to
continue to implement the frontier State floor under the OPPS in the
same manner as we have since CY 2011.
In addition to the changes required by the Affordable Care Act, we
noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39430) that the FY
2020 IPPS wage indexes continue to reflect a number of adjustments
implemented over the past few years, including, but not limited to,
reclassification of hospitals to different geographic areas, the rural
floor provisions, an adjustment for occupational mix, and an adjustment
to the wage index based on commuting patterns of employees (the out-
migration adjustment). Also, we noted that, as discussed in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19393 through 19399), we proposed a
number of policies under the IPPS to address wage index disparities
between high and low wage index value hospitals. In particular, in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
[[Page 61185]]
PPS proposed rule, we proposed to (1) calculate the rural floor without
including the wage data of urban hospitals that have reclassified as
rural under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act (as implemented in Sec.
412.103) (84 FR 19396 through 19398); (2) remove the wage data of urban
hospitals that have reclassified as rural under Sec. 412.103 from the
calculation of ``the wage index for rural areas in the State'' for
purposes of applying section 1886(d)(8)(C)(iii) of the Act (84 FR
19398); (3) increase the wage index values for hospitals with a wage
index below the 25th percentile wage index value across all hospitals
by half the difference between the otherwise applicable final wage
index value for a year for that hospital and the 25th percentile wage
index value for that year, and to offset the estimated increase in
payments to hospitals with wage index values below the 25th percentile
by decreasing the wage index values for hospitals with wage index
values above the 75th percentile wage index value across all hospitals
(84 FR 19394 through 19396); and (4) apply a 5-percent cap for FY 2020
on any decrease in a hospital's final wage index from the hospital's
final wage index in FY 2019, as a proposed transition wage index to
help mitigate any significant negative impacts on hospitals (84 FR
19398). In addition, in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR
19398), we proposed to apply a budget neutrality adjustment to the
standardized amount so that our proposed transition wage index for
hospitals that may be negatively impacted (described in item (4) above)
would be implemented in a budget neutral manner. Furthermore, in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19398 through 19399), we noted
that our proposed adjustment relating to the rural floor calculation
also would be budget neutral. We referred readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19373 through 19399) for a detailed
discussion of all proposed changes to the FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes.
Furthermore, as discussed in the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(79 FR 49951 through 49963) and in each subsequent IPPS/LTCH PPS final
rule, including the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (83 FR 41362), the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issued revisions to the labor
market area delineations on February 28, 2013 (based on 2010 Decennial
Census data), that included a number of significant changes, such as
new Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs), urban counties that became
rural, rural counties that became urban, and existing CBSAs that were
split apart (OMB Bulletin 13-01). This bulletin can be found at:
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/omb/bulletins/2013/b13-01.pdf. In the FY 2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49950
through 49985), for purposes of the IPPS, we adopted the use of the OMB
statistical area delineations contained in OMB Bulletin No. 13-01,
effective October 1, 2014. For purposes of the OPPS, in the CY 2015
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66826 through 66828), we
adopted the use of the OMB statistical area delineations contained in
OMB Bulletin No. 13-01, effective January 1, 2015, beginning with the
CY 2015 OPPS wage indexes. In the FY 2017 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (81
FR 56913), we adopted revisions to statistical areas contained in OMB
Bulletin No. 15-01, issued on July 15, 2015, which provided updates to
and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 that was issued on February 28,
2013. For purposes of the OPPS, in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79598), we adopted the revisions to the OMB
statistical area delineations contained in OMB Bulletin No. 15-01,
effective January 1, 2017, beginning with the CY 2017 OPPS wage
indexes.
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 17-01, which
provided updates to and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 that was
issued on July 15, 2015. The attachments to OMB Bulletin No. 17-01
provide detailed information on the update to the statistical areas
since July 15, 2015, and are based on the application of the 2010
Standards for Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical
Areas to Census Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2014 and July
1, 2015. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
58863 through 58865), we adopted the updates set forth in OMB Bulletin
No. 17-01, effective January 1, 2019, beginning with the CY 2019 wage
index. We continue to believe that it is important for the OPPS to use
the latest labor market area delineations available as soon as is
reasonably possible in order to maintain a more accurate and up-to-date
payment system that reflects the reality of population shifts and labor
market conditions. For a complete discussion of the adoption of the
updates set forth in OMB Bulletin No. 17-01, we refer readers to the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58864 through
58865).
As we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42301),
for the FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes, we are using the OMB delineations
that were adopted, beginning with FY 2015 (based on the revised
delineations issued in OMB Bulletin No. 13-01) to calculate the area
wage indexes, with updates as reflected in OMB Bulletin Nos. 15-01 and
17-01. Similarly, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431),
for the proposed CY 2020 OPPS wage indexes, we proposed to continue to
use the OMB delineations that were adopted under the OPPS, beginning
with CY 2015 (based on the revised delineations issued in OMB Bulletin
No. 13-01) to calculate the area wage indexes, with updates as
reflected in OMB Bulletin Nos. 15-01 and 17-01. We did not receive any
public comments on our proposal. Accordingly, for the reasons discussed
above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39430 through
39431), we are finalizing our proposal to continue to use the OMB
delineations that were adopted beginning with CY 2015 to calculate area
wage indexes under the OPPS, with updates as reflected in the OMB
Bulletin Nos. 15-01, and 17-01.
CBSAs are made up of one or more constituent counties. Each CBSA
and constituent county has its own unique identifying codes. The FY
2018 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (82 FR 38130) discussed the two different
lists of codes to identify counties: Social Security Administration
(SSA) codes and Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) codes.
Historically, CMS listed and used SSA and FIPS county codes to identify
and crosswalk counties to CBSA codes for purposes of the IPPS and OPPS
wage indexes. However, the SSA county codes are no longer being
maintained and updated, although the FIPS codes continue to be
maintained by the U.S. Census Bureau. The Census Bureau's most current
statistical area information is derived from ongoing census data
received since 2010; the most recent data are from 2015. The Census
Bureau maintains a complete list of changes to counties or county
equivalent entities on the website at: https://www.census.gov/geo/reference/county-changes.html (which, as of May 6, 2019, migrated to:
https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/geography.html). In the FY 2018
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (82 FR 38130), for purposes of crosswalking
counties to CBSAs for the IPPS wage index, we finalized our proposal to
discontinue the use of the SSA county codes and begin using only the
FIPS county codes. Similarly, for the purposes of crosswalking counties
to CBSAs for the OPPS wage index, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with
[[Page 61186]]
comment period (82 FR 59260), we finalized our proposal to discontinue
the use of SSA county codes and begin using only the FIPS county codes.
For CY 2020, under the OPPS, we are continuing to use only the FIPS
county codes for purposes of crosswalking counties to CBSAs.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431), we proposed to
use the FY 2020 hospital IPPS post-reclassified wage index for urban
and rural areas as the wage index for the OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment rate and the copayment
standardized amount for CY 2020. Therefore, we stated in the proposed
rule that any adjustments for the FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage
index, including, but not limited to, any policies finalized under the
IPPS to address wage index disparities between low and high wage index
value hospitals, would be reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS wage
index beginning on January 1, 2020. (We referred readers to the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19373 through 19399) and the
proposed FY 2020 hospital wage index files posted on the CMS website.)
With regard to budget neutrality for the CY 2020 OPPS wage index, we
referred readers to section II.B. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. We stated that we continue to believe that using the IPPS wage
index as the source of an adjustment factor for the OPPS is reasonable
and logical, given the inseparable, subordinate status of the HOPD
within the hospital overall. Summarized below are the comments we
received regarding our proposal to use the final FY 2020 hospital IPPS
post-reclassified wage index for urban and rural areas as the wage
index for the OPPS, including any adjustments for the final FY 2020
IPPS post-reclassified wage index as discussed above, along with our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported CMS adopting the finalized
post-reclassified wage index from the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
for use under the OPPS. Many of these commenters noted that the gap in
payment between rural and urban hospitals has contributed to
disparities in care and noted that increasing the wage index for
hospitals with wage index values below the 25th percentile wage index
value will help to lessen the gap. Some of these commenters noted that
this change will help rural areas have access to quality, affordable
health care. One commenter supported the proposal to increase the wage
index for hospitals with wage index values below the 25th percentile,
but wanted CMS to consider this solution temporary until the wage index
is more equitable between hospitals.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. In response to the
comment that CMS should consider the increase in the wage index for
hospitals with wage index values below the 25th percentile wage index
value (that it, low wage index hospitals) temporary until the wage
index is more equitable between hospitals, as we stated in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42326 through 42327), the increase in
the IPPS wage index for low wage index hospitals is not intended to be
permanent. As we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42326 through 42327), we expect that this policy will be in place for
at least 4 years in order to allow employee compensation increases
implemented by low wage index hospitals sufficient time to be reflected
in the wage index calculation. We stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS
final rule (84 FR 42327) that, once there has been sufficient time for
that increased employee compensation to be reflected in the wage data,
there should not be a continuing need for this policy.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to increase the
wage index for low wage index hospitals but wanted it implemented in a
non-budget neutral manner. They believe this would mitigate disparities
for median wage index hospitals. Several commenters opposed the
proposal to recalculate the wage index to help the lowest wage
hospitals. These commenters believed that applying a budget neutrality
adjustment for all hospitals to offset the increase in payments for low
wage index hospitals would result in a significant loss of resources
for patient care in other hospitals. While these commenters understood
and appreciated the goal of the proposed changes to increase the wage
index for low wage hospitals, they did not believe that these policies
would help rural hospitals. They believed that certain communities
would benefit from increasing the wage index for low wage hospitals but
believed this policy does not adequately recognize differences in
geographic labor markets. They further claimed that the offsetting
reductions to the wage index in some areas will hinder hospitals'
ability to attract and recruit quality health care practitioners.
Some commenters noted that OPPS payments to hospitals in their
respective states would decrease by millions in CY 2020 due to the
budget neutral implementation of the increase in the wage index for low
wage hospitals. These commenters noted that any reduction in Medicare
payments would force hospitals to reduce staff and/or salary and
benefits. One commenter noted that, for many years, the disparities
among geographic areas have continued to grow and have resulted in
challenges recruiting staff. Some commenters recommended CMS convene a
meeting to understand all of the challenges and issues in order to
develop a comprehensive reform of the wage index. One commenter
recommended that, if CMS is going to redistribute the area wage index,
CMS offset the increased wage index for very low wage areas with a
budget neutrality adjustment to the wage index applied evenly to all
hospitals. However, this commenter preferred that CMS not use budget
neutrality for the area wage index. They did not believe that the
budget neutrality adjustment policy follows statutory requirements for
adjusting the area wage index that require CMS to address real
differences in labor costs. Several commenters believed CMS went beyond
its authority in reallocating funding from hospitals in high wage
areas, to provide funding to low wage area hospitals, without any
relationship to actual wage-related data for the impacted areas.
Another commenter strongly opposed decreasing payments to some or all
hospitals to offset an increase in the area wage index for low wage
index hospitals and did not believe the rationale in the FY 2020 IPPS
final rule supported this change. One commenter opposed CMS making a
budget neutrality adjustment across all hospitals as well as the
transition wage index adjustment to ensure that no hospital's wage
index decreases by more than 5 percent. This commenter believed that
these adjustments negatively impact hospitals in the bottom quartile of
wage index that would have seen a larger increase in payment without
these additional adjustments.
Response: As we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42331), the intent of the wage index increase for hospitals with
wage indexes below the 25th percentile wage index value across all
hospitals (that is, low wage index hospitals) is to increase the
accuracy of the wage index as a technical adjustment, and not to use
the wage index as a policy tool to address non-wage issues related to
rural hospitals, or the laudable goals of the overall financial health
of hospitals in low wage areas or broader wage index reform. As we
stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, we believe the wage
index increase we finalized for
[[Page 61187]]
low wage index hospitals increases the accuracy of the wage index as a
relative measure because it allows low wage index hospitals to increase
their employee compensation in ways that we would expect if there were
no lag in reflecting compensation adjustments in the wage index. Thus,
we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that we believe the
IPPS wage index adjustment for low wage index hospitals will
appropriately reflect the relative hospital wage level in those areas
compared to the national average wage level. We further stated in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that because this policy is based on
the actual wages that we expect low wage index hospitals to pay, it
falls within the scope of the authority of section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act.
However, we note that, in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42331 through 42332), we did not finalize our budget neutrality
proposal to decrease the wage index for hospitals with wage index
values above the 75th percentile wage index value to offset the
estimated increase in payments to low wage index hospitals. Instead, in
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, consistent with our current
methodology for implementing wage index budget neutrality under the
IPPS, we finalized a budget neutrality adjustment to the IPPS national
standardized amount for all hospitals so that the increase in the IPPS
wage index for low wage index hospitals is implemented in a budget
neutral manner. As explained in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(84 FR42331), under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the IPPS wage
index adjustment is required to be implemented in a budget neutral
manner. We further noted in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule that,
even if the wage index were not required to be budget neutral, we would
consider it inappropriate to use the wage index to increase or decrease
overall spending. Similarly, under section 1886(t)(2)(D) and (9)(B) of
the Act, the OPPS wage index adjustment is required to be implemented
in a budget neutral manner. Accordingly, consistent with the policy
finalized in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, in this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we are finalizing a budget
neutrality adjustment to the conversion factor for all hospitals paid
under the OPPS so that the increase in the OPPS wage index for low wage
index hospitals is implemented in a budget neutral manner. We refer
readers to section II.B. of this final rule with comment period for a
discussion of budget neutrality. In addition, we refer readers to the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42328 through 42332) for
further discussion of the final FY 2020 IPPS wage index policies
(including the transition wage index adjustment) and detailed responses
to similar comments.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431), we proposed to
use the FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage index for urban and rural
areas as the wage index under the OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment rate and the copayment
standardized amount. Because we continue to believe that using the IPPS
post-reclassified wage index as the source of the wage index adjustment
factor under the OPPS is reasonable and logical given the inseparable,
subordinate status of the HOPD within the hospital overall, as
proposed, we are finalizing the use of the FY 2020 hospital IPPS post-
reclassified wage index for urban and rural areas as the wage index
under the OPPS to determine the wage adjustments for both the OPPS
payment rate and the copayment standardized amount for CY 2020.
Accordingly, any adjustments for the final FY 2020 IPPS post-
reclassified wage index, including, but not limited to, any policies
finalized in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to address wage index
disparities between low and high wage index value hospitals, will be
reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS wage index beginning on January 1,
2020.
Comment: Several commenters noted support for the revised rural
floor policy finalized in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH final rule. Many of
these commenters supported the proposal to exclude the wage data of
urban hospitals that reclassify as rural in calculating the rural
floor. These commenters suggested that including the wage data of these
hospitals in the rural floor calculation has inflated wage index values
in certain states and that excluding the wage data of these hospitals
will have positive effects on OPPS payment for rural hospitals.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters opposed the change to exclude the wage
data of urban hospitals that have been reclassified as rural in
calculating the IPPS rural floor. One of these commenters believed that
CMS lacks the legal authority to remove from the rural floor
calculation the wage data of hospitals that have been reclassified from
urban to rural as implemented in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH final rule. This
commenter believed CMS misread the applicable law in Section
1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act. One of the commenter's believed that removing
the urban to rural reclassifications from the calculation of the rural
floor penalizes hospitals that are allowed to reclassify under HHS
authority.
One commenter believed that CMS should put more structure around
the rural floor policy and should not apply the rural floor in
primarily urban states with only one or two rural facilities. The
commenter believed that this would reduce the potential for gaming the
system in determining an equitable wage adjustment.
Response: We addressed similar comments in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS final rule (84 FR 42334 through 42336). As provided in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH final rule (84 FR 42334), in the absence of broader wage
index reform from Congress, we believe it is appropriate to revise the
rural floor calculation as part of an effort to reduce wage index
disparities. Regarding CMS's statutory authority to exclude the wage
data of urban hospitals reclassified as rural from the IPPS rural floor
calculation, as we stated in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84
FR 42334), we believe our calculation methodology is permissible under
section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act (as implemented in Sec. 412.103) and
the rural floor statute (section 4410 of Pub. L. 105-33). Further, as
we discussed in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42336), we
do not believe this policy penalizes or adversely impacts urban
hospitals that have reclassified as rural. We refer readers to the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42332 through 42336) for further
discussion of this policy and detailed responses to similar comments.
We note that impact files and supporting data files available on the FY
2020 IPPS Final Rule Home Page provide the data necessary to understand
the impact of the finalized policies under the IPPS. Furthermore, we
appreciate the comment that CMS should not apply the rural floor in
primarily urban states with only one or two rural facilities; however,
because we consider this comment to be outside the scope of the CY 2020
OPPS wage index proposals, we are not addressing it in this final rule
with comment period.
As we discussed above, we continue to believe that using the IPPS
post-reclassified wage index as the source of the wage index adjustment
factor under the OPPS is reasonable and logical given the inseparable,
subordinate status of the HOPD within the hospital overall. Thus, as
proposed, we are using the FY 2020 hospital IPPS post-reclassified
[[Page 61188]]
wage index for urban and rural areas as the wage index under the OPPS
to determine the wage adjustments for both the OPPS payment rate and
the copayment standardized amount for CY 2020. Accordingly, as we
proposed, any adjustments for the final FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified
wage index, including, but not limited to, the revised rural floor
calculation methodology and other IPPS wage index policies finalized in
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to address wage index disparities,
will be reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS wage index beginning on
January 1, 2020.
After considering the public comments received, for the reasons
discussed earlier in this section and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we are finalizing without modification our proposal to use the
final FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage index for urban and rural
areas as the wage index under the OPPS to determine the wage
adjustments for both the OPPS payment rate and the copayment
standardized amount for CY 2020. Accordingly, as we proposed, any
adjustments for the final FY 2020 IPPS post-reclassified wage index (as
set forth in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, 84 FR 42300 through
42339), including, but not limited to, any policies finalized in the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to address wage index disparities between
low and high wage index value hospitals (as set forth at 84 FR 42300
through 42339), will be reflected in the final CY 2020 OPPS wage index
beginning on January 1, 2020. As discussed above, we note that in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42325 through 42332), we did
not finalize our budget neutrality proposal to decrease the wage index
for hospitals with wage index values above the 75th percentile wage
index value to offset the estimated increase in payments to hospitals
with wage index values below the 25th percentile wage index value, and
thus this budget neutrality policy will not be applied under the OPPS.
Instead, in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule, consistent with our
current methodology for implementing IPPS wage index budget neutrality,
we finalized a budget neutrality adjustment to the IPPS national
standardized amount for all hospitals so that the increase in the IPPS
wage index for low wage index hospitals is implemented in a budget
neutral manner. Consistent with this IPPS policy, in this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period, we are finalizing a budget
neutrality adjustment to the conversion factor for all hospitals paid
under the OPPS so that the increase in the OPPS wage index for low wage
index hospitals is implemented in a budget neutral manner. We refer
readers to section II.B. of this final rule with comment period for a
discussion of budget neutrality.
Hospitals that are paid under the OPPS, but not under the IPPS, do
not have an assigned hospital wage index under the IPPS. Therefore, for
non-IPPS hospitals paid under the OPPS, it is our longstanding policy
to assign the wage index that would be applicable if the hospital were
paid under the IPPS, based on its geographic location and any
applicable wage index adjustments. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39431), we proposed to continue this policy for CY 2020,
and included a brief summary of the major proposed FY 2020 IPPS wage
index policies and adjustments that we proposed to apply to these
hospitals under the OPPS for CY 2020, which we have summarized below.
We refer readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42300
through 42339) for a detailed discussion of the final changes to the FY
2020 IPPS wage indexes.
It has been our longstanding policy to allow non-IPPS hospitals
paid under the OPPS to qualify for the out-migration adjustment if they
are located in a section 505 out-migration county (section 505 of the
Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003
(MMA)). Applying this adjustment is consistent with our policy of
adopting IPPS wage index policies for hospitals paid under the OPPS. We
note that, because non-IPPS hospitals cannot reclassify, they are
eligible for the out-migration wage index adjustment if they are
located in a section 505 out-migration county. This is the same out-
migration adjustment policy that applies if the hospital were paid
under the IPPS. For CY 2020, we proposed to continue our policy of
allowing non-IPPS hospitals paid under the OPPS to qualify for the out-
migration adjustment if they are located in a section 505 out-migration
county (section 505 of the MMA). In addition, for non-IPPS hospitals
paid under the OPPS, we proposed to apply any policies that are
finalized under the IPPS relating to wage index disparities. We also
proposed that the wage index that would apply to non-IPPS hospitals for
CY 2020 would include the rural floor adjustment. We did not receive
any public comments on these proposals. Accordingly, for the reasons
discussed above and in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39431), we are finalizing these proposals without modifications.
For CMHCs, for CY 2020, we proposed to continue to calculate the
wage index by using the post-reclassification IPPS wage index based on
the CBSA where the CMHC is located. We also proposed to apply any
policies that are finalized under the IPPS relating to wage index
disparities. In addition, we proposed that the wage index that would
apply to CMHCs for CY 2020 would include the rural floor adjustment.
Also, we proposed that the wage index that would apply to CMHCs would
not include the out-migration adjustment because that adjustment only
applies to hospitals. We did not receive any public comments on these
proposals. Therefore, for the reasons discussed above and in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39431), we are finalizing these
proposals without modifications.
Table 4 associated with the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(available via the internet on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/)
identifies counties eligible for the out-migration adjustment. Table 2
associated with the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (available for
download via the website above) identifies IPPS hospitals that will
receive the out-migration adjustment for FY 2020. We are including the
out-migration adjustment information from Table 2 associated with the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule as Addendum L to this final rule with
comment period with the addition of non-IPPS hospitals that will
receive the section 505 out-migration adjustment under this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. Addendum L is available via
the internet on the CMS website. We refer readers to the CMS website
for the OPPS at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/. At this link, readers will
find a link to the final FY 2020 IPPS wage index tables and Addendum L.
D. Statewide Average Default Cost-to-Charge Ratios (CCRs)
In addition to using CCRs to estimate costs from charges on claims
for ratesetting, CMS uses overall hospital-specific CCRs calculated
from the hospital's most recent cost report to determine outlier
payments, payments for pass-through devices, and monthly interim
transitional corridor payments under the OPPS during the PPS year. For
certain hospitals, under the regulations at 42 CFR 419.43(d)(5)(iii),
CMS uses the statewide average default CCRs to determine the payments
[[Page 61189]]
mentioned earlier if it is unable to determine an accurate CCR for a
hospital in certain circumstances. This includes hospitals that are
new, hospitals that have not accepted assignment of an existing
hospital's provider agreement, and hospitals that have not yet
submitted a cost report. CMS also uses the statewide average default
CCRs to determine payments for hospitals whose CCR falls outside the
predetermined ceiling threshold for a valid CCR or for hospitals in
which the most recent cost report reflects an all-inclusive rate status
(Medicare Claims Processing Manual (Pub. 100-04), Chapter 4, Section
10.11).
We discussed our policy for using default CCRs, including setting
the ceiling threshold for a valid CCR, in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (73 FR 68594 through 68599) in the context of
our adoption of an outlier reconciliation policy for cost reports
beginning on or after January 1, 2009. For details on our process for
calculating the statewide average CCRs, we referred readers to the CY
2020 OPPS proposed rule Claims Accounting Narrative that is posted on
the CMS website. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39432),
we proposed to update the default ratios for CY 2020 using the most
recent cost report data. We indicated that we would update these ratios
in this final rule with comment period if more recent cost report data
are available.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal to use
statewide average default CCRs if we cannot calculate a CCR for a
hospital and to use these CCRs to adjust charges on claims to costs for
setting the final CY 2020 OPPS payment weights. Therefore, we
finalizing our proposal without modification.
As we stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39432),
we are no longer publishing a table in the Federal Register containing
the statewide average CCRs in the annual OPPS proposed rule and final
rule. These CCRs with the upper limit will be available for download
with each OPPS CY proposed rule and final rule on the CMS website. We
refer readers to the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html; click on the link on the left
of the page titled ``Hospital Outpatient Regulations and Notices'' and
then select the relevant regulation to download the statewide CCRs and
upper limit in the downloads section of the web page.
E. Adjustment for Rural Sole Community Hospitals (SCHs) and Essential
Access Community Hospitals (EACHs) Under Section 1833(t)(13)(B) of the
Act for CY 2020
In the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with comment period (70 FR 68556),
we finalized a payment increase for rural sole community hospitals
(SCHs) of 7.1 percent for all services and procedures paid under the
OPPS, excluding drugs, biologicals, brachytherapy sources, and devices
paid under the pass-through payment policy, in accordance with section
1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act, as added by section 411 of the Medicare
Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA)
(Pub. L. 108-173). Section 1833(t)(13) of the Act provided the
Secretary the authority to make an adjustment to OPPS payments for
rural hospitals, effective January 1, 2006, if justified by a study of
the difference in costs by APC between hospitals in rural areas and
hospitals in urban areas. Our analysis showed a difference in costs for
rural SCHs. Therefore, for the CY 2006 OPPS, we finalized a payment
adjustment for rural SCHs of 7.1 percent for all services and
procedures paid under the OPPS, excluding separately payable drugs and
biologicals, brachytherapy sources, items paid at charges reduced to
costs, and devices paid under the pass-through payment policy, in
accordance with section 1833(t)(13)(B) of the Act.
In the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (71 FR 68010
and 68227), for purposes of receiving this rural adjustment, we revised
our regulations at Sec. 419.43(g) to clarify that essential access
community hospitals (EACHs) are also eligible to receive the rural SCH
adjustment, assuming these entities otherwise meet the rural adjustment
criteria. Currently, two hospitals are classified as EACHs, and as of
CY 1998, under section 4201(c) of Public Law 105-33, a hospital can no
longer become newly classified as an EACH.
This adjustment for rural SCHs is budget neutral and applied before
calculating outlier payments and copayments. We stated in the CY 2006
OPPS final rule with comment period (70 FR 68560) that we would not
reestablish the adjustment amount on an annual basis, but we may review
the adjustment in the future and, if appropriate, would revise the
adjustment. We provided the same 7.1 percent adjustment to rural SCHs,
including EACHs, again in CYs 2008 through 2019. Further, in the CY
2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR 68590), we updated
the regulations at Sec. 419.43(g)(4) to specify, in general terms,
that items paid at charges adjusted to costs by application of a
hospital-specific CCR are excluded from the 7.1 percent payment
adjustment.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 58870 through 58871),
for the CY 2020 OPPS, we proposed to continue the current policy of a
7.1 percent payment adjustment that is done in a budget neutral manner
for rural SCHs, including EACHs, for all services and procedures paid
under the OPPS, excluding separately payable drugs and biologicals,
brachytherapy sources, items paid at charges reduced to costs, and
devices paid under the pass-through payment policy.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to continue the
7.1 percent payment adjustment.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS make the 7.1 percent
rural adjustment permanent. The commenter appreciated the policy that
CMS adopted in CY 2019 where we stated that the 7.1 percent rural
adjustment would continue to be in place until our data support
establishing a different rural adjustment percentage. However, the
commenter believed that this policy still does not provide enough
certainty for rural SCHs and EACHs to know whether they should take
into account the rural SCH adjustment when attempting to calculate
expected revenues for their hospital budgets.
Response: We thank the commenter for their input. We believe that
our currrent policy, which states that the 7.1 percent payment
adjustment for rural SCHs and EACHs will remain in effect until our
data show that a different percentage for the rural payment adjustment
is necessary, provides sufficient budget predictability for rural SCHs
and EACHs. Providers would receive notice in a proposed rule before any
changes to the rural adjustment percentage would be implemented.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS expand the payment
adjustment for rural SCHs and EACHs to additional types of hospitals.
One commenter requested that the payment adjustment apply to include
urban SCHs because, according to the commenter, urban SCHs care for
patient populations similar to rural SCHs and EACHs, face similar
financial challenges to rural SCHs and EACHs, and act as safety net
providers for rural areas despite their designation as urban providers.
Another commenter requested that the payment adjustment also apply to
Medicare-dependent hospitals (MDHs) because,
[[Page 61190]]
according to the commenter, these hospitals face similar financial
challenges to rural SCHs and EACHs, and MDHs play a similar safety net
role to rural SCHs and EACHs, especially for Medicare. One commenter
requested that payment rates for OPPS services for all rural hospitals
be increased to reduce financial vulnerability for rural hospitals
related to the high share of Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries they
serve.
Response: We thank the commenters for their comments. However, the
analysis we did to compare costs of urban providers to those of rural
providers did not support an add-on adjustment for providers other than
rural SCHs and EACHs. In addition, our follow-up analyses performed in
recent years have not shown differences in costs for all services for
any of the additional types of providers mentioned by the commenters.
Accordingly, we do not believe we currently have a basis to expand the
payment adjustment to any providers other than rural SCHs and EACHs.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to continue the current
policy of a 7.1 percent payment adjustment that is done in a budget
neutral manner for rural SCHs, including EACHs, for all services and
procedures paid under the OPPS, excluding separately payable drugs and
biologicals, devices paid under the pass-through payment policy, and
items paid at charges reduced to costs.
F. Payment Adjustment for Certain Cancer Hospitals for CY 2020
1. Background
Since the inception of the OPPS, which was authorized by the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) (Pub. L. 105-33), Medicare has paid
the 11 hospitals that meet the criteria for cancer hospitals identified
in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act under the OPPS for covered
outpatient hospital services. These cancer hospitals are exempted from
payment under the IPPS. With the Medicare, Medicaid and SCHIP Balanced
Budget Refinement Act of 1999 (Pub. L. 106-113), Congress established
section 1833(t)(7) of the Act, ``Transitional Adjustment to Limit
Decline in Payment,'' to determine OPPS payments to cancer and
children's hospitals based on their pre-BBA payment amount (often
referred to as ``held harmless'').
As required under section 1833(t)(7)(D)(ii) of the Act, a cancer
hospital receives the full amount of the difference between payments
for covered outpatient services under the OPPS and a ``pre-BBA
amount.'' That is, cancer hospitals are permanently held harmless to
their ``pre-BBA amount,'' and they receive transitional outpatient
payments (TOPs) or hold harmless payments to ensure that they do not
receive a payment that is lower in amount under the OPPS than the
payment amount they would have received before implementation of the
OPPS, as set forth in section 1833(t)(7)(F) of the Act. The ``pre-BBA
amount'' is the product of the hospital's reasonable costs for covered
outpatient services occurring in the current year and the base payment-
to-cost ratio (PCR) for the hospital defined in section
1833(t)(7)(F)(ii) of the Act. The ``pre-BBA amount'' and the
determination of the base PCR are defined at 42 CFR 419.70(f). TOPs are
calculated on Worksheet E, Part B, of the Hospital Cost Report or the
Hospital Health Care Complex Cost Report (Form CMS-2552-96 or Form CMS-
2552-10, respectively), as applicable each year. Section 1833(t)(7)(I)
of the Act exempts TOPs from budget neutrality calculations.
Section 3138 of the Affordable Care Act amended section 1833(t) of
the Act by adding a new paragraph (18), which instructs the Secretary
to conduct a study to determine if, under the OPPS, outpatient costs
incurred by cancer hospitals described in section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of
the Act with respect to APC groups exceed outpatient costs incurred by
other hospitals furnishing services under section 1833(t) of the Act,
as determined appropriate by the Secretary. Section 1833(t)(18)(A) of
the Act requires the Secretary to take into consideration the cost of
drugs and biologicals incurred by cancer hospitals and other hospitals.
Section 1833(t)(18)(B) of the Act provides that, if the Secretary
determines that cancer hospitals' costs are higher than those of other
hospitals, the Secretary shall provide an appropriate adjustment under
section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to reflect these higher costs. In
2011, after conducting the study required by section 1833(t)(18)(A) of
the Act, we determined that outpatient costs incurred by the 11
specified cancer hospitals were greater than the costs incurred by
other OPPS hospitals. For a complete discussion regarding the cancer
hospital cost study, we refer readers to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (76 FR 74200 through 74201).
Based on these findings, we finalized a policy to provide a payment
adjustment to the 11 specified cancer hospitals that reflects their
higher outpatient costs, as discussed in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (76 FR 74202 through 74206). Specifically, we
adopted a policy to provide additional payments to the cancer hospitals
so that each cancer hospital's final PCR for services provided in a
given calendar year is equal to the weighted average PCR (which we
refer to as the ``target PCR'') for other hospitals paid under the
OPPS. The target PCR is set in advance of the calendar year and is
calculated using the most recently submitted or settled cost report
data that are available at the time of final rulemaking for the
calendar year. The amount of the payment adjustment is made on an
aggregate basis at cost report settlement. We note that the changes
made by section 1833(t)(18) of the Act do not affect the existing
statutory provisions that provide for TOPs for cancer hospitals. The
TOPs are assessed, as usual, after all payments, including the cancer
hospital payment adjustment, have been made for a cost reporting
period. For CYs 2012 and 2013, the target PCR for purposes of the
cancer hospital payment adjustment was 0.91. For CY 2014, the target
PCR was 0.90. For CY 2015, the target PCR was 0.90. For CY 2016, the
target PCR was 0.92, as discussed in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70362 through 70363). For CY 2017, the
target PCR was 0.91, as discussed in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79603 through 79604). For CY 2018, the
target PCR was 0.88, as discussed in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 59265 through 59266). For CY 2019, the
target PCR was 0.88, as discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58871 through 58873).
2. Policy for CY 2020
Section 16002(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act (Pub. L. 114-255)
amended section 1833(t)(18) of the Act by adding subparagraph (C),
which requires that in applying Sec. 419.43(i) (that is, the payment
adjustment for certain cancer hospitals) for services furnished on or
after January 1, 2018, the target PCR adjustment be reduced by 1.0
percentage point less than what would otherwise apply. Section 16002(b)
also provides that, in addition to the percentage reduction, the
Secretary may consider making an additional percentage point reduction
to the target PCR that takes into account payment rates for applicable
items and services described under section 1833(t)(21)(C) of the Act
for hospitals that are not cancer hospitals described under
[[Page 61191]]
section 1886(d)(1)(B)(v) of the Act. Further, in making any budget
neutrality adjustment under section 1833(t) of the Act, the Secretary
shall not take into account the reduced expenditures that result from
application of section 1833(t)(18)(C) of the Act.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39433), for CY 2020,
we proposed to provide additional payments to the 11 specified cancer
hospitals so that each cancer hospital's final PCR is equal to the
weighted average PCR (or ``target PCR'') for the other OPPS hospitals,
using the most recent submitted or settled cost report data that were
available at the time of the development of the proposed rule, reduced
by 1.0 percentage point, to comply with section 16002(b) of the 21st
Century Cures Act.
We did not propose an additional reduction beyond the 1.0
percentage point reduction required by section 16002(b) for CY 2020. To
calculate the proposed CY 2020 target PCR, we are using the same
extract of cost report data from HCRIS, as discussed in section II.A.
of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and this final rule with comment
period, used to estimate costs for the CY 2020 OPPS. Using these cost
report data, we included data from Worksheet E, Part B, for each
hospital, using data from each hospital's most recent cost report,
whether as submitted or settled.
We then limited the dataset to the hospitals with CY 2018 claims
data that we used to model the impact of the proposed CY 2020 APC
relative payment weights (3,770 hospitals) because it is appropriate to
use the same set of hospitals that are being used to calibrate the
modeled CY 2020 OPPS. The cost report data for the hospitals in this
dataset were from cost report periods with fiscal year ends ranging
from 2016 to 2018. We then removed the cost report data of the 49
hospitals located in Puerto Rico from our dataset because we did not
believe their cost structure reflected the costs of most hospitals paid
under the OPPS, and, therefore, their inclusion may bias the
calculation of hospital-weighted statistics. We also removed the cost
report data of 23 hospitals because these hospitals had cost report
data that were not complete (missing aggregate OPPS payments, missing
aggregate cost data, or missing both), so that all cost reports in the
study would have both the payment and cost data necessary to calculate
a PCR for each hospital, leading to a proposed analytic file of 3,539
hospitals with cost report data.
Using this smaller dataset of cost report data, we estimated that,
on average, the OPPS payments to other hospitals furnishing services
under the OPPS were approximately 90 percent of reasonable cost
(weighted average PCR of 0.90). Therefore, after applying the 1.0
percentage point reduction, as required by section 16002(b) of the 21st
Century Cures Act, we proposed that the payment amount associated with
the cancer hospital payment adjustment to be determined at cost report
settlement would be the additional payment needed to result in a
proposed target PCR equal to 0.89 for each cancer hospital.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposals. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposed cancer hospital payment adjustment
methodology without modification. For this final rule with comment
period, we are using the most recent cost report data through June 30,
2019 to update the adjustment. This updated yields a target PCR of
0.90. We limited the dataset to hospitals with CY 2018 claims data that
we used to model the impact of the CY 2020 APC relative payment weights
(3,763) because it is appropriate to use the same set of hospitals that
we are using to calibrate the modeled CY 2020 OPPS. The cost report
data for the hospitals in the dataset were from cost report periods
with fiscal years ends ranging from 2010 to 2018. We then removed the
cost report data of the 46 hospitals located in Puerto Rico from our
dataset because we do not believe their cost structure reflects the
cost of most hospitals paid under the OPPS and, therefore, their
inclusion may bias the calculation of hospital-weighted statistics. We
also removed the cost report data of 21 hospitals because these
hospitals had cost report data that were not complete (missing
aggregate OPPS payments, missing aggregate cost data, or missing both),
so that all cost report in the study would have both the payment and
cost data necessary to calculate a PCR for each hospital, leading to an
analytic file of 3,523 hospitals with cost report data.
Using this smaller dataset of cost report data, we estimated a
target PCR of 0.90. Therefore, after applying the 1.0 percentage point
reduction as required by section 1602(b) of the 21st Century Cures Act,
we are finalizing that the payment amount associated with the cancer
hospital adjustment to be determined at cost report settlement will be
the additional payment needed to result in a PCR equal to 0.89 for each
cancer hospital.
Table 7 shows the estimated percentage increase in OPPS payments to
each cancer hospital for CY 2020, due to the cancer hospital payment
adjustment policy. The actual amount of the CY 2020 cancer hospital
payment adjustment for each cancer hospital will be determined at cost
report settlement and will depend on each hospital's CY 2020 payments
and costs. We note that the requirements contained in section
1833(t)(18) of the Act do not affect the existing statutory provisions
that provide for TOPs for cancer hospitals. The TOPs will be assessed,
as usual, after all payments, including the cancer hospital payment
adjustment, have been made for a cost reporting period.
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.012
G. Hospital Outpatient Outlier Payments
1. Background
The OPPS provides outlier payments to hospitals to help mitigate
the financial risk associated with high-cost and complex procedures,
where a very costly service could present a hospital with significant
financial loss. As explained in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66832 through 66834), we set our projected target
for aggregate outlier payments at 1.0 percent of the estimated
aggregate total payments under the OPPS for the prospective year.
Outlier payments are provided on a service-by-service basis when the
cost of a service exceeds the APC payment amount multiplier threshold
(the APC payment amount multiplied by a certain amount) as well as the
APC payment amount plus a fixed-dollar amount threshold (the APC
payment plus a certain amount of dollars). In CY 2019, the outlier
threshold was met when the hospital's cost of furnishing a service
exceeded 1.75 times (the multiplier threshold) the APC payment amount
and exceeded the APC payment amount plus $4,825 (the fixed-dollar
amount threshold) (83 FR 58874 through 58875). If the cost of a service
exceeds both the multiplier threshold and the fixed-dollar threshold,
the outlier payment is calculated as 50 percent of the amount by which
the cost of furnishing the service exceeds 1.75 times the APC payment
amount. Beginning with CY 2009 payments, outlier payments are subject
to a reconciliation process similar to the IPPS outlier reconciliation
process for cost reports, as discussed in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (73 FR 68594 through 68599).
It has been our policy to report the actual amount of outlier
payments as a percent of total spending in the claims being used to
model the OPPS. Our estimate of total outlier payments as a percent of
total CY 2018 OPPS payments, using CY 2018 claims available for the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39434 through 39435) was
approximately 1.0 percent of the total aggregated OPPS payments.
Therefore, for CY 2018, we estimated that we paid the outlier target of
1.0 percent of total aggregated OPPS payments. Using an updated claims
dataset for this CY 2020 OPPS final rule with comment period, we
estimate that we paid approximately 1.00 percent of the total
aggregated OPPS payments in outliers for CY 2018.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, using CY 2018 claims data
and CY 2019 payment rates, we estimated that the aggregate outlier
payments for CY 2019 would be approximately 1.03 percent of the total
CY 2019 OPPS payments. We provided estimated CY 2020 outlier payments
for hospitals and CMHCs with claims included in the claims data that we
used to model impacts in the Hospital-Specific Impacts--Provider-
Specific Data file on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
2. Outlier Calculation for CY 2020
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39434 through 39435),
for CY 2020, we proposed to continue our policy of estimating outlier
payments to be 1.0 percent of the estimated aggregate total payments
under the OPPS. We proposed that a portion of that 1.0 percent, an
amount equal to less than
[[Page 61193]]
0.01 percent of outlier payments (or 0.0001 percent of total OPPS
payments), would be allocated to CMHCs for PHP outlier payments. This
is the amount of estimated outlier payments that would result from the
proposed CMHC outlier threshold as a proportion of total estimated OPPS
outlier payments. As discussed in section VIII.C. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39435), we proposed to continue our
longstanding policy that if a CMHC's cost for partial hospitalization
services, paid under APC 5853 (Partial Hospitalization for CMHCs),
exceeds 3.40 times the payment rate for proposed APC 5853, the outlier
payment would be calculated as 50 percent of the amount by which the
cost exceeds 3.40 times the proposed APC 5853 payment rate.
For further discussion of CMHC outlier payments, we refer readers
to section VIII.C. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and this final
rule with comment period.
To ensure that the estimated CY 2020 aggregate outlier payments
would equal 1.0 percent of estimated aggregate total payments under the
OPPS, we proposed that the hospital outlier threshold be set so that
outlier payments would be triggered when a hospital's cost of
furnishing a service exceeds 1.75 times the APC payment amount and
exceeds the APC payment amount plus $4,950.
We calculated the proposed fixed-dollar threshold of $4,950 using
the standard methodology most recently used for CY 2019 (83 FR 58874
through 58875). For purposes of estimating outlier payments for the
proposed rule, we used the hospital-specific overall ancillary CCRs
available in the April 2019 update to the Outpatient Provider-Specific
File (OPSF). The OPSF contains provider-specific data, such as the most
current CCRs, which are maintained by the MACs and used by the OPPS
Pricer to pay claims. The claims that we use to model each OPPS update
lag by 2 years.
In order to estimate the CY 2020 hospital outlier payments for the
proposed rule, we inflated the charges on the CY 2018 claims using the
same inflation factor of 1.11189 that we used to estimate the IPPS
fixed-dollar outlier threshold for the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (84 FR 19596). We used an inflation factor of 1.05446 to estimate
CY 2019 charges from the CY 2018 charges reported on CY 2018 claims.
The methodology for determining this charge inflation factor is
discussed in the FY 2019 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (83 FR 41717 through
41718). As we stated in the CY 2005 OPPS final rule with comment period
(69 FR 65845), we believe that the use of these charge inflation
factors is appropriate for the OPPS because, with the exception of the
inpatient routine service cost centers, hospitals use the same
ancillary and outpatient cost centers to capture costs and charges for
inpatient and outpatient services.
As noted in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (71
FR 68011), we are concerned that we could systematically overestimate
the OPPS hospital outlier threshold if we did not apply a CCR inflation
adjustment factor. Therefore, we proposed to apply the same CCR
inflation adjustment factor that we proposed to apply for the FY 2020
IPPS outlier calculation to the CCRs used to simulate the proposed CY
2020 OPPS outlier payments to determine the fixed-dollar threshold.
Specifically, for CY 2020, we proposed to apply an adjustment factor of
0.97517 to the CCRs that were in the April 2019 OPSF to trend them
forward from CY 2019 to CY 2020. The methodology for calculating the
proposed adjustment is discussed in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed
rule (84 FR 19597).
To model hospital outlier payments for the proposed rule, we
applied the overall CCRs from the April 2019 OPSF after adjustment
(using the proposed CCR inflation adjustment factor of 0.97517 to
approximate CY 2020 CCRs) to charges on CY 2018 claims that were
adjusted (using the proposed charge inflation factor of 1.11189 to
approximate CY 2020 charges). We simulated aggregated CY 2020 hospital
outlier payments using these costs for several different fixed-dollar
thresholds, holding the 1.75 multiplier threshold constant and assuming
that outlier payments would continue to be made at 50 percent of the
amount by which the cost of furnishing the service would exceed 1.75
times the APC payment amount, until the total outlier payments equaled
1.0 percent of aggregated estimated total CY 2020 OPPS payments. We
estimated that a proposed fixed-dollar threshold of $4,950, combined
with the proposed multiplier threshold of 1.75 times the APC payment
rate, would allocate 1.0 percent of aggregated total OPPS payments to
outlier payments. For CMHCs, we proposed that, if a CMHC's cost for
partial hospitalization services, paid under APC 5853, exceeds 3.40
times the payment rate for APC 5853, the outlier payment would be
calculated as 50 percent of the amount by which the cost exceeds 3.40
times the APC 5853 payment rate.
Section 1833(t)(17)(A) of the Act, which applies to hospitals, as
defined under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, requires that hospitals
that fail to report data required for the quality measures selected by
the Secretary, in the form and manner required by the Secretary under
section 1833(t)(17)(B) of the Act, incur a 2.0 percentage point
reduction to their OPD fee schedule increase factor; that is, the
annual payment update factor. The application of a reduced OPD fee
schedule increase factor results in reduced national unadjusted payment
rates that will apply to certain outpatient items and services
furnished by hospitals that are required to report outpatient quality
data and that fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements. For
hospitals that fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements, as
we proposed, we are continuing the policy that we implemented in CY
2010 that the hospitals' costs will be compared to the reduced payments
for purposes of outlier eligibility and payment calculation. For more
information on the Hospital OQR Program, we referred readers to section
XIV. of this final rule with comment period.
We received no public comments on our proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to continue our policy
of estimating outlier payments to be 1.0 percent of the estimated
aggregate total payments under the OPPS and to use our established
methodology to set the OPPS outlier fixed-dollar loss threshold for CY
2020.
3. Final Outlier Calculation
Consistent with historical practice, we used updated data for this
final rule with comment period for outlier calculations. For CY 2020,
we are applying the overall CCRs from the October 2019 OPSF file after
adjustment (using the CCR inflation adjustment factor of 0.97615 to
approximate CY 2020 CCRs) to charges on CY 2018 claims that were
adjusted using a charge inflation factor of 1.11100 to approximate CY
2020 charges. These are the same CCR adjustment and charge inflation
factors that were used to set the IPPS fixed-dollar threshold for the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42629). We simulated aggregated
CY 2020 hospital outlier payments using these costs for several
different fixed-dollar thresholds, holding the 1.75 multiple-threshold
constant and assuming that outlier payments will continue to be made at
50 percent of the amount by which the cost of furnishing the service
would exceed 1.75 times the APC payment amount, until the total outlier
payment equaled 1.0 percent of aggregated estimated total CY 2020 OPPS
payments. We estimated that a
[[Page 61194]]
fixed-dollar threshold of $5,075 combined with the multiple threshold
of 1.75 times the APC payment rate, will allocate the 1.0 percent of
aggregated total OPPS payments to outlier payments.
For CMHCs, if a CMHC's cost for partial hospitalization services,
paid under APC 5853, exceeds 3.40 times the payment rate the outlier
payment will be calculated as 50 percent of the amount by which the
cost exceeds 3.40 times APC 5853.
H. Calculation of an Adjusted Medicare Payment From the National
Unadjusted Medicare Payment
The basic methodology for determining prospective payment rates for
HOPD services under the OPPS is set forth in existing regulations at 42
CFR part 419, subparts C and D. For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, the payment rate for most services and procedures
for which payment is made under the OPPS is the product of the
conversion factor calculated in accordance with section II.B. of this
final rule with comment period and the relative payment weight
determined under section II.A. of this final rule with comment period.
Therefore, the proposed national unadjusted payment rate for most APCs
contained in Addendum A to this final rule with comment period (which
is available via the internet on the CMS website) and for most HCPCS
codes to which separate payment under the OPPS has been assigned in
Addendum B to this final rule with comment period (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website) was calculated by multiplying the
proposed CY 2020 scaled weight for the APC by the CY 2020 conversion
factor.
We note that section 1833(t)(17) of the Act, which applies to
hospitals, as defined under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act, requires
that hospitals that fail to submit data required to be submitted on
quality measures selected by the Secretary, in the form and manner and
at a time specified by the Secretary, incur a reduction of 2.0
percentage points to their OPD fee schedule increase factor, that is,
the annual payment update factor. The application of a reduced OPD fee
schedule increase factor results in reduced national unadjusted payment
rates that apply to certain outpatient items and services provided by
hospitals that are required to report outpatient quality data and that
fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program (formerly referred to as the
Hospital Outpatient Quality Data Reporting Program (HOP QDRP))
requirements. For further discussion of the payment reduction for
hospitals that fail to meet the requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program, we refer readers to section XIV of this final rule with
comment period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39435), we
demonstrated the steps used to determine the APC payments that will be
made in a CY under the OPPS to a hospital that fulfills the Hospital
OQR Program requirements and to a hospital that fails to meet the
Hospital OQR Program requirements for a service that has any of the
following status indicator assignments: ``J1'', ``J2'', ``P'', ``Q1'',
``Q2'', ``Q3'', ``Q4'', ``R'', ``S'', ``T'', ``U'', or ``V'' (as
defined in Addendum D1 to the proposed rule, which is available via the
internet on the CMS website), in a circumstance in which the multiple
procedure discount does not apply, the procedure is not bilateral, and
conditionally packaged services (status indicator of ``Q1'' and ``Q2'')
qualify for separate payment. We noted that, although blood and blood
products with status indicator ``R'' and brachytherapy sources with
status indicator ``U'' are not subject to wage adjustment, they are
subject to reduced payments when a hospital fails to meet the Hospital
OQR Program requirements.
We did not receive any public comments on these steps under the
methodology that we included in the CY 2020 CY OPPS/ASC proposed rule
to determine the APC payments for CY 2020. Therefore, we are using the
steps in the methodology specified below, as we proposed, to
demonstrate the calculation of the final CY 2020 OPPS payments using
the same parameters.
Individual providers interested in calculating the payment amount
that they will receive for a specific service from the national
unadjusted payment rates presented in Addenda A and B to this final
rule with comment period (which are available via the internet on the
CMS website) should follow the formulas presented in the following
steps. For purposes of the payment calculations below, we refer to the
national unadjusted payment rate for hospitals that meet the
requirements of the Hospital OQR Program as the ``full'' national
unadjusted payment rate. We refer to the national unadjusted payment
rate for hospitals that fail to meet the requirements of the Hospital
OQR Program as the ``reduced'' national unadjusted payment rate. The
reduced national unadjusted payment rate is calculated by multiplying
the reporting ratio of 0.980 times the ``full'' national unadjusted
payment rate. The national unadjusted payment rate used in the
calculations below is either the full national unadjusted payment rate
or the reduced national unadjusted payment rate, depending on whether
the hospital met its Hospital OQR Program requirements to receive the
full CY 2020 OPPS fee schedule increase factor.
Step 1. Calculate 60 percent (the labor-related portion) of the
national unadjusted payment rate. Since the initial implementation of
the OPPS, we have used 60 percent to represent our estimate of that
portion of costs attributable, on average, to labor. We refer readers
to the April 7, 2000 OPPS final rule with comment period (65 FR 18496
through 18497) for a detailed discussion of how we derived this
percentage. During our regression analysis for the payment adjustment
for rural hospitals in the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68553), we confirmed that this labor-related share for hospital
outpatient services is appropriate.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 1 and
identifies the labor-related portion of a specific payment rate for a
specific service.
X is the labor-related portion of the national unadjusted payment rate.
X = .60 * (national unadjusted payment rate).
Step 2. Determine the wage index area in which the hospital is
located and identify the wage index level that applies to the specific
hospital. We note that, under the CY 2020 OPPS policy for continuing to
use the OMB labor market area delineations based on the 2010 Decennial
Census data for the wage indexes used under the IPPS, a hold harmless
policy for the wage index may apply, as discussed in section II.C. of
this final rule with comment period. The wage index values assigned to
each area reflect the geographic statistical areas (which are based
upon OMB standards) to which hospitals are assigned for FY 2020 under
the IPPS, reclassifications through the Medicare Geographic
Classification Review Board (MGCRB), section 1886(d)(8)(B) ``Lugar''
hospitals, reclassifications under section 1886(d)(8)(E) of the Act, as
defined in Sec. 412.103 of the regulations, and hospitals designated
as urban under section 601(g) of Public Law 98-21. For further
discussion of the changes to the FY 2020 IPPS wage indexes, as applied
to the CY 2020 OPPS, we refer readers to section II.C. of this final
rule with comment period. We are continuing to apply a wage index floor
of 1.00 to frontier States, in accordance with section 10324 of the
Affordable Care Act of 2010.
Step 3. Adjust the wage index of hospitals located in certain
qualifying
[[Page 61195]]
counties that have a relatively high percentage of hospital employees
who reside in the county, but who work in a different county with a
higher wage index, in accordance with section 505 of Public Law 108-
173. Addendum L to this final rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS website) contains the qualifying
counties and the associated wage index increase developed for the
proposed FY 2020 IPPS, which are listed in Table 2 associated with the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule and available via the internet on
the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/AcuteInpatientPPS/. (Click on the link on the
left side of the screen titled ``FY 2020 IPPS Proposed Rule Home Page''
and select ``FY 2020 Proposed Rule Tables.'') This step is to be
followed only if the hospital is not reclassified or redesignated under
section 1886(d)(8) or section 1886(d)(10) of the Act.
Step 4. Multiply the applicable wage index determined under Steps 2
and 3 by the amount determined under Step 1 that represents the labor-
related portion of the national unadjusted payment rate.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 4 and
adjusts the labor-related portion of the national unadjusted payment
rate for the specific service by the wage index.
Xa is the labor-related portion of the national unadjusted payment rate
(wage adjusted).
Xa = .60 * (national unadjusted payment rate) * applicable wage index.
Step 5. Calculate 40 percent (the nonlabor-related portion) of the
national unadjusted payment rate and add that amount to the resulting
product of Step 4. The result is the wage index adjusted payment rate
for the relevant wage index area.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 5 and
calculates the remaining portion of the national payment rate, the
amount not attributable to labor, and the adjusted payment for the
specific service.
Y is the nonlabor-related portion of the national unadjusted payment
rate.
Y = .40 * (national unadjusted payment rate).
Adjusted Medicare Payment = Y + Xa.
Step 6. If a provider is an SCH, as set forth in the regulations at
Sec. 412.92, or an EACH, which is considered to be an SCH under
section 1886(d)(5)(D)(iii)(III) of the Act, and located in a rural
area, as defined in Sec. 412.64(b), or is treated as being located in
a rural area under Sec. 412.103, multiply the wage index adjusted
payment rate by 1.071 to calculate the total payment.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 6 and
applies the rural adjustment for rural SCHs.
Adjusted Medicare Payment (SCH or EACH) = Adjusted Medicare Payment *
1.071.
We are providing examples below of the calculation of both the full
and reduced national unadjusted payment rates that will apply to
certain outpatient items and services performed by hospitals that meet
and that fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements, using the
steps outlined above. For purposes of this example, we are using a
provider that is located in Brooklyn, New York that is assigned to CBSA
35614. This provider bills one service that is assigned to APC 5071
(Level 1 Excision/Biopsy/Incision and Drainage). The CY 2020 full
national unadjusted payment rate for APC 5071 is $609.94. The reduced
national unadjusted payment rate for APC 5071 for a hospital that fails
to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements is $598.35. This reduced
rate is calculated by multiplying the reporting ratio of 0.981 by the
full unadjusted payment rate for APC 5071.
The FY 2020 wage index for a provider located in CBSA 35614 in New
York, which includes the proposed adoption of IPPS 2020 wage index
policies, is 1.2866. The labor-related portion of the full national
unadjusted payment is approximately $470.84 (.60 * $609.94 * 1.2866).
The labor-related portion of the reduced national unadjusted payment is
approximately $461.90 (.60 * $598.35 * 1.2866). The nonlabor-related
portion of the full national unadjusted payment is approximately
$243.98 (.40 * $609.94). The nonlabor-related portion of the reduced
national unadjusted payment is approximately $239.34 (.40 * $598.35).
The sum of the labor-related and nonlabor-related portions of the full
national adjusted payment is approximately $714.82 ($470.84 + $243.98).
The sum of the portions of the reduced national adjusted payment is
approximately $701.24 ($461.90 + $239.34).
I. Beneficiary Copayments
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(3)(B) of the Act requires the Secretary to set
rules for determining the unadjusted copayment amounts to be paid by
beneficiaries for covered OPD services. Section 1833(t)(8)(C)(ii) of
the Act specifies that the Secretary must reduce the national
unadjusted copayment amount for a covered OPD service (or group of such
services) furnished in a year in a manner so that the effective
copayment rate (determined on a national unadjusted basis) for that
service in the year does not exceed a specified percentage. As
specified in section 1833(t)(8)(C)(ii)(V) of the Act, the effective
copayment rate for a covered OPD service paid under the OPPS in CY
2006, and in CYs thereafter, shall not exceed 40 percent of the APC
payment rate.
Section 1833(t)(3)(B)(ii) of the Act provides that, for a covered
OPD service (or group of such services) furnished in a year, the
national unadjusted copayment amount cannot be less than 20 percent of
the OPD fee schedule amount. However, section 1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the
Act limits the amount of beneficiary copayment that may be collected
for a procedure (including items such as drugs and biologicals)
performed in a year to the amount of the inpatient hospital deductible
for that year.
Section 4104 of the Affordable Care Act eliminated the Medicare
Part B coinsurance for preventive services furnished on and after
January 1, 2011, that meet certain requirements, including flexible
sigmoidoscopies and screening colonoscopies, and waived the Part B
deductible for screening colonoscopies that become diagnostic during
the procedure. Our discussion of the changes made by the Affordable
Care Act with regard to copayments for preventive services furnished on
and after January 1, 2011, may be found in section XII.B. of the CY
2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (75 FR 72013).
2. OPPS Copayment Policy
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39437), we proposed to
determine copayment amounts for new and revised APCs using the same
methodology that we implemented beginning in CY 2004. (We refer readers
to the November 7, 2003 OPPS final rule with comment period (68 FR
63458).) In addition, we proposed to use the same standard rounding
principles that we have historically used in instances where the
application of our standard copayment methodology would result in a
copayment amount that is less than 20 percent and cannot be rounded,
under standard rounding principles, to 20 percent. (We refer readers to
the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66687) in
which we discuss our rationale for applying these rounding principles.)
The proposed national unadjusted copayment amounts for services payable
[[Page 61196]]
under the OPPS that would be effective January 1, 2020 are included in
Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (which are available via the
internet on the CMS website).
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed copayment
amounts for new and revised APCs using the same methodology we
implemented beginning in CY 2004 or the standard rounding principles we
apply to our copayment amounts. Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposed copayment policies, without modification.
As discussed in section XIV.E. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule and this final rule with comment period, for CY 2020, the Medicare
beneficiary's minimum unadjusted copayment and national unadjusted
copayment for a service to which a reduced national unadjusted payment
rate applies will equal the product of the reporting ratio and the
national unadjusted copayment, or the product of the reporting ratio
and the minimum unadjusted copayment, respectively, for the service.
We note that OPPS copayments may increase or decrease each year
based on changes in the calculated APC payment rates, due to updated
cost report and claims data, and any changes to the OPPS cost modeling
process. However, as described in the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with
comment period, the development of the copayment methodology generally
moves beneficiary copayments closer to 20 percent of OPPS APC payments
(68 FR 63458 through 63459).
In the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with comment period (68 FR 63459),
we adopted a new methodology to calculate unadjusted copayment amounts
in situations including reorganizing APCs, and we finalized the
following rules to determine copayment amounts in CY 2004 and
subsequent years.
When an APC group consists solely of HCPCS codes that were
not paid under the OPPS the prior year because they were packaged or
excluded or are new codes, the unadjusted copayment amount would be 20
percent of the APC payment rate.
If a new APC that did not exist during the prior year is
created and consists of HCPCS codes previously assigned to other APCs,
the copayment amount is calculated as the product of the APC payment
rate and the lowest coinsurance percentage of the codes comprising the
new APC.
If no codes are added to or removed from an APC and, after
recalibration of its relative payment weight, the new payment rate is
equal to or greater than the prior year's rate, the copayment amount
remains constant (unless the resulting coinsurance percentage is less
than 20 percent).
If no codes are added to or removed from an APC and, after
recalibration of its relative payment weight, the new payment rate is
less than the prior year's rate, the copayment amount is calculated as
the product of the new payment rate and the prior year's coinsurance
percentage.
If HCPCS codes are added to or deleted from an APC and,
after recalibrating its relative payment weight, holding its unadjusted
copayment amount constant results in a decrease in the coinsurance
percentage for the reconfigured APC, the copayment amount would not
change (unless retaining the copayment amount would result in a
coinsurance rate less than 20 percent).
If HCPCS codes are added to an APC and, after
recalibrating its relative payment weight, holding its unadjusted
copayment amount constant results in an increase in the coinsurance
percentage for the reconfigured APC, the copayment amount would be
calculated as the product of the payment rate of the reconfigured APC
and the lowest coinsurance percentage of the codes being added to the
reconfigured APC.
We noted in the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with comment period that we
would seek to lower the copayment percentage for a service in an APC
from the prior year if the copayment percentage was greater than 20
percent. We noted that this principle was consistent with section
1833(t)(8)(C)(ii) of the Act, which accelerates the reduction in the
national unadjusted coinsurance rate so that beneficiary liability will
eventually equal 20 percent of the OPPS payment rate for all OPPS
services to which a copayment applies, and with section 1833(t)(3)(B)
of the Act, which achieves a 20-percent copayment percentage when fully
phased in and gives the Secretary the authority to set rules for
determining copayment amounts for new services. We further noted that
the use of this methodology would, in general, reduce the beneficiary
coinsurance rate and copayment amount for APCs for which the payment
rate changes as the result of the reconfiguration of APCs and/or
recalibration of relative payment weights (68 FR 63459).
3. Calculation of an Adjusted Copayment Amount for an APC Group
Individuals interested in calculating the national copayment
liability for a Medicare beneficiary for a given service provided by a
hospital that met or failed to meet its Hospital OQR Program
requirements should follow the formulas presented in the following
steps.
Step 1. Calculate the beneficiary payment percentage for the APC by
dividing the APC's national unadjusted copayment by its payment rate.
For example, using APC 5071, $121.99 is approximately 20 percent of the
full national unadjusted payment rate of $609.94. For APCs with only a
minimum unadjusted copayment in Addenda A and B to this final rule with
comment period (which are available via the internet on the CMS
website), the beneficiary payment percentage is 20 percent.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 1 and
calculates the national copayment as a percentage of national payment
for a given service.
B is the beneficiary payment percentage.
B = National unadjusted copayment for APC/national unadjusted payment
rate for APC.
Step 2. Calculate the appropriate wage-adjusted payment rate for
the APC for the provider in question, as indicated in Steps 2 through 4
under section II.H. of this final rule with comment period. Calculate
the rural adjustment for eligible providers, as indicated in Step 6
under section II.H. of this final rule with comment period.
Step 3. Multiply the percentage calculated in Step 1 by the payment
rate calculated in Step 2. The result is the wage-adjusted copayment
amount for the APC.
The formula below is a mathematical representation of Step 3 and
applies the beneficiary payment percentage to the adjusted payment rate
for a service calculated under section II.H. of this final rule with
comment period, with and without the rural adjustment, to calculate the
adjusted beneficiary copayment for a given service.
Wage-adjusted copayment amount for the APC = Adjusted Medicare
Payment * B.
Wage-adjusted copayment amount for the APC (SCH or EACH) =
(Adjusted Medicare Payment * 1.071) * B.
Step 4. For a hospital that failed to meet its Hospital OQR Program
requirements, multiply the copayment calculated in Step 3 by the
reporting ratio of 0.980.
The proposed unadjusted copayments for services payable under the
OPPS that will be effective January 1, 2020, are shown in Addenda A and
B to this final rule with comment period (which are available via the
internet on the CMS website). We note that the national unadjusted
payment rates and copayment rates shown in Addenda A
[[Page 61197]]
and B to this final rule with comment period reflect the CY 2020 OPD
fee schedule increase factor discussed in section II.B. of this final
rule with comment period.
In addition, as noted earlier, section 1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the Act
limits the amount of beneficiary copayment that may be collected for a
procedure performed in a year to the amount of the inpatient hospital
deductible for that year.
III. OPPS Ambulatory Payment Classification (APC) Group Policies
A. OPPS Treatment of New and Revised HCPCS Codes
Payment for OPPS procedures, services, and items are generally
based on medical billing codes, specifically, HCPCS codes, that are
reported on HOPD claims. The HCPCS is divided into two principal
subsystems, referred to as Level I and Level II of the HCPCS. Level I
is comprised of CPT (Current Procedural Terminology), a numeric and
alphanumeric coding system maintained by the American Medical
Association (AMA), and consist of Category I, II, and III CPT codes.
Level II, which is maintained by CMS, is a standardized coding system
that is used primarily to identify products, supplies, and services not
included in the CPT codes. HCPCS codes are used to report surgical
procedures, medical services, items, and supplies under the hospital
OPPS. Specifically, CMS recognizes the following codes on OPPS claims:
Category I CPT codes, which describe surgical procedures,
diagnostic and therapeutic services, and vaccine codes;
Category III CPT codes, which describe new and emerging
technologies, services, and procedures; and
Level II HCPCS codes (also known as alphanumeric codes),
which are used primarily to identify drugs, devices, ambulance
services, durable medical equipment, orthotics, prosthetics, supplies,
temporary surgical procedures, and medical services not described by
CPT codes.
CPT codes are established by the American Medical Association (AMA)
while the Level II HCPCS codes are established by the CMS HCPCS
Workgroup. These codes are updated and changed throughout the year. CPT
and Level II HCPCS code changes that affect the OPPS are published
through the annual rulemaking cycle and through the OPPS quarterly
update Change Requests (CRs). Generally, these code changes are
effective January 1, April 1, July 1, or October 1. CPT code changes
are released by the AMA via their website while Level II HCPCS code
changes are released to the public via the CMS HCPCS website. CMS
recognizes the release of new CPT and Level II HCPCS codes and makes
the codes effective (that is, the codes can be reported on Medicare
claims) outside of the formal rulemaking process via OPPS quarterly
update CRs. Based on our review, we assign the new codes to interim
status indicators (SIs) and APCs. These interim assignments are
finalized in the OPPS/ASC final rules. This quarterly process offers
hospitals access to codes that more accurately describe items or
services furnished and provides payment for these items or services in
a timelier manner than if we waited for the annual rulemaking process.
We solicit public comments on the new CPT and Level II HCPCS codes and
finalize our proposals through our annual rulemaking process.
We note that, under the OPPS, the APC assignment determines the
payment rate for an item, procedure, or service. Those items,
procedures, or services not paid separately under the hospital OPPS are
assigned to appropriate status indicators. Certain payment status
indicators provide separate payment while other payment status
indicators do not. In section XI. (CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and
Comment Indicators) of this final rule with comment period, we discuss
the various status indicators used under the OPPS. We also provide a
complete list of the status indicators and their definitions in
Addendum D1 to this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
1. HCPCS Codes That Were Effective April 1, 2019 for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule
For the April 2019 update, there were no new CPT codes. However,
eight new Level II HCPCS codes were established and made effective on
April 1, 2019. These codes and their long descriptors were displayed in
Table 7 of the proposed rule and are now listed in Table 8 of this
final rule with comment period. Through the April 2019 OPPS quarterly
update CR (Transmittal 4255, Change Request 11216, dated March 15,
2019), we recognized several new Level II HCPCS codes for separate
payment under the OPPS. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39531-39532), we solicited public comments on the proposed APC and
status indicator assignments for these Level II HCPCS codes, which were
listed in Table 7 of the proposed rule.
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed OPPS APC and
status indicator assignments for the new Level II HCPCS codes
implemented in April 2019. Therefore, we are finalizing the proposed
APC and status indicator assignments for these codes, as indicated in
Table 8 below. We note that several of the HCPCS C-codes have been
replaced with HCPCS J-codes, effective January 1, 2020. Their
replacement codes are listed in Table 8. The final payment rates for
these codes can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, the status indicator definitions can be found in
Addendum D1 to this final rule with comment period. Both Addendum B and
Addendum D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
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2. HCPCS Codes That Were Effective July 1, 2019 for Which We Solicited
Public Comments in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule
For the July 2019 update, 58 new codes were established and made
effective July 1, 2019. The codes and long descriptors were listed in
Table 8 of the proposed rule. Through the July 2019 OPPS quarterly
update CR (Transmittal 4313, Change Request 11318, dated May 24, 2019),
we recognized several new codes for separate payment and assigned them
to appropriate interim OPPS status indicators and APCs. In the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we solicited public comments on the proposed
APC and status indicator assignments for the codes implemented on July
1, 2019, all of which were listed in Table 8 of the proposed rule.
We received some public comments related to CPT codes 0546T, 0548T,
0549T, 0554T, 0555T, 0556T, 0557T, and 0558T, which we address in
section III.D. (OPPS APC-Specific Policies) of this final rule with
comment period. With the exception of the eight codes, we did not
receive any public comments on the proposed OPPS APC and status
indicator assignments for the other new CPT and Level II HCPCS codes
implemented in July 2019. Therefore, we are finalizing the proposed APC
and status indicator assignments for the July 2019 codes, including the
eight codes on which we received public comments, as indicated in Table
9 below. We note that several of the HCPCS C-codes have been replaced
with HCPCS J-codes, effective January 1, 2020. Their replacement codes
are listed in Table 9. The final payment rates for the codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period. In
addition, the status indicator meanings can be found in Addendum D1 to
this final rule with comment period. Both Addendum B and Addendum D1
are available via the internet on the CMS website.
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3. October 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which We Are Soliciting Public Comments
in This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With Comment Period
As has been our practice in the past, we incorporate those new
HCPCS codes that are effective October 1 in the final rule with comment
period, thereby updating the OPPS for the following calendar year, as
displayed in Table 9 of the proposed rule and reprinted as Table 10 of
this final rule with comment period. These codes are released to the
public through the October OPPS quarterly update CRs and via the CMS
HCPCS website (for Level II HCPCS codes). For CY 2020, these codes are
flagged with comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum B to this OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period to indicate that we are assigning them
an interim payment status which is subject to public comment.
Specifically, the interim status indicator and APC assignments for
codes flagged with comment indicator ``NI'' are open to public comment
in this final rule with comment period, and we will respond to these
public comments in the OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period for the
next year's OPPS/ASC update.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39449), we proposed to
continue this process for CY 2020. Specifically, for CY 2020, we
proposed to include in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period the new HCPCS codes effective October 1, 2019, that
would be incorporated in the October 2019 OPPS quarterly update CR.
Also, as stated above, the October 1, 2019 codes are flagged with
comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum B to this CY 2020 OPPS/
[[Page 61207]]
ASC final rule with comment period to indicate that we have assigned
the codes an interim OPPS payment status for CY 2020. We are inviting
public comments on the interim status indicator and APC assignments for
these codes, if applicable, that will be finalized in the CY 2021 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
We note that we received a comment related to HCPCS code Q4184
(Cellesta or Cellesta Duo, per square centimeter), which was assigned
to comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum B of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule. The comment and our response can be found in section V.B.7 (Skin
Substitutes) of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
4. January 2020 HCPCS Codes
a. New Level II HCPCS Codes for Which We Are Soliciting Public Comments
in This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With Comment Period
As shown in Table 10 below, and as stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39449), consistent with past practice, we solicit
comments on the new Level II HCPCS codes that will be effective January
1 in the OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, thereby allowing us
to finalize the status indicators and APC assignments for the codes in
the next OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. Unlike the CPT codes
that are effective January 1 and are included in the OPPS/ASC proposed
rules, most Level II HCPCS codes are not released until sometime around
November to be effective January 1. Because these codes are not
available until November, we are unable to include them in the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules. Consequently, for CY 2020, we proposed to include in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period the
new Level II HCPCS codes effective January 1, 2020, that would be
incorporated in the January 2020 OPPS quarterly update CR. These codes
will be released to the public through the January OPPS quarterly
update CRs and via the CMS HCPCS website (for Level II HCPCS codes).
For CY 2020, the Level II HCPCS codes effective January 1, 2020 codes
are flagged with comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum B to this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period to indicate that we have
assigned the codes an interim OPPS payment status for CY 2020. We are
inviting public comments on the interim status indicator and APC
assignments for these codes, if applicable, that will be finalized in
the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
b. CPT Codes for Which We Solicited Public Comments in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule
For CY 2020, we received the CY 2020 CPT code updates that would be
effective January 1, 2020, from AMA in time for inclusion in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We note that in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (79 FR 66841 through 66844), we finalized a
revised process of assigning APC and status indicators for new and
revised Category I and III CPT codes that would be effective January 1.
Specifically, for the new/revised CPT codes that we receive in a timely
manner from the AMA's CPT Editorial Panel, we finalized our proposal to
include the codes that would be effective January 1 in the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules, along with proposed APC and status indicator
assignments for them, and to finalize the APC and status indicator
assignments in the OPPS/ASC final rules beginning with the CY 2016 OPPS
update. For those new/revised CPT codes that were received too late for
inclusion in the OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we finalized our proposal to
establish and use HCPCS G-codes that mirror the predecessor CPT codes
and retain the current APC and status indicator assignments for a year
until we can propose APC and status indicator assignments in the
following year's rulemaking cycle. We note that even if we find that we
need to create HCPCS G-codes in place of certain CPT codes for the PFS
proposed rule, we do not anticipate that these HCPCS G-codes will
always be necessary for OPPS purposes. We will make every effort to
include proposed APC and status indicator assignments for all new and
revised CPT codes that the AMA makes publicly available in time for us
to include them in the annual proposed rule, and to avoid the resort to
HCPCS G-codes and the resulting delay in utilization of the most
current CPT codes. Also, we finalized our proposal to make interim APC
and status indicator assignments for CPT codes that are not available
in time for the proposed rule and that describe wholly new services
(such as new technologies or new surgical procedures), solicit public
comments, and finalize the specific APC and status indicator
assignments for those codes in the following year's final rule.
As stated above, for the CY 2020 OPPS update, we received the CY
2020 CPT codes from AMA in time for inclusion in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule. The new, revised, and deleted CY 2020 Category I and III
CPT codes were included in Addendum B to the proposed rule (which is
available via the internet on the CMS website). We noted in the
proposed rule that the new and revised codes are assigned to new
comment indicator ``NP'' to indicate that the code is new for the next
calendar year or the code is an existing code with substantial revision
to its code descriptor in the next calendar year as compared to current
calendar year with a proposed APC assignment, and that comments will be
accepted on the proposed APC and status indicator assignments.
Further, we reminded readers that the CPT code descriptors that
appear in Addendum B are short descriptors and do not accurately
describe the complete procedure, service, or item described by the CPT
code. Therefore, we included the 5-digit placeholder codes and their
long descriptors for the new and revised CY 2020 CPT codes in Addendum
O to the proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website) so that the public could adequately comment on the proposed
APCs and status indicator assignments. The 5-digit placeholder codes
were included in Addendum O, specifically under the column labeled ``CY
2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule 5-Digit AMA Placeholder Code,'' to the
proposed rule. We noted that the final CPT code numbers will be
included in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. We
also noted that not every code listed in Addendum O is subject to
public comment. For the new and revised Category I and III CPT codes,
we requested public comments on only those codes that are assigned to
comment indicator ``NP''.
In summary, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we solicited
public comments on the proposed CY 2020 status indicator and APC
assignments for the new and revised Category I and III CPT codes that
will be effective January 1, 2020. The CPT codes were listed in
Addendum B to the proposed rule with short descriptors only. We listed
them again in Addendum O to the proposed rule with long descriptors. We
also proposed to finalize the status indicator and APC assignments for
these codes (with their final CPT code numbers) in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. The proposed status indicator and APC
assignments for these codes were included in Addendum B to the proposed
rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
Commenters addressed several of the new CPT codes that were
assigned to comment indicator ``NP'' in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed
[[Page 61208]]
rule. We have responded to those public comments in sections III.D.
(OPPS APC-Specific Policies), IV.B. (Device-Intensive Procedures) and
XII. (Updates to the ASC Payment System) of this CY 2020OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period.
The final status indicators, APC assignments, and payment rates for
the new CPT codes that are effective January 1, 2020 can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with comment period. In addition, the
status indicator meanings can be found in Addendum D1 (OPPS Payment
Status Indicators for CY 2020) to this final rule with comment period.
Both Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS
website.
Finally, Table 10 below, which is a reprint of Table 9 from the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, shows the comment timeframe for new and
revised HCPCS codes. The table provides information on our current
process for updating codes through our OPPS quarterly update CRs,
seeking public comments, and finalizing the treatment of these codes
under the OPPS.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.022
B. OPPS Changes--Variations Within APCs
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(2)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to develop
a classification system for covered hospital outpatient department
services. Section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act provides that the Secretary
may establish groups of covered OPD services within this classification
system, so that services classified within each group are comparable
clinically and with respect to the use of resources. In accordance with
these provisions, we developed a grouping classification system,
referred to as Ambulatory Payment Classifications (APCs), as set forth
in regulations at 42 CFR[thinsp]419.31. We use Level I (also known as
CPT codes) and Level II HCPCS codes (also known as alphanumeric codes)
to identify and group the services within each APC. The APCs are
organized such that each group is homogeneous both clinically and in
terms of resource use. Using this classification system, we have
established distinct groups of similar services. We also have developed
separate APC groups for certain medical devices, drugs, biologicals,
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals, and brachytherapy devices that are
not packaged into the payment for the procedure.
We have packaged into the payment for each procedure or service
within an APC group the costs associated with those items and services
that are typically ancillary and supportive to a primary diagnostic or
therapeutic modality and, in those cases, are an integral part of the
primary service they support. Therefore, we do not make separate
payment for these packaged items or services. In general, packaged
items and services include, but are not limited to, the items and
services listed in regulations at 42 CFR 419.2(b). A further discussion
of packaged services is included in section II.A.3. of this final rule
with comment period.
[[Page 61209]]
Under the OPPS, we generally pay for covered hospital outpatient
services on a rate-per-service basis, where the service may be reported
with one or more HCPCS codes. Payment varies according to the APC group
to which the independent service or combination of services is
assigned. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39451-39452),
for CY 2020, we proposed that each APC relative payment weight
represents the hospital cost of the services included in that APC,
relative to the hospital cost of the services included in APC 5012
(Clinic Visits and Related Services). The APC relative payment weights
are scaled to APC 5012 because it is the hospital clinic visit APC and
clinic visits are among the most frequently furnished services in the
hospital outpatient setting.
2. Application of the 2 Times Rule
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to review,
not less often than annually, and revise the APC groups, the relative
payment weights, and the wage and other adjustments described in
paragraph (2) to take into account changes in medical practice, changes
in technology, the addition of new services, new cost data, and other
relevant information and factors. Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act also
requires the Secretary to consult with an expert outside advisory panel
composed of an appropriate selection of representatives of providers to
review (and advise the Secretary concerning) the clinical integrity of
the APC groups and the relative payment weights. We note that the HOP
Panel recommendations for specific services for the CY 2020 OPPS update
are discussed in the relevant specific sections throughout this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
In addition, section 1833(t)(2) of the Act provides that, subject
to certain exceptions, the items and services within an APC group
cannot be considered comparable with respect to the use of resources if
the highest cost for an item or service in the group is more than 2
times greater than the lowest cost for an item or service within the
same group (referred to as the ``2 times rule''). The statute
authorizes the Secretary to make exceptions to the 2 times rule in
unusual cases, such as low-volume items and services (but the Secretary
may not make such an exception in the case of a drug or biological that
has been designated as an orphan drug under section 526 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act). In determining the APCs with a 2 times
rule violation, we consider only those HCPCS codes that are significant
based on the number of claims. We note that, for purposes of
identifying significant procedure codes for examination under the 2
times rule, we consider procedure codes that have more than 1,000
single major claims or procedure codes that both have more than 99
single major claims and contribute at least 2 percent of the single
major claims used to establish the APC cost to be significant (75 FR
71832). This longstanding definition of when a procedure code is
significant for purposes of the 2 times rule was selected because we
believe that a subset of 1,000 or fewer claims is negligible within the
set of approximately 100 million single procedure or single session
claims we use for establishing costs. Similarly, a procedure code for
which there are fewer than 99 single claims and that comprises less
than 2 percent of the single major claims within an APC will have a
negligible impact on the APC cost (75 FR 71832). In the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39451 through 39452), for CY 2020, we proposed
to make exceptions to this limit on the variation of costs within each
APC group in unusual cases, such as for certain low-volume items and
services.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we identified the APCs with
violations of the 2 times rule. Therefore, we proposed changes to the
procedure codes assigned to these APCs in Addendum B to the proposed
rule. We noted that Addendum B does not appear in the printed version
of the Federal Register as part of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
Rather, it is published and made available via the internet on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/. To eliminate a violation of
the 2 times rule and improve clinical and resource homogeneity, we
proposed to reassign these procedure codes to new APCs that contain
services that are similar with regard to both their clinical and
resource characteristics. In many cases, the proposed procedure code
reassignments and associated APC reconfigurations for CY 2020 included
in the proposed rule were related to changes in costs of services that
were observed in the CY 2018 claims data newly available for CY 2020
ratesetting. Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
identified with a comment indicator ``CH'' those procedure codes for
which we proposed a change to the APC assignment or status indicator,
or both, that were initially assigned in the July 1, 2019 OPPS Addendum
B Update (available via the internet on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Addendum-A-and-Addendum-B-Updates.html), which
was the latest payment rate file for 2019 prior to issuance of the
proposed rule.
3. APC Exceptions to the 2 Times Rule
Taking into account the APC changes that we proposed to make for CY
2020 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we reviewed all of the APCs
to determine which APCs would not meet the requirements of the 2 times
rule. We used the following criteria to evaluate whether to propose
exceptions to the 2 times rule for affected APCs:
Resource homogeneity;
Clinical homogeneity;
Hospital outpatient setting utilization;
Frequency of service (volume); and
Opportunity for upcoding and code fragments.
Based on the CY 2018 claims data available for the CY 2020 proposed
rule, we found 18 APCs with violations of the 2 times rule. We applied
the criteria as described above to identify the APCs for which we
proposed to make exceptions under the 2 times rule for CY 2020, and
found that all of the 18 APCs we identified met the criteria for an
exception to the 2 times rule based on the CY 2018 claims data
available for the proposed rule. We did not include in that
determination those APCs where a 2 times rule violation was not a
relevant concept, such as APC 5401 (Dialysis), which only has two HCPCS
codes assigned to it that have a similar geometric mean costs and do
not create a 2 time rule violation. Therefore, we only identified those
APCs, including those with criteria-based costs, such as device-
dependent CPT/HCPCS codes, with violations of the 2 times rule.
We note that, for cases in which a recommendation by the HOP Panel
appears to result in or allow a violation of the 2 times rule, we may
accept the HOP Panel's recommendation because those recommendations are
based on explicit consideration (that is, a review of the latest OPPS
claims data and group discussion of the issue) of resource use,
clinical homogeneity, site of service, and the quality of the claims
data used to determine the APC payment rates.
Table 10 of the proposed rule listed the 18 APCs that we proposed
to make an exception for under the 2 times rule for CY 2020 based on
the criteria cited above and claims data submitted between January 1,
2018, and December 31, 2018, and processed on or before December 31,
2018. In the proposed
[[Page 61210]]
rule, we stated that for the final rule with comment period, we intend
to use claims data for dates of service between January 1, 2018, and
December 31, 2018, that were processed on or before June 30, 2019, and
updated CCRs, if available.
Based on the updated final rule CY 2018 claims data used for this
CY 2020 final rule with comment period, we were able to remedy two APC
violation out of the 18 APCs that appeared in Table 10 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Specifically, APC 5672 (Level 2 Pathology) and
APC 5733 (Level 3 Minor Procedures) no longer met the criteria for
exception to the 2 times rule in this final rule with comment period.
In addition, based on our analysis of the final rule claims data, we
found a total of 17 APCs with violations of the 2 times rule. Of these
17 total APCs, 16 were identified in the proposed rule and one newly
identified APC. Specifically, we found the following 16 APCs from the
proposed rule continued to have violations of the 2 times rule for this
final rule with comment period:
APC 5112 (Level 2 Musculoskeletal Procedures);
APC 5161 (Level 1 ENT Procedures)
APC 5181 (Level 1 Vascular Procedures)
APC 5311 (Level 1 Lower GI Procedures)
APC 5521 (Level 1 Imaging without Contrast);
APC 5522 (Level 2 Imaging without Contrast);
APC 5523 (Level 3 Imaging without Contrast);
APC 5524 (Level 4 Imaging without Contrast);
APC 5571 (Level 1 Imaging with Contrast)
APC 5612 (Level 2 Therapeutic Radiation Treatment
Preparation);
APC 5691 (Level 1 Drug Administration);
APC 5721 (Level 1 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services);
APC 5731 (Level 1 Minor Procedures);
APC 5734 (Level 4 Minor Procedures);
APC 5822 (Level 2 Health and Behavior Services); and
APC 5823 (Level 3 Health and Behavior Services).
In addition, we found that APC 5593 (Level 3 Nuclear Medicine and
Related Services) violated the 2 times rule using the final rule with
comment period claims data.
Although we did not receive any comments on Table 10 of the
proposed rule, we did receive comments on APC assignments for specific
HCPCS codes. The comments, and our responses, can be found in section
III.D. (OPPS APC-Specific Policies) of this final rule with comment
period.
After considering the public comments we received on APC
assignments and our analysis of the CY 2018 costs from hospital claims
and cost report data available for this CY 2020 final rule with comment
period, we are finalizing our proposals with some modifications.
Specifically, we are finalizing our proposal to except 16 of the 18
proposed APCs from the 2 times rule for CY 2020 and also excepting one
additional APC (APC 5593). As noted above, we were able to remedy two
of the proposed rule 2 time violations in this final rule with comment
period.
In summary, Table 11 below lists the 17 APCs that we are excepting
from the 2 times rule for CY 2020 based on the criteria described
earlier and a review of updated claims data for dates of service
between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018, that were processed on
or before June 30, 2019, and updated CCRs, if available. We note that,
for cases in which a recommendation by the HOP Panel appears to result
in or allow a violation of the 2 times rule, we generally accept the
HOP Panel's recommendation because those recommendations are based on
explicit consideration of resource use, clinical homogeneity, site of
service, and the quality of the claims data used to determine the APC
payment rates. The geometric mean costs for hospital outpatient
services for these and all other APCs that were used in the development
of this final rule with comment period can be found on the CMS website
at: https://www.cms.gov.
[[Page 61211]]
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C. New Technology APCs
1. Background
In the CY 2002 OPPS final rule (66 FR 59903), we finalized changes
to the time period in which a service can be eligible for payment under
a New Technology APC. Beginning in CY 2002, we retain services within
New Technology APC groups until we gather sufficient claims data to
enable us to assign the service to an appropriate clinical APC. This
policy allows us to move a service from a New Technology APC in less
than 2 years if sufficient data are available. It also allows us to
retain a service in a New Technology APC for more than 2 years if
sufficient data upon which to base a decision for reassignment have not
been collected.
In the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with comment period (68 FR 63416),
we restructured the New Technology APCs to make the cost intervals more
consistent across payment levels and refined the cost bands for these
APCs to retain two parallel sets of New Technology APCs, one set with a
status indicator of ``S'' (Significant Procedures, Not Discounted when
Multiple. Paid under OPPS; separate APC payment) and the other set with
a status indicator of ``T'' (Significant Procedure, Multiple Reduction
Applies. Paid under OPPS; separate APC payment). These current New
Technology APC configurations allow us to price new technology services
more appropriately and consistently.
For CY 2019, there were 52 New Technology APC levels, ranging from
the lowest cost band assigned to APC 1491 (New Technology-Level 1A ($0-
$10)) through the highest cost band assigned to APC 1908 (New
Technology-Level 52 ($145,001-$160,000)). We note that the cost bands
for the New Technology APCs, specifically, APCs 1491 through 1599 and
1901 through 1908, vary with increments ranging from $10 to $14,999.
These cost bands identify the APCs to which new technology procedures
and services with estimated service costs that fall within those cost
bands are assigned under the OPPS. Payment for each APC is made at the
mid-point of the APC's assigned cost band. For example, payment for New
Technology APC 1507 (New Technology-Level 7 ($501-$600)) is made at
$550.50.
Under the OPPS, one of our goals is to make payments that are
appropriate for the services that are necessary for the treatment of
Medicare beneficiaries. The OPPS, like other Medicare payment systems,
is budget neutral and increases are limited to the annual hospital
inpatient market basket increase adjusted for multifactor productivity.
We believe that our payment rates generally reflect the costs that are
associated with providing care to Medicare beneficiaries. Furthermore,
we believe that our payment rates are adequate to ensure access to
services (80 FR 70374).
For many emerging technologies, there is a transitional period
during which utilization may be low, often because providers are first
learning about the technologies and their clinical utility. Quite
often, parties request that Medicare make higher payment amounts under
the New Technology APCs for new procedures in that transitional phase.
These requests, and their accompanying estimates for expected total
patient utilization, often reflect very low rates of patient use of
expensive equipment, resulting in high per-use costs for which
requesters believe Medicare should make full payment. Medicare does
not, and we believe should not, assume responsibility for more than its
share of the costs of procedures based on projected utilization for
Medicare beneficiaries and does not set its payment rates based on
initial projections of low utilization for services that require
expensive capital equipment. For the OPPS, we rely on hospitals to make
informed business decisions regarding the acquisition of high-cost
capital equipment, taking into consideration their knowledge about
their entire patient base (Medicare
[[Page 61212]]
beneficiaries included) and an understanding of Medicare's and other
payers' payment policies. (We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (77 FR 68314) for further discussion
regarding this payment policy.)
We note that, in a budget neutral system, payments may not fully
cover hospitals' costs in a particular circumstance, including those
for the purchase and maintenance of capital equipment. We rely on
hospitals to make their decisions regarding the acquisition of high-
cost equipment with the understanding that the Medicare program must be
careful to establish its initial payment rates, including those made
through New Technology APCs, for new services that lack hospital claims
data based on realistic utilization projections for all such services
delivered in cost-efficient hospital outpatient settings. As the OPPS
acquires claims data regarding hospital costs associated with new
procedures, we regularly examine the claims data and any available new
information regarding the clinical aspects of new procedures to confirm
that our OPPS payments remain appropriate for procedures as they
transition into mainstream medical practice (77 FR 68314). For CY 2020,
we included the proposed payment rates for New Technology APCs 1491 to
1599 and 1901 through 1908 in Addendum A to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
The final payment rates for these New Technology APCs are included in
Addendum A to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
2. Establishing Payment Rates for Low-Volume New Technology Procedures
Procedures that are assigned to New Technology APCs are typically
new procedures that do not have sufficient claims history to establish
an accurate payment for the procedures. One of the objectives of
establishing New Technology APCs is to generate sufficient claims data
for a new procedure so that it can be assigned to an appropriate
clinical APC. Some procedures that are assigned to New Technology APCs
have very low annual volume, which we consider to be fewer than 100
claims. We consider procedures with fewer than 100 claims annually as
low-volume procedures because there is a higher probability that the
payment data for a procedure may not have a normal statistical
distribution, which could affect the quality of our standard cost
methodology that is used to assign services to an APC. In addition,
services with fewer than 100 claims per year are not generally
considered to be a significant contributor to the APC ratesetting
calculations and, therefore, are not included in the assessment of the
2 times rule. As we explained in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58890), we were concerned that the methodology we
use to estimate the cost of a procedure under the OPPS by calculating
the geometric mean for all separately paid claims for a HCPCS procedure
code from the most recent available year of claims data may not
generate an accurate estimate of the actual cost of the procedure for
these low-volume procedures.
In accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, services
classified within each APC must be comparable clinically and with
respect to the use of resources. As described earlier, assigning a
procedure to a new technology APC allows us to gather claims data to
price the procedure and assign it to the APC with services that use
similar resources and are clinically comparable. However, where
utilization of services assigned to a New Technology APC is low, it can
lead to wide variation in payment rates from year to year, resulting in
even lower utilization and potential barriers to access to new
technologies, which ultimately limits our ability to assign the service
to the appropriate clinical APC. To mitigate these issues, we
determined in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that
it was appropriate to utilize our equitable adjustment authority at
section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to adjust how we determined the costs
for low-volume services assigned to New Technology APCs (83 FR 58892
through 58893). We have utilized our equitable adjustment authority at
section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which states that the Secretary shall
establish, in a budget neutral manner, other adjustments as determined
to be necessary to ensure equitable payments, to estimate an
appropriate payment amount for low-volume new technology procedures in
the past (82 FR 59281). Although we have used this adjustment authority
on a case-by-case basis in the past, we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period that we believe it is appropriate to
adopt an adjustment for low-volume services assigned to New Technology
APCs in order to mitigate the wide payment fluctuations that have
occurred for new technology services with fewer than 100 claims and to
provide more predictable payment for these services.
For purposes of this adjustment, we stated that we believe that it
is appropriate to use up to 4 years of claims data in calculating the
applicable payment rate for the prospective year, rather than using
solely the most recent available year of claims data, when a service
assigned to a New Technology APC has a low annual volume of claims,
which, for purposes of this adjustment, we define as fewer than 100
claims annually. We adopted a policy to consider procedures with fewer
than 100 claims annually as low-volume procedures because there is a
higher probability that the payment data for a procedure may not have a
normal statistical distribution, which could affect the quality of our
standard cost methodology that is used to assign services to an APC. We
explained that we were concerned that the methodology we use to
estimate the cost of a procedure under the OPPS by calculating the
geometric mean for all separately paid claims for a HCPCS procedure
code from the most recent available year of claims data may not
generate an accurate estimate of the actual cost of the low-volume
procedure. Using multiple years of claims data will potentially allow
for more than 100 claims to be used to set the payment rate, which
would, in turn, create a more statistically reliable payment rate.
In addition, to better approximate the cost of a low-volume service
within a New Technology APC, we stated that we believe using the median
or arithmetic mean rather than the geometric mean (which ``trims'' the
costs of certain claims out) could be more appropriate in some
circumstances, given the extremely low volume of claims. Low claim
volumes increase the impact of ``outlier'' claims; that is, claims with
either a very low or very high payment rate as compared to the average
claim, which would have a substantial impact on any statistical
methodology used to estimate the most appropriate payment rate for a
service. We also explained that we believe having the flexibility to
utilize an alternative statistical methodology to calculate the payment
rate in the case of low-volume new technology services would help to
create a more stable payment rate. Therefore, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 58893), we established that, in
each of our annual rulemakings, we will seek public comments on which
statistical methodology should be used for each low-volume service
assigned to a New Technology APC. In the preamble of
[[Page 61213]]
each annual rulemaking, we stated that we would present the result of
each statistical methodology and solicit public comment on which
methodology should be used to establish the payment rate for a low-
volume new technology service. In addition, we will use our assessment
of the resources used to perform a service and guidance from the
developer or manufacturer of the service, as well as other
stakeholders, to determine the most appropriate payment rate. Once we
identify the most appropriate payment rate for a service, we will
assign the service to the New Technology APC with the cost band that
includes its payment rate.
Accordingly for CY 2020, we proposed to continue the policy we
adopted in CY 2019 under which we will utilize our equitable adjustment
authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to calculate the
geometric mean, arithmetic mean, and median using multiple years of
claims data to select the appropriate payment rate for purposes of
assigning services with fewer than 100 claims per year to a New
Technology APC. Additional details on our policy is available in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58892 through
58893).
Comment: One commenter expressed support for the continuation of
our policy regarding payment rates for low-volume new technology
procedures.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support.
After considering the public comments we received, we are
finalizing this proposal without modification.
3. Procedures Assigned to New Technology APC Groups for CY 2020
As we explained in the CY 2002 OPPS final rule with comment period
(66 FR 59902), we generally retain a procedure in the New Technology
APC to which it is initially assigned until we have obtained sufficient
claims data to justify reassignment of the procedure to a clinically
appropriate APC.
In addition, in cases where we find that our initial New Technology
APC assignment was based on inaccurate or inadequate information
(although it was the best information available at the time), where we
obtain new information that was not available at the time of our
initial New Technology APC assignment, or where the New Technology APCs
are restructured, we may, based on more recent resource utilization
information (including claims data) or the availability of refined New
Technology APC cost bands, reassign the procedure or service to a
different New Technology APC that more appropriately reflects its cost
(66 FR 59903).
Consistent with our current policy, for CY 2020, in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39454), we proposed to retain services
within New Technology APC groups until we obtain sufficient claims data
to justify reassignment of the service to a clinically appropriate APC.
The flexibility associated with this policy allows us to reassign a
service from a New Technology APC in less than 2 years if sufficient
claims data are available. It also allows us to retain a service in a
New Technology APC for more than 2 years if sufficient claims data upon
which to base a decision for reassignment have not been obtained (66 FR
59902).
a. Magnetic Resonance-Guided Focused Ultrasound Surgery (MRgFUS) (APCs
1575, 5114, and 5414)
Currently, there are four CPT/HCPCS codes that describe magnetic
resonance image-guided, high-intensity focused ultrasound (MRgFUS)
procedures, three of which we proposed to continue to assign to
standard APCs, and one that we proposed to continue to assign to a New
Technology APC for CY 2020. These codes include CPT codes 0071T, 0072T,
and 0398T, and HCPCS code C9734. CPT codes 0071T and 0072T describe
procedures for the treatment of uterine fibroids, CPT code 0398T
describes procedures for the treatment of essential tremor, and HCPCS
code C9734 describes procedures for pain palliation for metastatic bone
cancer.
As shown in Table 11 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and as
listed in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed
to continue to assign the procedures described by CPT codes 0071T and
0072T to APC 5414 (Level 4 Gynecologic Procedures) for CY 2020. We also
proposed to continue to assign the APC to status indicator ``J1''
(Hospital Part B services paid through a comprehensive APC). In
addition, we proposed to continue to assign the services described by
HCPCS code C9734 (Focused ultrasound ablation/therapeutic intervention,
other than uterine leiomyomata, with magnetic resonance (mr) guidance)
to APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures) for CY 2020. We also
proposed to continue to assign HCPCS code C9734 to status indicator
``J1''. We refer readers to Addendum B to the proposed rule for the
proposed payment rates for CPT codes 0071T and 0072T and HCPCS code
C9734 under the OPPS. Addendum B is available via the internet on the
CMS website.
For the procedure described by CPT code 0398T, we have identified
37 paid claims from CY 2016 through CY 2018 (1 claim in CY 2016, 11
claims in CY 2017, and 25 claims in CY 2018). We note that the
procedure described by CPT code 0398T was first assigned to a New
Technology APC in CY 2016. Accordingly, there are 3 years of claims
data available for the OPPS ratesetting purposes. The payment amounts
for the claims vary widely, with a cost of approximately $29,254 for
the sole CY 2016 claim, a geometric mean cost of approximately $4,647
for the 11 claims from CY 2017, and a geometric mean cost of
approximately $11,716 for the 25 claims from CY 2018. We are concerned
about the large fluctuation in the cost of the procedure described by
CPT code 0398T from year to year and the relatively small number of
claims available to establish a payment rate for the service. In
accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we must establish
that services classified within each APC are comparable clinically and
with respect to the use of resources.
Therefore, as discussed in section III.C.2. of the proposed rule,
we proposed to apply the policy we adopted in CY 2019, under which we
will utilize our equitable adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to calculate the geometric mean, arithmetic
mean, and median costs using multiple years of claims data to select
the appropriate payment rate for purposes of assigning CPT code 0398T
to a New Technology APC. We believe using this approach to assign CPT
code 0398T to a New Technology APC is more likely to yield a payment
rate that will be representative of the cost of the procedure described
by CPT code 0398T, despite the fluctuating geometric mean costs for the
procedure available in the claims data used for the proposed rule. We
continue to believe that the situation for the procedure described by
CPT code 0398T is unique, given the limited number of claims for the
procedure and the high variability for the cost of the claims, which
makes it challenging to determine a reliable payment rate.
Our analysis found that the estimated geometric mean cost of the 37
claims over the 3 year period for which there are claims was
approximately $8,829, the estimated arithmetic mean cost of the claims
was approximately $10,021, and the median cost of the claims was
approximately $11,985. While the results of using different
methodologies range from approximately $8,800 to nearly $12,000, two of
the estimates fall within the cost bands of New Technology APC 1575
(New
[[Page 61214]]
Technology--Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000)), with a proposed payment rate
of $12,500.50. Consistent with our low volume policy for procedures
assigned to a new technology APC, we presented the result of each
statistical methodology in the proposed rule, and we sought public
comments on which methodology should be used to establish payment for
the procedures described by CPT code 0398T. We noted that we believe
that the median cost estimate was the most appropriate representative
cost of the procedure described by CPT code 0398T because it was
consistent with the payment rates established for the procedure from CY
2017 to CY 2019 and did not involve any trimming of claims. Calculating
the payment rate using either the geometric mean cost or the arithmetic
mean cost would involve trimming the one paid claim from CY 2016,
because the paid amount for the claim of $29,254 is substantially
larger than the amount for any other paid claim reported for the
procedure described by CPT code 0398T. The median cost estimate for CPT
code 0398T also falls within the same New Technology APC cost band that
was used to set the payment rate for CY 2019, which is $12,500.50 for
this procedure. Therefore, for purposes of determining the proposed CY
2020 payment rate, we proposed to estimate the cost for the procedure
described by CPT code 0398T by calculating the median cost of the 37
paid claims for the procedures in CY 2016 through CY 2018, and assigned
the procedure described by CPT code 0398T to the New Technology APC
that includes the estimated cost. Accordingly, we proposed to maintain
the procedure described by CPT code 0398T in APC 1575 (New Technology--
Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000)), with a proposed payment rate of $12,500.50
for CY 2020. We refer readers to Addendum B to the proposed rule for
the proposed payment rates for all codes reportable under the OPPS.
Addendum B is available via the internet on the CMS website.
[[Page 61215]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.024
[[Page 61216]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.025
Comment: Multiple commenters, including the developer of MRgFUS,
stated that the proposed payment rate for CPT code 0398T was too low
because they believed the claims data for CPT code 0398T continue to
underestimate the resources used to perform the procedure even when
using the low-volume payment policy to establish the payment rate for
the procedure. The developer also used the example of the service
described by HCPCS code C9734 (Focused ultrasound ablation/therapeutic
intervention, other than uterine leiomyomata, with magnetic resonance
(mr) guidance), where the payment rate for the service had doubled from
$5,222 in CY 2017 to $11,675 in the CY 2020 proposed rule, to argue
that a similar increase could occur for CPT code 0398T. Commenters
suggested several ideas for what they believed would be a more
appropriate rate. Commenters believed the claims cost data reported for
CPT code 0398T does not fully reflect the resource costs for the time
the procedure takes, the cost of single-use supplies for the procedure,
and hours of use of a provider's MRI machine. To reflect these costs,
several commenters supported restoring the payment rate from CY 2018 of
$17,500.50. Other commenters simply requested a higher rate than what
was proposed such as a payment rate of either $22,000 or $25,000.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns, but the claims
data we currently have for CPT code 0398T do not support a higher
payment rate even when using the low-volume payment policy. Also, while
the payment rate for HCPCS code C9734 (Focused ultrasound ablation/
therapeutic intervention, other than uterine leiomyomata, with magnetic
resonance (mr) guidance) doubled from CY 2017 to CY 2020, the payment
rate increase for HCPCS code C9734 is not predictive of the changes in
cost that may occur with CPT code 0398T (Magnetic resonance image
guided high intensity focused ultrasound (mrgfus), stereotactic
ablation lesion, intracranial for movement disorder including
stereotactic navigation and frame placement when performed). Rather,
the payment rate for each service, including that described by HCPCS
code C9734, is generally based on the costs associated with furnishing
the service, which, in turn, drives the APC assignment. The geometric
mean for C9734, which represents the cost of the individual procedure,
increased from $8,655 in CY 2017 to $9,294 in CY 2020, and was
reassigned to a higher level APC based clinical and resource similarity
to other services.
Under the low-volume payment policy, we utilized our equitable
adjustment authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to
calculate the geometric mean, arithmetic mean, and median costs using
multiple years of claims data to select the appropriate payment rate
for purposes of assigning CPT code 0398T to a New Technology APC. We
identified 43 claims reporting the procedure described by CPT code
0398T for the 3-year period of CY 2016 through CY 2018. We found the
geometric mean cost for the procedure described by CPT code 0398T is
approximately $8,485, the arithmetic mean cost is approximately $9,672,
and the median cost is approximately $11,182. Based on our methodology,
we will use the median cost of CPT code 0398T to set the payment rate
for the procedure because the median cost is the highest rate of the
three statistical methods and may reflect some of the higher resource
costs, as described by commenters, for the procedure. The median cost
for CPT code 0398T falls within the same New Technology APC 1575 (New
Technology--Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000)) with a proposed payment rate of
$12,500.50 that was proposed as the APC assignment for CPT code 0398T
in the proposed rule.
Comment: Two commenters supported the assignment of CPT code 0398T
to New Technology APC 1575 (New Technology--Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000))
with a proposed payment rate of $12,500.50. One of the commenters
supported the proposed new technology APC assignment because it is
reflective of the median cost of the service and would ensure that what
the commenter believed would be a severe underpayment calculated from
the geometric mean would not be used to establish the payment rate for
CPT code 0398T, which the commenter believed could discourage providers
from performing the service.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenters.
Comment: One commenter, the developer, supported the assignment of
HCPCS code C9734 to APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures) for
CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenter.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal for the APC assignment of CPT code 0398T.
Specifically, we are continuing to assign this code to New Technology
APC 1575 (New Technology--Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000)), with a payment
rate of $12,500.50, for CY 2020 through use of our low-volume payment
policy for new technology procedures. In addition, we are finalizing
our proposal, without modification, to assign HCPCS code C9734 to APC
5115. We also are finalizing our proposal to continue to assign CPT
codes 0071T and 0072T to APC 5414, without modification. Table 11 above
lists the final CY 2018 status
[[Page 61217]]
indicator and APC assignments for MRgFUS procedures. We refer readers
to Addendum B of this final rule with comment period for the final
payment rates for all codes reportable under the OPPS. Addendum B is
available via the internet on the CMS website.
b. Retinal Prosthesis Implant Procedure
CPT code 0100T (Placement of a subconjunctival retinal prosthesis
receiver and pulse generator, and implantation of intra-ocular retinal
electrode array, with vitrectomy) describes the implantation of a
retinal prosthesis, specifically, a procedure involving the use of the
Argus[supreg] II Retinal Prosthesis System. This first retinal
prosthesis was approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in
2013 for adult patients diagnosed with severe to profound retinitis
pigmentosa. Pass-through payment status was granted for the
Argus[supreg] II device under HCPCS code C1841 (Retinal prosthesis,
includes all internal and external components) beginning October 1,
2013, and this status expired on December 31, 2015. We note that after
pass-through payment status expires for a medical device, the payment
for the device is packaged into the payment for the associated surgical
procedure. Consequently, for CY 2016, the device described by HCPCS
code C1841 was assigned to OPPS status indicator ``N'' to indicate that
payment for the device is packaged and included in the payment rate for
the surgical procedure described by CPT code 0100T. For CY 2016, the
procedure described by CPT code 0100T was assigned to New Technology
APC 1599, with a payment rate of $95,000, which was the highest paying
New Technology APC for that year. This payment included both the
surgical procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the use of the Argus[supreg] II
device (HCPCS code C1841). However, stakeholders (including the device
manufacturer and hospitals) believed that the CY 2016 payment rate for
the procedure involving the Argus[supreg] II System was insufficient to
cover the hospital cost of performing the procedure, which includes the
cost of the retinal prosthesis at the retail price of approximately
$145,000.
For CY 2017, analysis of the CY 2015 OPPS claims data used for the
CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period showed 9 single claims
(out of 13 total claims) for the procedure described by CPT code 0100T,
with a geometric mean cost of approximately $142,003 based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2015, through December 31, 2015, and
processed through June 30, 2016. Based on the CY 2015 OPPS claims data
available for the final rule with comment period and our understanding
of the Argus[supreg] II procedure, we reassigned the procedure
described by CPT code 0100T from New Technology APC 1599 to New
Technology APC 1906, with a final payment rate of $150,000.50 for CY
2017. We noted that this payment rate included the cost of both the
surgical procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the retinal prosthesis device
(HCPCS code C1841).
For CY 2018, the reported cost of the Argus[supreg] II procedure
based on CY 2016 hospital outpatient claims data for 6 claims used for
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period was approximately
$94,455, which was more than $55,000 less than the payment rate for the
procedure in CY 2017, but closer to the CY 2016 payment rate for the
procedure. We noted that the costs of the Argus[supreg] II procedure
are extraordinarily high compared to many other procedures paid under
the OPPS. In addition, the number of claims submitted has been very low
and has not exceeded 10 claims within a single year. We believed that
it is important to mitigate significant payment differences, especially
shifts of several tens of thousands of dollars, while also basing
payment rates on available cost information and claims data. In CY
2016, the payment rate for the Argus[supreg] II procedure was
$95,000.50. The payment rate increased to $150,000.50 in CY 2017. For
CY 2018, if we had established the payment rate based on updated final
rule claims data, the payment rate would have decreased to $95,000.50
for CY 2018, a decrease of $55,000 relative to CY 2017. We were
concerned that these large fluctuations in payment could potentially
create an access to care issue for the Argus[supreg] II procedure, and
we wanted to establish a payment rate to mitigate the potential sharp
decline in payment from CY 2017 to CY 2018.
In accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we must
establish that services classified within each APC are comparable
clinically and with respect to the use of resources. Therefore, for CY
2018, we used our equitable adjustment authority under section
1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which states that the Secretary shall
establish, in a budget neutral manner, other adjustments as determined
to be necessary to ensure equitable payments, to maintain the payment
rate for this procedure, despite the lower geometric mean costs
available in the claims data used for the final rule with comment
period. For CY 2018, we reassigned the Argus[supreg] II procedure to
APC 1904 (New Technology--Level 50 ($115,001-$130,000)), which
established a payment rate for the Argus[supreg] II procedure of
$122,500.50, which was the arithmetic mean of the payment rates for the
procedure for CY 2016 and CY 2017.
For CY 2019, the reported cost of the Argus[supreg] II procedure
based on the geometric mean cost of 12 claims from the CY 2017 hospital
outpatient claims data was approximately $171,865, which was
approximately $49,364 more than the payment rate for the procedure for
CY 2018. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we
continued to note that the costs of the Argus[supreg] II procedure are
extraordinarily high compared to many other procedures paid under the
OPPS (83 FR 58897 through 58898). In addition, the number of claims
submitted continued to be very low for the Argus[supreg] II procedure.
We stated that we continued to believe that it is important to mitigate
significant payment fluctuations for a procedure, especially shifts of
several tens of thousands of dollars, while also basing payment rates
on available cost information and claims data because we are concerned
that large decreases in the payment rate could potentially create an
access to care issue for the Argus[supreg] II procedure. In addition,
we indicated that we wanted to establish a payment rate to mitigate the
potential sharp increase in payment from CY 2018 to CY 2019, and
potentially ensure a more stable payment rate in future years.
As discussed in section III.C.2. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58892 through 58893), we used our equitable
adjustment authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act, which
states that the Secretary shall establish, in a budget neutral manner,
other adjustments as determined to be necessary to ensure equitable
payments, to establish a payment rate that is more representative of
the likely cost of the service. We stated that we believed the likely
cost of the Argus[supreg] II procedure is higher than the geometric
mean cost calculated from the claims data used for the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period but lower than the geometric mean cost
calculated from the claims data used for the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period.
For CY 2019, we analyzed claims data for the Argus[supreg] II
procedure using 3 years of available data from CY 2015 through CY 2017.
These data included claims from the last year that the Argus[supreg] II
received transitional device pass-through payments (CY 2015) and the
first 2 years since device pass-through payment status for the
Argus[supreg] II
[[Page 61218]]
expired. We found that the geometric mean cost for the procedure was
approximately $145,808, the arithmetic mean cost was approximately
$151,367, and the median cost was approximately $151,266. As we do each
year, we reviewed claims data regarding hospital costs associated with
new procedures. We regularly examine the claims data and any available
new information regarding the clinical aspects of new procedures to
confirm that OPPS payments remain appropriate for procedures like the
Argus[supreg] II procedure as they transition into mainstream medical
practice (77 FR 68314). We noted that the proposed payment rate
included both the surgical procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the use of
the Argus[supreg] II device (HCPCS code C1841). For CY 2019, the
estimated costs using all three potential statistical methods for
determining APC assignment under the New Technology low-volume payment
policy fell within the cost band of New Technology APC 1908, which is
between $145,001 and $160,000. Therefore, we reassigned the
Argus[supreg] II procedure (CPT code 0100T) to APC 1908 (New
Technology--Level 52 ($145,001-$160,000)), with a payment rate of
$152,500.50 for CY 2019.
For CY 2020, the number of reported claims for the Argus[supreg] II
procedure continues to be very low with a substantial fluctuation in
cost from year to year. The high annual variability of the cost of the
Argus[supreg] II procedure continues to make it difficult to establish
a consistent and stable payment rate for the procedure. As previously
mentioned, in accordance with section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act, we are
required to establish that services classified within each APC are
comparable clinically and with respect to the use of resources.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we proposed to apply the policy we adopted in
CY 2019, under which we utilize our equitable adjustment authority
under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act to calculate the geometric mean,
arithmetic mean, and median costs using multiple years of claims data
to select the appropriate payment rate for purposes of assigning the
Argus[supreg] II procedure (CPT code 0100T) to a New Technology APC.
We identified 35 claims reporting the procedure described by CPT
code 0100T for the 4-year period of CY 2015 through CY 2018. We found
the geometric mean cost for the procedure described by CPT code 0100T
to be approximately $146,059, the arithmetic mean cost to be
approximately $152,123, and the median cost to be approximately
$151,267. All of the resulting estimates from using the three
statistical methodologies fall within the same New Technology APC cost
band ($145,001-$160,000), where the Argus[supreg] II procedure is
assigned for CY 2019. Consistent with our policy stated in section
III.C.2. of the proposed rule, we presented the result of each
statistical methodology in the proposed rule, and we sought public
comments on which method should be used to assign procedures described
by CPT code 0100T to a New Technology APC. All three potential
statistical methodologies used to estimate the cost of the
Argus[supreg] II procedure fell within the cost band for New Technology
APC 1908, with the estimated cost being between $145,001 and $160,000.
Accordingly, we proposed to maintain the assignment of the procedure
described by CPT code 0100T in APC 1908 (New Technology--Level 52
($145,001-$160,000)), with a proposed payment rate of $152,500.50 for
CY 2020. We note that the proposed payment rate includes both the
surgical procedure (CPT code 0100T) and the use of the Argus[supreg] II
device (HCPCS code C1841). We refer readers to Addendum B to the
proposed rule for the proposed payment rates for all codes reportable
under the OPPS. Addendum B is available via the internet on the CMS
website.
Comment: Two commenters, including the manufacturer, supported the
assignment of 0100T to APC 1908 (New Technology--Level 52 ($145,001-
$160,000)), with a proposed payment rate of $152,500.50 for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenters. Consistent
with our policy for low-volume services assigned to a New Technology
APC, for this final rule, we calculated the geometric mean, arithmetic
mean, and median costs using multiple years of claims data to select
the appropriate payment rate for purposes of assigning the
Argus[supreg] II procedure (CPT code 0100T) to a New Technology APC. We
identified 41 claims reporting the procedure described by CPT code
0100T for the 4-year period of CY 2015 through CY 2018. We found the
geometric mean cost for the procedure described by CPT code 0100T to be
approximately $146,042, the arithmetic mean cost to be approximately
$151,453, and the median cost to be approximately $151,426. All of the
resulting estimates from using the three statistical methodologies fall
within the same New Technology APC cost band ($145,001-$160,000), that
was proposed as the APC assignment for CPT code 0100T in the proposed
rule. Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal to maintain the
assignment of the procedure described by CPT code 0100T in APC 1908
(New Technology--Level 52 ($145,001-$160,000)), with a payment rate of
$152,500.50 for CY 2020. We refer readers to Addendum B to the proposed
rule for the proposed payment rates for all codes reportable under the
OPPS. Addendum B is available via the internet on the CMS website.
As we discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58898), the claims data from CY 2017 showed another
payment issue with regard to the Argus[supreg] II procedure. We found
that payment for the Argus[supreg] II procedure was sometimes bundled
into the payment for another procedure. Therefore in CY 2019, we
implemented a policy to exclude payment for all procedures assigned to
New Technology APCs from being bundled into the payment for procedures
assigned to a C-APC. For CY 2020, we proposed to continue this policy
as described in section II.A.2.b.(3) of the proposed rule. Our proposal
would continue to exclude payment for any procedure that is assigned to
a New Technology APC from being packaged when included on a claim with
a service assigned to status indicator ``J1''. While we did not propose
to exclude payment for a procedure assigned to a New Technology APC
from being packaged when included on a claim with a service assigned to
status indicator ``J2'', we sought public comments on this issue.
Comment: Several commenters, including device manufacturers, device
manufacturer associations and physicians were opposed to our proposal
to package payment for procedures assigned to a New Technology APC into
the payment for comprehensive observation services assigned status
indicator ``J2''. The commenters stated that there were instances where
beneficiaries receiving observation services may require the types of
procedures that are assigned to New Technology APCs. Several commenters
specifically mentioned HeartFlow, and stated that it could be performed
appropriately for a patient receiving observation services. The
commenters also stated that providing separate payment for this new
technology procedure will allow CMS to collect sufficient claims data
to enable assignment of the procedure to an appropriate clinical APC.
Response: We appreciate the stakeholders' comments regarding this
proposal and agree that, although rare, there are situations in which
it is clinically appropriate to provide a new technology service when
providing comprehensive observation services. As discussed in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC
[[Page 61219]]
final rule with comment period (83 FR 58847), the purpose of the new
technology APC policy is to ensure that there are sufficient claims
data for new services in order to assign these procedures to a clinical
APC and therefore, we excluded procedures assigned to New Technology
APCs from packaging under the C-APC policy. In the CY 2019 final rule,
we specifically stated that the exclusion policy included circumstances
when New Technology procedures were billed with comprehensive services
assigned to status indicator ``J1'', however we believe this rationale
is also applicable to comprehensive observations services that are
assigned status indicator ``J2''.
Accordingly, for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we are modifying our
policy for excluding procedures assigned to New Technology APCs from
the C-APC policy. That is, we are finalizing our proposal to exclude
payment for any procedure that is assigned to a New Technology APC from
being packaged when included on a claim with a ``J1'' service assigned
to a C-APC. For CY 2020 and subsequent years, we are also finalizing a
policy to exclude payment for any procedures that are assigned to a New
Technology APC from being packaged into the payment for comprehensive
observation services assigned to status indicator ``J2'' when they are
included on a claim with ``J2'' procedures. This policy is also
described in section II.A.2.b.(3) of this final rule.
c. Bronchoscopy With Transbronchial Ablation of Lesion(s) by Microwave
Energy
Effective January 1, 2019, CMS established HCPCS code C9751
(Bronchoscopy, rigid or flexible, transbronchial ablation of lesion(s)
by microwave energy, including fluoroscopic guidance, when performed,
with computed tomography acquisition(s) and 3-D rendering, computer-
assisted, image-guided navigation, and endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS)
guided transtracheal and/or transbronchial sampling (eg, aspiration[s]/
biopsy[ies]) and all mediastinal and/or hilar lymph node stations or
structures and therapeutic intervention(s)). This microwave ablation
procedure utilizes a flexible catheter to access the lung tumor via a
working channel and may be used as an alternative procedure to a
percutaneous microwave approach. Based on our review of the New
Technology APC application for this service and the service's clinical
similarity to existing services paid under the OPPS, we estimated the
likely cost of the procedure would be between $8,001 and $8,500. We
have not received any claims data for this service. Therefore, we
proposed to continue to assign the procedure described by HCPCS code
C9751 to New Technology APC 1571 (New Technology--Level 34 ($8,001-
$8,500)), with a proposed payment rate of $8,250.50 for CY 2020.
Details regarding HCPCS code C9751 were shown in Table 12 of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed Rule, which is reprinted below in Table 13.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.026
Comment: The developer of the procedure noted that there will be
clinical trials for HCPCS code C9751 in CY 2020 and it is anticipated
the procedure also will have a limited market release in CY 2020.
Therefore, the developer is expecting claims to be reported billed with
HCPCS code C9751 for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the update on the expected utilization for
HCPCS code C9751 for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter supported our proposal to assign HCPCS code
C9751 to New Technology APC 1571 (New Technology--Level 34 ($8,001-
$8,500)), with a proposed payment rate of $8,250.50 for CY 2020.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenter.
After considering the public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign HCPCS code C9751 to New Technology APC 1571 (New
Technology--Level 34 ($8,001-$8,500)), with a payment rate of $8,250.50
for CY 2020.
d. Pathogen Test for Platelets
As stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59281), HCPCS code P9100 is used to report any test used to
identify bacterial or other pathogen contamination in blood platelets.
Currently, there are two rapid bacterial detection tests cleared by FDA
that are described by HCPCS code P9100. According to their instructions
for use, rapid bacterial detection tests should be performed on
platelets from 72 hours after collection. Currently, certain rapid and
culture-based tests can be used to extend the dating for platelets from
5 days to 7 days. Blood banks and transfusion services may test and use
6-day old to 7-day old platelets if the test results are negative for
bacterial contamination.
[[Page 61220]]
HCPCS code P9100 was assigned in CY 2019 to New Technology APC 1493
(New Technology--Level 1C ($21-$30)), with a payment rate of $25.50.
For CY 2020, based on CY 2018 claims data, there are approximately
1,100 claims reported for this service with a geometric mean cost of
approximately $32. This geometric mean cost would result in the
assignment of the service described by HCPCS code P9100 to a New
Technology APC, based on the associated cost band, with a higher
payment rate than where the service is currently assigned. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we proposed to reassign the service described by HCPCS
code P9100 to New Technology APC 1494 (New Technology--Level 1D ($31-
$40)), with a proposed payment rate of $35.50.
Comment: One commenter expressed support for the proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenter.
After considering the public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign HCPCS code P9100 to New Technology APC 1494 (New
Technology--Level 1D ($31-$40)), with a payment rate of $35.50.
e. Fractional Flow Reserve Derived From Computed Tomography (FFRCT)
Fractional Flow Reserve Derived from Computed Tomography (FFRCT),
also known by the trade name HeartFlow, is a noninvasive diagnostic
service that allows physicians to measure coronary artery disease in a
patient through the use of coronary CT scans. The HeartFlow procedure
is intended for clinically stable symptomatic patients with coronary
artery disease, and, in many cases, may avoid the need for an invasive
coronary angiogram procedure. HeartFlow uses a proprietary data
analysis process performed at a central facility to develop a three-
dimensional image of a patient's coronary arteries, which allows
physicians to identify the fractional flow reserve to assess whether or
not patients should undergo further invasive testing (that is, a
coronary angiogram).
For many procedures in the OPPS, payment for analytics that are
performed after the main diagnostic/image procedure are packaged into
the payment for the primary procedure. However, in CY 2018, we
determined that HeartFlow should receive a separate payment because the
procedure is performed by a separate entity (that is, a HeartFlow
technician who conducts computer analysis offsite) rather than the
provider performing the CT scan. We assigned CPT code 0503T, which
describes the analytics performed, to New Technology APC 1516 (New
Technology--Level 16 ($1,401-$1,500)), with a payment rate of $1,450.50
based on pricing information provided by the developer of the procedure
that indicated the price of the procedure was approximately $1,500.
For CY 2020, based on our analysis of the CY 2018 claims data
available for the proposed rule, we found that over 840 claims had been
submitted for payment for HeartFlow during CY 2018. We stated that the
estimated geometric mean cost of HeartFlow was $788.19, or roughly $660
lower that the payment rate for CY 2019 of $1,450.50. Therefore, for CY
2020, we proposed to reassign the service described by CPT code 0503T
in order to adjust the payment rate to better reflect the cost for the
service. We proposed to reassign the service described by CPT code
0503T to New Technology APC 1509 (New Technology--Level 9 ($701-$800)),
with a proposed payment rate of $750.50 for CY 2020. We sought public
comments on this proposal.
Comment: Multiple commenters requested that we retain the CY 2019
OPPS APC assignment of APC 1516 (New Technology--Level 16 ($1401-
$1500)) for HeartFlow with a payment rate of $1,450.50. The commenters
were concerned that reducing the payment rate to $750.50 would
discourage hospitals from using the service because they stated that
the list price of the HeartFlow service is substantially higher than
the proposed payment rate. Commenters were concerned that reduced
utilization of HeartFlow would cause some beneficiaries to have
unnecessary invasive coronary angiograms that are more costly than the
HeartFlow procedure.
Multiple commenters, including the developer of HeartFlow, provided
additional reasons to maintain the current payment rate for the service
of $1,450.50 despite claims data suggesting a lower payment rate for
HeartFlow. The commenters believed that 78 single frequency claims used
for the proposed rule solely represented a single year and that such a
low number of claims would be an insufficient number of claims on which
to base a payment rate reduction for the service. Two commenters
suggested that CMS should collect another one or two years of claims
data before making changes to the current payment rate. One of the
commenters believed the reason the estimated cost of HeartFlow derived
from claims data is substantially less than the current payment rate
may be due to providers submitting claims without marked up gross
charges for the services they provide.
Another commenter, the developer, encouraged CMS to use our
equitable adjustment authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act,
which states that the Secretary shall establish, in a budget neutral
manner, other adjustments as determined to be necessary to ensure
equitable payments to maintain the current payment rate for HeartFlow.
The developer suggested that CMS should use its own assessment of the
resources required to perform the HeartFlow service to set the payment
rate for the service. The developer cited instances in the last four
years where CMS used its equitable adjustment authority to mitigate
either large fluctuations or declines in annual payment rates. These
cases include: (1) A CY 2018 decision to use multiple years of claims
data to pay a higher rate for CPT code 0100T (Placement of a
subconjunctival retinal prosthesis receiver and pulse generator, and
implantation of intraocular retinal electrode array, with vitrectomy)
of $122,500.50 rather than the payment rate generated by the most
recent year of claims data of $95,000.50; (2) a CY 2016 decision
regarding the payment rate of CPT code 0308T (Insertion of ocular
telescope prosthesis including removal of crystalline lens or
intraocular lens prosthesis) where the median cost of $18,365 was used
to set the payment rate instead of the geometric mean cost of $13,865
because only 39 single frequency claims were reported for the service,
and where we stated that ``the median cost would be a more appropriate
measure of the central tendency for purposes of calculating the cost
and the payment rate for the procedure;'' (3) a CY 2016 decision to
adjust the geometric mean per diem cost for the partial hospital
program to ensure a per diem payment for fewer services was less than a
per diem payment for a larger number of services; and (4) a CY 2018
decision to establish a payment rate of $17,500.50 for CPT code 0398T
(Magnetic resonance image guided high intensity focused ultrasound
(mrgfus), stereotactic ablation lesion, intracranial for movement
disorder including stereotactic navigation and frame placement when
performed) instead of proposed payment rate of $9,750.50.
The developer believes that the proposed New Technology APC
assignment for HeartFlow, which would result in a nearly 50 percent
reduction in the payment rate between CY 2019 and CY 2020, is similar
to these cases described in their comment. Therefore, the developer
asked us to use our equitable adjustment authority to
[[Page 61221]]
maintain the CY 2019 payment rate of $1,450.50 for the service rather
than adopt the proposed payment rate.
Response: The proposed payment rate for CPT code 0503T was based on
claims data from CY 2018, which is the first year the service was
payable in the OPPS. For ratesetting for CY 2018 and CY 2019, there
were no claims data available showing the cost of the service. Also,
there were no services identified as comparable to CPT code 0503T,
which meant we could not estimate the cost of CPT code 0503T by using
the cost of a similar service. Accordingly, we previously based pricing
for the service on pricing information provided by the developer of the
procedure.
We recognize that there was a low volume of claims for HeartFlow
based on the data available for the proposed rule and, thus, we should
have applied the low-volume policy for new technology services in the
proposed rule.
However, for the final rule, using the most recently available
data, there are now 957 total claims billed with CPT code 0503T and 101
single frequency claims. We appreciate the concerns of the commenters
who stated that there were not enough claims billed with HeartFlow to
use claims data to revise the rate for HeartFlow. While 101 single
claims is above the threshold we established for low-volume services
assigned to a new technology APC, we agree with the commenters that a
payment reduction of nearly 50 percent is significant for a new
technology that still has relatively low volume.
Accordingly, given the low number of single frequency claims for
CPT code 0503T, that number of claims for the Heartflow procedure was
below the low-volume payment policy threshold for the proposed rule,
and that it is only two claims above the threshold using data available
for this final rule with comment period, we have decided to use our
equitable adjustment authority under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act
to calculate the geometric mean, arithmetic mean, and median using the
CY 2018 claims data to determine an appropriate payment rate for
HeartFlow using our new technology APC low-volume payment policy. While
the number of single frequency claims is just above our threshold to
use the low-volume payment policy, we still have concerns about the
normal cost distribution of the claims used to calculate the payment
rate for Heartflow, and we decided the low-volume payment policy would
be the best approach to address those concerns.
Our analysis found that the geometric mean cost for CPT code 0503T
was $768.26, the arithmetic mean cost for CPT code 0503T was $960.12
and that the median cost for CPT code 0503T was $900.28. Of the three
cost methods, the highest amount was for the arithmetic mean. The
arithmetic mean falls within the cost band for New Technology APC 1511
(New Technology--Level 11 ($901-$1000)) with a payment rate of $950.50.
The arithmetic mean helps to account for some of the higher costs of
CPT code 0503T identified by the commenters that may not have been
reflected by either the median or the geometric mean. We acknowledge
the commenters' concern and recognize that it may be theoretically
possible that the reported cost of CPT code 0503T is higher than what
we calculated from the claims data due to some providers reporting
costs lower than actual costs for the service. However, we rely on
hospitals to bill all CPT codes accurately in accordance with their
code descriptors and CPT and CMS instructions, as applicable, and to
report charges on claims and charges and costs on their Medicare
hospital cost reports appropriately. In addition, we do not specify the
methodologies that hospitals must use to set charges for this or any
other service.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
utilizing our new technology low-volume payment policy to set the
payment rate for the HeartFlow service CPT code 0503T based on the
arithmetic mean for the procedure. Specifically, we are assigning CPT
code 0503T to New Technology APC 1511 (New Technology--Level 11 ($901-
$1000)) with a payment rate of $950.50.
f. Cardiac Positron Emission Tomography (PET)/Computed Tomography (CT)
Studies
Effective January 1, 2020, we have assigned three CPT codes (78431,
78432, and 78433) that describe the services associated with cardiac
PET/CT studies to New Technology APCs. Table 13 reports code
descriptors, status indicators, and APC assignments for these CPT
codes. These codes were listed in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule as 78X32, 78X33, and 78X44. More information about CPT
codes 78431, 78432, and 78433 can be found in section III. D. b. of
this final rule.
Comment: Several commenters reported that certain societies
submitted a new technology application to CMS for CPT codes 78431,
78432, and 78433 that details the costs associated with providing these
services. For CPT code 78431, these same commenters disagreed with the
proposed APC placement and recommended its reassignment from APC 5594
(Level 4 Nuclear Medicine and Related Services) with a proposed payment
rate of $1,466.16 to APC 1522 (New Technology--Level 23 ($2501-$3000))
with a proposed payment rate of $2,750.50. They reported that, based on
the resource cost of the service described by CPT code 78431, APC 1522
provides adequate reimbursement for the service. Similarly, for CPT
codes 78432 and 78433, the commenters indicated that APC 5594 would not
adequately cover the resource costs associated with these procedures,
and recommended their reassignment to APC 1523 (New Technology--Level
23 ($2501-$3000)) with a proposed payment rate of $ 2,750.50
Response: Based on the information provided in the new technology
application, and the comments received, we are revising the APC
assignments for these codes. Specifically, we are revising the APC
assignment for CPT code 78431 from APC 5594 to APC 1522, and
reassigning CPT codes 78432 and 78433 from APC 5594 to APC 1523.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments for the new
cardiac PET/CT codes, and based on our evaluation of the new technology
application which provided the estimated costs for the services and
described the components and characteristics of the new codes, we are
assigning CPT codes 78431, 78432, and 78433 to the final APCs listed in
Table 14 below. Please refer to section III. D. b. of this final rule
for more information on the finalized proposal to establish a payment
rate for other new CPT codes associated with PET/CT studies. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period (which is available via the internet on
the CMS website).
[[Page 61222]]
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[[Page 61223]]
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g. V-Wave Interatrial Shunt Procedure
A randomized, double-blinded control IDE study is currently in
progress for the V-Wave interatrial shunt procedure. All participants
who passed initial screening for the study receive a right heart
catherization procedure described by CPT code 93451 (Right heart
catheterization including measurement(s) of oxygen saturation and
cardiac output, when performed). Participants assigned to the
experimental group also receive the V-Wave interatrial shunt procedure
while participants assigned to the control group only receive right
heart catheterization. The developer of V-Wave is concerned that the
current coding of these services by Medicare would reveal to the study
participants whether they have received the interatrial shunt because
an additional procedure code, CPT code 93799 (Unlisted cardiovascular
service or procedure) would be included on the claims for participants
receiving the interatrial shunt. Therefore, we created a temporary
HCPCS code to describe the V-wave interatrial shunt procedure for both
the experimental group and the control group in the study.
Specifically, we established HCPCS code C9758 (Blinded procedure for
NYHA class III/IV heart failure; transcatheter implantation of
interatrial shunt or placebo control, including right heart
catheterization, trans-esophageal echocardiography (TEE)/intracardiac
echocardiography (ICE), and all imaging with or without guidance (for
example, ultrasound, fluoroscopy), performed in an approved
investigational device exemption (IDE) study) to describe the service,
and we assigned the service to New Technology APC 1589 (New
Technology--Level 38 ($10,001-$15,000)). Details about the temporary
HCPCS code are shown in Table 15 below. The final CY 2020 payment rate
for V-Wave interatrial shunt procedure can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website).
[[Page 61224]]
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D. OPPS APC-Specific Policies
1. Barostim Neo\TM\ System (APC 5464)
In CY 2019, CPT codes 0266T and 0268T were assigned to APC 5463
(Level 3 Neurostimulator and Related Procedures) with a payment rate of
$18,707.16. For CY 2020, as listed in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we proposed to reassign both codes to APC 5464
(Level 4 Neurostimulator and Related Procedures) with a proposed
payment rate of $29,025.99. Table 16 below lists the long descriptors,
proposed status indicator (SI), and APC assignments for these codes. We
note that both codes are associated with the Barostim Neo\TM\ System.
Comment: A medical device company agreed with the reassignment for
CPT codes 0266T and 0268T to APC 5464. The commenter stated that APC
5464 is the more appropriate assignment for these codes based on
clinical and resource homogeneity, and encouraged CMS to finalize the
APC assignment.
Response: As we have stated every year since the implementation of
the OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on our
analysis of the latest claims data.
Based on our analysis of the proposed rule claims data as well as
clinical review of the services described, we proposed to revise the
APC assignment for both CPT codes 0266T and 0268T to APC 5464. In our
analysis of CPT code 0268T (which describes implantation/replacement of
the pulse generator), we noticed that the APC assignment for CPT code
0266T (which describes the implantation or replacement of the complete
system) was lower. We do not believe that the payment for the complete
system (CPT code 0266T) should be less than the payment for the
implantation/replacement of the pulse generator (CPT code 0268T)
procedure. Consequently, we proposed to revise the APC assignment for
CPT code 0266T to APC 5464. Although we had no claims data for CPT code
0266T, we believed it was necessary to revise the APC assignment to
appropriately reflect the device cost associated with the procedure.
Similar to our findings for the proposed rule, based on updated
claims data for this final rule with comment period, the geometric mean
cost for CPT code 0268T supports its reassignment from APC 5463 to APC
5464. Specifically, our claims data show a geometric mean cost of
approximately $25,558 for CPT code 0268T based on 6 single claims (out
of 6 total claims), which is consistent with the geometric mean cost of
approximately $28,491 for APC 5464, rather than the geometric mean cost
of approximately $18,864 for APC 5463. Furthermore, as mentioned above,
we are also assigning CPT code 0266T to APC 5464 even though we do not
yet have claims data because we do not believe that the service for
implantation of the entire system (CPT code 0266T) would be less
resource intensive than the implantation of the pulse generator alone
(CPT code 0268T).
[[Page 61225]]
In summary, after consideration of the public comment and analysis
of the latest claims data, we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to assign CPT codes 0266T and 0268T to APC 5464 for CY
2020. Table 16 below list the long descriptors for the codes and the
final SI and APC assignments. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule
with comment period for the status indicator (SI) assignments for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.030
2. Biomechanical Computed Tomography (BCT) Analysis (APCs 5521, 5523,
and 5731)
The CPT Editorial Panel established five new codes, specifically,
CPT codes 0554T, 0555T, 0556T, 0557T, and 0558T, to describe the
services associated with biomechanical computed tomography (BCT)
analysis effective July 1, 2019. Through the July 2019 OPPS quarterly
update CR (Transmittal 4313, Change Request 11318, dated May 24, 2019),
we assigned these new codes to appropriate interim status indicators
(SI) and APCs. Table 17 below lists the long descriptors and proposed
SI and APCs of the codes.
Comment: A commenter agreed with the SI and APC assignments and
stated that the APC assignments for these codes are the best available
placements. The commenter also noted that CMS did not assign the
comprehensive code (CPT code 0554T) and the physician interpretation
code (CPT code 0557T) to an APC because the codes represent physician
services.
Response: We thank the commenter for its feedback. We are
finalizing the SIs and APC assignments for the codes. Table 17 below
list the long descriptors and final SIs and APCs. The final CY 2020
payment rate for the codes can be found in Addendum B to this final
rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1
of this final rule with comment period for the complete list of the
OPPS payment status indicators and their definitions for CY 2020. Both
Addendum B and Addendum D1 are available via the internet on the CMS
website.
As we do for all codes, we will reevaluate the APC assignments for
CPT codes 0555T, 0556T, and 0558T once we have claims data. We remind
hospitals that we review, on an annual basis, the APC assignments for
all services and items paid under the OPPS based on the latest claims
data.
[[Page 61226]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.031
3. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) Imaging (APC 5572)
For CY 2020, we proposed to maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 75561 (Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging for morphology and
function without contrast material(s), followed by contrast material(s)
and further sequences) to APC 5572 (Level 2 Imaging with Contrast) with
a proposed payment rate of $373.45.
Comment: Some commenters expressed concern with the placement of
CPT code 75561 in APC 5572, and stated that it is grouped with services
that are not similar clinically or with respect to resource use. As an
example, they observed that CPT code 75561 is unlike CT of the abdomen
or pelvis or MRI of the neck and spine, and instead, is more similar to
those services in APC 5573 (Level 3 Imaging with Contrast), with a
proposed payment rate of $682.96.Another commenter expressed concern
with the payment stability for CPT code 75561. The commenter noted that
although the code is assigned to the same APC for CY 2020, the payment
for the service is slated for another reduction. The commenter observed
that the payment rate for the service has decreased in the last several
years and noted the following yearly rates:
CY 2017 OPPS payment rate: $426.52
CY 2018 OPPS payment rate: $456.34
[[Page 61227]]
CY 2019 OPPS payment rate: $385.88
CY 2020 OPPS proposed payment rate: $373.45
This same commenter reported that the code was previously included
in a nuclear medicine APC, which it maintained was appropriate based on
its clinical and resource homogeneity to cardiovascular magnetic
resonance and cardiac nuclear imaging services in the APC, and that,
since its APC reassignment, the payment for the service has dropped.
The commenter believed that the different cost reporting methods used
by hospitals may contribute to the artificially low relative payment
weights and payment amounts for CT and MR.
Response: For CY 2020, based on claims submitted between January 1,
2018 through December 30, 2018, that were processed on or before June
30, 2019, our analysis of the latest claims data for this final rule
continues to support our proposal of assigning CPT code 75561 to APC
5572. Specifically, our claims data show a geometric mean cost of
approximately $413 for CPT code 75561 based on 14,350 single claims
(out of 18,118 total claims), which is comparable to the geometric mean
cost of about $359 for APC 5572, rather than the geometric mean cost of
approximately $660 for APC 5573. The geometric cost of approximately
$413 for CPT code 75561 is also consistent with the costs for
significant services in APC 5572, which range between about $269 (for
CPT code 74174) to $515 (for CPT code 73525). Based on our analysis of
the latest claims data, we believe that CPT code 75561 is appropriately
assigned to APC 5572.
With regards to the issue of payment stability, we note that
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to review, not
less often than annually, and to revise the groups, relative payment
weights, and the wage and other adjustments to take into account
changes in medical practices, changes in technology, the addition of
new services, new cost data, and other relevant information and
factors. Therefore, every year we review and revise the APC assignments
based on our evaluation of these factors using the latest OPPS claims
data. While we recognize the concerns about payment stability, we note
that changes made to payment rates are based on our calculations of
geometric mean costs from the most recently available Medicare claims
and cost report data analysis, which may or may not result in payment
increases and/or reductions based on the most recent geometric mean
costs available. We note that the geometric mean costs reflect the
national average resources to furnish a service in the hospital
outpatient setting. To the extent that costs decrease, so too, would
the payment rate.
In addition, with regard to the issue of different hospital cost
reporting methods, we are unable to determine whether hospitals are
misreporting the procedure. It is generally not our policy to judge the
accuracy of hospital charging and coding for purposes of ratesetting.
We rely on hospitals to accurately report the use of HCPCS codes in
accordance with their code descriptors and CPT and CMS instructions,
and to appropriately report services on claims and charges and costs
for the services on their Medicare hospital cost report. Also, we do
not specify the methodologies that hospitals use to set charges for
this or any other service. Furthermore, we state in Chapter 4 of the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual that ``it is extremely important that
hospitals report all HCPCS codes consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct coding principles, and all charges
for all services they furnish, whether payment for the services is made
separately paid or is packaged'' to enable CMS to establish future
ratesetting for OPPS services.
Comment: One commenter who expressed concern with the APC
assignment for CPT code 75561 also requested that we address in the
final rule how we determine which services are clinically similar. The
commenter noted that CMS has constructed many APCs with a mix of
imaging services that are dissimilar and yet preserves the clinical
homogeneity of some APCs, such as nuclear medicine services.
Response: Under the OPPS, each service is assigned to an APC based
on the clinical and resource similarity to other services within the
APC or family of APCS. The OPPS is a prospective payment system under
which payment groupings (that is, APCs) are based on clinical and
resource similarity rather than code-specific payment rates, which
would result in a cost-based fee schedule. For example APCs 5111-5116,
which are described as Levels 1 through 6 Musculoskeletal Procedures,
all include services that involve musculoskeletal services/procedures
and the various levels of that APC family differentiate such procedures
based on resource homogeneity. That is, the descriptors for APCs 5111
through 5116 are general and broadly describe a variety of
musculoskeletal procedures, and are differentiated by the various
levels based on the geometric mean costs for each APC. Clinically, all
the procedures in APCs 5111 through 5116 are similar in that they
involve some form of musculoskeletal procedure. In addition, as stated
in section III.B.2. (Application of the 2 Times Rule) of this final
rule with comment, section 1833(t)(2) of the Act provides that, subject
to certain exceptions, the items and services within an APC group
cannot be considered comparable with respect to the use of resources if
the highest cost for an item or service in the group is more than 2
times greater than the lowest cost for an item or service within the
same group (referred to as the ``2 times rule''). While it may seem
appropriate to place one code in a specific grouping, based on our 2
times rule criteria, we must assign the code to the appropriate APC
based on its geometric mean cost.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to assign CPT code 75561
to APC 5572. The final CY 2020 payment rate for CPT code 75561 can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period. In
addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the status indicator (SI) meanings for all codes
reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via the
internet on the CMS website.
4. CardioFluxTM Magnetocardiography (MCG) Myocardial Imaging
(APC 5723)
For CY 2020, we proposed to maintain the APC assignment for CPT
code 0541T to APC 5722 (Level 2 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of $256.60. We also proposed to continue
to assign CPT code 0541T, which is an add-on code, to status indicator
``N'' to indicate that the code is packaged and payment for it is
included in the primary procedure or service. In this case, the payment
for 0542T is included in CPT code 0541T. We note that CPT codes 0541T
and 0542T are associated with the CardioFlux magnetocardiography
imaging technology. Table 18 below lists the long descriptors for the
codes as well as the proposed SI and APC assignments.
Comment: A commenter disagreed with the assignment to APC 5722 and
reported that the service associated with CPT code 0541T is not
clinically and resource comparable to the services in the APC. The
commenter stated that the service is clinically comparable to the
services that are assigned to APCs 5593 and 5724, specifically:
[[Page 61228]]
APC 5593 (Level 3 Nuclear Medicine), with a proposed
payment rate of $ 1,293.33, which includes--
+ CPT code 78451 (Myocardial perfusion imaging); and
+ CPT code 78452 (Myocardial perfusion imaging).
APC 5724 (Level 4 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services),
with a proposed payment rate of approximately $ 920.66, which
includes--
+ CPT code 95965 (Magnetoencephalography (MEG)); and
+ CPT code 95966 (Magnetoencephalography (MEG)).
The commenter indicated that this new technology requires the use of
very expensive capital equipment, and added that the CardioFlux System
costs about $1.5 million with a useful life of seven years. The
technology itself involves hospital site implementation and ongoing
operation. The commenter stated that the proposed payment does not
provide adequate payment for this novel technology. The commenter
expressed concern that the proposed low payment rate will severely
limit uptake of this new technology, and, consequently, urged CMS to
reassign CPT code 0541T to either APC 5593 or APC 5724 to ensure
patient access to this emerging technology and its potential for
savings to the Medicare program.
Response: Under the OPPS, one of our goals is to make payments that
are appropriate for the services that are necessary for the treatment
of Medicare beneficiaries. The OPPS, like other Medicare payment
systems, is a prospective payment system. The payment rates that are
established reflect the geometric mean costs associated with items and
services assigned to an APC and we believe that our payment rates
generally reflect the costs that are associated with providing care to
Medicare beneficiaries in cost efficient settings. Moreover, we strive
to establish rates that are adequate to ensure access to medically
necessary services for Medicare beneficiaries.
For many emerging technologies there is a transitional period
during which utilization may be low, often because providers are first
learning about the techniques and their clinical utility. Quite often,
the requests for higher payment amounts are for new procedures in that
transitional phase. These requests, and their accompanying estimates
for expected Medicare beneficiary or total patient utilization, often
reflect very low rates of patient use, resulting in high per use costs
for which requesters believe Medicare should make full payment.
Medicare does not, and we believe should not, assume responsibility for
more than its share of the costs of procedures based on Medicare
beneficiary projected utilization and does not set its payment rates
based on initial projections of low utilization for services that
require expensive capital equipment.
We note that in a budget neutral environment, payments may not
fully cover hospitals' costs, including those for the purchase and
maintenance of capital equipment. We rely on hospitals to make their
decisions regarding the acquisition of high cost equipment with the
understanding that the Medicare program must be careful to establish
its initial payment rates for new services that lack hospital claims
data based on realistic utilization projections for all such services
delivered in cost-efficient hospital outpatient settings. As the OPPS
acquires claims data regarding hospital costs associated with new
procedures, we annually review the claims data and any available new
information regarding the clinical aspects of new procedures to confirm
that our OPPS payments remain appropriate for procedures as they
transition into mainstream medical practice.
In addition, we note this new technology is currently under
clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: NCT03968809 and
NCT04044391) and does not appear to be a service that is typically
performed in an HOPD facility. Further, based on our clinical
evaluation, we do not agree that CardioFlux MCG is similar to the MEG
procedures described by CPT codes 95965 and 95966 since MEG procedures
involve the brain while the CardioFlux technology involves imaging of
the heart. Also, we do not agree that CardioFlux MCG is similar to the
myocardial perfusion scans described by CPT codes 78451 and 78452
because these scans involve the use of radioactive tracers, specialized
staff, and more time as the test generally takes two to four hours to
complete. Furthermore, based on our findings, the CardioFlux MCG scan
is unlike other cardiac imaging tests because it does not require or
expose the patient to radiation, and takes about 90 seconds to perform
with physician review and return of interpretation of the results in an
estimated 5 minutes per patient.
However, based on our review of the issue and feedback from our
medical advisors, as well as the anticipated operating costs per case
derived from the public comment and publicly available information
about the service, we believe that CPT code 0541T should be assigned to
APC 5723 (Level 3 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services) rather than to
APC 5722 (Level 2 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services). Because we
have neither claims data nor specific HOPD costs, including the cost to
perform each exam (other than the cost of the capital equipment that
was supplied to us), we believe that APC 5723 is the most appropriate
assignment at this time.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comment, we are
finalizing our proposal, with modification, to assign CPT code 0541T to
APC 5723. Table 18 list the long descriptors and final SI and APC
assignments for both codes. The final CY 2020 payment rate for CPT code
0541T can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule
with comment period for the status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
[[Page 61229]]
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5. Cataract Removal With Endoscopic Cyclophotocoagulation (ECP) (APC
5492)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel established two new codes to
describe cataract removal with endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation (ECP),
specifically, CPT codes 66987 and 66988. As listed in Table 19 below
with the long descriptors, and also in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we proposed to assign CPT code 66987 and 66988 to
APC 5491 (Level 1 Intraocular Procedures) with a proposed payment rate
of $2,053.39. The codes were listed as 66X01 and 66X02 (the 5-digit CMS
placeholder codes), respectively, in Addendum B with the short
descriptors and again in Addendum O with the long descriptors. We also
assigned the codes to comment indicator ``NP'' in Addendum B to
indicate that they are new for CY 2020 and that public comments would
be accepted on their proposed status indicator assignments. We note
these codes will be effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A commenter disagreed with the APC assignment and, based
on their analysis of the combined geometric mean costs for the existing
cataract and ECP procedures (CPT codes 66982, 66984, and 66711),
believed the new codes should be reassigned to APC 5492 (Level 2
Intraocular Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $3,867.16. Four
professional ophthalmology organizations suggested that CMS should
establish the payment rate for CPT code 66987 based on the combined
costs of CPT codes 66711 and 66982, and, similarly, determine the
payment rate for CPT code 66988 based on the combined costs of CPT
codes 66711 and 66984. They expressed concern that the proposed payment
rates for the codes do not adequately capture the resources hospitals
will expend for each combined procedure.
Response: APC assignment for a code is not typically based on
combined costs of existing HCPCS codes, rather, it is based on
similarity to other codes within an APC based clinical homogeneity and
resource costs. As specified in 42 CFR 419.31(a)(1), CMS classifies
outpatient services and procedures that are comparable clinically and
in terms of resource use into APC groups. Also, as we stated in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule (76 FR 74224), the OPPS is a prospective
payment system that provides payment for groups of services that share
clinical and resource use characteristics. It should be noted that,
with all new codes, our policy has been to assign the service or
procedure to an APC based on feedback from a variety of sources,
including but not limited to review of the clinical similarity of the
service to existing procedures; advice from CMS medical advisors;
information from interested specialty societies; and review of all
other information available to us, including information provided to us
by the public, whether through meetings with stakeholders or additional
information that is mailed or otherwise communicated to us.
Based on our analysis of the public comment and input from our
medical advisors, we believe that we should
[[Page 61230]]
revise the APC assignment for these new cataract codes. We reviewed the
components of the procedure associated with CPT codes 66987 and 66988,
and after our analysis, we agree with commenters that the resources
associated with the new codes are higher than the routine cataract and
ECP procedures when performed by themselves. Therefore, we are
reassigning the new codes from APC 5491 to APC 5492.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification, and revising the APC
assignment for CPT codes 66987 and 66988 to APC 5492 for CY 2020. Table
19 lists the final SI and APC assignments for the two codes. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status
indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
We note that we will reevaluate the APC assignments for CPT codes
66987 and 66988 once we have claims data. We review, on an annual
basis, the APC assignments for all services and items paid under the
OPPS based on the latest claims data that we have available.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 61231]]
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
6. Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-Cell (CAR T) Therapy (APCs 5694, 9035,
and 9194)
Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy is a cell-based gene
therapy in which T-cells are collected and genetically engineered to
express a chimeric antigen receptor that will bind to a certain protein
on a patient's cancerous cells. The CAR T-cells are then administered
to the patient to attack certain cancerous cells and the individual is
observed for potential serious side effects that would require medical
intervention.
Two CAR T-cell therapies received FDA approval in 2017.
KYMRIAH[supreg] (manufactured by Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation)
was
[[Page 61232]]
approved for use in the treatment of patients up to 25 years of age
with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) that is
refractory or in second or later relapse. In May 2018, KYMRIAH[supreg]
received FDA approval for a second indication, treatment of adult
patients with relapsed or refractory large B-cell lymphoma after two or
more lines of systemic therapy, including diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
(DLBCL), high grade B-cell lymphoma, and DLBCL arising from follicular
lymphoma. YESCARTA[supreg] (manufactured by Kite Pharma, Inc.) was
approved for use in the treatment of adult patients with relapsed or
refractory large B-cell lymphoma and who have not responded to or who
have relapsed after at least two other kinds of treatment.
The HCPCS code to describe the use of KYMRIAH[supreg] (HCPCS code
Q2042) has been active since January 1, 2019 for OPPS, which replaced
HCPCS code Q2040, active January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, as
discussed in the CY2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. The
HCPCS code to describe the use of YESCARTA[supreg] (HCPCS code Q2041)
has been active since April, 1, 2018 for OPPS. The HCPCS Q-code for the
currently approved CAR T-cell therapies include leukapheresis and dose
preparation procedures because these services are included in the
manufacturing of these biologicals. Both of these CAR T-cell therapies
were approved for transitional pass-through payment status, effective
April 1, 2018. The HCPCS codes that describe the use of these CAR T-
cell therapies were assigned status indicator ``G'' in Addenda A and B
to the CY2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
As discussed in section V.A.4. (Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals with New or Continuing Pass-Through Payment Status
in CY 2019) of this final rule with comment period, we are finalizing
our proposal to continue pass-through payment status for HCPCS code
Q2042 and HCPCS code Q2041 for CY 2020. In section V.A.4. of this final
rule with comment period, we also are finalizing our proposal to
determine the pass-through payment rate following the standard ASP
methodology, updating pass-through payment rates on a quarterly basis
if applicable information indicates that adjustments to the payment
rates are necessary.
The AMA created four Category III CPT codes that are related to CAR
T-cell therapy, effective January 1, 2019. As discussed in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we finalized our proposal to
assign procedures described by CPT codes, 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T to
status indicator ``B'' (Codes that are not recognized by OPPS when
submitted on an outpatient hospital Part B bill type (12x and 13x)) to
indicate that the services are not paid under the OPPS. The procedures
described by CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T describe the various
steps required to collect and prepare the genetically modified T-cells,
and Medicare does not generally pay separately for each step used to
manufacture a drug or biological. Additionally, we finalized that the
procedures described by CPT code 0540T would be assigned status
indicator ``S'' (Procedure or Service, Not Discounted when Multiple)
and APC 5694 (Level IV Drug Administration) for CY 2019. Additionally,
the National Uniform Billing Committee (NUBC) established CAR T-cell
related revenue codes and value code to be reportable on Hospital
Outpatient Department (HOPD) claims effective for claims received on or
after April 1, 2019.
As listed in Addendum B of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to assign procedures described by these CPT codes, 0537T,
0538T, and 0539T, to status indicator ``B'' (Codes that are not
recognized by OPPS when submitted on an outpatient hospital Part B bill
type (12x and 13x)) to indicate that the services are not paid under
the OPPS. We proposed to assign CPT code 0540T to status indicator
``S'' (Procedure or Service, Not Discounted when Multiple) and APC 5694
(Level IV Drug Administration).
At the August 19, 2019 meeting, the HOP Panel recommended that CMS
reassign the status indicator for the procedures described by the
specific CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T from ``B'' to ``Q1'' for
CY2020.
Comment: Several commenters opposed our proposal to continue to
assign status indicator ``B'' to CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for
CY2020. Commenters proposed a variety of alternative status indicators
including status indicators ``N'', ``S'', and ``Q1.'' Commenters
believed that CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T did not represent the
steps required to manufacture the CAR T product as CMS has stated.
Generally, those advocating for status indicator ``N'' (Items and
Services Packaged into APC Rates) stated that this assignment would
ease the billing burden and confusion experienced by providers under
the current status indicator assignment of ``B''. Generally, those
advocating for status indicator ``S'' (Procedure or Service, Not
Discounted When Multiple) believed that separate payment is warranted
for these services as they are distinct procedures and are ordered and
performed by clinicians. Finally, generally those advocating for status
indicator ``Q1'', indicating conditional separate payment, supported
the HOP Panel's recommendation to assign this status indicator based on
codes, such as CPT code 0565T (placeholder code 05X3T) (Autologous
cellular implant derived from adipose tissue for the treatment of
osteoarthritis of the knees; tissue harvesting and cellular implant
creation). CPT code 0565T has a status indicator of ``Q1'' and
commenters believe it is similar to the procedures described by CPT
codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T, since CPT code 0565T involves the
collection and harvest of cells, in the form of tissue, for the
treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee. Additionally, commenters
stated that the HCPCS drug Q-codes (Q2041 and Q2042) should be revised
to eliminate the language referencing leukapheresis and dose
preparation procedures.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback. CMS does not
believe that separate or packaged payment under the OPPS is necessary
for the procedures described by CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for
CY2020. The existing CAR T-cell therapies on the market were approved
as biologics and, therefore, provisions of the Medicare statute
providing for payment for biological products apply. The procedures
described by CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T describe the various
steps required to collect and prepare the genetically modified T-cells
and Medicare does not generally pay separately for each step used to
manufacture a drug or biological product. Additionally, we note that
CAR T-cell therapy is a unique therapy approved as a biologic, with
unique preparation procedures, and it cannot be directly compared to
other therapies or existing CPT codes. We note that the current HCPCS
coding for the currently approved CAR T-cell therapy drugs, HCPCS codes
Q2041 and Q2042, include leukapheresis and dose preparation procedures
as these services are including in the manufacturing of these
biologicals. Therefore, payment for these services is incorporated into
the drug Q-codes. We note that although there is no payment associated
with 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for reasons stated previously, these codes
can still be reported to CMS for tracking purposes. Additionally, HOPDs
can bill Medicare for reasonable and necessary services that are
otherwise payable under the OPPS, and we believe that the comments in
reference to payment for services in settings not payable under
[[Page 61233]]
the OPPS are outside the scope of this proposed rule.
Accordingly, we are not revising the existing Q-codes for CAR T-
cell therapies to remove leukapheresis and dose preparation procedures,
and we are not accepting the recommendations to revise the status
indicators for procedures described by CPT codes 0537T, 0538T, and
0539T. We will continue to evaluate and monitor our payment for CAR T-
cell therapies.
Comment: We note that commenters were supportive of the decision to
continue the assignment of status indicator ``S'' (Procedure or
Service, Not Discounted When Multiple) to CPT code 0540T.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and are finalizing
our proposal to maintain status indicator ``S'' for CPT code 0540T.
Comment: Some commenters recommended CMS evaluate modifications to
CAR T-cell payments for future rule making years, including strategies
such as creating a new statutory benefit category for cell and gene
therapies and value-based payment. Specifically, commenters suggested
value-based payments could include milestone-based payments over time,
indication-based pricing or combination-based pricing.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback. Currently, the
existing CAR T-cell therapies on the market were approved as biologics
and, therefore, provisions of the Medicare statute providing for
payment for biologicals apply. In regards to the creation of a new
statutory benefit category, that is out of the scope of existing CMS
statutory authority.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments we received,
we are finalizing our proposal to assign status indicator ``B'' to CPT
codes 0537T, 0538T, and 0539T for CY2020. Additionally, we are
continuing our policy from CY2019 to assign status indicator ``S'' to
CPT code 0540T for CY2020. Tables 20 and 21 below show the final SI and
APC assignments for HCPCS codes Q2041, Q2042, 0537T, 0538T, 0539T, and
0540T for CY 2020. We refer readers to Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period for the payment rates for all codes reportable
under the OPPS. Addendum B is available via the internet on the CMS
website. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 to this final
rule with comment period for the complete list of the OPPS payment
status indicators and their definitions for CY2020.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.034
[[Page 61234]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.035
7. Colonoscopy and Sigmoidoscopy With Endoscopic Mucosal Resection
(EMR) (APC 5313)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT codes 45349 and
45390 to APC 5312 (Level 2 Lower GI Procedures), with a proposed
payment rate of $1,024.08. The long descriptors and proposed SI and APC
assignments for both codes can be found in Table 22 below.
Comment: A commenter believed that the two procedures are different
from the other procedures currently assigned to APC 5312, and stated
they are more similar to these procedures that are assigned to APC
5313:
46610 (Anoscopy; with removal of single tumor, polyp, or
other lesion by hot biopsy forceps or bipolar cautery);
46612 (Anoscopy; with removal of multiple tumors, polyps,
or other lesions by hot biopsy forceps, bipolar cautery or snare
technique); and
46615 (Anoscopy; with ablation of tumor(s), polyp(s), or
other lesion(s) not amenable to removal by hot biopsy forceps, bipolar
cautery or snare technique) where lesions are being removed by methods
other than just the snare wire technique.
Based on clinical and resource homogeneity, the commenter requested a
reassignment from APC 5312 to APC 5313 (Level 3 Lower GI Procedures),
which had a proposed payment rate of $2,512.28, for CPT code 45349 and
45390
Response: Upon review of data available for this final rule with
comment period, we agree with the commenter that the most appropriate
assignment for both codes is APC 5313. Based on the latest hospital
outpatient claims data used for this final rule with comment period,
our analysis supports the reassignment for the codes to APC 5313.
Specifically, our analysis of the claims data show a geometric mean
cost of approximately $1,941 for CPT code 45349 based on 386 single
claims (out of 387 total claims), and a geometric mean cost of about
$2,039 for CPT code 45390 based on 10,212 single claims (out of
10,246). In both instances, the geometric mean cost for the codes are
most compatible with APC 5313, whose geometric mean cost is
approximately $2,294, compared to APC 5312, whose geometric mean cost
is about $983. We believe that maintaining both codes in APC 5312 would
underpay for the procedures. Therefore, we are reassigning the codes
from APC 5312 to APC 5313 for CY 2020.
In summary, after consideration of the public comment, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification, and revising the APC
assignment for 45349 and 45390 from APC 5312 to APC 5313 for CY 2020.
Table 22 lists the final SI and APC assignments for the two codes. The
final CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status
indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
As we do every year, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
codes 45349 and 45390 in the next rulemaking cycle. We remind hospitals
that we review, on an annual basis, the APC assignments for all
services and items paid under the OPPS based on the latest claims data
available to us.
[[Page 61235]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.036
8. Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography (CCTA) (APC 5571)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT codes 75572,
75573, and 75574 to APC 5571 (Level 1 Imaging with Contrast) with a
proposed payment rate of $179.91. The long descriptors and proposed
status indicator (SI) and APC assignments for the codes can be found in
Table 23 below.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concern with the decreased
reimbursement for the codes and stated that the proposed payment rate
underestimates the resources necessary to provide the service. They
noted this is the third consecutive year of decreased reimbursement for
cardiac CT. Some commenters added that the exams described by CPT codes
75572, 75573, and 75574 require more resources than the contrast-
enhanced studies in APC 5571 because they require more time, are
performed by highly trained technologists, involve higher risk
patients, require administration of vasoactive medications, and require
close supervision of patients during and after the procedure. A
commenter urged CMS to reassign the codes to a higher paying APC that
is more resource intensive and includes procedures that share similar
clinical characteristics, such as APC 5572 (Level 2 Imaging with
Contrast), which had a proposed payment rate of $373.45, or APC 5573
(Level 3 Imaging with Contrast), which had a proposed payment rate of
$682.96. Other commenters specifically requested a reassignment to APC
5573 based on clinical and resource homogeneity to these services that
are assigned to the APC: Stress cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CPT
code 75563), stress echocardiography (HCPCS codes C8928, C8930), and
nuclear SPECT MPI (CPT codes 78451, 78452). One commenter recommended
the reassignment of CPT code 75574 to APC 5191 (Level 1 Endovascular
Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $2,899.34 and believed the
service is very similar to a cardiac catheterization procedure that is
described by CPT code 93455 (Catheter placement in coronary artery(s)
for coronary angiography, including intraprocedural injection(s) for
coronary angiography, imaging supervision and interpretation; with
catheter placement(s) in bypass graft(s) (internal mammary, free
arterial, venous grafts) including intraprocedural injection(s) for
bypass graft angiography). This same commenter suggested that the less-
intensive CPT codes 75572 and 75573 be reassigned to APC 5572.
Response: CPT codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 were effective January
1, 2010, and prior to that they were described by Category III CPT
codes from January 1, 2006 through December 31, 2009; therefore, we
have many years of claims data associated with these services. For this
final rule with comment period, based on claims submitted between
January 1, 2018 through December 30, 2018, that were processed on or
before June 30, 2019, our analysis of the latest claims data for this
final rule supports maintaining CPT codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 in
APC 5571. Specifically, our claims data show a geometric mean cost of
approximately $159 for CPT code 75572 based on 12,299 single claims
(out of 23,902 total claims), $185 for CPT code 75573 based on 323
single claims (out of 466 total claims), and $196 for CPT code 75574
based on 25,434 single claims (out of 40,219 total claims). Because the
geometric mean costs for the CCTA codes range are between $159 and
$196, we believe it would be inappropriate to reassign the codes to
these suggested APCs because their geometric mean costs are
significantly higher:
APC 5572 (with geometric mean cost of about $359)
APC 5573 (with a geometric mean cost of approximately
$660)
APC 5191 (with a geometric mean cost of about $2,788)
In our analysis to determine the cause of the decreased payment
rates for the last several years, we also reviewed our claims data to
determine whether changes in payment for certain computed tomography
(CT) services impacted the OPPS payment rates. Specifically, section
218(a)(1) of the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA) (Pub.
L. 113-93) amended section 1834 of the Act by establishing a new
subsection 1834(p). Effective for services furnished on or after
January 1, 2016, section 1834(p) of the Act reduces payment for the
technical component (TC) of applicable CT services paid under the MPFS
and applicable CT services paid under the OPPS, with a 5-percent
reduction required in 2016 and a 15-percent reduction required in 2017
and subsequent years. The applicable CT services are identified by
HCPCS codes 70450 through 70498; 71250 through 71275; 72125 through
72133; 72191 through 72194; 73200 through 73206; 73700 through 73706;
74150 through 74178; 74261 through 74263; and 75571 through 75574 (and
any succeeding codes) for services furnished using equipment that does
not meet each of the attributes of the National Electrical
Manufacturers Association (NEMA) Standard XR-29-2013, entitled
``Standard Attributes on CT Equipment Related to Dose Optimization and
Management.''
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR
70470), we established a new ``CT'' modifier to be used on claims that
include CT services furnished using equipment that does not meet each
of the attributes of NEMA Standard XR-29-2013. Hospitals are required
to report the ``CT'' modifier on claims for CT scans described by any
of the HCPCS codes we identified (and any
[[Page 61236]]
successor codes) that are furnished on non-NEMA Standard XR-29-2013-
compliant CT scanners. The use of this modifier results in the
applicable payment reduction for the CT service, as specified under
section 1834(p) of the Act.
Based on our analysis, we observed declining use of the CT modifier
in both billing volume and the number of providers using the modifier
over the past several years. Further, we note that the payment
reduction required by section 1834(p), as amended by section 218(a)(1)
of PAMA, does not directly affect the geometric mean costs under the
OPPS, because we do not use payment rates to establish CCRs, rather we
use the charges submitted by hospitals on claims and costs estimated
through applying the cost report CCRs for modeling purposes. The
application of the payment reductions associated with the CT modifier
only occurs after the prospective OPPS payments are already calculated.
Comment: Some commenters recommended the establishment of a new
cost center specific to CCTA. They noted that hospitals currently do
not submit any cost center data for cardiac CT services.
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestion. CMS is
currently reviewing non-standard cost centers used frequently in the
Medicare cost report in order to establish additional standardized
reporting. We will consider the establishment of a new cost center
specific to cardiac CT services in our review.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments and after
our analysis of the latest claims data, we are finalizing our proposal,
without modification, to assign CPT codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 to
APC 5571 for CY 2020. Table 23 lists the final SI and APC assignments
for the three codes. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can
be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS website).
As we do every year, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
codes 75572, 75573, and 75574 for the next rulemaking cycle. We remind
hospitals that we review, on an annual basis, the APC assignments for
all services and items paid under the OPPS based on the latest claims
data.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.037
[[Page 61237]]
9. Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) Programming (APC 5742)
In CY 2018, the DBS programming codes were described by CPT code
95978 (first 60 minutes), which was assigned to APC 5742, with a
payment of $115.18, and CPT code 95979 (each additional 30 minutes),
which was assigned to SI ``N'' to indicate that the code is packaged
since it is an add-on code. For CY 2019, the CPT Editorial Panel
deleted CPT code 95978 and replaced it with CPT code 95983 (first 15
minutes) effective January 1, 2019. Similarly, CPT code 95979 was
deleted and replaced with CPT code 95984 (each additional 15 minutes)
effective January 1, 2019. As a result of this coding change, we
assigned the 15-minute CPT code 95983 to APC 5741 (Level 1 Electronic
Analysis of Devices) with a payment rate of $37.16, and assigned CPT
code 95984 to ``N'' to indicate that the code is packaged because it
describes an add-on service, which is similar to the SI for its
predecessor code (CPT code 95979). Table 24 below list the long
descriptors and proposed SI and APC assignments for CPT codes 95983 and
95984.
At the August 21, 2019 HOP Panel Meeting, a presenter requested
that the 15-minute CPT code 95983 be reassigned to APC 5742. The
presenter added that the cost of providing the service from 2018 to
2019 has not changed but the reimbursement has reduced the hospital
payment by about $100. The presenter requested an APC modification for
CPT code 95983 from APC 5741 to APC 5742 so that hospitals receive
adequate payment for providing the service. Based on the information
presented at the meeting, the HOP Panel recommended a reassignment to
APC 5742 for CPT code 95983. Specifically, the Panel recommended that
``CMS move HCPCS code 95983, Electronic analysis of implanted
neurostimulator pulse generator/transmitter (e.g., contact group[s],
interleaving, amplitude, pulse width, frequency [hz], on/off cycling,
burst, magnet mode, dose lockout, patient selectable parameters,
responsive neurostimulation, detection algorithms, closed loop
parameters, and passive parameters) by physician or other qualified
health care professional; with brain neurostimulator pulse generator/
transmitter programming, first 15 minutes face-to-face time with
physician or other qualified health care professional, to APC code
5472, Level II Electronic Analysis of Devices, if the final data that
are available in time for consideration of the Final Rule are
consistent with preliminary data.''
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT code 95983 to
APC 5741 (Level 1 Electronic Analysis of Devices) with a proposed
payment rate of $36.81. In addition, we proposed to continue to assign
CPT code 95984 to status indicator (SI) ``N'' to indicate that the code
is an add-on that is packaged and payment for it is included in the
primary service. In this case, the payment for the add-on code is
included in CPT code 95983.
Comment: Several commenters requested the reassignment of CPT code
95983 to APC 5742. One commenter stated that the assignment of the
primary CPT code 95983 to the lower level APC 5741 is not appropriate
because the overall time and resources expended by a hospital when
furnishing this service in the HOPD setting remains the same, even if
the units are billed differently. This same commenter indicated that,
based on the coding descriptor for the replacement codes with the
primary service described as the first 15-minutes and the secondary
service as each additional 15-minutes, hospitals will continue to
receive a single line-item payment for the service, with the payment
for the add-on CPT code packaged into it, regardless of the number of
units billed. Another commenter stated that reassigning the code from
APC 5741 to APC 5742 will have no effect on the geometric mean cost of
either APC. Another commenter requested the reassignment based on the
geometric mean cost of approximately $109 for the predecessor code (CPT
code 95978) and the Panel's recommendation at the August 19, 2019 HOP
Panel Meeting.
Response: As noted above, the predecessor CPT code 95978 described
a 60-minute service, while the replacement code--CPT code 95983--
describes a 15-minute service. Based on the new time specified in the
descriptor for CPT code 95983, we believed that assigning the
replacement code to APC 5741 was appropriate. However, at the August
21, 2019 HOP Panel meeting, the presenter indicated that the service of
providing DBS programming during 2018 and 2019 are the same, but
because of the coding change that packages any service after each
additional 15 minutes, the maximum payment that a hospital would
receive for the service is a single unit of the code. The presenter
recommended a change in the APC assignment to APC 5742 so that
hospitals receive adequate payment for the service based on the coding
structure of the replacement codes.
As recommended by the HOP Panel, we reviewed the claims data
associated with the predecessor code (CPT code 95978). Based on the
latest hospital outpatient claims data used for this final rule with
comment period, our analysis reveals a geometric mean cost of
approximately $109 for the code, which is consistent with the geometric
mean cost of about $111 for APC 5742 compared to APC 5741 whose
geometric mean cost is about $35. Based on the information presented at
the HOP Panel Meeting, the Panel's recommendation, as well as the final
rule claims data, we agree with the commenters that APC 5741 may not
adequately reflect the resources to provide the service described by
CPT code 95983 and are, therefore, modifying the assignment for CPT
code 95983 to APC 5742.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments and the
presentation at the August 21 HOP Panel Meeting, we are finalizing our
proposal, with modification, and revising the APC assignment for CPT
code 95983 to APC 5742 for CY 2020. Table 24 list the final SI and APC
assignments for CPT code 95983 and 95984. The final CY 2020 payment
rate for CPT code 95983 can be found in Addendum B to this final rule
with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of
this final rule with comment period for the status indicator (SI)
meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1
are available via the internet on the CMS website.
As we do every year, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
code 95983 for the next rulemaking cycle. We remind hospitals that we
review, on an annual basis, the APC assignments for all services and
items paid under the OPPS.
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10. Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy (ESWL) (APC 5374)
For the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule, we reviewed all of the
procedures assigned to the Urology Procedures APCs, specifically, APCs
5371 through 5377, and made some modifications to more appropriately
reflect the resource costs and clinical characteristics of the services
within each APC grouping. Specifically, we revised the APC assignment
of the procedures assigned to the family of Urology APCs to more
appropriately reflect a prospective payment system that is based on
payment groupings and not code-specific payment rates, while
maintaining clinical and resource homogeneity. As we stated in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR 58900), this modification was based on
public comments we received in response to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule on the proposed APC assignments for certain urology
procedures.
We received many comments on the APC reassignment for the
extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) procedure, which is
described by CPT code 50590 (Lithotripsy, extracorporeal shock wave),
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. The commenters
indicated there was no discussion in the preamble on the reassignment
of the code from APC 5375 (Level 5 Urology and Related Services) to APC
5374 (Level 4 Urology and Related Services), and they disagreed with
the revision and believed that APC 5375 was the more appropriate
assignment for the code. We remind the commenters that, as we have
stated in every OPPS/ASC proposed and final rules, we review, on an
annual basis, the APC assignments for all services and items paid under
the OPPS based on our analysis of the latest claims data. Based on
updated claims data for the final rule for CY 2019, we found that the
geometric mean cost of approximately $3,265 for CPT code 50590 did not
support its continued assignment to APC 5375, which had a geometric
mean cost of about $4,055. We believed that we would have significantly
overpaid for the procedure had we maintained the assignment to APC
5375. Consequently, we revised the APC assignment for CPT code 50590 to
APC 5374, which had a geometric mean cost of approximately $2,952 for
CY 2019.
We note that the SI and APC assignment for CPT code 50590 were
subject to comment in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule but not in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. Nevertheless, we
received comments on this specific issue in response to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. Because CPT code 50590 was not
assigned to comment indicator ``NI'' in the final rule because it was
not a new code for CY 2019, and therefore, the comments received
related to this code
[[Page 61240]]
were out-of-scope. Nonetheless, we discuss above to provide some
clarity to this issue.
For CY 2020, as listed in Addendum B to the proposed rule, we
proposed to maintain the APC assignment for CPT code 50590 to APC 5374
with a proposed payment rate of $3,059.21.
Comment: Some commenters requested that we restore the code to APC
5375 where it had been placed for several years prior to CY 2019. The
commenters indicated that CPT code 50590 is similar to two ureteroscopy
with lithotripsy (URSL) procedures that are assigned to APC 5375,
specifically:
CPT code 52353 (Cystourethroscopy, with ureteroscopy and/
or pyeloscopy; with lithotripsy (ureteral catheterization is
included)); and
CPT code 52356 (Cystourethroscopy, with ureteroscopy and/
or pyeloscopy; with lithotripsy including insertion of indwelling
ureteral stent (e.g., gibbons or double-j type)).
In addition, some commenters suggested that placing the three
procedures in two separate APCs may create an unintended consequence of
unplanned admissions to the hospital. Specifically, the commenters
indicated that if the proposed assignment for CPT code 50590 is
finalized in APC 5374, while CPT codes 52353 and 52356 are finalized in
APC 5375, hospitals might discontinue ESWL services (described by CPT
code 50590) which would make it less accessible to Medicare
beneficiaries and, ultimately, encourage hospitals to perform more URSL
procedures, which, according to the commenter, have higher complication
rates compared to ESWL. These commenters asserted that 90 percent of
Medicare patients require an indwelling ureteral stent after a URSL
procedure (described by CPT codes 52353 and 52356), and that the stents
lead to infection, visits to the ER, and unplanned admissions. Hence,
the commenters requested an APC reassignment to APC 5375 for CPT code
50590 to eliminate any unintended consequences.
Further, the commenters noted that because of the capital equipment
expense associated with purchasing ($500,000) and maintaining ($65,000
per year) a lithotripter, hospitals rarely own their own lithotripter
and generally contract under arrangement with suppliers to provide the
service. Alternatively, the commenter asserted that all URSL equipment
is owned by the hospitals furnishing the service and that the hospitals
are therefore able to train clinicians on the equipment.
Response: As discussed above, we revised the APC assignment for CPT
code 50590 based on our analysis of the latest claims data for the CY
2019 final rule. For this final rule with comment period, which is
based on claims submitted between January 1, 2018 through December 30,
2018, that were processed on or before June 30, 2019, our findings do
not support a reassignment to APC 5375. Instead, our analysis supports
retaining CPT code 50590 in APC 5374. Specifically, our data reveal a
geometric mean cost of approximately $3,247 for CPT code 50590 based on
40,009 single claims (out of 40,351 total claims). The geometric mean
cost for APC 5374 is about $2,953 while APC 5375 shows a geometric mean
cost of approximately $4,140. Based on the geometric mean cost, we
believe that maintaining CPT code in APC 5374 is more appropriate than
reassigning it to APC 5375, based on the geometric mean cost of CPT
code 50590 relative to that of APCs 5374 and 5375.
In addition, we note that the resource costs associated with the
URSL procedures (CPT codes 52353 and 52356) are higher than that of
ESWL (CPT code 50590). Specifically, the geometric mean cost for CPT
code 50590 for CY 2020 is $3,247 while the geometric mean cost for CPT
codes 52353 and 52356 are $3,740 and $4,361, respectively. The
geometric mean cost of $3,247 for CPT code 50590 falls within APC 5374,
whose geometric mean costs for the significant procedures range between
$2,495 (for CPT code 52351) and $3,472 (for CPT code 52318), while the
geometric mean costs of $3,740 and $4,361 for CPT codes 52353 and
52356, respectively, fall within APC 5375, whose geometric mean costs
for the significant procedures range between $3,575 (for CPT code
52630) and $5,655 (for CPT code 55875). Although all three procedures
are used for the treatment of kidney stones, we disagree that CPT codes
50590, 52353, and 52356 are similar based on resource and clinical
homogeneity. With regards to unintended consequences as a result of the
assignment to APC 5374 for CPT code 50590, we rely on physicians to
provide appropriate care based on the needs of their patients. While
the payment rate for services assigned to APC 5375 is higher than that
of APC 5374, it is based on the relative resources associated with
furnishing the services assigned to that APC. While each of the
lithotripsy procedures have some clinical similarity, as the commenters
pointed out, they have clinical differences. While the commenters
expected that these clinical differences may result in similar or
higher resources for CPT code 50590 compared to CPT codes 52353 and
52356, that has not been borne out in the Medicare data we have
available. As we do every year, we will review the claims data
associated with CPT code 50590 to determine its appropriate APC
placement for the next rulemaking update.
Comment: Some commenters suggested, based on their analysis of the
OPPS Limited Data Sets (LDS) for the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule, the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule, and the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
that the methodology formula that was supplied with the LDS materials
was flawed and, therefore, they were unable to validate CMS's
calculation or the accuracy of the cost data upon which CMS relied to
determine the payment rates. In addition, these same commenters
suggested that because hospitals do not generally own lithotripters,
they would not be surprised if the cost reports for CPT code 50590 were
inaccurate.
Response: It is generally not our policy to judge the accuracy of
hospital coding and charging for purposes of ratesetting. We rely on
hospitals to accurately report the use of HCPCS codes in accordance
with their code descriptors and CPT and CMS instructions, and to report
services on claims and charges and costs for the services on their
Medicare hospital cost report appropriately. We do not specify the
methodologies that hospitals use to set charges for this or any other
service. In addition, we state in Chapter 4 of the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual that ``it is extremely important that hospitals
report all HCPCS codes consistent with their descriptors; CPT and/or
CMS instructions and correct coding principles, and all charges for all
services they furnish, whether payment for the services is made
separately paid or is packaged'' to enable CMS to establish future
ratesetting for OPPS services.
Comment: To pay appropriately for CPT code 50590, some commenters
suggested adding the cost of a ureteral stent in calculating the
geometric mean cost since some procedures (less than 20 percent)
require the device. They noted that the URSL procedure described by CPT
code 52356 requires the insertion of a ureteral stent that costs
$609.16.
Response: Geometric mean costs are determined based on the costs
reported on the claim. If the CPT code descriptor describes the
insertion of a device, we would expect the device cost to be packaged
into the cost of the procedure
[[Page 61241]]
since the charges associated with the device and its insertion should
be reflected in claims submitted to Medicare. We note that the CPT code
descriptor for the URSL procedures (CPT codes 52353 and 52356)
describes the use of stents, consequently, the geometric mean cost for
the procedures include the packaged cost of the devices. However, the
CPT code descriptor for the ESWL procedure does not describe the use of
a ureteral stent, so we disagree that device costs for a ureteral stent
should be included in CPT code 50590. If a ureteral stent were involved
in an ESWL procedure, HOPDs should report the CPT code that
appropriately describes the procedure performed. Moreover, as we have
stated previously, we rely on HOPDs to accurately report all HCPCS
codes consistent with their descriptors; CPT and/or CMS instructions
and correct coding principles, and all charges for all services they
furnish, whether payment for the services is made separately paid or is
packaged.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments and after
our analysis of the updated claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification,
to continue to assign CPT code 50590 to APC 5374 for CY 2020. The final
CY 2020 payment rate for the code can be found in Addendum B to this
final rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status
indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT code 50590
for the next rulemaking cycle. As stated above, we review, on an annual
basis, the APC assignments for all services and items paid under the
OPPS.
11. Extravascular Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (EV ICD)
As displayed in Table 25 and in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to assign CPT codes 0571T through 0580T to
status indicator (SI) ``E1'' to indicate that the codes are not payable
by Medicare when submitted on outpatient claims (any outpatient bill
type) because the services associated with these codes are either not
covered by any Medicare outpatient benefit category, are statutorily
excluded from Medicare payment, or are not reasonable and necessary.
The codes were listed as 06X0T through and 07X4T (the 5-digit CMS
placeholder codes) in Addendum B with the short descriptors, and again
in Addendum O with the long descriptors. We also assigned the codes to
comment indicator ``NP'' in Addendum B to indicate that they are new
for CY 2020 and that public comments would be accepted on their
proposed status indicator assignments. We note that these codes will be
effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A commenter reported that the device associated with these
codes is in a clinical trial and also received FDA approval with an IDE
Category B designation. The commenter added that they are currently in
the process of applying for Medicare national coverage for the clinical
trial as a Category B IDE study. The commenter requested that we
crosswalk the new codes to the SIs and APC assignments of comparable
procedures involving ICD placement so that appropriate hospital
outpatient payment may be made in the event the Category B IDE study is
approved for Medicare coverage. The commenter listed the comparable
codes with the SI and APCs assignments.
Response: Based on our review, the clinical trial has not met
Medicare's standards for coverage, nor does it appear on the CMS
Approved IDE List, which can be found at this CMS website: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/IDE/Approved-IDE-Studies.html. Because
the clinical trial associated with these codes has not been approved
for Medicare coverage, we believe we should continue to assign CPT
codes 0571T through 0580T to status indicator ``E1'' for CY 2020. If
Medicare approves the clinical trial as a Category B IDE study, we will
reassess the SI and APC assignments for the codes.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comment received, we
are finalizing our proposal without modification for CPT codes 0571T
through 0580T. The final status indicator assignments for both codes
are listed in Table 25 below. We refer readers to Addendum D1 of this
final rule with comment period for the complete list of the OPPS
payment status indicators and their definitions for CY 2020. Addendum
D1 is available via the internet on the CMS website.
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12. Genicular and Sacroiliac Joint Nerve Injections/Procedures (APCs
5442 and 5431)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel established four new codes to
describe genicular and sacroiliac joint nerve injections and
procedures. As listed in Table 26 below with the long descriptors, and
also in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed
to assign CPT codes 64451 and 64454 to APC 5442 (Level 2 Nerve
Injections) with a proposed payment rate of $627.39. We note both CPT
codes 64451 and 64454 describe therapeutic and/or diagnostic injection
procedures. We also proposed to assign CPT code 64624 to APC 5443
(Level 3 Nerve Injections) with a proposed payment rate of $808.58. In
addition, we proposed to assign CPT code 64625 to APC 5431 (Level 1
Nerve Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $1,747.26. CPT codes
64451, 64454, 64624, and 64625 were listed as 6XX00, 64XX0, 64XX1, and
6XX01 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes), respectively, in Addendum B
with the short descriptors, and again in Addendum O with the long
descriptors. We also assigned these codes to comment indicator ``NP''
in Addendum B to indicate that the codes are new for CY 2020 and that
public comments would be accepted on their proposed status indicator
assignments. We note that these codes will be effective January 1,
2020.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with the APC assignment for
CPT code 64624 (shown in the proposed rule with placeholder code 64XX1)
and suggested that it would be more appropriate, based on clinical
homogeneity, to assign it to APC 5431, where similar radiofrequency
ablation procedures are assigned, specifically, CPT codes 64633
(Destruction by neurolytic agent, paravertebral facet joint nerve(s),
with imaging guidance (fluoroscopy or ct); cervical or thoracic, single
facet joint), 64635 (Destruction by neurolytic agent, paravertebral
facet joint nerve(s), with imaging guidance
[[Page 61244]]
(fluoroscopy or ct); lumbar or sacral, single facet joint), and new CPT
code 64625. Several commenters reported that, unlike CPT code 64640
(Destruction by neurolytic agent; other peripheral nerve or branch)
which only involves one nerve, the procedure described by CPT code
64624 requires more expensive medical equipment and supplies and
involves the destruction of three nerves. Most commenters agreed that
the procedure is not a nerve injection. One commenter explained that
the procedure describes the destruction of three nerve branches at
three locations in the knee, and the destruction is typically done via
radiofrequency ablation similar to those procedures described by CPT
codes 64633 and 64635 that are assigned to APC 5431. Another commenter
suggested that reassigning CPT code 64624 to APC 5431, similar to new
CPT code 64625, would provide adequate reimbursement for the procedure
and enable providers to offer patients with chronic knee pain an
effective alternative to systemic opioids.
Response: After consideration of the public comments, and based on
the characteristics of the procedure, as well as input from our medical
advisors, we believe that it would be appropriate to revise the APC
assignment for CPT code 64624 from APC 5443 to APC 5431. We agree with
the commenters that this new procedure shares similar characteristics
with CPT codes 64633 and 64635 that are assigned to APC 5431.
Comment: A commenter agreed with the proposed APC assignments for
CPT codes 64451, 64454, and 64425.
Response: We thank the commenter for their feedback and are
finalizing the APC assignments for these codes.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification. Specifically, we are
finalizing the APC assignments for CPT codes 64451, 64454, and 64425 to
the APCs listed in Table 26. In addition, we are revising the APC
assignment for CPT code 64624 from APC 5443 to APC 5431. Table 26 lists
the long descriptors for the codes, as well as the final APC and SI
assignments for all four codes. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the
codes can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment
period. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule
with comment period for the status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for these codes
once we have claims data. We review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on the
latest claims data that we have available.
[[Page 61245]]
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13. FemBloc[supreg] and FemChec[supreg]
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel established two new codes to
describe FemBloc (0567T) and FemChec (0568T). As listed in Table 27
with the long descriptors, and in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to assign CPT code 0567T to APC 5414 (Level
4 Gynecologic Procedures) and status indicator (SI) ``J1'' (Hospital
Part B services paid through a comprehensive APC) with a payment rate
of $2,564.60. In addition, we proposed to assign new CPT code 0568T to
APC 5732 (Level 2 Minor Procedures) and status indicator ``Q1''
(conditionally packaged) with a payment rate of $34.33. The codes were
listed as 05X1T and 05X2T (the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes),
respectively, in Addendum B with the short descriptors, and again in
Addendum O with the long descriptors. We also assigned these codes to
comment indicator ``NP'' in Addendum B to indicate that the codes are
new for CY 2020 and that public comments would be accepted on their
proposed status indicator assignments. We note these codes will be
effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A medical technology company disagreed with the proposed
APC assignment for CPT code 0567T and suggested that we reassign the
procedure code from APC 5414 to APC 5415 (Level 5 Gynecologic
Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $4,426.45. The commenter
noted that the single-use, disposable device associated with the code
contains two deployable and retractable balloon catheters and a
biopolymer that retails for $1,800. The commenter believes the
procedure more appropriately fits in APC 5415 based on its similarity
to CPT code 58565 (Hysteroscopy, surgical; with bilateral fallopian
tube cannulation to induce occlusion by placement of permanent
implants). Specifically, the commenter explained that in both
procedures, specifically CPT codes
[[Page 61246]]
58565 and 0567T, the entrances to the fallopian tubes are accessed and
a device is placed that causes permanent occlusion of the tubes.
Response: Based on our findings associated with FemBloc, the
procedure is currently in clinical trial with an estimated study
completion date of September 2022 (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT03067272). Because the FemBloc device has not received FDA approval,
we believe that we should reassign CPT code 0567T to status indicator
``E1'' to indicate that the code is not payable by Medicare when
submitted on outpatient claims (any outpatient bill type). If FDA
approves the device, we will reassess the code and determine the
appropriate SI and APC assignments.
Comment: The same commenter for FemBloc also requested an APC
modification for the code associated with FemChec. Specifically, the
commenter requested the reassignment for CPT code 0568T from APC 5732
(Level 2 Minor Procedures) to APC 5523 (Level 3 Imaging without
Contrast) with a proposed payment rate of $231.28. The commenter
reported that the code is more clinically related to one of the
procedures assigned to APC 5523, specifically, CPT code 76831 (Saline
infusion sonohysterography (sis), including color flow doppler, when
performed). Both CPT codes 0568T and 76831 require ultrasound and
saline to study the uterus.
Response: Our findings reveal that the clinical study associated
with FemBloc also applies to FemChec. Based on the clinical study
(ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03067272), FemChec will be used with
FemBloc. Because the FemBloc device has not received FDA approval, we
believe that we should reassign CPT code 0568T to status indicator
``E1'' to indicate that the code is not payable by Medicare when
submitted on outpatient claims (any outpatient bill type). If FDA
approves FemBloc, we will reassess the code associated with FemChec and
determine the appropriate OPPS SI and APC assignments for CPT code
0568T.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comments, we are
revising the SI and APC assignments for CPT codes 0567T and 0568T. The
final status indicator assignments for both codes are listed in Table
27 below. We refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule with
comment period for the complete list of the OPPS payment status
indicators and their definitions for CY 2020. Addendum D1 is available
via the internet on the CMS website.
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14. Hemodialysis Arteriovenous Fistula (AVF) Procedures (APC 5194)
For CY 2019, based on two new technology applications received by
CMS for hemodialysis arteriovenous fistula creation, CMS established
two new HCPCS codes to describe the procedures. Specifically, CMS
established HCPCS code C9754 for the Ellipsys[supreg] System and C9755
for the WavelinQ\TM\ System effective January 1, 2019. Both HCPCS codes
were assigned to APC 5193 (Level 3 Endovascular Procedures) with a
payment rate of 9,669.04 for CY 2019.
At the August 21, 2019 HOP Panel Meeting, a presenter requested
that we reassign the WavelinQ procedure to APC 5194. The presenter
indicated that the APC payment associated with HCPCS code C9755 is
inadequate to cover the cost of the procedure. According to the
presenter, the conservative cost estimate for the procedure is over
$12,500. The presenter also reported that their HOPD facility performed
35 procedures between October 2018 to July 31, 2019, and the average
payment for each procedure ranged between $3,410 and $11,247. Based on
the information presented at the meeting, the HOP Panel made no
recommendation to CMS on the APC assignment for the WavelinQ procedure.
For CY 2020, as listed in Table 28 below with the long descriptors
and proposed SI and APC assignments, we
[[Page 61247]]
proposed to continue to assign HCPCS codes C9754 and C9755 to APC 5193
with a proposed payment rate of $10,013.25. We received several
comments related to this proposal. Below are the comments and our
responses.
Comment: Several physicians stated that the current payment rate
does not cover the cost of the procedure and requested the reassignment
of both HCPCS code C9754 and C9755 to APC 5194 (Level 4 Endovascular
Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $16,049.73. A physician
association explained that the new technologies describe innovative new
procedures that increase options for dialysis patients to have a
successful arteriovenous fistula for dialysis access, and that the
procedures are important in making fistula access possible for patients
that either refuse open surgery or where skilled surgeons are not
readily available. However, they expressed concern that the procedures
may not be available to patients if the costs are higher than the
payment, and requested that CMS carefully examine the most recent
claims to determine if they should be reclassified to APC 5194.
Response: After consideration of the public comments received and
based on input from our medical advisors, as well as our review of the
latest claims data available to us, we believe that we should revise
the APC assignment for HCPCS code C9754 and C9755 to APC 5194 for CY
2020.
Comment: A medical device company requested an APC reassignment
based on data presented at the August 21, 2019 HOP Panel Meeting. They
indicated that their analysis of the 1Q2019 Medicare Limited Data Set
(LDS) Standard Analytic File (SAF) for HCPCS code C9755 showed a
geometric mean cost of $12,960, and suggested reassigning the code to
APC 5194. They also reminded CMS that the reassignment to APC 5194 is
in line with various HHS initiatives, such as the HHS Initiative on
``Advancing American Kidney Health'' since the payment rate for the
procedure would improve access to the service.
Response: As stated above, we believe that it is appropriate to
revise the APC assignment for HCPCS code C9754 and C9755. Consequently,
we are reassigning both codes from APC 5193 to APC 5194 for CY 2020.
Comment: A commenter representing 13 different health systems
suggested that CMS adopt the recommendation they made at the August 21,
2019 HOP Panel Meeting. Specifically, they recommended the reassignment
of HCPCS code C9755 from APC 5193 to APC 5194.
Response: Although there was a presentation at the August 21, 2019
meeting on HCPCS code C9755 with a request to reassign the code to APC
5194, the HOP Panel made no recommendation to CMS. We note that the
August 21, 2019, HOP Panel recommendations are posted online and can be
found on this CMS website: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/FACA/AdvisoryPanelonAmbulatoryPaymentClassificationGroups.html. Although the
HOP Panel made no recommendation to CMS, based on the proposed rule
comments, and our review of the issue, we are revising the APC
assignment for HCPCS code C9755 to APC 5194 for CY 2020.
Comment: A commenter stated that it was brought to their attention
that other comments related to the WavelinQ procedure may urge CMS to
revisit the APC assignment for HCPCS code C9755. The commenter
indicated that if CMS were to revisit the issue and reassign the APC
assignment for the WavelinQ procedure, it should also apply the same
consideration to the Ellipsys procedure (C9754).
Response: We agree that the services described by HCPCS codes C9754
and C9755 are clinically similar and, therefore, we are revising the
APC assignment for both HCPCS code C9754 and C9755 to APC 5194 for CY
2020. However, we note that claims data upon which we could determine
the geometric mean costs associated with each procedure are not yet
available for ratesetting but once such data become available, we will
be able to determine whether the two services are similar in terms of
resources. In addition, as has been our practice since the
implementation of the OPPS in 2000, we review, on an annual basis, the
APC assignments for the procedures and services paid under the OPPS.
Consequently, we will review the cost data associated with HCPCS codes
C9754 and C9755 for the next annual rulemaking.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification. Specifically, we are
reassigning HCPCS codes C9754 and C9755 from APC 5193 to APC 5194 for
CY 2020. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with comment period. In addition, we
refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for
the status indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the
OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS
website. Table 28 lists the final SI and APC assignments for HCPCS
codes C9754 and C9755.
[[Page 61248]]
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15. Hemodialysis Duplex Studies (APCs 5522 and 5523)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel established two new codes to
describe hemodialysis duplex studies, specifically, CPT codes 93985 and
93986. The new codes replace HCPCS code G0365 (Vessel mapping of
vessels for hemodialysis access (services for preoperative vessel
mapping prior to creation of hemodialysis access using an autogenous
hemodialysis conduit, including arterial inflow and venous outflow)).
HCPCS code G0365 was assigned to status indicator ``D'' in the proposed
rule to indicate that the code would be deleted on December 31, 2019.
As listed in Table 29 below with the long descriptors, and also in
Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to assign
CPT code 93985 and 93986 to APC 5522 (Level 2 Imaging without Contrast)
with a proposed payment rate of $111.04. The codes were listed as 93X00
and 93X01 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes), respectively, in
Addendum B with the short descriptors, and again in Addendum O with the
long descriptors. We also assigned these codes to comment indicator
``NP'' in Addendum B to indicate that the codes are new for CY 2020 and
that public comments would be accepted on their proposed status
indicator assignments. We note that these codes will be effective
January 1, 2020.
Comment: Several commenters recommended a reassignment of CPT code
93985 from APC 5522 to APC 5523 (Level 3 Imaging without Contrast) with
a proposed payment rate of $231.28. They indicated that the code
represents a bilateral study, and as such, should be assigned to APC
5523 with similar bilateral/complete duplex studies.
Response: Based on the public comments that we received, our review
of the procedure associated with CPT code 93985 and advice from our
medical advisors, we agree that the code fits more appropriately in APC
5523 based on its clinical homogeneity and resource use to the other
procedures in the APC. Therefore, we are reassigning the code to APC
5523. We received no comments on CPT code 93986. Consequently, we are
finalizing its APC assignment to APC 5522.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification. Specifically, we are
finalizing our proposal for CPT code 93986 to APC 5522, and reassigning
CPT code 93985 to APC 5523. Table 29 below lists the long descriptors
for the three codes and the final SI and APC assignments for CY 2020.
The final CY 2020 OPPS payment rates can be found in Addendum B of this
final rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status
indicator meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS for CY 2020.
Both Addendum B and Addendum D1 are available via the internet on the
CMS website.
[[Page 61249]]
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16. Intraocular Procedures (APCs 5491 Through 5494)
In prior years, CPT code 0308T (Insertion of ocular telescope
prosthesis including removal of crystalline lens or intraocular lens
prosthesis) was assigned to the APC 5495 (Level 5 Intraocular
Procedures) based on its estimated costs. In addition, its relative
payment weight has been based on its median cost under our payment
policy for low-volume device-intensive procedures because the APC
contained a low volume of claims. The low-volume device-intensive
procedures payment policy is discussed in more detail in section
III.C.2. of the proposed rule.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to reassign CPT
code 0308T from APC 5495 to APC 5493 (Level 3 Intraocular Procedures),
based on the data for two claims available for ratesetting for the
proposed rule, and to delete APC 5495 (83 FR 37096 through 37097).
However in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, based
on updated data on a single claim available for ratesetting for the
final rule, we modified our proposal and reassigned procedure code CPT
code 0308T to the APC 5494 (Level 4
[[Page 61250]]
Intraocular Procedures) (83 FR 58917 through 58918). We made this
change based on the similarity of the estimated cost for the single
claim of $12,939.75 to that of the APC ($11,427.14). However, this
created a discrepancy in payments between the OPPS setting and the ASC
setting in which the ASC payments would be higher than the OPPS
payments for the same service because of the intersection of the
estimated cost for the encounter determined under a comprehensive
methodology within the OPPS and the estimated cost determined under the
payment methodology for device-intensive services within the ASC
payment system.
In reviewing the claims data available for the proposed rule for CY
2020 OPPS ratesetting, we found several claims reporting the procedure
described by CPT code 0308T. Based on the claims data, the procedure
would have a geometric mean cost of $28,122.51 and a median cost of
$19,864.38. These cost statistics are significantly higher than the
geometric mean cost of the other procedure assigned to APC 5494, that
is, the procedure described by CPT code 67027 (Implant eye drug
system), which has a geometric mean cost of $12,296.27. In addition, if
we continued to assign the procedure described by CPT code 0308T to APC
5494 (the Level 4 Intraocular Procedures APC), the discrepancy between
payments within the OPPS and the ASC payment system would also continue
to exist. As a result, we proposed to reestablish APC 5495 (Level 5
Intraocular Procedures) because we believe that the procedure described
by CPT code 0308T would be most appropriately placed in this APC based
on its estimated cost. Assignment of the procedure to the Level 5
Intraocular Procedures APC is consistent with its historical placement
and would also address the large discrepancy in payment for the
procedure between the OPPS and the ASC payment system. We note that,
based on data available for the proposed rule, the proposed payment
rate for this procedure when performed in an ASC, as discussed in more
detail in section XIII.D.1.c. of the proposed rule, would be no higher
than the OPPS payment rate for this procedure when performed in the
hospital outpatient setting. We will continue to monitor the volume of
claims data available for the procedure for ratesetting purposes.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we proposed to reestablish APC 5495 (Level
5 Intraocular Procedures) and reassign the procedure described by CPT
code 0308T from APC 5494 to APC 5495. Under this proposal, the proposed
CY 2020 OPPS payment rate for the service would be established based on
its median cost, as discussed in section V.A.5. of the proposed rule,
because it is a device-intensive procedure assigned to an APC with
fewer than 100 total annual claims within the APC.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for our proposal to
assign the HCPCS code 0308T to APC 5495 (Level 5 Intracoular
Procedures).
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to assign HCPCS code CPT
0308T to APC 5495 for the CY 2020 OPPS.
17. Long-Term Electroencephalogram (EEG) Monitoring Services (APCs
5722, 5723, and 5724)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial Panel deleted four existing long-
term EEG monitoring services, specifically, CPT codes 95950, 95951,
95953, and 95956, and replaced them with 23 new CPT codes that
consisted of 10 professional component (PC) codes and 13 technical
component (TC) codes. As listed in Table 30 below with the long
descriptors, and also in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we proposed to assign the 13 technical component codes,
specifically, CPT codes 95700 through 95716, to either APC 5722 (Level
2 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services) with a proposed payment rate
of $256.60 or APC 5723 (Level 3 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of $486.65. The codes were listed as 95X01
through and 95X13 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes) in Addendum B
with the short descriptors, and again in Addendum O with the long
descriptors. In addition, we proposed to assign the 10 professional
component codes, specifically, CPT codes 95717 through 95726, to status
indicator ``M'' to indicate that the services are not paid under the
OPPS since they describe physician services. These codes were listed
were listed as 95X14 through 95X23 (the 5-digit CMS placeholder codes)
in Addendum B with the short descriptors, and again in Addendum O with
the long descriptors. We assigned these 23 codes to comment indicator
``NP'' in Addendum B to indicate that the codes are new for CY 2020 and
that public comments would be accepted on their proposed status
indicator assignments. We note these codes will be effective January 1,
2020.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concern with the proposed APC
assignments for CPT codes 95712, 95713, 95715, and 95716 and stated
that the proposed payment rates for the codes do not provide adequate
reimbursement. A commenter indicated that the proposed APC assignments
for the EEG monitoring services for 2 to 12 hours does not
appropriately reflect the resources and time required to monitor
complex epilepsy patients. Several other commenters recommended the
reassignment of CPT codes 95712 and 95713 to APC 5723 and stated they
should be paid approximately half the rate of the 24-hour video EEG
services. These same commenters stated that the reassignment of CPT
codes 95715 and 95716 to APC 5724, which had a proposed payment rate of
$920.66, would be appropriate since patients being tested may be
classified as observation stays and will not be admitted to the
hospital. The commenters added that these codes were previously
described by predecessor CPT code 95951 (24 hour VEEG), which was
assigned to APC 5724 (Level 4 Diagnostic Tests and Related Services).
Response: With respect to CPT codes 95712 (2-12 hours VEEG with
intermittent monitoring) and 95713 (2-12 hours VEEG with continuous
monitoring), we believe that the resources and time associated with
intermittent monitoring (CPT code 95712) are less than that of
continuous monitoring (CPT code 95713), and therefore, believe they
should be assigned to different APCs. Based on input from our medical
advisors that intermittent monitoring involves checking the patient
every two hours rather than the full 12 hours, we believe it would be
appropriate to modify the APC assignment for the continuous monitoring
code (CPT code 95713) to APC 5723. Applying this same concept to the
12-24 VEEG technical component codes, we believe that the resources
associated with the intermittent monitoring code (CPT code 95715) are
not the same as the continuous monitoring code (CPT code 95716).
Therefore, we are reassigning the APC assignment for CPT code 95716 to
APC 5724. Although the commenters indicated that the predecessor code
for 95715 and 95716 was CPT code 95951, we are uncertain whether the
predecessor code describes continuous or intermittent monitoring since
the code descriptor lacks this specificity.
Comment: Some commenters urged CMS not to finalize the policies
proposed in the PFS or OPPS proposed rules. They indicated that the
policies would dramatically reduce reimbursement for EEG and VEEG
services and instead, suggested that we
[[Page 61251]]
appropriately value these services so that people with epilepsy have
access and can be diagnosed and treated in a timely manner.
Response: We believe these commenters did not fully understand our
APC proposal. Because the existing EEG and VEEG CPT codes will be
deleted on December 31, 2019, if we do not finalize our proposal for
the 13 technical codes that will be effective January 1, 2020, there
would be no codes to report the services associated with EEG and VEEG.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal, with modification. Specifically, we are
finalizing our proposal to assign CPT codes 95700 through 95712, 95714,
and 95715 to the APCs listed in Table 30 below. In addition, we are
modifying our proposal for CPT codes 95713 and 95716, and revising
their APC assignments to APC 5723 and APC 5724, respectively. Further,
we are finalizing our proposal to assign CPT codes 95717 through 95726
to status indicator ``M''. These codes, along with the deleted codes,
are listed in Table 30. The final CY 2020 payment rate for these codes
can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
As always, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for these codes
once we have claims data. We review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on the
latest claims data that we have available.
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18. Musculoskeletal Procedures (APCs 5111 Through 5116)
Prior to the CY 2016 OPPS, payment for musculoskeletal procedures
was primarily divided according to anatomy and the type of
musculoskeletal procedure. As part of the CY 2016 reorganization to
better structure the OPPS payments towards prospective payment
packages, we consolidated those individual APCs so that they became a
general Musculoskeletal APC series (80 FR 70397 through 70398).
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
59300), we continued to apply a six-level structure for the
Musculoskeletal APCs because doing so provided an appropriate
distinction for resource costs at each level and provided clinical
homogeneity. However, we indicated that we would continue to review the
structure of these APCs to determine whether additional granularity
would be necessary.
In the CY 2019 OPPS proposed rule (83 FR 37096), we recognized that
commenters had previously expressed concerns regarding the granularity
of the current APC levels and, therefore, requested comment on the
establishment of additional levels. Specifically, we solicited comments
on the creation of a new APC level between the current Level 5 and
Level 6 within the Musculoskeletal APC series. While some commenters
provided suggested APC reconfigurations and requests for change to APC
assignments, many commenters requested that we maintain the current
six-level structure and continue to monitor the claims data as they
become available. Therefore, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we maintained the six-level APC structure for the
[[Page 61253]]
Musculoskeletal Procedures APCs (83 FR 58920 through 58921).
Based on the claims data available for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we continue to believe that the six-level APC structure
for the Musculoskeletal Procedures APC series is appropriate.
Therefore, we proposed to maintain the APC structure for the CY 2020
OPPS update.
We note that this is the first year for which claims data are
available for the total knee arthroplasty procedure described by CPT
code 27447, which was removed from the inpatient only list in the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59382 through
59385). Based on approximately 60,000 hospital outpatient claims
reporting the procedure that were available for ratesetting in the
proposed rule, the geometric mean cost was approximately $12,472.05,
which is similar to the geometric mean cost for APC 5115 (Level 5
Musculoskeletal Procedures) of $11,879.66, and within a range of the
lowest geometric mean cost of the significant procedure costs of
$9,969.37 and the highest geometric mean cost of the significant
procedure costs of $12,894.18. Therefore, we believed that the
assignment of the procedure described by CPT code 27447 in the Level 5
Musculoskeletal Procedures APC series remains appropriate and,
therefore, we proposed to continue to assign CPT code 27447 to APC 5115
(Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures) for CY 2020.
We also proposed to remove the procedure described by CPT code
27130 (Total hip arthroplasty) from the CY 2020 OPPS inpatient only
list. Based on the estimated costs derived from in the available claims
data, as well as the 50th percentile IPPS payment for TKA/THA
procedures without major complications or comorbidities (MS-DRG 470) of
approximately $11,900 for FY 2020 when the procedure is performed on an
inpatient basis, we believed that it was appropriate to assign the
procedure described by CPT code 27130 to the Level 5 Musculoskeletal
Procedures APC series, which had a geometric mean cost of $11,879.66.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we also proposed to assign the procedure
described by CPT code 27130 to APC 5115. We noted that we will monitor
the claims data reflecting these procedures as they become available.
For a more detailed discussion of the procedures that were proposed to
be removed from the inpatient only (IPO) list for CY 2020 under the
OPPS, we refer readers to section IX. of the proposed rule.
Table 31 displays the CY 2020 Musculoskeletal Procedures APC
series' structure and APC geometric mean costs.
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Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS reconsider the
proposal to assign CPT code 22869 (Insertion of interlaminar/
interspinous process stabilization/distraction device, without open
decompression or fusion, including image guidance when performed,
lumbar; single level) to APC 5115, and instead allow the code to remain
in APC 5116, where it has been historically placed. They believed that
the proposal to move the APC was based on inaccurate data, due to one
hospital incorrectly reporting its costs and charges. They noted that
the influence of that inaccurate data would be short term and that the
claims would eventually support the higher placement, as the reporting
issues were corrected. We also note that the HOP Panel made a
recommendation that CMS examine the claims data for CPT code 22869 and
determine an appropriate APC placement.
Response: While we recognize the concerns that the commenters have
described, it is generally not our policy to judge the accuracy of
hospital coding and charging for purposes of ratesetting. We rely on
hospitals to accurately report the use of HCPCS codes in accordance
with their code descriptors and CPT and CMS instructions, and to report
services on claims and charges and costs for the services on their
Medicare hospital cost report appropriately. However, we do not specify
the methodologies that hospitals use to set charges for this or any
other service. In addition, we state in Chapter 4 of the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual that ``it is extremely important that
hospitals report all HCPCS codes consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct coding principles, and all charges
for all services they furnish, whether payment for the services is made
separately paid
[[Page 61254]]
or is packaged'' to enable CMS to establish future ratesetting for OPPS
services.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the proposed six level Musculoskeletal Procedures APC
structure. We also are finalizing the proposed assignment of the
procedure described by CPT codes 22869 to APC 5115. As discussed in
section IX. of this final rule, we are also finalizing the proposal to
remove the procedure described by CPT code 27130 from the inpatient
only list and to assign it to APC 5115 for the CY 2020 OPPS.
19. Nuclear Medicine Services
a. Cardiac Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Studies (APCs 5593 and
5594)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT code 78459
(Myocardial imaging, positron emission tomography (pet), metabolic
evaluation) to APC 5593 (Level 3 Nuclear Medicine and Related Services)
with a proposed payment rate of $1,293.33. Similarly, we proposed to
maintain the APC assignments for CPT codes 78491 (Myocardial imaging,
positron emission tomography (pet), perfusion; single study at rest or
stress) and 78492 (Myocardial imaging, positron emission tomography
(pet), perfusion; multiple studies at rest and/or stress) to APC 5594
(Level 4 Nuclear Medicine and Related Services) with a proposed payment
rate of $1,466.16.
Comment: Commenters agreed with the APC assignments for CPT codes
78459, 78491, and 78492 and stated they are placed appropriately in
APCs 5593 and 5594. Some commenters added that the cost associated with
CPT code 78492, which describes a wall motion and ejection fraction,
supports its maintenance in APC 5594.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and will
finalize the APC assignments for CPT code 78459 to APC 5593, and for
CPT codes 78491 and 78492 to APC 5594.
b. Cardiac Positron Emission Tomography (PET)/Computed Tomography (CT)
Studies (APCs 1522, 1523, and 5594)
For CY 2020, the CPT Editorial established six new codes to
describe the services associated with cardiac PET/CT studies,
specifically, CPT codes 78429, 78430, 78431, 78432, 78433, and 78434.
These codes were listed in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule as 78X29, 78X31, 78X32, 78X33, 78X34, and 78X35 (the 5-digit CMS
placeholder codes), respectively, in Addendum B with the short
descriptors, and again in Addendum O with the long descriptors. We also
assigned these codes to comment indicator ``NP'' in Addendum B to
indicate that the codes are new for CY 2020 and that public comments
would be accepted on their proposed status indicator assignments. We
note that these codes will be effective January 1, 2020. Table 32 below
list the placeholder codes, long descriptors, and proposed SI and APC
assignments.
Comment: Several commenters opposed the APC assignment for CPT code
78429 (placeholder code 78X29) and recommended its reassignment from
APC 5593 to APC 5594. They stated that APC 5593 does not recognize the
additional cost associated with the CT scan that is included in the
service, and requested revising the code to APC 5594.
Response: Based on the commenters' feedback and our review of the
components of this new service, we agree with the commenters that APC
5594 is the more appropriate assignment for CPT code 78429. Therefore,
we will reassign CPT code 78429 from APC 5593 to APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters agreed with the APC placement for CPT
code 78430 (placeholder code 78X31) in APC 5594. They stated that APC
5594 allows adequate payment for the CT scanner that that is a
component of this service.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and are
finalizing the APC assignment for CPT code 78430 to APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters reported that certain societies
submitted a new technology application to CMS for CPT codes 78431
(placeholder code 78X32), 78432 (placeholder code 78X33), and 78433
(placeholder code 78X34) that details the costs associated with
providing the services. For CPT code 78431, these same commenters
disagreed with the proposed APC placement and recommended its revision
from APC 5594 (Level 4 Nuclear Medicine and Related Services) with a
proposed payment rate of $1,466.16 to APC 1522 (New Technology--Level
23 ($2501-$3000)) with a proposed payment rate of $2,750.50. They
reported that, based on the resource cost of the service described by
CPT code 78431, APC 1522 provides adequate reimbursement for the
service. Similarly, for CPT codes 78432 and 78433, the commenters
indicated that APC 5594 would not adequately reimburse the resource
costs associated with providing these services, and recommended their
reassignment to APC 1523 (New Technology--Level 23 ($2501-$3000)) with
a proposed payment rate of $ 2,750.50
Response: Based on our assessment of the information provided in
the new technology application and the public comments received, we are
revising the APC assignments for these codes. Specifically, we are
revising the APC assignment for CPT code 78431 from APC 5594 to APC
1522, and reassigning CPT codes 78432 and 78433 from APC 5594 to APC
1523.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments for the new
cardiac PET/CT codes, and based on our evaluation of the new technology
application that provided the estimated costs for the services and
described the components and characteristics of the new codes, we are
finalizing our proposal, with modification, to assign CPT codes 78429,
78431, 78432, and 78433 to the final APCs listed in Table 32 below. In
addition, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, for CPT
codes 78430 and 78434. In Table 32 below we list the long descriptors
and final SI and APC assignments for the codes. The final CY 2020
payment rate for the codes can be found in Addendum B to this final
rule with comment period (which is available via the internet on the
CMS website).
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c. Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT) Studies (APCs
5591, 5593, and 5594).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT codes 78800 and
78801 to APC 5591 with a proposed payment rate of $372.69, CPT codes
78802 and 78804 to APC 5593 with a proposed payment rate of $1,293.33),
and CPT code 78803 to APC 5592 with a proposed payment rate of $482.38.
We also proposed to assign new CPT codes 78830 and 78831 to APC
5593, and 78832 to APC 5594 with a proposed payment rate of $1,466.16.
In addition, we proposed to assign new CPT code 78835 to status
indicator ``N'' because it is an add-on code that is packaged and
payment for it is included in the primary service. Table 33 below list
the long descriptors and their proposed SI and APC assignments for
these codes.
Comment: Some commenters agreed with the proposed APC assignments
for CPT codes 78800, 78801, and 78802.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and are
finalizing the APC assignments for these codes.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with the assignment for CPT
codes 78803 and requested a modification from APC 5592 to APC 5593
because this one code will replace seven SPECT codes that will be
deleted on December 31, 2019. Specifically, they reported that the
seven CPT codes listed in Figure 34 will be deleted. Several commenters
indicated that APC 5592 would not account for the deleted SPECT codes
and recommended using a weighted average to determine an appropriate
geometric mean cost for 78803. Based on their calculation, the
geometric mean cost for the code should be $784.18, which is higher
than the approximately $462 geometric mean cost for APC 5592, and is
more consistent with the geometric mean cost for APC 5593.
Response: Based on our analysis of the latest claims data for this
final rule with comment period, and as listed in the Figure 33 below,
the range of geometric mean cost for CPT code 78803 and the seven
deleted codes is between $433 and $1,417. We note that several of the
deleted codes were assigned to APC 5593, and based on our review of
these codes, we believe it would be appropriate to reassign CPT code
78803 from APC 5592 to APC 5593.
[[Page 61258]]
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Comment: Some commenters disagreed with the assignment of CPT code
78804 to APC 5593, and stated that the APC assignment does not
adequately capture the cost of multiple SPECTs provided. The commenters
indicated that it would not make sense to continue to assign single and
full sets of studies to the same APC and urged CMS to reassign the code
to APC 5594.
Response: For CY 2020, based on claims submitted between January 1,
2018 and December 30, 2018 that were processed on or before June 30,
2019, our analysis of the latest claims data for this final rule
supports maintaining CPT code 78804 in APC 5593. Specifically, our
claims data show a geometric mean cost of approximately $1,298 for CPT
code 78804 based on 1,656 single claims (out of 2,961 total claims),
which is more appropriate in APC 5593 whose geometric mean cost is
about $1,245 compared to the geometric mean cost of approximately
$1,412 for APC 5594.
Comment: Some commenters agreed with the APC assignment for new CPT
codes 78830 and 78832 to APC 5593 and APC 5594, respectively.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' feedback and are finalizing
the APC assignment for CPT code 78830 to APC 5593 and for CPT code
78832 to APC 5594.
Comment: Several commenters opposed the APC assignment for CPT code
78831 to APC 5593. They indicated that the proposed APC assignment for
CPT code 78831 does not adequately capture the resources required to
perform the procedure and should be reassigned to APC 5594.
Response: We believe that new CPT code 78831 shares similar
characteristics and resources to existing CPT code 78804. Consequently,
we assigned the new code to APC 5593, which is the same APC assignment
for CPT 78804. We note that once we have claims data for CPT code
78831, we will assess and determine whether a reassignment is
necessary. As always, we review the APC assignments for all services
under the OPPS based on the latest claims data.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments and after
evaluation of our claims data for this final rule with comment period,
we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, for CPT codes
78800, 78801, 78802, 78804, 78830, 78831, 78832, and 78835. However, we
are finalizing our proposal, with modification, for CPT code 78803 and
reassigning the code from APC 5592 to APC 5593 for CY 2020. Table 34
below list the long descriptors for these codes and their final SI and
APC assignments. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be
found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS website).
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20. Radiofrequency Spectroscopy
As displayed in Table 8 and Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to assign CPT code 0546T (Radiofrequency
spectroscopy, real time, intraoperative margin assessment, at the time
of partial
[[Page 61262]]
mastectomy, with report) to status indicator (SI) ``N'' to indicate
that the code is packaged and payment for it is included in the primary
surgical procedure. Specifically, payment for the codes assigned to
status indicator ``N'' is made through the payment for the separately
payable, independent services with which they are billed. No separate
payment is made for services that we have assigned to status indicator
``N.'' We note that CPT code 0546T is associated with the MarginProbe
procedure.
Comment: Several commenters requested separate payment for CPT code
0546T. One commenter stated that the code should be adequately valued
and removed from packaging. Another commenter stated that packaging the
code will limit the number of Medicare beneficiaries who will benefit
from the procedure. Still another commenter suggested a modification in
the status indicator from ``N'' to ``J1'' (comprehensive APC) but did
not suggest any specific APC to which they believed the code should be
assigned. Another commenter stated that assigning separate payment for
CPT code 0546T is in line with CMS' objectives of reducing the number
of repeat surgical excisions.
Response: As noted in the code descriptor, CPT code 0546T describes
an intraoperative procedure that is performed at the time of partial
mastectomy. As specified in 42 CFR 419.2(b)(14), intraoperative items
and services are packaged under the OPPS. By definition, a service that
is performed intraoperatively is provided during and, therefore on the
same date of service, as another procedure that is separately payable
under the OPPS. Because intraoperative services support the performance
of an independent procedure and they are provided in the same operative
session as the independent procedure, we have packaged the payment for
the radiofrequency spectroscopy into the OPPS payment for the primary
surgical procedure with which it is reported. In this case, the payment
for CPT code 0546T is included in the breast mastectomy codes that are
reported with the procedure.
We note that since 2008, intraoperative services have been packaged
under the OPPS, however, packaging has always been a primary component
of the OPPS since its implementation in 2000. As we state in section
II.A.3. (Changes to Packaged Items and Services) of this final rule,
because packaging encourages efficiency and is an essential component
of a prospective payment system, packaging payment for items and
services that are typically integral, ancillary, supportive, dependent,
or adjunctive to a primary service has been a fundamental part of the
OPPS since its implementation in August 2000.
Comment: A medical device company stated that although CPT code
0546T is a procedure provided during an operative session, it is a
distinct procedure with a beginning, middle, and end. The commenter
reported that the cost of the procedure is not included in the primary
surgical procedure. The same commenter pointed out that based on the
language below from the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule (72 FR 66621), it
believed CMS has the discretion not to package an intraoperative
service:
``To the extent that a service for which New Technology APC
status is being requested is ancillary and supportive of another
service, for example, a new intraoperative service or a new guidance
service, we might not consider it to be a complete service because
its value is as part of an independent service. However, if the
entire, complete service, including the guidance component of the
service, for example, is `truly new,' as we explained that term at
length . . . we would consider the new complete procedure for New
Technology APC assignment.''
The commenter also indicated that, at its September 2018 meeting,
the CPT Editorial Panel determined that radiofrequency spectroscopy is
a stand-alone service and, therefore, issued a unique code,
specifically, CPT code 0546T to be effective July 1, 2019. The
commenter noted that until July 1, 2019 there was no code available to
adequately describe the service, therefore, the procedure could not be
represented in the claims data upon which CMS has established the CY
2020 OPPS payment determinations. Consequently, the commenter requested
that CMS assign CPT code 0546T to New Technology APC 1518 (New
Technology--Level 18 ($1601-$1700)) with a proposed payment rate of
$1,650.50, and indicated that the payment would reflect the cost of the
sterile, disposable, radiofrequency spectroscopy probe and supplies.
The commenter asserted that assigning separate payment for the
procedure would alleviate the barrier to access to care for the
service.
Response: We note that the establishment of a new CPT code does not
indicate that a code is always a stand-alone procedure or service. The
current CPT code set lists hundreds of add-on codes that do not
describe stand-alone services. For the list of add-on codes, refer to
Appendix D (Summary of CPT Add-on Codes) of the latest CPT code book.
We note that the CPT Editorial Panel does not establish new CPT codes
because the service or procedure is considered stand-alone, rather they
establish new codes for procedures and services that are not described
by any existing code and have met their application criteria.
As stated above, CPT code 0546T is associated with the MarginProbe
procedure. CPT code 0546T describes an intraoperative procedure that is
performed at the time of partial mastectomy. As specified in 42 CFR
419.2(b)(14), intraoperative items and services are packaged under the
OPPS.
We also disagree with the commenter's statement that CMS has the
discretion not to package an intraoperative procedure. As noted above,
42 CFR 419.2(b)(14) states that intraoperative items and services are
packaged under the OPPS. We do not agree that MarginProbe, for which
CPT code 0546T was established, is a new, standalone procedure for
which separate payment should be made. We note that the preamble
language the commenter quoted only applies for services that are truly
new and a complete service and, as mentioned in the quoted language,
with respect to an ancillary service, which may include a new
intraoperative service or a new guidance service, we might not consider
it to be a complete service because its value is as part of an
independent service. MarginProbe, received Premarket Approval (PMA)
from the FDA on December 27, 2012, and has been on the market since
February 2013, however, FDA approval alone does not compel a
determination under Medicare that the technology represents a separate
standalone service that would qualify for New Technology APC
assignment.
Finally, because CPT code 0546T describes an intraoperative service
that is performed during a mastectomy procedure, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign the code to status indicator ``N''. Therefore, after
consideration of the public comments received, we are finalizing our
proposal without modification for CPT code 0546T. The final status
indicator assignment for the code is listed in Addendum B to this final
with comment period. We refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule
with comment period for the complete list of the OPPS payment status
indicators and their definitions for CY 2020. Both Addendum B and
Addendum D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
[[Page 61263]]
21. Reflectance Confocal Microscopy (RCM)
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign CPT code 96932 to
status indicator ``Q1'' (conditionally packaged) and APC 5731 (Level 1
Minor Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $23.57. We note that
the CPT Editorial Panel established six (6) CPT codes to describe the
services associated with RCM. These codes are shown in Table 35 with
the long descriptors and proposed status indicator assignments.
Comment: A commenter stated that the low payment rate for this
service under the OPPS is based on misreporting of charges by a
hospital. The commenter explained that based on their review and
analysis of the OPPS claims, only two hospitals in the country are
performing this imaging test, and that the proposed payment rate is
based primarily on one hospital's charges. The same commenter stated
that the cost of performing the imaging service is about $128, which is
more than the proposed payment rate of $23.57. To correct the low
payment for the test, the commenter suggested that CMS use its
equitable adjustment authority to set an appropriate payment for 96932
and also recommended that we do one of the following:
Reassign the code to APC 5522 (Level 1 Imaging without
Contrast) with a proposed payment rate of $111.04;
Reassign the code to New Technology APC 1503 (New
Technology--Level 3 ($101-$200) with a proposed payment rate of
$150.50; or
Assign an unconditionally packaged (``N'') or non-payable
status indicator to the code, similar to the other RCM codes.
The commenter also expressed concern that the low payment rate
under the OPPS significantly impacts the payment for the service under
the PFS. The commenter added that RCM is primarily performed in the
physician office setting, however, because of the low payment rate
established under the OPPS, the payment for the service is inadequate.
To correct the low payment rate, the commenter suggested that CMS
revise the status indicator of CPT code 96932 to identify the service
as packaged or non-payable, and, therefore, not have a published OPPS
payment rate for the code. The commenter believed that packaging the
code or assigning it as non-payable will correct the payment rate and
provide adequate payment for the service.
Response: Section 5102(b) of the Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
(DRA) amended the PFS statute to place a payment cap on the technical
component (TC) of certain diagnostic imaging procedures and the TC
portions of the global diagnostic imaging services at the amount paid
under the OPPS. To implement this provision, the physician fee schedule
(PFS) amount is compared to the OPPS payment amount and the lower
amount is used for payment. CPT code 96932 is designated as a DRA
imaging code whose payment under the PFS is capped at the OPPS rate
even when performed in a physician office setting. Based on our review
of the issue, we believe that we should revise the OPPS status
indicator assignment for CPT code 96932 from ``Q1'' to ``N'', similar
to the status indicator assignment for several other RCM codes. Since
CPT code was low volume under the OPPS, it may be inappropriate to
establish an OPPS payment rate by which the PFS rate would be capped.
Accordingly, this change will allow there not to be an OPPS cap for the
service.
In summary, after consideration of the public comment, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification and revising the status
indicator assignment for CPT code 96930 to ``N'' for CY 2020. Table 35
below lists the long descriptors and final status indicator assignments
for the six (6) codes that describe the services associated with RCM.
We refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period
for the complete list of the OPPS payment status indicators and their
definitions for CY 2020. Addendum D1 is available via the internet on
the CMS website.
[[Page 61264]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.056
22. remed[emacr][supreg] System--Transvenous Phrenic Nerve Stimulation
Therapy (APCs 5461-5464, 5724, and 5742)
For the CY 2020 update, we proposed to modify the APC assignment
for certain CPT codes associated with the Transvenous Phrenic Nerve
Stimulation Therapy or remed[emacr][supreg] System. Of the 13 codes, we
received a comment on the APC assignment for three codes, specifically,
CPT codes 0426T, 0427T, and 0431T. As shown in Table 36 below with the
long descriptors, and also in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to reassign CPT codes 0426T and 0431T from
APC 5463 (Level 3 Neurostimulator and Related Procedures) to APC 5464
(Level 4 Neurostimulator and Related Procedures) with a proposed
payment rate of $29,025.99. In addition, we proposed to continue to
assign CPT code 0427T to APC 5463 ((Level 3 Neurostimulator and Related
Procedures) with a proposed payment rate of $19,370.82.
Comment: A device company suggested that we maintain the current
assignment and not revise the APC assignment to APC 5464 for CPT code
0426T. The commenter stated that the resources required for the
procedure are more closely aligned with the procedures in APC 5463.
Response: Based on our evaluation of the procedure associated with
CPT code 0426T, we agree that the procedure described by the code
appropriately fits in APC 5463 based on its clinical similarity to
other procedures in the APC. CPT code 0426T describes the insertion or
replacement of the stimulation lead associated with a neurostimulator
system for the treatment of central sleep apnea, and APC 5463 includes
other procedures that involve the insertion or replacement of a
stimulation lead for a neurostimulator system. Therefore, we will
maintain the APC assignment for CPT code 0426T to APC 5463 for CY 2020.
Comment: The same device company that commented on CPT code 0426T
also commented on the APC assignment for CPT code 0427T. According to
the commenter, the procedure describes the initial insertion of the
implantable pulse generator when the full system cannot be implanted
for a patient, and added that the procedure does not occur frequently.
The commenter also noted that the hospital resources associated
with CPT code 0427T are very similar to CPT code 0431T, which is
assigned to APC 5464, and recommended the assignment of both procedures
to APC 5464.
Response: Based on our review of the two procedures, we agree that
the resources associated with inserting or replacing a pulse generator
for a neurostimulator system that is described by CPT code 0427T are
very similar to removing and replacing a pulse generator for a
neurostimulator system that is described by CPT code 0431T.
Consequently, we are modifying our
[[Page 61265]]
proposal and reassigning CPT code 0427T to APC 5464.
Comment: The same device company that commented on CPT codes 0426T
and 0427T also commented on CPT code 0431T. Specifically, the commenter
concurred with the APC reassignment for the code to APC 5464.
Response: As indicated above, based on our review of the two
procedures, we agree that the resources associated with inserting or
replacing a pulse generator for a neurostimulator system that is
described by CPT code 0427T are very similar to removing and replacing
a pulse generator for a neurostimulator system that is described by CPT
code 0431T. Therefore, we are finalizing our proposal for CPT code
0431T and assigning the code to APC 5464.
In summary, after consideration of the public comment, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification. Specifically, we are
finalizing our APC proposal for CPT code 0431T to APC 5464, however, we
are maintaining the APC assignment for CPT code 0426T to APC 5463, and
reassigning CPT code 0427T to APC 5464. We note that the final CY 2020
OPPS payment rates for all the codes associated with the Transvenous
Phrenic Nerve Stimulation Therapy or remed[emacr][supreg] System can be
found in Addendum B of this final rule with comment period. Table 36
below lists the long descriptors for all 13 codes and the final APC and
SI assignments for CY 2020. In addition, we refer readers to Addendum
D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status indicator
meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS for CY 2020. Both
Addendum B and Addendum D1 are available via the internet on the CMS
website.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 61266]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.057
[[Page 61267]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.058
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
23. Surgical Pathology Tissue Exam (APC 5673)
In CY 2019, CPT code 88307 (Level V--surgical pathology, gross and
microscopic examination) was assigned to APC 5673 (Level 3 Pathology)
with a payment rate of $274.22. For CY 2020, we proposed to reassign
the code to APC 5672 (Level 2 Pathology) with a proposed payment rate
of $148.62.
Comment: A commenter disagreed with the proposed reassignment and
urged CMS to continue to assign CPT code 88307 to APC 5673. This same
commenter reported that the service includes complex Level V surgical
pathology specimens and the proposed change represents a 46 percent
decrease in the payment amount. The commenter added that the proposed
reassignment creates a resource cost rank order anomaly with other
physician services and the technical costs will not be fully recovered
from each unit of service. In addition, the commenter believed that the
data do not identify actual costs for specific procedures, and stated
that the cost associated with CPT code 88307 is greater than six times
the cost of the services assigned to APC 5672 (Level 2 Pathology) based
on physician fee schedule technical component cost differences. The
commenter also believed that the data leading to the APC reassignment
must be flawed and added that charge-based cost data were neither
designed nor intended to be an accurate estimate of service/procedure
level costs at the CPT code level. The commenter stated that the
hospital charge-based cost data used for OPPS rate-setting allows CMS
to estimate costs for purposes of grouping a number of services or
procedures (multiple distinct codes) into appropriate clinically and
economically homogeneous APCs.
Response: As stated in section III.B. (Final OPPS Changes--
Variations Within APCs) of this final rule with comment period,
payments for OPPS services and procedures are based on our analysis of
the latest claims data. For the proposed rule, the OPPS proposed
payment rates were based on claims data that were submitted between
January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, that were processed on or
before December 31, 2018. However, for the final rule, the OPPS final
payment rates are based on claims that were submitted between January
1, 2018 through December 31, 2018, that were processed on or before
June 30, 2019. Based on the latest hospital outpatient claims data used
for this final rule with comment period, we agree with the commenter
that the code should continue to be assigned to APC 5673 for CY 2020.
Specifically, CPT code 88307 shows a geometric mean cost of
approximately $219, which is more appropriate in APC 5673 whose
geometric cost is approximately $277 compared to the geometric mean
cost of about $140 for APC 5672. Consequently, we are revising our
proposal and maintaining the APC assignment for CPT code 88307 to APC
5673 for CY 2020.
In summary, after consideration of the public comment, and after
our analysis of the updated claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our proposal with modification.
Specifically, we are revising the APC assignment for CPT code 88307 to
APC 5673 for CY 2020. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the code can
be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment period (which is
available via the internet on the CMS website).
As we do every year, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT
code 88307 for the next rulemaking cycle. We note that we review, on an
annual basis, the APC assignments for all services and items paid under
the OPPS.
[[Page 61268]]
24. Urology Procedures
a. HIFU Procedure--High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound of the Prostate
(APC 5375)
In 2017, CMS received a new technology application for the prostate
HIFU procedure and established a new code, specifically, HCPCS code
C9747 (Ablation of prostate, transrectal, high intensity focused
ultrasound (hifu), including imaging guidance). Based on the estimated
cost provided in the new technology application, we assigned the new
code to APC 5376 (Level 6 Urology and Related Services) with a payment
rate of $7,452.66 effective July 1, 2017. We announced the SI and APC
assignment in the July 2017 OPPS quarterly update CR (Transmittal 3783,
Change Request 10122, dated May 26, 2017).
For the CY 2018 update, we made no change to the APC assignment and
continued to assign HCPCS code C9747 to APC 5376 with a payment rate of
$7,596.26. We note that the payment rates for the CY 2018 OPPS update
were based on claims submitted between January 1, 2016 through December
30, 2016, that were processed on or before June 30, 2017. Since HCPCS
code C9747 was established on July 1, 2017, we had no claims data for
the procedure for use in ratesetting for CY 2018.
However, for the CY 2019 update, based on the latest claims data
for the final rule, we revised the APC assignment for HCPCS code C9747
from APC 5376 to APC 5375 with a payment rate of $4,020.54. We note
that the payment rates for CY 2019 were based on claims submitted
between January 1, 2017 through December 30, 2017, that were processed
on or before June 30, 2018. Our claims data showed a geometric mean
cost of approximately $5,000 for HCPCS code C9747 based on 64 single
claims (out of 64 total claims), which was significantly lower than the
geometric mean cost of about $7,717 for APC 5376. We believed that the
geometric mean cost for HCPCS code C9747 was more comparable to the
geometric mean cost of approximately $4,055 for APC 5375. Consequently,
we reassigned the code from APC 5376 to APC 5375 (Level 5 Urology and
Related Services) for CY 2019.
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign HCPCS code C9747 to
APC 5375 with a proposed payment rate $4,286.06.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with the APC assignment for
HCPCS code C9747 and recommended a reclassification to APC 5376 because
they believed the service is clinically similar and comparable in terms
of resources to cryoablation of the prostate, which is described by CPT
code 55873 (Cryosurgical ablation of the prostate (includes ultrasonic
guidance and monitoring), and placed in APC 5376 (Level 6 Urology and
Related Services), with a proposed payment rate of $8,193.30. The
commenters believed that the geometric mean cost, and ultimately, the
APC determination for the prostate HIFU procedure was based on
inaccurate hospital costs. They believed that the average cost of the
procedure should be approximately $6,250, and requested a reassignment
to APC 5376 to enable Medicare beneficiaries to continue to receive the
treatment. They stated based on their projections that maintaining the
APC assignment to APC 5375 for the procedure will decrease the number
of Medicare beneficiaries receiving the treatment by 75 percent if the
CY 2020 payment rate is finalized.
Response: As we have stated every year since the implementation of
the OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on our
analysis of the latest claims data. For CY 2020, based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2018 through December 30, 2018, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports maintaining HCPCS code C9747 in APC
5375. Specifically, our claims data shows a geometric mean cost of
approximately $5,850 for HCPCS code C9747 based on 264 single claims
(out of 268 total claims), which is comparable to the geometric mean
cost of about $4,140 for APC 5375, rather than the geometric mean cost
of approximately $7,894 for APC 5376.
Also, we do not agree that the resource costs associated with the
prostate HIFU procedure are similar to those of cryoablation of the
prostate. Our claims data for the CY 2020 update shows a geometric mean
cost of about $8,152 based on 1,417 single claims (out of 1,429 total
claims) for cryoablation of the prostate. The geometric mean cost for
CPT code 55873 is reasonably consistent with APC 5376, whose geometric
mean cost is approximately $7,894.
With respect to the issue of inaccurate hospital cost reporting for
HCPCS code C9747, based on our analysis of the CY 2020 hospital
outpatient claims data used for this final rule with comment period, we
are unable to determine whether hospitals are misreporting the
procedure. It is generally not our policy to judge the accuracy of
hospital coding and charging for purposes of ratesetting. We rely on
hospitals to accurately report the use of HCPCS codes in accordance
with their code descriptors and CPT and CMS instructions, and to report
services on claims and charges and costs for the services on their
Medicare hospital cost report appropriately. Also, we do not specify
the methodologies that hospitals use to set charges for this or any
other service. Furthermore, we state in Chapter 4 of the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual that ``it is extremely important that
hospitals report all HCPCS codes consistent with their descriptors; CPT
and/or CMS instructions and correct coding principles, and all charges
for all services they furnish, whether payment for the services is made
separately paid or is packaged'' to enable CMS to establish future
ratesetting for OPPS services.
Comment: A commenter reported that the prostate HIFU procedure
(C9747) and cryoablation of the prostate (55873) are two clinically
similar procedures for the ablation of prostate for cancer, and are the
only two acknowledged treatments for radiorecurrent, non-metastatic
prostate cancer. This same commenter requested that we either create a
new APC group specific to prostate ablation procedures or modify the
organization of HCPCS codes within the urology family of APCs. The
commenter specifically noted that a reorganization for APCs 5374
through 5376 would be appropriate but added that there are other
inconsistencies across procedures within the urology APCs. The
commenter also mentioned that CPT codes 50555 (Renal endoscopy through
established nephrostomy or pyelostomy, with or without irrigation,
instillation, or ureteropyelography, exclusive of radiologic service;
with biopsy) and 50557 (Renal endoscopy through established nephrostomy
or pyelostomy, with or without irrigation, instillation, or
ureteropyelography, exclusive of radiologic service; with fulguration
and/or incision, with or without biopsy) are assigned to two different
APCs, however, their APC assignments appear reversed. The commenter
further suggested updating the procedures within APCs 5374, 5375, and
5376 so that the geometric mean costs for the procedure fall into the
following ranges:
[[Page 61269]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.059
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestions and may
consider a reorganization of the procedures in the urology APCs in
future rulemaking. We note that each year, under the OPPS, we revise
and make changes to the APC groupings based on the latest hospital
outpatient claims data to appropriately place procedures and services
in APCs based on clinical characteristics and resource similarity. For
CY 2020, based on our analysis of the latest claims data for this final
rule, we do not believe that establishing a new APC specific to
prostate ablation procedures is necessary, nor do we believe that
modifying the HCPCS codes within the urology family APCs is appropriate
at this time.
With respect to CPT codes 50555 and 50557, based on our review of
the claims data for this final rule with comment period, we revised the
APC assignment for CPT code 50555 from APC 5375 to APC 5376, and
maintained the APC assignment for CPT code 50557 in APC 5376.
Specifically, our claims data show a geometric about $7,327 for CPT
code 50555 and approximately $6,224 for CPT code 50557, which are more
comparable with the geometric cost for APC 5376 of about $7,894 unlike
that of APC 5375 whose geometric mean cost is approximately $4,140.
In summary, after consideration of the public comments, and after
our analysis of the updated claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification,
to continue to assign HCPCS code C9747 to APC 5375 for CY 2020. The
final CY 2020 payment rate for the code can be found in Addendum B to
this final rule with comment period. In addition, we refer readers to
Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for the status
indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the OPPS. Both
Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS website.
b. ProACT Procedure--Transperineal Periurethral Adjustable Balloon
Continence Device Procedure (APCs 5371, 5374, 5375, and 5376)
In 2017, CMS received a new technology application for the
transperineal periurethral adjustable balloon continence device
procedure, which is associated with ProACT Therapy, and established a
new code, specifically, HCPCS code C9746. Based on the estimated cost
for the bilateral placement of the balloon continence devices, we
assigned the code to APC 5377 (Level 7 Urology and Related Services)
with a payment rate of $14,363.61 effective July 1, 2017. We announced
the new code, and interim SI and APC assignments, and payment rate in
the July 2017 quarterly update to the OPPS (Transmittal 3783, Change
Request 10122, dated May 26, 2017).
For the CY 2018 update, we made no change to the APC assignment and
continued to assign HCPCS code C9746 to APC 5377 with a payment rate of
$15,697.82. We note that OPPS payment rates for the CY 2018 update were
based on claims submitted between January 1, 2016 through December 30,
2016, that were processed on or before June 30, 2017. Since HCPCS code
C9746 was established on July 1, 2017, we had no claims data for the
procedure for use in ratesetting in CY 2018.
For the CY 2019 update, we again had no claims data for the code so
we made no change to the APC assignment and continued to assign HCPCS
code C9746 to APC 5377 with a payment rate of $16,319.55. We note that
the payment rates for CY 2019 were based on claims submitted between
January 1, 2017 through December 30, 2017, that were processed on or
before June 30, 2018.
In July 2019, the CPT Editorial Panel established four new codes to
describe the transperineal periurethral adjustable balloon continence
device procedure, specifically, CPT codes 0548T, 0549T, 0550T, and
0551T. In the July 2019 quarterly update to the OPPS (Transmittal 4313,
Change Request 11318, dated May 24, 2019), we listed the temporary APC
assignments for the new codes in the July 2019 OPPS Update CR and
announced the deletion of HCPCS code C9746 on June 30, 2019, since it
was replaced with CPT code 0548T effective July 1, 2019. These codes
are listed in Table 37 along with their long descriptors and proposed
SI and APC assignments.
For CY 2020, we proposed to revise the APC assignment for new CPT
code 0548T, which was previously described by HCPCS code C9746. In
addition, we proposed to assign CPT codes 0549T, 0550T, and 0551T to
APCs 5375, 5374, and 5371, respectively.
Comment: A medical device company suggested that CPT code 0548T
remain in APC 5377, consistent with the APC assignment for the
predecessor code (HCPCS code C9746). This commenter indicated that the
calculated geometric mean cost does not accurately reflect the actual
cost of the procedure. The commenter noted there were only two billings
identified in the CMS data--one billing at the correct cost of $16,250
and one billing incorrectly recorded at $0. The commenter stated that
the resulting calculation of the geometric mean cost of $8,125 does not
accurately represent the actual cost of the bilateral procedure for CPT
code 0548T. In addition, the same commenter requested a reassignment
from APC 5375 to APC 5376 for CPT code 0549T.
Response: As we have stated every year since the implementation of
the OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on our
analysis of the latest claims data. For CY 2020, based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2018 through December 30, 2018, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports revising the APC assignment for CPT
code 0548T (which was previously described by predecessor HCPCS code
C9746) from APC 5377 to APC 5376 (Level 6 Urology and Related
Services). Specifically, our claims data shows a geometric mean cost of
approximately $9,504 for HCPCS code C9746 based on 7 single claims (out
of 7 total claims), which is most comparable to the geometric mean cost
of about $7,894 for APC 5376, rather than the geometric mean cost of
approximately $17,195 for APC 5377. We believe that assigning CPT code
0548T to APC 5377 would significantly overpay for the procedure.
In addition, based on the geometric mean cost for the placement of
the bilateral balloon continence devices (CPT code 0548T), we do not
agree that we should revise the APC assignment for CPT code 0549T,
which represents
[[Page 61270]]
the unilateral placement of the balloon continence device, from APC
5375 to APC 5376. We believe that the cost associated with CPT code
0549T should be less than that of CPT code 0548T since CPT code 0549T
describes the use of only one device.
Moreover, we rely on hospitals to accurately report the use of
HCPCS codes in accordance with their code descriptors and CPT and CMS
instructions, and to appropriately report services on claims and
charges and costs for the services on their Medicare hospital cost
report. However, we do not specify the methodologies that hospitals use
to set charges for this or any other service. We also state in Chapter
4 of the Medicare Claims Processing Manual that ``it is extremely
important that hospitals report all HCPCS codes consistent with their
descriptors; CPT and/or CMS instructions and correct coding principles,
and all charges for all services they furnish, whether payment for the
services is made separately paid or is packaged'' to enable CMS to
establish future ratesetting for OPPS services.
In summary, after consideration of the public comment and after our
analysis of the updated claims data for this final rule with comment
period, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to assign
CPT codes 0548T, 0549T, 0550T, and 0551T to the APCs listed in Table 37
below. The final CY 2020 payment rate for the codes can be found in
Addendum B to this final rule with comment period. In addition, we
refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule with comment period for
the status indicator (SI) meanings for all codes reported under the
OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via the internet on the CMS
website.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.060
c. Rezum Procedure--Transurethral High Energy Water Vapor Thermal
Therapy of the Prostate (APC 5373)
In late 2017, CMS received a new technology application for the
transurethral radiofrequency generated water vapor thermal therapy of
the prostate, also known as the Rezum procedure, and established a new
code, specifically, HCPCS code C9748 (Transurethral destruction of
prostate tissue; by radiofrequency water vapor (steam) thermal therapy)
effective January 1, 2018. Based on the estimated cost of the
procedure, we assigned the new code to APC 5373 (Level 3 Urology and
Related Services) with a payment rate of $1,695.68 effective January 1,
2018. The new code appeared in both the OPPS Addendum B of the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule and the January 2018 OPPS Update CR (Transmittal
3941, Change Request 10417, dated December 22, 2017).
For the CY 2019 update, the CPT Editorial Panel established a new
code to describe the Rezum procedure, specifically, CPT code 53854
(Transurethral destruction of prostate tissue; by radiofrequency
generated water vapor thermotherapy) effective January 1, 2019. We
deleted HCPCS code C9748 on December 31, 2018 because it was replaced
with CPT code 53854 and assigned the new code to APC 5373, which was
the same APC assignment for the predecessor code, with a payment rate
of $1,739.75. We note that payment rates for the CY 2019 update were
based on claims submitted between January 1, 2017 and December 30, 2017
that were processed on or before June 30, 2018.
For the CY 2020 update, we proposed to maintain the APC assignment
for CPT code 53854 to APC 5373 with a proposed payment rate of
$1,797.97.
Comment: Several commenters requested a reclassification for CPT
code 53854 from APC 5373 to APC 5374 (Level 4 Urology and Related
Services) with a proposed payment rate of $3,059.21. The commenters
reported that the Rezum procedure is most clinically similar to the
transurethral microwave therapy (TUMT), which is described by CPT code
53850 (Transurethral destruction of prostate tissue; by microwave
thermotherapy), and transurethral needle (radiofrequency) ablation
(TUNA), which is described by CPT code 53852
[[Page 61271]]
(Transurethral destruction of prostate tissue; by radiofrequency
thermotherapy). Some commenters reported that the primary difference
between each of these codes is the energy source used to destroy or
shrink the prostate tissue, specifically, CPT code 53850 uses microwave
energy, 53852 uses radiofrequency energy, and 53854 uses radiofrequency
generated water vapor thermotherapy. Apart from the energy source, the
commenters indicated that the procedures and resources used in these
procedures are similar. Consequently, they recommended that all three
procedures be placed in APC 5374.
Response: As we have stated every year since the implementation of
the OPPS on August 1, 2000, we review, on an annual basis, the APC
assignments for all services and items paid under the OPPS based on our
analysis of the latest claims data. For CY 2020, based on claims
submitted between January 1, 2018 through December 30, 2018, that were
processed on or before June 30, 2019, our analysis of the latest claims
data for this final rule supports maintaining the APC assignment for
CPT code 53854 (which was previously described by predecessor HCPCS
code C9748) to APC 5373. Our claims data show a geometric mean cost of
approximately $1,899 for the predecessor HCPCS code C9748 based on 191
single claims (out of 192 total claims). The geometric mean cost for
the Rezum procedure is more in line with the geometric mean cost of
about $1,733 for APC 5373 rather than with APC 5374 whose geometric
mean cost is approximately $2,953.
In addition, based on our analysis of the claims data, the resource
costs associated with the TUMT and TUNA procedures are not similar to
the Rezum procedure. While all three procedures treat the same
indication and utilize the same type of technology, time, set up, and
planning, their resource costs vary. Our claims data show a geometric
mean cost of approximately $2,851 for the TUMT procedure (CPT code
53850) based on 41 single claims (out of 41 total claims), and about
$3,027 for the TUNA procedure (CPT code 53852) based on 513 single
claims (out of 514 total claims). In both cases, the resource costs for
the TUMT and TUNA procedures are much higher than those for the Rezum
procedure.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comments, and after
our analysis of the updated claims data for this final rule with
comment period, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification,
and assigning CPT code 53854 to APC 5373. Table 38 below list the final
APC assignments for CPT code 58350 (TUMT), 53852 (TUNA) and 53854
(Rezum). In addition, the final CY 2020 payment rates for these
procedures can be found in Addendum B to this final rule with comment
period. Further, we refer readers to Addendum D1 of this final rule
with comment period for the status indicator (SI) meanings for all
codes reported under the OPPS. Both Addendum B and D1 are available via
the internet on the CMS website.
As always, we will reevaluate the APC assignment for CPT code 53854
in the next rulemaking cycle. As stated above, we review, on an annual
basis, the APC assignments for all services and items paid under the
OPPS.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.061
d. VaporBlate Procedure--Transurethral Radiofrequency Generated Water
Vapor Thermal Therapy of the Prostate
As displayed in Addendum B to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we proposed to assign the procedure described by CPT code 0582T
(Transurethral ablation of malignant prostate tissue by high-energy
water vapor thermotherapy, including intraoperative imaging and needle
guidance) to status indicator ``E1'' to indicate that the code is not
payable by Medicare when submitted on outpatient claims (any outpatient
bill type) because the services associated with these codes are either
not covered by any Medicare outpatient benefit category, are
statutorily excluded by Medicare, or are not reasonable and necessary.
The code was listed as 0X76T (the 5-digit CMS placeholder code) in
Addendum B with the short descriptor, and again in Addendum O with the
long descriptor. We also assigned the code to comment indicator ``NP''
in Addendum B to indicate that the code is new for CY 2020 and that
public comments would be accepted on the proposed status indicator
assignment. We note that the code will be effective January 1, 2020.
Comment: A medical device company reported that the technology
associated with this new code received FDA approval as an IDE.
Specifically, the VaporBlate technology was designated by the FDA as a
Category B IDE on August 29, 2019. The commenter also
[[Page 61272]]
stated that they are in the process of applying for Medicare coverage
of the Category B IDE clinical trial. In the event the clinical trial
is approved by Medicare, the commenter suggested assigning the code to
one of the following APCs:
APC 1590 (New Technology--Level 39 ($15,001-$20,000)) with
a proposed payment rate of $ 17,500.50; or
APC 5377 (Level 7 Urology and Related Services) with a
proposed payment rate of $17,465.94.
The commenter explained that the VaporBlate procedure involves the
transurethral ablation of malignant prostate tissue by high-energy
water vapor thermotherapy, which is unlike that of the Rezum procedure
that involves transurethral radiofrequency generated water vapor
thermal therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). The commenter
added that the resource costs associated with the VaporBlate procedure
are significantly higher than those for the Rezum procedure. The Rezum
generator (capital equipment) used in CPT code 53854 costs $32,500 and
the Rezum supply kit (disposables) costs between $1,000 and $1,500,
while the VaporBlate generator (capital equipment) used to perform the
procedure described by the VaporBlate procedure costs $80,000 and the
supply kits (disposables) cost $12,500 each. Based on the clinical and
cost differences, the commenter stated that CPT code 0582T should not
be assigned to the same APC as CPT code 53854 (Rezum procedure).
Response: Based on our understanding of the procedure, we found
that the service associated with CPT code 0582T is currently in
clinical trial (Study Title: ``Ablation of Prostate Tissue in Patients
With Intermediate Risk Localized Prostate Cancer''; ClinicalTrials.gov
Identifier: NCT04087980). Further review of the clinical trial revealed
that the clinical study has not yet met CMS' standards for coverage,
nor does it appear on the CMS Approved IDE List, which can be found at
this CMS website: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/IDE/Approved-IDE-Studies.html. Because the VaporBlate technology has not been
approved for Medicare coverage as a Category B IDE, we believe that we
should continue to assign CPT code 0582T to status indicator ``E1''. If
this technology later meets CMS' standards for coverage, we will
reassess the APC assignment for the code in a future quarterly update
and/or rulemaking cycle.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comment, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to assign CPT code 0582T
to status indicator ``E1''. We refer readers to Addendum D1 of this
final rule with comment period for the complete list of the OPPS
payment status indicators and their definitions for CY 2020. Addendum
D1 is available via the internet on the CMS website.
IV. OPPS Payment for Devices
A. Pass-Through Payment for Devices
1. Beginning Eligibility Date for Device Pass-Through Status and
Quarterly Expiration of Device Pass-Through Payments
a. Background
The intent of transitional device pass-through payment, as
implemented at 42 CFR 419.66, is to facilitate access for beneficiaries
to the advantages of new and truly innovative devices by allowing for
adequate payment for these new devices while the necessary cost data is
collected to incorporate the costs for these devices into the procedure
APC rate (66 FR 55861). Under section 1833(t)(6)(B)(iii) of the Act,
the period for which a device category eligible for transitional pass-
through payments under the OPPS can be in effect is at least 2 years
but not more than 3 years. Prior to CY 2017, our regulation at 42 CFR
419.66(g) provided that this pass-through payment eligibility period
began on the date CMS established a particular transitional pass-
through category of devices, and we based the pass-through status
expiration date for a device category on the date on which pass-through
payment was effective for the category. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79654), in accordance with section
1833(t)(6)(B)(iii)(II) of the Act, we amended Sec. 419.66(g) to
provide that the pass-through eligibility period for a device category
begins on the first date on which pass-through payment is made under
the OPPS for any medical device described by such category.
In addition, prior to CY 2017, our policy was to propose and
finalize the dates for expiration of pass-through status for device
categories as part of the OPPS annual update. This means that device
pass-through status would expire at the end of a calendar year when at
least 2 years of pass-through payments had been made, regardless of the
quarter in which the device was approved. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79655), we changed our policy to allow
for quarterly expiration of pass-through payment status for devices,
beginning with pass-through devices approved in CY 2017 and subsequent
calendar years, to afford a pass-through payment period that is as
close to a full 3 years as possible for all pass-through payment
devices.
We refer readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79648 through 79661) for a full discussion of the current
device pass-through payment policy.
We also have an established policy to package the costs of the
devices that are no longer eligible for pass-through payments into the
costs of the procedures with which the devices are reported in the
claims data used to set the payment rates (67 FR 66763).
b. Expiration of Transitional Pass-Through Payments for Certain Devices
As stated earlier, section 1833(t)(6)(B)(iii) of the Act requires
that, under the OPPS, a category of devices be eligible for
transitional pass-through payments for at least 2 years, but not more
than 3 years. There currently is one device category eligible for pass-
through payment: C1823 Generator, neurostimulator (implantable),
nonrechargeable, with transvenous sensing and stimulation leads), which
was established effective January 1, 2019. The pass-through payment
status of the device category for HCPCS code C1823 will end on December
31, 2021. HCPCS code C1823 will continue to receive pass-through status
in CY 2020.
2. New Device Pass-Through Applications
a. Background
Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides for pass-through payments
for devices, and section 1833(t)(6)(B) of the Act requires CMS to use
categories in determining the eligibility of devices for pass-through
payments. As part of implementing the statute through regulations, we
have continued to believe that it is important for hospitals to receive
pass-through payments for devices that offer substantial clinical
improvement in the treatment of Medicare beneficiaries to facilitate
access by beneficiaries to the advantages of the new technology.
Conversely, we have noted that the need for additional payments for
devices that offer little or no clinical improvement over previously
existing devices is less apparent. In such cases, these devices can
still be used by hospitals, and hospitals will be paid for them through
appropriate APC payment. Moreover, a goal is to target pass-through
payments for those devices where cost considerations might be most
likely to interfere with patient access (66 FR 55852; 67 FR 66782; and
70 FR 68629).
[[Page 61273]]
We note that, in section IV.A.4. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we proposed an alternative pathway that would grant fast-track device
pass-through payment under the OPPS for devices approved under the FDA
Breakthrough Device Program for OPPS device pass-through payment
applications received on or after January 1, 2020. We refer readers to
section IV.A.4. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule for a complete
discussion on this proposal.
As specified in regulations at 42 CFR 419.66(b)(1) through (3), to
be eligible for transitional pass-through payment under the OPPS, a
device must meet the following criteria:
If required by FDA, the device must have received FDA
approval or clearance (except for a device that has received an FDA
investigational device exemption (IDE) and has been classified as a
Category B device by the FDA), or meet another appropriate FDA
exemption; and the pass-through payment application must be submitted
within 3 years from the date of the initial FDA approval or clearance,
if required, unless there is a documented, verifiable delay in U.S.
market availability after FDA approval or clearance is granted, in
which case CMS will consider the pass-through payment application if it
is submitted within 3 years from the date of market availability;
The device is determined to be reasonable and necessary
for the diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or to improve
the functioning of a malformed body part, as required by section
1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act; and
The device is an integral part of the service furnished,
is used for one patient only, comes in contact with human tissue, and
is surgically implanted or inserted (either permanently or
temporarily), or applied in or on a wound or other skin lesion.
In addition, according to Sec. 419.66(b)(4), a device is not
eligible to be considered for device pass-through payment if it is any
of the following: (1) Equipment, an instrument, apparatus, implement,
or item of this type for which depreciation and financing expenses are
recovered as depreciation assets as defined in Chapter 1 of the
Medicare Provider Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15-1); or (2) a
material or supply furnished incident to a service (for example, a
suture, customized surgical kit, or clip, other than a radiological
site marker).
Separately, we use the following criteria, as set forth under Sec.
419.66(c), to determine whether a new category of pass-through payment
devices should be established. The device to be included in the new
category must--
Not be appropriately described by an existing category or
by any category previously in effect established for transitional pass-
through payments, and was not being paid for as an outpatient service
as of December 31, 1996;
Have an average cost that is not ``insignificant''
relative to the payment amount for the procedure or service with which
the device is associated as determined under Sec. 419.66(d) by
demonstrating: (1) The estimated average reasonable costs of devices in
the category exceeds 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of devices; (2) the estimated
average reasonable cost of the devices in the category exceeds the cost
of the device-related portion of the APC payment amount for the related
service by at least 25 percent; and (3) the difference between the
estimated average reasonable cost of the devices in the category and
the portion of the APC payment amount for the device exceeds 10 percent
of the APC payment amount for the related service (with the exception
of brachytherapy and temperature-monitored cryoablation, which are
exempt from the cost requirements as specified at Sec. 419.66(c)(3)
and (e)); and
Demonstrate a substantial clinical improvement, that is,
substantially improve the diagnosis or treatment of an illness or
injury or improve the functioning of a malformed body part compared to
the benefits of a device or devices in a previously established
category or other available treatment.
Beginning in CY 2016, we changed our device pass-through evaluation
and determination process. Device pass-through applications are still
submitted to CMS through the quarterly subregulatory process, but the
applications will be subject to notice-and-comment rulemaking in the
next applicable OPPS annual rulemaking cycle. Under this process, all
applications that are preliminarily approved upon quarterly review will
automatically be included in the next applicable OPPS annual rulemaking
cycle, while submitters of applications that are not approved upon
quarterly review will have the option of being included in the next
applicable OPPS annual rulemaking cycle or withdrawing their
application from consideration. Under this notice-and-comment process,
applicants may submit new evidence, such as clinical trial results
published in a peer-reviewed journal or other materials for
consideration during the public comment process for the proposed rule.
This process allows those applications that we are able to determine
meet all of the criteria for device pass-through payment under the
quarterly review process to receive timely pass-through payment status,
while still allowing for a transparent, public review process for all
applications (80 FR 70417 through 70418).
More details on the requirements for device pass-through payment
applications are included on the CMS website in the application form
itself at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/passthrough_payment.html, in the
``Downloads'' section. In addition, CMS is amenable to meeting with
applicants or potential applicants to discuss research trial design in
advance of any device pass-through application or to discuss
application criteria, including the substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
b. Applications Received for Device Pass-Through Payment for CY 2020
We received seven complete applications by the March 1, 2019
quarterly deadline, which was the last quarterly deadline for
applications to be received in time to be included in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule. We received one of the applications in the second
quarter of 2018, three of the applications in the fourth quarter of
2018, and three of the applications in the first quarter of 2019. None
of the applications were approved for device pass-through payment
during the quarterly review process.
Applications received for the later deadlines for the remaining
2019 quarters (June 1, September 1, and December 1), if any, will be
presented in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We note that the
quarterly application process and requirements have not changed in
light of the addition of rulemaking review. Detailed instructions on
submission of a quarterly device pass-through payment application are
included on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Downloads/catapp.pdf. A
discussion of the applications received by the March 1, 2019 deadline
is presented below.
(1) Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System
TriSalus Life Sciences submitted an application for a new device
category for transitional pass-through payment status for the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System. The
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System is described as a
[[Page 61274]]
flexible, ultra-thin microcatheter with a self-expanding, nonocclusive
one-way microvalve at the distal end. The applicant stated that it has
designed the Pressure Enabled Drug DeliveryTM technology of
the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System to overcome
intratumoral pressure in solid tumors and improve distribution and
penetration of therapy during Transcatheter Arterial Chemoembolization
(TACE) procedures. TACE is a minimally invasive, image-guided procedure
used to infuse a high dose of chemotherapy into liver tumors. According
to the applicant, the pliable, one-way valve at the distal tip of the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System creates a temporary
local increase in pressure during infusion, opening up collapsed
vessels in tumors, which enables perfusion and therapy delivery in
areas inaccessible to the systemic circulation, a positive hydrostatic
pressure gradient, and restores convective flow to enable therapy to
penetrate deeper into the tumor. During the TACE procedure, the
physician first gains catheter access into the arterial system of the
hepatic arteries through a small incision in the groin or the wrist.
The applicant stated that the physician then uses real-time
fluoroscopic guidance to navigate the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System into the blood vessels feeding the
tumors, infusing the chemotherapy and embolic materials through the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System until the tumor bed
is completely saturated.
With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), FDA
granted 510(k) premarket clearance as of April 3, 2018. The application
for a new device category for transitional pass-through payment status
for the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System was
received on November 29, 2018, which is within 3 years of the date of
the initial FDA approval or clearance. We invited public comments on
whether the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets
the newness criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer of Surefire[supreg] SparkTM
Infusion System believed this device meets the eligibility criteria for
device pass-through payment under the regulation at Sec. 419.66, which
includes the newness criterion.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's input. After consideration
of the public comments we received and based on the fact that the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System application was
received within 3 years of FDA approval, we believe that the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets the newness
criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
according to the applicant, the use of the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System is integral to the service of
providing delivery of chemotherapy into liver tumors, is used for one
patient only, comes in contact with human skin, and is applied in or on
a wound or other skin lesion. The applicant also claimed the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets the device
eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it is not a supply or material
furnished incident to a service. We invited public comments on whether
the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets the
eligibility criteria at Sec. 419.66(b).
Comment: The manufacturer of Surefire[supreg] SparkTM
Infusion System believed that that the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System met the eligibility criteria at
Sec. 419.66(b).
Response: We appreciate the commenter's input. Based on the
information we have received and our review of the application, we have
determined that Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System
meets the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3) and (b)(4).
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously in effect, and was not being
paid for as an outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. We
identified several existing pass-through payment categories that may be
applicable to the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System.
The Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System may be
described by HCPCS code C1887 (Catheter, guiding (may include infusion/
perfusion capability)). The applicant describes the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System as a device used in vascular
interventional procedures to deliver diagnostic and therapeutic agents
in the peripheral vasculatures. The CMS List of Device Category Codes
for Present or Previous Pass-Through Payment and Related Definitions
describes HCPCS code C1887 as intended for the introduction of
interventional/diagnostic devices into the coronary or peripheral
vascular systems. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we also stated
that the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System may also
be described by HCPCS code C1751 (Catheter, infusion, inserted
peripherally, centrally or midline (other than hemodialysis)). The
applicant describes the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion
System as being inserted through a small incision in the groin or the
wrist. We invited public comments on this issue.
Comment: The manufacturer of the device does not believe there is
an existing pass-through payment category that describes the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System, commenting that
the existing device categories that CMS identified do not adequately
describe critical aspects of the device. The manufacturer noted that
existing categories, such as C1887 Catheter, guiding (may include
infusion/perfusion capability) and C1751 Catheter, infusion, inserted
peripherally, centrally or midline (other than hemodialysis)--do not
appropriately describe catheters with a pressure-enabled drug delivery
(PEDD) valve, a key mechanism of action of the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System. The manufacturer stated that the
PEDD valve is closely associated with differential and improved
outcomes as compared to catheters without PEDD valves and is not
appropriately described by existing categories.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's input. After consideration
of the public comments we received, we believe there is no existing
pass-through payment category that appropriately describes the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System, due to the
pressure-enabled drug delivery (PEDD) valve which offers a unique
mechanism for therapy delivery. Based on this information, we believe
that the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets the
eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(2), provides that CMS determines that a device to be included
in the category has demonstrated that it will substantially improve the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously established category or other
available treatment. With respect to this criterion, the applicant
submitted four studies to support the claim that their technology
represents a substantial clinical improvement over existing
technologies. The applicant asserts that the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System represents a substantial clinical
improvement over existing technologies because it offers a treatment
option that no other catheters currently available can provide. The
manufacturer notes that the self-expanding, nonocclusive, one-way valve
can infuse therapy at pressure higher
[[Page 61275]]
than the baseline mean arterial pressure, and this pressurized delivery
opens up collapsed vessels in tumors and enables perfusion and therapy
delivery into hypoxic areas of the liver tumors. The applicant also
believes that the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System
represents a substantial clinical improvement because the technology
has shown improved tumor response rates in hepatocellular carcinoma, as
well as a decrease in the rate of disease recurrence and the need for
subsequent treatment.
The first pilot study of nine patients being treated for
hepatocellular carcinoma, who received infusions via both a
conventional end-hole catheter and an antireflux microcatheter,
demonstrated statistically significant reductions in downstream
distribution of embolic particles with the antireflux catheter and
increases in tumor deposition (p < 0.05).\13\ The second singlecenter
retrospective study was conducted with 22 patients treated for
hepatocellular carcinoma with the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM
Infusion System and TACE. As assessed by MRI, there appeared to be
overall disease response in 91 percent of patients and 85 percent of
lesions and complete response in 32 percent of patients and 54 percent
of lesions.\14\ In the first study for a case-control series, 19
patients undergoing treatment using SIS-TACE had a statistically
significant improvement in disease response rate compared to 19
patients treated with end-hole microcatheters, 78.9 percent compared to
36.8 percent for initial overall response rate (p = 0.008).\15\ In the
second study, a multi-center registry of 72 patients demonstrated high
response rate when compared to historical control at 6 months follow-
up.\16\
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\13\ Pasciak AS, McElmurray JH, Bourgeois AC, Heidel RE, Bradley
YC. Impact of an antireflux catheter on target volume particulate
distribution in liver-directed embolotherapy: a pilot study. J Vasc
Interv Radiol. 2015 May;26(5):660-9.
\14\ Kim AY, Frantz S, Krishnan P, DeMulder D, Caridi T, Lynskey
GE, et al. (2017) Short-term imaging response after drug-eluting
embolic trans- arterial chemoembolization delivered with the
Surefire Infusion System[supreg] for the treatment of hepatocellular
carcinoma. PloS one 12.9 (2017): e0183861.
\15\ N Apseloff, J Keung, T Caridi, D Buckley, G Lynskey, A Kim.
Case-control evaluation of endhole microcatheter versus Surefire
Infusion System for use during transarterial chemoembolization for
hepatocellular carcinoma. Conference abstract presented at 2017
Society of Intervention Radiology Annual Congress, March 8, 2017.
\16\ Kapoor B, Contreras F, Katz M, Arepally A, Fischman A, Rose
S, Kim A, Ferraro J. Surefire Infusion System (SIS) hepatocellular
carcinoma registry study interim results: A multicenter study of the
safety, feasibility, and outcomes of the SIS expandable-tip
microcatheter in DEB-TACE.
Conference abstract presented at 2018 Society of Intervention
Radiology Annual Congress, March 19, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the information submitted by the applicant, one concern
was that large-scale studies with long-term follow-up were limited.
Also, the majority of studies presented had a sample size of less than
25 and the highest sample size presented was less than 100 patients.
Additionally, patient follow-up occurred mostly within a 3 to 6 month
timeframe with few studies occurring beyond this range. Another concern
was that none of the studies presented improvements in mortality with
the use of the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System.
Outcomes focused primarily on tumor response rates and lesion size,
based upon imaging. We noted additional data on mortality endpoints
would be helpful to fully assess substantial clinical improvement. We
invited public comments on whether the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer responded to several statements regarding
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System and substantial
clinical improvement in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and
asserted that SparkTM Infusion System meets the substantial
clinical improvement criterion. The manufacturer stated that the
population size in the studies submitted to CMS are normal for a new
and innovative technology, noting that the studies are methodologically
rigorous and show statistically significant differentiation from
comparators. The manufacturer also noted that overall survival is not
an appropriate endpoint for hepatocellular carcinoma. They cited
National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines, noting that
tumor necrosis and pathologic response are primary predictors of
success in these cases and locoregional therapy should be viewed as a
way to transition patients to transplant or resection. The manufacturer
also suggested that CMS should consider that clinical improvements vary
based on the therapeutic agent being delivered by the
SparkTM Infusion System and that these agents are approved
on a variety of endpoints.
Response: We appreciate the response to the questions we had
regarding SparkTM Infusion System. After reviewing the
information provided in the public comment, we agree that while the
opportunity for large-scale studies with long-term follow-up is limited
for a new technology, the existing studies show statistically
significant improvements. Additionally, with regard to our questions
about impacts on mortality, we accept the applicant's statement that
there are other key clinical endpoints, such as tumor necrosis and
progression-free survival, that can be used to assess improvements from
the SparkTM Infusion System.
Comment: Multiple commenters supported granting SparkTM
Infusion System transitional pass-through payment status. Many of the
commenters mentioned that SparkTM Infusion System provides
substantial clinical benefit over conventional therapy and urged CMS to
approve the transitional pass-through payment to reduce cost burden and
increase patient access.
Response: We appreciate the additional information that the
commenters provided on the performance and the benefits of
SparkTM Infusion System.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we have
determined that SparkTM Infusion System does meet the
substantial clinical improvement criterion.
The third criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(3), requires us to determine that the cost of the device is
not insignificant, as described in Sec. 419.66(d). Section 419.66(d)
includes three cost significance criteria that must each be met. The
applicant provided the following information in support of the cost
significance requirements. The applicant stated that the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System would be reported
with CPT code 37243, which is assigned to APC 5193 (Level 3
Endovascular Procedures). To meet the cost criterion for device pass-
through payment status, a device must pass all three tests of the cost
criterion for at least one APC. For our calculations, we used APC 5193,
which has a CY 2019 payment rate of $9,669.04. Beginning in CY 2017, we
calculated the device offset amount at the HCPCS/CPT code level instead
of the APC level (81 FR 79657). CPT code 37243 had a device offset
amount of $3,894.69 at the time the application was received. According
to the applicant, the cost of the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM
Infusion System is $7,750.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost significance requirement,
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of devices in the
category must exceed 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $7,750 for the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System is
[[Page 61276]]
80.2 percent of the applicable APC payment amount for the service
related to the category of devices of $9,669.04 ($7,750/$9,669.04 x 100
= 80.2 percent). Therefore, we believe the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System meets the first cost significance
requirement.
The second cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(2),
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of the devices in
the category must exceed the cost of the device-related portion of the
APC payment amount for the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs to be at least 125 percent of
the offset amount (the device-related portion of the APC found on the
offset list). The estimated average reasonable cost of $7,750 for the
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System exceeds the cost of
the device-related portion of the APC payment amount for the related
service of $3,894.69 by 199 percent ($7,750-$3,894.69) x 100 = 198.99
percent). Therefore, we believe that the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System meets the second cost significance
requirement.
The third cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(3),
provides that the difference between the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category and the portion of the APC payment
amount for the device must exceed 10 percent of the APC payment amount
for the related service. The difference between the estimated average
reasonable cost of $7,750 for the SparkTM Infusion System
and the portion of the APC payment amount for the device of $3,894.69
exceeds the APC payment amount for the related service of $9,669.04 by
40 percent (($7,750-$3,894.69)/$9,669.04) x 100 = 39.87 percent).
Therefore, we believe that the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM
Infusion System meets the third cost significance requirement.
We invited public comments on whether the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System meets the device pass-through
payment criteria discussed in this section, including the cost
criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer of the Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System believed that the device meets the
cost criterion for device pass-through payment status.
Response: We appreciate the manufacturer's input. After
consideration of the public comments we received, we believe that
Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System meets the cost
criterion for device pass-through payment status.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
approving the Surefire[supreg] SparkTM Infusion System for
device pass-through payment status beginning in CY 2020.
(2) TracPatch
According to the applicant, TracPatch is a wearable device that
utilizes an accelerometer, temperature sensor and step counter to allow
the surgeon and patient to monitor recovery and help ensure critical
milestones are being met. The applicant states that TracPatch utilizes
wearable monitoring technology and methods in an effort to enhance the
rehabilitation experience for both patients and physicians.
Accelerometers are utilized to recognize and record the results when
patients perform standard physical therapy exercises, in addition to
providing standard step count and high-acceleration events that may
indicate a fall. A temperature sensor monitors the skin temperature
near the joint.
TracPatch is described by the applicant as a 24/7 remote monitoring
wearable device that captures a patient's key daily activities: such as
range of motion progress, exercise compliance, and ambulation.
TracPatch is used for pre- and post-operative patient monitoring,
patient engagement, data analytics and post-op cost reduction.
According to the applicant, the wearable devices stick on the skin
above and below the knee. The wearables are applied before total knee
surgery to determine a patient's baseline activity levels, and then
again after surgery to allow the patient and surgeon to monitor
activity, pain, range of motion and physical therapy. The use of the
Bluetooth connectivity allows the device to be paired with any
smartphone and the TracPatch cloud allows for unlimited data collection
and storage. The applicant states that TracPatch includes a web
dashboard and computer application, which permit a health care provider
to monitor a patient's recovery in real-time, allowing for immediate
care adjustments and the ability for providers and patients to respond
to issues that may occur during recovery from surgery.
With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), the
applicant stated that TracPatch does not need FDA clearance because it
is a Class I device that would be assigned to a generic category of
devices described in 21 CFR parts 862 through 892 that is exempt from
FDA premarket notification. However, the applicant did not identify
which category of exempted devices that TracPatch would be assigned.
The applicant also stated that TracPatch will be introduced into the
market in 2019, which would be within 3 years of the device pass-
through payment application for TracPatch that was received in March
2019. We invited public comments on whether the TracPatch is exempt
from FDA clearance and if the TracPatch meets the newness criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, stated that they had
registered TracPatch as a Class I Exempt goniometer with FDA which was
listed on the Global Unique Device Identification Database (GUDID) as
of August 28, 2019.
Response: We thank the manufacturer for clarifying that TracPatch
is now registered with FDA as a Class I Exempt goniometer as of August
28, 2019.
After consideration of the public comments, we have determined that
TracPatch meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
the applicant claimed that the TracPatch is an integral part of
monitoring the range of motion for a knee prior to and after total knee
arthroplasty, is used for one patient only, and is placed on the skin
above and below the knee and secured by Velcro strips. The applicant
stated that the device is not surgically implanted or inserted into the
patient and is not applied in or on a wound or other skin lesion. We
stated concerns in the proposed rule with TracPatch's eligibility with
respect to the criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3) because to be eligible
for pass-through payment a device must be surgically implanted or
inserted into the patient or applied in a wound or on other skin
lesions. In addition, the applicant stated that the TracPatch meets the
device eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4) because it is not
an instrument, apparatus, implement, or item for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered. We determined that TracPatch was not
a material or supply furnished incident to a service. We invited public
comments on whether the TracPatch meets the eligibility criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, provided more information
on whether TracPatch meets the eligibility criterion. The manufacturer
states that the device is adhered to a patient's skin using a medical
adhesive patch and not Velcro strips and that the device is placed near
a wound (which we assume is the incision for the associated knee
surgery) in a sterile setting. The placement of the device near the
wound allows real time monitoring of changes to the wound and
complications and abnormalities that may arise. Also the device
placement is important to perform measurements related to the knee's
range of motion.
[[Page 61277]]
Response: The commenter did not state or provide evidence either in
its device pass-through application or in its comment on the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, that the TracPatch device is surgically
implanted or inserted into a patient or is applied in a wound or on
other skin lesions. In fact, the description of the Class I Exempt
goniometer on the FDA product classification web page states that the
goniometer is not an implantable device. To be considered for device
pass-through payment, a device must meet this part of the eligibility
criterion.
After consideration of all of the information we have received, we
have determined that TracPatch is not surgically implanted or inserted
into a patient or applied in a wound or on other skin lesions, and the
product thus does not meet the eligibility criterion for device pass-
through payment status. Because we have determined that TracPatch does
not meet the basic eligibility criterion for transitional pass-through
payment status, we have not evaluated this product to determine whether
it meets the other criteria required for transitional pass-through
payment for devices; that is the substantial clinical improvement
criterion, and the cost criterion.
Comment: Multiple commenters, including physicians and patients,
described the benefits of TracPatch and how it helped either them or
their patients with their recoveries from knee surgery.
Response: We appreciate the comments we received about the benefits
of TracPatch. However, we did not evaluate substantial clinical
improvement for TracPatch because it did not meet the eligibility
criterion.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are not
approving device pass-through payment status for TracPatch for CY 2020.
(3) Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) Therapy[supreg] System for Treatment
Resistant Depression (TRD)
LivaNova USA Inc. submitted an application for the Vagus Nerve
Stimulation (VNS) Therapy[supreg] System for Treatment Resistant
Depression (TRD). According to the applicant, the VNS Therapy[supreg]
System consists of two implantable components: A programmable
electronic pulse generator and a bipolar electrical lead that is
connected to the programmable electronic pulse generator. The applicant
stated that the surgical procedure to implant the VNS Therapy[supreg]
System involves subcutaneous implanting of the pulse generator in the
intraclavicular region as well as insertion of the bipolar electrical
lead which entails wrapping two spiral electrodes around the cervical
portion of the left vagus nerve within the carotid sheath.
According to the applicant, following implant and recovery, the
physician programs the pulse generator to intermittently stimulate the
vagus nerve at a level that balances efficacy and patient tolerability.
The pulse generator delivers electrical stimulation via the bipolar
electrical lead to the cervical portion of the left vagus nerve within
the carotid sheath thereby relaying information to the brain stem
modulating structures relevant to depression. Stimulation typically
consists of a 30-second period of ``on time,'' during which the device
stimulates at a fixed level of output current, followed by a 5-minute
``off time'' period of no stimulation.
The applicant states that a hand-held programmer is utilized to
program the pulse generator stimulation parameters, including the
current charge, pulse width, pulse frequency, and the on/off stimulus
time, which is also known as the on/off duty cycle. Initial settings
can be adjusted to enhance the tolerability of the device as well as
its clinical effects on the patient. The generator runs continuously,
but patients can temporarily turn off the device by holding a magnet
over it. The generator can also be turned on and off by the programmer.
The applicant states that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System provides
indirect modulation of brain activity through the stimulation of the
vagus nerve. The vagus nerve, the tenth cranial nerve, has
parasympathetic outflow that regulates the autonomic (that is,
involuntary) functions of heart rate and gastric acid secretion, and
also includes the primary functions of sensation from the pharynx,
muscles of the vocal cords and swallowing. It is a nerve that carries
both sensory and motor information to and from the brain. Importantly,
the vagus nerve has influence over widespread brain areas and it is
believed that electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve alters various
networks of the brain in order to treat psychiatric disease.
With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), the
applicant received FDA clearance for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for
TRD through the premarket approval (PMA) process on July 15, 2005, and
the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD device was introduced to the market in
September 2005. However, on May 4, 2007, a national coverage
determination (NCD 160.18) was released prohibiting Medicare from
covering the use of the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD. This NCD
remained in effect until February 15, 2019, when CMS determined that
the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD could receive payment if the service
was performed in CMS-approved coverage with evidence development (CED)
studies. Although the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD was introduced
to the market in September 2005, Medicare has only covered it for
slightly more than 1\1/2\ years. However, Sec. 419.66(b)(1) states
that a pass-through payment application for a device must be received
within 3 years of when the device either received FDA approval or was
introduced to the market. The applicant stated that the VNS
Therapy[supreg] System for TRD was introduced to the market in
September 2005, which means the device pass-through payment application
would have needed to have been submitted to CMS by September 2008.
However, the pass-through application for the device was not received
by CMS until March 2019.
In addition, it appeared that the neurostimulator device for the
VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD is the same device that has been
used since 1997 to treat epilepsy.\17\ The applicant stated the
following three differences between the two devices: (1) How the device
is programmed to treat epilepsy versus TRD; (2) how the external
magnets of the device are used for epilepsy treatment as compared to
TRD treatment; and (3) that the battery life of the device to treat
epilepsy is different than the battery life of the device when treating
TRD. However, it was not clear that these differences demonstrate that
the actual device used to treat TRD is any different than the device
used to treat epilepsy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Current Behavioral Neuroscience Reports. 2014 Jun; 1(2):
64-73.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on the information presented, we invited public comments on
whether the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD meets the newness
criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, made additional arguments
for why the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD meets the newness
criterion. The manufacturer stated that there were 22 months between
the FDA approval of the associated procedure to treat TRD in July 2005
and CMS' issuance of the national determination of non-coverage on May
4, 2007. The manufacturer asserts that during those 22 months the VNS
Therapy[supreg] System for TRD was ``realistically not available''
because of concerns about covering the TRD treatment procedure during
the period between FDA approval and the national determination of non-
coverage.
[[Page 61278]]
In another part of the manufacturer's comment, they state that the
uncertainty of coverage for the TRD treatment procedure meant that the
treatment was not available to patients during the July 2005 to May
2007 time period.
The manufacturer believes the most equitable reading of the rule
that is consistent with the intent of the criterion when it was
established in the CY 2016 OPPS final rule (80 FR 70418 through 70420)
is that the 3-year period for newness from when the VNS Therapy[supreg]
System for TRD was introduced into the market in July 2015 should have
been held in suspension from May 4, 2007 when the original national
determination of non-coverage by CMS until the subsequent national
determination allowing coverage of the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for
TRD with coverage with evidence development (CED) was released on
February 15, 2019.
The manufacturer cites CMS statements from the CY 2016 OPPS final
rule supporting this reading, including that device pass-through
payment is for devices that are truly new and do not have sufficient
claims data for CMS to analyze, and that market availability for a
device could be considered to be after its FDA approval or clearance
date where there is a national coverage determination of non-coverage
of the device within the Medicare population. The manufacturer asserts
that the reason that the newness criterion does not address the market
availability situation faced by the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD
is that CMS simply did not envision that such a situation would occur.
The manufacturer asserts that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD
neurostimulator device has not been available in the market for 3 full
years, and therefore still meets the newness criterion.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's conclusion. The
manufacturer did not provide evidence to establish that the
neurostimulator device for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD was
not similar to the neurostimulator device that has been used since 1997
to treat epilepsy. With no evidence to the contrary, it appears the
neurostimulator device for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD has
been on the market continuously since 1997 and therefore fails the
newness criterion.
However, even if we were to assume the neurostimulator device for
the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD was a new device upon FDA
approval for the TRD treatment procedure in July 2005, the device would
still not meet the newness criterion. The manufacturer's comment about
suggesting an equitable reading of the newness criterion consistent
with what it believed was our intent in the CY 2016 OPPS final rule (80
FR 70418 through 70420) implied that, for a device to meet the newness
standard, it had to be available in the market for less than three
years and that the availability period would be suspended if the device
was unavailable in the market due to national non-coverage. This
comment does not align with the language of Sec. 419.66(b)(1), which
states that the application for device pass-through payment must be
received within 3 years from the date of market availability and makes
no exception for periods of national non-coverage. As we stated in the
proposed rule, based on information provided in the original device
pass-through application, the device pass-through application had to be
submitted by September 2008 to meet the newness requirement.
Comment: One commenter stated that it did not believe that the VNS
Therapy[supreg] System for TRD meets the newness criterion for device
pass-through payment. The commenter states that while there have been
technical improvements with the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD, the
commenter believes these are typical upgrades of an existing technology
and not evidence of a new device.
Response: We appreciate the feedback from the commenter, including
their concern that the differences cited by the manufacturer between
the neurostimulator VNS device to treat epilepsy and the
neurostimulator VNS device to treat TRD are not substantial enough to
establish the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD neurostimulator device
as a new device that meets the newness criterion. A device also will
fail the newness criterion if, as noted above, it is on the market more
than three years, based either on its FDA clearance or approval date or
the date of U.S. market availability.
After consideration of all of the information we have received, we
have determined that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD does not
meet the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
the applicant claimed that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD is an
integral part of a procedure to provide adjunctive treatment of chronic
or recurrent depression in adult patients that have failed four or more
antidepressant treatments. The VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD is
used for one patient only, comes in contact with human tissue, and is
surgically implanted or inserted into the patient. In addition, the
applicant stated that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD meets the
device eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4) because it is not
an instrument, apparatus, implement, or item for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered. We determined that the VNS
Therapy[supreg] for TRD was not a material or supply furnished incident
to a service. We invited public comments on whether the VNS
Therapy[supreg] for TRD meets the eligibility criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, claimed that the VNS
Therapy[supreg] for TRD device meets the basic eligibility criteria for
pass-through status. The device is an integral part of the service
provided which is the adjunctive treatment of TRD. The device is used
by one patient, comes in contact with human tissue and is surgically
implanted. The manufacturer also asserts that the device is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or item for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered. The manufacturer states that the
device is not a material or supply furnished incident to a service.
Response: We appreciate the additional comments from the
manufacturer. After consideration of all of the information we have
received, we have determined that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for
TRD does meet the device eligibility criterion as described by Sec.
419.66(b)(4).
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any existing categories or
by any category previously in effect, and was not being paid for as an
outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. With respect to the
existence of a previous pass-through device category that describes the
device used for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD, the applicant
suggested a category descriptor of ``Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), treatment resistant depression, non-rechargeable.''
However, the device category represented by HCPCS code C1767 is
described as ``Generator, neurostimulator (implantable), non-
rechargeable,'' which appears to encompass the device category
descriptor for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD suggested by the
applicant. The applicant asserts that the device category descriptor
for HCPCS code C1767 is overly broad and noted the establishment of
HCPCS code C1823 (Generator, neurostimulator (implantable),
nonrechargeable, with transvenous sensing and stimulation
[[Page 61279]]
leads), effective January 1, 2019, as an example of where a new device
category for a nonrechargeable neurostimulation system to treat central
sleep apnea was carved out from the broad category described by HCPCS
code C1767.
The applicant believes its proposed category for the device for the
VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD should similarly qualify as a new
category. However, HCPCS code C1823 was established due to specific
device features which distinguish that device category from HCPCS code
C1767. The applicant for the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD
requested a new device category based on a beneficiary's diagnosis, but
OPPS does not differentiate payment by diagnosis.
Comment: The applicant asserts that the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD
device is not described by any of the existing device categories in the
OPPS and that the associated service was not paid as an outpatient
service as of December 31, 1996.
Response: We do not agree with the applicant's assertion. We
believe the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD device is described by existing
HCPCS code C1767 (Generator, neurostimulator (implantable), non-
rechargeable) and does not meet the criterion that is described by
Sec. 419.66(c)(1) because the device is described by an existing
device category. As stated in the proposed rule, OPPS does not
differentiate payment by diagnosis and therefore cannot establish new
device categories based solely on a previously described device being
used to treat a new indication. In the original pass-through
application, the applicant cited the example of the establishment of a
new category code, HCPCS code C1823 (Generator, neurostimulator
(implantable), nonrechargeable, with transvenous sensing and
stimulation leads), for the remede system even though that device is a
non-rechargeable neurostimulator and initially appeared to be covered
by HCPCS code C1767, like the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD device.
However, as we stated in the proposed rule, HCPCS code C1823 was
established due to specific device features that distinguish that
device category from HCPCS code C1767. The applicant has not identified
any device features of the VNS Therapy[supreg] for TRD device that
distinguish it from the category described by HCPCS code C1767.
After consideration of all of the information we have received, we
have determined that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD is
described by either an existing category or by a category previously in
effect and does not meets the requirements of Sec. 419.66(c)(1) and
the device category eligibility criterion.
Because we have determined that the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for
TRD does not meet either the newness criterion or the device category
eligibility criterion for transitional pass-through payment status, we
have not evaluated this device to determine whether it meets the other
criteria required for transitional pass-through payment for devices;
namely, the substantial clinical improvement criterion and the cost
criterion.
Comment: A commenter supported giving pass-through status for the
VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD because the commenter believes the
clinical benefits of the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD have been
demonstrated by the studies submitted for the recent national coverage
determination that established coverage with evidence development for
the procedure.
Response: We appreciate the comment in support of the clinical
benefits of the VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD. However, we did not
evaluate substantial clinical improvement for the VNS Therapy[supreg]
System for TRD because this device does not meet the newness criterion
or the device category eligibility criterion.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are not
approving VNS Therapy[supreg] System for TRD device pass-through
payment status for CY 2020.
(4) Optimizer[supreg] System
Impulse Dynamics submitted an application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment status for the Optimizer[supreg]
System. According to the applicant, the Optimizer[supreg] System is an
implantable device that delivers Cardiac Contractility Modulation (CCM)
therapy for the treatment of patients with moderate to severe chronic
heart failure. CCM therapy is intended to treat patients with
persistent symptomatic heart failure despite receiving guideline
directed medical therapy (GDMT). The applicant stated that the
Optimizer System consists of the Optimizer Implantable Pulse Generator
(IPG), Optimizer Mini Charger, and Omni II Programmer with Omni Smart
Software. Lastly, the applicant stated that the Optimizer[supreg]
System delivers CCM signals to the myocardium. CCM signals are
nonexcitatory electrical signals applied during the cardiac absolute
refractory period that, over time, enhance the strength of cardiac
muscle contraction.
With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), the
applicant received a Category B-3 Investigational Device Exemption
(IDE) from FDA on April 6, 2017. Subsequently, the applicant received
its premarket approval (PMA) application from FDA on March 21, 2019. We
received the application for a new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for the Optimizer[supreg] System on
February 26, 2019, which is within 3 years of the date of the initial
FDA approval or clearance. We invited public comments on whether the
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the newness criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer believes that the Optimizer[supreg]
System meets the newness criterion.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's input. After consideration
of the public comment we received, we believe that the
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
according to the applicant, the Optimizer[supreg] System is integral to
the CCM therapy service provided, is used for one patient only, comes
in contact with human skin, and is applied in or on a wound or other
skin lesion. The applicant also stated that the Optimizer[supreg]
System meets the device eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4)
because it is not an instrument, apparatus, implement, or items for
which depreciation and financing expenses are recovered, and it is not
a supply or material furnished incident to a service.
We did not receive any public comments regarding whether
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the eligibility criterion. Based on the
information we have received, we have determined that Optimizer[supreg]
System meets the eligibility criterion.
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously in effect, and was not being
paid for as an outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. For the
proposed rule, we had not identified an existing pass-through payment
category that describes the Optimizer[supreg] System.
Comment: The manufacturer of the Optimizer[supreg] System indicated
that there is not an existing pass-through payment category that
describes the device.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's input. After consideration
of the public comment we received, we believe that the
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the device category eligibility
criterion.
[[Page 61280]]
The second criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(2), provides that CMS determines that a device to be included
in the category has demonstrated that it will substantially improve the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously established category or other
available treatment. The applicant stated that the use of CCM
significantly improves clinical outcomes for a patient population
compared to currently available treatments. With respect to this
criterion, the applicant submitted studies that examined the impact of
CCM on quality of life, exercise tolerance, hospitalizations, and
mortality.
The applicant noted that the use of the Optimizer[supreg] System
significantly improves clinical outcomes for patients with moderate-to-
severe chronic heart failure, and specifically improves exercise
tolerance, quality of life, and functional status of patients that are
otherwise underserved. The applicant claims that the Optimizer[supreg]
System fulfills an unmet need because there is currently no therapeutic
medical device therapies available for the 70 percent of heart failure
patients who have New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III heart
failure, normal QRS duration and reduced ejection fraction (EF). FDA
approved the Optimizer[supreg] System for NYHA Class III heart failure
patients who remain symptomatic despite guideline directed medical
therapy, who are in normal sinus rhythm, are not indicated for Cardiac
Resynchronization Therapy, and have a left ventricular ejection
fraction ranging from 25 percent to 45 percent.\18\
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\18\ https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/cdrh_docs/pdf18/P180036B.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant presented several studies to support these claims.
According to the applicant, the results of a randomized clinical study
in which patients with NYHA functional Class III, ambulatory Class IV
heart failure despite OMT, an EF from 25-45 percent, or a normal sinus
rhythm with QRS duration <130ms (n = 160) were randomized to continued
medical therapy (n = 86) or CCM with the Optimizer[supreg] System (n =
74) for 24 weeks showed a statistically significant improvement in the
primary endpoint of peak oxygen consumption (pVO2 = 0.84, 95 percent
Bayesian credible interval 0.123 to 1.52) compared with the patients
who were randomized to continued medical therapy.\19\ The secondary
endpoint of quality of life, measured by Minnesota Living with Heart
Failure Questionnaire (MLWHFQ) (p<0.001), 6-minute hall walk test (p =
0.02), and an NYHA function class assessment (p<0.001) were better in
the treatment group versus control group. The secondary endpoint of
heart failure-related hospitalizations was lowered from 10.8 percent to
2.9 percent (p = 0.048). The applicant also reported a registry study
of 140 patients with a left ventricular ejection fraction from 25-45
percent receiving CCM therapy with a primary endpoint of comparing
observed survival to Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM) predicted
survival over 3 years of follow-up. All patients implanted with the
Optimizer[supreg] System at participating centers were offered
participation and 72 percent of patients agreed to enroll in the
registry. There were improvements in quality of life markers (MLWHFQ)
and a 75-percent reduction in heart failure hospitalizations
(p<0.0001). Survival at 3 years was similar between the two study arms
with CCM at 82.8 percent [73.4 percent-89.1 percent] and SHFM at 76.7
percent (p = 0.16). However, for patients with a left ventricular
ejection fraction from 35-45 percent receiving CCM therapy, the 3-year
mortality for CCM therapy was significantly better than predicted with
88 percent for CCM compared to 74.7 percent for SHFM (p = 0.0463).\20\
The applicant presented a randomized, double blind, crossover study of
CCM signals with 164 patients with EF <=35 percent and NYHA Class II
(24 percent) or III (76 percent) symptoms who received a CCM pulse
generator. After the 6-month treatment period, results indicated
statistically significantly improved peak VO2 and MLWHFQ (p = 0.03 for
each parameter), concluding that CCM signals appear to be safe for
patients and that exercise tolerance and quality of life were
significantly better while patients were receiving active CCM
treatment.\21\
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\19\ Abraham, W. T., Kuck, K. H., Goldsmith, R. L., Lindenfeld,
J., Reddy, V. Y., Carson, P. E., . & Wiegn, P. (2018). A randomized
controlled trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of cardiac
contractility modulation. JACC: Heart Failure, 6(10), 874-883.
\20\ Anker, S. D., Borggrefe, M., Neuser, H., Ohlow, M. A.,
R[ouml]ger, S., Goette, A., . & Rousso, B. Cardiac contractility
modulation improves long-term survival and hospitalizations in heart
failure with reduced ejection fraction. Eur J Heart Fail .2019 Jan
16. doi: 10.1002/ejhf.1374. [Epub ahead of print]
\21\ Borggrefe MM, Lawo T, Butter C, Schmidinger H, Lunati M,
Pieske B, Misier AR, Curnis A, Bocker D, Remppis A, Kautzner J,
Stuhlinger M, Leclerq C, Taborsky M, Frigerio M, Parides M, Burkhoff
D and Hindricks G. Randomized, double blind study of non-excitatory,
cardiac contractility modulation electrical impulses for symptomatic
heart failure. Eur Heart J. 2008;29:1019-28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A study was conducted with 68 consecutive heart failure patients
with NYHA Class II or III symptoms, QRS duration <=130 ms, and who had
been implanted with a CCM device between May 2002 and July 2013 in
Germany. Based upon pre-implant SHFM survival rates, 4.5 years mean
follow-up, and an average patient age of 61 years old, the study found
lower mortality rates for CCM therapy group with 0 percent at 1 year,
3.5 percent at 2 years, and 14.2 percent at 5 years, compared to 6.1
percent, 11.8 percent, and 27.7 percent predicted by SHFM, respectively
(p = 0.007).\22\ In a study on long-term outcomes, 41 consecutive heart
failure patients with left ventricular ejection fraction (EF) < 40
percent receiving CCM therapy were compared to a control group of 41
similar heart failure patients and primarily evaluated for all-cause
mortality, as well as heart failure hospitalization, cardiovascular
death, and a death and heart failure hospitalization composite. After 6
years of follow-up, the results showed that all-cause mortality was
lower for the CCM group as compared to the control group (39 percent
versus 71 percent respectively, p = 0.001), especially among patients
with EF >= 25-40 percent with 36 percent for the CCM group versus 80
percent for the control group (p <0.001). Although heart failure
hospitalization was similar between the treatment and control cohorts,
there was a significantly lower heart failure hospitalization rate for
CCM patients with EF >= 25-40 percent (36 percent versus 64 percent
respectively, p = 0.005).\23\ The applicant also presented additional
studies 24 25 that presented similar conclusions to the
studies discussed above, noting that CCM therapy provided improvements
in quality of life, exercise capacity, NYHA class, and mortality rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Kloppe A, Lawo T, Mijic D, et al. Long-term survival with
Cardiac Contractility Modulation in patients with NYHA II or III
symptoms and normal QRS duration. Int J Cardiol. 2016 Apr
15;209:291-5.
\23\ Liu M, Fang F, Luo XX, Shlomo BH, Burkhoff D, Chan JY, Chan
CP, Cheung L, Rousso B, Gutterman D, Yu CM. Improvement of long-term
survival by cardiac contractility modulation in heart failure
patients: A case-control study. Int J Cardiol. 2016 Mar 1;206:122-6.
\24\ M[uuml]ller D, Remppis A, Schauerte P, et al. Clinical
effects of long-term cardiac contractility modulation (CCM) in
subjects with heart failure caused by left ventricular systolic
dysfunction. Clin Res. Cardiol. 2017 Nov 1;106(11):893-904.
\25\ Kuschyk J, Roeger S, Schneider R, et al. Efficacy and
survival in patients with cardiac contractility modulation: Long-
term single center experience in 81 patients. Int J Cardiol.
2015;183C:76-81.
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[[Page 61281]]
We noted several concerns with the studies presented by the
applicant. One concern regarding the evidence for the Optimizer[supreg]
System involves the mixed mortality outcomes presented. Three studies
showed significantly lower mortality rates with the use of CCM compared
to controls or predicted mortality. Each of these studies focused on
slightly different mortality outcomes, including all-cause mortality, a
composite of death and heart failure hospitalization, and cardiac
mortality rates from 1 to 5 years. Two studies show mixed results. For
the first, 3-year survival was not significant for the overall
population, despite a significantly higher survival rate found in a
subpopulation. For the second, mortality rates were significant
compared to predictions at 1 year, but not 3 years. The final study did
not report significance in its overall survival at 2 years. Although
the studies and trials presented show improvements in mortality when
evaluating CCM therapy with comparators, the studies have small sample
sizes and limited timeframes for measuring survival. Additionally,
three studies compared observed mortality rates to statistically
projected mortality rates. In the two studies with observed mortality
rates, the overall improvement in mortality was not significant,
despite some significance found in subanalyses. These issues raise
concerns about the strength of the conclusions related to the use of
CCM therapy improving patient outcomes.
Another concern with the studies presented for the
Optimizer[supreg] System is that the included study population may not
be necessarily representative of the Medicare beneficiary population.
Several studies had a predominantly white, male patient population,
which could make generalization of study results to a more diverse
Medicare population difficult. Additionally, the average age of
patients for several studies was under 65 years old, which may also be
a limitation in applying these study results to the Medicare
population.
Overall, we were concerned that there was a lack of evidence from
large trials for the CCM therapy provided by the Optimizer[supreg]
System. The studies presented had sample sizes fewer than 500 patients.
Other limitations include the potential placebo effects and selection
bias that may have impacted study results. Only two studies presented
were randomized and only one of those two was a double-blinded study.
For the remaining studies, no blinding occurred to minimize potential
biases, which indicates that patients and researchers knew they were
receiving CCM therapy. This is a limitation because observed outcomes
may be impacted by the placebo effect. Although most studies matched
participants for similar demographics, there could be systematic
differences and unmeasured bias between the two groups beyond the
similarities addressed in the study that could affect outcomes. The
lack of randomization may have implications for the strength of the
studies' conclusions.
Based upon the evidence presented, we invited public comments on
whether the Optimizer[supreg] System meets the substantial clinical
improvement criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer responded to several statements regarding
Optimizer[supreg] System and substantial clinical improvement in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and asserted that Optimizer[supreg] System
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion. The manufacturer
noted that a mortality benefit cannot be claimed based on currently
published data but that the Optimizer[supreg] System does not appear to
have a negative impact on mortality. The manufacturer acknowledged that
male patients and those that identify as white were prevalent in the
Optimizer System studies but contended that for clinical trials in
general, and for heart failure specifically, these groups are typically
over-represented. They presented several examples of cardiac device and
pharmaceutical clinical trials for the treatment of heart failure,
where a similar mix of patients in terms of gender and race existed
across unrelated trials and therapies. In response to the concern that
the average age of patients for several studies was under 65 years old,
limiting the application of the study results to the Medicare
population, the manufacturer conducted additional analyses on patients
aged 65 and older. The analysis showed that the two populations were
not dissimilar, and the manufacturer believes the clinical trial
results are applicable to the Medicare patient population.
The manufacturer presented data to demonstrate that the
Optimizer[supreg] System delivers substantial clinical improvement in
terms of improved functional status, quality of life, and exercise
tolerance. In response to the concern regarding clinical trials
enrolling sample sizes fewer than 500 patients, the manufacturer noted
that there were 638 subjects enrolled and implanted with the Optimizer
System in the U.S. randomized trials and that trials of this size are
common in Class III medical device trials, which are tailored for
gathering the required evidence to support FDA approval of novel
technology. Regarding the concern about the lack of randomization and
blinding in studies presented, the manufacturer noted that four out of
the six studies were randomized, and two of the four were also blinded
with both the control and the treatment group receiving the device.
Response: We appreciate the response to the questions we had
regarding Optimizer[supreg] System. After reviewing the additional
information provided during the public comment period, we agree that,
for patients with NYHA Class III heart failure patients who remain
symptomatic despite guideline directed medical therapy, who are in
normal sinus rhythm, are not indicated for Cardiac Resynchronization
Therapy, and have a left ventricular ejection fraction ranging from 25
percent to 45 percent, Optimizer[supreg] System is a substantial
clinical improvement over existing treatment options for this
population. The provided studies support improvements in functional
status, quality of life, and exercise tolerance, all of which are
relevant outcomes in this population. While the studies describe
improved survival in a subset of patients and substantially reduced
hospitalizations, the numbers are small, the observation period is
short, and the data on readmissions are not specifically highlighted.
However, we accept the manufacturer's note that while mortality benefit
cannot be claimed based on currently published data, the
Optimizer[supreg] System does not appear to have a negative impact on
mortality.
Accordingly, we have determined that the Optimizer[supreg] System
has demonstrated substantial clinical improvement relative to existing
treatment options for patients diagnosed with moderate to severe
chronic heart failure. As the Optimizer[supreg] System received a
Breakthrough Device designation from FDA, it meets the substantial
clinical improvement criterion under this alternative pathway as well.
The third criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(3), requires us to determine that the cost of the device is
not insignificant, as described in Sec. 419.66(d). Section 419.66(d)
includes three cost significance criteria that must each be met. The
applicant provided the following information in support of the cost
significance requirements. The applicant stated that the
Optimizer[supreg] System would be reported with CPT codes 0408T, 0409T,
0410T, 0411T, 0412T, 0413T, 0414T, 0415T, 0416T,
[[Page 61282]]
0417T, and 0418T. The associated APCs are APC 5231 (Level 1 ICD and
Similar Procedures) and APC 5222 (Level 2 Pacemaker and Similar
Procedures). To meet the cost criterion for device pass-through payment
status, a device must pass all three tests of the cost criterion for at
least one APC. For our calculations, we used APC 5222, which had a CY
2019 payment rate of $7,404.11 at the time the application was
received. Beginning in CY 2017, we calculate the device offset amount
at the HCPCS/CPT code level instead of the APC level (81 FR 79657). CPT
code 0410T had a device offset amount of $2,295.27 at the time the
application was received. According to the applicant, the cost of the
Optimizer[supreg] System was $15,700.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost significance requirement,
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of devices in the
category must exceed 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $15,700 for the Optimizer[supreg] System
exceeds 212 percent of the applicable APC payment amount for the
service related to the category of devices of $7,404.11 ($15,700/
$7,404.11 x 100 = 212 percent). Therefore, we believe the
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the first cost significance requirement.
The second cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(2),
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of the devices in
the category must exceed the cost of the device-related portion of the
APC payment amount for the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs to be at least 125 percent of
the offset amount (the device-related portion of the APC found on the
offset list). The estimated average reasonable cost of $15,700 for the
Optimizer[supreg] System exceeds the cost of the device-related portion
of the APC payment amount for the related service of $2,295.27 by 684
percent ($15,700/$2,295.27) x 100 = 684 percent. Therefore, we believe
that the Optimizer[supreg] System meets the second cost significance
requirement.
The third cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(3),
provides that the difference between the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category and the portion of the APC payment
amount for the device must exceed 10 percent of the APC payment amount
for the related service. The difference between the estimated average
reasonable cost of $15,700 for the Optimizer[supreg] System and the
portion of the APC payment amount for the device of $2,295.27 exceeds
the APC payment amount for the related service of $7,404.11 by 181
percent (($15,700 - $2,295.27)/$7,404.11) x 100 = 181 percent).
Therefore, we believe that the Optimizer[supreg] System meets the third
cost significance requirement.
We invited public comments on whether the Optimizer[supreg] System
meets the device pass-through payment criteria discussed in this
section, including the cost criterion for device pass-through payment
status.
Comment: The manufacturer of the Optimizer[supreg] System believed
that the device meets the cost criterion for device pass-through
payment status. The manufacturer noted a point of clarification
regarding the average sales price (ASP) of the Optimizer[supreg] System
used for these calculations. They stated that the $15,700 price in the
application was based on discounted clinical trial pricing used during
the FDA IDE clinical trials to cover the manufacturing and research
costs only. After FDA approval on March 21, 2019, commercial pricing
took effect, changing the Optimizer[supreg] System to $23,000. The
manufacturer contended the Cost Criteria are still met with the current
$23,000 ASP for the Optimizer Smart System.
Response: We appreciate the manufacturer's input. After
consideration of the public comments we received, we believe that
Optimizer[supreg] System meets the cost criterion for device pass-
through payment status.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we believe
that the Optimizer[supreg] System qualifies for device pass-through
payment status and we are approving the application for device pass-
through payment status for the Optimizer[supreg] System beginning in CY
2020.
(5) AquaBeam[supreg] System
PROCEPT BioRobotics Corporation submitted an application for a new
device category for transitional pass-through payment status for the
AquaBeam[supreg] System as a resubmission of their CY 2019 application.
The AquaBeam[supreg] System is intended for the resection and removal
of prostate tissue in males suffering from lower urinary tract symptoms
(LUTS) due to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). The applicant stated
that this is a very common condition typically occurring in elderly
men. The clinical symptoms of this condition can include diminished
urinary stream and partial urethral obstruction.\26\ According to the
applicant, the AquaBeam[supreg] system resects the prostate to relieve
symptoms of urethral compression. The resection is performed
robotically using a high velocity, nonheated sterile saline water jet
(in a procedure called Aquablation). The applicant stated that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System utilizes real-time intra-operative ultrasound
guidance to allow the surgeon to precisely plan the surgical resection
area of the prostate and then the system delivers Aquablation therapy
to accurately resect the obstructive prostate tissue without the use of
heat. The materials submitted by the applicant state that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System consists of a disposable, single-use handpiece
as well as other components that are considered capital equipment.
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\26\ Chungtai B. Forde JC. Thomas DDM et al. Benign Prostatic
Hyperplasia. Nature Reviews Disease Primers 2 (2016) article 16031.
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With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), FDA
granted a De Novo request classifying the AquaBeam[supreg] System as a
Class II device under section 513(f)(2) of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act on December 21, 2017. The application for a new device
category for transitional pass-through payment status for the
AquaBeam[supreg] System was received on March 1, 2018, which is within
3 years of the date of the initial FDA approval or clearance. We
invited public comments on whether the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets
the newness criterion. We did not receive any comments on the newness
of the AquaBeam[supreg] System. We believe AquaBeam[supreg] System
meets the transitional pass-through payment newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
according to the applicant, the AquaBeam[supreg] System is integral to
the service provided, is used for one patient only, comes in contact
with human skin, and is applied in or on a wound or other skin lesion.
The applicant also claimed the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the device
eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it is not a supply or material
furnished incident to a service. However, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed and final rules, we cited the CY 2000 OPPS interim final rule
with comment period (65 FR 67804 through 67805), where we explained how
we interpreted Sec. 419.43(e)(4)(iv). We stated that we consider a
device to be surgically implanted or inserted if is surgically inserted
or implanted via a natural or surgically created orifice, or inserted
or implanted via a surgically created incision. We also stated that we
do not consider an item used to cut or otherwise create a surgical
opening to be
[[Page 61283]]
a device that is surgically implanted or inserted. We consider items
used to create incisions, such as scalpels, electrocautery units,
biopsy apparatuses, or other commonly used operating room instruments
to be supplies or capital equipment not eligible for transitional pass-
through payments. We stated that we believe the function of these items
is different and distinct from that of devices that are used for
surgical implantation or insertion. Finally, we stated that, generally,
we would expect that surgical implantation or insertion of a device
occurs after the surgeon uses certain primary tools, supplies, or
instruments to create the surgical path or site for implanting the
device. In the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with comment period (70 FR 68329
and 68630), we adopted as final our interpretation that surgical
insertion or implantation criteria include devices that are surgically
inserted or implanted via a natural or surgically created orifice, as
well as those devices that are inserted or implanted via a surgically
created incision. We reiterated that we maintain all of the other
criteria in Sec. 419.66 of the regulations, namely, that we do not
consider an item used to cut or otherwise create a surgical opening to
be a device that is surgically implanted or inserted.
The applicant resubmitted their application with additional
information that they believe supports their stance that the device
should be considered eligible under the device pass-through payment
eligibility criteria. The applicant stated that the AquaBeam[supreg]
System's handpiece is temporarily surgically inserted into the urethra
via the urinary meatus. The applicant indicated that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System's handpiece does not create an incision or
surgical opening or pathway, but instead ablates prostate tissue. The
applicant further stated that the device only cuts the prostatic tissue
after being inserted into the prostatic urethra and therefore it should
be considered eligible. The applicant also stated that the prostatic
urethra tissue is cut because it is at the center of the obstruction in
the prostate. Additionally, the applicant explained that to relieve the
symptoms of BPH, both the prostatic urethra and prostate tissue
encircling the prostatic urethra must be ablated, or cut, to relieve
the symptoms of BPH and provide some additional clearance for future
swelling or growth of the prostate. The applicant stated that the
prostatic urethra tissue is not cut or disturbed to access the prostate
tissue underneath, but the removal of the prostatic urethra is a key
aspect of treating the obstruction that causes BPH symptoms. Finally,
the applicant believes that clinically the distinction between the
prostatic urethra tissue and the prostate tissue are not meaningful in
the context of a BPH surgical intervention. We invited public comments
on whether the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the eligibility criteria
at Sec. 419.66(b).
Comments: We received several comments in regards to the
eligibility of the AquaBeam[supreg] System. While other stakeholders
commented generally on the eligibility of the AquaBeam[supreg] System,
the applicant provided additional detail in support of AquaBeam's
eligibility. Stakeholders agreed that AquaBeam[supreg] System was
eligible, and providing the following reasons: AquaBeam[supreg] System
is not used to cut or otherwise create a surgical opening; the AquaBeam
System handpiece is not a commonly used operation room instrument; the
AquaBeam System handpiece is integral to the service provided; it is a
single use item; it comes into contact with human tissue and finally,
it is inserted into the prostatic urethra through a natural orifice.
The applicant restated that the AquaBeam[supreg] System does not
cut or otherwise create a surgical opening. They reiterated that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System is inserted into the body through a natural
orifice at the meatus of the urethra without any cutting. The applicant
again stated that the AquaBeam[supreg] System is not used to cut or
otherwise create a surgical opening at the meatus, or the prostatic
urethra. The applicant further detailed that the purpose of the
ablation procedure is to remove the tissue that is obstructing urine
flow through the urethra as well as to remove additional tissue that
may obstruct the urethra causing LUTS. The applicant claimed that the
removal of the obstruction is not the creation of a surgical opening
for inserting the device and that the device is already positioned
inside the body.
The applicant further argued that ablating both the prostatic
urethra and the prostate tissue is central to the treatment of BPH
symptoms. Additionally, they argued that clinically, the distinction
between the prostatic urethra and the prostate tissue are not
meaningful to treat BPH and the procedure does not create an opening at
the urethra to access the prostate for tissue removal. The applicant
further argued that the plain meaning of the language used to expand
eligibility to include devices inserted through natural orifices \27\
means that passing the AquaBeam[supreg] System through the natural
orifice into the body is taking the place of creating a surgical
opening.
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\27\ 70 FR 68630.
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Response: We appreciate the comments submitted by the stakeholders
on the eligibility of the AquaBeam[supreg] System. After consideration
of submitted comments and after gaining additional clarity on the
clinical details of the procedure, we have determined that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the eligibility criteria at Sec.
419.66(b). Specifically, we believe that the AquaBeam[supreg] System is
inserted into the urethra, a natural orifice. We recognize that after
being inserted into the urethra, the device then ablates both the
prostatic urethra and the prostate tissue in order to relieve and treat
the symptoms of BPH.
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously in effect, and was not being
paid for as an outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. In the
proposed rule, we had not identified an existing pass-through payment
category that describes the AquaBeam[supreg] System. The applicant
proposed a category descriptor for the AquaBeam[supreg] System of
``Probe, image guided, robotic resection of prostate.'' We invited
public comments on whether the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets this
criterion.
We did not receive public comments that identified an existing
pass-through payment category that describes the AquaBeam[supreg]
System. We believe that the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets this
criterion.
The second criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(2), provides that CMS determines that a device to be included
in the category has demonstrated that it will substantially improve the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously established category or other
available treatment. The applicant stated that the AquaBeam[supreg]
System provides a substantial clinical improvement as the first
autonomous tissue resection robot for the treatment of lower urinary
tract symptoms due to BPH. The applicant further provided that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System is also a substantial clinical improvement
because the Aquablation procedure demonstrated superior
[[Page 61284]]
efficacy and safety for larger prostates (prostates sized 50-80 mL) as
compared to transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP). The
applicant also believes that the Aquablation procedure would provide
better outcomes for patients with large prostates (>80 mL) who may
undergo open prostatectomy whereas the open prostatectomy procedure
would require a hospital inpatient admission. With respect to this
criterion, the applicant submitted several articles that examined the
use of a current standard treatment for BPH--transurethral
prostatectomy TURP, including complications associated with the
procedure and the comparison of the effectiveness of TURP to other
modalities used to treat BPH, including holmium laser enucleation of
the prostate (HoLEP) \28\ and photoselective vaporization (PVP).\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Montorsi, F. et al.: Holmium Laser Enucleation Versus
Transurethral Resection of The Prostate: Results from A 2-Center,
Prospective, Randomized Trial In Patients With Obstructive Benign
Prostatic Hyperplasia. J. Urol. 172, 1926-1929 (2004).
\29\ Bachmann A, et al.: 180-W XPS GreenLight laser vaporisation
versus transurethral resection of the prostate for the treatment of
benign prostatic obstruction: 6-month safety and efficacy results of
a European Multicentre Randomised Trial--the GOLIATH study. Eur
Urol, 2014;65(5):931-42.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The most recent clinical study involving the AquaBeam[supreg]
System was an accepted manuscript describing a double-blind trial that
compared men treated with the AquaBeam[supreg] System versus men
treated with traditional TURP.\30\ This was a multicenter study in 4
countries with 17 sites, 6 of which contributed 5 patients or fewer.
Patients were randomized to receive treatment with either the
AquaBeam[supreg] System or TURP in a two-to-one ratio. With exclusions
and dropouts, 117 patients were treated with the AquaBeam[supreg]
System and 67 patients with TURP. The data on efficacy supported the
equivalence of the two procedures based upon noninferiority analysis.
The safety data were reported as showing superiority of the
AquaBeam[supreg] System over TURP, although the data were difficult to
track because adverse consequences were combined into categories. The
applicant claimed that the International Prostate Symptom Scores (IPPS)
were significantly improved in AquaBeam[supreg] System patients as
compared to TURP patients in men whose prostate was greater the 50 mL
in size. The applicant also claimed that the proportion of men with a
worsening of sexual function (as shown with a decrease in Male Sexual
Health Questionnaire for Ejaculatory Dysfunction (MSHQ) score of at
least 2 points or a decrease in International Index of Erectile
Function (IIEF-5) score of at least 6 points by 6 months) was lower for
the Aquablation procedure at 32.9 percent compared to the TURP groups
at 52.8 percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Gilling P. Barber M. Anderson P et al.: WATER--A Double-
Blind Randomized Controlled Trial of Aquablation vs Transurethal
Resection of the Prostate in Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia. J Urol.
Accepted December 29, 2017 doi 10.1016/j.juro.2017.12.065.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we stated that we believed
that the comparison of the AquaBeam[supreg] System with TURP does not
recognize that there are other treatment modalities available that are
likely to have a similar safety profile as the AquaBeam[supreg] System.
No studies comparing other treatment modalities were cited to show that
the AquaBeam[supreg] System is a significant improvement over other
available procedures.
Based on the evidence submitted with the application, we were
concerned that there was a lack of sufficient evidence that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System provides a substantial clinical improvement
over other similar products, particularly in the outpatient setting
where large prostates are less likely to be treated. We invited public
comments on whether the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the substantial
clinical improvement criterion.
Comment: We received several comments regarding the substantial
clinical improvement that the AquaBeam[supreg] System may provide. They
were concerned that the comparison of the AquaBeam[supreg] System with
TURP does not recognize that there are other treatment modalities
available that are likely to have a similar safety profile as the
AquaBeam[supreg] System and that there were no studies provided
comparing other treatment modalities to show that the AquaBeam[supreg]
System is a significant improvement over other available procedures.
The applicant commented that in the FY 2019 IPPS notice of final
rulemaking, CMS concluded that the WATER study findings were
statistically significant and showed Aquablation superior to TURP in
safety, as well as that patients in the WATER study with prostates
larger than 50 mL in volume treated with Aquablation had superior
improvement in quantifiable symptom outcomes.
Additionally, the applicant provided that TURP is the gold standard
and most common treatment for LUTS due to BPH and that through a direct
comparison to TURP, the WATER study demonstrates that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System is a substantial clinical improvement over the
gold standard. The applicant also provides that the direct comparison
to TURP in the WATER study allows a comparison of Aquablation to other
treatment modalities, including transurethral incision of the prostate,
photoselective vaporization prostatectomy, transurethral needle
ablation of the prostate, transurethral microwave therapy, and
prostatic urethral lift. The applicant included several additional
pieces of clinical literature to demonstrate that the above-mentioned
modalties are inferior in efficacy to TURP in numerous objective and
subjective measurers, including peak urine flow, post-void reduction,
and BPH symptom reduction.31 32 33
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ Christidis, D. et al. Minimally Invasive Therapies for
Benign Prostatic Hypertrophy: The Rise in Minimally Invasive
Surgical Therapies, Prostate International. 5, 41-46 (2017).
\32\ Bachmann A, Tubaro A, Barber N et al: 180-W XPS GreenLight
laser vaporisation versus transurethral resection of the prostate
for the treatment of benign prostatic obstruction: 6-month safety
and efficacy results of a European multicenter randomised trial--the
GOLIATH study. Eur Urol 2014; 65: 931.
\33\ Sonksen J et al. Prospective, Randomized, Multinational
Study of Prostatic Urethral Lift Versus Transurethral Resection of
the Prostate: 12-month Results from the BPH6 Study. Eur Urol 2015;
68:643-52.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the applicant provided published data on a list of
all surgical treatment modalities. The applicant claims that based on
this provided data it is evident that larger prostates are a clinical
challenge for all other transurethral surgical approaches to BPH due to
high rates of sexual dysfunction in TURP, SP, PVP, HoLEP, and ThuLEP;
high rates of blood transfusions in TURP and SP; longer operative time
due to the size of prostate in PVP, HoLEP, and ThuLEP; transurethral
resection (TUR) syndrome due to length of procedure; high rates of re-
intervention or secondary procedures in PVP; and, transient
incontinence in HoLEP and ThuLEP. The applicant states that these
complication have traditionally limited the treatment of larger
prostates in the outpatient setting. The applicant further details that
the reason for the increase in complications in large prostates is due
to the length of the resection time required. In support of their claim
of being appropriate for the outpatient study, the applicant restates
findings from the WATER II study, which utilized Aquablation therapy to
treat large prostates 80 to 150 mL in volume, with greater than 50
percent of the cases involving large prostates in the hospital
outpatient setting. The average Aquablation operative time was 37
minutes, including 8 minutes of resection time and 29 minutes used for
planning and robotic programming.
Response: We appreciate the submission of public comments.
[[Page 61285]]
Specifically, we appreciate the additional scientific data provided
that demonstrates the AquaBeam[supreg] System's superiority to other
techniques, specifically for reducing operative time and complications
in general, especially for larger prostates. We agree that the results
of the WATER study are statistically significant with a 95 percent
confidence interval of the difference between AquaBeam[supreg] and TURP
and show AquaBeam[supreg] is superior to TURP in safety as evidenced by
a lower proportion of persistent Clavien-Dindo (CD) Grade 1 adverse
events (incontinence, ejaculatory dysfunction and erectile dysfunction)
at 3 months. We also agree that when considering CD Grade 2 and above
events (events requiring pharmacological treatment, blood transfusions,
or endoscopic, surgical or radiological interventions) the WATER study
demonstrated a superior safety rate to TURP. Additionally, patients
enrolled in the WATER study with prostate sizes greater than 50 mL in
volume and treated with AquaBeam[supreg] had superior BPH symptom
reduction (IPSS) than those treated with TURP, as well as better peak
urinary flow rates at 6 months (Qmax), improved ejaculatory function,
and improved incontinence scores at 3 months.
Additionally, results from the WATER II study for patients with
large prostates demonstrate better outcomes of the AquaBeam[supreg]
System over open prostatectomy, regarding shorter operative time,
shorter length of stay, and decreased rates of severe hemorrhage and
transfusions. We also agree that the minimally invasive nature of
Aquablation offers men with large prostates (>80 mL) an outpatient
option. In conclusion, after review of the additional data and
literature, we agree that the AquaBeam[supreg] System provides a
substantial clinical improvement.
The third criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(3), requires us to determine that the cost of the device is
not insignificant, as described in Sec. 419.66(d). Section 419.66(d)
includes three cost significance criteria that must each be met. The
applicant provided the following information in support of the cost
significance requirements. The applicant stated that the
AquaBeam[supreg] System would be reported with CPT code 0421T. CPT code
0421T is assigned to APC 5375 (Level 5 Urology and Related Services).
To meet the cost criterion for device pass-through payment status, a
device must pass all three tests of the cost criterion for at least one
APC. For our calculations, we used APC 5375, which has a CY 2018
payment rate of $3,706.03. Beginning in CY 2017, we calculate the
device offset amount at the HCPCS/CPT code level instead of the APC
level (81 FR 79657). CPT code 0421T had device offset amount of $0.00
at the time the application was received. According to the applicant,
the cost of the handpiece for the AquaBeam[supreg] System is $2,500.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost significance requirement,
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of devices in the
category must exceed 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of $2,500 for the AquaBeam[supreg] System
exceeds 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount for the service
related to the category of devices of $3,706.03 ($2,500/$3,706.03 x 100
= 67.5 percent). Therefore, we believe the AquaBeam[supreg] System
meets the first cost significance requirement.
The second cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(2),
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of the devices in
the category must exceed the cost of the device-related portion of the
APC payment amount for the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs to be at least 125 percent of
the offset amount (the device-related portion of the APC found on the
offset list). Given that there are no device-related costs in the APC
payment amount and the AquaBeam[supreg] System has an estimated average
reasonable cost of $2,500, we believe that the AquaBeam[supreg] System
meets the second cost significance requirement.
The third cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(3),
provides that the difference between the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category and the portion of the APC payment
amount for the device must exceed 10 percent of the APC payment amount
for the related service. The difference between the estimated average
reasonable cost of $2,500 for the AquaBeam[supreg] System and the
portion of the APC payment amount for the device of $0.00 exceeds the
APC payment amount for the related service of $3,706.03 by 68 percent
(($2,500 - $0.00)/$3,706.03 x 100 = 67.5 percent). Therefore, we
believe that the AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the third cost
significance requirement.
We invited public comments on whether the AquaBeam[supreg] System
meets the device pass-through payment criteria discussed in this
section, including the cost criterion.
Comment: The manufacturer believed that the AquaBeam[supreg] System
meets the device pass-through payment criteria, including the cost
criterion.
Response: We thank the manufacturer for their input. After
consideration of the public comments we received, we believe the
AquaBeam[supreg] System meets the cost criterion and we are approving
it for device pass-through payment status beginning in CY 2020.
(6) EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System
Boston Scientific Corporation submitted an application for new
technology add-on payments for the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System for FY 2020. According to the applicant, the
EluviaTM system is a sustained-release drug-eluting stent
indicated for improving luminal diameter in the treatment of peripheral
artery disease (PAD) with symptomatic de novo or restenotic lesions in
the native superficial femoral artery (SFA) and/or the proximal
popliteal artery (PPA) with reference vessel diameters (RVD) ranging
from 4.0 to 6.0 mm and total lesion lengths up to 190 mm.
The applicant stated that PAD is a circulatory condition in which
narrowed arteries reduce blood flow to the limbs, usually in the legs.
Symptoms of PAD may include lower extremity pain due to varying degrees
of ischemia, claudication which is characterized by pain induced by
exercise and relieved with rest. According to the applicant, risk
factors for PAD include individuals who are age 70 years old and older;
individuals who are between the ages of 50 years old and 69 years old
with a history of smoking or diabetes; individuals who are between the
ages of 40 years old and 49 years old with diabetes and at least one
other risk factor for atherosclerosis; leg symptoms suggestive of
claudication with exertion, or ischemic pain at rest; abnormal lower
extremity pulse examination; known atherosclerosis at other sites (for
example, coronary, carotid, renal artery disease); smoking;
hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and homocysteinemia.\34\ PAD is primarily
caused by atherosclerosis--the buildup of fatty plaque in the arteries.
PAD can occur in any blood vessel, but it is more common in the legs
than the arms. Approximately 8.5 million people in the U.S. have PAD,
including 12 to 20
[[Page 61286]]
percent of individuals who are age 60 years old and older.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ Neschis, David G. & MD, Golden, M., ``Clinical features and
diagnosis of lower extremity peripheral artery disease.'' Available
at: https://www.uptodate.com/contents/clinical-features-and-diagnosis-of-lower-extremity-peripheral-artery-disease.
\35\ Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, ``Peripheral
Arterial Disease (PAD) Fact Sheet,'' 2018, Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/DHDSP/data_statistics/fact_sheets/fs_PAD.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Management of the disease is aimed at improving symptoms, improving
functional capacity, and preventing amputations and death. Management
of patients who have been diagnosed with lower extremity PAD may
include medical therapies to reduce the risk for future cardiovascular
events related to atherosclerosis, such as myocardial infarction,
stroke, and peripheral arterial thrombosis. Such therapies may include
antiplatelet therapy, smoking cessation, lipid-lowering therapy, and
treatment of diabetes and hypertension. For patients with significant
or disabling symptoms unresponsive to lifestyle adjustment and
pharmacologic therapy, intervention (percutaneous, surgical) may be
needed. Surgical intervention includes angioplasty, a procedure in
which a balloon-tip catheter is inserted into the artery and inflated
to dilate the narrowed artery lumen. The balloon is then deflated and
removed with the catheter. For patients with limb-threatening ischemia
(for example, pain while at rest and/or ulceration), revascularization
is a priority to reestablish arterial blood flow. According to the
applicant, treatment of the SFA is problematic due to multiple issues
including high rate of restenosis and significant forces of
compression.
The applicant describes the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System as a sustained-release drug-eluting self-
expanding, nickel titanium alloy (nitinol) mesh stent used to
reestablish blood flow to stenotic arteries. According to the
applicant, the EluviaTM stent is coated with the drug
paclitaxel, which helps prevent the artery from restenosis. The
applicant stated that EluviaTM's polymer-based drug delivery
system is uniquely designed to sustain the release of paclitaxel beyond
1 year to match the restenotic process in the SFA. According to the
applicant, the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System
is comprised of: (1) The implantable endoprosthesis; and (2) the stent
delivery system (SDS). On both the proximal and distal ends of the
stent, radiopaque markers made of tantalum increase visibility of the
stent to aid in placement. The tri-axial designed delivery system
consists of an outer shaft to stabilize the stent delivery system, a
middle shaft to protect and constrain the stent, and an inner shaft to
provide a guide wire lumen. The delivery system is compatible with
0.035 in (0.89 mm) guide wires. The EluviaTM stent is
available in a variety of diameters and lengths. The delivery system is
offered in 2 working lengths (75 cm and 130 cm).
With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1),
EluviaTM received FDA premarket approval (PMA) on September
18, 2018. The application for a new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for EluviaTM was received on
November 15, 2018, which is within 3 years of the date of the initial
FDA approval or clearance. We invited public comments on whether the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System meets the
newness criterion. We did not receive public comments in regards to
Eluvia's newness, however, since the application was received within 3
years of the initial date of FDA approval or clearance, we believe that
the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System meets the
newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
according to the applicant, the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System is integral to the service provided, is used for
one patient only, comes in contact with human skin, and is applied in
or on a wound or other skin lesion. The applicant also claimed that the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System meets the device
eligibility requirements of Sec. 419.66(b)(4) because it is not an
instrument, apparatus, implement, or items for which depreciation and
financing expenses are recovered, and it is not a supply or material
furnished incident to a service. We invited public comments on whether
the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System meets the
eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b).
We did not receive any public comments on this issue. We believe
that EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System meets the
eligibility criterion.
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously in effect, and was not being
paid for as an outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. We have not
identified an existing pass-through payment category that describes the
EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System. The applicant
proposed a category descriptor for the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting
Vascular Stent System of ``Stent, non-coronary, polymer matrix, minimum
12-month sustained drug release, with delivery system.'' We invited
public comments on this issue.
Comment: One commenter stated that the stent platform, the drug
coating, and the polymer coating of the EluviaTM Drug-
Eluting Vascular Stent System are not new. The commenter compared
EluviaTM to the Zilver PTX drug-eluting stent, arguing that
both are self-expanding nitinol stents coated with paclitaxel. The
commenter also compared the underlying stent platform and delivery
system of EluviaTM to Boston Scientific's Innova self-
expanding stent.\36\ Finally, the commenter believed that the polymers
used in the EluviaTM coating are the same used in the Xience
V and Promus Element coronary stents.\37\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ Gray W, et al. A polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting stent
(Eluvia) versus a polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX)
for endovascular femoropopliteal intervention (IMPERIAL): a
randomised, non-inferiority trial. Lancet; Published Online
September 22, 2018; https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
\37\ Gray W, et al. A polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting stent
(Eluvia) versus a polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX)
for endovascular femoropopliteal intervention (IMPERIAL): a
randomised, non-inferiority trial. Lancet; Published Online
September 22, 2018; https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Another commenter, the manufacturer, restated that they
are vastly different than the Zilver PTX drug eluting stent, as well as
any other device. The commenter provided that Eluvia's polymer matrix
layer is different from the paclitaxel-coated Zilver PTX, and allows
for targeted, localized, sustained, low-dose amorphous paclitaxel
delivery with minimal systemic distribution or particulate loss. The
commenter also states that there is a difference in the diffusion
gradient: Paclitaxel is delivered to the lesion via a diffusion
gradient with poly(vinylidene fluoride)-co-hexafluoropropylene, whereas
they state that the Zilver PTX does not have a diffusion gradient. The
commenter stated that EluviaTM releases paclitaxel directly
to the target lesion, while Zilver PTX release is non-specific to the
target lesion. The commenter also stated that Eluvia releases
paclitaxel over approximately 12 to 15 months, while Zilver PTX's
release is complete at two months. The commenter stated that these
significant differences in the device designs impact drug dose, drug
release mechanism, and drug release kinetics.
Response: We appreciate the stakeholders' comments and comparison
of the polymer matrix EluviaTM versus the paclitaxel-coated
Zilver PTX and several other devices. After consideration of the
comments, we
[[Page 61287]]
believe that EluviaTM device is a new design with a unique
mechanism of action, and therefore is not described by any current
device category. Therefore, the EluviaTM device meets the
device category eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(2), provides that CMS determines that a device to be included
in the category has demonstrated that it will substantially improve the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously established category or other
available treatment. With respect to this criterion, the applicant
submitted several articles that examined the use of a current standard
treatment for peripheral artery disease (PAD) with symptomatic de novo
or restenotic lesions in the native superficial femoral artery (SFA)
and/or proximal popliteal artery (PPA), with claims of substantial
clinical improvement in achieving superior primary patency; reducing
the rate of subsequent therapeutic interventions; decreasing the number
of future hospitalizations or physician visits; reducing hospital
readmission rates; reducing the rate of device-related complications;
and achieving similar functional outcomes and EQ-5D index values while
associated with half the rate of target lesion revascularizations
(TLRs) procedures.
The applicant submitted the results of the MAJESTIC study, a
single-arm, first-in-human study of the EluviaTM Drug-
Eluting Vascular Stent System. The MAJESTICT \38\ study is a
prospective, multi-center, single-arm, open-label study. According to
the applicant, the MAJESTIC study demonstrated long-term treatment
durability among patients whose femoropopliteal arteries were treated
with the EluviaTM stent. The applicant asserted that the
MAJESTIC study demonstrates the sustained impact of the
EluviaTM stent on primary patency. The MAJESTIC study
enrolled 57 patients who had been diagnosed with symptomatic lower limb
ischemia and lesions in the SAF or PPA. Efficacy measures at 2 years
included primary patency, defined as duplex ultrasound peak systolic
velocity ratio of less than 2.5 and the absence of TLR or bypass.
Safety monitoring through 3 years included adverse events and TLR. The
24-month clinic visit was completed by 53 patients; 52 had Doppler
ultrasound evaluable by the core laboratory, and 48 patients had
radiographs taken for stent fracture analysis. The 3-year follow-up was
completed by 54 patients. At 2 years, 90.6 percent (48/53) of the
patients had improved by 1 or more Rutherford categories as compared
with the pre-procedure level without the need for TLR (when those with
TLR were included, 96.2 percent sustained improvement); only 1 patient
exhibited a worsening in level, 66.0 percent (35/53) of the patients
exhibited no symptoms (Category 0) and 24.5 percent (13/53) had mild
claudication (Category 1) at the 24-month visit. Mean ABI improved from
0.73 0.22 at baseline to 1.02 0.20 at 12
months and 0.93 0.26 at 24 months. At 24 months, 79.2
percent (38/48) of the patients had an ABI increase of at least 0.1
compared with baseline or had reached an ABI of at least 0.9. The
applicant also noted that at 12 months the Kaplan-Meier estimate of
primary patency was 96.4 percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ M[uuml]ller-H[uuml]lsbeck, S., et al., ``Long-Term Results
from the MAJESTIC Trial of the Eluvia Paclitaxel-Eluting Stent for
Femoropopliteal Treatment: 3-Year Follow-up,'' Cardiovasc Intervent
Radiol, December 2017, vol. 40(12), pp. 1832-1838.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With regard to the EluviaTM stent achieving superior
primary patency, the applicant submitted the results of the IMPERIAL
\39\ study in which the EluviaTM stent is compared, head-to-
head, to the Zilver[supreg] PTX Drug-Eluting stent. The IMPERIAL study
is a global, multi-center, randomized controlled trial consisting of
465 subjects. Eligible patients were aged 18 years old or older and had
a diagnosis of symptomatic lower-limb ischaemia, defined as Rutherford
Category 2, 3, or 4 and stenotic, restenotic (treated with a drug-
coated balloon greater than 12 months before the study or standard
percutaneous transluminal angioplasty only), or occlusive lesions in
the native SFA or PPA, with at least 1 infrapopliteal vessel patent to
the ankle or foot. Patients had to have stenosis of 70 percent or more
(via angiographic assessment), vessel diameter between 4 mm and 6 mm,
and total lesion length between 30 mm and 140 mm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ Gray, W.A., et al., ``A polymer-coated, paclitaxel-eluting
stent (Eluvia) versus a polymer-free, paclitaxel-coated stent
(Zilver PTX) for endovascular femoropopliteal intervention
(IMPERIAL): a randomised, non-inferiority trial,'' Lancet, September
24, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patients who had previously stented target lesion/vessels treated
with drug-coated balloon less than 12 months prior to randomization/
enrollment and patients who had undergone prior surgery of the SFA/PPA
in the target limb to treat atherosclerotic disease were excluded from
the study. Two concurrent single-group (EluviaTM only)
substudies were done: A nonblinded, nonrandomized pharmacokinetic sub-
study and a nonblinded, nonrandomized study of patients who had been
diagnosed with long lesions (greater than 140 mm in diameter).
The IMPERIAL study is a prospective, multi-center, single-blinded
randomized, controlled (RCT) noninferiority trial. Patients were
randomized (2:1) to implantation of either a paclitaxel-eluting polymer
stent (EluviaTM) or a paclitaxel-coated stent
(Zilver[supreg] PTX) after the treating physician had successfully
crossed the target lesion with a guide wire. The primary endpoints of
the study are Major Adverse Events defined as all causes of death
through 1 month, Target Limb Major Amputation through 12 months and/or
Target Lesion Revascularization (TLR) procedure through 12 months and
primary vessel patency at 12 months post-procedure. Secondary endpoints
included the Rutherford categorization, Walking Impairment
Questionnaire, and EQ-5D assessments at 1 month, 6 months, and 12
months post-procedure. Patient demographic and characteristics were
balanced between the EluviaTM stent and Zilver[supreg] PTX
stent groups.
The applicant noted that lesion characteristics for the patients in
the EluviaTM stent versus the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent arms
were comparable. Clinical follow-up visits related to the study were
scheduled for 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months after the procedure,
with follow-up planned to continue through 5 years, including clinical
visits at 24 months and 5 years and clinical or telephone follow-up at
3 and 4 years.
The applicant asserted that in the IMPERIAL study the
EluviaTM stent demonstrated superior primary patency over
the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent, 86.8 percent versus 77.5 percent,
respectively (p = 0.0144). The noninferiority primary efficacy endpoint
was also met. The applicant provided that the superior primary patency
results at the SFA are notable because the SFA presents unique
challenges with respect to maintaining long-term patency. There are
distinct pathological differences between the SFA and coronary
arteries. The SFA tends to have higher levels of calcification and
chronic total occlusions when compared to coronary arteries. Following
an intervention within the SFA, the SFA produces a healing response
which often results in restenosis or re-narrowing of the arterial
lumen. This cascade of events leading to restenosis starts with
inflammation, followed by smooth muscle cell
[[Page 61288]]
proliferation and matrix formation.\40\ Because of the unique
mechanical forces in the SFA, this restenotic process of the SFA can
continue well beyond 300 days from the initial intervention. Results
from the IMPERIAL study showed that primary patency at 12 months, by
Kaplan-Meier estimate, was significantly greater for
EluviaTM than for Zilver[supreg] PTX, 88.5 percent and 79.5
percent, respectively (p = 0.0119). According to the applicant, these
results are consistent with the 96.4 percent primary patency rate at 12
months in the MAJESTIC study.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Forrester, J.S., Fishbein, M., Helfant, R., Fagin, J., ``A
paradigm for restenosis based on cell biology: clues for the
development of new preventive therapies,'' J Am Coll Cardiol, March
1, 1991, vol. 17(3), pp. 758-69.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The IMPERIAL study included two concurrent single-group
(EluviaTM only) substudies: A nonblinded, nonrandomized
pharmacokinetic substudy and a nonblinded, nonrandomized study of
patients with long lesions (greater than 140 mm in diameter). For the
pharmacokinetic sub-study, patients had venous blood drawn before stent
implantation and at intervals ranging from 10 minutes to 24 hours post
implantation, and again at either 48 hours or 72 hours post
implantation. The pharmacokinetics sub-study confirmed that plasma
paclitaxel concentrations after EluviaTM stent implantation
were well below thresholds associated with toxic effects in studies in
patients who had been diagnosed with cancer (0[middot]05 [mu]M or ~43
ng/mL).
The IMPERIAL substudy long lesion subgroup consisted of 50 patients
with average lesion length of 162.8 mm that were each treated with two
EluviaTM stents. According to the applicant, 12-month
outcomes for the long lesion subgroup are 87 percent primary patency
and 6.5 percent TLR. According to the applicant, in a separate subgroup
analysis of patients 65 years old and older (Medicare population), the
primary patency rate in the EluviaTM stent group is 92.6
percent, compared to 75.0 percent for the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent
group (p = 0.0386).
With regard to reducing the rate of subsequent therapeutic
interventions, secondary outcomes in the IMPERIAL study included repeat
re-intervention on the same lesion, referred to as target lesion
revascularization (TLR), over the 12 months following the index
procedure. The rate of subsequent interventions, or TLRs, in the
EluviaTM stent group was 4.5 percent compared to 9.0 percent
in the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group. The applicant asserted that the
TLR rate in the EluviaTM stent group represents a
substantial reduction in reintervention on the target lesion compared
to that of the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group (at a p = 0.067 p-value).
The Eluvia[supreg] stent group clinically driven TLR rates through 12
months following the index procedure were likewise lower for U.S.
patients age 65 and older as well as for those with medically treated
diabetes (confidential and unpublished as of the date of the device
transitional pass-through payment application, data on file with Boston
Scientific). In the subgroup of U.S. patients age 65 and older, the
rates of TLR were 2.4 percent in the EluviaTM group compared
to 3.1 percent in the Zilver[supreg] PTX group, and in the subgroup of
medically treated diabetes patients, the rates of TLR were 3.7 percent
compared to 13.6 percent in the Zilver[supreg] PTX group (p = 0.0269).
With regard to decreasing the number of future hospitalizations or
physician visits, the applicant asserted that the substantial reduction
in the lesion revascularization rate led to a reduced need to provide
additional intensive care, distinguishing the EluviaTM stent
group from the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group. In the IMPERIAL study,
the EluviaTM-treated patients required fewer days of re-
hospitalization. Patients in the EluviaTM group averaged
13.9 days of rehospitalization for all adverse events compared to 17.7
days of rehospitalization for patients in the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent
group. Patients in the EluviaTM group were rehospitalized
for 2.8 days for TLR/Total Vessel Revascularization (TVR) compared to
7.1 days in the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group. Lastly, patients in the
EluviaTM stent group were rehospitalized for 2.7 days for
procedure/device-related adverse events compared to 4.5 days from the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group.
Regarding reduction in hospital readmission rates, the applicant
asserted that patients treated in the EluviaTM stent group
experienced reduced rates of hospital readmission following the index
procedure compared to those in the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group.
Hospital readmission rates at 12 months were 3.9 percent for the
EluviaTM stent group compared to 7.1 percent for the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group. Similar results were noted at 1 and 6
months; 1.0 percent versus 2.6 percent and 2.4 percent versus 3.8
percent, respectively.
With regard to reducing the rate of device-related complications,
the applicant asserted that while the rates of adverse events were
similar in total between treatment arms in the IMPERIAL study, there
were measurable differences in device-related complications. Device-
related adverse-events were reported in 8 percent of the patients in
the EluviaTM stent group compared to 14 percent of the
patients in the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent group.
Lastly, the applicant asserted that while functional outcomes
appear similar between the EluviaTM and Zilver[supreg] PTX
stent groups at 12 months, these improvements for the Zilver[supreg]
PTX stent group are associated with twice as many TLRs to achieve
similar EQ-5D index values.\41\ Secondary endpoints improved after
stent implantation and were generally similar between the groups. At 12
months, of the patients with complete Rutherford assessment data, 241
(86 percent) of the 281 patients in the EluviaTM group and
120 (85 percent) of the 142 patients in the Zilver[supreg] PTX group
had symptoms reported as Rutherford Category 0 or 1 (none to mild
claudication). The mean ankle-brachial index was 1[middot]0 (SD
0[middot]2) in both groups at 12 months (baseline mean ankle-brachial
index 0[middot]7 [SD 0[middot]2] for EluviaTM; 0[middot]8
[0[middot]2] for Zilver[supreg] PTX), with sustained hemodynamic
improvement for approximately 80 percent of the patients in both
groups. Walking function improved significantly from baseline to 12
months in both groups, as measured with the Walking Impairment
Questionnaire and the 6-minute walk test. In both groups, the majority
of patients had sustained improvement in the mobility dimension of the
EQ-5D, and approximately half had sustained improvement in the pain or
discomfort dimension. No significant between-group differences were
observed in the Walking Impairment Questionnaire, 6-minute walk test,
or EQ-5D. Secondary endpoint results for the EluviaTM stent
and Zilver[supreg] PTX stent groups are shown in Table 39 as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ Gray, W.A., Keirse, K., Soga, Y., et al., ``A polymer-
coated, paclitaxel-eluting stent (Eluvia) versus a polymer-free,
paclitaxel-coated stent (Zilver PTX) for endovascular
femoropopliteal intervention (IMPERIAL): A randomized, non-
inferiority trial,'' Lancet, 2018. Available at: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32262-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 61289]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.062
We noted that the IMPERIAL study, which showed significant
differences in primary patency at 12 months, was designed for
noninferiority and not superiority. Therefore, we wereconcerned that
results showing primary patency at 12 months may not be valid given the
study design. We also are concerned that the results of a recently
published meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials of the risk of
death associated with the use of paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents
in the femoropopliteal artery of the leg, which found that there is
increased risk of death following application of paclitaxel-coated
balloons and stents in the femoropopliteal artery of the lower limbs
and that further investigations are urgently warranted,\42\ although
the EluviaTM system was not included in the meta-analysis.
We were also concerned that the findings from this study indicated that
the data suggesting that drug-coated stents are substantially
clinically improved are unconfirmed. We invited public comments on
whether the EluviaTM Drug-Eluting Vascular Stent System
meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion, including the
implications of the meta-analysis results with respect to a finding of
substantial clinical improvement for the EluviaTM system.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Katsanos, K., et al., ``Risk of Death Following Application
of Paclitaxel-Coated Balloons and Stents in the Femoropopliteal
Artery of the Leg: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of
Randomized Controlled Trials,'' JAHA, vol. 7(24).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We further noted that the applicant for the EluviaTM
Drug Eluting Vascular Stent System also applied for the IPPS new
technology add-on payment (FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule; 86 FR
19314). In the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, we discussed
several publicly available comments that also raised concerns relating
to substantial clinical improvement. We list several of those concerns
below. While the EluviaTM IMPERIAL study does cite a reduced
rate of ``Subsequent Therapeutic Interventions'', public comments for
the IPPS proposed rule note that ``Subsequent Therapeutic
Interventions'' was not further defined in the New Technology Town Hall
presentation nor in the IMPERIAL study. The commenters stated that it
would appear from the presentation materials, however, that this claim
refers specifically to ``target lesion revascularizations (TLR)'',
which does not appear statistically significant.
With regard to the applicant's assertion that the use of the
EluviaTM stent reduces hospital readmission rates, a
commenter noted that during the New Technology Town Hall presentation,
the presenter noted that the EluviaTM group had a hospital
readmission rate at 12 months of 3.9 percent compared to the
Zilver[supreg] PTX group's rate of 7.1 percent, and that no p-value was
included on the slide used for the presentation to offer an assessment
of the statistical significance of this difference. The commenter noted
that the manufacturer of the EluviaTM stent did not discuss
this particular hospital readmission rate data comparison in the main
body of The Lancet paper; however, the data could be found in the
online appendix and is shown as not statistically significant.
With regards to longer-term data on the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent
and the EluviaTM stent, the commenter noted that in the
commentary in The Lancet paper accompanying the IMPERIAL study, Drs.
Salvatore Cassese and Robert Byrne write that a follow-up duration of
12 months is insufficient to assess late failure, which is not
infrequently observed. According to Drs. Cassese and Byrne, the
preclinical models of restenosis after stenting of peripheral arteries
have shown that stents permanently overstretch the arterial wall, thus
stimulating persistent neointimal growth, which might cause a catch-up
phenomenon and late failure. The Lancet paper noted that, in this
regard, data on outcomes beyond one year will be important to confirm
the durability of the efficacy of the EluviaTM stent.\43\
The commenter stated that, at
[[Page 61290]]
this point in time, very limited longer-term data are available on the
use of the EluviaTM stent and that the IMPERIAL study offers
only 12-month data, although data out to three years have been
published from the relatively small 57-patient single-arm MAJESTIC
study. The commenter noted that the MAJESTIC study demonstrates a
decrease in primary patency from 96.4 percent at one year to 83.5
percent at 2 years; and a doubling in TLR rates from 1 year to 2 years
(3.6 percent to 7.2 percent) and again from 2 years to 3 years (7.2
percent to 14.7 percent). The commenter stated that this is not
inconsistent with Drs. Cassese and Byrne's commentary regarding late
failure, and that the relatively small, single-arm design of the study
does not lend itself well to direct comparison to other SFA treatment
options such as the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ Cassese, S., & Byrne, R.E., ``Endovascular stenting in
femoropopliteal arteries,'' The Lancet, 2018, vol. 392(10157), pp.
1491-1493.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The commenter also stated that EluviaTM's lack of long-
term data contrasts with 5-year data that is available from the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent's pivotal 479-patient RCT comparing the use of
the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent to angioplasty (with a sub-randomization
comparing provisional use of Zilver[supreg] PTX stenting to bare metal
Zilver stenting in patients experiencing an acute failure of
percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA)). The commenter believed
that these 5-year data demonstrate that the superiority of the use of
the Zilver[supreg] PTX stent demonstrated at 12 and 24 months is
maintained through 5 years compared to PTA and provisional bare metal
stenting, and actually increases rather than decreases over time. The
commenter also believed that, given that these stent devices are
permanent implants and they are used to treat a chronic disease, long-
term data are important to fully understand an SFA stent's clinical
benefits. The commenter stated that with 5-year data available to
support the ongoing safety and effectiveness of the use of the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent, but no such corresponding data available for
the use of the EluviaTM stent, it seems incongruous to
suggest that the use of the EluviaTM stent results in a
substantial clinical improvement compared to the Zilver[supreg] PTX
stent.
The commenter further stated that, in addition to the limited long-
term data available for the EluviaTM stent, there is also a
lack of clinical data for the use of the EluviaTM stent to
confirm the benefit of the device outside of a strictly controlled
clinical study population. The commenter stated that, in contrast, the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent has demonstrated comparable outcomes across a
broad patient population, including a 787 patient study conducted in
Europe with 2-year follow-up and a 904-patient study of all-comers (no
exclusion criteria) in Japan with 5-year follow-up completed. The
commenter believed that, with no corresponding data for the use of the
EluviaTM stent in a broad patient population, it seems
unreasonable to suggest that the use of the EluviaTM stent
results in a substantial clinical improvement compared to the
Zilver[supreg] PTX stent.
Based on the evidence submitted with the application, we were
concerned that there was a lack of sufficient evidence that the
EluviaTM Vascular Drug-Eluting Stent System provides a
substantial clinical improvement over other similar products. We
invited public comments on whether EluviaTM Vascular Drug-
Eluting Stent System meets the substantial clinical improvement
criterion.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, stated that the IMPERIAL
trial's design as a non-inferiority study is consistent with accepted
research methodology and is typical of many head-to-head trials of
medical devices. The commenter stated that they defined a pre-
specified, post-hoc superiority analysis before evaluation of the
clinical trial results, the non-inferiority and subsequent superiority
testing methodology and results are not subjected to bias. The
commenter argued that the pre-specified success criteria for
superiority used the same logic as the pre-specified success criteria
for non-inferiority. The commenter stated: ``Eluvia will be concluded
to be superior to Zilver PTX for device effectiveness if the one-sided
lower 95 percent confidence bound on the difference between treatment
groups in 12-month primary patency is greater than zero.'' The
commenter believes that the more stringent one-sided lower 97.5 percent
confidence bound (shown as two-sided 95 percent confidence interval on
the difference between treatment groups) was observed to be greater
than zero and the corresponding p-value was 0.0144. The commenter also
provided that the aforementioned data were published in The Lancet
following its rigorous peer-review process, suggesting that the claims
are not misleading and are supported by valid scientific evidence. The
commenters also claimed that clinical guidelines support performing a
pre-specified post-hoc analysis given specific requirements, that they
believe they met.
Comment: Two commenters mentioned the meta-analysis of paclitaxel-
coated balloons and stents \44\ that initiated an FDA panel and
analysis. The meta-analysis and systematic review of several randomized
controlled trials of the risk of death associated with the use of
paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents in the femoropopliteal artery of
the leg and found that there is an increased risk of death following
the application of paclitaxel-coated devices.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ Katsanos, K., Spiliopoulos, S., Kitrou, P., Krokidis, M., &
Karnabatidis, D. (2018). Risk of Death Following Application of
Paclitaxel[hyphen]Coated Balloons and Stents in the Femoropopliteal
Artery of the Leg: A Systematic Review and Meta[hyphen]Analysis of
Randomized Controlled Trials. Journal of the American Heart
Association, 7(24). https://doi.org/10.1161/jaha.118.011245.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters stated that EluviaTM is different from the
devices that were studied in the meta-analysis of paclitaxel-coated
balloons and stents. Specifically, the commenters claim that
EluviaTM delivers paclitaxel in lower doses than the devices
in the meta-analysis and is the only peripheral device to deliver
paclitaxel through a sustained-release mechanism of action where
delivery of paclitaxel is controlled and focused on the target lesion.
The commenters, including the applicant, believe that the suggestion in
the meta-analysis of a late-term mortality risk associated with
paclitaxel-coated devices is not directly applicable to the
EluviaTM device.
Additionally, the applicant stated that given the differences
between EluviaTM's paclitaxel delivery mechanisms and other
peripheral paclitaxel-coated devices, it would be more appropriate to
examine safety considerations and data for Eluvia relative to products
with similar mechanisms of action and dose levels. The applicant
provides the TAXUS coronary stent as such an appropriate comparator,
stating that Eluvia and TAXUS are similar in design intent and
mechanism of action. In support, the applicant provided additional data
showing a 5-year all-cause mortality observed between paclitaxel-
eluting and bare metal stents. The applicant also stated that coronary
and peripheral atherosclerotic lesions have similar disease
presentation and the same antiproliferative impact of paclitaxel on the
lesions regardless of vessel bed. The applicant recommends that signals
for any potential long-term systemic effects of targeted paclitaxel
eluted from a stent polymer matrix would be apparent in patients
treated with TAXUS. As opposed to the meta-analysis and the resulting
FDA panel analysis, the applicant believes that data on TAXUS can be
used to gauge potential system
[[Page 61291]]
effects of paclitaxel eluted from Eluvia. The applicant argues that the
TAXUS stent's safety and effects has been extensively studied with more
than 14 years of commercial experience and clinical trial data out to
10 years 45 46 47 48 in patients with coronary implants and
5 years for those with infrapopliteal implants. The applicant then
recognizes that mortality rates for patients treated for peripheral
artery disease (PAD) are not directly comparable to rates for patients
with coronary artery or infrapopliteal disease due to appreciable
differences in baseline risk. The applicant states that an additive
effect due to low dose paclitaxel elution over time, if it exists,
would have been observed in patients receiving treatment in these
vessel beds. In regards to the meta-analysis and the risk of late
mortality, the applicant further argues that understanding possible
effects of paclitaxel exposure is not possible without complete
analysis of uniformly re-adjudicated patient level data, particularly
with treatment arm crossover and previous interventions or subsequent
reinterventions with paclitaxel-coated devices, which occurred in the
analyzed studies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ Yamaji K, Raber L, Zanchin T, et al. Ten-year clinical
outcomes of first-generation drug-eluting stents: The Sirolimus-
Eluting vs. Paclitaxel-Eluting Stents for Coronary Revascularization
(SIRTAX) VERY LATE trial. Eur Heart J. 2016;37(45):3386-3395.
\46\ Ormiston JA, Charles O, Mann T, et al. Final 5-year results
of the TAXUS ATLAS, TAXUS ATLAS Small Vessel, and TAXUS ATLAS Long
Lesion clinical trials of the TAXUS Liberte paclitaxel-eluting stent
in de-novo coronary artery lesions. Coron Artery Dis. 2013;24(1):61-
68.
\47\ Kereiakes DJ, Cannon LA, Dauber I, et al. Long-term follow-
up of the platinum chromium TAXUS Element (ION) stent: The PERSEUS
Workhorse and Small Vessel trial five-year results. Catheter
Cardiovasc Interv. 2015;86(6):994-1001.
\48\ Stone GW, Ellis SG, Colombo A, et al. Long-term safety and
efficacy of paclitaxel-eluting stents final 5-year analysis from the
TAXUS Clinical Trial Program. JACC Cardiovasc Interv. 2011;4(5):530-
542.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant also provided responses to several comments that CMS
noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that were originally
mentioned during and following the NTAP Town Hall meeting (84 FR
39479). In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, CMS noted a comment that
showed concern over the EluviaTM IMPERIAL study's citation
of a reduced rate of ``Subsequent Therapeutic Interventions''. The
applicant states that the use of the term ``Subsequent Therapeutic
Interventions'' was used as a lay explanation for target lesion
revascularization. The applicant then states that it has recently
obtained and analyzed IMPERIAL trial 2-year TLR results, which they
also released at the FDA panel meeting on June 19, 2019. The applicant
states that 1-year trial results, published in The Lancet, demonstrated
a 50 percent reduction in TLRs and 2-year data demonstrated a
statistically significantly (p-value not provided) lower rate of repeat
re-interventions at 2 years compared to Zilver PTX. The applicant
states that the clinical impact of fewer TLR procedures is significant
and therefore demonstrates substantial clinical improvement.
The applicant also addressed concerns regarding hospital
readmissions. Specifically, the applicant stated that in the NTAP Town
Hall Eluvia Meeting, they presented 12-month readmission rates for
Eluvia (3.9 percent) and Zilver PTX (7.1 percent), with a self-reported
p-value of 0.1369. The applicant argues that statistical significance
of the 12-month readmission rates should not be expected to be
statistically significant due to the small number of patients. They
conclude their response by stating that the data suggests a lower
patient and health system burden for rehospitalization of patients for
EluviaTM versus patients for Zilver PTX.
Additionally, the applicant responded to concerns regarding long-
term data and real-world evidence, stating that due to the nature of
the transitional pass-through status requirements for medical devices,
EluviaTM is new to the market and would no longer meet the
newness criterion if the applicant were to wait until 5-year data are
available. The applicant further stated that Medicare NTAP precedent
suggests that one-year peer reviewed published results are sufficient
to prove substantial clinical improvement, given that at the time of
Zilver PTX's NTAP approval they only provided 12-month data published
in peer-reviewed literature.\49\ The applicant further argues that
waiting for a substantial amount of real-world evidence for the use of
the Eluvia\TM\ drug-eluting stent would disqualify the technology for
the transitional pass-through consideration, as the technology would no
longer be considered new by the time the data are available.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ 84 FR 39479.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We appreciate the comments. We are aware of FDA's actions
in regards to the meta-analysis of paclitaxel devices and the late
mortality signal in patients treated for PAD with paclitaxel-coated
balloons and paclitaxel-eluting stents. We agree with the applicant
that mortality rates for patients treated for peripheral artery disease
are not directly comparable to rates for patients with coronary artery
or infrapopliteal. We have continued to closely follow FDA's guidance
and recommendations for the use of paclitaxel-coated balloons and
paclitaxel-eluting stents for PAD, with details provided below.
On June 19-20, 2019, FDA convened a public meeting of the
Circulatory System Devices Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory
Committee to discuss, analyze, and make recommendations on the topic of
a potential late mortality signal after treatment of PAD in the
femoropopliteal artery with paclitaxel-coated balloons and paclitaxel-
eluting stents. The Panel concluded that a late mortality signal
associated with the use of paclitaxel-coated devices to treat
femoropopliteal PAD was present. With that, the Panel and FDA
cautiously interpreted the magnitude of the signal due to multiple
limitations in the available data including: Wide confidence intervals
due to a small sample size, pooling of studies of different paclitaxel-
coated devices that were not intended to be combined, substantial
amounts of missing study data, no clear evidence of a paclitaxel dose
effect on mortality, and no identified pathophysiologic mechanism for
the late deaths. The Panel and FDA further concluded that additional
clinical study data are needed to fully evaluate the late mortality
signal.
As of August 7, 2019,\50\ FDA continues to actively work with the
manufacturers and investigators on developing additional clinical
evidence to better assess the long-term safety of paclitaxel-coated
devices. They continue to assert that data could potentially suggest
that paclitaxel-coated balloons and stents may improve blood flow to
the legs and decrease the likelihood of repeat procedures to reopen
blocked blood vessels compared to uncoated devices. However, they also
continue to stress the importance of clinicians weighing potential
benefits of the paclitaxel-coated devices with the potential risks,
including late mortality.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/letters-health-care-providers/august-7-2019-update-treatment-peripheral-arterial-disease-paclitaxel-coated-balloons-and-paclitaxel.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of public comments and the latest available
information from FDA advisory panel, we note that FDA's panel's has
continued to review data that has identified a potentially concerning
signal of increased long-term mortality in study subjects treated with
paclitaxel-coated products compared to patients treated with uncoated
devices. We also note that FDA determined that the analysis revealed no
clear evidence of a
[[Page 61292]]
paclitaxel dose effect on mortality. While FDA continues to further
evaluate the increased long-term mortality signal and its impact on the
overall benefit-risk profile of these devices, we remain concerned that
we do not have enough information to determine that the
EluviaTM device represents a substantial clinical
improvement over existing devices. Therefore, we are not approving the
EluviaTM device for CY 2020 device transitional payment. We
will continue to monitor any new information and/or recommendations as
they become available.
(7) AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft
Wright Medical submitted an application for a new device category
for transitional pass-through payment status for the AUGMENT[supreg]
Bone Graft. The applicant describes AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft as a
device/drug indicated for use as an alternative to autograft in
arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hindfoot where the need for
supplemental graft material is required. The applicant stated that the
product has two components: Recombinant human platelet-derived growth
factor-BB (rhPDGF-BB) solution (0.3 mg/mL) and Beta-tricalcium
phosphate ([beta]-TCP) granules (1000-2000 [mu]m). The two components
are combined at the point of use and applied to the surgical site. The
beta-TCP provides a porous osteoconductive scaffold for new bone growth
and the rhPDGF-BB, which act as an osteoinductive chemo-attractant and
mitogen for cells involved in wound healing and through promotion of
angiogenesis.
According to the applicant, the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft is
indicated for use in arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hindfoot due to
osteoarthritis, post-traumatic arthritis (PTA), rheumatoid arthritis,
psoriatic arthritis, avascular necrosis, joint instability, joint
deformity, congenital defect or joint arthropathy as an alternative to
autograft in patients needing graft material. Osteoarthritis is the
most common joint disease among middle aged and older individuals and
has been shown to also have health related mental and physical
disabilities, which can be compared to the severity as patients with
end-stage hip arthritis.\51\ Additionally, post-traumatic arthritis
develops after an acute direct trauma to the joint and can cause 12
percent of all osteoarthritis cases.\52\ Common causes leading to PTOA
include intra-articular fractures and meniscal, ligamentous and
chondral injuries.\53\ The ankle is cited as the most affected joint,
reportedly accounting for 54 to 78 percent of over 300,000 injuries
occurring in the USA annually. The applicant stated that autologous
bone graft has often been used in ankle arthrodesis. Autologous bone is
retrieved from a donor site, which may require an incision separate
from the arthrodesis.\54\ The applicant stated that, in these
procedures, harvested autologous bone graft is implanted to stimulate
healing between the bones across a diseased joint. The applicant
further stated that the procedures may require the use of synthetic
bone substitutes to fill the bony voids or gaps or to serve as an
alternative to the autograft where autograft is not feasible. The
applicant stated that the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft removes the need
for autologous retrieval. The applicant noted that during the
procedure, the surgeon prepares the joint for the graft application and
locates any potential bony defect, then applying and packing the
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft into the joint defects intended for
arthrodesis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ Greaser M, Ellington JK. 2014. ``Ankle arthritis.'' Journal
of Arthritis, 3:129. doi:10.4172/2167-7921.1000129.
\52\ Punzi, Leonardo et al. 2016. ``Post-traumatic arthritis:
overview on pathogenic mechanisms and role of inflammation.''
Rheumatic & Musculoskeletal Diseases. RMD open, 2(2), e000279.
doi:10.1136/rmdopen-2016-000279.
\53\ Ibid.
\54\ Lareau, Craig R. et al. 2015.''Does autogenous bone graft
work? A logistic regression analysis of data from 159 papers in the
foot and ankle literature.'' Foot and Ankle Surgery. 21 (3):150-59.
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With respect to the newness criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(1), FDA
granted the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft premarket approval on September
1, 2015. The application for a new device category for transitional
pass-through payment status for the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft was
received May 31, 2018, which is within 3 years of the date of the
initial FDA approval or clearance. We invited public comments on
whether the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the newness criterion.
Comment: We received one comment from the manufacturer restating
the date of their application and their initial FDA approval or
clearance.
Response: As the application was received within 3 years of the
date of the initial FDA approval or clearance, we believe that
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the newness criterion.
With respect to the eligibility criterion at Sec. 419.66(b)(3),
according to the applicant, the use of the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft
is integral to the service provided, is used for one patient only,
comes in contact with human skin, and is applied in or on a wound or
other skin lesion. The applicant also claimed that the AUGMENT[supreg]
Bone Graft meets the device eligibility requirements of Sec.
419.66(b)(4) because it is not an instrument, apparatus, implement, or
items for which depreciation and financing expenses are recovered, and
it is not a supply or material furnished incident to a service.
The criteria for establishing new device categories are specified
at Sec. 419.66(c). The first criterion, at Sec. 419.66(c)(1),
provides that CMS determines that a device to be included in the
category is not appropriately described by any of the existing
categories or by any category previously in effect, and was not being
paid for as an outpatient service as of December 31, 1996. We have not
identified an existing pass-through payment category that describes the
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft. The applicant proposed a category
descriptor for the AUGMENT[supreg] of ``rhPDGF-BB and [beta]-TCP as an
alternative to autograft in arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hindfoot.''
We did not receive any public comments on these issue. We continue
to believe that there is no existing pass-through category that
describes AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft and have determined that
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets this eligibility criterion.
The second criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(2), provides that CMS determines that a device to be included
in the category has demonstrated that it will substantially improve the
diagnosis or treatment of an illness or injury or improve the
functioning of a malformed body part compared to the benefits of a
device or devices in a previously established category or other
available treatment. The applicant claims that the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone
Graft provides a substantial clinical improvement over autograft
procedures by reducing pain at the autograft donor site. With respect
to this criterion, the applicant submitted data that examined the use
of autograft arthrodesis of the ankle and/or hind foot and arthrodesis
with the use of the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft.
In a randomized, nonblinded, placebo controlled, noninferiority
trial of the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft versus autologous bone graft,
the AUGMENT[supreg] arm showed equivalence bone bridging as
demonstrated by CT, pain on weight bearing, The American Orthopaedic
Foot & Ankle Society Ankle-Hindfoot (AOFAS--AHS) score, and the Foot
Function Index to autologous bone graft. The study noted that patients
experienced significantly decreased (in fact no) pain due to
elimination of the donor site procedure. In the autograft group, at 6
months, 18/142 patients (13 percent) experienced pain >20 mm (of
[[Page 61293]]
100 mm) on the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) at the autograft donor site as
compared to 0/272 in the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft group. At 12
months, 13/142 autograft patients (9 percent) had pain defined as >20
mm VAS as compared to 0/272 AUGMENT[supreg] patients.\55\ The VAS has
patients mark a visual representation of pain on a ruler based scale
from 1 to 100. The measured distance (in mm) on the 10[hyphen]cm line
between the ``no pain'' anchor and the patient's mark represents the
level of pain. We were concerned that we are unable to sufficiently
determine substantial clinical improvement using the provided data,
given that a comparison to alternatives to autologous bone graft, such
as the reamer-irrigator-aspirator (RIA) technique were not evaluated.
Specifically, the RIA technique has been suggested in a number of
studies to be a viable alternative to bone autograft, because
autogenous bone graft can be readily obtained without the need for
additional incisions, therefore eliminating pain from an incisional
site.\56\ Another concern was the time period of the study because
certain ankle arthrodesis complications such as ankle replacement and
repeat arthrodesis can happen more than two years after the initial
surgery.\57\ A long-term study of at least 60 months is currently
underway in order to assess long-term safety and efficacy, looking at
the following 4 primary outcomes: bone bridging as demonstrated by CT,
pain on weight bearing, The American Orthopaedic Foot & Ankle Society
Ankle-Hindfoot (AOFAS--AHS) score, and the Foot Function Index. We
believe that this long-term study is necessary for meaningful
information about long-term efficacy of the Augment[supreg] Bone Graft.
Further, there was a notable difference in the infection rate,
musculoskeletal and tissue disorders, and pain in extremity for those
in the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft group. These findings were
unfortunately not tested for significance and also were not necessarily
focused on relevance to the procedure. Should these be significant and
related to the device, these findings would suggest that the adverse
outcomes due to the Augment[supreg] Bone Graft may outweigh its
potential benefits.
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\55\ DiGiovanni CW, Lin SS, Baumbauer JF, et al. 2013.
``Recombinant Human Platelet-Derived Growth Factor-BB and Beta-
Tricalcium Phosphate (rhPDGF-BB/b-TCP): An Alternative to Autogenous
Bone Graft.'' J Bone Joint Surg Am., 95: 1184-92.
\56\ Herscovici, D., Scaduto, J.M. 2012. ``Use of the reamer-
irrigator-aspirator technique to obtain autograft for ankle and
hindfoot arthrodesis.'' The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. 94-
B:75-9.
\57\ Stavrakis, AL., SooHoo, NF. 2016. ``Trends in complication
rates following ankle arthrodesis and total ankle replacement.'' The
Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. JBJS 1453-1458.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We invited public comments on whether the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone
Graft meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
Comment: We received several comments in regards to our inquiry of
whether or not RIA is an appropriate comparator to AUGMENT[supreg] Bone
Graft. Specifically, the applicant asserted that the standard of care
has been autograft, as evidenced by peer-review literature, a review of
claims, and randomized controlled trials. The commenters further
asserted that the RIA technique is another way to harvest autograft,
requires a separate incision, and is not appropriate given the volume
of graft needed for ankle and hindfoot arthrodesis. The applicant
further argued that given that the RIA technique still requires a
separate incision, the concerns surrounding the second procedure,
including pain and potential complications, would still apply. Finally,
the applicant asserted that the RIA technique has additional risks and
complications, including: A steep learning curve for surgeons with the
potential for technical errors creating risk of potential
complications;\58\ select populations for whom the technique is not
appropriate, including patients with osteoporosis and osteopenia, as
well as elderly patients;\59\ and, risk for fractures, penetration of
the anterior cortex, violation of the knee joint, blood loss, and
pressure emboli. 60 61 62
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Haubruck P, Ober J, Heller R, Miska M, Schmidmaier G,
Tanner MC (2018) Complications and risk management in the use of the
reaming-irrigator-aspirator (RIA) system: RIA is a safe and reliable
method in harvesting autologous bone graft. PLoS ONE 13(4):
e0196051.
\59\ Ibid.
\60\ Dimitriou R, Mataliotakis GI, Angoules AG, et al.
Complications following autologous bone graft harvesting from the
iliac crest and using the RIA: a systematic review. Injury. 2011
Sep;42 Suppl 2:S3-15.
\61\ See Complications and risk management in the use of the
reaming-irrigator-aspirator (RIA) system: RIA is a safe and reliable
method in harvesting autologous bone graft, supra.
\62\ See Use of the reamer-irrigator-aspirator technique to
obtain autograft for ankle and hindfoot arthrodesis, supra.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applicant also commented on concerns regarding long-term
outcomes. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we noted a potential
lack of data on AUGMENT[supreg] beyond 2 years after the initial
procedure. In response, the applicant submitted information on ongoing
longer-term post-market surveillance data for AUGMENT[supreg].
Specifically, the applicant describes FDA post-market approval studies
as a post-market requirement for the FDA PMA approval order to be
submitted in Q4 2019.
In response to our concern about potential safety and adverse event
rates, the applicant stated that available data demonstrates that the
benefits of AUGMENT[supreg] outweigh the risks. Specifically, the
applicant stated that although the reported percentage of infection
rates outlined in the FDA's Summary of Safety and Effectiveness Data
were higher for the AUGMENT[supreg] versus autograft, this is due to
various infections unrelated to ankle and hindfoot arthrodesis. The
applicant focused on infections related to the surgical support and
commented that there was a dramatically lower infection rate, not
significantly different between AUGMENT[supreg] versus autograft (p =
0.447). The applicant reported that surgical site infections occurred
in 7 percent of AUGMENT[supreg] subjects and 9.2 percent in traditional
autograft procedure subjects. The applicant also stated that it is
common when studying a novel therapy against an active comparator that
is known to be safe and effective to use a non-inferiority study. The
applicant also stated that they conducted an additional analysis of the
IDE trial data to determine the impact of graft type (AUGMENT[supreg]
Bone Graft versus autograft) and subject age (over 65 vs those 65 and
younger) on fusion outcomes.\63\ The applicant believed that the data
confirm results of prior studies that have found that autograft tissue
quality is affected by age. The applicant suggested that while
AUGMENT[supreg] was non-inferior to autograft overall, the elderly
population data shows better odds of fusion success with
AUGMENT[supreg] compared with autograft.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\63\ Haddad SL, Berlet GC, Baumhauer JF, et al. Impact of
patient age and graft type on fusion following ankle and hindfoot
arthrodesis. Combined Australia & New Zealand Orthopaedic Foot &
Ankle Societies Conference, Surfers Paradise, Queensland, Australia,
2019
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We appreciate the additional information and analysis
provided by the applicant and other stakeholders. After reviewing the
additional information provided by the applicant and other stakeholders
addressing our concerns raised in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we agree with the applicant that AUGMENT[supreg] provides a substantial
clinical improvement by significantly reducing, or eliminating, chronic
pain (measured at > 20mm on VAS) associated with the autograft donor
site with the elimination of the donor site procedure, at 6 months and
12 months. We also note that in subjects 65+, AUGMENT[supreg] was more
than twice as
[[Page 61294]]
likely as autograft to result in fusion.\64\ Finally, after analyzing
the additional data provided through public comment, we believe that
AUGMENT[supreg] will provide a substantial clinical improvement by
reducing chronic pain and also reducing complications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\64\ Ibid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The third criterion for establishing a device category, at Sec.
419.66(c)(3), requires us to determine that the cost of the device is
not insignificant, as described in Sec. 419.66(d). Section 419.66(d)
includes three cost significance criteria that must each be met. The
applicant provided the following information in support of the cost
significance requirements. The applicant stated that the use of the
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft would be reported with CPT code 27870
(Arthrodesis, ankle, open), which is assigned to APC 5115 (Level 5
Musculoskeletal Procedures). To meet the cost criterion for device
pass-through payment status, a device must pass all three tests of the
cost criterion for at least one APC. For our calculations, we used APC
5115, which has a CY 2019 payment rate of $10,122.92. Beginning in CY
2017, we calculate the device offset amount at the HCPCS/CPT code level
instead of the APC level (81 FR 79657). CPT code 27870 had a device
offset amount of $4,553.29. According to the applicant, the cost of the
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft is $3,077 per device/drug combination. The
applicant further provided a weighted average cost of the graft,
accounting for how many procedures required one, two, or three
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft device/drug kits, equaling a weighted
average cost of $6,020.22.
Section 419.66(d)(1), the first cost significance requirement,
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of devices in the
category must exceed 25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount
for the service related to the category of devices. The estimated
average reasonable cost of the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft is more than
25 percent of the applicable APC payment amount \65\ for the service
related to the category of devices of $10,122.92 (($6,020.22/
$10,122.92) x 100 = 59 percent)). Therefore, we believe that the
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the first cost significance
requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\65\ Due to the timing of the application, the AUGMENT[supreg]
Bone Graft cost values were calculated using the 2018 proposed rule
data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The second cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(2),
provides that the estimated average reasonable cost of the devices in
the category must exceed the cost of the device-related portion of the
APC payment amount for the related service by at least 25 percent,
which means that the device cost needs to be at least 125 percent of
the offset amount (the device-related portion of the APC found on the
offset list). The estimated average reasonable cost of $6,020.22 for
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft exceeds the cost of the device-related
portion of the APC payment amount for the related service of $4,553.29
by at least 25 percent (($6,020.22/$4,553.29) x 100 = 132 percent).
Therefore, we believe AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the second cost
significance requirement.
The third cost significance requirement, at Sec. 419.66(d)(3),
provides that the difference between the estimated average reasonable
cost of the devices in the category and the portion of the APC payment
amount for the device must exceed 10 percent of the APC payment amount
for the related service. The difference between the estimated average
reasonable cost of $6,020.22 for the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft and the
portion of the APC payment amount for the device of $4,553.29 exceeds
the APC payment amount for the related service of $10,122.92 by more
than 10 percent (($6,020.22 - $4,553.29)/$10,122.92 x 100 = 15
percent). Therefore, we believe that AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets
the third cost significance test. We invited public comments on whether
the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the device pass-through payment
criteria discussed in this section, including the cost criterion.
Comment: The applicant submitted a comment in support of our cost
analysis of AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft.
Response: We thank the applicant for their comment in support, and
continue to believe AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft meets the cost criteria.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
approving the AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft for device pass-through
payment status beginning in CY 2020.
3. Request for Information and Potential Revisions to the OPPS Device
Pass-Through Substantial Clinical Improvement Criterion in the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS Proposed Rule
As mentioned earlier, section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides for
pass-through payments for devices, and section 1833(t)(6)(B) of the Act
requires CMS to use categories in determining the eligibility of
devices for pass-through payments. Separately, the criteria as set
forth under Sec. 419.66(c) are used to determine whether a new
category of pass-through payment devices should be established. One of
these criteria, at Sec. 419.66(c)(2), states that CMS determines that
a device to be included in the category has demonstrated that it will
substantially improve the diagnosis or treatment of an illness or
injury or improve the functioning of a malformed body part compared to
the benefits of a device or devices in a previously established
category or other available treatment. CMS considers the totality of
the substantial clinical improvement claims and supporting data, as
well as public comments, when evaluating this aspect of each
application. CMS summarizes each applicant's claim of substantial
clinical improvement as part of its discussion of the entire
application in the relevant proposed rule, as well as any concerns
regarding those claims. In the relevant final rule for the OPPS, CMS
responds to public comments and discusses its decision to approve or
deny the application for separate transitional pass-through payments.
Over the years, applicants and commenters have indicated that it
would be helpful for CMS to provide greater guidance on what
constitutes ``substantial clinical improvement.'' In the FY 2020 IPPS/
LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19368 through 19371), we requested
information on the substantial clinical improvement criterion for OPPS
transitional pass-through payments for devices and stated that we were
considering potential revisions to that criterion. In particular, we
sought public comments in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule on
the type of additional detail and guidance that the public and
applicants for device pass-through transitional payment would find
useful (84 FR 19367 to 19369). This request for public comments was
intended to be broad in scope and provide a foundation for potential
rulemaking in future years. We refer readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
proposed rule for the full text of this request for information.
In addition to the broad request for public comments for potential
rulemaking in future years, in order to respond to stakeholder feedback
requesting greater understanding of CMS' approach to evaluating
substantial clinical improvement, we also solicited comments from the
public in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19369 through
19371) on specific changes or clarifications to the IPPS and OPPS
substantial clinical improvement criterion that CMS might consider
making in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule to provide greater
clarity and predictability. We refer readers to the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH
PPS proposed rule
[[Page 61295]]
for complete details on those potential revisions. We noted that any
responses to public comments we received on potential revisions to the
OPPS substantial clinical improvement criterion in response to the FY
2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule, as well as any revisions that might
be adopted, would be included in this final rule with comment period
and would inform future OPPS rulemaking.
Comment: We received one comment addressing this RFI, which
recommended that CMS demonstrate greater flexibility in considering
what constitutes substantial clinical improvement, including evidence
developed through data registries and evidence from markets outside the
U.S.
Response: We thank the commenter for their response. We note that
we accept a wide range of data and other evidence to help determine
whether a device meets the substantial clinical improvement criterion.
4. Proposed Alternative Pathway to the OPPS Device Pass-Through
Substantial Clinical Improvement Criterion for Transformative New
Devices
Since 2001 when we first established the substantial clinical
improvement criterion, FDA programs for helping to expedite the
development and review of transformative new devices that are intended
to treat or diagnose serious diseases or conditions and address unmet
medical needs (referred to, for purposes of this rule) as FDA's
expedited programs) have continued to evolve in tandem with advances in
medical innovations and technology. There is currently one FDA
expedited program for devices, the Breakthrough Devices Program. The
21st Century Cures Act (Cures Act) (Pub. L. 144-255) established the
Breakthrough Devices Program to expedite the development of, and
provide for priority review of, medical devices and device-led
combination products that provide for more effective treatment or
diagnosis of life-threatening or irreversibly debilitating diseases or
conditions and which meet one of the following four criteria: (1) That
represent breakthrough technologies; (2) for which no approved or
cleared alternatives exist; (3) that offer significant advantages over
existing approved or cleared alternatives, including the potential,
compared to existing approved alternatives, to reduce or eliminate the
need for hospitalization, improve patient quality of life, facilitate
patients' ability to manage their own care (such as through self-
directed personal assistance), or establish long-term clinical
efficiencies; or (4) the availability of which is in the best interest
of patients.
Some stakeholders over the years have requested that devices that
receive marketing authorization and are part of an FDA expedited
program be deemed as representing a substantial clinical improvement
for purposes of OPPS device pass-through status. We understand this
request would arguably create administrative efficiency because the
commenters currently view the two sets of criteria as the same,
overlapping, similar, or otherwise duplicative or unnecessary.
The Administration is committed to addressing barriers to health
care innovation and ensuring Medicare beneficiaries have access to
critical and life-saving new cures and technologies that improve
beneficiary health outcomes. As detailed in the President's FY 2020
Budget (we refer readers to HHS FY 2020 Budget in Brief, Improve
Medicare Beneficiary Access to Breakthrough Devices, pp. 84-85), HHS is
pursuing several policies that will instill greater transparency and
consistency around how Medicare covers and pays for innovative
technology.
Therefore, given the existence of the current and past FDA programs
for helping to expedite the development and review of certain devices
intended to treat or diagnose serious or life-threatening or
irreversibly debilitating diseases or conditions for which there is an
unmet medical need), we considered whether it would also be appropriate
to similarly facilitate access to these transformative new technologies
for Medicare beneficiaries taking into consideration that, at the time
of marketing authorization (that is, Premarket Approval (PMA); 510(k)
clearance; or the granting of a De Novo classification request) for a
product that is the subject of a FDA expedited program, the evidence
base for demonstrating substantial clinical improvement in accordance
with CMS' current standard may not be fully developed. We also
considered whether FDA marketing authorization of a product that is
part of an FDA expedited program is evidence that the product is
sufficiently different from existing products for purposes of newness.
After consideration of these issues, and consistent with the
Administration's commitment to addressing barriers to health care
innovation and ensuring Medicare beneficiaries have access to critical
and life-saving new cures and technologies that improve beneficiary
health outcomes, we concluded that it would be appropriate to develop
an alternative pathway for transformative medical devices. In
situations where a new medical device is part of the Breakthrough
Devices Program and has received FDA marketing authorization (that is,
the device has received PMA; 510(k) clearance; or the granting of a De
Novo classification request), we proposed an alternative outpatient
pass-through pathway to facilitate access to this technology for
Medicare beneficiaries beginning with applications received for pass-
through payment on or after January 1, 2020.
We continue to believe that hospitals should receive pass-through
payments for devices that offer clear clinical improvement and that
cost considerations should not interfere with patient access. In light
of the criteria designation as a Breakthrough Device, and because we
recognize that such devices may not have a sufficient evidence base to
demonstrate substantial clinical improvement at the time of FDA
marketing authorization, we proposed to amend the OPPS device
transitional pass-through payment regulations to create an alternative
pathway to demonstrating substantial clinical improvement that would
enable devices that receive FDA marketing authorization and are part of
the FDA Breakthrough Devices Program to qualify for our quarterly
approval process for device pass-through payment under the OPPS for
pass-through payment applications received on or after January 1, 2020.
With this proposal, OPPS device pass-through payment applicants for
devices that have received FDA marketing authorization and are part of
the FDA Breakthrough Devices Program would not be evaluated in terms of
the current substantial clinical improvement criterion at Sec.
419.66(c)(2) for the purposes of determining device pass-through
payment status, but would continue to need to meet the other
requirements for pass-through payment status in our regulation at Sec.
419.66. Devices that have received FDA marketing authorization and are
part of the Breakthrough Devices Program can be approved through the
quarterly process and would be announced through that process (81 FR
79655). Finally, we would include proposals regarding these devices and
whether pass-through payment status should continue to apply in the
next applicable OPPS rulemaking cycle.
As such, we proposed to revise paragraph (c)(2) under Sec. 419.66.
Under proposed revised paragraph (c)(2), we proposed to establish an
alternative pathway where applications for device pass-through payment
status for new
[[Page 61296]]
medical devices received on or after January 1, 2020 that are a part of
FDA's Breakthrough Devices Program and have received FDA marketing
authorization (that is, the device has received PMA, 510(k) clearance,
or the granting of a De Novo classification request) will not be
evaluated for substantial clinical improvement for the purposes of
determining device pass-through payment status. Under this proposed
alternative pathway, a medical device that has received FDA marketing
authorization (that is, has been approved or cleared by, or had a De
Novo classification request granted by, FDA) and that is part of FDA's
Breakthrough Devices Program would still need to meet the eligibility
criteria under Sec. 419.66(b), the other criteria for establishing
device categories under Sec. 419.66(c), and the cost criterion under
Sec. 419.66(d). We noted that this proposal aligns with a proposal in
the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19371 through 19373) and
final rule (84 FR 42292 through 42297) and will help achieve the goals
of expedited access to innovative devices to further reduce
administrative burden.
Comment: MedPAC opposed our proposal and stated that participation
in the FDA Breakthrough Device Program does not necessarily reflect
improvements in outcomes or justify increased payment for Medicare
beneficiaries. MedPAC expressed concern that such a policy would
provide inappropriate incentives for providers to use new technology
without proven safety or efficacy by allowing increased payment for the
new technology.
Most commenters supported the proposal for an alternative pathway
and offered suggestions that they thought would enhance the proposal.
Specifically, commenters requested that CMS expand the alternative
pathway to include other FDA designations, namely the Expedited Access
Pathway and the Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT)
Designation. A commenter requested that similar to the IPPS policy, we
also waive the newness criterion under the alternative pathway.
Commenters also requested that we expand the alternative pathway to New
Technology APCs, drug pass-through payment, and non-opioid
alternatives.
Finally, a number of commenters encouraged us to ensure coverage
for devices that are approved under the alternative pathway.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the alternative
pathway proposal. After reviewing the public comments, we continue to
believe that the benefits of providing earlier access to Breakthrough
Devices can improve beneficiary health outcomes support establishing
this alternative pathway. While we appreciate the commenter's concern
regarding potential negative incentives, we continue to believe that it
is appropriate to facilitate beneficiary access to transformative new
medical devices by establishing an alternative pathway for devices that
receive FDA marketing authorization through FDA's Breakthrough Devices
Program, and not to require substantial clinical improvement as a
requirement for pass-through status for these devices because the
evidence base to demonstrate substantial clinical improvement may not
be completely developed at the time of FDA marketing authorization for
such devices, which would delay their eligibility for pass-through
status.
In regards to expanding the alternative pathway to include pass-
through drugs and New Technology APCs, we continue to believe that it
is appropriate to distinguish between drugs and devices, while we
continue to work on other initiatives for drug affordability; a
priority for this Administration. Importantly, substantial clinical
improvement is not a requirement to be assigned to a New Technology APC
or for drug pass-through status, so it is not necessary to waive such a
criterion under either of these policies. Finally, we appreciate the
commenters' suggestion that we should apply the alternative pathway to
other types of FDA designations and will continue to take those
comments into consideration for future rulemaking, where appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that we revise the effective
date of the policy, and specifically requested that the policy be
effective on or after January 1, 2020 for applications submitted prior
to the September 2019 quarterly application submission deadline.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. We agree with
commenters and do not believe applicants with devices that would
qualify for the alternative pathway should be required to re-submit
their pass-through applications after January 1, 2020 in order to be
considered for the alternative pathway. Therefore, after considering
the public comments we received, we are finalizing a policy that the
alternative pathway will apply for devices that will receive pass-
through payments effective on or after January 1, 2020 and we are
revising paragraph (c)(2) under Sec. 419.66 consistent with this final
policy.
Where we received a device pass-through application by the
September 2019 quarterly application deadline for a device that
qualifies for the alternative pathway and the device meets the other
criteria for device pass-through status, the device can be approved for
pass-through status beginning on January 1, 2020. Similarly, devices
for which we received a device pass-through application prior to the
December 2019 quarterly deadline can receive pass-through status
beginning April 1, 2020, assuming they qualify for the alternative
pathway and meet the other criteria for device pass-through status.
In summary, we are finalizing our proposal with the change to the
effective date suggested by commenters to establish an alternative
pathway to the substantial clinical improvement criterion for devices
that have FDA Breakthrough Devices Program designation and have
received FDA marketing authorization (that is, the device has received
PMA, 510(k) clearance, or the granting of a De Novo classification
request) for devices approved for transitional pass-through status
effective on or after January 1, 2020.
Devices Approved for Pass-Through Status Under the Breakthrough Device
Alternative Pathway
We received two device pass-through applications by the September
2, 2019 quarterly application deadline that have received FDA marketing
authorization and a Breakthrough Devices designation from FDA and that
qualify for consideration under the alternative pathway to the OPPS
device pass-through substantial clinical improvement criterion. These
devices meet the other criteria for device pass-through including the
eligibility criteria under Sec. 419.66(b), the criteria for
establishing device categories under Sec. 419.66(c), and the cost
criterion under Sec. 419.66(d) and are approved for pass-through
status beginning on January 1, 2020.
The devices include: (1) Optimizer[supreg] System which is
discussed earlier in this section and approved under the standard
pathway, and (2) ARTIFICIALIris[supreg] which is an iris prosthesis for
the treatment of iris defects. The ARTIFICIALIris[supreg] application
was received in June 2019 after the March 2019 quarterly deadline for
applications to be received in time to be included in CY 2020
rulemaking. We are approving ARTIFICIALIris[supreg] for transitional
pass-through payment under the alternative pathway for CY 2020. As
previously stated, all applications that are preliminarily
[[Page 61297]]
approved upon quarterly review will automatically be included in the
next applicable OPPS annual rulemaking cycle, therefore a discussion of
this application will be included in CY 2021 rulemaking.
B. Device-Intensive Procedures
1. Background
Under the OPPS, prior to CY 2017, device-intensive status for
procedures was determined at the APC level for APCs with a device
offset percentage greater than 40 percent (79 FR 66795). Beginning in
CY 2017, CMS began determining device-intensive status at the HCPCS
code level. In assigning device-intensive status to an APC prior to CY
2017, the device costs of all the procedures within the APC were
calculated and the geometric mean device offset of all of the
procedures had to exceed 40 percent. Almost all of the procedures
assigned to device-intensive APCs utilized devices, and the device
costs for the associated HCPCS codes exceeded the 40-percent threshold.
The no cost/full credit and partial credit device policy (79 FR 66872
through 66873) applies to device-intensive APCs and is discussed in
detail in section IV.B.4. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. A
related device policy was the requirement that certain procedures
assigned to device-intensive APCs require the reporting of a device
code on the claim (80 FR 70422). For further background information on
the device-intensive APC policy, we refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70421 through 70426).
a. HCPCS Code-Level Device-Intensive Determination
As stated earlier, prior to CY 2017, the device-intensive
methodology assigned device-intensive status to all procedures
requiring the implantation of a device that were assigned to an APC
with a device offset greater than 40 percent and, beginning in CY 2015,
that met the three criteria listed below. Historically, the device-
intensive designation was at the APC level and applied to the
applicable procedures within that APC. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79658), we changed our methodology to
assign device-intensive status at the individual HCPCS code level
rather than at the APC level. Under this policy, a procedure could be
assigned device-intensive status regardless of its APC assignment, and
device-intensive APCs were no longer applied under the OPPS or the ASC
payment system.
We believe that a HCPCS code-level device offset is, in most cases,
a better representation of a procedure's device cost than an APC-wide
average device offset based on the average device offset of all of the
procedures assigned to an APC. Unlike a device offset calculated at the
APC level, which is a weighted average offset for all devices used in
all of the procedures assigned to an APC, a HCPCS code-level device
offset is calculated using only claims for a single HCPCS code. We
believe that this methodological change results in a more accurate
representation of the cost attributable to implantation of a high-cost
device, which ensures consistent device-intensive designation of
procedures with a significant device cost. Further, we believe a HCPCS
code-level device offset removes inappropriate device-intensive status
for procedures without a significant device cost that are granted such
status because of APC assignment.
Under our existing policy, procedures that meet the criteria listed
below in section IV.B.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule are
identified as device-intensive procedures and are subject to all the
policies applicable to procedures assigned device-intensive status
under our established methodology, including our policies on device
edits and no cost/full credit and partial credit devices discussed in
sections IV.B.3. and IV.B.4. of the CY 2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule,
respectively.
b. Use of the Three Criteria To Designate Device-Intensive Procedures
We clarified our established policy in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (82 FR 52474), where we explained that device-
intensive procedures require the implantation of a device and
additionally are subject to the following criteria:
All procedures must involve implantable devices that would
be reported if device insertion procedures were performed;
The required devices must be surgically inserted or
implanted devices that remain in the patient's body after the
conclusion of the procedure (at least temporarily); and
The device offset amount must be significant, which is
defined as exceeding 40 percent of the procedure's mean cost.
We changed our policy to apply these three criteria to determine
whether procedures qualify as device-intensive in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR 66926), where we stated that we
would apply the no cost/full credit and partial credit device policy--
which includes the three criteria listed above--to all device-intensive
procedures beginning in CY 2015. We reiterated this position in the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70424), where we
explained that we were finalizing our proposal to continue using the
three criteria established in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period for determining the APCs to which the CY 2016 device
intensive policy will apply. Under the policies we adopted in CYs 2015,
2016, and 2017, all procedures that require the implantation of a
device and meet the above criteria are assigned device-intensive
status, regardless of their APC placement.
2. Device-Intensive Procedure Policy for CY 2019 and Subsequent Years
As part of CMS' effort to better capture costs for procedures with
significant device costs, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58944 through 58948), for CY 2019, we modified
our criteria for device-intensive procedures. We had heard from
stakeholders that the criteria excluded some procedures that
stakeholders believed should qualify as device-intensive procedures.
Specifically, we were persuaded by stakeholder arguments that
procedures requiring expensive surgically inserted or implanted devices
that are not capital equipment should qualify as device-intensive
procedures, regardless of whether the device remains in the patient's
body after the conclusion of the procedure. We agreed that a broader
definition of device-intensive procedures was warranted, and made two
modifications to the criteria for CY 2019 (83 FR 58948). First, we
allowed procedures that involve surgically inserted or implanted
single-use devices that meet the device offset percentage threshold to
qualify as device-intensive procedures, regardless of whether the
device remains in the patient's body after the conclusion of the
procedure. We established this policy because we no longer believe that
whether a device remains in the patient's body should affect its
designation as a device-intensive procedure, as such devices could,
nonetheless, comprise a large portion of the cost of the applicable
procedure. Second, we modified our criteria to lower the device offset
percentage threshold from 40 percent to 30 percent, to allow a greater
number of procedures to qualify as device-intensive. We stated that we
believe allowing these additional procedures to qualify for device-
intensive status will help ensure these procedures receive
[[Page 61298]]
more appropriate payment in the ASC setting, which will help encourage
the provision of these services in the ASC setting. In addition, we
stated that this change would help to ensure that more procedures
containing relatively high-cost devices are subject to the device
edits, which leads to more correctly coded claims and greater accuracy
in our claims data. Specifically, for CY 2019 and subsequent years, we
finalized that device-intensive procedures will be subject to the
following criteria:
All procedures must involve implantable devices assigned a
CPT or HCPCS code;
The required devices (including single-use devices) must
be surgically inserted or implanted; and
The device offset amount must be significant, which is
defined as exceeding 30 percent of the procedure's mean cost (83 FR
58945).
In addition, to further align the device-intensive policy with the
criteria used for device pass-through payment status, we finalized, for
CY 2019 and subsequent years, that for purposes of satisfying the
device-intensive criteria, a device-intensive procedure must involve a
device that:
Has received FDA marketing authorization, has received an
FDA investigational device exemption (IDE), and has been classified as
a Category B device by FDA in accordance with 42 CFR 405.203 through
405.207 and 405.211 through 405.215, or meets another appropriate FDA
exemption from premarket review;
Is an integral part of the service furnished;
Is used for one patient only;
Comes in contact with human tissue;
Is surgically implanted or inserted (either permanently or
temporarily); and
Is not either of the following:
(a) Equipment, an instrument, apparatus, implement, or item of this
type for which depreciation and financing expenses are recovered as
depreciable assets as defined in Chapter 1 of the Medicare Provider
Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15-1); or
(b) A material or supply furnished incident to a service (for
example, a suture, customized surgical kit, scalpel, or clip, other
than a radiological site marker) (83 FR 58945).
In addition, for new HCPCS codes describing procedures requiring
the implantation of medical devices that do not yet have associated
claims data, in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81
FR 79658), we finalized a policy for CY 2017 to apply device-intensive
status with a default device offset set at 41 percent for new HCPCS
codes describing procedures requiring the implantation or insertion of
a medical device that did not yet have associated claims data until
claims data are available to establish the HCPCS code-level device
offset for the procedures. This default device offset amount of 41
percent was not calculated from claims data; instead, it was applied as
a default until claims data were available upon which to calculate an
actual device offset for the new code. The purpose of applying the 41-
percent default device offset to new codes that describe procedures
that implant or insert medical devices was to ensure ASC access for new
procedures until claims data become available.
As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule
with comment period (83 FR 37108 through 37109 and 58945 through 58946,
respectively), in accordance with our policy stated above to lower the
device offset percentage threshold for procedures to qualify as device-
intensive from greater than 40 percent to greater than 30 percent, for
CY 2019 and subsequent years, we modified this policy to apply a 31-
percent default device offset to new HCPCS codes describing procedures
requiring the implantation of a medical device that do not yet have
associated claims data until claims data are available to establish the
HCPCS code-level device offset for the procedures. In conjunction with
the policy to lower the default device offset from 41 percent to 31
percent, we continued our current policy of, in certain rare instances
(for example, in the case of a very expensive implantable device),
temporarily assigning a higher offset percentage if warranted by
additional information such as pricing data from a device manufacturer
(81 FR 79658). Once claims data are available for a new procedure
requiring the implantation of a medical device, device-intensive status
is applied to the code if the HCPCS code-level device offset is greater
than 30 percent, according to our policy of determining device-
intensive status by calculating the HCPCS code-level device offset.
In addition, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we clarified that since the adoption of our policy in effect as
of CY 2018, the associated claims data used for purposes of determining
whether or not to apply the default device offset are the associated
claims data for either the new HCPCS code or any predecessor code, as
described by CPT coding guidance, for the new HCPCS code. Additionally,
for CY 2019 and subsequent years, in limited instances where a new
HCPCS code does not have a predecessor code as defined by CPT, but
describes a procedure that was previously described by an existing
code, we use clinical discretion to identify HCPCS codes that are
clinically related or similar to the new HCPCS code but are not
officially recognized as a predecessor code by CPT, and to use the
claims data of the clinically related or similar code(s) for purposes
of determining whether or not to apply the default device offset to the
new HCPCS code (83 FR 58946). Clinically related and similar procedures
for purposes of this policy are procedures that have little or no
clinical differences and use the same devices as the new HCPCS code. In
addition, clinically related and similar codes for purposes of this
policy are codes that either currently or previously describe the
procedure described by the new HCPCS code. Under this policy, claims
data from clinically related and similar codes are included as
associated claims data for a new code, and where an existing HCPCS code
is found to be clinically related or similar to a new HCPCS code, we
apply the device offset percentage derived from the existing clinically
related or similar HCPCS code's claims data to the new HCPCS code for
determining the device offset percentage. We stated that we believe
that claims data for HCPCS codes describing procedures that have minor
differences from the procedures described by new HCPCS codes will
provide an accurate depiction of the cost relationship between the
procedure and the device(s) that are used, and will be appropriate to
use to set a new code's device offset percentage, in the same way that
predecessor codes are used. If a new HCPCS code has multiple
predecessor codes, the claims data for the predecessor code that has
the highest individual HCPCS-level device offset percentage is used to
determine whether the new HCPCS code qualifies for device-intensive
status. Similarly, in the event that a new HCPCS code does not have a
predecessor code but has multiple clinically related or similar codes,
the claims data for the clinically related or similar code that has the
highest individual HCPCS level device offset percentage is used to
determine whether the new HCPCS code qualifies for device-intensive
status.
As we indicated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final
rule with comment period, additional information for our consideration
of an offset percentage higher than the default of 31 percent for new
HCPCS codes describing procedures requiring the implantation (or, in
some cases, the
[[Page 61299]]
insertion) of a medical device that do not yet have associated claims
data, such as pricing data or invoices from a device manufacturer,
should be directed to the Division of Outpatient Care, Mail Stop C4-01-
26, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, 7500 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21244-1850, or electronically at
[email protected]. Additional information can be submitted
prior to issuance of an OPPS/ASC proposed rule or as a public comment
in response to an issued OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Device offset
percentages will be set in each year's final rule.
For CY 2020, we did not propose any changes to our device-intensive
policy.
Comment: Some commenters noted that CPT codes 22612 and 64912 had a
device-offset percentage greater than 30 percent and should have been
proposed to have device-intensive status for CY 2020.
Response: We agree with commenters that CPT codes 22612 and 64912
were inadvertently omitted from Addendum P and were not assigned
device-intensive status in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. For the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, the device offset for
both procedures exceeds the 30 percent threshold and these procedures
are assigned device-intensive status for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter requested that we assign HCPCS code C9752 a
higher device offset percentage. Additionally, one commenter requested
that we assign HCPCS code C9754 a higher device offset percentage.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations and
their submission of device pricing information. After reviewing the
pricing information provided by commenters, we believe a default device
offset percentage of 31 percent appropriately reflects the device costs
for these procedures for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter requested we assign device-intensive status
for CPT codes 36904, 36905, 50590, and HCPCS code 0275T for CY 2020.
Response: Using the most currently available data for this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we have determined that the
device offset percentages for CPT codes 36905, 50590, and HCPCS code
0275T are not above the 30-percent threshold and, therefore, these
procedures are not eligible to be assigned device-intensive status.
Additionally, based on the most currently available data for this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we have determined that
the device offset percentage for CPT code 36904 exceeds the 30-percent
threshold and therefore, this procedure is assigned device-intensive
status for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter stated that the device offset for CPT code
53854 should be based on the predecessor code of HCPCS code 0275T and
that CPT code 53854 should be assigned device-intensive status for CY
2020.
Response: We agree with the commenter that, in the absence of
device cost statistics for a particular procedure, we may use the
predecessor code (in this case HCPCS code 0275T) to make a device-
intensive determination. However, we note that the device-intensive
percentage for HCPCS code 0275T is below the 30 percent threshold and,
therefore, we are not assigning CPT code 53854 device-intensive status
for CY 2020.
The full listing of the proposed CY 2020 device-intensive
procedures can be found in Addendum P to this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
3. Device Edit Policy
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR
66795), we finalized a policy and implemented claims processing edits
that require any of the device codes used in the previous device-to-
procedure edits to be present on the claim whenever a procedure code
assigned to any of the APCs listed in Table 5 of the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (the CY 2015 device-dependent APCs) is
reported on the claim. In addition, in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70422), we modified our previously existing
policy and applied the device coding requirements exclusively to
procedures that require the implantation of a device that are assigned
to a device-intensive APC. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, we also finalized our policy that the claims processing
edits are such that any device code, when reported on a claim with a
procedure assigned to a device-intensive APC (listed in Table 42 of the
CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70422)) will
satisfy the edit.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79658
through 79659), we changed our policy for CY 2017 and subsequent years
to apply the CY 2016 device coding requirements to the newly defined
device-intensive procedures. For CY 2017 and subsequent years, we also
specified that any device code, when reported on a claim with a device-
intensive procedure, will satisfy the edit. In addition, we created
HCPCS code C1889 to recognize devices furnished during a device-
intensive procedure that are not described by a specific Level II HCPCS
Category C-code. Reporting HCPCS code C1889 with a device-intensive
procedure will satisfy the edit requiring a device code to be reported
on a claim with a device-intensive procedure. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, we revised the description of HCPCS
code C1889 to remove the specific applicability to device-intensive
procedures (83 FR 58950). For CY 2019 and subsequent years, the
description of HCPCS code C1889 is ``Implantable/insertable device, not
otherwise classified''.
We did not propose any changes to this policy for CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS restore the device-
to-procedure and procedure-to-device edits. Additionally, some
commenters requested specific device edits for total hip arthroplasty
procedures and total knee arthroplasty procedures as well as device-
intensive ``C'' HCPCS codes.
Response: As we stated in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66794), we continue to believe that the
elimination of device-to-procedure edits and procedure-to-device edits
is appropriate due to the experience hospitals now have in coding and
reporting these claims fully. More specifically, for the most costly
devices, we believe the C-APCs will reliably reflect the cost of the
device if charges for the device are included anywhere on the claim. We
note that, under our current policy, hospitals are still expected to
adhere to the guidelines of correct coding and append the correct
device code to the claim when applicable. We also note that, as with
all other items and services recognized under the OPPS, we expect
hospitals to code and report their costs appropriately, regardless of
whether there are claims processing edits in place. Further, we also
note that our current device edit policy requires hospitals to report a
device for certain device-intensive procedures, which include total
knee arthroplasty, device-intensive ``C'' HCPCS codes, as well as total
hip arthroplasty beginning in CY 2020.
4. Adjustment to OPPS Payment for No Cost/Full Credit and Partial
Credit Devices
a. Background
To ensure equitable OPPS payment when a hospital receives a device
without cost or with full credit, in CY 2007, we implemented a policy
to
[[Page 61300]]
reduce the payment for specified device-dependent APCs by the estimated
portion of the APC payment attributable to device costs (that is, the
device offset) when the hospital receives a specified device at no cost
or with full credit (71 FR 68071 through 68077). Hospitals were
instructed to report no cost/full credit device cases on the claim
using the ``FB'' modifier on the line with the procedure code in which
the no cost/full credit device is used. In cases in which the device is
furnished without cost or with full credit, hospitals were instructed
to report a token device charge of less than $1.01. In cases in which
the device being inserted is an upgrade (either of the same type of
device or to a different type of device) with a full credit for the
device being replaced, hospitals were instructed to report as the
device charge the difference between the hospital's usual charge for
the device being implanted and the hospital's usual charge for the
device for which it received full credit. In CY 2008, we expanded this
payment adjustment policy to include cases in which hospitals receive
partial credit of 50 percent or more of the cost of a specified device.
Hospitals were instructed to append the ``FC'' modifier to the
procedure code that reports the service provided to furnish the device
when they receive a partial credit of 50 percent or more of the cost of
the new device. We refer readers to the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period for more background information on the ``FB'' and
``FC'' modifiers payment adjustment policies (72 FR 66743 through
66749).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 75005
through 75007), beginning in CY 2014, we modified our policy of
reducing OPPS payment for specified APCs when a hospital furnishes a
specified device without cost or with a full or partial credit. For CY
2013 and prior years, our policy had been to reduce OPPS payment by 100
percent of the device offset amount when a hospital furnishes a
specified device without cost or with a full credit and by 50 percent
of the device offset amount when the hospital receives partial credit
in the amount of 50 percent or more of the cost for the specified
device. For CY 2014, we reduced OPPS payment, for the applicable APCs,
by the full or partial credit a hospital receives for a replaced
device. Specifically, under this modified policy, hospitals are
required to report on the claim the amount of the credit in the amount
portion for value code ``FD'' (Credit Received from the Manufacturer
for a Replaced Medical Device) when the hospital receives a credit for
a replaced device that is 50 percent or greater than the cost of the
device. For CY 2014, we also limited the OPPS payment deduction for the
applicable APCs to the total amount of the device offset when the
``FD'' value code appears on a claim. For CY 2015, we continued our
policy of reducing OPPS payment for specified APCs when a hospital
furnishes a specified device without cost or with a full or partial
credit and to use the three criteria established in the CY 2007 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (71 FR 68072 through 68077) for
determining the APCs to which our CY 2015 policy will apply (79 FR
66872 through 66873). In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70424), we finalized our policy to no longer specify a
list of devices to which the OPPS payment adjustment for no cost/full
credit and partial credit devices would apply and instead apply this
APC payment adjustment to all replaced devices furnished in conjunction
with a procedure assigned to a device-intensive APC when the hospital
receives a credit for a replaced specified device that is 50 percent or
greater than the cost of the device.
b. Policy for No Cost/Full Credit and Partial Credit Devices
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79659
through 79660), for CY 2017 and subsequent years, we finalized our
policy to reduce OPPS payment for device-intensive procedures, by the
full or partial credit a provider receives for a replaced device, when
a hospital furnishes a specified device without cost or with a full or
partial credit. Under our current policy, hospitals continue to be
required to report on the claim the amount of the credit in the amount
portion for value code ``FD'' when the hospital receives a credit for a
replaced device that is 50 percent or greater than the cost of the
device.
We did not propose any changes to our no cost/full credit and
partial credit device policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
5. Payment Policy for Low-Volume Device-Intensive Procedures
In CY 2016, we used our equitable adjustment authority under
section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act and used the median cost (instead of
the geometric mean cost per our standard methodology) to calculate the
payment rate for the implantable miniature telescope procedure
described by CPT code 0308T (Insertion of ocular telescope prosthesis
including removal of crystalline lens or intraocular lens prosthesis),
which is the only code assigned to APC 5494 (Level 4 Intraocular
Procedures) (80 FR 70388). We noted that, as stated in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (81 FR 45656), we proposed to reassign the
procedure described by CPT code 0308T to APC 5495 (Level 5 Intraocular
Procedures) for CY 2017, but it would be the only procedure code
assigned to APC 5495. The payment rates for a procedure described by
CPT code 0308T (including the predecessor HCPCS code C9732) were
$15,551 in CY 2014, $23,084 in CY 2015, and $17,551 in CY 2016. The
procedure described by CPT code 0308T is a high-cost device-intensive
surgical procedure that has a very low volume of claims (in part
because most of the procedures described by CPT code 0308T are
performed in ASCs). We believe that the median cost is a more
appropriate measure of the central tendency for purposes of calculating
the cost and the payment rate for this procedure because the median
cost is impacted to a lesser degree than the geometric mean cost by
more extreme observations. We stated that, in future rulemaking, we
would consider proposing a general policy for the payment rate
calculation for very low-volume device-intensive APCs (80 FR 70389).
For CY 2017, we proposed and finalized a payment policy for low-
volume device-intensive procedures that is similar to the policy
applied to the procedure described by CPT code 0308T in CY 2016. In the
CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79660 through
79661), we established our current policy that the payment rate for any
device-intensive procedure that is assigned to a clinical APC with
fewer than 100 total claims for all procedures in the APC be calculated
using the median cost instead of the geometric mean cost, for the
reasons described above for the policy applied to the procedure
described by CPT code 0308T in CY 2016. The CY 2018 final rule
geometric mean cost for the procedure described by CPT code 0308T
(based on 19 claims containing the device HCPCS C-code, in accordance
with the device-intensive edit policy) was $21,302, and the median cost
was $19,521. The final CY 2018 payment rate (calculated using the
median cost) was $17,560.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
58951), for CY 2019, we continued with our policy of establishing the
payment rate for any device-intensive procedure that is assigned to a
clinical APC with fewer
[[Page 61301]]
than 100 total claims for all procedures in the APC based on
calculations using the median cost instead of the geometric mean cost.
For more information on the specific policy for assignment of low-
volume device-intensive procedures for CY 2019, we refer readers to
section III.D.13. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58917 through 58918).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue our current policy of
establishing the payment rate for any device-intensive procedure that
is assigned to a clinical APC with fewer than 100 total claims for all
procedures in the APC using the median cost instead of the geometric
mean cost. For CY 2020, this policy would apply to CPT code 0308T,
which we proposed to assign to APC 5495 (Level 5 Intraocular
Procedures) in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. The CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule geometric mean cost for the procedure described by CPT
code 0308T (based on 7 claims containing the device HCPCS C-code, in
accordance with the device-intensive edit policy) was $28,237, and the
median cost was $19,270. The proposed CY 2020 payment rate (calculated
using the median cost) was $19,740 and can be found in Addendum B to
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is available via the internet
on the CMS website).
V. OPPS Payment Changes for Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals
A. OPPS Transitional Pass-Through Payment for Additional Costs of
Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(6) of the Act provides for temporary additional
payments or ``transitional pass-through payments'' for certain drugs
and biologicals. Throughout the proposed rule, the term ``biological''
is used because this is the term that appears in section 1861(t) of the
Act. A ``biological'' as used in the proposed rule includes (but is not
necessarily limited to) a ``biological product'' or a ``biologic'' as
defined under section 351 of the Public Health Service Act. As enacted
by the Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Balanced Budget Refinement Act of
1999 (BBRA) (Pub. L. 106-113), this pass-through payment provision
requires the Secretary to make additional payments to hospitals for:
Current orphan drugs for rare disease and conditions, as designated
under section 526 of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act; current
drugs and biologicals and brachytherapy sources used in cancer therapy;
and current radiopharmaceutical drugs and biologicals. ``Current''
refers to those types of drugs or biologicals mentioned above that are
hospital outpatient services under Medicare Part B for which
transitional pass-through payment was made on the first date the
hospital OPPS was implemented.
Transitional pass-through payments also are provided for certain
``new'' drugs and biologicals that were not being paid for as an HOPD
service as of December 31, 1996 and whose cost is ``not insignificant''
in relation to the OPPS payments for the procedures or services
associated with the new drug or biological. For pass-through payment
purposes, radiopharmaceuticals are included as ``drugs.'' As required
by statute, transitional pass-through payments for a drug or biological
described in section 1833(t)(6)(C)(i)(II) of the Act can be made for a
period of at least 2 years, but not more than 3 years, after the
payment was first made for the product as a hospital outpatient service
under Medicare Part B. Proposed CY 2020 pass-through drugs and
biologicals and their designated APCs are assigned status indicator
``G'' in Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (which are available via
the internet on the CMS website).
Section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act specifies that the pass-through
payment amount, in the case of a drug or biological, is the amount by
which the amount determined under section 1842(o) of the Act for the
drug or biological exceeds the portion of the otherwise applicable
Medicare OPD fee schedule that the Secretary determines is associated
with the drug or biological. The methodology for determining the pass-
through payment amount is set forth in regulations at 42 CFR 419.64.
These regulations specify that the pass-through payment equals the
amount determined under section 1842(o) of the Act minus the portion of
the APC payment that CMS determines is associated with the drug or
biological.
Section 1847A of the Act establishes the average sales price (ASP)
methodology, which is used for payment for drugs and biologicals
described in section 1842(o)(1)(C) of the Act furnished on or after
January 1, 2005. The ASP methodology, as applied under the OPPS, uses
several sources of data as a basis for payment, including the ASP, the
wholesale acquisition cost (WAC), and the average wholesale price
(AWP). In the proposed rule, the term ``ASP methodology'' and ``ASP-
based'' are inclusive of all data sources and methodologies described
therein. Additional information on the ASP methodology can be found on
the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Part-B-Drugs/McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/.
The pass-through application and review process for drugs and
biologicals is described on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/passthrough_payment.html.
2. Three-Year Transitional Pass-Through Payment Period for All Pass-
Through Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals and Quarterly
Expiration of Pass-Through Status
As required by statute, transitional pass-through payments for a
drug or biological described in section 1833(t)(6)(C)(i)(II) of the Act
can be made for a period of at least 2 years, but not more than 3
years, after the payment was first made for the product as a hospital
outpatient service under Medicare Part B. Our current policy is to
accept pass-through applications on a quarterly basis and to begin
pass-through payments for newly approved pass-through drugs and
biologicals on a quarterly basis through the next available OPPS
quarterly update after the approval of a product's pass-through status.
However, prior to CY 2017, we expired pass-through status for drugs and
biologicals on an annual basis through notice-and-comment rulemaking
(74 FR 60480). In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(81 FR 79662), we finalized a policy change, beginning with pass-
through drugs and biologicals newly approved in CY 2017 and subsequent
calendar years, to allow for a quarterly expiration of pass-through
payment status for drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals to
afford a pass-through payment period that is as close to a full 3 years
as possible for all pass-through drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals.
This change eliminated the variability of the pass-through payment
eligibility period, which previously varied based on when a particular
application was initially received. We adopted this change for pass-
through approvals beginning on or after CY 2017, to allow, on a
prospective basis, for the maximum pass-through payment period for each
pass-through drug without exceeding the statutory limit of 3 years.
Notice of drugs whose pass-through payment status is ending during the
calendar year will continue to be included in the quarterly OPPS Change
Request transmittals.
[[Page 61302]]
3. Drugs and Biologicals With Expiring Pass-Through Payment Status in
CY 2019
We proposed that the pass-through payment status of six drugs and
biologicals would expire on December 31, 2019 as listed in Table 14.
These drugs and biologicals will have received OPPS pass-through
payment for 3 years during the period of January 1, 2017 until December
31, 2019.
In accordance with the policy finalized in CY 2017 and described
earlier, pass-through payment status for drugs and biologicals newly
approved in CY 2017 and subsequent years will expire on a quarterly
basis, with a pass-through payment period as close to 3 years as
possible. With the exception of those groups of drugs and biologicals
that are always packaged when they do not have pass-through payment
status (specifically, anesthesia drugs; drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when used in a
diagnostic test or procedure (including diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents, and stress agents); and drugs
and biologicals that function as supplies when used in a surgical
procedure), our standard methodology for providing payment for drugs
and biologicals with expiring pass-through payment status in an
upcoming calendar year is to determine the product's estimated per day
cost and compare it with the OPPS drug packaging threshold for that
calendar year (which is proposed to be $130 for CY 2020), as discussed
further in section V.B.2. of the proposed rule. We proposed that if the
estimated per day cost for the drug or biological is less than or equal
to the applicable OPPS drug packaging threshold, we would package
payment for the drug or biological into the payment for the associated
procedure in the upcoming calendar year. If the estimated per day cost
of the drug or biological is greater than the OPPS drug packaging
threshold, we proposed to provide separate payment at the applicable
relative ASP-based payment amount (which is proposed at ASP+6 percent
for CY 2020, as discussed further in section V.B.3. of the proposed
rule).
The proposed packaged or separately payable status of each of these
drugs or biologicals is listed in Addendum B to the proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS should establish a new
policy to require equal payment for all drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals included in the same CED trial to avoid affecting
the trial by implicitly favoring one product over another through a
higher payment rate. The commenter referenced a current CED trial for
amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) that will be active into CY
2020. (Information on this CED trial can be found on the CMS website at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coverage/Coverage-withEvidence-Development/AmyloidPET.html). In the CED trial, Neuraceq\TM\
(florbetaben F18, HCPCS code Q9982) and Vizamyl\TM\ (flutemetamol F18,
HCPCS code Q9983) have not had pass-through status since December 31,
2018, while a third drug, Amyvid\TM\ (florbetapir F18, HCPCS code
A9586) continues to have pass-through status until September 30, 2020.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter's request that we
establish a policy to require the equal payment of all drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals in the same CED trial. The
payment rate for each product is consistent with current OPPS statutory
requirements. In the case of the particular products mentioned above,
one product has drug pass-through status through September 30, 2020, as
required by section 1833(t)(6)(G), while the pass-through period for
the other products has already expired, meaning payment for these
products is packaged into the payment for the primary procedure.
Further, section 1833(t)(6) establishes the statutory authority for CMS
to provide pass-through payment to cover the additional costs of
innovative drugs including radiopharmaceuticals. All of these products
receive payment that is consistent with statutory and regulatory
requirements and payment will be packaged for all three products once
the statutory pass-through period for Amyvid expires. We note that the
payment rate for each product does not affect the protocol established
under the CED trial because the protocol does not consider the cost of
the radiopharmaceutical used for treatment. Therefore, we expect
providers to make their own decision about which radiopharmaceutical to
use to provide the treatment independent of the payment received for an
individual drug.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to expire the pass-
through payment status of the 6 drugs and biologicals listed in Table
40 below on December 31, 2019.
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4. Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals With New or Continuing
Pass-Through Payment Status in CY 2020
We proposed to continue pass-through payment status in CY 2020 for
61 drugs and biologicals. These drugs and biologicals, which were
approved for pass-through payment status between April 1, 2017 and
April 1, 2019 are listed in Table 15. The APCs and HCPCS codes for
these drugs and biologicals approved for pass-through payment status on
or after January 1, 2020 are assigned status indicator ``G'' in Addenda
A and B to the proposed rule (which are available via the internet on
the CMS website). In addition, there are four drugs and biologicals
that have already had 3 years of pass-through payment status but for
which pass-through payment status is required to be extended for an
additional 2 years, effective October 1, 2018 under section
1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141). That means
the last 9 months of pass-through status for these drugs will occur in
CY 2020. Because of this requirement, these drugs and biologicals are
also included in Table 15, which brings the total number of drugs and
biologicals with proposed pass-through payment status in CY 2020 to 65.
Section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act sets the amount of pass-through
payment for pass-through drugs and biologicals (the pass-through
payment amount) as the difference between the amount authorized under
section 1842(o) of the Act and the portion of the otherwise applicable
OPD fee schedule that the Secretary determines is associated with the
drug or biological. For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to pay for
pass-through drugs and biologicals at ASP+6 percent, equivalent to the
payment rate these drugs and biologicals would receive in the
physician's office setting in CY 2020. We proposed that a $0 pass-
through payment amount would be paid for pass-through drugs and
biologicals under the CY 2020 OPPS because the difference between the
amount authorized under section 1842(o) of the Act, which is proposed
at ASP+6 percent, and the portion of the otherwise applicable OPD fee
schedule that the Secretary determines is appropriate, which is
proposed at ASP+6 percent, is $0.
In the case of policy-packaged drugs (which include the following:
Anesthesia drugs; drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals that
function as supplies when used in a diagnostic test or procedure
(including contrast agents, diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, and stress
agents); and drugs and biologicals that function as supplies when used
in a surgical procedure), we proposed that their pass-through payment
amount would be equal to ASP+6 percent for CY 2020 minus a payment
offset for any predecessor drug products contributing to the pass-
through payment as described in section V.A.6. of the proposed rule. We
are making this proposal because, if not for the pass-through payment
status of these policy-packaged products, payment for these products
would be packaged into the associated procedure.
We proposed to continue to update pass-through payment rates on a
quarterly basis on the CMS website during CY 2020 if later quarter ASP
submissions (or more recent WAC or AWP information, as applicable)
indicate that adjustments to the payment rates for these pass-through
payment drugs or biologicals are necessary. For a full description of
this policy, we refer readers to the CY 2006 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (70 FR 68632 through 68635).
For CY 2020, consistent with our CY 2019 policy for diagnostic and
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals, we proposed to provide payment for
both diagnostic and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals that are granted
pass-through payment status based on the ASP methodology. As stated
earlier, for purposes of pass-through payment, we consider
radiopharmaceuticals to be drugs under the OPPS. Therefore, if a
diagnostic or therapeutic radiopharmaceutical receives pass-through
payment status during CY 2020, we proposed to follow the standard ASP
methodology to determine the pass-through payment rate that drugs
receive under section 1842(o) of the Act, which is proposed at ASP+6
percent. If ASP data are not available for a radiopharmaceutical, we
proposed to provide pass-through payment at WAC+3 percent (consistent
with our proposed policy in section V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule), the
equivalent payment provided to pass-through payment drugs and
biologicals without ASP information. Additional detail and comments on
the WAC+3 percent payment policy can be found in section
[[Page 61304]]
V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule. If WAC information also is not
available, we proposed to provide payment for the pass-through
radiopharmaceutical at 95 percent of its most recent AWP.
We did not receive any public comments regarding these proposals.
Therefore, we are finalizing these proposals for CY 2020 without
modification. We note that public comments pertaining to our proposal
to continue to pay WAC+3 percent for drugs and biologicals without ASP
information are addressed elsewhere in this final rule with comment
period. The drugs and biologicals that continue to have pass-through
payment status for CY 2020 or have been granted pass-through payment
status as of January 2020 are shown in Table 41 below.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
5. Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals With Pass-Through
Status as a Result of Section 1301 of the Consolidated Appropriations
Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141)
As mentioned earlier, section 1301(a)(1) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141) amended section 1833(t)(6)
of the Act and added a new section 1833(t)(6)(G), which provides that
for drugs or biologicals whose period of pass-through payment status
ended on December 31, 2017 and for which payment was packaged into a
covered hospital outpatient service furnished beginning January 1,
2018, such pass-through payment status shall be extended for a 2-year
period beginning on October 1, 2018 through September 30, 2020. There
are four products whose period of drug and biological pass-through
payment status ended on December 31, 2017 and for which payment would
have been packaged beginning January 1, 2018. These products were
listed in Table 39 of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58962).
Starting in CY 2019, the HCPCS code Q4172 (PuraPly, and PuraPly
Antimicrobial, any type, per square centimeter) was discontinued. In
its place, two new HCPCS codes were established--Q4195 (Puraply, per
square centimeter) and Q4196 (Puraply am, per square centimeter).
Because these HCPCS codes are direct successors to HCPCS code Q4172,
the provisions of section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act apply to HCPCS codes
Q4195 and Q4196, and these codes were listed in Table 16 of the
proposed rule (84 FR 39495). For CY 2020, we proposed to continue pass-
through payment status for the drugs and biologicals listed in Table 16
of the proposed rule (we note that these drugs and biologicals are also
listed in Table 15 of the proposed rule) through September 30, 2020 as
required in section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as added by section
1301(a)(1)(C) of the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018. The APCs
and HCPCS codes for these drugs and biologicals approved for pass-
through payment status are assigned status indicator ``G'' in Addenda A
and B to the proposed rule (which are available via the internet on the
CMS website).
We proposed to continue to update pass-through payment rates for
HCPCS codes Q4195 and Q4196 along with the other three drugs and
biologicals covered by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act on a quarterly
basis on the CMS website during CY 2020 if later quarter ASP
submissions (or more recent WAC or AWP information, as applicable)
indicate that adjustments to the payment rates for these pass-through
drugs or biologicals are necessary. The replacement of HCPCS code Q4172
by HCPCS codes Q4195 and Q4196 means there are five HCPCS codes for
drugs and biologicals covered by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act. For
a full description of this policy, we refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58960 through 58962).
The five HCPCS codes for drugs and biologicals that we proposed
would have pass-through payment status for CY 2020 under section
1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018, are shown in Table 16 of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Included as two of the five HCPCS codes
for drugs and biologicals with pass-through payment status for CY 2020
are HCPCS codes Q4195 (Puraply, per square centimeter) and Q4196
(Puraply am, per square centimeter). PuraPly and PuraPly AM are skin
substitute products that were approved for pass-through payment status
on January 1, 2015 through the drug and biological pass-through payment
process. Beginning on April 1, 2015, skin substitute products are
evaluated for pass-through payment status through the device pass-
through payment process. However, we stated in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR 66887) that skin substitutes that
are approved for pass-through payment status as biologicals effective
on or before January 1, 2015 would continue to be paid as pass-through
biologicals for the duration of their pass-through payment period.
Because PuraPly and PuraPly AM were approved for pass-through payment
status through the drug and biological pass-through payment pathway, we
finalized a policy to consider both PuraPly and PuraPly AM to be drugs
or biologicals as described by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the Act, as
added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the Consolidated Appropriations Act
of 2018, and to be eligible for extended pass-through payment under our
proposal for CY 2020 (83 FR 58961 through 58962).
We did not receive any comments on this policy. Therefore, we are
finalizing this proposal without modification. Starting on October 1,
2020, the drugs and biologicals listed in Table 42 will no longer
receive pass-through status, and will be assigned to status indicator
``N'', which means these drugs will once again be packaged in the OPPS.
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6. Provisions for Reducing Transitional Pass-Through Payments for
Policy-Packaged Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals To Offset
Costs Packaged Into APC Groups
Under the regulations at 42 CFR 419.2(b), nonpass-through drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when
used in a diagnostic test or procedure are packaged in the OPPS. This
category includes diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents,
stress agents, and other diagnostic drugs. Also under 42 CFR 419.2(b),
nonpass-through drugs and biologicals that function as supplies in a
surgical procedure are packaged in the OPPS. This category includes
skin substitutes and other surgical-supply drugs and biologicals. As
described earlier, section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act specifies that
the transitional pass-through payment amount for pass-through drugs and
biologicals is the difference between the amount paid under section
1842(o) of the Act and the otherwise applicable OPD fee schedule
amount. Because a payment offset is necessary in order to provide an
appropriate transitional pass-through payment, we deduct from the pass-
through payment for policy-packaged drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals an amount reflecting the portion of the APC
payment associated with predecessor products in order to ensure no
duplicate payment is made. This amount reflecting the portion of the
APC payment associated with predecessor products is called the payment
offset.
The payment offset policy applies to all policy packaged drugs,
biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals. For a full description of the
payment offset policy as applied to diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals,
contrast agents, stress agents, and skin substitutes, we refer readers
to the discussion in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70430 through 70432). For CY 2020, as we did in CY 2019,
we proposed to continue to apply the same policy packaged offset policy
to payment for pass-through diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, pass-
through contrast agents, pass-through stress agents, and pass-through
skin substitutes. The proposed APCs to which a payment offset may be
applicable for pass-through diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, pass-
through contrast agents, pass-through stress agents, and pass-through
skin substitutes are identified in Table 43 below.
We did not receive any comments on this proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing this proposal without modification.
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We proposed to continue to post annually on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Annual-Policy-Files.html a file that contains the
APC offset amounts that will be used for that year for purposes of both
evaluating cost significance for candidate pass-through payment device
categories and drugs and biologicals and establishing any appropriate
APC offset amounts. Specifically, the file will continue to provide the
amounts and percentages of APC payment associated with packaged
implantable devices, policy-packaged drugs, and threshold packaged
drugs and biologicals for every OPPS clinical APC.
B. OPPS Payment for Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
Without Pass-Through Payment Status
1. Criteria for Packaging Payment for Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals
a. Packaging Threshold
In accordance with section 1833(t)(16)(B) of the Act, the threshold
for establishing separate APCs for payment of drugs and biologicals was
set to $50 per administration during CYs 2005 and 2006. In CY 2007, we
used the four quarter moving average Producer Price Index (PPI) levels
for Pharmaceutical Preparations (Prescription) to trend the $50
threshold forward from the third quarter of CY 2005 (when the Pub. L.
108-173 mandated threshold became effective) to the third quarter of CY
2007. We then rounded the resulting dollar amount to the nearest $5
increment in order to determine the CY 2007 threshold amount of $55.
Using the same methodology as that used in CY 2007 (which is discussed
in more detail in the CY 2007 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(71 FR 68085 through 68086)), we set the packaging threshold for
establishing separate APCs for drugs and biologicals at $125 for CY
2019 (83 FR 58963 through 58964).
Following the CY 2007 methodology, for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final
rule, we used the most recently available four quarter moving average
PPI levels to trend the $50 threshold forward from the third quarter of
CY 2005 to the third quarter of CY 2020 and rounded the resulting
dollar amount ($128.11) to the nearest $5 increment, which yielded a
figure of $130. In performing this calculation, we used the most recent
forecast of the quarterly index levels for the PPI for Pharmaceuticals
for Human Use (Prescription) (Bureau of Labor Statistics series code
WPUSI07003) from CMS' Office of the Actuary. For this CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, based on these calculations using the
CY 2007 OPPS methodology, we are finalizing a packaging threshold for
CY 2020 of $130.
b. Packaging of Payment for HCPCS Codes That Describe Certain Drugs,
Certain Biologicals, and Therapeutic Radiopharmaceuticals Under the
Cost Threshold (``Threshold-Packaged Drugs'')
To determine the proposed CY 2020 packaging status for all nonpass-
through drugs and biologicals that are not policy packaged, we
calculated, on a HCPCS code-specific basis, the per day cost of all
drugs, biologicals, and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals (collectively
called ``threshold-packaged'' drugs) that had a HCPCS code in CY 2018
and were paid (via packaged or separate payment) under the OPPS. We
used data from CY 2018 claims processed before January 1, 2019 for this
calculation. However, we did not perform this calculation for those
drugs and biologicals with multiple HCPCS codes that include different
dosages, as described in section V.B.1.d. of the proposed rule, or for
the following policy-packaged items that we proposed to continue to
package in CY 2020: Anesthesia drugs; drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when used in a
diagnostic test or procedure; and drugs and biologicals that function
as supplies when used in a surgical procedure.
In order to calculate the per day costs for drugs, biologicals, and
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals to determine their proposed packaging
status in CY 2020, we used the methodology that was described in detail
in the CY 2006 OPPS proposed rule (70 FR 42723 through
[[Page 61313]]
42724) and finalized in the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68636 through 68638). For each drug and biological HCPCS code,
we used an estimated payment rate of ASP+6 percent (which is the
payment rate we proposed for separately payable drugs and biologicals
for CY 2020, as discussed in more detail in section V.B.2.b. of the
proposed rule) to calculate the CY 2020 proposed rule per day costs. We
used the manufacturer-submitted ASP data from the fourth quarter of CY
2018 (data that were used for payment purposes in the physician's
office setting, effective April 1, 2019) to determine the proposed rule
per day cost.
As is our standard methodology, for CY 2020, we proposed to use
payment rates based on the ASP data from the first quarter of CY 2019
for budget neutrality estimates, packaging determinations, impact
analyses, and completion of Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (which
are available via the internet on the CMS website) because these are
the most recent data available for use at the time of development of
the proposed rule. These data also were the basis for drug payments in
the physician's office setting, effective April 1, 2019. For items that
did not have an ASP-based payment rate, such as some therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, we used their mean unit cost derived from the CY
2018 hospital claims data to determine their per day cost.
We proposed to package items with a per day cost less than or equal
to $130, and identify items with a per day cost greater than $130 as
separately payable unless they are policy-packaged. Consistent with our
past practice, we cross-walked historical OPPS claims data from the CY
2018 HCPCS codes that were reported to the CY 2019 HCPCS codes that we
display in Addendum B to the proposed rule (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website) for proposed payment in CY 2020.
Comment: Two commenters suggested that CMS create an exception to
the drug cost threshold packaging policy in situations where a shortage
of a drug that is packaged under the drug cost threshold packaging
policy requires providers to use a higher-cost substitute drug that
presumably is still packaged because of the drug cost packaging
threshold. The commenters suggested that the substitute drug be
separately paid even though the per day cost of the substitute drug is
still below the drug cost packaging threshold amount.
Response: We thank the commenter for its suggestion but disagree
that such a policy is necessary at this time. We note that the purpose
of the drug cost threshold is to require the packaging of relatively
small per day drug costs into the associated outpatient hospital
procedure. This suggestion runs contrary to our policy goal of bundling
more services to encourage provider efficiency. However, we are
cognizant of issues surrounding drug shortages and will consider this
suggestion for the future.
Comment: One commenter requested that we no longer package HCPCS
code J2274 (Injection, Morphine Sulfate, Preservative-Free For Epidural
Or Intrathecal Use, 10 mg) because the drug is used in an implantable
infusion pump for intrathecal management of pain and/or spasticity, and
another drug, HCPCS code J0475 (injection, baclofen, 10 mg) which can
be used with the same infusion pump, currently receives separate
payment in the OPPS.
Response: We disagree with the commenter. Neither HCPCS code J2274
nor HCPCS code J0475 are classified as drugs that are policy packaged.
We refer readers to section V.B.1.c. for a description of drugs that
are policy packaged. Also, neither of these drugs is assigned to drug
pass-through status. Therefore, we use our drug cost threshold
methodology as described in this section of the rule to determine
whether the drugs are packaged into an associated procedure or if the
drugs are separately paid. The per day cost of HCPCS code J2274 is
below the $130 drug packaging threshold, and therefore, the drug is
packaged in the OPPS. The per day cost of HCPCS code J0475 is above the
drug packaging threshold, and therefore, the drug is paid separately in
the OPPS. The drug packaging threshold is based on the per day cost of
the specific drug administered, and the threshold is not affected by
the means by which the drug is administered to the beneficiary (in this
case, through a pump). In the case brought up by the commenter, the per
day cost of HCPCS code J2274 is below the $130 drug packaging
threshold, and is therefore packaged into the payment for its
associated procedure.
After consideration of the public comments we received, and
consistent with our methodology for establishing the packaging
threshold using the most recent PPI forecast data, we are adopting a CY
2019 packaging threshold of $130.
Our policy during previous cycles of the OPPS has been to use
updated ASP and claims data to make final determinations of the
packaging status of HCPCS codes for drugs, biologicals, and therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals for the OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
We note that it is also our policy to make an annual packaging
determination for a HCPCS code only when we develop the OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period for the update year. Only HCPCS codes that are
identified as separately payable in the final rule with comment period
are subject to quarterly updates. For our calculation of per day costs
of HCPCS codes for drugs and biologicals in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to use ASP data from the fourth quarter of
CY 2018, which is the basis for calculating payment rates for drugs and
biologicals in the physician's office setting using the ASP
methodology, effective April 1, 2019, along with updated hospital
claims data from CY 2018. We note that we also proposed to use these
data for budget neutrality estimates and impact analyses for this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
Payment rates for HCPCS codes for separately payable drugs and
biologicals included in Addenda A and B for the final rule with comment
period will be based on ASP data from the third quarter of CY 2019.
These data will be the basis for calculating payment rates for drugs
and biologicals in the physician's office setting using the ASP
methodology, effective October 1, 2019. These payment rates would then
be updated in the January 2020 OPPS update, based on the most recent
ASP data to be used for physicians' office and OPPS payment as of
January 1, 2020. For items that do not currently have an ASP-based
payment rate, we proposed to recalculate their mean unit cost from all
of the CY 2018 claims data and update cost report information available
for the CY 2020 final rule with comment period to determine their final
per day cost.
Consequently, the packaging status of some HCPCS codes for drugs,
biologicals, and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals in the proposed rule
may be different from the same drugs' HCPCS codes' packaging status
determined based on the data used for the final rule with comment
period. Under such circumstances, we proposed to continue to follow the
established policies initially adopted for the CY 2005 OPPS (69 FR
65780) in order to more equitably pay for those drugs whose costs
fluctuate relative to the proposed CY 2020 OPPS drug packaging
threshold and the drug's payment status (packaged or separately
payable) in CY 2019. These established policies have not changed for
many years and are the same as described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70434). Specifically, for CY 2020,
[[Page 61314]]
consistent with our historical practice, we proposed to apply the
following policies to these HCPCS codes for drugs, biologicals, and
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals whose relationship to the drug
packaging threshold changes based on the updated drug packaging
threshold and on the final updated data:
HCPCS codes for drugs and biologicals that were paid
separately in CY 2019 and that are proposed for separate payment in CY
2020, and that then have per day costs equal to or less than the CY
2020 final rule drug packaging threshold, based on the updated ASPs and
hospital claims data used for the CY 2020 final rule, would continue to
receive separate payment in CY 2020.
HCPCS codes for drugs and biologicals that were packaged
in CY 2019 and that are proposed for separate payment in CY 2020, and
that then have per day costs equal to or less than the CY 2020 final
rule drug packaging threshold, based on the updated ASPs and hospital
claims data used for the CY 2020 final rule, would remain packaged in
CY 2020.
HCPCS codes for drugs and biologicals for which we
proposed packaged payment in CY 2020 but that then have per-day costs
greater than the CY 2020 final rule drug packaging threshold, based on
the updated ASPs and hospital claims data used for the CY 2020 final
rule, would receive separate payment in CY 2020.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal to
recalculate the mean unit cost for items that do not currently have an
ASP-based payment rate from all of the CY 2018 claims data and updated
cost report information available for this CY 2020 final rule with
comment period to determine their final per day cost. We also did not
receive any public comments on our proposal to continue to follow the
established policies, initially adopted for the CY 2005 OPPS (69 FR
65780), when the packaging status of some HCPCS codes for drugs,
biologicals, and therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals in the proposed rule
may be different from the same drug HCPCS code's packaging status
determined based on the data used for the final rule with comment
period. Therefore, for CY 2020, we are finalizing these two proposals
without modification.
c. Policy Packaged Drugs, Biologicals, and Radiopharmaceuticals
As mentioned earlier in this section, in the OPPS, we package
several categories of drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals,
regardless of the cost of the products. Because the products are
packaged according to the policies in 42 CFR 419.2(b), we refer to
these packaged drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals as
``policy-packaged'' drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals. These
policies are either longstanding or based on longstanding principles
and inherent to the OPPS and are as follows:
Anesthesia, certain drugs, biologicals, and other
pharmaceuticals; medical and surgical supplies and equipment; surgical
dressings; and devices used for external reduction of fractures and
dislocations (Sec. 419.2(b)(4));
Intraoperative items and services (Sec. 419.2(b)(14));
Drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals that function
as supplies when used in a diagnostic test or procedure (including, but
not limited to, diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents, and
pharmacologic stress agents) (Sec. 419.2(b)(15)); and
Drugs and biologicals that function as supplies when used
in a surgical procedure (including, but not limited to, skin
substitutes and similar products that aid wound healing and implantable
biologicals) (Sec. 419.2(b)(16)).
The policy at Sec. 419.2(b)(16) is broader than that at Sec.
419.2(b)(14). As we stated in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period: ``We consider all items related to the surgical outcome
and provided during the hospital stay in which the surgery is
performed, including postsurgical pain management drugs, to be part of
the surgery for purposes of our drug and biological surgical supply
packaging policy'' (79 FR 66875). The category described by Sec.
419.2(b)(15) is large and includes diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals,
contrast agents, stress agents, and some other products. The category
described by Sec. 419.2(b)(16) includes skin substitutes and some
other products. We believe it is important to reiterate that cost
consideration is not a factor when determining whether an item is a
surgical supply (79 FR 66875).
We did not make any proposals to revise our policy-packaged drug
policy.
Comment: CMS received several comments from stakeholders regarding
the policy-packaged status of diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals. Several
commenters recommended that CMS continue to apply the nuclear medicine
procedure to radiolabeled product edits to ensure that all packaged
costs are included on nuclear medicine claims in order to establish
appropriate payment rates in the future. There was concern that many
providers performing nuclear medicine procedures are not including the
cost of diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals used for the procedures in
their claims submissions. Commenters believe this lack of drug cost
reporting could be causing the cost of nuclear medicine procedures to
be underreported and therefore requests that the radiolabeled product
edits be reinstated.
Response: We appreciated the commenter's feedback; however, we do
not agree with the commenter that we should reinstate the nuclear
medicine procedure to radiolabeled product edits, which required a
diagnostic radiopharmaceutical to be present on the same claim as a
nuclear medicine procedure for payment under the OPPS to be made. As
previously discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58965), the edits were in place between CY 2008 and CY
2014 (78 FR 75033). We believe the period of time in which the edits
were in place was sufficient for hospitals to gain experience reporting
procedures involving radiolabeled products and to become accustomed to
ensuring that they code and report charges so that their claims fully
and appropriately reflect the costs of those radiolabeled products. As
with all other items and services recognized under the OPPS, we expect
hospitals to code and report their costs appropriately, regardless of
whether there are claims processing edits in place.
Comment: Several commenters requested that diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals be paid separately in all cases, not just when the
drugs have pass-through payment status. Some commenters suggested
payment based upon ASP, WAC, AWP, or mean unit cost data derived from
hospital claims. Some commenters mentioned that pass-through payment
status helps the diffusion of new diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals into
the market, but is not enough to make up for the inadequate payment
after pass-through expires. Several commenters recommended treating
diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals similarly to therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals. Commenters opposed incorporating the cost of the
drug into the associated APC, and provided limited evidence showing
procedures in which diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals are considered to
be a surgical supply that the commenter believed are often paid at a
lower rate than the payment rate for the diagnostic radiopharmaceutical
itself when the drug was paid separately because it had pass-through
payment status. Additionally, commenters proposed
[[Page 61315]]
alternative payment methodologies such as subjecting diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals to the drug packaging threshold, creating separate
APC payments for diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals that cost more than
$500, or using ASP, WAC, or AWP to account for packaged
radiopharmaceutical costs. Conversely, other commenters disagreed with
the idea to pay separately for diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals that
cost more than $500 because they claimed that this would incentivize
radiopharmaceutical companies to raise their prices to exceed the
threshold. Additionally, commenters stated that nearly 95 percent of
radiopharmaceuticals are priced less than $500, so creating a
diagnostic radiopharmaceutical packaging threshold of $500 would not be
appropriate.
Response: We thank commenters for their responses. We continue to
believe that diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals are an integral component
of many nuclear medicine and imaging procedures and charges associated
with them should be reported on hospital claims to the extent they are
used. Therefore, the payment for the radiopharmaceuticals is reflected
within the payment for the primary procedure. In response to the
comment regarding the proposed cost of the packaged procedure in CY
2020 being substantially lower than the payment rate of the
radiopharmaceutical when it was on pass-through payment status plus the
payment rate of the procedure associated with the radiopharmaceutical,
we note the rates are established in a manner that uses the average,
more specifically the geometric mean, of reported costs to furnish the
procedure based on data submitted to CMS from all hospitals paid under
the OPPS to set the payment rate for the service. Accordingly, the
costs that are calculated by Medicare reflect the average costs of
items and services that are packaged into a primary procedure and will
not necessarily equal the sum of the cost of the primary procedure and
the average sales price of items and services because the billing
patterns of hospitals may not reflect that a particular item or service
is always billed with the primary procedure. Furthermore, the costs
will be based on the reported costs submitted to Medicare by the
hospitals and not the list price established by the manufacturer.
Claims data that include the radiopharmaceutical packaged with the
associated procedure reflect the combined cost of the procedure and the
radiopharmaceutical used in the procedure. Additionally, we do not
believe it is appropriate to create a new packaging threshold
specifically for diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals as that does not align
with our overall packaging policy and limited data has been submitted
to support a specific threshold. With respect to the request that we
create a new APC for each radiopharmaceutical product, we do not
believe it is appropriate to create unique APCs for diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals. Diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals function as
supplies during a diagnostic test or procedure and following our
longstanding packaging policy, these items are packaged under the OPPS,
which supports our goal of making OPPS payments consistent with those
of a prospective payment system, which packages costs into a single
aggregate payment for a service, encounter, or episode of care.
Furthermore, diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals function as supplies that
enable the provision of an independent service, and are not themselves
the primary therapeutic modality, and therefore, we do not believe they
warrant separate payment through creation of a unique APC at this time.
We welcome ongoing dialogue with stakeholders regarding suggestions for
payment changes for consideration for future rulemaking.
d. Packaging Determination for HCPCS Codes That Describe the Same Drug
or Biological but Different Dosages
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (74 FR 60490
through 60491), we finalized a policy to make a single packaging
determination for a drug, rather than an individual HCPCS code, when a
drug has multiple HCPCS codes describing different dosages because we
believe that adopting the standard HCPCS code-specific packaging
determinations for these codes could lead to inappropriate payment
incentives for hospitals to report certain HCPCS codes instead of
others. We continue to believe that making packaging determinations on
a drug-specific basis eliminates payment incentives for hospitals to
report certain HCPCS codes for drugs and allows hospitals flexibility
in choosing to report all HCPCS codes for different dosages of the same
drug or only the lowest dosage HCPCS code. Therefore, we proposed to
continue our policy to make packaging determinations on a drug-specific
basis, rather than a HCPCS code-specific basis, for those HCPCS codes
that describe the same drug or biological but different dosages in CY
2020.
For CY 2020, in order to propose a packaging determination that is
consistent across all HCPCS codes that describe different dosages of
the same drug or biological, we aggregated both our CY 2018 claims data
and our pricing information at ASP+6 percent across all of the HCPCS
codes that describe each distinct drug or biological in order to
determine the mean units per day of the drug or biological in terms of
the HCPCS code with the lowest dosage descriptor. The following drugs
did not have pricing information available for the ASP methodology for
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, and as is our current policy for
determining the packaging status of other drugs, we used the mean unit
cost available from the CY 2018 claims data to make the proposed
packaging determinations for these drugs: HCPCS code J1840 (Injection,
kanamycin sulfate, up to 500 mg); HCPCS code J1850 (Injection,
kanamycin sulfate, up to 75 mg); HCPCS code J3472 (Injection,
hyaluronidase, ovine, preservative free, per 1000 usp units); HCPCS
code J7100 (Infusion, dextran 40, 500 ml); and HCPCS code J7110
(Infusion, dextran 75, 500 ml).
For all other drugs and biologicals that have HCPCS codes
describing different doses, we then multiplied the proposed weighted
average ASP+6 percent per unit payment amount across all dosage levels
of a specific drug or biological by the estimated units per day for all
HCPCS codes that describe each drug or biological from our claims data
to determine the estimated per day cost of each drug or biological at
less than or equal to the proposed CY 2020 drug packaging threshold of
$130 (so that all HCPCS codes for the same drug or biological would be
packaged) or greater than the proposed CY 2020 drug packaging threshold
of $130 (so that all HCPCS codes for the same drug or biological would
be separately payable). The proposed packaging status of each drug and
biological HCPCS code to which this methodology would apply in CY 2020
was displayed in Table 18 of the proposed rule (84 FR 39499).
We did not receive any public comments on this proposal. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we are finalizing our CY 2020 proposal, without
modification, to continue our policy to make packaging determinations
on a drug-specific basis, rather than a HCPCS code-specific basis, for
those HCPCS codes that describe the same drug or biological but
different dosages. Table 44 below displays the final packaging status
of each drug and biological HCPCS code to which the finalized
methodology applies for CY 2020.
[[Page 61316]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.072
2. Payment for Drugs and Biologicals Without Pass-Through Status That
Are Not Packaged
a. Payment for Specified Covered Outpatient Drugs (SCODs) and Other
Separately Payable Drugs and Biologicals
Section 1833(t)(14) of the Act defines certain separately payable
radiopharmaceuticals, drugs, and biologicals and mandates specific
payments for these items. Under section 1833(t)(14)(B)(i) of the Act, a
``specified covered outpatient drug'' (known as a SCOD) is defined as a
covered outpatient drug, as defined in section 1927(k)(2) of the Act,
for which a separate APC has been established and that either is a
radiopharmaceutical agent or is a drug or biological for which payment
was made on a pass-through basis on or before December 31, 2002.
Under section 1833(t)(14)(B)(ii) of the Act, certain drugs and
biologicals are designated as exceptions and are not included in the
definition of SCODs. These exceptions are--
A drug or biological for which payment is first made on or
after January 1, 2003, under the transitional pass-through payment
provision in section 1833(t)(6) of the Act.
A drug or biological for which a temporary HCPCS code has
not been assigned.
During CYs 2004 and 2005, an orphan drug (as designated by
the Secretary).
Section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii) of the Act requires that payment for
SCODs in CY 2006 and subsequent years be equal to
[[Page 61317]]
the average acquisition cost for the drug for that year as determined
by the Secretary, subject to any adjustment for overhead costs and
taking into account the hospital acquisition cost survey data collected
by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in CYs 2004 and 2005, and
later periodic surveys conducted by the Secretary as set forth in the
statute. If hospital acquisition cost data are not available, the law
requires that payment be equal to payment rates established under the
methodology described in section 1842(o), section 1847A, or section
1847B of the Act, as calculated and adjusted by the Secretary as
necessary for purposes of paragraph (14). We refer to this alternative
methodology as the ``statutory default.'' Most physician Part B drugs
are paid at ASP+6 percent in accordance with section 1842(o) and
section 1847A of the Act.
Section 1833(t)(14)(E)(ii) of the Act provides for an adjustment in
OPPS payment rates for SCODs to take into account overhead and related
expenses, such as pharmacy services and handling costs. Section
1833(t)(14)(E)(i) of the Act required MedPAC to study pharmacy overhead
and related expenses and to make recommendations to the Secretary
regarding whether, and if so how, a payment adjustment should be made
to compensate hospitals for overhead and related expenses. Section
1833(t)(14)(E)(ii) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to adjust the
weights for ambulatory procedure classifications for SCODs to take into
account the findings of the MedPAC study.\66\
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\66\ Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. June 2005 Report to
the Congress. Chapter 6: Payment for pharmacy handling costs in
hospital outpatient departments. Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/docs/default-source/reports/June05_ch6.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It has been our policy since CY 2006 to apply the same treatment to
all separately payable drugs and biologicals, which include SCODs, and
drugs and biologicals that are not SCODs. Therefore, we apply the
payment methodology in section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii) of the Act to SCODs,
as required by statute, but we also apply it to separately payable
drugs and biologicals that are not SCODs, which is a policy
determination rather than a statutory requirement. In this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to apply section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act to all separately payable drugs and
biologicals, including SCODs. Although we do not distinguish SCODs in
this discussion, we note that we are required to apply section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act to SCODs, but we also are applying
this provision to other separately payable drugs and biologicals,
consistent with our history of using the same payment methodology for
all separately payable drugs and biologicals.
For a detailed discussion of our OPPS drug payment policies from CY
2006 to CY 2012, we refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (77 FR 68383 through 68385). In the CY 2013 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (77 FR 68386 through 68389), we
first adopted the statutory default policy to pay for separately
payable drugs and biologicals at ASP+6 percent based on section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act. We have continued this policy of
paying for separately payable drugs and biologicals at the statutory
default for CYs 2014 through 2019.
b. CY 2020 Payment Policy
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue our payment policy that has
been in effect since CY 2013 to pay for separately payable drugs and
biologicals at ASP+6 percent in accordance with section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act (the statutory default). We proposed
to continue to pay for separately payable nonpass-through drugs
acquired with a 340B discount at a rate of ASP minus 22.5 percent, but
we also solicited comments on alternative policies as well as the
appropriate remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019 in the event that we do not
prevail on appeal in the pending litigation, as discussed in greater
detail later in this section. We refer readers to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR 59353 through 59371) and the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58979 through
58981) for more information about how the payment rate for drugs
acquired with a 340B discount was established.
In the case of a drug or biological during an initial sales period
in which data on the prices for sales for the drug or biological are
not sufficiently available from the manufacturer, section 1847A(c)(4)
of the Act permits the Secretary to make payments that are based on
WAC. Under section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II), the amount of payment for a
separately payable drug equals the average price for the drug for the
year established under, among other authorities, section 1847A of the
Act. As explained in greater detail in the CY 2019 PFS final rule,
under section 1847A(c)(4), although payments may be based on WAC,
unlike section 1847A(b) of the Act (which specifies that payments using
ASP or WAC must be made with a 6 percent add-on), section 1847A(c)(4)
of the Act does not require that a particular add-on amount be applied
to WAC-based pricing for this initial period when ASP data is not
available. Consistent with section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act, in the CY
2019 PFS final rule (83 FR 59661 to 59666), we finalized a policy that,
effective January 1, 2019, WAC-based payments for Part B drugs made
under section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act will utilize a 3-percent add-on in
place of the 6-percent add-on that was being used according to our
policy in effect as of CY 2018. For the CY 2019 OPPS, we followed the
same policy finalized in the CY 2019 PFS final rule (83 FR 59661 to
59666). For the CY 2020 OPPS, we proposed to continue to utilize a 3
percent add-on instead of a 6-percent add-on for WAC-based drugs
pursuant to our authority under section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the
Act, which provides, in part, that the amount of payment for a SCOD is
the average price of the drug in the year established under section
1847A of the Act. We also proposed to apply this provision to non-SCOD
separately payable drugs. Because we proposed to establish the average
price for a WAC-based drug under section 1847A of the Act as WAC+3
percent instead of WAC+6 percent, we believe it is appropriate to price
separately payable WAC-based drugs at the same amount under the OPPS.
We proposed that, if finalized, our proposal to pay for drugs or
biologicals at WAC+3 percent, rather than WAC+6 percent, would apply
whenever WAC-based pricing is used for a drug or biological. For drugs
and biologicals that would otherwise be subject to a payment reduction
because they were acquired under the 340B Program, the 340B Program
rate (in this case, WAC minus 22.5 percent) would continue to apply. We
refer readers to the CY 2019 PFS final rule (83 FR 59661 to 59666) for
additional background on this proposal.
Comment: Several commenters opposed our proposal to utilize a 3
percent add-on instead of a 6 percent add-on for drugs that are paid
based on WAC under section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act. Commenters were
concerned that paying less for new drugs may discourage the use of new
innovative drugs and inhibit access to patients. Commenters also noted
that the sequestration cuts further decreased payment for drugs, which
leaves a smaller margin for providers. Additionally, some commenters
believe that this proposal would only negatively impact providers, and
would not address increasing drug costs. Additionally, commenters
suggested excluding certain drugs and biologicals
[[Page 61318]]
from this policy, such as biosimilar biological products or
radiopharmaceuticals. These commenters felt as though the policy was
appropriate for drugs in general, but not for the previously mentioned
products, which could potentially offer savings to the Medicare program
if utilized in the case of biosimilars or which have a higher
associated overhead in the case of radiopharmaceuticals. Commenters
also discussed value-based payments as a more meaningful change than
this proposal.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's feedback. We continue to
believe our policy will improve Medicare payment rates by better
aligning payments with drug acquisition costs, which is of the utmost
importance to CMS as Part B drug spending has grown significantly. WAC
plus a 3 percent add-on is more comparable to an ASP plus a 6 percent
add-on, since the WAC pricing does not reflect many of the discounts
associated with ASP, such as rebates. This proposal to continue to
utilize a 3 percent add-on instead of a 6 percent add-on for drugs that
are paid based on WAC under section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act is
consistent with MedPAC's previous analysis and recommendations in its
June 2017 Report to the Congress. This policy is not meant to provide
preferential treatment to any specific drug or biological, but to
address WAC based payment under 1847A of the Act. We remind commenters
that this proposal still results in a net payment greater than the WAC.
In addition, this policy decreases the beneficiary cost-sharing for
these drugs. This could help Medicare beneficiaries afford to pay for
new drugs by reducing their out-of-pocket expenses.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to utilize a 3 percent
add-on instead of a 6 percent add-on for drugs that are paid based on
WAC under section 1847A(c)(4) of the Act pursuant to our authority
under section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
We proposed that payments for separately payable drugs and
biologicals are included in the budget neutrality adjustments, under
the requirements in section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act. We also proposed
that the budget neutral weight scalar not be applied in determining
payments for these separately paid drugs and biologicals.
We note that separately payable drug and biological payment rates
listed in Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (available via the
internet on the CMS website), which illustrate the proposed CY 2020
payment of ASP+6 percent for separately payable nonpass-through drugs
and biologicals and ASP+6 percent for pass-through drugs and
biologicals, reflect either ASP information that is the basis for
calculating payment rates for drugs and biologicals in the physician's
office setting effective April 1, 2019, or WAC, AWP, or mean unit cost
from CY 2018 claims data and updated cost report information available
for the proposed rule. In general, these published payment rates are
not the same as the actual January 2020 payment rates. This is because
payment rates for drugs and biologicals with ASP information for
January 2020 will be determined through the standard quarterly process
where ASP data submitted by manufacturers for the third quarter of CY
2019 (July 1, 2019 through September 30, 2019) will be used to set the
payment rates that are released for the quarter beginning in January
2020 near the end of December 2019. In addition, payment rates for
drugs and biologicals in Addenda A and B to the proposed rule for which
there was no ASP information available for April 2019 are based on mean
unit cost in the available CY 2018 claims data. If ASP information
becomes available for payment for the quarter beginning in January
2020, we will price payment for these drugs and biologicals based on
their newly available ASP information. Finally, there may be drugs and
biologicals that have ASP information available for the proposed rule
(reflecting April 2019 ASP data) that do not have ASP information
available for the quarter beginning in January 2020. These drugs and
biologicals would then be paid based on mean unit cost data derived
from CY 2018 hospital claims. Therefore, the proposed payment rates
listed in Addenda A and B to the proposed rule are not for January 2020
payment purposes and are only illustrative of the CY 2020 OPPS payment
methodology using the most recently available information at the time
of issuance of the proposed rule.
c. Biosimilar Biological Products
For CY 2016 and CY 2017, we finalized a policy to pay for
biosimilar biological products based on the payment allowance of the
product as determined under section 1847A of the Act and to subject
nonpass-through biosimilar biological products to our annual threshold-
packaged policy (for CY 2016, 80 FR 70445 through 70446; and for CY
2017, 81 FR 79674). In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR
33630), for CY 2018, we proposed to continue this same payment policy
for biosimilar biological products.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
59351), we noted that, with respect to comments we received regarding
OPPS payment for biosimilar biological products, in the CY 2018 PFS
final rule, CMS finalized a policy to implement separate HCPCS codes
for biosimilar biological products. Therefore, consistent with our
established OPPS drug, biological, and radiopharmaceutical payment
policy, HCPCS coding for biosimilar biological products is based on the
policy established under the CY 2018 PFS final rule.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR
59351), after consideration of the public comments we received, we
finalized our proposed payment policy for biosimilar biological
products, with the following technical correction: All biosimilar
biological products are eligible for pass-through payment and not just
the first biosimilar biological product for a reference product. In the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37123), for CY 2019, we proposed
to continue the policy in place from CY 2018 to make all biosimilar
biological products eligible for pass-through payment and not just the
first biosimilar biological product for a reference product.
In addition, in CY 2018, we adopted a policy that biosimilars
without pass-through payment status that were acquired under the 340B
Program would be paid the ASP of the biosimilar minus 22.5 percent of
the reference product's ASP (82 FR 59367). We adopted this policy in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period because we believe
that biosimilars without pass-through payment status acquired under the
340B Program should be treated in the same manner as other drugs and
biologicals acquired through the 340B Program. As noted earlier,
biosimilars with pass-through payment status are paid their own ASP+6
percent of the reference product's ASP. Separately payable biosimilars
that do not have pass-through payment status and are not acquired under
the 340B Program are also paid their own ASP+6 percent of the reference
product's ASP. If a biosimilar does not have ASP pricing, but instead
has WAC pricing, the WAC pricing add-on of either 3 percent or 6
percent is calculated from the biosimilar's WAC and is not calculated
from the WAC price of the reference product.
As noted in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37123),
several stakeholders raised concerns to us that the current payment
policy for
[[Page 61319]]
biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program could unfairly lower the
OPPS payment for biosimilars not on pass-through payment status because
the payment reduction would be based on the reference product's ASP,
which would generally be expected to be priced higher than the
biosimilar, thus resulting in a more significant reduction in payment
than if the 22.5 percent was calculated based on the biosimilar's ASP.
We agreed with stakeholders that the current payment policy could
unfairly lower the price of biosimilars without pass-through payment
status that are acquired under the 340B Program. In addition, we
believe that these changes would better reflect the resources and
production costs that biosimilar manufacturers incur. We also believe
this approach is more consistent with the payment methodology for 340B-
acquired drugs and biologicals, for which the 22.5 percent reduction is
calculated based on the drug or biological's ASP, rather than the ASP
of another product. In addition, we believe that paying for biosimilars
acquired under the 340B Program at ASP minus 22.5 percent of the
biosimilar's ASP, rather than 22.5 percent of the reference product's
ASP, will more closely approximate hospitals' acquisition costs for
these products.
Accordingly, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37123),
for CY 2019, we proposed changes to our Medicare Part B drug payment
methodology for biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program.
Specifically, for CY 2019 and subsequent years, in accordance with
section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act, we proposed to pay nonpass-
through biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program at ASP minus 22.5
percent of the biosimilar's ASP instead of the biosimilar's ASP minus
22.5 percent of the reference product's ASP. This proposal was
finalized without modification in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58977).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue our policy to make all
biosimilar biological products eligible for pass-through payment and
not just the first biosimilar biological product for a reference
product. We also proposed to continue our policy to pay nonpass-through
biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program at the biosimilar's ASP
minus 22.5 percent of the biosimilar's ASP instead of the biosimilar's
ASP minus 22.5 percent of the reference product's ASP, in accordance
with section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act. In addition, as
discussed further below, we solicited comments on the appropriate
remedy in the event of an adverse decision on appeal in the litigation
related to our policy for payment of 340B-acquired drugs and
biologicals, including on whether paying for 340B-acquired biosimilars
at ASP+3 percent of the reference product's ASP would be an appropriate
policy in line with that discussion. Our policy for 340B-acquired drugs
and biologicals is discussed in V.B.6. of this final rule with comment
period.
Comment: Many commenters supported our biosimilar proposal to
continue our policy from CY 2018 to make biosimilar biological products
eligible for pass-through payment and not just the first biosimilar
biological product for a reference product. Commenters believe this
would continue to improve access to these treatments and lower costs,
and they stressed the importance of consistency with biosimilar
payment. Commenters stated that there is a large disparity between
payment for biosimilars and their reference products and that this
proposal helps to mitigate that concern. Commenters also advocated for
additional proposals to increase the utilization of biosimilars, such
as extended pass-through payment.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. We believe this
proposal will continue to encourage competition, lower costs for the
Medicare program and beneficiaries, and eliminate any financial
incentive to utilize one product over another. We will continue to
assess biosimilar utilization under the OPPS.
Comment: Several commenters supported our proposal to pay nonpass-
through biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program at ASP minus 22.5
percent of the biosimilar's ASP in accordance with section
1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. Please see section
V.B.6 for a discussion of payment for biosimilars aquired under 340B.
Comment: Some commenters did not support our proposal to continue
our CY 2018 policy to make all biosimilar biological products eligible
for pass-through payment and not just the first biosimilar biological
product for a reference product. Commenters believe biosimilars are not
new or innovative drugs or biologicals, because they believe the
originator product is the only new and innovative product. Therefore,
they stated biosimilars should not be considered for pass-through
payment status. Additionally, commenters stated there should be a level
playing field between biosimilars and their originator reference
products in order to increase competition and reduce costs for
beneficiaries. Commenters believe that this proposal could potentially
lead to increased Medicare spending on biosimilars, and commenters
articulated concerns that therapies will be interrupted by providers
switching from innovator products to biosimilars.
Response: As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58977), we continue to believe that eligibility
for pass-through payment status reflects the unique, complex nature of
biosimilars and is important as biosimilars become established in the
market, just as it is for all other new drugs and biologicals.
Additionally, we are not convinced that making all biosimilar
biological products eligible for pass-through payment status will lead
to inappropriate treatment changes from a reference product without
pass-through payment to a biosimilar product with pass-through payment.
Under current policy, both originator products and their associated
biosimilars receive the same percentage add-on amount, regardless of
the ASP of the product; therefore, we do not believe that therapies
will be interrupted by providers switching from innovator products to
biosimilars. We note that Section 351(i) of the Public Health Service
Act defines biosimilarity to mean ``that the biological product is
highly similar to the reference product notwithstanding minor
differences in clinically inactive components'' and that ``there are no
clinically meaningful differences between the biological product and
the reference product in terms of the safety, purity, and potency of
the product.'' Therefore, concerns that therapy would be interrupted by
a switch from an innovator product to a biosimilar are unfounded as the
biosimilar has been determined to have no clinically meaningful
difference from the reference product. In regards to the increased
payment of biosimilars under this policy, overall increased competition
due to more biosimilars on the market as a result of this policy is
expected to drive payments down for both Medicare and for beneficiaries
over time, even if there may be increased spending on biosimilars in
the short term.
For CY 2020, after consideration of the public comments we
received, we are finalizing our proposed payment policy for biosimilar
products, without modification, to continue the policy established in
CY 2018 to make all biosimilar biological products eligible for pass-
through payment and not just the first biosimilar biological product
[[Page 61320]]
for a reference product. We also are finalizing our proposal to pay
nonpass-through biosimilars acquired under the 340B Program at the
biosimilar's ASP minus 22.5 percent of the reference product's ASP, in
accordance with section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act.
3. Payment Policy for Therapeutic Radiopharmaceuticals
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39502), for CY 2020,
we proposed to continue the payment policy for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals that began in CY 2010. We pay for separately
payable therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals under the ASP methodology
adopted for separately payable drugs and biologicals. If ASP
information is unavailable for a therapeutic radiopharmaceutical, we
base therapeutic radiopharmaceutical payment on mean unit cost data
derived from hospital claims. We believe that the rationale outlined in
the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (74 FR 60524
through 60525) for applying the principles of separately payable drug
pricing to therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals continues to be appropriate
for nonpass-through, separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals in CY 2020. Therefore, we proposed for CY 2020 to
pay all nonpass-through, separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals at ASP+6 percent, based on the statutory default
described in section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act. For a full
discussion of ASP-based payment for therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals,
we refer readers to the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(74 FR 60520 through 60521). We also proposed to rely on CY 2018 mean
unit cost data derived from hospital claims data for payment rates for
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals for which ASP data are unavailable and
to update the payment rates for separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals according to our usual process for updating the
payment rates for separately payable drugs and biologicals on a
quarterly basis if updated ASP information is unavailable. For a
complete history of the OPPS payment policy for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals, we refer readers to the CY 2005 OPPS final rule
with comment period (69 FR 65811), the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with
comment period (70 FR 68655), and the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (74 FR 60524). The proposed CY 2020 payment rates for
nonpass-through, separately payable therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals
were included in Addenda A and B to the proposed rule (which are
available via the internet on the CMS website).
Comment: Commenters supported the continuation of the policy to pay
ASP+6 percent for radiopharmaceuticals, if available, and to base
payment on the mean unit cost derived from hospital claims data when
not available. Commenters also stressed the high overhead, handling,
compounding and storage costs associated with delivering therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals and asked CMS to look into higher payment rates
for radiopharmaceuticals or ways to compensate hospitals for the higher
overhead and handling costs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. As previously
stated, we continue to believe a single payment is appropriate for
therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals and that the payment rate of ASP+6
percent is appropriate because it provides payment for both the
therapeutic radiopharmaceutical's acquisition cost and the associated
costs such as storage and handling of the radiopharmaceuticals. Payment
for the radiopharmaceutical and radiopharmaceutical processing services
is made through the single ASP-based payment.
For CY 2020, after consideration of the public comments we
received, we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to
continue to pay all nonpass-through, separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals at ASP+6 percent. We are also finalizing our
proposal to continue to rely on CY 2018 mean unit cost data derived
from hospital claims data for payment rates for therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals for which ASP data are unavailable. The CY 2020
final payment rates for nonpass-through separately payable therapeutic
radiopharmaceuticals are included in Addenda A and B to this final rule
with comment period (which are available via the internet on the CMS
website).
4. Payment for Blood Clotting Factors
For CY 2019, we provided payment for blood clotting factors under
the same methodology as other nonpass-through separately payable drugs
and biologicals under the OPPS and continued paying an updated
furnishing fee (83 FR 58979). That is, for CY 2019, we provided payment
for blood clotting factors under the OPPS at ASP+6 percent, plus an
additional payment for the furnishing fee. We note that when blood
clotting factors are provided in physicians' offices under Medicare
Part B and in other Medicare settings, a furnishing fee is also applied
to the payment. The CY 2019 updated furnishing fee was $0.220 per unit.
For CY 2020, we proposed to pay for blood clotting factors at ASP+6
percent, consistent with our proposed payment policy for other nonpass-
through, separately payable drugs and biologicals, and to continue our
policy for payment of the furnishing fee using an updated amount. Our
policy to pay for a furnishing fee for blood clotting factors under the
OPPS is consistent with the methodology applied in the physician's
office and in the inpatient hospital setting. These methodologies were
first articulated in the CY 2006 OPPS final rule with comment period
(70 FR 68661) and later discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (72 FR 66765). The proposed furnishing fee update
is based on the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index (CPI)
for medical care for the 12-month period ending with June of the
previous year. Because the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases the
applicable CPI data after the PFS and OPPS/ASC proposed rules are
published, we were not able to include the actual updated furnishing
fee in the proposed rules. Therefore, in accordance with our policy, as
finalized in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR
66765), we proposed to announce the actual figure for the percent
change in the applicable CPI and the updated furnishing fee calculated
based on that figure through applicable program instructions and
posting on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Part-B-Drugs/McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/.
Comment: Commenters supported CMS' proposal to continue to pay for
blood clotting factors at ASP+6 percent plus a blood clotting factor
furnishing fee in the hospital outpatient department.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal, without modification, to provide payment for
blood clotting factors under the same methodology as other separately
payable drugs and biologicals under the OPPS and to continue payment of
an updated furnishing fee. We will announce the actual figure of the
percent change in the applicable CPI and the updated furnishing fee
calculation based on that figure through the applicable program
instructions and posting on the CMS website.
[[Page 61321]]
5. Payment for Nonpass-Through Drugs, Biologicals, and
Radiopharmaceuticals With HCPCS Codes But Without OPPS Hospital Claims
Data
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to use the same payment policy
as in CY 2019 for nonpass-through drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals with HCPCS codes but without OPPS hospital claims
data, which describes how we determine the payment rate for drugs,
biologicals, or radiopharmaceuticals without an ASP. For a detailed
discussion of the payment policy and methodology, we refer readers to
the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70442
through 70443). The proposed CY 2020 payment status of each of the
nonpass-through drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals with HCPCS
codes but without OPPS hospital claims data is listed in Addendum B to
the proposed rule, which is available via the internet on the CMS
website.
We did not receive any comments on our proposal. Therefore, we are
finalizing our CY 2020 proposal without modification, including our
proposal to assign drug or biological products status indicator ``K''
and pay for them separately for the remainder of CY 2020 if pricing
information becomes available. The CY 2020 payment status of each of
the nonpass-through drugs, biologicals, and radiopharmaceuticals with
HCPCS codes but without OPPS hospital claims data is listed in Addendum
B to this final rule with comment period, which is available via the
internet on the CMS website.
6. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Methodology for 340B Purchased Drugs
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR 33558 through 33724),
we proposed changes to the Medicare Part B drug payment methodology for
340B hospitals. We proposed these changes to better, and more
accurately, reflect the resources and acquisition costs that these
hospitals incur. We believe that such changes would allow Medicare
beneficiaries (and the Medicare program) to pay a more appropriate
amount when hospitals participating in the 340B Program furnish drugs
to Medicare beneficiaries that are purchased under the 340B Program.
Subsequently, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59369 through 59370), we finalized our proposal and adjusted the
payment rate for separately payable drugs and biologicals (other than
drugs on pass-through payment status and vaccines) acquired under the
340B Program from average sales price (ASP) plus 6 percent to ASP minus
22.5 percent. We stated that our goal was to make Medicare payment for
separately payable drugs more aligned with the resources expended by
hospitals to acquire such drugs, while recognizing the intent of the
340B Program to allow covered entities, including eligible hospitals,
to stretch scarce resources in ways that enable hospitals to continue
providing access to care for Medicare beneficiaries and other patients.
Critical access hospitals are not included in this 340B policy change
because they are paid under section 1834(g) of the Act. We also
excepted rural sole community hospitals, children's hospitals, and PPS-
exempt cancer hospitals from the 340B payment adjustment in CY 2018. In
addition, as stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, this policy change does not apply to drugs on pass-through
payment status, which are required to be paid based on the ASP
methodology, or vaccines, which are excluded from the 340B Program.
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79699
through 79706), we implemented section 603 of the Bipartisan Budget Act
of 2015. As a general matter, applicable items and services furnished
in certain off-campus outpatient departments of a provider on or after
January 1, 2017 are not considered covered outpatient services for
purposes of payment under the OPPS and are paid ``under the applicable
payment system,'' which is generally the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS).
However, consistent with our policy to pay separately payable, covered
outpatient drugs and biologicals acquired under the 340B Program at ASP
minus 22.5 percent, rather than ASP+6 percent, when billed by a
hospital paid under the OPPS that is not excepted from the payment
adjustment, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59015 through 59022), we finalized a policy to pay ASP minus 22.5
percent for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals furnished in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS. We adopted this payment
policy effective for CY 2019 and for subsequent years.
As discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37125),
another topic that was brought to our attention since we finalized the
payment adjustment for 340B-acquired drugs in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period was whether drugs that do not have ASP
pricing but instead receive WAC or AWP pricing are subject to the 340B
payment adjustment. We did not receive public comments on this topic in
response to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. However, we later heard
from stakeholders that there had been some confusion about this issue.
We clarified in the CY 2019 proposed rule that the 340B payment
adjustment applies to drugs that are priced using either WAC or AWP,
and it has been our policy to subject 340B-acquired drugs that use
these pricing methodologies to the 340B payment adjustment since the
policy was first adopted. The 340B payment adjustment for WAC-priced
drugs is WAC minus 22.5 percent and AWP-priced drugs have a payment
rate of 69.46 percent of AWP when the 340B payment adjustment is
applied. The 69.46 percent of AWP is calculated by first reducing the
original 95 percent of AWP price by 6 percent to generate a value that
is similar to ASP or WAC with no percentage markup. Then we apply the
22.5 percent reduction to ASP/WAC-similar AWP value to obtain the 69.46
percent of AWP, which is similar to either ASP minus 22.5 percent or
WAC minus 22.5 percent. The number of separately payable drugs
receiving WAC or AWP pricing that are affected by the 340B payment
adjustment is small--consisting of less than 10 percent of all
separately payable Medicare Part B drugs in April 2018.
Furthermore, data limitations previously inhibited our ability to
identify which drugs were acquired under the 340B Program in the
Medicare OPPS claims data. This lack of information within the claims
data has limited researchers' and our ability to precisely analyze
differences in acquisition cost of 340B and non-340B acquired drugs
with Medicare claims data. Accordingly, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (82 FR 33633), we stated our intent to establish a
modifier, to be effective January 1, 2018, for hospitals to report with
separately payable drugs that were not acquired under the 340B Program.
Because a significant portion of hospitals paid under the OPPS
participate in the 340B Program, we stated our belief that it is
appropriate to presume that a separately payable drug reported on an
OPPS claim was purchased under the 340B Program, unless the hospital
identifies that the drug was not purchased under the 340B Program. We
stated in the CY 2018 proposed rule that we intended to provide further
details about this modifier in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period and/or through subregulatory guidance, including
guidance related to billing for dually eligible beneficiaries (that is,
beneficiaries covered under Medicare and Medicaid) for whom covered
[[Page 61322]]
entities do not receive a discount under the 340B Program. As discussed
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59369
through 59370), to effectuate the payment adjustment for 340B-acquired
drugs, CMS implemented modifier ``JG'', effective January 1, 2018.
Hospitals paid under the OPPS, other than a type of hospital excluded
from the OPPS (such as critical access hospitals or those hospitals
paid under the Maryland waiver), or excepted from the 340B drug payment
policy for CY 2018, are required to report modifier ``JG'' on the same
claim line as the drug HCPCS code to identify a 340B-acquired drug. For
CY 2018, rural sole community hospitals, children's hospitals and PPS-
exempt cancer hospitals are excepted from the 340B payment adjustment.
These hospitals are required to report informational modifier ``TB''
for 340B-acquired drugs, and continue to be paid ASP+6 percent.
We refer readers to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59353 through 59370) for a full discussion and rationale
for the CY 2018 policies and use of modifier ``JG''.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37125), for CY 2019,
we proposed to continue the 340B Program policies that were implemented
in CY 2018 with the exception of the way we calculate payment for 340B-
acquired biosimilars (that is, we proposed to pay for nonpass-through
340B-acquired biosimilars at ASP minus 22.5 percent of the biosimilar's
ASP, rather than of the reference product's ASP). More information on
our revised policy for the payment of biosimilars acquired through the
340B Program is available in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. For CY 2019, we proposed, in accordance
with section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act, to pay for separately
payable Medicare Part B drugs (assigned status indicator ``K''), other
than vaccines and drugs on pass-through payment status, that meet the
definition of ``covered outpatient drug'' as defined in section 1927(k)
of the Act, that are acquired through the 340B Program at ASP minus
22.5 percent when billed by a hospital paid under the OPPS that is not
excepted from the payment adjustment. Medicare Part B drugs or
biologicals excluded from the 340B payment adjustment include vaccines
(assigned status indicator ``F'', ``L'' or ``M'') and drugs with OPPS
transitional pass-through payment status (assigned status indicator
``G''). As discussed in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we proposed to pay nonpass-through biosimilars acquired
under the 340B Program at the biosimilar's ASP minus 22.5 percent of
the biosimilar's ASP. We also proposed for CY 2019 that Medicare would
continue to pay for drugs or biologicals that were not purchased with a
340B discount at ASP+6 percent.
As stated earlier, to effectuate the payment adjustment for 340B-
acquired drugs, CMS implemented modifier ``JG'', effective January 1,
2018. For CY 2019, we proposed that hospitals paid under the OPPS,
other than a type of hospital excluded from the OPPS, or excepted from
the 340B drug payment policy for CY 2018, continue to be required to
report modifier ``JG'' on the same claim line as the drug HCPCS code to
identify a 340B-acquired drug. We also proposed for CY 2019 that rural
sole community hospitals, children's hospitals, and PPS-exempt cancer
hospitals would continue to be excepted from the 340B payment
adjustment. We proposed for CY 2019 that these hospitals be required to
report informational modifier ``TB'' for 340B-acquired drugs, and
continue to be paid ASP+6 percent. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58981), after consideration of the public
comments we received, we finalized our proposals without modification.
Our CY 2018 and 2019 OPPS payment policies for 340B-acquired drugs
are the subject of ongoing litigation. On December 27, 2018, in the
case of American Hospital Association et al. v. Azar et al., the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia (hereinafter
referred to as ``the district court'') concluded in the context of
reimbursement requests for CY 2018 that the Secretary exceeded his
statutory authority by adjusting the Medicare payment rates for drugs
acquired under the 340B Program to ASP minus 22.5 percent for that
year.\67\ In that same decision, the district court recognized the
```havoc that piecemeal review of OPPS payment could bring about' in
light of the budget neutrality requirement,'' and ordered supplemental
briefing on the appropriate remedy.\68\ On May 6, 2019, after briefing
on remedy, the district court issued an opinion that reiterated that
the 2018 rate reduction exceeded the Secretary's authority, and
declared that the rate reduction for 2019 (which had been finalized
since the Court's initial order was entered) also exceeded his
authority.\69\ Rather than ordering HHS to pay plaintiffs their alleged
underpayments, however, the district court recognized that crafting a
remedy is ``no easy task, given Medicare's complexity,'' \70\ and
initially remanded the issue to HHS to devise an appropriate remedy
while also retaining jurisdiction. The district court acknowledged that
``if the Secretary were to retroactively raise the 2018 and 2019 340B
rates, budget neutrality would require him to retroactively lower the
2018 and 2019 rates for other Medicare Part B products and services.''
\71\ Id. at 19. ``And because HHS has already processed claims under
the previous rates, the Secretary would potentially be required to
recoup certain payments made to providers; an expensive and time-
consuming prospect.'' \72\
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\67\ American Hosp. Ass'n, et al. v. Azar, et al., No. 1:18-cv-
2084 (D.D.C. Dec. 27, 2018).
\68\ Id. at 35 (quoting Amgen, Inc. v. Smith, 357 F.3d 103, 112
(D.C. Cir. 2004) (citations omitted)).
\69\ See May 6, 2019 Memorandum Opinion, Granting in Part
Plaintiffs' Motion for a Permanent Injunction; Remanding the 2018
and 2019 OPPS Rules to HHS at 10-12.
\70\ Id. at 13.
\71\ Id. at 19.
\72\ Id. (citing Declaration of Elizabeth Richter).
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CMS respectfully disagreed with the district court's understanding
of the scope of its adjustment authority. On July 10, 2019, the
district court entered final judgment, and the agency has filed its
appeal. Nonetheless, CMS is taking the steps necessary to craft an
appropriate remedy in the event of an unfavorable decision on appeal.
Notably, after the proposed rule was issued, CMS announced in the
Federal Register (84 FR 51590) its intent to conduct a 340B hospital
survey to collect drug acquisition cost data for CY 2018 and 2019. Such
survey data may be used in setting the Medicare payment amount for
drugs acquired by 340B hospitals for cost years going forward, and also
may be used to devise a remedy for prior years if the district court's
ruling is upheld on appeal. The district court itself acknowledged that
CMS may base the Medicare payment amount on average acquisition cost
when survey data are available. See 348 F. Supp. 3d at 82. No 340B
hospital disputed in the rulemakings for CY 2018 and 2019 that the ASP
minus 22.5 percent formula was a conservative adjustment that
represented the minimum discount that hospitals receive for drugs
acquired through the 340B program--a significant omission because 340B
hospitals have their own data regarding their drug acquisition costs.
We thus anticipate that survey data collected for CY 2018 and 2019 will
confirm that the ASP minus 22.5 percent rate is a conservative measure
that overcompensates 340B hospitals. A
[[Page 61323]]
remedy that relies on such survey data could avoid the remedial
complexities discussed below and in the proposed rule.
Recognizing Medicare's complexity in formulating an appropriate
remedy, any changes to the OPPS must be budget neutral, and reversal of
the policy change, which raised rates for non-drug items and services
by an estimated $1.6 billion for 2018 alone, could have a significant
economic impact on the approximate 3,900 facilities that are paid for
outpatient items and services covered under the OPPS. Second, any
remedy that increases payments to 340B hospitals is likely to
significantly affect beneficiary cost-sharing. The items and services
that could be affected by the remedy were provided to millions of
Medicare beneficiaries, who, by statute, are required to pay cost-
sharing for such items and services, which is usually 20 percent of the
total Medicare payment rate.
CMS solicited initial public comments on how to formulate a
solution that would account for all of the complexities the district
court recognized in the event of an unfavorable decision on appeal. A
summary of the public comments received on a potential remedy is
included later in this section. In the event 340B hospital survey data
are not used to devise a remedy, we intend to consider this public
input to further inform the steps that are required under the
Administrative Procedure Act to provide adequate notice and an
opportunity for meaningful comment on our proposed policies, which
would entail devising the specific remedy itself, presenting the
specific budget neutrality implications of that remedy in the proposed
rule, and potentially calculating all the different payment rates under
the OPPS for 340B-acquired drugs, as well as all other items and
services under the OPPS. (In essence, we would need to provide
hospitals with sufficient notice of the impact of the remedy on their
rates to enable them to comment meaningfully on the proposed rule.) Our
own best practices for preparing notices of proposed rulemaking dictate
that we begin policy development in the year before the proposed rule
is issued, and that we begin the rule drafting process in the first
quarter of each year.
In the event of an unfavorable decision on appeal, if 340B hospital
survey data are not used to devise a remedy, as we stated in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we anticipate proposing the specific
remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019 in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC proposed rule in
the event of an unfavorable decision on appeal. Those potential
proposals for CY 2021 would be informed by the comments that CMS
solicited in the CY 2020 proposed rule.
Thus, for CY 2020, we proposed to continue to pay ASP minus 22.5
percent for 340B-acquired drugs, including when furnished in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS. We proposed to continue
the 340B policies that were implemented in CY 2018 with the exception
of the way we are calculating payment for 340B-acquired biosimilars,
which is discussed in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, as well as the policy we finalized in CY 2019
to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39504), we also
solicited public comment on the appropriate OPPS payment rate for 340B-
acquired drugs, including whether a rate of ASP+3 percent could be an
appropriate remedial payment amount for these drugs, both for CY 2020
and for purposes of determining the remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019. This
amount would result in payment rates that are well above the actual
costs hospitals incur in purchasing 340B drugs, and we proposed it
solely because of the court decision. However, to the extent the courts
are limiting the size of the payment reduction the agency can
permissibly apply, the agency believes it could be appropriate to apply
a payment reduction that is at the upper end of that limit, to the
extent it has been or could be clearly defined, given the substantial
discounts that hospitals receive through the 340B program. For example,
absent further guidance from the Court of Appeals on what it believes
is an appropriate ``adjustment'' amount, CMS could look to the district
court's December 27, 2018 opinion, which cites to payment reductions of
0.2 percent and 2.9 percent as ``not significant enough'' to fall
outside of the Secretary's authority to ``adjust'' ASP.\73\ This
payment rate would apply to 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals billed
by a hospital paid under the OPPS that are not excepted from the
payment adjustment and to 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals furnished
in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS. We welcomed public
comments on payment rates other than ASP+3 percent that commenters
believe would be appropriate for purposes of addressing CY 2020 payment
as an alternative to our proposal above, as well as for potential
future rulemaking related to CY 2018 and 2019.
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\73\ 348 F. Supp. 3d 62, 81 (D.D.C. 2018) (citing to payment
reductions of 0.2 percent and 2.9 percent that other decisions have
recognized as being within the agency's adjustment authority for
Medicare rates under the inpatient prospective payment system).
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Comments on the Appropriate Payment Rate for 340B-Acquired Drugs in CY
2020
Comment: Several commenters supported the continuation of the 340B
Program policy of ASP minus 22.5 percent for CY 2020. One commenter
believed the 340B program's recent growth may be contributing to the
consolidation of community oncology practices. This commenter and
others asserted that the growth of the 340B program has resulted in a
shift in the site of service for chemotherapy administration from the
physician-office setting to the more costly hospital outpatient
setting, since hospitals are able to acquire drugs, including oncologic
drugs, at a significant discount under the 340B program. Another
commenter believed that the 340B program is no longer serving its
intended purpose to help America's most vulnerable patients access the
drugs they need. They further asserted that instead, 340B profits are
being used for hospitals to make larger profits.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. We note that
comments related to the 340B program itself are outside the scope of
this rule, however, we note that we adopted the 340B payment policy so
that our payment policy would be more in line with the acquisition
costs hospitals incur, and thereby lower drug expenditures for Medicare
beneficiaries and the Medicare Trust Fund.
Comment: Many commenters, the majority of which represented
hospitals or hospital associations, opposed CMS' proposal to continue
to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs in CY 2020. Many
of these commenters believe the proposal undermines the intent and
goals of the 340B program and will have negative impacts on patients
and 340B hospitals. One commenter asserted that CMS should pay
hospitals participating in the 340B program the statutory default
payment of ASP+6 percent. Another commenter opposed the proposal on the
belief that it undermines the Public Health Service Act (PHSA), which
authorized the 340B program and exceeds CMS' statutory authority.
Furthermore, a hospital organization commented that the application of
the reduced payment for the 340B policy has resulted in negative
consequences for patients and providers and does not save any money for
[[Page 61324]]
Medicare because the policy is implemented in a budget-neutral manner.
Several commenters who opposed the continuation of the 340B program
payment policy stated that the district court's ruling showed that the
payment reduction is illegal and exceeded the Administration's
authority. These commenters recommended CMS refrain from ``doing more
damage'' to impacted hospitals by continuing the ASP minus 22.5 percent
policy and return to the payment rate of ASP+6 percent for CY 2020.
Response: As noted in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we continue to believe that ASP minus 22.5 percent for drugs
acquired through the 340B Program represents the average minimum
discount that 340B enrolled hospitals receive and better represents
acquisition costs.
We disagree with commenters that the 340B payment policy has had a
negative impact on Medicare patients; we are not aware of any access
issues related to the implementation of this policy. Further, we note
that under the current policy, Medicare patients who receive 340B drugs
for which the Medicare program paid ASP minus 22.5 percent have much
lower cost sharing than if these beneficiaries received 340B drugs for
which the Medicare program paid ASP+6 percent. As a result, we continue
to believe that ASP minus 22.5 percent is a reasonable payment rate for
these drugs.
In regards to the commenters' belief that CMS lacks the legal
authority to continue paying a reduced amount for drugs and biologicals
obtained through the 340B Program and that we should pay the statutory
default amount of ASP+6 percent, we refer commenters to our detailed
response regarding our statutory authority to require payment
reductions for drugs and biologicals obtained through the 340B Program
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59359
through 59364), as well as our statements in the proposed rule
regarding our appeal of the district court's decision.
After considering these public comments and the comments summarized
below, and in light of the fact that we are awaiting a decision on our
appeal in the litigation, for CY 2020, we are finalizing our proposal,
without modification, to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired
drugs including when furnished in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid
under the PFS. Our finalized proposal continues the 340B policies that
were implemented in CY 2018 with the exception of the way we are
calculating payment for 340B-acquired biosimilars, which is discussed
in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, and would continue the policy we finalized in CY 2019 to pay
ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
furnished in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS.
As noted in the proposed rule (84 FR 39504), we are appealing the
district court's decision and are awaiting a decision from the Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Because we hope to
prevail on appeal and have our 340B policy upheld, we believe it is
appropriate to finalize our proposal of ASP minus 22.5 percent rather
than an alternative payment amount of either ASP+3 percent or ASP+6
percent, and to maintain the other payment policies we adopted for
340B-acquired drugs in the CY 2018 and 2019 OPPS final rules with
comment period. In the event of an adverse decision on appeal, we
solicited public comments on the appropriate remedy for use in the CY
2021 rulemaking. Those comments are summarized below. We note that in
the event 340B hospital survey data are not used to devise a remedy, we
intend to consider the following comments to develop an appropriate
remedy to propose in next year's rulemaking.
Comments on the CY 2020 Payment Policy for 340B-Aquired Drugs to Non-
Excepted Off-Campus Provider Based Departments (PBDs)
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with CMS' assertion that 340B
hospitals will move drug administration services for 340B-acquired
drugs to non-excepted off-campus PBDs if CMS does not continue to pay
for drugs furnished in these settings at the adjusted amount, and
recommended CMS study hospital's drug administration behavior pre- and
post-implementation of the CY 2018 final rule to confirm this
presumption before finalizing the proposal to continue paying ASP minus
22.5 percent for 340B drugs furnished by non-excepted PBDs. Several
commenters asserted that CMS should not continue with this policy for
CY 2020 for non-excepted PBDs and stated that continuing to do so would
be unlawful.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' input on the proposal to
continue to pay at ASP minus 22.5 percent under the PFS for 340B drugs
furnished in non-excepted off-campus PBDs. As we stated in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment (83 FR 59017), because hospitals can,
in some cases, acquire drugs and biologicals under the 340B Program for
use in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs, we believe that not adjusting
payment exclusively for these departments would present a significant
incongruity between the payment amounts for these drugs depending on
where they are furnished. This incongruity would distort the relative
accuracy of the resource-based payment amounts under the site-specific
PFS rates and could result in significant perverse incentives for
hospitals to acquire drugs and biologicals under the 340B Program and
avoid Medicare payment adjustments that account for the discount by
providing these drugs to patients predominantly in nonexcepted off-
campus PBDs. In light of the significant payment differences between
excepted and nonexcepted off-campus PBDs, in combination with the
potential eligibility for discounts, which result in reduced costs
under the 340B Program for both kinds of departments, a different
payment policy for 340B drugs in the two settings could undermine the
use of the OPPS payment structure in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. In
order to avoid such perverse incentives and the potential resulting
distortions in drug payment, pursuant to our authority at section
1833(t)(21)(c) of the Act we adopted a policy to identify the PFS as
the ``applicable payment system for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals
and, accordingly, to pay under the PFS instead of under section 1847A/
1842(o) of the Act an amount equal to ASP minus 22.5 percent for drugs
and biologicals acquired under the 340B Program that are furnished by
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. We continue to believe this payment policy
is necessary to avoid the significant incongruity between the payment
amounts that would exist for these drugs depending upon whether they
are furnished by excepted off-campus PBDs or nonexcepted off-campus
PBDs. We believe we have discretion under section 1833(t)(21)(c) of the
Act to continue to adjust payments for nonexcepted off-campus PBDs.
Comments on Use of ASP Plus 3 Percent for CY 2020
Comment: Many commenters opposed a payment amount of ASP+3 percent
as a potential remedial payment for 340B-acquired drugs furnished in CY
2018 and CY 2019 as well as for CY 2020 payments. These commenters
believe CMS did not provide a rationale to support the proposed ASP+3
percent adjustment and stated that CMS does not have statutory
authority to pay one group of hospitals at ASP+3 percent and all other
hospitals at ASP+6 percent.
[[Page 61325]]
Some commenters stated that section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) requires
CMS to pay hospitals for covered outpatient drugs at ASP+6 percent and
that CMS does not have the legal authority to change that payment
amount to ASP+3 percent. Furthermore, some commenters stated that
although CMS has some authority to make adjustments, the agency's
stated rationale of imposing a payment reduction at the upper end of
the court's ``limit [on] the size of the payment reduction the agency
can permissibly apply . . . given the substantial discounts that
hospitals receive under the 340B program'' would be inconsistent with
the law itself and therefore, reducing payment for 340B-acquired drugs
to ASP+3 percent would be unlawful.
However, a few commenters supported the proposal to pay ASP+3
percent for 340B-acquired drugs in CY 2020, rather than to continue to
pay ASP minus 22.5 percent. One commenter supported the approach of
paying ASP+3 percent for 340B-acquired drugs if CMS receives an adverse
decision on appeal.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support of CMS' suggestion to
pay at ASP+3 percent if we are unsuccessful in the Appeals Court. As
explained above, we are finalizing our proposal to continue to pay for
340B-acquired drugs at ASP minus 22.5 percent. In the event of an
adverse decision on appeal, we will take these comments into
consideration in crafting an appropriate remedy.
Comment: One commenter believed a rate closer to ASP+6 percent,
such as ASP+3 percent, would mitigate remediation efforts should the
Agency not ultimately prevail on appeal and have to return the
difference in payments between ASP minus 22.5 percent and ASP+6 percent
based on a negative court decision.
Response: We thank the commenter for its feedback. As explained
above, we are finalizing our proposal to continue to pay for 340B-
acquired drugs at ASP minus 22.5 percent. In the event of an adverse
decision on appeal, we will take these comments into consideration in
crafting an appropriate remedy.
Comments on Use of Hospital Acquisition Costs
Comment: Several commenters, including a large medical association,
suggested that CMS gather hospitals' acquisition costs for drugs. One
commenter stated that ``since CMS has the authority to base
reimbursement rates on the hospitals' acquisition cost (340B price) if
the Agency considers hospital acquisition cost survey data, we urge CMS
to collect such data.'' Another commenter urged CMS to gather
additional data to better understand 340B acquisition costs and the
impact of payment reductions on 340B providers prior to making payment
changes that the commenter believes jeopardizes access and 340B program
participation.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestion and note that we
announced in the Federal Register (84 FR 51590) our intent to conduct a
340B hospital survey to collect drug acquisition cost data for CY 2018
and 2019. We have no evidence that the current 340B policy has limited
patient access to 340B drugs or program participation. For the reasons
explained above, we believe it is appropriate to continue our 340B
payment policies for CY 2020.
Thus, for CY 2020, we are finalizing our proposal, without
modification, to pay ASP minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs
including when furnished in nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the
PFS. Our finalized proposal continues the 340B Program policies that
were implemented in CY 2018 with the exception of the way we are
calculating payment for 340B-acquired biosimilars, which is discussed
in section V.B.2.c. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, and continues the policy we finalized in CY 2019 to pay ASP
minus 22.5 percent for 340B-acquired drugs and biologicals furnished in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs paid under the PFS.
Comments on a Potential Remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019
In addition to comments on the appropriate payment amount for
calculating the remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019 and for use for CY 2020,
we sought public comment on how to structure the remedy for CYs 2018
and 2019. This request for public comment included whether such a
remedy should be retrospective in nature (for example, made on a claim-
by-claim basis), whether such a remedy could be prospective in nature
(for example, an upward adjustment to 340B claims in the future to
account for any underpayments in the past), and whether there is some
other mechanism that could produce a result equitable to hospitals that
do not acquire drugs through the 340B program while respecting the
budget neutrality mandate.
We stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that one potential
remedy for alleged underpayments in 2018 and 2019 would involve making
additional payments to the parties who have demonstrated harm from the
alleged underpayments (which could be defined as hospitals that
submitted a claim for drug payment with the ``JG'' modifier in CYs 2018
and 2019) outside the normal claims process. Under this approach, we
would calculate the amount that such hospitals should have been paid
and would utilize our Medicare contractors to make one payment to each
affected hospital. This approach--one additional payment made to each
affected hospital by our contractors--is a different approach than
reprocessing each and every claim submitted by plaintiff hospitals for
2018 and 2019. Then, depending on when a final decision is rendered,
the Secretary would propose to budget-neutralize those additional
expenditures for each of CYs 2018 and 2019. For example, if the Court
of Appeals were to render a decision in February of 2020, we might
propose those additional payments and an appropriate budget neutrality
adjustment for each of CYs 2018, 2019, and, if necessary, 2020, in time
for the CY 2021 rule. We noted that we would need to receive a final
decision from the Court of Appeals sufficiently early in CY 2020
(likely no later than March 1, 2020) to make it potentially possible
for us to propose and finalize an appropriate remedy and budget
neutrality adjustments in the CY 2021 rulemaking. We solicited public
comment on this approach as well as other suggested approaches from
commenters.
In considering these potential future proposals, we noted that we
would rely on our statutory authority under section 1833(t)(14) for
determining the OPPS payment rates for drugs and biologicals as well as
section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act to review certain components of the
OPPS not less often than annually and to revise the groups, relative
payment weights, and other adjustments. In addition, we noted that
under section 1833(t)(14)(H) of the Act, any adjustments made by the
Secretary to payment rates using the statutory formula outlined in
section 1833(t)(14)(A)(iii)(II) of the Act are required to be taken
into account under the budget neutrality requirements outlined in
section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39505), we solicited public comments on the best, most
appropriate way to maintain budget neutrality, either under a
retrospective claim-by-claim approach, with a prospective approach, or
any other proposed remedy. We also solicited comments on whether,
depending on the amount of those additional expenditures, we should
[[Page 61326]]
consider spreading out the relevant budget neutrality adjustment across
multiple years. We appreciated all the public comments that we received
on the advantages and disadvantages of such an approach.
We also sought public comments on the best, most appropriate
treatment of Medicare beneficiary cost-sharing responsibilities under
any proposed remedy. We stated that the statutory budget neutrality
requirement and beneficiary cost-sharing are extremely difficult to
balance, and we sought stakeholder comments as we continue to review
the viability of alternative remedies in the event of an adverse
decision from the Court of Appeals.
We refer readers to the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (82 FR 59369 through 59370) and the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 58976 through 58977 and 59015 through 59022)
for more detail on the policies implemented in CY 2018 and CY 2019 for
drugs acquired through the 340B Program.
We also note that since the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule was
published, we announced in the Federal Register (84 FR 51590) our
intent to conduct a 340B hospital survey to collect drug acquisition
cost data for CY 2018 and 2019. As noted above, we may use this survey
data to devise a remedy for prior years if the district court's ruling
is upheld on appeal. A remedy that relies on such survey data could
avoid the remedial complexities discussed below and in the proposed
rule. If, however, 340B hospital survey data are not used to devise a
remedy, we intend to consider the comments summarized below to inform a
remedy we would propose in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC proposed rule in the
event of an adverse decision upon appeal.
Comments on Potential Remedy Structure
Comment: On the issue of a remedy structure, many commenters
supported a retrospective remedy on a claim-by-claim basis over a
prospective adjustment of prior 340B claims. Several commenters believe
it is CMS' responsibility to remedy the policy by requiring as little
effort as possible on the part of affected hospitals, thus avoiding any
additional injuries to the parties. Many commenters believe that CMS
should repay the difference between ASP+6 percent and ASP minus 22.5
percent plus interest for all claims for 340B-acquired drugs for CYs
2018 and 2019. They asserted that CMS can calculate the amount owed to
the affected 340B hospitals by using the JG modifier that identifies
the claims for 340B drugs. One commenter suggested identifying the
total amount paid to a hospital for drugs with the status indicator
``K'' and multiplying by 1.3677 (that is ASP+6 percent/ASP minus 22.5
percent = 1.06/0.775). Another commenter stated that the percentage of
claims that each hospital was underpaid is the same in each case and
that we can calculate the total payment for each hospital and multiply
that number by a factor, in order to determine how much each hospital
should have been paid. Some commenters supported a lump-sum payment.
One commenter supported either a lump-sum payment or a prospective
payment segmented out over multiple years. One commenter compared this
case to those remedies that the courts and agency have adopted to
handle past cases. This commenter believed the affected parties should
receive a supplemental payment for those affected claims in an amount
equal to the difference between ASP minus 22.5 percent and ASP+6
percent. Another commenter believed that the remedy should be decided
by a federal judge.
Additionally, some commenters supported a prospective remedy,
pointing out that a retrospective process would be too complex and
administratively burdensome. Several commenters supported an aggregate
payment for each affected 340B entity outside the normal claims process
rather than a retrospective adjustment. One commenter suggested
applying an increase factor of 26.89 percent that would pay the
affected entities at an amount that would approximate ASP+6 percent.
Another commenter supported an upward adjustment to future claims,
which they believed would reduce administrative burden.
Another commenter believed that CMS should publish a proposed
methodology for conducting the look-back and issuing the payment.
Further, they believed that providers should have opportunity for
public comment, and that CMS should revise and issue a final
methodology in CY 2020 outside of the normal OPPS rulemaking cycle,
with the applicable data set and calculation instructions posted on the
CMS web page. Other commenters believed the remedy does not necessitate
rulemaking.
One commenter offered three remedy suggestions. Two suggestions
involved staggered methods of payment. Under the first suggested
remedy, this commenter believed that CMS could pay for 340B drugs at
the following amounts over three years, which the commenter believed
would make affected providers whole: Beginning January 1, 2021, CMS
would pay ASP+14.25 percent plus an additional 2 percent; beginning
January 1, 2022 would pay ASP+14.25 percent plus an additional 1
percent; and finally, beginning January 1, 2023, CMS would pay ASP+6
percent going forward.
The same commenter suggested a second approach under which CMS
would pay affected hospitals set amounts plus interest as follows:
The first payment would be for claims submitted between January 1,
2018 and June 30, 2018 and would be paid out by July 1, 2020. The
second payment would be for claims submitted between July 1, 2018 and
December 31, 2018 and would be paid out January 1, 2021. The third
payment would be for claims submitted between January 1, 2019 and June
30, 2019 and would be paid out July 1, 2021. The final payment would be
for claims submitted between July 1, 2019 and December, 31, 2019 and
would be paid out January 1, 2022.
Alternatively, the same commenter suggested a third method of
making remedy payments under which CMS could recalculate the payments
for all claims paid for CYs 2018 and 2019 and pay affected 340B
hospitals the difference (between ASP+6 and ASP minus 22.5 percent) in
one lump-sum payment plus interest by January 1, 2021. The commenter
suggested that CMS would provide affected 340B hospitals notice on or
before July 1, 2021 of the calculated payment amount owed to the
hospital. The commenter suggested that the repayment amounts should be
placed in a 340B-specified account to be redistributed to eligible
hospitals and distributed in equal payments over a two-year period
beginning January 2021 for covered entities that demonstrate
``responsible program integrity'' as determined in collaboration with
HRSA. The commenters suggested that funds not able to be distributed
will be used to provide funding to CMS and HRSA to collaborate with
industry stakeholders to identify and implement solutions for duplicate
discount prevention.
Comments on Budget Neutrality
On the issue of budget neutrality, many commenters asserted that
budget neutrality is not necessary given prior court precedents
involving underpayments: Cape Cod Hospital v. Sebelius (DC Cir. 2011),
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Inc. vs. Azar,
(D.D.C. 2018), Shands Jacksonville Medical Center v. Burwell, (D.D.C.
2015). Other commenters asserted that neither (t)(9)(B) nor any other
provision of the OPPS statue
[[Page 61327]]
authorizes the agency to revisit budget neutrality if its estimates of
money owed for a prior year turn out to be incorrect. They view the
statute as directing CMS to make estimates for the purposes of setting
prospective payment rates only, and not authorizing the agency to
recalibrate those estimates after the fact if its predictions turn out
to be incorrect. These commenters believe that the Congress drafted the
OPPS statute to prohibit the agency from revisiting its budget-
neutrality determinations after it first makes them on a prospective
basis for a given year. They further asserted that CMS should exercise
discretion in using its budget neutrality authority in seeking payments
back from providers.
Some commenters supported a prospective payment rate reduction on
OPPS non-drug items and services to maintain budget neutrality from any
remedy. Other commenters supported a gradual rate reduction of the
payment amounts for OPPS non-drug items and services ranging from a
minimum of two to six years to lessen the impact of rate reduction to
the affected entities. Several commenters supported a modest reduction
in future OPPS payment by reducing the conversion factor.
Comments on Beneficiary Coinsurance
Additionally, many commenters asserted that there is no law that
requires hospitals to adjust beneficiaries' coinsurance for 340B-
acquired drugs. They stated that neither the False Claims nor the anti-
kickback statutes would apply because beneficiaries did not receive any
inducements to seek services. These commenters believe that
beneficiaries already fully paid for the hospital care months or years
ago and should not have to pay any additional payments. They requested
that CMS clearly state in this final rule that there is no requirement
for any beneficiary copay adjustments. One commenter offered estimates
on what they believe are the percentage of patients who are impacted by
any adjustment on the patient's copay citing 29 percent with Medigap,
22 percent enrolled in Medicaid (dually eligible), and 19 percent
without a supplemental plan, with the remaining 30 percent enrolled in
a Medicare Advantage plan. Thus, this commenter believed that only 19
percent of patients would be impacted directly by cost-sharing
implications and CMS would need to calculate payment owed to Medicare
for these beneficiaries.
Response: We thank the commenters for their comments on the
appropriate remedy for CYs 2018 and 2019. As noted above, we may use
the survey data for 2018 and 2019 that we plan to collect from 340B
hospitals to devise a remedy for prior years if the district court's
ruling is upheld on appeal. A remedy that relies on such survey data
could avoid the remedial complexities discussed above and in the
proposed rule. If, however, 340B hospital survey data are not used to
devise a remedy in the event of an adverse decision from the Court of
Appeals, we intend to consider all of these suggestions in determining
the appropriate remedy to propose in the CY 2021 OPPS rulemaking. To
the extent commenters made legal arguments relating to the False Claims
Act or anti-kickback statutes, CMS offers no opinion.
7. High Cost/Low Cost Threshold for Packaged Skin Substitutes
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR
74938), we unconditionally packaged skin substitute products into their
associated surgical procedures as part of a broader policy to package
all drugs and biologicals that function as supplies when used in a
surgical procedure. As part of the policy to finalize the packaging of
skin substitutes, we also finalized a methodology that divides the skin
substitutes into a high cost group and a low cost group, in order to
ensure adequate resource homogeneity among APC assignments for the skin
substitute application procedures (78 FR 74933).
Skin substitutes assigned to the high cost group are described by
HCPCS codes 15271 through 15278. Skin substitutes assigned to the low
cost group are described by HCPCS codes C5271 through C5278. Geometric
mean costs for the various procedures are calculated using only claims
for the skin substitutes that are assigned to each group. Specifically,
claims billed with HCPCS code 15271, 15273, 15275, or 15277 are used to
calculate the geometric mean costs for procedures assigned to the high
cost group, and claims billed with HCPCS code C5271, C5273, C5275, or
C5277 are used to calculate the geometric mean costs for procedures
assigned to the low cost group (78 FR 74935).
Each of the HCPCS codes described above are assigned to one of the
following three skin procedure APCs according to the geometric mean
cost for the code: APC 5053 (Level 3 Skin Procedures): HCPCS codes
C5271, C5275, and C5277); APC 5054 (Level 4 Skin Procedures): HCPCS
codes C5273, 15271, 15275, and 15277); or APC 5055 (Level 5 Skin
Procedures): HCPCS code 15273). In CY 2019, the payment rate for APC
5053 (Level 3 Skin Procedures) was $482.89, the payment rate for APC
5054 (Level 4 Skin Procedures) was $1,548.96, and the payment rate for
APC 5055 (Level 5 Skin Procedures) was $2,766.13. This information also
is available in Addenda A and B of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website).
We have continued the high cost/low cost categories policy since CY
2014, and we proposed to continue it for CY 2020. Under this current
policy, skin substitutes in the high cost category are reported with
the skin substitute application CPT codes, and skin substitutes in the
low cost category are reported with the analogous skin substitute HCPCS
C-codes. For a discussion of the CY 2014 and CY 2015 methodologies for
assigning skin substitutes to either the high cost group or the low
cost group, we refer readers to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 74932 through 74935) and the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (79 FR 66882 through 66885).
For a discussion of the high cost/low cost methodology that was
adopted in CY 2016 and has been in effect since then, we refer readers
to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70434
through 70435). For CY 2020, consistent with our policy since CY 2016,
we proposed to continue to determine the high cost/low cost status for
each skin substitute product based on either a product's geometric mean
unit cost (MUC) exceeding the geometric MUC threshold or the product's
per day cost (PDC) (the total units of a skin substitute multiplied by
the mean unit cost and divided by the total number of days) exceeding
the PDC threshold. For CY 2020, as we did for CY 2019, we proposed to
assign each skin substitute that exceeds either the MUC threshold or
the PDC threshold to the high cost group. In addition, as described in
more detail later in this section, for CY 2020, as we did for CY 2019,
we proposed to assign any skin substitute with a MUC or a PDC that does
not exceed either the MUC threshold or the PDC threshold to the low
cost group. For CY 2020, we proposed that any skin substitute product
that was assigned to the high cost group in CY 2019 would be assigned
to the high cost group for CY 2020, regardless of whether it exceeds or
falls below the CY 2020 MUC or PDC threshold. This policy was
established in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82
FR 59346 through 59348).
For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule, consistent with the
methodology as established in the CY 2014 through CY
[[Page 61328]]
2018 final rules with comment period, we analyzed CY 2018 claims data
to calculate the MUC threshold (a weighted average of all skin
substitutes' MUCs) and the PDC threshold (a weighted average of all
skin substitutes' PDCs). The final CY 2020 MUC threshold is $48 per cm
\2\ (rounded to the nearest $1) (proposed at $49 per cm \2\) and the
final CY 2020 PDC threshold is $790 (rounded to the nearest $1)
(proposed at $789).
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue to assign skin substitutes
with pass-through payment status to the high cost category. We proposed
to assign skin substitutes with pricing information but without claims
data to calculate a geometric MUC or PDC to either the high cost or low
cost category based on the product's ASP+6 percent payment rate as
compared to the MUC threshold. If ASP is not available, we proposed to
use WAC+3 percent to assign a product to either the high cost or low
cost category. Finally, if neither ASP nor WAC is available, we would
use 95 percent of AWP to assign a skin substitute to either the high
cost or low cost category. We proposed to continue to use WAC+3 percent
instead of WAC+6 percent to conform to our proposed policy described in
section V.B.2.b. of the proposed rule to establish a payment rate of
WAC+3 percent for separately payable drugs and biologicals that do not
have ASP data available. New skin substitutes without pricing
information would be assigned to the low cost category until pricing
information is available to compare to the CY 2020 MUC threshold. For a
discussion of our existing policy under which we assign skin
substitutes without pricing information to the low cost category until
pricing information is available, we refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70436).
Some skin substitute manufacturers have raised concerns about
significant fluctuation in both the MUC threshold and the PDC threshold
from year to year. The fluctuation in the thresholds may result in the
reassignment of several skin substitutes from the high cost group to
the low cost group which, under current payment rates, can be a
difference of approximately $1,000 in the payment amount for the same
procedure. In addition, these stakeholders were concerned that the
inclusion of cost data from skin substitutes with pass-through payment
status in the MUC and PDC calculations would artificially inflate the
thresholds. Skin substitute stakeholders requested that CMS consider
alternatives to the current methodology used to calculate the MUC and
PDC thresholds and also requested that CMS consider whether it might be
appropriate to establish a new cost group in between the low cost group
and the high cost group to allow for assignment of moderately priced
skin substitutes to a newly created middle group.
We share the goal of promoting payment stability for skin
substitute products and their related procedures as price stability
allows hospitals using such products to more easily anticipate future
payments associated with these products. We have attempted to limit
year-to-year shifts for skin substitute products between the high cost
and low cost groups through multiple initiatives implemented since CY
2014, including: Establishing separate skin substitute application
procedure codes for low-cost skin substitutes (78 FR 74935); using a
skin substitute's MUC calculated from outpatient hospital claims data
instead of an average of ASP+6 percent as the primary methodology to
assign products to the high cost or low cost group (79 FR 66883); and
establishing the PDC threshold as an alternate methodology to assign a
skin substitute to the high cost group (80 FR 70434 through 70435).
To allow additional time to evaluate concerns and suggestions from
stakeholders about the volatility of the MUC and PDC thresholds, in the
CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (82 FR 33627), we proposed that a skin
substitute that was assigned to the high cost group for CY 2017 would
be assigned to the high cost group for CY 2018, even if it does not
exceed the CY 2018 MUC or PDC thresholds. We finalized this policy in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59347). We
stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that the goal of our
proposal to retain the same skin substitute cost group assignments in
CY 2018 as in CY 2017 was to maintain similar levels of payment for
skin substitute products for CY 2018 while we study our skin substitute
payment methodology to determine whether refinement to the existing
policies are consistent with our policy goal of providing payment
stability for skin substitutes.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59347) that we would continue to study issues related to the
payment of skin substitutes and take these comments into consideration
for future rulemaking. We received many responses to our request for
comments in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule about possible
refinements to the existing payment methodology for skin substitutes
that would be consistent with our policy goal of providing payment
stability for these products. In addition, several stakeholders have
made us aware of additional concerns and recommendations since the
release of the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. As
discussed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
58967 through 58968), we identified four potential methodologies that
have been raised to us that we encouraged the public to review and
provide comments on. We stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period that we were especially interested in any specific
feedback on policy concerns with any of the options presented as they
relate to skin substitutes with differing per day or per episode costs
and sizes and other factors that may differ among the dozens of skin
substitutes currently on the market. We also specified in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that we were interested in any
new ideas that are not represented below along with an analysis of how
different skin substitute products would fare under such ideas.
Finally, we stated that we intend to explore the full array of public
comments on these ideas for the CY 2020 rulemaking, and we indicated
that we will consider the feedback received in response to our requests
for comments in developing proposals for CY 2020.
a. Discussion of CY 2019 Comment Solicitation for Episode-Based Payment
and Solicitation of Additional Comments for CY 2020
The methodology that commenters discussed most in response to our
comment solicitation in CY 2019 and that stakeholders raised in
subsequent meetings we have had with the wound care community has been
a lump-sum ``episode-based'' payment for a wound care episode.
Commenters that supported an episode-based payment believe that it
would allow health care professionals to choose the best skin
substitute to treat a patient's wound and would give providers
flexibility with the treatments they administer. These commenters also
believe an episode-based payment helps to reduce incentives for
providers to use excessive applications of skin substitute products or
use higher cost products to generate more payment for the services they
furnish. In addition, they believe that episode-based payment could
help with innovations with skin substitutes by encouraging the
development of products that require fewer applications. These
commenters noted
[[Page 61329]]
that episode-based payment would make wound care payment more
predictable for hospitals and provide incentives to manage the cost of
care that they furnish. Finally, commenters for an episode-based
payment believe that workable quality metrics can be developed to
monitor the quality of care administered under the payment methodology
and limit excessive applications of skin substitutes.
However, many commenters opposed establishing an episode-based
payment. One of the main concerns of commenters who opposed episode-
based payment was that wound care is too complex and variable to be
covered through such a payment methodology. These commenters stated
that every patient and every wound is different; therefore, it would be
very challenging to establish a standard episode length for coverage.
They noted that it would be too difficult to risk-stratify and
specialty-adjust an episode-based payment, given the diversity of
patients receiving wound care and their providers who administer
treatment, as well as the variety of pathologies covered in treatment.
Also, these commenters questioned how episodes would be defined for
patients when they are having multiple wounds treated at one time or
have another wound develop while the original wound was receiving
treatment. These commenters expressed concerns that episode-based
payment would be burdensome both operationally and administratively for
providers. They believe that CMS will need to create a large number of
new APCs and HCPCS codes to account for all of the patient situations
that would be covered with an episode-based payment, which would
increase burdens on providers. Finally, these commenters had concerns
about the impacts of episode-based payment on the usage of higher cost
skin substitute products. They believe that a single payment could
discourage the use of higher-cost products because of the large
variability in the cost of skin substitute products, which could limit
innovations for skin substitute products.
The wide array of views on episode-based payment for skin
substitute products and the unforeseen issues that may arise from the
implementation of such a policy make us reluctant to present a proposal
for this CY 2020 proposed rule without more review of the issues
involved with episode-based payment. Therefore, we sought further
comments from stakeholders and other interested parties regarding skin
substitute payment policies that could be applied in future years to
address concerns about excessive utilization and spending on skin
substitute products, while avoiding administrative issues such as
establishing additional HCPCS codes to describe different treatment
situations. One possible policy construct that we sought comments on
was whether to establish a payment period for skin substitute
application services (CPT codes 15271 through 15278 and HCPCS codes
C5271 through C5278) between 4 weeks and 12 weeks. Under this option,
we could also assign CPT codes 15271, 15273, 15275, and 15277, and
HCPCS codes C5271, C5273, C5275, and C5277 to comprehensive APCs with
the option for a complexity adjustment that would allow for an increase
in the standard APC payment for more resource-intensive cases. Our
research has found that most wound care episodes require one to three
skin substitute applications. Those cases would likely receive the
standard APC payment for the comprehensive procedure. Then the
complexity adjustment could be applied for the relatively small number
of cases that require more intensive treatments.
Comment: Several commenters were in favor of establishing a
comprehensive APC with either an option for a complexity adjustment or
outlier payments to pay for higher cost skin substitute application
procedures. The commenters supported the idea of having a traditional
comprehensive APC payment for standard wound care cases with a
complexity adjustment or outlier payment to handle complicated or
costly cases. However, they also expressed concerns about how many
payment levels would be available in the skin substitute procedures APC
group since a complexity adjustment can only be used if there is an
existing higher-paying APC to which the service receiving the
complexity adjustment may be assigned. A couple of commenters wanted
more opportunities for services to receive a complexity adjustment
through using clusters of procedure codes that reflect the full range
of wound care services a beneficiary receives instead of using code
pairs to determine if a complexity adjustment should apply. A few
commenters suggested that episodic payments be risk-adjusted to account
for clinical conditions and co-morbidities of beneficiaries with
outlier payments and that complexity adjustments be linked to
beneficiaries with more co-morbidities.
Some commenters opposed the idea of a complexity adjustment for
skin substitute application procedures. The commenters believe there
was not enough detail in the comment solicitation to understand how a
complexity adjustment would work with an episodic payment arrangement.
Commenters also expressed concerns that payment rates for comprehensive
APCs may not be representative of the wound care services that would be
paid within those APCs. One commenter stated that payment policy is not
the right way to resolve issues with the over-utilization and
inappropriate use of skin substitutes because they are concerned that
major changes in payment methodology, such as episodic payment, could
lead to serious issues with the care beneficiaries receive.
Regarding the topic of episodic payment, commenters brought up some
of the same issues they had mentioned in response to last year's
comment solicitation. Supporters of episodic payments believe the
policy idea would give providers more flexibility with the treatments
they administer to their patients, and will help encourage innovation
by encouraging the development of graft skin substitute products that
require fewer applications.
Some commenters supported developing an episodic payment model
first in the CMS Innovation Center before adopting episodic payment in
the OPPS. One commenter wrote about the need for quality measures as a
part of episodic payment to ensure providers render appropriate care
during a treatment episode. However, another commenter wanted to ensure
that quality measures would not prevent providers from using a
medically necessary product. Commenters also discussed episode length
with a couple of commenters supporting a 12-week payment episode as
mentioned in the comment solicitation, and another commenter suggesting
that an episode be based not only on the length of time but the number
of allowed skin substitute applications during that time period.
Commenters also favored establishing a separate payment episode for
each wound receiving treatment.
Commenters who oppose episodic payment expressed similar concerns
as they did in response to last year's comment solicitation. Many
commenters believe that wound care is too complex and variable to be
covered through episodic payment even with an option for a complexity
adjustment. For example, one commenter noted that the care regimen for
diabetic foot ulcers is very different than the care regimen for
pressure wounds. A few commenters expressed concerns about the
complexities associated with episodic payment, claiming that CMS will
have to established several new HCPCS codes and clinical APCs to be
able to have
[[Page 61330]]
payment rates for all of the care scenarios covered by episodic
payment. Commenters also believe it would take several years to
implement an episode-based payment system and such system would be
operationally and administratively burdensome for providers. Other
commenters were concerned about financial incentives created by
episodic payment that may discourage providers from rendering the best
quality of care and encourage providers to use skin substitute products
that may not be the most clinically appropriate for their patients.
Finally, commenters had concerns about establishing the length of a
payment episode, stating there was no clear evidence on what the
appropriate episode length should be. These commenters believe it also
would be difficult to establish separate payment episodes when a
patient was being treated for multiple wounds at the same time.
Commenters also discussed which services should be included with an
episodic payment. Commenters were divided over whether an episode
should be limited to application of skin substitute products or
encompass other related wound care treatments including hyperbaric
oxygen and negative-pressure treatment. Some commenters were concerned
that episodic payment may discourage the treatment of large or
complicated wounds. There also was one commenter who wanted episodic
payment to cover tissue repair products used in surgical procedures.
Response: We appreciate all of the feedback we received from
commenters, and we will use the feedback as we consider potential
refinements to how we pay for skin substitute products and procedures
under the OPPS.
b. Potential Revisions to the OPPS Payment Policy for Skin Substitutes:
Comment Solicitation for CY 2020
In addition to possible future rulemaking based on the responses to
the comment solicitations in the preceding section, we noted that we
were considering adopting for CY 2020 another payment methodology that
generated significant public comments in response to the CY 2019
comment solicitation. That option would be to eliminate the high cost
and low cost categories for skin substitutes and have only one payment
category and set of procedure codes for the application of all graft
skin substitute products. Under this option, the only available
procedure codes to bill for skin substitute graft procedures would be
CPT codes 15271 through 15278. HCPCS codes C5271 through C5278 would be
eliminated. Providers would bill CPT codes 15271 through 15278 without
having to consider either the MUC or PDC of the graft skin substitute
product used in the procedure. There would be only one APC for the
graft skin substitute application procedures described by CPT codes
15271 (Skin sub graft trnk/arm/leg), 15273 (Skin sub grft t/arm/lg
child), 15275 (Skin sub graft face/nk/hf/g), and 15277 (Skn sub grft f/
n/hf/g child). The payment rate would be the geometric mean of all
graft skin substitutes procedures for a given CPT code that are covered
through the OPPS. For example, under the current skin substitute
payment policy, there are two procedure codes (CPT code 15271 and HCPCS
code C5271) that are reported for the procedure described as
``application of skin substitute graft to trunk, arms, legs, total
wound surface area up to 100 sq cm; first 25 sq cm or less wound
surface area''. The geometric mean cost for CPT code 15271 was
$1,572.17 in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and the geometric mean
cost for HCPCS code C5271 was $728.28 in the proposed rule. We stated
in the proposed rule that if this policy option was implemented, only
CPT code 15271 would be available in the OPPS, and the geometric mean
cost using data from the CY 2020 proposed rule for the procedure code
would be $1,465.18.
Commenters that supported this option believe it would remove the
incentives for manufacturers to develop and providers to use high cost
skin substitute products and would lead to the use of lower-cost,
quality products. Commenters noted that lower Medicare payments for
graft skin substitute procedures would lead to lower copayments for
beneficiaries. In addition, commenters believe a single payment
category would reduce incentives to apply skin substitute products in
excessive amounts. Commenters also believe a single payment category is
clinically justified because they stated that many studies have shown
that no one skin substitute product is superior to another. Finally,
supporters of a single payment category believe it would simplify
coding for providers and reduce administrative burden.
There were also commenters that raised concerns that a single
payment category would not offer providers incentives to furnish high
quality care and would reduce the use of higher-cost skin substitute
products (which they seemed to imply are of higher quality than lower
cost products). They argued that eliminating the high cost and low cost
payment categories also does not maintain homogeneity among APC
assignments for services using skin substitutes according to opponents
of the single payment category. Commenters stated that instead of
having categories grouped by the relative cost of products, there would
be only one category to cover the payment of products with a mean unit
cost ranging from less than $1 to over $750. Commenters believe a
single payment category would favor inexpensive products, which could
limit innovation, and could eliminate all but the most inexpensive
products from the market. Finally, opponents of a single payment
category believe a single payment category would discourage the
treatment of wounds that are difficult and costly to treat.
The responses to the comment solicitation show the potential of a
single payment category to reduce the cost of wound care services for
graft skin substitute procedures for both beneficiaries and Medicare in
general. In addition, a single payment category may help to lower
administrative burden for providers. Conversely, we are cognizant of
other commenters' concerns that a single payment category may hinder
innovation of new graft skin substitute products and cause some
products that are currently well-utilized to leave the market.
Nonetheless, we are persuaded that a single payment category could
potentially provide a more equitable payment for many products used
with graft skin substitute procedures, while recognizing that
procedures performed with expensive skin substitute products would
likely receive substantially lower payment.
We believe a more equitable payment rate for graft skin substitute
procedures could substantially reduce the amount Medicare pays for
these procedures. We welcomed suggestions or other information
regarding the possibility of utilizing a single payment category to pay
for skin substitute products under the OPPS, and, depending on the
information we received in response to this request, we noted we may
consider modifying our skin substitute payment policy in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
We believe some of the concerns commenters who oppose a single
payment category for skin substitute products raised might be mitigated
if stakeholders have a period of time to adjust to the changes inherent
in establishing a single payment category. Accordingly, we solicited
public comments that provide additional information about how
commenters believe we should transition from the current low cost/high
cost payment
[[Page 61331]]
methodology to a single payment category.
Such suggestions to facilitate the payment transition from a low
cost/high cost payment methodology to a single payment category
methodology could include, but are not limited to--
Delaying implementation of a single category payment for 1
or 2 years after the payment methodology is adopted; and
Gradually lowering the MUC and PDC thresholds over 2 or
more years to add more graft skin substitute procedures into the
current high cost group until all graft skin substitute procedures are
assigned to the high cost group and it becomes a single payment
category.
We sought commenters' feedback on these ideas, or other approaches,
to mitigate challenges that could impact providers, manufacturers, and
other stakeholders if we establish a single payment category, which we
indicated we might include as part of a final skin substitute payment
policy that we would adopt in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for a single payment
category for the application of skin substitute products. These
commenters supported the payment methodology because they believe it
would remove incentives for manufacturers to develop and providers to
use high-cost products. These commenters maintained that a single
payment category would encourage product innovations that maintain the
quality of care for beneficiaries while bringing down the cost of skin
substitute products, which will help to reduce the co-payments
beneficiaries pay for skin substitute application services. Commenters
supported more payment homogeneity because they believe most skin
substitute products perform in a similar manner and no product or group
of products is clinically superior over other skin substitute products.
One commenter noted that the device pass-through payment pathway
continues to be available for manufacturers to receive additional
payment if a superior skin substitute product is developed.
Several commenters in favor of a single payment category believe it
would simplify coding for providers and reduce administrative burden.
They also believe a single payment category provides adequate payment
for providers based on the case mix of smaller, easier to treat wounds
and larger, more complex wounds. Also, a single payment category would
promote cost stability by eliminating the large payment fluctuation for
skin substitutes who are close to the cost-group thresholds in the
current high-cost/low-cost payment methodology for skin substitutes.
The vast majority of commenters were opposed to a single payment
category for skin substitute products. Commenters stated that the large
difference in resource costs between higher cost and lower cost skin
substitute products would mean only the most inexpensive products would
be used to provide care, which would hurt both product innovation and
the quality of care beneficiaries receive. Commenters were concerned
that a single payment category would encourage providers to choose
financial benefit over clinical efficacy when determining which skin
substitute products to use.
These commenters also stated that a single payment category would
increase incentives for providers to use cheaper products that require
more applications to generate more revenue. A couple of commenters
believe that overall Medicare spending on skin substitutes would be
higher with a single payment category than under the current payment
methodology which has separate payment for higher cost and lower cost
skin substitutes. The reason spending would go up according to the
commenters is the overpayment for low cost skin substitutes by Medicare
would exceed the savings Medicare would receive on reduced payments for
higher cost skin substitutes.
Further, commenters stated that a single payment rate would lead to
too much heterogeneity in the products receiving payment through the
skin substitute application procedures. The same payment rate would
apply to skin substitute products whether they cost less than $10 per
cm\2\ or over $200 per cm\2\ and regardless of the type of wound they
treat. Commenters would prefer to have multiple payment categories
where the payment rate is more reflective of the cost of the product.
Commenters believe that a single payment category would discourage
providers from treating more complicated wounds.
Some commenters stated that CMS should not implement a single
payment category methodology in CY 2020 because it only sought comments
and did not propose it and that CMS should formally propose the
methodology to allow commenters a meaningful opportunity to comment on
the precise proposal before implementing it.
There also were comments about the idea of having a transition
period of 1 to 2 years before the full implementation of a single
category payment methodology. Those commenters in favor of a single
payment category did not see a need for a transition period or wanted
only a one-year transition period. Conversely, those commenters opposed
to a single payment category either who did mention the idea of a
transition period wanted it to last multiple years with one commenter
suggesting a transition period of four years.
Response: We appreciate the comments we received for this comment
solicitation, and we will use the feedback to help inform our
development of our payment methodology for skin substitute application
procedures in future rulemaking.
c. Proposals for Packaged Skin Substitutes for CY 2020
To allow stakeholders time to analyze and comment on the issues
discussed above, we proposed for CY 2020 to continue our policy
established in CY 2018 to assign skin substitutes to the low cost or
high cost group. Specifically, we proposed to assign a skin substitute
with a MUC or a PDC that does not exceed either the MUC threshold or
the PDC threshold to the low cost group, unless the product was
assigned to the high cost group in CY 2019, in which case we would
assign the product to the high cost group for CY 2020, regardless of
whether it exceeds the CY 2020 MUC or PDC threshold. We also proposed
to assign to the high cost group any skin substitute product that
exceeds the CY 2020 MUC or PDC thresholds and assign to the low cost
group any skin substitute product that does not exceed the CY 2020 MUC
or PDC thresholds and was not assigned to the high cost group in CY
2019. We proposed to continue to use payment methodologies including
ASP+6 percent and 95 percent of AWP for skin substitute products that
have pricing information but do not have claims data to determine if
their costs exceed the CY 2020 MUC. In addition, we proposed to use
WAC+3 percent for skin substitute products that do not have ASP pricing
information or have claims data to determine if those products' costs
exceed the CY 2020 MUC. We proposed to continue our established policy
to assign new skin substitute products without pricing information to
the low cost group.
Table 19 of the proposed rule displayed the proposed CY 2020 cost
category assignment for each skin substitute product.
Comment: Most commenters supported our proposal to continue our
policy to assign skin substitutes to the low cost or high cost group,
mainly
[[Page 61332]]
because they still want more information on both episode-based payment
for skin substitutes and the possibility of creating a single payment
category for skin substitutes. These commenters do not currently
support either potential payment methodology and prefer to keep the
current high-cost and low-cost payment methodology until an alternative
methodology for skin substitutes is better developed.
Response: We appreciate the support of the commenters of our CY
2020 proposal for the payment of skin substitute application services.
Comment: One commenter was opposed to our proposal. This commenter
requested that we no longer assign to the high-cost group skin
substitute products that do not meet either the MUC or PDC thresholds
in CY 2020 because the skin substitute product had previous been
assigned to the high-cost group in CY 2019. The commenter believes skin
substitute products should be assigned to the cost group that for which
they qualify based on current MUC and PDC thresholds because the
commenter believes that Medicare payment should reflect to some extent
the relative cost of a skin substitute product compared to all other
skin substitute products.
Response: We disagree with commenter. Requiring products to
potentially switch annually between the high-cost and low-cost group
leads to payment instability for skin substitute products (82 FR 59346-
59347). The payment rate for a skin substitute application procedure
may change by several hundred dollars depending on if a skin substitute
product is assigned to the high-cost or low-cost group, which can make
it challenging for manufacturers to estimate the payment their products
will generate when used by providers. The policy to continue to assign
skin substitute products to the high-cost group once they qualify for
the group promotes payment stability and allows manufacturers and
providers to know over a long period of time the payment rate of the
procedures used with each skin substitute product.
Comment: For the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, a
commenter, the manufacturer, requested that HCPCS code Q4184 (Cellesta,
per square centimeter) be assigned to the high-cost skin substitute
group because the ASP+6 percent price of HCPCS code Q4184 for Quarter 1
of 2019 was $110.02 per cm\2\ which was substantially higher than the
MUC threshold for CY 2019 of $49 per cm\2\.
Response: HCPCS code Q4184 (Cellesta, per square centimeter) has
been assigned to the high-cost group since April 1, 2019 and we
proposed assigning the skin substitute product again to the high-cost
group in CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter, the manufacturer, has requested that HCPCS
codes Q4122 (Dermacell, per square centimeter) and Q4150 (Allowrap ds
or dry, per square centimeter) continue to be assigned to the high-cost
skin substitute group.
Response: HCPCS codes Q4122 (Dermacell, per square centimeter) and
Q4150 (Allowrap ds or dry, per square centimeter) were both assigned to
the high-cost group in CY 2019 and also were proposed to the high-cost
group for CY 2020. Per our proposal, a skin substitute that has been
proposed in the high-cost group in a proposed rule will remain in the
high-cost group in the final rule. Also, any skin substitute assigned
to the high-cost group in CY 2019 will continue to be assigned to the
high-cost group in CY 2020 even if MUC and PDC for the skin substitute
product is below the overall MUC and PDC thresholds for all skin
substitute products. Accordingly, we are finalizing our proposal to
assign HCPCS codes Q4122 and Q4150 to the high-cost group in CY 2020.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal to assign a skin substitute with a MUC or a PDC
that does not exceed either the MUC threshold or the PDC threshold to
the low cost group, unless the product was assigned to the high cost
group in CY 2019, in which case we would assign the product to the high
cost group for CY 2020, regardless of whether it exceeds the CY 2020
MUC or PDC threshold. We also are finalizing our proposal to assign to
the high cost group any skin substitute product that exceeds the CY
2020 MUC or PDC thresholds and assign to the low cost group any skin
substitute product that does not exceed the CY 2020 MUC or PDC
thresholds and was not assigned to the high cost group in CY 2019. We
are finalizing our proposal to continue to use payment methodologies
including ASP+6 percent and 95 percent of AWP for skin substitute
products that have pricing information but do not have claims data to
determine if their costs exceed the CY 2020 MUC. In addition, we are
finalizing our proposal to continue to use WAC+3 percent instead of
WAC+6 percent for skin substitute products that do not have ASP pricing
information or claims data to determine if those products' costs exceed
the CY 2020 MUC. We also are finalizing our proposal to retain our
established policy to assign new skin substitute products with pricing
information to the low cost group. Table 45 below displays the final CY
2020 cost category assignment for each skin substitute product.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 61333]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.073
[[Page 61334]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.074
[[Page 61335]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.075
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
VI. Estimate of OPPS Transitional Pass-Through Spending for Drugs,
Biologicals, Radiopharmaceuticals, and Devices
A. Background
Section 1833(t)(6)(E) of the Act limits the total projected amount
of transitional pass-through payments for drugs, biologicals,
radiopharmaceuticals, and categories of devices for a given year to an
``applicable percentage,'' currently not to exceed 2.0 percent of total
program payments estimated to be made for all covered services under
the OPPS furnished for that year. If we estimate before the beginning
of the calendar year that the total amount of pass-through payments in
that year would exceed the applicable percentage, section
1833(t)(6)(E)(iii) of the Act requires a uniform prospective reduction
in the amount of each of the transitional pass-through payments made in
that year to ensure that the limit is not exceeded. We estimate the
pass-through spending to determine whether payments exceed the
applicable percentage and the appropriate prorata reduction to the
conversion factor for the projected level of pass-through spending in
the following year to ensure that total estimated pass-through spending
for the prospective payment year is budget neutral, as required by
section 1833(t)(6)(E) of the Act.
For devices, developing a proposed estimate of pass-through
spending in CY 2020 entails estimating spending for two groups of
items. The first group of items consists of device categories that are
currently eligible for pass-through payment and that will continue to
be eligible for pass-through payment in CY 2020. The CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR 66778) describes the methodology
we have used in previous years to develop the pass-through spending
estimate for known device categories continuing into the applicable
update year. The second group of items consists of items that we know
are newly eligible, or project may be newly eligible, for device pass-
through payment in the remaining quarters of CY 2019 or beginning in CY
2020. The sum of the proposed CY 2020 pass-through spending estimates
for these two groups of device categories equaled the proposed total CY
2020 pass-through spending estimate for device categories with pass-
through payment status. We based the device pass-through estimated
payments for each device category on the amount of payment as
established in section 1833(t)(6)(D)(ii) of the Act, and as outlined in
previous rules, including the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75034 through 75036). We note that, beginning in CY 2010,
the pass-through evaluation process and pass-through payment
methodology for implantable biologicals newly approved for pass-through
payment beginning on or after January 1, 2010, that are surgically
inserted or implanted (through a surgical incision or a natural
orifice) use the device pass-through process and payment methodology
(74 FR 60476). As has been our past practice (76 FR 74335), in the
proposed rule, we proposed to include an estimate of any implantable
biologicals eligible for pass-through payment in our estimate of pass-
through spending for devices. Similarly, we finalized a policy in CY
2015 that applications for pass-through payment for skin substitutes
and similar products be evaluated using the medical device pass-through
process and payment methodology (76 FR 66885 through 66888). Therefore,
as we did beginning in CY 2015, for CY 2020, we also proposed to
include an estimate of any skin substitutes and similar products in our
estimate of pass-through spending for devices.
For drugs and biologicals eligible for pass-through payment,
section 1833(t)(6)(D)(i) of the Act establishes the pass-through
payment amount as the amount by which the amount authorized under
section 1842(o) of the Act (or, if the drug or biological is covered
under a competitive acquisition contract under section 1847B of the
Act, an amount determined by the Secretary equal to the average price
for the drug or biological for all competitive acquisition areas and
year established under such section as calculated and adjusted by the
Secretary) exceeds the portion of the otherwise applicable fee schedule
amount that the Secretary determines is associated with the drug or
biological. Our estimate of drug and biological pass-through payment
for CY 2020 for this group of items is $224.1
[[Page 61336]]
million, as discussed below, because we proposed to pay for most
nonpass-through separately payable drugs and biologicals under the CY
2020 OPPS at ASP+6 percent with the exception of 340B-acquired
separately payable drugs that are paid at ASP minus 22.5 percent, and
because we proposed to pay for CY 2020 pass-through payment drugs and
biologicals at ASP+6 percent, as we discuss in section V.A. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We refer readers to section V.B.6 of the
CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule where we discuss the comments we
solicited on an appropriate remedy in litigation involving our OPPS
payment policy for 340B purchased drugs, which would inform CY 2021
rulemaking in the event of an adverse decision on appeal in that
litigation.
Furthermore, payment for certain drugs, specifically diagnostic
radiopharmaceuticals and contrast agents without pass-through payment
status, is packaged into payment for the associated procedures, and
these products will not be separately paid. In addition, we policy-
package all nonpass-through drugs, biologicals, and
radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when used in a
diagnostic test or procedure and drugs and biologicals that function as
supplies when used in a surgical procedure, as discussed in section
II.A.3. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and this final rule with
comment period. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39511), we
proposed that all of these policy-packaged drugs and biologicals with
pass-through payment status would be paid at ASP+6 percent, like other
pass-through drugs and biologicals, for CY 2020. Therefore, our
estimate of pass-through payment for policy-packaged drugs and
biologicals with pass-through payment status approved prior to CY 2020
was not $0, as discussed below. In section V.A.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule, we discussed our policy to determine if the costs of
certain policy-packaged drugs or biologicals are already packaged into
the existing APC structure. If we determine that a policy-packaged drug
or biological approved for pass-through payment resembles predecessor
drugs or biologicals already included in the costs of the APCs that are
associated with the drug receiving pass-through payment, we proposed to
offset the amount of pass-through payment for the policy-packaged drug
or biological. For these drugs or biologicals, the APC offset amount is
the portion of the APC payment for the specific procedure performed
with the pass-through drug or biological, which we refer to as the
policy-packaged drug APC offset amount. If we determine that an offset
is appropriate for a specific policy-packaged drug or biological
receiving pass-through payment, we proposed to reduce our estimate of
pass-through payments for these drugs or biologicals by this amount.
Similar to pass-through spending estimates for devices, the first
group of drugs and biologicals requiring a pass-through payment
estimate consists of those products that were recently made eligible
for pass-through payment and that will continue to be eligible for
pass-through payment in CY 2020. The second group contains drugs and
biologicals that we know are newly eligible, or project will be newly
eligible, in the remaining quarters of CY 2019 or beginning in CY 2020.
The sum of the CY 2020 pass-through spending estimates for these two
groups of drugs and biologicals equals the total CY 2020 pass-through
spending estimate for drugs and biologicals with pass-through payment
status.
B. Estimate of Pass-Through Spending
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39511 through 39512),
we proposed to set the applicable pass-through payment percentage limit
at 2.0 percent of the total projected OPPS payments for CY 2020,
consistent with section 1833(t)(6)(E)(ii)(II) of the Act and our OPPS
policy from CY 2004 through CY 2019 (82 FR 59371 through 59373).
For the first group, consisting of device categories that are
currently eligible for pass-through payment and will continue to be
eligible for pass-through payment in CY 2020, there is one active
category for CY 2020. The active category is described by HCPCS code
C1823 (Generator, neurostimulator (implantable), nonrechargeable, with
transvenous sensing and stimulation leads). Based on the information
from the device manufacturer, we estimated that 100 devices will
receive payment in the OPPS in CY 2020 at an estimated cost of $5,655
per device. Therefore, we proposed an estimate for the first group of
devices of $565,500. We did not receive any public comments on the
proposal. Therefore, we are finalizing the proposed estimate for the
first group of devices of $565,500 for CY 2020.
In estimating our proposed CY 2020 pass-through spending for device
categories in the second group, we included: Device categories that we
knew at the time of the development of the proposed rule will be newly
eligible for pass-through payment in CY 2020; additional device
categories that we estimated could be approved for pass-through status
after the development of the proposed rule and before January 1, 2020;
and contingent projections for new device categories established in the
second through fourth quarters of CY 2020. For CY 2020, we proposed to
use the general methodology described in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (72 FR 66778), while also taking into account
recent OPPS experience in approving new pass-through device categories.
For the proposed rule, the proposed estimate of CY 2020 pass-through
spending for this second group of device categories was $10 million.
We did not receive any public comments on this proposal. As stated
earlier in this final rule with comment period, we are approving five
devices for pass-through payment status: Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System; Optimizer[supreg] System;
AquaBeam[supreg] System; AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft and
ARTIFICIALIris[supreg] . The manufacturers of these systems provided
utilization and cost data that indicate the spending for the devices
would be approximately $116.25 million for Surefire[supreg]
SparkTM Infusion System, $46 million for Optimizer[supreg]
System, $11.25 million for AquaBeam[supreg] System, $ 72.2 million for
AUGMENT[supreg] Bone Graft, and $500,500 for ARTIFICIALIris[supreg].
Therefore, we are finalizing an estimate of $246.2 million for this
second group of devices for CY 2020.
To estimate proposed CY 2020 pass-through spending for drugs and
biologicals in the first group, specifically those drugs and
biologicals recently made eligible for pass-through payment and
continuing on pass-through payment status for at least one quarter in
CY 2020, we proposed to use the most recent Medicare hospital
outpatient claims data regarding their utilization, information
provided in the respective pass-through applications, historical
hospital claims data, pharmaceutical industry information, and clinical
information regarding those drugs or biologicals to project the CY 2020
OPPS utilization of the products.
For the known drugs and biologicals (excluding policy-packaged
diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, contrast agents, drugs, biologicals,
and radiopharmaceuticals that function as supplies when used in a
diagnostic test or procedure, and drugs and biologicals that function
as supplies when used in a surgical procedure) that will be continuing
on pass-through payment status in CY 2020, we estimated the pass-
through payment amount as the difference between ASP+6 percent and the
payment rate for nonpass-through
[[Page 61337]]
drugs and biologicals that will be separately paid. Separately payable
drugs are paid at a rate of ASP+6 percent with the exception of 340B-
acquired drugs that are paid at ASP minus 22.5 percent. Therefore, the
payment rate difference between the pass-through payment amount and the
nonpass-through payment amount is $224.1 million for this group of
drugs. Because payment for policy-packaged drugs and biologicals is
packaged if the product was not paid separately due to its pass-through
payment status, we proposed to include in the CY 2020 pass-through
estimate the difference between payment for the policy-packaged drug or
biological at ASP+6 percent (or WAC+6 percent, or 95 percent of AWP, if
ASP or WAC information is not available) and the policy-packaged drug
APC offset amount, if we determine that the policy-packaged drug or
biological approved for pass-through payment resembles a predecessor
drug or biological already included in the costs of the APCs that are
associated with the drug receiving pass-through payment, which we
estimate for CY 2020 to be $17.0 million. For the proposed rule, using
the proposed methodology described above, we calculated a CY 2020
proposed spending estimate for this first group of drugs and
biologicals that includes drugs currently on pass-through payment
status that would otherwise be separately payable or policy-packaged of
approximately $241.1 million. We did not receive any public comments on
our proposal. Using our methodology for this final rule with comment
period, we calculated a CY 2020 spending estimate for this first group
of drugs and biologicals of approximately $399.6 million.
To estimate proposed CY 2020 pass-through spending for drugs and
biologicals in the second group (that is, drugs and biologicals that we
knew at the time of development of the proposed rule were newly
eligible for pass-through payment in CY 2020, additional drugs and
biologicals that we estimated could be approved for pass-through status
subsequent to the development of the proposed rule and before January
1, 2020 and projections for new drugs and biologicals that could be
initially eligible for pass-through payment in the second through
fourth quarters of CY 2020), we proposed to use utilization estimates
from pass-through applicants, pharmaceutical industry data, clinical
information, recent trends in the per unit ASPs of hospital outpatient
drugs, and projected annual changes in service volume and intensity as
our basis for making the CY 2020 pass-through payment estimate. We also
proposed to consider the most recent OPPS experience in approving new
pass-through drugs and biologicals. Using our proposed methodology for
estimating CY 2020 pass-through payments for this second group of
drugs, we calculated a proposed spending estimate for this second group
of drugs and biologicals of approximately $17.1 million.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal. Therefore,
for CY 2020, we are continuing to use the general methodology described
above. For this final rule with comment period, we calculated a CY 2020
spending estimate for this second group of drugs and biologicals of
approximately $26 million.
In summary, in accordance with the methodology described earlier in
this section, for this final rule with comment period, we estimate that
total pass-through spending for the device categories and the drugs and
biologicals that are continuing to receive pass-through payment in CY
2020 and those device categories, drugs, and biologicals that first
become eligible for pass-through payment during CY 2020 is
approximately $698.4 million (approximately $246.8 million for device
categories and approximately $451.6 million for drugs and biologicals)
which represents 0.88 percent of total projected OPPS payments for CY
2020 (approximately $79 billion). Therefore, we estimate that pass-
through spending in CY 2020 will not amount to 2.0 percent of total
projected OPPS CY 2020 program spending.
VII. OPPS Payment for Hospital Outpatient Visits and Critical Care
Services
For CY 2020, we proposed to continue with our current clinic and
emergency department (ED) hospital outpatient visits payment policies.
For a description of the current clinic and ED hospital outpatient
visits policies, we refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70448). We also proposed to continue our
payment policy for critical care services for CY 2020. For a
description of the current payment policy for critical care services,
we refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(80 FR 70449), and for the history of the payment policy for critical
care services, we refer readers to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75043). In the proposed rule, we sought public
comments on any changes to these codes that we should consider for
future rulemaking cycles. We continue to encourage commenters to
provide the data and analysis necessary to justify any suggested
changes.
Comment: We received two public comments, one from a health system
and another from a health information management association, in
response to our CY 2020 proposal. Commenters suggested that CMS should
adopt the recommendation of the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission
(MedPAC) for the development and implementation of a set of national
guidelines for coding hospital emergency department (ED) visits under
the OPPS. They argued that national guidelines would provide hospitals
with a clear set of rules for coding ED visits.
Response: We thank the commenters for their responses. We will
consider these comments for future rulemaking.
After consideration of the public comments received, we are
finalizing our CY 2020 proposal to continue our current clinic and ED
hospital outpatient visits and critical care services payment policies
without modifications.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59004
through 59015), we adopted a method to control unnecessary increases in
the volume of covered outpatient department services under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act by utilizing a Medicare Physician Fee Schedule
(PFS)-equivalent payment rate for the hospital outpatient clinic visit
(HCPCS code G0463) when it is furnished by excepted off-campus
provider-based departments (PBDs). As discussed in section X.D of the
proposed rule and the CY 2019 final rule (FR 58818 through 59179), CY
2020 will be the second year of the 2-year transition of this policy,
and in CY 2020, these departments will be paid the site-specific PFS
rate for the clinic visit service. For a full discussion of this
policy, we refer readers to the CY 2020 final rule with comment period
and section X.C of this final rule with comment period.
VIII. Payment for Partial Hospitalization Services
A. Background
A partial hospitalization program (PHP) is an intensive outpatient
program of psychiatric services provided as an alternative to inpatient
psychiatric care for individuals who have an acute mental illness,
which includes, but is not limited to, conditions such as depression,
schizophrenia, and substance use disorders. Section 1861(ff)(1) of the
Act defines partial hospitalization services
[[Page 61338]]
as the items and services described in paragraph (2) prescribed by a
physician and provided under a program described in paragraph (3) under
the supervision of a physician pursuant to an individualized, written
plan of treatment established and periodically reviewed by a physician
(in consultation with appropriate staff participating in such program),
which sets forth the physician's diagnosis, the type, amount,
frequency, and duration of the items and services provided under the
plan, and the goals for treatment under the plan. Section 1861(ff)(2)
of the Act describes the items and services included in partial
hospitalization services. Section 1861(ff)(3)(A) of the Act specifies
that a PHP is a program furnished by a hospital to its outpatients or
by a community mental health center (CMHC), as a distinct and organized
intensive ambulatory treatment service, offering less than 24-hour-
daily care, in a location other than an individual's home or inpatient
or residential setting. Section 1861(ff)(3)(B) of the Act defines a
CMHC for purposes of this benefit.
Section 1833(t)(1)(B)(i) of the Act provides the Secretary with the
authority to designate the outpatient department (OPD) services to be
covered under the OPPS. The Medicare regulations that implement this
provision specify, at 42 CFR 419.21, that payments under the OPPS will
be made for partial hospitalization services furnished by CMHCs as well
as Medicare Part B services furnished to hospital outpatients
designated by the Secretary, which include partial hospitalization
services (65 FR 18444 through 18445).
Section 1833(t)(2)(C) of the Act requires the Secretary, in part,
to establish relative payment weights for covered OPD services (and any
groups of such services described in section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act)
based on median (or, at the election of the Secretary, mean) hospital
costs using data on claims from 1996 and data from the most recent
available cost reports. In pertinent part, section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the
Act provides that the Secretary may establish groups of covered OPD
services, within a classification system developed by the Secretary for
covered OPD services, so that services classified within each group are
comparable clinically and with respect to the use of resources. In
accordance with these provisions, we have developed the PHP APCs. Since
a day of care is the unit that defines the structure and scheduling of
partial hospitalization services, we established a per diem payment
methodology for the PHP APCs, effective for services furnished on or
after July 1, 2000 (65 FR 18452 through 18455). Under this methodology,
the median per diem costs were used to calculate the relative payment
weights for the PHP APCs. Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act requires the
Secretary to review, not less often than annually, and revise the
groups, the relative payment weights, and the wage and other
adjustments described in section 1833(t)(2) of the Act to take into
account changes in medical practice, changes in technology, the
addition of new services, new cost data, and other relevant information
and factors.
We began efforts to strengthen the PHP benefit through extensive
data analysis, along with policy and payment changes finalized in the
CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66670 through
66676). In that final rule with comment period, we made two refinements
to the methodology for computing the PHP median: The first remapped 10
revenue codes that are common among hospital-based PHP claims to the
most appropriate cost centers; and the second refined our methodology
for computing the PHP median per diem cost by computing a separate per
diem cost for each day rather than for each bill.
In CY 2009, we implemented several regulatory, policy, and payment
changes, including a two-tier payment approach for partial
hospitalization services under which we paid one amount for days with 3
services under PHP APC 0172 (Level 1 Partial Hospitalization) and a
higher amount for days with 4 or more services under PHP APC 0173
(Level 2 Partial Hospitalization) (73 FR 68688 through 68693). We also
finalized our policy to deny payment for any PHP claims submitted for
days when fewer than 3 units of therapeutic services are provided (73
FR 68694). Additionally, for CY 2009, we revised the regulations at 42
CFR 410.43 to codify existing basic PHP patient eligibility criteria
and to add a reference to current physician certification requirements
under 42 CFR 424.24 to conform our regulations to our longstanding
policy (73 FR 68694 through 68695). We also revised the partial
hospitalization benefit to include several coding updates (73 FR 68695
through 68697).
For CY 2010, we retained the two-tier payment approach for partial
hospitalization services and used only hospital-based PHP data in
computing the PHP APC per diem costs, upon which PHP APC per diem
payment rates are based. We used only hospital-based PHP data because
we were concerned about further reducing both PHP APC per diem payment
rates without knowing the impact of the policy and payment changes we
made in CY 2009. Because of the 2-year lag between data collection and
rulemaking, the changes we made in CY 2009 were reflected for the first
time in the claims data that we used to determine payment rates for the
CY 2011 rulemaking (74 FR 60556 through 60559).
In the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (75 FR
71994), we established four separate PHP APC per diem payment rates:
Two for CMHCs (APC 0172 (for Level 1 services) and APC 0173 (for Level
2 services)) and two for hospital-based PHPs (APC 0175 (for Level 1
services) and APC 0176 (for Level 2 services)), based on each provider
type's own unique data. For CY 2011, we also instituted a 2-year
transition period for CMHCs to the CMHC APC per diem payment rates
based solely on CMHC data. Under the transition methodology, CMHC APCs
Level 1 and Level 2 per diem costs were calculated by taking 50 percent
of the difference between the CY 2010 final hospital-based PHP median
costs and the CY 2011 final CMHC median costs and then adding that
number to the CY 2011 final CMHC median costs. A 2-year transition
under this methodology moved us in the direction of our goal, which is
to pay appropriately for partial hospitalization services based on each
provider type's data, while at the same time allowing providers time to
adjust their business operations and protect access to care for
Medicare beneficiaries. We also stated that we would review and analyze
the data during the CY 2012 rulemaking cycle and, based on these
analyses, we might further refine the payment mechanism. We refer
readers to section X.B. of the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (75 FR 71991 through 71994) for a full discussion.
In addition, in accordance with section 1301(b) of the Health Care
and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (HCERA 2010), we amended the
description of a PHP in our regulations to specify that a PHP must be a
distinct and organized intensive ambulatory treatment program offering
less than 24-hour daily care other than in an individual's home or in
an inpatient or residential setting. In accordance with section 1301(a)
of HCERA 2010, we revised the definition of a CMHC in the regulations
to conform to the revised definition now set forth under section
1861(ff)(3)(B) of the Act (75 FR 71990).
For CY 2012, as discussed in the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74348 through 74352), we determined the relative
[[Page 61339]]
payment weights for partial hospitalization services provided by CMHCs
based on data derived solely from CMHCs and the relative payment
weights for partial hospitalization services provided by hospital-based
PHPs based exclusively on hospital data.
In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we
finalized our proposal to base the relative payment weights that
underpin the OPPS APCs, including the four PHP APCs (APCs 0172, 0173,
0175, and 0176), on geometric mean costs rather than on the median
costs. We established these four PHP APC per diem payment rates based
on geometric mean cost levels calculated using the most recent claims
and cost data for each provider type. For a detailed discussion on this
policy, we refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68406 through 68412).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (78 FR 43621 through 43622),
we solicited comments on possible future initiatives that may help to
ensure the long-term stability of PHPs and further improve the accuracy
of payment for PHP services, but proposed no changes. In the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 75050 through 75053), we
summarized the comments received on those possible future initiatives.
We also continued to apply our established policies to calculate the
four PHP APC per diem payment rates based on geometric mean per diem
costs using the most recent claims data for each provider type. For a
detailed discussion on this policy, we refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 75047 through 75050).
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66902
through 66908), we continued to apply our established policies to
calculate the four PHP APC per diem payment rates based on PHP APC
geometric mean per diem costs, using the most recent claims and cost
data for each provider type.
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70455
through 70465), we described our extensive analysis of the claims and
cost data and ratesetting methodology. We found aberrant data from some
hospital-based PHP providers that were not captured using the existing
OPPS 3 standard deviation trims for extreme cost-to-charge
ratios (CCRs) and excessive CMHC charges resulting in CMHC geometric
mean costs per day that were approximately the same as or more than the
daily payment for inpatient psychiatric facility services.
Consequently, we implemented a trim to remove hospital-based PHP
service days that use a CCR that was greater than five to calculate
costs for at least one of their component services, and a trim on CMHCs
with a geometric mean cost per day that is above or below 2 (2) standard deviations from the mean. We stated in the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70456) that, without
using a trimming process, the data from these providers would
inappropriately skew the geometric mean per diem cost for Level 2 CMHC
services.
In addition, in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(80 FR 70459 through 70460), we corrected a cost inversion that
occurred in the final rule data with respect to hospital-based PHP
providers. We corrected the cost inversion with an equitable adjustment
to the actual geometric mean per diem costs by increasing the Level 2
hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs and decreasing the
Level 1 hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs by the
same factor, to result in a percentage difference equal to the average
percent difference between the hospital-based Level 1 PHP APC and the
Level 2 PHP APC for partial hospitalization services from CY 2013
through CY 2015.
Finally, we renumbered the PHP APCs, which were previously APCs
0172 and 0173 for CMHCs' partial hospitalization Level 1 and Level 2
services, and APCs 0175 and 0176 for hospital-based partial
hospitalization Level 1 and Level 2 services to APCs 5851 and 5852 for
CMHCs' partial hospitalization Level 1 and Level 2 services, and APCs
5861 and 5862 for hospital-based partial hospitalization Level 1 and
Level 2 services, respectively. For a detailed discussion of the PHP
ratesetting process, we refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70462 through 70467).
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79687
through 79691), we continued to apply our established policies to
calculate the PHP APC per diem payment rates based on geometric mean
per diem costs using the most recent claims and cost data for each
provider type. However, we finalized a policy to combine the Level 1
and Level 2 PHP APCs for CMHCs and to combine the Level 1 and Level 2
APCs for hospital-based PHPs because we believed this would best
reflect actual geometric mean per diem costs going forward, provide
more predictable per diem costs, particularly given the small number of
CMHCs, and generate more appropriate payments for these services, for
example by avoiding the cost inversions for hospital-based PHPs
addressed in the CY 2016 and CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment
period (80 FR 70459 and 81 FR 79682). We also implemented an eight-
percent outlier cap for CMHCs to mitigate potential outlier billing
vulnerabilities by limiting the impact of inflated CMHC charges on
outlier payments. We stated that we will continue to monitor the trends
in outlier payments and consider policy adjustments as necessary.
For a comprehensive description of PHP payment policy, including a
detailed methodology for determining PHP per diem amounts, we refer
readers to the CY 2016 and CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment
period (80 FR 70453 through 70455 and 81 FR 79678 through 79680).
In the CYs 2018 and 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment period
(82 FR 59373 through 59381, and 83 FR 58983 through 58998,
respectively), we continued to apply our established policies to
calculate the PHP APC per diem payment rates based on geometric mean
per diem costs using the most recent claims and cost data for each
provider type. We also continued to designate a portion of the
estimated 1.0 percent hospital outpatient outlier threshold
specifically for CMHCs, consistent with the percentage of projected
payments to CMHCs under the OPPS, excluding outlier payments. In the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58997 through
58998), we also included proposed updates to the PHP allowable HCPCS
codes. Specifically, we proposed to delete six psychological and
neuropsychological testing CPT codes, which affect PHPs, and to add
nine new codes as replacements. We refer readers to section VIII.D. of
the proposed rule for a discussion of those proposed updates and the
applicability for CY 2020.
B. Final PHP APC Update for CY 2020
1. Final PHP APC Geometric Mean Per Diem Costs
In summary, for CY 2020, we are finalizing our proposal as proposed
to use the CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean per diem cost calculated in
accordance with our existing methodology, but with a cost floor equal
to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per diem cost for CMHCs of $121.62
(83 FR 58991), as the basis for developing the CY 2020 CMHC APC per
diem rate. We are also finalizing our proposal to use the CY 2020
hospital-based PHP geometric mean per diem cost of $233.52, calculated
in accordance with our existing methodology for hospital-based
[[Page 61340]]
PHPs, as the basis for developing the CY 2020 hospital-based APC per
diem rate. We are finalizing our proposal to use the most recent
updated claims and cost data to calculate CY 2020 geometric mean per
diem costs in this final rule with comment period.
Also, we are finalizing our proposal to continue to use CMHC APC
5853 (Partial Hospitalization (3 or More Services Per Day)) and
hospital-based PHP APC 5863 (Partial Hospitalization (3 or More
Services Per Day)). These proposals, which we are finalizing as
proposed in this final rule with comment period, are discussed in more
detail.
2. Development of the Final PHP APC Geometric Mean Per Diem Costs
In preparation for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we followed the
PHP ratesetting methodology described in section VIII.B.2. of the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70462 through
70466) to calculate the PHP APCs' geometric mean per diem costs and
payment rates for APCs 5853 and 5863, incorporating the modifications
made in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. As
discussed in section VIII.B.1. of the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79680 through 79687), the geometric mean per diem
cost for hospital-based PHP APC 5863 is based upon actual hospital-
based PHP claims and costs for PHP service days providing 3 or more
services. Similarly, the geometric mean per diem cost for CMHC APC 5853
is based upon actual CMHC claims and costs for CMHC service days
providing three or more services.
The CMHC or hospital-based PHP APC per diem costs are the provider-
type specific costs derived from the most recent claims and cost data.
The CMHC or hospital-based PHP APC per diem payment rates are the
national unadjusted payment rates calculated from the CMHC or hospital-
based PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs, after applying the OPPS
budget neutrality adjustments described in section II.A.4. of this
final rule with comment period.
As previously stated, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
proposed to apply our established methodologies in calculating the CY
2020 geometric mean per diem costs and payment rates, including the
application of a 2 standard deviation trim on costs per day
for CMHCs and a CCR greater than 5 hospital service day trim for
hospital-based PHP providers. These two trims were finalized in the CY
2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70455 through
70462) for CY 2016 and subsequent years.
a. CMHC Data Preparation: Data Trims, Exclusions, and CCR Adjustments
For this CY 2020 final rule with comment period, prior to
calculating the final geometric mean per diem cost for CMHC APC 5853,
we prepared the data by first applying trims and data exclusions, and
assessing CCRs as described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70463 through 70465), so that ratesetting is not
skewed by providers with extreme data. Before any trims or exclusions
were applied, there were 44 CMHCs in the PHP claims data file. Under
the 2 standard deviation trim policy, we excluded any data
from a CMHC for ratesetting purposes when the CMHC's geometric mean
cost per day was more than 2 standard deviations from the
geometric mean cost per day for all CMHCs. In applying this trim for CY
2020 ratesetting, no CMHCs had geometric mean costs per day below the
trim's lower limit of $20.58 or had geometric mean costs per day above
the trim's upper limit of $520.48. Therefore, we did not exclude any
CMHCs because of the 2 standard deviation trim.
In accordance with our PHP ratesetting methodology, we also remove
service days with no wage index values, because we use the wage index
data to remove the effects of geographic variation in costs prior to
APC geometric mean per diem cost calculation (80 FR 70465). For this CY
2020 final rule with comment period ratesetting, no CMHC was missing
wage index data for all of its service days and, therefore, no CMHC was
excluded. However, one CMHC had no days with Medicare payment, and it
was excluded from ratesetting.
In addition to our trims and data exclusions, before calculating
the PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs, we also assess CCRs (80 FR
70463). Our longstanding PHP OPPS ratesetting methodology defaults any
CMHC CCR greater than one to the statewide hospital CCR (80 FR 70457).
For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period ratesetting,
there were no CMHCs that showed CCRs greater than one. Therefore, it
was not necessary to default any CMHC to its statewide hospital CCR for
ratesetting.
In summary, these data preparation steps did not adjust the CCR for
any CMHCs with a CCR greater than one during our ratesetting process.
We also did not exclude any CMHCs for other missing data or for failing
the 2 standard deviation trim, but excluded one CMHC for
having no Medicare payment data, resulting in the inclusion of 43
CMHCs. There were 319 CMHC claims removed during data preparation steps
because they either had no PHP-allowable codes or had zero payment
days, leaving 12,265 CMHC claims in our CY 2020 final rule ratesetting
modeling.
After applying all of the previously listed trims, exclusions, and
adjustments, we followed the methodology described in the CY 2016 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70464 through 70465) and
modified in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR
79687 through 79688, and 79691) to calculate a CMHC APC geometric mean
per diem cost.\74\ The calculated CY 2020 geometric mean per diem cost
for all CMHCs for providing 3 or more services per day (CMHC APC 5853)
is $103.50, a decrease from $121.62 calculated last year for CY 2019
ratesetting (83 FR 58986 through 58989). This final calculated per diem
cost for CMHCs is almost the same as the $103.42 geometric mean per
diem cost calculated for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39515 to 39516).
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\74\ Each revenue code on the CMHC claim must have a HCPCS code
and charge associated with it. We multiply each claim service line's
charges by the CMHC's overall CCR from the OPSF (or statewide CCR,
where the overall CCR was greater than 1) to estimate CMHC costs.
Only the claims service lines containing PHP allowable HCPCS codes
and PHP allowable revenue codes from the CMHC claims remaining after
trimming are retained for CMHC cost determination. The costs,
payments, and service units for all service lines occurring on the
same service date, by the same provider, and for the same
beneficiary are summed. CMHC service days must have 3 or more
services provided to be assigned to CMHC APC 5853. The final
geometric mean per diem cost for CMHC APC 5853 is calculated by
taking the nth root of the product of n numbers, for days where 3 or
more services were provided. CMHC service days with costs 3 standard deviations from the geometric mean costs within APC
5853 are deleted and removed from modeling. The remaining PHP
service days are used to calculate the final geometric mean per diem
cost for each PHP APC by taking the nth root of the product of n
numbers for days where 3 or more services were provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Due to this fluctuation from the CY 2019 final CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost, we investigated why the CY 2020 final calculated CMHC
APC geometric mean per diem cost had decreased from the prior year, and
found that two large providers reported lower costs per day than those
reported for the CY 2019 final rule ratesetting; those two providers
heavily influenced the calculated geometric mean per diem cost. Because
these providers had a high number of paid PHP days, and because the
CMHC data set is so small (n=43), these providers had a significant
influence on the calculated CY 2020 CMHC APC geometric mean per diem
[[Page 61341]]
cost. In the case of PHPs provided by CMHCs, we have a low number of
PHP providers in our ratesetting dataset (43 CMHCs compared to 374
hospital-based PHPs) that provide a small volume of services and,
therefore, account for a limited amount of payments, relative to the
rest of OPPS payments (total CY 2018 CMHC payments are estimated to be
approximately 0.02 percent of all OPPS payments).
As noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39516), we
are concerned that a final calculated CMHC APC geometric mean per diem
cost of $103.50 would not support ongoing access to PHPs in CMHCs. This
cost is nearly a 15 percent decrease from the final CY 2019 CMHC
geometric mean per diem cost. We believe access to partial
hospitalization services and PHPs is better supported when the
geometric mean per diem cost does not fluctuate greatly. In addition,
while the CMHC APC 5853 is described as providing 3 or more partial
hospitalization services per day (81 FR 79680), 95 percent of CMHC paid
days in CY 2018 were for providing 4 or more services per day. To be
eligible for a PHP, a patient must need at least 20 hours of
therapeutic services per week, as evidenced in the patient's plan of
care (42 CFR 410.43(c)(1)). To meet those patient needs, most PHP
provider paid days are for providing 4 or more services per day (we
refer readers to Table 22.--Percentage of PHP Days by Service Unit
Frequency of the proposed rule). Therefore, the CMHC APC 5853 is
actually heavily weighted to the cost of providing 4 or more services.
The per diem costs for CMHC APC 5853 have been calculated as $124.92,
$143.22, and $121.62 for CY 2017 (81 FR 79691), CY 2018 (82 FR 59378),
and CY 2019 (83 FR 58991), respectively. We do not believe it is likely
that the actual cost of providing partial hospitalization services
through a PHP by CMHCs has suddenly declined when costs generally
increase over time. We are concerned by this fluctuation, which we
believe is influenced by data from two large providers.
Therefore, rather than simply finalizing the calculated CY 2020
CMHC APC geometric mean per diem cost of $103.50 for CY 2020
ratesetting, we are instead finalizing our proposal as proposed, to use
the CY 2020 CMHC APC geometric mean per diem cost, calculated in
accordance with our existing methodology, but with a cost floor equal
to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per diem cost for CMHCs of $121.62
(83 FR 58991), as the basis for developing the final CY 2020 CMHC APC
per diem rate. We believe using the CY 2019 CMHC geometric mean per
diem cost as the floor is appropriate because it is based on very
recent CMHC PHP claims and cost data and would help to protect provider
access by preventing wide fluctuation in the per diem costs for CMHC
APC 5853. As we proposed, in this final rule with comment period, we
used the most recent updated claims and cost data to calculate CY 2020
CMHC geometric mean per diem cost, which was $103.50. Because the final
CY 2020 CMHC calculated geometric mean per diem cost of $103.50 is less
than the proposed cost floor (which equals the final CY 2019 CMHC APC
geometric mean per diem cost of $121.62), the final CY 2020 CMHC
geometric mean per diem cost is $121.62. Implementing the cost floor
for CY 2020 will protect CMHCs since the final CY 2020 calculated per
diem cost of $103.50 still results in an amount that is less than
$121.62. We believe finalizing the CMHC cost floor amount of $121.62 as
the final CY 2020 CMHC APC geometric mean per diem cost allows us to
use the most recent or very recent CMHC claims and cost reporting data
while still protecting provider access. To be clear, this policy would
only apply for the CY 2020 ratesetting.
As we noted in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39516), we
also considered proposing a 3-year rolling average calculated using the
final PHP geometric mean per diem costs, by provider type, from CY 2018
(82 FR 59378), CY 2019 (83 FR 58991), and the calculated CY 2020
geometric mean per diem cost from that proposed rule of $103.42 for
CMHCs, and the calculated CY 2020 geometric mean per diem costs for
hospital-based PHPs discussed in section VIII.B.2.b. of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. The 3-year rolling averages discussed in that
proposed rule resulted in geometric mean per diem costs that would have
been $122.75 for CMHCs, and $209.79 for hospital-based PHPs. While we
believe this option would have avoided the fluctuation in the geometric
mean per diem cost and, therefore, supported access to PHPs provided by
CMHCs, it would have maintained the fluctuation in the geometric mean
per diem costs used to derive the hospital-based PHP APC per diem
payment rates. This is further discussed in the hospital-based PHP
section VIII.B.2.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and section
VIII.B.2.b. of this final rule. In addition, we believe that it is
necessary to recalculate the CMHC geometric mean per diem cost for this
final rule with comment period using updated claims and cost data, and
simply proposing to use a 3-year rolling average for the CMHC geometric
mean per diem cost for CY 2020 would not have allowed us to do so.
Therefore, we believe that it is more appropriate to use the final CY
2019 geometric mean per diem costs, by provider type, as the cost floor
for use with the final calculated CY 2020 PHP geometric mean per diem
costs, by provider type, because those CY 2019 per diem costs are based
on very recent CMHC and hospital-based PHP claims and cost data, are
the easiest to understand, and would result in proposed geometric mean
per diem costs which would support access for both CMHCs and hospital-
based PHPs.
We estimate the aggregate difference in the (prescaled) CMHC
geometric mean per diem costs for CY 2020 from finalizing the CMHC cost
floor amount of $121.62 rather than the calculated CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost of $103.50 to be $1.7 million. We refer readers to
section XXVII. of this final rule with comment period for payment
impacts, which are budget neutral.
We received 6 comments, with those focused on CMHC rate setting
summarized as follows:
Comment: Nearly all commenters supported our proposal to calculate
updated per diem costs with a cost floor, to avoid fluctuations in CMHC
payments and help protect access.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. For CY 2020,
we are finalizing the CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean per diem cost as
$121.62, which is the cost floor amount, rather than the calculated
geometric mean per diem cost of $103.50.
Comment: Two commenters recommended that CMS pay CMHCs the same
rate as hospital-based PHPs, since these two provider types provide the
same services and have the same qualified clinical staff. One commenter
objected to CMS' continuing use of the single-tier payment system for
CMHCs, stating that it adversely affects the quality and intensity of
PHP services.
Response: The OPPS pays for outpatient services, including partial
hospitalization services, based on the costs of providing services
using provider data from claims and cost reports, in accordance with
statute. Section 1833(t)(2)(B) of the Act provides that the Secretary
may establish groups of covered OPD services, within a classification
system developed by the Secretary for covered OPD services, so that
services classified within each group are comparable clinically and
with respect to the use of resources. While CMHCs and hospital-based
CMHCs provide the same clinical services, their resource use differs,
[[Page 61342]]
because these two provider types have different cost structures. We see
this difference in cost structures reflected when we calculate the
geometric mean cost per day for CMHCs versus for hospital-based PHPs,
where CMHC costs per day are consistently lower than hospital-based PHP
costs per day. For example, the final CY 2020 calculated geometric mean
costs for providing PHP services were $103.50 per day for CMHCs, but
were $233.52 per day for hospital-based PHPs. In this final rule and in
prior rulemaking, commenters and CMS have noted that hospitals tend to
have higher costs than CMHCs, particularly higher overhead (83 FR
58986; 82 FR 59377; 81 FR 79686 to 69687). Therefore, we do not believe
we can pay CMHCs the same APC rate as hospital-based PHPs, and should
calculate a CMHC APC rate based on the CMHC costs which providers
supply on their cost reports. We strongly encourage CMHCs to review
cost reporting instructions to be sure they are reporting their costs
correctly. These instructions are available in chapter 45 of the
Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part 2, available on the CMS website at
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Paper-Based-Manuals.html.
We believe our policy to replace the existing Level 1 and Level 2
PHP APCs for both provider types with a single PHP APC, by provider
type, is supported by the statute and regulations and will continue to
pay for partial hospitalization services appropriately based upon
actual provider costs (81 FR 79683). Regarding the commenter's concern
about the small number of providers and the use of a single-tier
payment system, we refer the commenter to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79682 to 79685), where we discussed our
rationale for implementing the single-tier payment system for CMHCs. A
key reason behind implementing the single tier for CMHCs was to reduce
cost fluctuations and bring more stability to CMHC APC rates,
especially given the small number of providers (81 FR 79683). We also
noted that the costs of providing a Level 1 CMHC day were nearly the
same as the cost of providing a Level 2 CMHC day (81 FR 79684). In
accordance with the regulations at 42 CFR 419.31, we could not justify
continuing to separate these services into two APCs, but combined
clinically similar services with similar resource use into a single APC
(81 FR 79683 to 79684).
We do not believe the intensity of PHP services provided in
hospitals and in CMHCs has been affected by using a single-tier payment
system. Based on the utilization data found in Table 22 of this final
rule, the percentage of paid PHP days which have only three services
has been relatively stable over time. As we note in section VIII.B.3.b,
with only 2 years of claims data reflecting the single-tiered payment
system, we do not have enough data yet to identify any trends in
utilization that could be associated with the change from two-tiered to
single-tiered payment. We continue to monitor the percentage of 3-
service days and are also monitoring the provision of 20 hours per week
of PHP services, to ensure there are no unintended consequences of a
single-tier payment system on PHP intensity. We are unable to determine
the effects of the single-tier payment on CMHC quality, because there
are no quality measures for CMHCs, nor is quality reporting required of
CMHCs. However, we do not believe that a single-tier payment system
would affect the quality of care provided in a CMHC.
Comment: One commenter noted that, in the past, CMS stated that
CMHCs provide fewer services and have less costly staff than hospitals.
Response: We believe that the commenter may be referring to the CY
2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (75 FR 71991), which
states that we believe that CMHCs have a lower cost structure than
their hospital-based PHP counterparts because the data showed that
CMHCs provide fewer PHP services in a day and use less costly staff
than hospital-based PHPs. Those statements were based on CY 2009 claims
and cost data, which differ from more recent claims and cost data. Each
year, we calculate geometric mean per diem costs based on updated
claims and cost reports. We do not have detailed labor cost data to
make a direct comparison of CMHC versus hospital-based PHP staff costs,
so we could not comment on whether CMHCs have lower labor costs than
hospital-based PHPs. But we note that both provider types use similar
types of clinical staff (see personnel qualifications in 42 CFR 485.904
for CMHCs, and in 42 CFR 482.12, 482.23, and 482.62 for hospitals).
Regarding the level of services provided, we refer the commenter to the
utilization data in section VIII.B.3.b. of this CY 2020 final rule with
comment period for details on current level of services CMHCs provide,
based on CY 2018 claims data. Table 22 shows that CMHCs provide more
days with four or more services than hospital-based PHPs.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about the decline in
the number of CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs, and the effects on
beneficiary access to care. Two commenters wrote that the current
payment methodology has resulted in reductions in provider access
rather than protection of access. Commenters noted that these declines
have occurred while the need for mental health services has increased;
that the demand for mental health services is on track to outpace the
supply of behavioral health care providers; and that as the number of
PHPs declines, it may become even more difficult to calculate the
appropriate per diems. A few commenters noted that decreased access to
PHP services could result in increasing instances of patient recidivism
and more inpatient psychiatric admissions. One commenter noted that
beneficiaries would have their treatment alternatives limited if CMHCs
closed, and therefore, be forced to use more costly hospital-based
PHPs, with higher beneficiary co-payments.
A commenter expressed concerns about CMHC rate setting being based
on only 41 providers, and wrote that the data are skewed, the
calculations are incorrect, and the proposed low payment rates would
result in the remaining CMHCs closing. This commenter noted that
setting CMHCs' payment rates based on a small number of CMHCs does not
reflect the actual cost of providing these services and expressed
concern that by using the mean or median costs, more CMHCs would close.
The same commenter also stated that CMHCs incur extra costs to meet the
CMHC conditions of participation (CoPs), have experienced an increase
in bad debt expense, and the effects of sequestration.
Response: We appreciate the work PHPs do to care for a particularly
vulnerable population with serious mental illnesses and believe that
having PHPs available to beneficiaries helps prevent patient recidivism
and inpatient psychiatric admissions. We share the commenters' concerns
about the decline in the number of PHPs, particularly at CMHCs, and the
effect on access. Our goal is to protect access to both provider types,
so beneficiaries have choices regarding where to receive treatment. We
want to ensure that CMHCs remain a viable option as providers of mental
health care in the beneficiary's own community. We agree that
beneficiaries receiving care at a CMHC instead of a hospital-based PHP
would have lower out-of-pocket costs.
We disagree that the CMHC data are skewed and that the calculations
are incorrect. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule (80 FR 70456 to
70459), we implemented a 2 standard deviation
[[Page 61343]]
trim on CMHC costs per day to remove aberrant data that could skew
costs up or down inappropriately. We recognize that with a small number
of providers, such as the 43 CMHCs used for this final rule rate
setting, the calculations can be influenced by large providers. That
occurred in this CY 2020 final rule rate setting, as discussed
previously in this section, and we proposed and are finalizing a cost
floor in CY 2020 to help protect CMHCs from this fluctuation and
possible effects on access.
We are confident that the per diem costs we calculate follow the
methodology we discussed in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70462 to 70466) and in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79691). Those costs are geometric mean
per diem costs, rather than arithmetic mean or median per diem costs;
in the CY 2013 OPPS final rule (77 FR 68409), we discussed the
advantages of using geometric means rather than medians to calculate
PHP costs, and noted that the geometric mean more accurately captures
the full range of service costs (including outliers) than the median
cost and promotes more stability in the payment system.
We believe that providing payment that is based upon actual
provider-reported costs will not lead to provider closures. As we have
noted in prior rulemaking (76 FR 74350; 79 FR 66906), the closure of
PHPs may be due to any number of reasons, such as business management
or marketing decisions, competition, oversaturation of certain
geographic areas, and Federal and State fraud and abuse efforts, among
others. It does not directly follow that closure could be due to
reduced per diem payment rates alone, especially when the per diem
payment rates reflect the costs of PHP providers, as stated in claims
and cost data.
Furthermore, most (if not all) of the costs associated with
adhering to CoPs should be captured in the cost report data used in
ratesetting and, therefore, are accounted for when computing the
geometric mean per diem costs. The reduction to bad debt reimbursement
was a result of provisions of section 3201 of the Middle Class Tax
Extension and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-96). The reduction
to bad debt reimbursement impacted all providers eligible to receive
bad debt reimbursement, as discussed in the CY 2013 End-Stage Renal
Disease final rule (77 FR 67518). Medicare currently reimburses bad
debt for eligible providers at 65 percent. Because this percentage was
enacted by Congress, CMS does not have the authority to change the
percentage. In contrast to the Medicare bad debt reimbursement policy,
private sector insurers typically do not reimburse providers for any
amounts of enrollees' unpaid deductibles or coinsurance. In light of
budgetary constraints and the steady increase in bad debt claims over
the years, a reduction in bad debt reimbursement is necessary to
protect the Medicare Trust Fund and preserve beneficiary access to care
without imposing an undue burden on hospitals.
Finally, the reduction in payments due to sequestration has been
mandated by Congress, and we are unable to remove or modify it. This
mandatory payment reduction was established by the Budget Control Act
of 2011 (Pub. L. 112-25) and amended by the American Taxpayer Relief
Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-240). Sequestration is discussed in a Medicare
Fee-for-Service Provider eNews article available at: https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Outreach/FFSProvPartProg/Downloads/2013-03-08-standalone.pdf. Sequestration is outside the scope of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and this final rule with comment period.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS use value-based
purchasing for paying CMHCs instead of a cost-based system. This
commenter recommended that CMS look at the value provided by the
quality of provided services. This commenter believed that rewarding
providers for higher-quality care, as measured by selected standards,
instead of rewarding providers for increasing costs, is a better way to
improve the quality of any service.
Response: We responded to a similar public comment in the CY 2016
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70462) and refer readers
to a summary of that comment and our response. Currently, there is no
statutory language authorizing value-based purchasing for CMHCs or for
outpatient hospital-based PHPs. To reiterate, sections 1833(t)(2) and
1833(t)(9) of the Act set forth the requirements for establishing and
adjusting OPPS payment rates, which are based on costs, and which
include PHP payment rates.
We note that section 1833(t)(17) of the Act authorizes the Hospital
Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program, which applies a payment
reduction to subsection (d) hospitals that fail to meet program
requirements. In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (79 FR 41040), we
considered future inclusion of, and requested comments on, the
following quality measures addressing PHP issues that would apply in
the hospital outpatient setting: (1) 30-Day Readmission; (2) Group
Therapy; and (3) No Individual Therapy. We refer readers to the CY 2015
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66957 through 66958) for
a more detailed discussion of PHP measures considered for inclusion in
the Hospital OQR Program in future years, and of the comments received
as a result of the solicitation. However, the Hospital OQR Program does
not apply to CMHCs, and there are no quality measures applied to CMHCs.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that more work be done to
establish PHP rates accurately, that CMS reconsider its PHP policy
positions to determine how to rebuild PHP services, or that CMS
establish a task force to review and discuss the availability of PHPs
for Medicare beneficiaries.
Response: We will continue to explore policy options for
strengthening the PHP benefit and increasing access to the valuable
services provided by CMHCs as well as by hospital-based PHPs. As part
of that process, we regularly review our methodology to ensure that it
is appropriately capturing the cost of care reported by providers. For
example, for the CY 2016 ratesetting, we extensively reviewed the
methodology used for PHP ratesetting. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70462 through 70466), we also included
a detailed description of the ratesetting process to help all PHP
providers record costs correctly so that we can more fully capture PHP
costs in ratesetting. In this CY 2020 ratesetting, we proposed and are
finalizing a policy to calculate the CY 2020 per diem costs with a cost
floor. We believe that policy helps to support access, particularly for
CMHCs, whose calculated costs were still below the cost floor when we
ran the calculations with updated data for this final rule with comment
period.
We also recognize that as the number of providers decreases, the
ratesetting calculations can be more strongly influenced by the costs
of large providers. We are regularly evaluating our rate setting
methodology to ensure that it is as accurate as possible, and captures
provider cost data fully. However, our rate setting methodology must
comply with requirements given in statute at 1833(t)(2) and 1833(t)(9),
and depends heavily on provider-reported costs. As noted previously, we
strongly encourage CMHCs to review cost reporting instructions to be
sure they are reporting their costs correctly. These instructions are
available in chapter 45 of the Provider
[[Page 61344]]
Reimbursement Manual, Part 2, available on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Paper-Based-Manuals.html. We also strongly encourage those CMHCs that do not file
full cost reports to consider doing so, to help us in more fully
capturing CMHC costs in rate setting.
We maintain positive working relationships with various industry
leaders representing both CMHCs and hospital-based PHP providers with
whom we have consistently met over the years to discuss industry
concerns and ideas. These relationships have provided significant and
valued input regarding PHP ratesetting. We also hold Hospital
Outpatient Open Door Forum calls monthly, in which all individuals are
welcome to participate and/or submit questions regarding specific
issues, including questions related to PHPs. Furthermore, we initiate
rulemaking annually, through which we receive public comments on
proposals set forth in a proposed rule and respond to those comments in
a final rule. All individuals are provided an opportunity to comment,
and we give consideration to each comment that we receive. Given the
relationships that we have established with various industry leaders
and the various means for us to receive comments and recommendations,
we believe that we receive adequate input regarding ratesetting and
take that input into consideration when establishing the payment rates.
We continue to welcome any input and information that the public is
willing to provide.
After consideration of the comments, we are finalizing our proposal
as proposed. Because the final CY 2020 calculated CMHC geometric mean
per diem cost of $103.50 is less than the cost floor amount of $121.62,
the final CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean per diem cost is $121.62.
b. Hospital-Based PHP Data Preparation: Data Trims and Exclusions
For this CY 2020 final rule with comment period, we prepared data
consistent with our policies as described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70463 through 70465) for hospital-based
PHP providers, which is similar to that used for CMHCs. The CY 2018 PHP
claims included data for 436 hospital-based PHP providers for our
calculations in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
Consistent with our policies as stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR 70463 through 70465), we prepared
the data by applying trims and data exclusions. We applied a trim on
hospital service days for hospital-based PHP providers with a CCR
greater than 5 at the cost center level. To be clear, the CCR greater
than 5 trim is a service day-level trim in contrast to the CMHC 2 standard deviation trim, which is a provider-level trim.
Applying this CCR greater than 5 trim removed affected service days
from one hospital-based PHP provider with a CCR of 6.398 from our final
ratesetting. However, 100 percent of the service days for this one
hospital-based PHP provider had at least one service associated with a
CCR greater than 5, so the trim removed this provider entirely from our
final ratesetting. In addition, 59 hospital-based PHPs were removed for
having no PHP costs and, therefore, no days with PHP payment. Two
hospital-based PHPs were removed because none of their days included
PHP-allowable HCPCS codes. No hospital-based PHPs were removed for
missing wage index data, nor were any hospital-based PHPs removed by
the OPPS 3 standard deviation trim on costs per day. (We
refer readers to the OPPS Claims Accounting Document, available online
at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Downloads/CMS-1695-FC-2019-OPPS-FR-Claims-Accounting.pdf.)
Overall, we removed 62 hospital-based PHP providers [(1 with all
service days having a CCR greater than 5) + (59 with zero daily costs
and no PHP payment) + (2 with no PHP-allowable HCPCS codes)], resulting
in 374 (436 total - 62 excluded) hospital-based PHP providers in the
data used for calculating ratesetting. In addition, no hospital-based
PHP providers were defaulted to their overall hospital ancillary CCRs
due to outlier cost center CCR values.
After completing these data preparation steps, we calculated the
final CY 2020 geometric mean per diem cost for hospital-based PHP APC
5863 for hospital-based partial hospitalization services by following
the methodology described in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70464 through 70465) and modified in the CY 2017
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79687 and 79691).\75\
The final calculated CY 2020 hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per
diem cost for hospital-based PHP providers that provide 3 or more
services per service day (hospital-based PHP APC 5863) is $233.52,
which is an increase of 4.8 percent from $222.76 calculated last year
for CY 2019 ratesetting (83 FR 58989 through 58991). The increase in
the final CY 2020 calculated hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per
diem cost from the prior year is influenced by two large providers with
updated cost data, whose costs per day increased. We believe that a
hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per diem cost of $233.52 supports
ongoing access to hospital-based PHPs. This cost is nearly a 5 percent
increase from the final CY 2019 hospital-based PHP geometric mean per
diem cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\75\ Each revenue code on the hospital-based PHP claim must have
a HCPCS code and charge associated with it. We multiply each claim
service line's charges by the hospital's department-level CCR; in CY
2020 and subsequent years, that CCR is determined by using the PHP-
only revenue-code-to-cost-center crosswalk. Only the claims service
lines containing PHP-allowable HCPCS codes and PHP-allowable revenue
codes from the hospital-based PHP claims remaining after trimming
are retained for hospital-based PHP cost determination. The costs,
payments, and service units for all service lines occurring on the
same service date, by the same provider, and for the same
beneficiary are summed. Hospital-based PHP service days must have 3
or more services provided to be assigned to hospital-based PHP APC
5863. The final geometric mean per diem cost for hospital-based PHP
APC 5863 is calculated by taking the nth root of the product of n
numbers, for days where 3 or more services were provided. Hospital-
based PHP service days with costs 3 standard deviations
from the geometric mean costs within APC 5863 are deleted and
removed from modeling. The remaining hospital-based PHP service days
are used to calculate the final geometric mean per diem cost for
hospital-based PHP APC 5863.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the CY 2020 OPPS proposed rule (84 FR 39516 to 39518), the
calculated CY 2020 hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per diem cost
for hospital-based PHP providers that provide 3 or more services per
service day (hospital-based PHP APC 5863) was $198.53, which was a
decrease from $222.76 calculated last year for CY 2019 ratesetting (83
FR 58989 through 58991). We stated that we believe access is better
supported when the geometric mean per diem cost does not fluctuate
greatly. In addition, while the hospital-based PHP APC 5863 is
described as providing payment for the cost of 3 or more services per
day (81 FR 79680), 89 percent of hospital-based PHP paid service days
in CY 2018 were for providing 4 or more services per day. To be
eligible for a PHP, a patient must need at least 20 hours of
therapeutic services per week, as evidenced in the patient's plan of
care (42 CFR 410.43(c)(1)). To meet those patient needs, most PHP paid
service days provide 4 or more services (we refer readers to Table
22.--Percentage of PHP Days by Service Unit Frequency in the proposed
rule). Therefore, the hospital-based PHP APC 5863 is actually heavily
weighted to the cost of providing 4 or
[[Page 61345]]
more services. The per diem costs for hospital-based PHP APC 5863 have
been calculated as $213.14, $208.09, and $222.76 for CY 2017 (81 FR
79691), CY 2018 (82 FR 59378), and CY 2019 (83 FR 58991), respectively.
We noted that we do not believe that it is likely that the cost of
providing hospital-based PHP services has suddenly declined when costs
generally increase over time. We were concerned by this fluctuation,
which we believe was influenced by data from a single large provider
that had low service costs per day.
Therefore, rather than proposing the calculated CY 2020 hospital-
based PHP APC geometric mean per diem cost, we instead proposed to use
the CY 2020 hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per diem cost,
calculated in accordance with our existing methodology, but with a cost
floor equal to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per diem cost for
hospital-based PHPs of $222.76 (83 FR 58991), as the basis for
developing the CY 2020 hospital-based PHP APC per diem rate. As part of
this proposal, we proposed that we would use the most recent updated
claims and cost data to calculate CY 2020 geometric mean per diem costs
for the final rule with comment period, just as we did for CMHCs. We
believe using the CY 2019 hospital-based PHP per diem cost as the floor
is appropriate because it is based on very recent hospital-based PHP
claims and cost data and would help to protect provider access by
preventing wide fluctuation in the per diem costs for hospital-based
APC 5863.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule discussion of the proposed
cost floor, we also considered proposing a 3-year rolling average
calculated using the final PHP geometric mean per diem costs, by
provider type, from CY 2018 (82 FR 59378) and CY 2019 (83 FR 58991),
and the calculated CY 2020 geometric mean per diem cost of $198.53
discussed earlier in this section for hospital-based PHPs. As discussed
previously in that proposed rule, the 3-year rolling average per diem
cost floor for CMHCs would have been $122.75, but the resulting rolling
average per diem cost floor for hospital-based PHPs would have been
$209.79. While we believe that this option would have supported access
to CMHCs, as discussed previously, it could have resulted in a
geometric mean per diem cost for the hospital-based PHP APC which still
would have been a decrease from the hospital-based PHP APC geometric
mean per diem cost of $222.76 finalized in CY 2019 (83 FR 58991). In
addition, we believed that it was necessary to recalculate the
hospital-based PHP geometric mean per diem cost for the final rule
using updated claims and cost data; had we simply proposed to use a 3-
year rolling average per diem cost floor for the hospital-based PHP APC
per diem costs for CY 2020, we could not have done so. We were
concerned that the 3-year rolling average per diem cost would have
continued to result in a fluctuation in the cost of a hospital
providing 3 or more hospital-based PHP services per day.
We believe that it is important to support access to partial
hospitalization services in both CMHCs and in hospital-based PHPs, and
note that hospital-based PHPs provide 80 percent of all paid PHP
service days. Therefore, we believe that it was more appropriate to
have proposed to use the final CY 2019 geometric mean per diem costs,
by provider type, as the cost floor for use with the calculated CY 2020
PHP geometric mean per diem costs, by provider type, because those CY
2019 per diem costs are based on very recent CMHC and hospital-based
PHP claims and cost data, are the easiest to understand, and would
result in final geometric mean per diem costs which would help to
protect provider access by preventing wide fluctuation in the per diem
costs for both CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs.
While the cost floor would have protected hospital-based PHPs if
the final CY 2020 calculated hospital-based PHP APC geometric mean per
diem cost were still less than $222.76, the final calculated hospital-
based PHP geometric mean per diem cost of $233.52 is greater than the
floor, and therefore, we are finalizing this calculated CY 2020 cost
for hospital-based PHPs. We believe finalizing our proposal for CY 2020
ratesetting allows us to use the most recent or very recent hospital-
based PHP claims and cost reporting data while still protecting
provider access. To be clear, this policy of using a cost floor is only
applied for the CY 2020 ratesetting.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we estimated that the
aggregate difference in the (prescaled) hospital-based PHP geometric
mean per diem costs for CY 2020 from proposing the hospital-based PHP
cost floor amount of $222.76 rather than the calculated hospital-based
PHP geometric mean per diem cost of $198.53 to be $9.3 million.
However, because we are finalizing the CY 2020 calculated geometric
mean per diem cost for hospital-based PHPs, there is no cost difference
to Medicare from using a cost floor. We refer readers to section XXVII.
of this final rule for payment impacts, which are budget neutral.
We received several comments on our proposal.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about the decline in
the number of CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs, and the effects on
beneficiary access to care. Two commenters wrote that the current
payment methodology has resulted in reductions in provider access
rather than protection of access. Commenters noted that these declines
have occurred while the need for mental health services has increased;
that the demand for mental health services is on track to outpace the
supply of behavioral health care providers; that as the number of PHPs
declines, it may become even more difficult to calculate the
appropriate per diems; and that recent changes in OPPS rulemaking
related to Section 603 of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 require
that the per diem for new hospital-based PHP programs must be set equal
to the lower CMHC rate, which they said was not viable for hospital-
based PHPs and would limit the ability to create new PHP programs. A
few commenters noted that decreased access to PHP services could result
in increasing instances of patient recidivism and more inpatient
psychiatric admissions.
Response: We appreciate the work PHPs do to care for a particularly
vulnerable population with serious mental illnesses and believe that
having PHPs available to beneficiaries helps prevent patient recidivism
and inpatient psychiatric admissions. We share the commenters' concerns
about the decline in the number of PHPs and the effect on access. Our
goal is to protect access to both provider types, so beneficiaries have
choices regarding where to receive treatment. We also refer readers to
section VIII.B.2.a. for a similar comment and response related to
CMHCs.
Regarding the effects of Section 603 of the Bipartisan Budget Act
of 2015 \76\ on hospital-based PHP access, we note that this provision
amended the statute at section 1833(t) of the Act to require that
certain items and services furnished in certain off-campus provider-
based departments (PBDs) shall not be considered covered outpatient
department services for purposes of OPPS, and payment for those
nonexcepted items and services shall be made ``under the applicable
payment system'' beginning January 1, 2017 (81 FR 79720).
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\76\ Public Law 114-74.
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These amendments do not prevent hospitals from creating new PHP
programs. Instead, they provide that certain items and services are no
longer
[[Page 61346]]
covered OPD services payable under the OPPS, and instead must be paid
under another ``applicable payment system.'' CMS adopted the Medicare
Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) as the applicable payment system for
these services (81 FR 79717). Although, nonexcepted off-campus
provider-based departments are no longer paid under the OPPS and
payments may be lower for these departments, the section 603 changes do
not prohibit these departments from creating PHP programs. Excepted
off-campus provider-based departments and the main campuses of
hospitals continue to be paid under the OPPS, so it is unclear for
these locations why entities could not create new PHPs.
Commenters were incorrect in stating that new hospital-based PHPs
are paid at the CMHC per diem rate. Only non-excepted off-campus PHPs
are paid through the MPFS at the CMHC rate; new hospital-based PHPs
that are on-campus are paid at the hospital-based PHP per diem rate
under the OPPS.
We believe that paying non-excepted off-campus PHPs through the
MPFS at the CMHC APC rate is appropriate. We note that the clinical
services, staffing, and documentation requirements are similar for
CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs. As discussed in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR 79717), when a beneficiary
receives services in an off-campus department of a hospital (such as in
a hospital-based PHP), the Medicare payment is generally higher than
when those same services are provided in a physician's office.
Similarly, when partial hospitalization services are provided in a
hospital-based PHP, Medicare pays more than when those same services
are provided by a CMHC. CMHCs are freestanding providers that are not
part of a hospital, and that have lower cost structures than hospital-
based PHPs. This is similar to the differences between freestanding
entities paid under the MPFS that furnish other services also provided
by hospital-based entities. We believe that paying for non-excepted
hospital-based partial hospitalization services at the lower CMHC per
diem rate is in alignment with section 603 amendments to the OPPS
statute, while also protecting access to the PHP benefit.
Furthermore, we note that our policy of paying non-excepted off-
campus PHPs at the CMHC APC 5853 per diem rate provides some relief to
those off-campus PHPs since non-PHP mental health services provided by
non-excepted off-campus hospital provider departments are paid through
the MPFS at 40 percent of the OPPS APC amount for the same service.
Paying non-excepted off-campus hospital-based PHPs at the CY 2020 CMHC
APC 5853 payment rate results in a payment that is 52 percent of the CY
2020 APC 5863 OPPS payment rate for hospital-based PHPs. The final FY
2020 payment rates for PHP APCs 5853 and 5863 are in Addendum A to this
final rule with comment period, which is available in the FY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule supporting documents found on our website at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS base PHP reimbursement on
incentives determined by documented productivity results. This
commenter suggested we consider Measurement-based Care and Patient
Satisfaction.
Response: We believe ``measurement-based care'' that the commenter
cited refers to administering a standardized instrument to measure some
aspect of patient symptoms when he or she begins and ends receiving PHP
services. This type of measure could inform clinical decision-making
and quality improvement activities at minimum, but results could
theoretically be used to adjust payment. We also believe that the
commenter is asking if CMS could administer patient satisfaction
surveys (like HCAHPS) and then reward high-performing PHPs.
Currently, there is no statutory language explicitly authorizing an
incentive payment methodology based on productivity results or patient
satisfaction for CMHCs or for outpatient hospital-based PHPs. We
responded to a similar public comment in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70462) and refer readers to a summary
of that comment and our response. To reiterate, sections 1833(t)(2) and
1833(t)(9) of the Act set forth the requirements for establishing and
adjusting OPPS payment rates, which are based on costs, and which
include PHP payment rates. We note that section 1833(t)(17) of the Act
authorizes the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program,
which applies a payment reduction to subsection (d) hospitals that fail
to meet program requirements; as finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 59109 to 59110), this payment
reduction applies to HCPCS codes which include PHP services. In the CY
2015 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (79 FR 41040), we considered future
inclusion of, and requested comments on, the following quality measures
addressing PHP issues that would apply in the hospital outpatient
setting: (1) 30-Day Readmission; (2) Group Therapy; and (3) No
Individual Therapy. We also refer readers to the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (79 FR 66957 through 66958) for a discussion
of the comments received and of PHP measures considered for inclusion
in the Hospital OQR Program in future years.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that more work be done to
establish PHP rates accurately, that CMS reconsider its PHP policy
positions to determine how to rebuild PHP services, or that CMS
establish a task force to review and discuss the availability of PHPs
for Medicare beneficiaries.
Response: We will continue to explore policy options for
strengthening the PHP benefit and increasing access to the valuable
services provided by CMHCs as well as by hospital-based PHPs. As part
of that process, we regularly review our methodology to ensure that it
is appropriately capturing the cost of care reported by providers. For
example, for the CY 2016 ratesetting, we extensively reviewed the
methodology used for PHP ratesetting. In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (80 FR 70462 through 70466), we also included
a detailed description of the ratesetting process to help all PHP
providers record costs correctly so that we can more fully capture PHP
costs in ratesetting. In this CY 2020 ratesetting, we proposed to
calculate the CY 2020 per diem costs with a cost floor. We believe that
proposal helped support access, particularly for CMHCs, whose
calculated costs were still below the cost floor when we ran the
calculations with updated data for this final rule with comment period.
We also recognize that as the number of providers decreases, the
ratesetting calculations can be more strongly influenced by the costs
of large providers. We are regularly evaluating our rate setting
methodology to ensure that it is as accurate as possible, and captures
provider cost data fully. However, our rate setting methodology must
comply with requirements given in statute at 1833(t)(2) and 1833(t)(9),
and depends heavily on provider-reported costs. We remind hospital-
based PHPs that they are required to record PHP costs in cost center
line 9399 (``Partial Hospitalization Program''), which was added to the
cost report in response to commenters in prior OPPS rulemaking (81 FR
79691); this line is the primary source of the department-level CCR
used for hospital-based PHP ratesetting in the Revenue
[[Page 61347]]
Code to Cost Center crosswalk. Line 9399 should not mix other non-PHP
mental health service costs with PHP costs. PHP costs incorrectly
recorded in other cost centers may not be included for PHP rate
setting, thereby affecting the hospital-based PHP per diem cost amount.
We maintain positive working relationships with various industry
leaders representing both CMHCs and hospital-based PHP providers with
whom we have consistently met over the years to discuss industry
concerns and ideas. These relationships have provided significant and
valued input regarding PHP ratesetting. We also hold Hospital
Outpatient Open Door Forum calls monthly, in which all individuals are
welcome to participate and/or submit questions regarding specific
issues, including questions related to PHPs. Furthermore, we initiate
rulemaking annually, through which we receive public comments on
proposals set forth in a proposed rule and respond to those comments in
a final rule. All individuals are provided an opportunity to comment,
and we give consideration to each comment that we receive. Given the
relationships that we have established with various industry leaders
and the various means for us to receive comments and recommendations,
we believe that we receive adequate input regarding ratesetting and
take that input into consideration when establishing the payment rates.
We continue to welcome any input and information that the public is
willing to provide.
We refer readers to section VIII.B.2.a. for a similar comment and
response related to CMHCs.
After consideration of the comments, we are finalizing our proposal
as proposed. Because the final CY 2020 calculated hospital-based PHP
geometric mean per diem cost of $233.52 is greater than the cost floor
amount of $222.76, the final CY 2020 hospital-based PHP geometric mean
per diem cost is $233.52.
In summary, for CY 2020, we are finalizing our proposal to use the
calculated CY 2020 CMHC geometric mean per diem cost and the calculated
CY 2020 hospital-based PHP geometric mean per diem cost, each
calculated in accordance with our existing methodology, but with a cost
floor equal to the CY 2019 final geometric mean per diem costs as the
basis for developing the CY 2020 PHP APC per diem rates, as proposed.
Because the final CY 2020 calculated geometric mean per diem cost for
CMHCs is less than the cost floor amount of $121.62, we are finalizing
a CY 2020 geometric mean per diem cost for CMHCs of $121.62. In
addition, because the CY 2020 final calculated hospital-based PHP
geometric mean per diem cost is greater than the hospital-based PHP
cost floor amount of $222.76, we are finalizing the final calculated CY
2020 hospital-based PHP geometric mean per diem cost of $233.52. In
this final rule with comment period, we used the most recent updated
claims and cost data to calculate CY 2020 geometric mean per diem
costs. The inclusion of a cost floor, which is based on very recent
data, protected CMHCs as their final calculated per diem cost was still
less than the cost floor amount, but was not needed for hospital-based
PHPs.
These final CY 2020 PHP geometric mean per diem costs are shown in
Table 45, and are used to derive the final CY 2020 PHP APC per diem
rates for CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs. The final CY 2020 PHP APC per
diem rates are included in Addendum A to this final rule with comment
period (which is available on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html).\77\
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\77\ As discussed in section II.A. of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule, final OPPS APC geometric mean per diem costs (including
final PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs) are divided by the
final geometric mean per diem costs for APC 5012 (Clinic Visits and
Related Services) to calculate each PHP APC's unscaled relative
payment weight. An unscaled relative payment weight is one that is
not yet adjusted for budget neutrality. Budget neutrality is
required under section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act, and ensures that
the estimated aggregate weight under the OPPS for a calendar year is
neither greater than nor less than the estimated aggregate weight
that would have been made without the changes. To adjust for budget
neutrality (that is, to scale the weights), we compare the estimated
aggregated weight using the scaled relative payment weights from the
previous calendar year at issue. We refer readers to the ratesetting
procedures described in Part 2 of the OPPS Claims Accounting
narrative and in section II. of this final rule for more information
on scaling the weights, and for details on the final steps of the
process that leads to final PHP APC per diem payment rates. The OPPS
Claims Accounting narrative is available on the CMS website at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices.html.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.076
3. PHP Service Utilization Updates
a. Provision of Individual Therapy
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81 FR 79684
through 79685), we expressed concern over the low frequency of
individual therapy provided to beneficiaries. The CY 2018 claims data
used for this CY 2020 final rule with comment period revealed some
changes in the provision of individual therapy compared to CY 2015, CY
2016, and CY 2017 claims data as shown in the Table 46.
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.077
As shown in Table 46A, the CY 2018 claims show that both CMHCs and
hospital-based PHPs have slightly increased the provision of individual
therapy on days with 4 or more services, compared to CY 2017 claims.
However, on days with 3 services, CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs both
decreased the provision of individual therapy compared to prior years.
b. Provision of 3-Service Days
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule with comment
period (82 FR 33640 and 82 FR 59378), we stated that we are aware that
our single-tier payment policy may influence a change in service
provision because providers are able to obtain payment that is heavily
weighted to the cost of providing four or more services when they
provide only 3 services. We indicated that we are interested in
ensuring that providers furnish an appropriate number of services to
beneficiaries enrolled in PHPs. Therefore, with the CY 2017
implementation of CMHC APC 5853 and hospital-based PHP APC 5863 for
providing 3 or more PHP services per day, we are continuing to monitor
utilization of days with only 3 PHP services.
For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we used
the CY 2018 claims data. Table 46A shows the utilization findings based
on the final claims data.
[[Page 61349]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.078
As shown in Table 46A, the CY 2018 claims data used for this final
rule with comment period show that utilization of 3 service days is
increasing compared to the 3 prior claim years. Compared to CY 2017, in
CY 2018 hospital-based PHPs provided more days with 3 services only,
more days with 4 services only, and fewer days with 5 or more services.
Compared to CY 2017, in CY 2018 CMHCs provided more days with 3
services, fewer days with 4 services, and more days with 5 or more
services.
The CY 2017 data are the first year of claims data to reflect the
change to the single-tier PHP APCs. We hope the increase in the
percentage of days with 3 services is simply an anomaly rather than the
start of a trend, but more data will be needed to make that
determination. As we noted in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79685), we will continue to monitor the provision
of days with only 3 services, particularly now that the single-tier PHP
APCs 5853 and 5863 are established for providing 3 or more services per
day for CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs, respectively.
It is important to reiterate our expectation that days with only 3
services are meant to be an exception and not the typical PHP day. In
the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR 68694), we
clearly stated that we consider the acceptable minimum units of PHP
services required in a PHP day to be 3 and explained that it was never
our intention that 3 units of service represent the number of services
to be provided in a typical PHP day. PHP is furnished in lieu of
inpatient psychiatric hospitalization and is intended to be more
intensive than a half-day program. We further indicated that a typical
PHP day should generally consist of 5 to 6 units of service (73 FR
68689). We explained that days with only 3 units of services may be
appropriate to bill in certain limited circumstances, such as when a
patient might need to leave early for a medical appointment and,
therefore, would be unable to complete a full day of PHP treatment. At
that time, we noted that if a PHP were to only provide days with 3
services, it would be difficult for patients to meet the eligibility
requirement in 42 CFR 410.43(c)(1) that patients must require a minimum
of 20 hours per week of therapeutic services as evidenced in their plan
of care (73 FR 68689).
We received 2 comments related to PHP utilization.
Comment: Two commenters noted that the data in Table 22 of the
proposed rule demonstrate commitment by PHPs to comply with and exceed
the 20-hour rule. These commenters noted that the vast majority of
claim days for CMHCs and hospital-based PHPs have 4 or more services
provided. The commenters noted that PHPs are voluntary, and that they
cannot force patients to attend every day. They also noted that the
typical patient profile includes behaviors that work against attendance
and full daily participation. In addition, the commenters wrote that
there are other challenges to providing 20 hours of services per week
that are beyond providers' control, such as holidays, weather, and
other medical appointments.
Response: We appreciate that most PHP days include 4 or more
services being provided, but the updated data for this final rule
showed an uptick in the percentage of 3-service days. We will continue
to monitor the data over time.
The ``20-hour rule'' the commenters mentioned is from our
regulations at 42 CFR 410.43(c) (discussed at 73 FR 68694 to 68695),
which require that eligible PHP patients need at least 20 hours of
therapeutic services per week, as evidenced in their plan of care. PHPs
are intended to be intensive programs that are provided in lieu of
inpatient hospitalization. We appreciate the efforts providers have
made to increase beneficiary attendance, and also recognize the
provider concerns about circumstances beyond their control which can
affect the number of hours of services provided each week. We did not
make any proposals related to the 20-hour requirement, and are
continuing to monitor the claims data regarding the hours per week of
services provided, sending providers
[[Page 61350]]
informational messaging without affecting payment.
C. Outlier Policy for CMHCs
In this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, for CY
2020, we are finalizing to continue to calculate the CMHC outlier
percentage, cutoff point and percentage payment amount, outlier
reconciliation, outlier payment cap, and fixed-dollar threshold
according to previously established policies. These topics are
discussed in more detail. We refer readers to section II.G. of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule for our general policies for hospital
outpatient outlier payments (84 CFR 39434 through 39435.
1. Background
As discussed in the CY 2004 OPPS final rule with comment period (68
FR 63469 through 63470), we noted a significant difference in the
amount of outlier payments made to hospitals and CMHCs for PHP
services. Given the difference in PHP charges between hospitals and
CMHCs, we did not believe it was appropriate to make outlier payments
to CMHCs using the outlier percentage target amount and threshold
established for hospitals. Therefore, beginning in CY 2004, we created
a separate outlier policy specific to the estimated costs and OPPS
payments provided to CMHCs. We designated a portion of the estimated
OPPS outlier threshold specifically for CMHCs, consistent with the
percentage of projected payments to CMHCs under the OPPS each year,
excluding outlier payments, and established a separate outlier
threshold for CMHCs. This separate outlier threshold for CMHCs resulted
in $1.8 million in outlier payments to CMHCs in CY 2004 and $0.5
million in outlier payments to CMHCs in CY 2005 (82 FR 59381). In
contrast, in CY 2003, more than $30 million was paid to CMHCs in
outlier payments (82 FR 59381).
2. CMHC Outlier Percentage
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59267
through 59268), we described the current outlier policy for hospital
outpatient payments and CMHCs. We note that we also discussed our
outlier policy for CMHCs in more detail in section VIII. C. of that
same final rule (82 FR 59381). We set our projected target for all OPPS
aggregate outlier payments at 1.0 percent of the estimated aggregate
total payments under the OPPS (82 FR 59267). This same policy was also
reiterated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58996). We estimate CMHC per diem payments and outlier payments by
using the most recent available utilization and charges from CMHC
claims, updated CCRs, and the updated payment rate for APC 5853. For
increased transparency, we are providing a more detailed explanation of
the existing calculation process for determining the CMHC outlier
percentages. As previously stated, we proposed to continue to calculate
the CMHC outlier percentage according to previously established
policies, and we did not propose any changes to our current methodology
for calculating the CMHC outlier percentage for CY 2020. To calculate
the CMHC outlier percentage, we followed three steps:
Step 1: We multiplied the OPPS outlier threshold, which is
1.0 percent, by the total estimated OPPS Medicare payments (before
outliers) for the prospective year to calculate the estimated total
OPPS outlier payments:
(0.01 x Estimated Total OPPS Payments) = Estimated Total OPPS Outlier
Payments.
Step 2: We estimated CMHC outlier payments by taking each
provider's estimated costs (based on their allowable charges multiplied
by the provider's CCR) minus each provider's estimated CMHC outlier
multiplier threshold (we refer readers to section VIII.C.3. of this
final rule with comment period). That threshold is determined by
multiplying the provider's estimated paid days by 3.4 times the CMHC
PHP APC payment rate. If the provider's costs exceeded the threshold,
we multiplied that excess by 50 percent, as described in section
VIII.C.3. of this final rule with comment period, to determine the
estimated outlier payments for that provider. CMHC outlier payments are
capped at 8 percent of the provider's estimated total per diem payments
(including the beneficiary's copayment), as described in section
VIII.C.5. of this final rule with comment period, so any provider's
costs that exceed the CMHC outlier cap will have its payments adjusted
downward. After accounting for the CMHC outlier cap, we summed all of
the estimated outlier payments to determine the estimated total CMHC
outlier payments.
(Each Provider's Estimated Costs--Each Provider's Estimated Multiplier
Threshold) = A. If A is greater than 0, then (A x 0.50) = Estimated
CMHC Outlier Payment (before cap) = B. If B is greater than (0.08 x
Provider's Total Estimated Per Diem Payments), then cap-adjusted B =
(0.08 x Provider's Total Estimated Per Diem Payments); otherwise, B =
B. Sum (B or cap-adjusted B) for Each Provider = Total CMHC Outlier
Payments.
Step 3: We determined the percentage of all OPPS outlier
payments that CMHCs represent by dividing the estimated CMHC outlier
payments from Step 2 by the total OPPS outlier payments from Step 1:
(Estimated CMHC Outlier Payments/Total OPPS Outlier Payments).
In CY 2019, we designated approximately 0.01 percent of that
estimated 1.0 percent hospital outpatient outlier threshold for CMHCs
(83 FR 58996), based on this methodology. In the CY 2020 proposed rule
(84 FR 39521), we proposed to continue to use the same methodology for
CY 2020. Therefore, based on our CY 2020 payment estimates, CMHCs are
projected to receive 0.02 percent of total hospital outpatient payments
in CY 2020, excluding outlier payments. We proposed to designate
approximately less than 0.01 percent of the estimated 1.0 percent
hospital outpatient outlier threshold for CMHCs. This percentage is
based upon the formula given in Step 3.
CMS did not receive any comments on the CMHC outlier percentage, so
we are finalizing the proposal as proposed.
3. Cutoff Point and Percentage Payment Amount
As described in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59381), our policy has been to pay CMHCs for outliers if the
estimated cost of the day exceeds a cutoff point. In CY 2006, we set
the cutoff point for outlier payments at 3.4 times the highest CMHC PHP
APC payment rate implemented for that calendar year (70 FR 68551). For
CY 2018, the highest CMHC PHP APC payment rate is the payment rate for
CMHC PHP APC 5853. In addition, in CY 2002, the final OPPS outlier
payment percentage for costs above the multiplier threshold was set at
50 percent (66 FR 59889). In CY 2018, we continued to apply the same 50
percent outlier payment percentage that applies to hospitals to CMHCs
and continued to use the existing cutoff point (82 FR 59381).
Therefore, for CY 2018, we continued to pay for partial hospitalization
services that exceeded 3.4 times the CMHC PHP APC payment rate at 50
percent of the amount of CMHC PHP APC geometric mean per diem costs
over the cutoff point. For example, for CY 2018, if a CMHC's cost for
partial hospitalization services paid under CMHC PHP APC 5853 exceeds
3.4 times the CY 2018 payment rate for CMHC PHP APC 5853, the outlier
payment would be calculated as 50 percent of the amount by which the
cost
[[Page 61351]]
exceeds 3.4 times the CY 2018 payment rate for CMHC PHP APC 5853 [0.50
x (CMHC Cost-(3.4 x APC 5853 rate))]. This same policy was also
reiterated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 58996 through 58997).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39521), in accordance
with our existing policy, we proposed to continue to pay for partial
hospitalization services that exceed 3.4 times the proposed CMHC PHP
APC payment rate at 50 percent of the CMHC PHP APC geometric mean per
diem costs over the cutoff point. That is, for CY 2020, if a CMHC's
cost for partial hospitalization services paid under CMHC PHP APC 5853
exceeds 3.4 times the payment rate for CMHC APC 5853, the outlier
payment will be calculated as [0.50 x (CMHC Cost-(3.4 x APC 5853
rate))].
CMS did not receive comments on the Cutoff Point and Percentage
Payment Amount, so we are finalizing our proposal as proposed.
4. Outlier Reconciliation
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR 68594
through 68599), we established an outlier reconciliation policy to
address charging aberrations related to OPPS outlier payments. We
addressed vulnerabilities in the OPPS outlier payment system that lead
to differences between billed charges and charges included in the
overall CCR, which are used to estimate cost and would apply to all
hospitals and CMHCs paid under the OPPS. CMS initiated steps to ensure
that outlier payments appropriately account for the financial risk when
providing an extraordinarily costly and complex service, but are only
being made for services that legitimately qualify for the additional
payment.
For a comprehensive description of outlier reconciliation, we refer
readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment period (83 FR
58874 through 58875 and 81 FR 79678 through 79680).
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to continue
these policies for partial hospitalization services provided through
PHPs for CY 2020. The current outlier reconciliation policy requires
that providers whose outlier payments meet a specified threshold
(currently $500,000 for hospitals and any outlier payments for CMHCs)
and whose overall ancillary CCRs change by plus or minus 10 percentage
points or more, are subject to outlier reconciliation, pending approval
of the CMS Central Office and Regional Office (73 FR 68596 through
68599). The policy also includes provisions related to CCRs and to
calculating the time value of money for reconciled outlier payments due
to or due from Medicare, as detailed in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period and in the Medicare Claims Processing Manual (73 FR
68595 through 68599 and Medicare Claims Processing Internet Only
Manual, Chapter 4, Section 10.7.2 and its subsections, available online
at: https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/clm104c04.pdf).
CMS did not receive comments on the Outlier Reconciliation Policy,
so we are finalizing our proposal as proposed.
5. Outlier Payment Cap
In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we
implemented a CMHC outlier payment cap to be applied at the provider
level, such that in any given year, an individual CMHC will receive no
more than a set percentage of its CMHC total per diem payments in
outlier payments (81 FR 79692 through 79695). We finalized the CMHC
outlier payment cap to be set at 8 percent of the CMHC's total per diem
payments (81 FR 79694 through 79695). This outlier payment cap only
affects CMHCs, it does not affect other provider types (that is,
hospital-based PHPs), and is in addition to and separate from the
current outlier policy and reconciliation policy in effect. For CY
2019, we continued this policy in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58997).
For CY 2020 and subsequent years, we proposed to continue to apply
the 8 percent CMHC outlier payment cap to the CMHC's total per diem
payments (84 FR 39522).
CMS did not receive comments on the CMHC outlier payment cap, so we
are finalizing our proposal as proposed.
6. Fixed-Dollar Threshold
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59267
through 59268), for the hospital outpatient outlier payment policy, we
set a fixed-dollar threshold in addition to an APC multiplier
threshold. Fixed-dollar thresholds are typically used to drive outlier
payments for very costly items or services, such as cardiac pacemaker
insertions. CMHC PHP APC 5853 is the only APC for which CMHCs may
receive payment under the OPPS, and is for providing a defined set of
services that are relatively low cost when compared to other OPPS
services. Because of the relatively low cost of CMHC services that are
used to comprise the structure of CMHC PHP APC 5853, it is not
necessary to also impose a fixed-dollar threshold on CMHCs. Therefore,
in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we did not set
a fixed-dollar threshold for CMHC outlier payments (82 FR 59381). This
same policy was also reiterated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58996 through 58997.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39522), we proposed to
continue this policy for CY 2020. CMS did not receive any comments on
the fixed-dollar threshold, so we are finalizing our proposal as
proposed.
D. Update to PHP Allowable HCPCS Codes
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58997
through 58998), we discussed that, during the CY 2019 rulemaking, we
received the Category I and III CPT codes from the AMA that were new,
revised, and deleted, effective January 1, 2019. This included the
deleting of the following psychological and neuropsychological testing
CPT codes, which affect PHPs, as of January 1, 2019:
CPT code 96101 (Psychological testing by psychologist/
physician);
CPT code 96102 (Psychological testing by technician);
CPT code 96103 (Psychological testing administered by
computer);
CPT code 96118 (Neuropsychological testing by
psychologist/physician)
CPT code 96119 (Neuropsychological testing by technician);
and
CPT code 96120 (Neuropsychological test administered w/
computer).
In addition, the AMA added the following psychological and
neuropsychological testing CPT codes to replace the deleted codes, as
of January 1, 2019:
CPT code 96130 (Psychological testing evaluation by
physician/qualified health care professional; first hour);
CPT code 93131 (Psychological testing evaluation by
physician/qualified health care professional; each additional hour);
CPT code 96132 (Neuropsychological testing evaluation by
physician/qualified health care professional; first hour);
CPT code 96133 (Neuropsychological testing evaluation by
physician/qualified health care professional; each additional hour);
CPT code 96136 (Psychological/neuropsychological testing
by
[[Page 61352]]
physician/qualified health care professional; first 30 minutes);
CPT code 96137 (Psychological/neuropsychological testing
by physician/qualified health care professional; each additional 30
minutes);
CPT code 96138 (Psychological/neuropsychological testing
by technician; first 30 minutes);
CPT code 96139 (Psychological/neuropsychological testing
by technician; each additional 30 minutes); and
CPT code 96146 (Psychological/neuropsychological testing;
automated result only).
As we proposed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58997 through 58998), we included these replacement codes
in Addenda B and O. As is our usual practice for including new and
revised Category I and III CPT codes under the OPPS, we included
interim APC assignments and status indicators for these codes and
provided an opportunity under the OPPS for the public to comment on
these interim assignments. That is, we included comment indicator
``NP'' to indicate that the code is new for the next calendar year or
the code is an existing code with substantial revision to its code
descriptor in the next calendar year as compared to current calendar
year with a proposed APC assignment, and that comments will be accepted
on the proposed APC and status indicator assignments.
While these interim APC and status indicator assignments under the
OPPS were included in Addendum B and Addendum O to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule and final rule with comment period, PHP providers may not
have been aware of those changes because we did not also include these
in the PHP discussion presented in the proposed rule; to be clear, PHP
is a part of the OPPS. To ensure that PHP providers were aware of the
new and replacement codes related to CMHC and hospital-based partial
hospitalization programs and had the opportunity to comment on the
changes, we utilized a practice similar to the one we use under the
OPPS for new Level II HCPCS codes that become effective after the
proposed rule is published. Therefore, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, we proposed to delete the same 6 CPT codes
listed from the PHP-allowable code set for CMHC APC 5853 and hospital-
based PHP APC 5863, and replace them with 9 new CPT codes as shown in
Table 47 of the final rule with comment period, effective January 1,
2019. We also refer readers to section III.A.4. of the proposed rule
for a detailed discussion of how we include new and revised Category I
and III CPT codes for a related calendar year, assign interim APC and
status indicator assignments, and allow for public comments on these
interim assignments for finalization in the next calendar year final
rule with comment period.
We solicited public comments on these proposals and since we did
not receive any comments, we are finalizing our proposals as proposed.
IX. Procedures That Will Be Paid Only as Inpatient Procedures
A. Background
We refer readers to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74352 through 74353) for a full historical discussion of
our longstanding policies on how we identify procedures that are
typically provided only in an inpatient setting (referred to as the
inpatient only (IPO) list) and, therefore, will not be paid by Medicare
under the OPPS, and on the criteria that we use to review the IPO list
each year to determine whether or not any procedures should be removed
from the list. The complete list of codes that describe procedures that
will be paid by Medicare in CY 2020 as inpatient only procedures is
included as Addendum E to this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, which is available via the internet on the CMS website.
B. Changes to the Inpatient Only (IPO) List
1. Methodology for Identifying Appropriate Changes to IPO List
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39523 through 39525),
for CY 2020, we proposed to use the same methodology (described in the
November 15, 2004 final rule with comment period (69 FR 65834)) of
reviewing the current list of procedures on the IPO list to identify
any procedures that may be removed from the list. We have established
five criteria that are part of this methodology. As noted in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74353), we utilize
these criteria when reviewing procedures to determine whether or not
they should be removed from the IPO list and assigned to an APC group
for payment under the OPPS when provided in the hospital outpatient
setting. We note that a procedure is not required to meet all of the
established criteria to be removed from the IPO list. The criteria
include the following:
Most outpatient departments are equipped to provide the
services to the Medicare population.
The simplest procedure described by the code may be
performed in most outpatient departments.
The procedure is related to codes that we have already
removed from the IPO list.
A determination is made that the procedure is being
performed in numerous hospitals on an outpatient basis.
A determination is made that the procedure can be
appropriately and safely performed in an ASC and is on the list of
approved ASC procedures or has been proposed by us for addition to the
ASC list.
2. Procedures Proposed for Removal From the IPO List
Using the listed criteria, for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we identified one procedure described by CPT code 27130 (Arthroplasty,
acetabular and proximal femoral prosthetic replacement (total hip
arthroplasty) with or without autograft or allograft) that met the
criteria for proposed removal from the IPO list. The procedure that we
proposed to remove from the IPO list for CY 2020 and subsequent years,
including the CPT/HCPCS code, long descriptor, and the proposed CY 2020
payment indicator was displayed in Table 23 of the proposed rule.
For a number of years, total hip arthroplasty (THA) has been a
topic of discussion for removal from the IPO list with both stakeholder
support and opposition. Most recently, in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (82 FR 33644 and 33645), we sought public comment on the possible
removal of partial hip arthroplasty (PHA), CPT code 27125
(Hemiarthroplasty, hip, partial (for example, femoral stem prosthesis,
bipolar arthroplasty)), and total hip arthroplasty (THA) or total hip
replacement, CPT code 27130 (Arthroplasty, acetabular and proximal
femoral prosthetic replacement (total hip arthroplasty), with or
without autograft or allograft from the IPO list. Both THA and PHA were
placed on the original IPO list in the CY 2001 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (65 FR 18780).
Among those commenters expressing support in response to the CY
2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which we summarized and responded to in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 52527
through 52528)) for removal of THA from the IPO list were several
surgeons and other stakeholders who believed that, given
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thorough preoperative screening by medical teams with significant
experience and expertise involving hip replacement procedures, the THA
procedure could be provided on an outpatient basis for some Medicare
beneficiaries. These commenters noted significant success involving
same day discharge for patients who met the screening criteria and
whose experienced medical teams were able to perform the procedure
early enough in the day for the patients to achieve postoperative
goals, allowing home discharge by the end of the day. The commenters
believed that the benefits of providing the THA procedure on an
outpatient basis include significant enhancements in patient well-
being, improved efficiency, and cost savings to the Medicare program,
including shorter hospital stays resulting in fewer medical
complications, improved results, and enhanced patient satisfaction.
We stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that, like most
surgical procedures, both PHA and THA need to be tailored to the
individual patient's needs. Patients with a relatively low anesthesia
risk and without significant comorbidities who have family members at
home who can assist them may likely be good candidates for an
outpatient PHA or THA procedure. These patients may also be able to
tolerate outpatient rehabilitation in either an outpatient facility or
at home postsurgery. On the other hand, patients with multiple medical
comorbidities, aside from their osteoarthritis, would more likely
require inpatient hospitalization and possibly postacute care in a
skilled nursing facility or other facility. Surgeons who discussed
outpatient PHA and THA procedures in public comments in response to our
CY 2017 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (81 FR 45679) comment solicitation
(which we summarized and responded to in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (81 FR 79696)) on the TKA procedure emphasized
the importance of careful patient selection and strict protocols to
optimize outpatient hip replacement outcomes. These protocols typically
manage all aspects of the patient's care, including the at-home
preoperative and postoperative environment, anesthesia, pain
management, and rehabilitation to maximize rapid recovery, ambulation,
and performance of activities of daily living.
Numerous commenters representing a variety of stakeholders,
including physicians and other care providers, individual stakeholders,
specialty societies, hospital associations, hospital systems, ASCs,
device manufacturers, and beneficiaries, responded to our solicitation
of comments regarding the removal of PHA and THA from the IPO list
(which we summarized and responded to in CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (82 FR 52527 through 52528)). The comments were
diverse and some were similar to the comments we received on our
proposal to remove TKA from the IPO list. Some commenters, including
hospital systems and associations, as well as specialty societies and
physicians, stated that it would not be clinically appropriate to
remove PHA and THA from the IPO list, indicating that the patient
safety profile of outpatient THA and PHA in the non-Medicare population
is not well-established. Commenters representing orthopedic surgeons
also stated that patients requiring a hemiarthroplasty (PHA) for
fragility fractures are, by nature, a higher risk, suffer more
extensive comorbidities, and require closer monitoring and preoperative
optimization; therefore, it would not be medically appropriate to
remove the PHA procedure from the IPO list.
Other commenters, including ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs),
physicians, and beneficiaries, supported the removal of PHA and THA
from the IPO list. These commenters stated that the procedures were
appropriate for certain Medicare beneficiaries and most outpatient
departments are equipped to provide THA to some Medicare beneficiaries.
They also referenced their own personal successful experiences with
outpatient THA.
a. Removal of Total Hip Arthroplasty From the Inpatient Only List
After reviewing the clinical characteristics of the procedure
described by CPT code 27130, considering the public comments described
earlier from past rules, additional feedback from stakeholders, and
with further consultation with our clinical advisors regarding this
procedure, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39524), we
stated our belief that this procedure meets criterion 2 (the simplest
procedure described by the code may be performed in most outpatient
departments) and criterion 3 (the procedure is related to codes that we
have already removed from the IPO list). As such, we believe that
appropriately selected patients could have this procedure performed on
an outpatient basis. Therefore, we proposed to remove THA from the IPO
list and to assign the THA procedure (CPT code 27130) to C-APC 5115
with status indicator ``J1''. We sought public comments on our
conclusion that the procedure described by CPT code 27130 meets
criteria 2 and 3 and our proposal to assign the procedure to C-APC 5115
with status indicator ``J1''. We did not propose to remove PHA from the
IPO list because we continue to believe that it does not meet the
criteria for removal.
Comment: In response to our proposal to remove CPT code 27130 from
the IPO list, we received many of the same type of comments that we
received in response to our CY 2018 proposed rule comment solicitation
for removing THA. Many commenters, including health care providers and
medical associations, supported the proposal. The commenters recognized
that with careful, appropriate selection, THA could be performed in the
outpatient setting with few to no complications. One commenter, an
orthopaedic specialty society, agreed with the patient selection
characteristics that were noted in the proposed rule--namely, that good
candidates for outpatient THA have relatively low anesthesia risk, do
not have significant comorbidities, have in-home support, and are able
to tolerate post-surgical outpatient rehabilitation in either an
outpatient facility or in the home.
One commenter suggested that a patient that requires a revision of
a prior hip replacement, and/or has other complicating clinical
conditions, including multiple co-morbidities such as obesity,
diabetes, heart disease, is not a strong candidate for outpatient THA
and should be scheduled for an inpatient stay. Furthermore, another
commenter stated that the following social factors should be considered
when analyzing the implications of outpatient THA: Living alone, pain,
prior hospitalization, depression, functional status, high-risk
medication, and health literacy. Additionally, both supporters and
opponents requested that CMS provide detailed guidance on what those
selection criteria should look like.
Some commenters did not support the proposal, citing both clinical
and operational concerns based on their experience with the removal of
TKA from the IPO in 2018. Those commenters believe that it would be
hasty to remove THA without waiting for providers and MACs to have a
better handle on performing TKA in the outpatient setting and
developing better skill at performing appropriate patient selection.
One commenter suggested delaying the removal of THA from the IPO list
for a year, until CMS could provide greater evidence, specifically, a
rigorous medical literature review, that THA could be performed safely
in the outpatient or ASC setting, especially for
[[Page 61354]]
beneficiaries with multiple co-morbidities.
Some commenters, including two major orthopaedic associations,
raised concerns about whether the THA procedure meets the criteria
required to be removed from the IPO list. One commenter, an orthopaedic
surgery specialty society for hips and knees, shared that they do not
believe THA meets criterion 2 (the simplest procedure described by the
code may be performed in most outpatient departments)--they argued that
there is no such thing as a simple THA and that all procedures
described by CPT code 27130 have moderate risks for complications. The
commenter further argues that criterion 3 (the procedure is related to
codes that we have already removed from the IPO list) is also not met
since they do not believe that THA and TKA are similar, except for the
risks associated with each in moving the site of surgery. The commenter
expressed additional concerns regarding criterion 4 (a determination is
made that the procedure is being performed in numerous hospitals on an
outpatient basis) and the lack of peer-reviewed literature that would
provide supportive data. Finally, the commenter expressed concerns
regarding criterion 5 (a determination is made that the procedure can
be appropriately and safely performed in an ASC and is on the list of
approved ASC procedures or has been proposed by us for addition to the
ASC list), stating that there is a lack of peer-reviewed literature and
the ability to guarantee excellent patient selection and education,
tailored anesthetic techniques, well-done surgery, good medical care,
and exceptional post-operative care coordination in the ASC setting.
The commenter conceded that performance of THA in the outpatient
setting is possible, but does not believe that data and guidance on
appropriate patient selection and education, patient-specific
anesthetic techniques, and post-operative care coordination are well
demonstrated in peer-reviewed literature. This commenter did note that
appropriate patient selection for outpatient THA candidates could
mitigate some of its concerns.
Another orthopaedic surgery specialty society called the removal of
THA from the IPO list ``rash,'' and expressed extensive concern that
CMS would remove a procedure from the IPO list based on only two of the
five criteria used to determine appropriate removals for the IPO list.
The commenter further expressed concern that the rationale behind
removing THA from the IPO list--specifically that CMS believes it meets
criteria 2 and 3--fails to consider whether or not outpatient
facilities are equipped and appropriate for outpatient THA, and whether
or not THA is performed safely in outpatient settings a majority of the
time.
Response: We thank commenters for providing public comments on the
appropriateness of removing THA from the IPO list and providing it in
outpatient settings. We appreciate the support for the proposal. We
also recognize concerns for ensuring patient health and quality care.
As we have stated numerous times, like most surgical procedures, the
appropriate site of service for THA should be based on the physician's
assessment of the patient and tailored to the individual patient's
needs. As we stated in the proposed rule (84 FR 39524), patients with a
relatively low anesthesia risk and without significant comorbidities
who have family members at home who can assist them may likely be good
candidates for an outpatient THA procedure. On one hand, it may be
determined that these patients will also be able to tolerate outpatient
rehabilitation either in an outpatient facility or at home postsurgery.
On the other hand, patients that require a revision of a prior hip
replacement, and/or have other complicating clinical conditions,
including multiple co-morbidities such as obesity, diabetes, heart
disease, may not be strong candidates for outpatient THA. We also
recognize that elective THA, necessitated, for example, by
osteoarthritis, for a generally healthy patient with at-home support is
different than THA for a hip fracture that is performed on either an
emergent or scheduled basis. While the former may be appropriate for
outpatient THA if the physician believes that the patient may be safely
discharged on the same or next day, the latter may be more appropriate
for hospital inpatient admission.
As previously stated in the discussion of the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule (82 FR 59383), we continue to believe that the decision
regarding the most appropriate care setting for a given surgical
procedure is a complex medical judgment made by the physician based on
the beneficiary's individual clinical needs and preferences and on the
general coverage rules requiring that any procedure be reasonable and
necessary. We also reiterate our previous statement that the removal of
any procedure from the IPO list does not require the procedure to be
performed only on an outpatient basis. That is, when a procedure is
removed from the IPO, it simply means that Medicare will pay for it in
either the hospital inpatient or outpatient setting; it does not mean
that the procedure must be performed on an outpatient basis. The 2-
midnight rule, which is discussed in section X.B. of this final rule
with comment period, provides general guidance on when payment under
Medicare Part A (that is, hospital inpatient) may be appropriate.
However, the 2-midnight rule also recognizes the importance of the
attending physician's clinical judgment regarding the appropriate
setting of care for a procedure to be performed.
While we continue to expect providers who perform outpatient THA on
Medicare beneficiaries to use comprehensive patient selection criteria
to identify appropriate candidates for the procedure, we believe that
the surgeons, clinical staff, and medical specialty societies who
perform outpatient THA and possess specialized clinical knowledge and
experience are most suited to create such guidelines. Therefore, we do
not expect to create or endorse specific guidelines or content for the
establishment of providers' patient selection protocols.
With respect to certain criteria not being met, we remind
commenters that not all criteria must be met for a service to be
removed from the IPO. We continue to believe that THA meets criteria 2
and 3.
Comment: Several commenters stated concerns regarding the impact of
removing THA from the IPO list in light of the 2-midnight rule and
subsequent RAC review. Because of past concerns with the removal of TKA
from the IPO list and fear of RAC review, commenters also suggested
that if THA is removed from the IPO list, that CMS should provide a
two-year exemption from site-of service denials and Recovery Audit
Contractor (RAC) referrals. Commenters further stated that in addition
to the exemption, CMS should also educate providers that CMS policy
allows for case-by-case exceptions to the 2-midnight rule in
consideration of patient history, co-morbidities, and risk of adverse
events.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback. We will again
refer readers to the more extensive discussion of an exemption from
site-of service denials and RAC referrals in section X.B. of this final
rule with comment period. The case-by-case exception under the 2-
midnight rule continues to allow for Part A payment to be made, on a
case-by-case basis, where the physician does not expect the patient to
remain in the hospital for at least two midnights but nonetheless
determines that inpatient admission is necessary based on the clinical
characteristics of
[[Page 61355]]
the patient and that determination is supported by the medical record.
Comment: Several commenters opposed the removal of THA due to
potential detrimental impacts on hospitals participating in the
Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement (CJR) Program and the Bundled
Payments for Care Initiative (BCPI). Some commenters supported the
proposal, but requested that payment for THA in the context of
alternative payment models be adjusted.
Response: We again refer readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ACS final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79698 through 79699) in which we originally
proposed the removal of TKA procedural codes from the IPO list and
sought comments on how to modify the CJR and BPCI programs to reflect
the shift of some Medicare beneficiaries from an inpatient TKA
procedure to an outpatient TKA procedure in the BPCI and CJR model
pricing methodologies, including target price calculations and
reconciliation processes, as we also believe it to be applicable to
THA. As in the case of the policy change to move THAs from the IPO
list, the CMS Innovation Center may consider making future changes to
the CJR and BPCI Models to address the removal of THAs from the IPO
list and the performance of THA procedures in the OPPS setting.
Additionally, CMS notes the concerns about appropriate patient
selection raised by commenters and agrees that it is imperative that
physicians and hospitals are mindful of factors that affect whether a
patient would be a good candidate for outpatient THA or should instead
be admitted as a hospital inpatient; however, for the reasons cited in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we continue to believe that it is
appropriate to remove THA as described by CPT code 27130 from the IPO
list. After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing the removal of CPT code 27130, and assigning the procedure
to C-APC 5115 (Level 5 Musculoskeletal Procedures) with status
indicator ``J1''. In addition, we are removing anesthesia code 01214,
(anesthesia for open procedures involving hip joint; total hip
arthroplasty) as a conforming change.
As stated above, the decision regarding the most appropriate care
setting for a given surgical procedure is a complex medical judgment
made by the physician based on the beneficiary's individual clinical
needs and preferences and on the general coverage rules requiring that
any procedure be reasonable and necessary. Further, the removal of any
procedure from the IPO list, including THA, does not require the
procedure to be performed only on an outpatient basis. That is, when a
procedure is removed from the IPO, it simply means that Medicare will
pay for it in either the hospital inpatient or outpatient setting; it
does not mean that the procedure must be performed on an outpatient
basis. The decision to admit as an inpatient admission or to perform
the procedure on a hospital outpatient basis is subject to the complex
medical judgment of the physician. While we have not established
patient selection criteria for THA or any other procedure, we reiterate
our finding that patients with a relatively low anesthesia risk and
without significant comorbidities who have family members at home who
can assist them may likely be (but are not necessarily) good candidates
for an outpatient THA procedure. These patients may be determined to be
able to tolerate outpatient rehabilitation either in an outpatient
facility or at home postsurgery. While on the other hand, patients that
require a revision of a prior hip replacement, and/or has other
complicating clinical conditions, including multiple co-morbidities
such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, may not be strong candidates
for outpatient THA. As stated previously, we also recognize that
elective THA, necessitated, for example, by osteoarthritis, for a
generally healthy patient with at-home support is different than THA
for a hip fracture that is performed on either an emergent or scheduled
basis. While the former may be appropriate for outpatient THA if the
physician believes that the patient may be safely discharged on the
same or next day, the latter may be more appropriate for hospital
inpatient admission.
3. Solicitation of Public Comments on the Potential Removal of
Procedures Described by CPT Codes 22633, 22634, 63265, 63266, 63267,
and 63268 From the IPO List
Throughout the years, we have received several public comments on
additional CPT codes that stakeholders believe fit our criteria and
should be removed from the IPO list. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, we sought public comment on the removal of the following
procedures from the IPO list in Table 47.
[[Page 61356]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.079
We reviewed the clinical characteristics of CPT codes 22633 and
22634 and stated that we believe they are related to codes that we have
already removed from the IPO list. Specifically, stakeholders have
suggested that CPT codes 22633 and 22634 are related to CPT code 22551
(Arthrodesis, anterior interbody, including disc space preparation,
discectomy, osteophytectomy and decompression of spinal cord and/or
nerve roots; cervical below c2), which is currently performed in the
outpatient hospital setting. During the proposed rule, we sought public
comments that would provide additional information on the safety of
performing CPT codes 22633 and 22634 in the outpatient hospital
setting.
In addition, we reviewed CPT codes 63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268.
Over the years, stakeholders indicated that this series of CPT codes
should be considered minimally invasive, arguing that CPT codes 63265,
63266, 63267, and 63268 meet criteria 1 and 2 for removal from the IPO
list: Most outpatient departments are equipped to provide the services
to the Medicare population and the simplest procedure described by the
code may be performed in most outpatient departments. We sought public
comment on whether CPT codes 63265 through 63268 meet criteria to be
removed from the IPO list, including information from commenters to
demonstrate that the codes meet these criteria.
Comment: We received a few comments in support of the removal of
the services described by CPT codes 22633, 22634, 63265, 63266, 63267,
and 63268. Commenters agreed that these procedures were both related to
codes that were previously removed from the IPO list and are performed
safely in numerous hospitals on an outpatient basis. Commenters largely
provided anecdotal experience in support of removing these services
from the IPO list. One commenter provided a March 2019 published
retrospective cohort study of lumbar interbody fusion to treat spinal
pathology using the American College of Surgeons National Surgical
Quality Improvement Program database. The commenter believed that this
study provided additional insight into the perioperative safety profile
and operative efficiency and efficacy of performing transforaminal
lumbar interbody fusions (TLIF) at an outpatient facility.
Commenters in support of the proposal argued that physicians
perform the cases regardless of the IPO list--evaluating each patient
carefully to determine the best fit clinically for that patient.
Several ASCs commented that they often perform all listed procedures
with few to no complications in that setting. This commenter supported
not only removing all six procedures from the IPO list, but also adding
them to the ASC-CPL list.
Commenters further stated that although their current patient
volume does not constitute a large percentage of Medicare
beneficiaries, they would expect to see similar results with Medicare
patients that are active, have a relatively low anesthesia risk, do not
have significant comorbidities and that also have a support system at
home that can assist them post-procedure. The commenters specifically
supported the removal of the six procedures based on the development of
less invasive techniques, improved perioperative
[[Page 61357]]
pain management, and expedited rehabilitation protocols.
Specifically for the services described by CPT codes 22633 and
22634, commenters agreed that related procedures and similar codes such
as 22551 (Arthrodesis, anterior interbody, including disc space
preparation, discectomy, osteophytectomy and decompression of spinal
cord and/or nerve roots; cervical below c2); 22612 (Arthrodesis,
posterior or posterolateral technique, single level; lumbar (with
lateral transverse technique, when performed); and 22614 (Arthrodesis,
posterior or posterolateral technique, single level; each additional
vertebral segment) were previously removed from the IPO list. One
commenter specifically pointed out that performance of CPT codes 22612,
22614, and 22551 are all allowed in the ASC setting, and that their
safety was reconfirmed in the review of procedures added to the ASC
covered procedures list in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR
59057).
In reference to the laminectomy codes, commenters specifically
supported their removal from the IPO list based on their perceived safe
and effective performance in the outpatient setting, in accordance with
criterion 2.
We also received a few general comments in opposition to the
prospect of removing the codes. Specifically, those who opposed
removing the procedures expressed concern that all six procedures in
this comment solicitation are complex procedures and that very few
Medicare beneficiaries are likely to be good candidates to receive the
procedures in the outpatient setting because of their complexity. The
commenters further stated that removing these procedures from the IPO
list and providing them in the outpatient setting may impact patient
safety and outcomes, which they believe should be the primary
considerations when determining which procedures can be removed from
the IPO list.
Response: After reviewing clinical evidence and the public
comments, including input from multiple spinal specialty societies and
ASCs we have determined that the services described by CPT codes 22633,
22634, 63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268 are appropriate candidates for
removal from the IPO list. CMS notes the overall support and for the
reasons cited in the proposed rule, we believe that it is appropriate
to remove CPT codes 22633 and 22634 from IPO list because they meet
criteria one and two: Most outpatient departments are equipped to
provide the services to the Medicare population and the simplest
procedure described by the code may be performed in most outpatient
departments. We also believe that it is appropriate to remove CPT codes
63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268 from the inpatient only list, based on
criterion one; most outpatient departments are equipped to provide the
services to the Medicare population. Therefore, we are finalizing the
removal of CPT codes 22633, 22634, 63265, 63266, 63267, and 63268, and
assigning the procedures as follows. The APC and status indicator
assignments are reflected in Table 48 below.
Additional Requests for Changes to the IPO List
Comment: CMS received two additional comments recommending the
removal of several procedures not originally proposed for removal from
the IPO list for CY 2020. These recommended procedures related to other
procedures that were recently removed from the IPO. Specifically, the
commenters referenced the following anesthesia codes for removal:
[[Page 61358]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.080
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback. After
consideration of the public comments, we agree that the recommended
anesthesia CPT codes should be removed from the IPO list, as they meet
criterion 3; the procedure is related to codes that we have already
removed from the IPO list. Notably, these removed anesthesia codes will
be assigned a status indicator of ``N''.
Comment: Finally, we also received a comment from a provider
organization that suggested that CMS eliminate the IPO list.
Specifically, the commenter argued that the IPO list should to be
eliminated to allow patient status to be determined by the physician
based on the individual patient's clinical condition.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and will
consider this feedback for future rulemaking.
Table 49 contains the final changes that we are making to the IPO
list for CY 2020.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 61359]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.081
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
X. Nonrecurring Policy Changes
A. Changes in the Level of Supervision of Outpatient Therapeutic
Services in Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs)
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59390
through 59391) and in the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and final rule
with comment period (73 FR 41518 through 41519 and 73 FR 68702 through
68704, respectively), we clarified that direct supervision is required
for hospital outpatient therapeutic services covered and paid by
Medicare that are furnished in hospitals as well as in provider-based
departments (PBDs) of hospitals, as set forth in the CY 2000 OPPS final
rule with comment period (65 FR 18525). In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (74 FR 60575 through 60591), we finalized a
technical correction to the title and text of the applicable regulation
at 42 CFR 410.27 to clarify that this standard applies in critical
access hospitals (CAHs) as well as hospitals. In response to concerns
expressed by the hospital community, in particular CAHs and small rural
hospitals, that they would have difficulty meeting this standard, on
March 15, 2010, we instructed all MACs not to evaluate or enforce the
supervision requirements for therapeutic services provided to
outpatients in CAHs from January 1, 2010 through December 31, 2010,
while the agency revisited the supervision policy during the CY 2011
OPPS/ASC rulemaking cycle.
Due to continued concerns expressed by CAHs and small rural
hospitals, we extended this notice of nonenforcement (``enforcement
instruction'') as an interim measure for CY 2011, and expanded it to
apply to small rural hospitals having 100 or fewer beds (75 FR 72007).
We continued to consider the issue further in our annual OPPS notice-
and-comment rulemaking, and implemented an independent review process
in 2012 to obtain advice from the HOP Panel on this matter (76 FR 74360
through 74371). Under this process used since CY 2012, the HOP Panel
considers and advises CMS regarding stakeholder requests for changes in
the required minimum level of supervision of individual hospital
outpatient therapeutic services. In addition, we extended the
enforcement
[[Page 61360]]
instruction through CY 2012 and CY 2013. For the period of CY 2014
through CY 2017, Congress took legislative action (Pub. L. 113-198,
Pub. L. 114-112, Pub. L. 114-255, and Pub. L. 115-123) to extend
nonenforcement of the direct supervision requirement for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services in CAHs and small rural hospitals
having 100 or fewer beds through December 31, 2017. Then in the CY 2018
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59391), we reinstated
the enforcement instruction providing for the nonenforcement of the
direct supervision requirement for hospital outpatient therapeutic
services in CAHs and small rural hospitals having 100 or fewer beds
through December 31, 2019. The current enforcement instruction is
available on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Downloads/Supervision-Moratorium-on-Enforcement-for-CAHs-and-Certain-Small-Rural-Hospitals.pdf.
As discussed in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(82 FR 59390 through 59391), stakeholders have consistently requested
that CMS continue the nonenforcement of the direct supervision
requirement for hospital outpatient therapeutic services for CAHs and
small rural hospitals having 100 or fewer beds. Stakeholders stated
that some small rural hospitals and CAHs have insufficient staff
available to furnish direct supervision. The primary reason
stakeholders cited for this request is the difficulty that CAHs and
small rural hospitals have in recruiting physicians and nonphysician
practitioners to practice in rural areas. These stakeholders noted that
it is particularly difficult to furnish direct supervision for critical
specialty services, such as radiation oncology services, that cannot be
directly supervised by a hospital emergency department physician or
nonphysician practitioner because of the volume of emergency patients
or lack of specialty expertise. In addition, we are not aware of any
supervision-related complaints from beneficiaries or providers
regarding quality of care for services furnished during the several
years that the enforcement instruction has been in effect.
The upcoming expiration of the latest enforcement instruction
providing for the nonenforcement of the direct supervision requirement
for hospital outpatient therapeutic services for CAHs and small rural
hospitals having 100 or fewer beds has prompted us to consider whether
to change the level of supervision for hospital outpatient therapeutic
services for all hospitals and CAHs. The enforcement instructions and
legislative actions that have been in place since 2010 have created a
two-tiered system of physician supervision requirements for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services for providers in the Medicare program,
with direct supervision required for most hospital outpatient
therapeutic services in most hospital providers, but only general
supervision required for most hospital outpatient therapeutic services
in CAHs and small rural hospitals with fewer than 100 beds.
However, we have not learned of any data or information from CAHs
and small rural hospitals indicating that the quality of outpatient
therapeutic services has been affected by requiring only general
supervision for these services. It is important to remember that the
requirement for general supervision for outpatient therapeutic services
does not preclude these hospitals from providing direct supervision for
outpatient therapeutic services when the physicians administering the
medical procedures decide that it is appropriate to do so. Many
outpatient therapeutic services involve a level of complexity and risk
such that direct supervision would be warranted even though only
general supervision is required.
In addition, CAHs and hospitals in general continue to be subject
to conditions of participation (CoPs) that complement the general
supervision requirements for hospital outpatient therapeutic services
to ensure that the medical services Medicare patients receive are
properly supervised. CoPs for hospitals require Medicare patients to be
under the care of a physician (42 CFR 482.12(c)(4))), and for the
hospital to ``have an organized medical staff that operates under
bylaws approved by the governing body, and which is responsible for the
quality of medical care provided to patients by the hospital'' (42 CFR
482.22). The CoPs for CAHs (42 CFR 485.631(b)(1)(i)) require physicians
to provide medical direction for the CAHs' health care activities,
consultation for, and medical supervision of the health care staff. The
physicians' responsibilities in hospitals and CAHs include supervision
of all services performed at those facilities. In addition, physicians
must also follow State laws regarding scope of practice.
Failure of an applicable physician to provide adequate supervision
in accordance with the hospital and CAH CoPs does not cause payment to
be denied for that individual service. However, consistent violations
of the CoP supervision requirements can lead to a provider having to
establish a corrective action plan to address supervision deficiencies,
and if the provider still fails to meet the CoP requirements, the
hospital or CAH can be terminated from Medicare participation.
Our experience indicates that Medicare providers will provide a
similar quality of hospital outpatient therapeutic services, regardless
of whether the minimum level of supervision required under the Medicare
program is direct or general. We have come to believe that the direct
supervision requirement for hospital outpatient therapeutic services
places an additional burden on providers that reduces their flexibility
to provide medical care. The issues with increased burden and reduced
flexibility to provide medical care have a more significant impact on
CAHs and small rural hospitals due to their recruiting and staffing
challenges, as we have recognized over the years in providing for
nonenforcement of the policy for these hospitals. Larger hospitals and
hospitals in urban or suburban areas are less affected by the burden
and reduced flexibility of the direct supervision requirement. However,
given that the direct supervision requirement has not yet been enforced
for CAHs and small rural hospitals, we believe it is time to end what
is effectively a two-tiered system of supervision levels for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services by proposing a policy that sets an
appropriate and uniformly enforceable supervision standard for all
hospital outpatient therapeutic services.
Therefore, we proposed to change the generally applicable minimum
required level of supervision for hospital outpatient therapeutic
services from direct supervision to general supervision for services
furnished by all hospitals and CAHs. General supervision, as defined in
our regulation at 42 CFR 410.32(b)(3)(i) means that the procedure is
furnished under the physician's overall direction and control, but that
the physician's presence is not required during the performance of the
procedure. This proposal would ensure a standard minimum level of
supervision for each hospital outpatient therapeutic service furnished
incident to a physician's service in accordance with the statute. We
proposed to amend the existing regulation at Sec. 410.27(a)(1)(iv) to
provide that the default minimum level of supervision for each hospital
outpatient therapeutic service is ``general.''
We will continue to have the HOP Panel provide advice on the
appropriate
[[Page 61361]]
supervision levels for hospital outpatient services as described in
section I.E.2. of the proposed rule. We will also retain the ability to
consider a change to the supervision level of an individual hospital
outpatient therapeutic service to a level of supervision that is more
intensive than general supervision through notice and comment
rulemaking. We solicited public comments on this proposal.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: A majority of commenters supported our proposal to change
the generally applicable minimum required level of supervision for
hospital outpatient therapeutic services from direct supervision to
general supervision when these services are furnished by hospitals or
CAHs. The commenters appreciated that we proposed to eliminate what is
effectively a two-tiered system of supervision levels for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services between CAHs and small rural hospitals
and all other hospitals by proposing a policy that would set an
appropriate and uniformly enforceable supervision standard for all
hospital outpatient therapeutic services. The commenters also agreed
with our observation that the quality of outpatient therapeutic
services provided by CAHs and small rural hospitals has not been
adversely affected by the nonenforcement instruction. The majority of
commenters stated that our proposal would reduce burden for outpatient
hospital providers, especially those providers in either rural or
underserved areas. The commenters stated that our proposal would allow
CAHs and small rural hospitals more flexibility to provide outpatient
therapeutic care for the Medicare beneficiaries that they serve than
what CAHs and small rural hospitals could provide when the temporary
nonenforcement instruction for direct supervision was in effect,
because a permanent, rather than temporary policy, would allow them to
better make long-range staffing and budgetary plans.
Numerous commenters mentioned the many safeguards noted in our
proposal, including our ongoing policy that gives providers discretion
to require the appropriate amount of supervision to ensure a
therapeutic outpatient procedure is performed without risking a
beneficiary's safety or the quality of the care a beneficiary receives.
Commenters also noted that outpatient hospital and CAH CoPs and state
and federal laws and regulations are present in addition to the
requirements for physician supervision to ensure the safety, health,
and quality standards of the outpatient therapeutic services that
beneficiaries receive.
Response: We appreciate the overall support for our proposal from a
majority of the commenters. We agree with the commenters that this
policy would support our goal of reducing burden on providers,
especially CAHs and small rural hospitals. We also appreciate the
commenters' point that this policy will allow these providers to be
more flexible with their staffing and in turn provide better care to
the communities they serve.
We also appreciate that the commenters noted that providers and
physicians have flexibility to require a higher level of physician
supervision for any service they render if they believe a higher level
of supervision is required to ensure the quality and safety of the
procedure and to protect a beneficiary from complications that might
occur. We agree with the commenters that CoPs, state and federal laws
and regulations, and supervision requirements will also ensure
beneficiary health and safety when receiving outpatient therapeutic
services.
The CoPs for hospitals require a doctor of medicine or osteopathy
(MD/DO) to be responsible for the care of every Medicare patient with
respect to any medical or psychiatric problem that is present on
admission or develops during hospitalization and that is not
specifically within the scope of practice of other types of
practitioners (such as dentists, podiatrists, chiropractors, or
clinical psychologists) as that scope of practice is defined by the
medical staff and permitted by state law (42 CFR 482.12(c)(4)). The
CoPs also require a hospital to ``have an organized medical staff that
operates under bylaws approved by the governing body, and which is
responsible for the quality of medical care provided to patients by the
hospital'' (42 CFR 482.22). The CoPs for CAHs (42 CFR 485.631(b)(1)(i))
require an MD or DO to provide medical direction for the CAHs' health
care activities, and consultation for, and medical supervision of, the
health care staff. The responsibilities of an MD or DO in hospitals and
CAHs include supervision of all services performed at those facilities.
In addition, MDs and DOs must also follow state laws regarding scope of
practice. State scope of practice laws are state-level regulations that
apply to physicians and other health care practitioners that determine
the tasks they can perform when caring for patients in healthcare
settings in that state.
Comment: Two of the commenters, including MedPAC, strongly
encouraged CMS to diligently monitor the impacts of our proposal on the
quality and safety of outpatient therapeutic services that Medicare
beneficiaries receive to ensure their quality of care is not
compromised and that beneficiaries do not experience higher rates of
medical errors. In addition, several commenters wrote in support of the
Hospital Outpatient Payment Panel (HOP) Panel, which continues to
evaluate and make recommendations on supervision levels for individual
therapeutic outpatient services. These commenters also wrote in support
of CMS' use of the regulatory process to set a higher minimum level of
supervision for individual therapeutic services if needed.
Response: We agree with the commenters and will continue to have a
system in place to change the default minimum level of physician
supervision to a level of supervision higher than general supervision,
which we believe will be important to the overall success of this
policy. We are also committed to monitoring care furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries to determine if there is any decline in the quality of
therapeutic outpatient services provided to Medicare beneficiaries as a
result of this policy, although we believe that the combination of the
CoPs, state and federal laws and regulations, and supervision
requirements will help beneficiaries to receive safe and high-quality
care. We agree with commenters that the work of HOP Panel is helpful to
identify individual outpatient therapeutic procedures that may require
a higher minimum level of physician supervision, which can assist us in
electing whether to establish higher minimum supervision levels on
case-by-case basis through notice and comment rulemaking.
Comment: A few commenters were entirely opposed to our proposal to
change the default level of supervision from direct to general and
either requested that no changes be made to our current policy (which
requires the default minimum level of physician supervision for
outpatient therapeutic services to be direct supervision unless we
establish a different minimum level of supervision) or requested that
CMS evaluate outpatient therapeutic services individually to determine
if the default minimum level of supervision should change from direct
supervision to general supervision.
Several of these commenters appreciated the concerns from CAHs and
small rural providers about the burden they face from the physician
supervision requirements, but these
[[Page 61362]]
commenters believed those concerns were outweighed by the need to have
qualified physicians directly supervise services, especially in the
fields of radiation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen treatment, and wound
care. These commenters believed the default level of supervision for
outpatient therapeutic services should be the same for all outpatient
hospitals and CAHs.
Other commenters expressed concerns that allowing general
supervision to be the minimum default level of supervision for certain
types of services, including radiation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen
treatment, and wound care, could put the health and safety of Medicare
beneficiaries receiving these procedures at risk. These commenters
described these particular services as requiring a high level of skill
to perform and having complications that, while rare, can cause serious
issues for a beneficiary's health. Therefore, these commenters believed
that the minimum default level of supervision for radiation therapy,
hyperbaric oxygen treatment, and wound care should be direct
supervision.
Response: We agree with the commenters about the importance of
ensuring the quality of outpatient therapeutic services and the health
and safety of the beneficiaries who receive those services. We also
appreciate the concerns several commenters raised about how this
proposal will affect the quality and safety of outpatient therapeutic
services including radiation therapy, hyperbaric oxygen treatments, and
wound care services. We believe our supervision requirements continue
to provide the safeguards Medicare beneficiaries need to ensure they
receive quality care when they receive outpatient hospital therapeutic
services and that health and safety of beneficiaries is protected.
Providers have the flexibility to establish what they believe is
the appropriate level of physician supervision for these procedures,
which may well be higher than the requirements for general supervision.
In addition, providers must adhere to the hospital and CAH conditions
of participation, federal and state regulations for radiation therapy,
hyperbaric oxygen treatments, and wound care services, and state
standards for scope of practice for medical personnel who provide these
services. We believe that the combination of providers' desire to
ensure the safety of their patients and the regulations governing these
procedures discussed by the commenters should ensure that these
procedures will be appropriately supervised without risking
beneficiaries' safety or the quality of the care beneficiaries receive,
whether the default level of physician supervision is direct
supervision or general supervision.
We reiterate a key point that the commenters who are in support of
our proposal mentioned, which is that establishing general supervision
as the default level of physician supervision for outpatient
therapeutic services does not prevent a hospital or CAH from requiring
a higher level of supervision for a particular service if they believe
such a supervision level is necessary. Providers and physicians have
flexibility to require a higher level of physician supervision for any
service they furnish if they believe a higher level of supervision is
required to ensure the quality and safety of the procedure and to
protect a beneficiary from complications that might occur. We believe
this flexibility for individual providers to have a higher level of
physician supervision for a given service, which has always been
present in our supervision policies, should address the concerns of
those commenters who believe general supervision is not sufficient for
certain outpatient therapeutic services. In addition, CoP, other
federal and state regulations, and state standards for scope of work
for medical personnel are not affected by this policy, and remain in
place to ensure that hospitals provide proper medical care to all of
their patients including Medicare beneficiaries.
Comment: Two commenters wanted confirmation that our proposed
policy was intended to be permanent and not just for CY 2020.
Response: This policy will take effect beginning in CY 2020 and
will remain in place through subsequent years unless modified in future
notice and comment rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter wanted more clarification on what
constitutes general supervision. The commenter does not support
Medicare requirements for physician supervision that do not help with
patient safety.
Response: Our policies on supervision, along with hospital
conditions of participation, state scope of practice laws, and other
state and federal laws and regulations, all help ensure the quality and
safety of outpatient hospital therapeutic services Medicare
beneficiaries receive. General supervision is defined in our regulation
at 42 CFR 410.32(b)(3)(i) to mean that the procedure is furnished under
the physician's overall direction and control, but that the physician's
presence is not required during the performance of the procedure.
With general supervision, our proposal would ensure a standard
minimum level of supervision for each hospital outpatient therapeutic
service furnished incident to a physician's service in accordance with
the statute. General supervision ensures patient safety as it requires
a physician to provide overall direction and control for outpatient
hospital therapeutic procedures, which means the medical personnel
performing the procedure are being monitored and receiving guidance
from a qualified physician even if the physician is not physically
present. Also, a provider may voluntarily choose to require a higher
level of involvement in the medical procedure by the physician if the
hospital believes it is necessary for the safety of the patient
receiving the procedure.
Additionally, we solicited public comments on whether specific
types of services, such as chemotherapy administration or radiation
therapy, should be excepted from our proposal to change the generally
applicable minimum required level of supervision for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services from direct supervision to general
supervision for services furnished by all hospitals and CAHs.
Comment: Multiple commenters supported our proposal to have general
supervision be the minimum default level of supervision for outpatient
hospital therapeutic chemotherapy and radiation therapy services. One
commenter supported this policy because they were concerned that if
direct supervision was required to be the default minimum level of
physician supervision for chemotherapy and radiation therapy while all
other outpatient hospital therapeutic services have a default minimum
level of general supervision, it would be difficult to change the
minimum default level of supervision for chemotherapy and radiation
therapy to general supervision in the future. Another commenter wanted
to know under what circumstances the minimum default supervision level
for chemotherapy and radiation therapy would be direct physician
supervision if the current policy has established general supervision
as the minimum default level of supervision.
Response: We appreciate the feedback we received from commenters on
this topic. Regarding the question from the one commenter about how the
default minimum level of supervision for chemotherapy and radiation
services could be direct supervision when the default minimum level of
supervision is
[[Page 61363]]
general supervision for other outpatient therapeutic services, we note
that because we are finalizing our proposal to require general
supervision for all outpatient therapeutic services, the required
supervision level is the same for all of these services, including
chemotherapy and radiation therapy services.
After reviewing all of the public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal for CY 2020 and subsequent years to change the generally
applicable minimum required level of supervision for hospital
outpatient therapeutic services from direct supervision to general
supervision for services furnished by all hospitals and CAHs without
modification. We also note all of the policy safeguards that have been
in place to ensure the safety, health, and quality standards of the
outpatient therapeutic services that beneficiaries receive will
continue to be in place under our new policy. These safeguards include
allowing providers and physicians the discretion to require a higher
level of supervision to ensure a therapeutic outpatient procedure is
performed without risking a beneficiary's safety or their quality of
the care, as well as the presence outpatient hospital and CAH CoPs, and
other state and federal laws and regulations. We are also finalizing
the accompanying changes we proposed to the regulatory text at Sec.
410.27 with several technical changes.
B. Short Inpatient Hospital Stays
1. Background on the 2-Midnight Rule
In the FY 2014 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (78 FR 50913 through
50954), we clarified our policy regarding when an inpatient admission
is considered reasonable and necessary for purposes of Medicare Part A
payment. Under this policy, we established a benchmark providing that
surgical procedures, diagnostic tests, and other treatments would be
generally considered appropriate for inpatient hospital admission and
payment under Medicare Part A when the physician expects the patient to
require a stay that crosses at least 2 midnights and admits the patient
to the hospital based upon that expectation. Conversely, when a
beneficiary enters a hospital for a surgical procedure not designated
as an inpatient-only (IPO) procedure as described in 42 CFR 419.22(n),
a diagnostic test, or any other treatment, and the physician expects to
keep the beneficiary in the hospital for only a limited period of time
that does not cross 2 midnights, the services would be generally
inappropriate for payment under Medicare Part A, regardless of the hour
that the beneficiary came to the hospital or whether the beneficiary
used a bed. With respect to services designated under the OPPS as IPO
procedures, we explained that because of the intrinsic risks, recovery
impacts, or complexities associated with such services, these
procedures would continue to be appropriate for inpatient hospital
admission and payment under Medicare Part A regardless of the expected
length of stay. We also indicated that there might be further ``rare
and unusual'' exceptions to the application of the benchmark, which
would be detailed in subregulatory guidance.
2. Current Policy for Medical Review of Inpatient Hospital Admissions
Under Medicare Part A
In the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (80 FR 70538
through 70549), we revised the previous rare and unusual exceptions
policy and finalized a proposal to allow for case-by-case exceptions to
the 2-midnight benchmark, whereby Medicare Part A payment may be made
for inpatient admissions where the admitting physician does not expect
the patient to require hospital care spanning 2 midnights, if the
documentation in the medical record supports the physician's
determination that the patient nonetheless requires inpatient hospital
care.
We note that, in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we reiterated our position that the 2-midnight benchmark
provides clear guidance on when a hospital inpatient admission is
appropriate for Medicare Part A payment, while respecting the role of
physician judgment. We stated that the following criteria will be
relevant to determining whether an inpatient admission with an expected
length of stay of less than 2 midnights is nonetheless appropriate for
Medicare Part A payment:
Complex medical factors such as history and comorbidities;
The severity of signs and symptoms;
Current medical needs; and
The risk of an adverse event.
In other words, for purposes of Medicare payment, an inpatient
admission is payable under Part A if the documentation in the medical
record supports either the admitting physician's reasonable expectation
that the patient will require hospital care spanning at least 2
midnights, or the physician's determination based on factors such as
those identified above that the patient nonetheless requires care on an
inpatient basis. The exceptions for procedures on the IPO list and for
``rare and unusual'' circumstances designated by CMS as national
exceptions were unchanged by the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period.
As we stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, the decision to formally admit a patient to the hospital is
subject to medical review. For instance, for cases where the medical
record does not support a reasonable expectation of the need for
hospital care crossing at least 2 midnights, and for inpatient
admissions not related to a surgical procedure specified by Medicare as
an IPO procedure under 42 CFR 419.22(n) or for which there was not a
national exception, payment of the claim under Medicare Part A is
subject to the clinical judgment of the medical reviewer. The medical
reviewer's clinical judgment involves the synthesis of all submitted
medical record information (for example, progress notes, diagnostic
findings, medications, nursing notes, and other supporting
documentation) to make a medical review determination on whether the
clinical requirements in the relevant policy have been met. In
addition, Medicare review contractors must abide by CMS' policies in
conducting payment determinations, but are permitted to take into
account evidence-based guidelines or commercial utilization tools that
may aid such a decision. While Medicare review contractors may continue
to use commercial screening tools to help evaluate the inpatient
admission decision for purposes of payment under Medicare Part A, such
tools are not binding on the hospital, CMS, or its review contractors.
This type of information also may be appropriately considered by the
physician as part of the complex medical judgment that guides their
decision to keep a beneficiary in the hospital and formulation of the
expected length of stay.
3. Change for Medical Review of Certain Inpatient Hospital Admissions
Under Medicare Part A for CY 2020 and Subsequent Years
As stated earlier in this section, the procedures on the IPO list
of procedures under the OPPS are not subject to the 2-midnight
benchmark for purposes of inpatient hospital payment. However, the 2-
midnight benchmark is applicable once procedures have been removed from
the IPO list. Procedures that are removed from the IPO list are also
subject to initial medical reviews of claims for short-stay inpatient
[[Page 61364]]
admissions conducted by Beneficiary and Family-Centered Care Quality
Improvement Organizations (BFCC-QIOs).
BFCC-QIOs may also refer providers to the Recovery Audit
Contractors (RACs) for further medical review due to exhibiting
persistent noncompliance with Medicare payment policies, including, but
not limited to:
Having high denial rates;
Consistently failing to adhere to the 2-midnight rule; or
Failing to improve their performance after QIO educational
intervention.
As part of our continued effort to facilitate compliance with our
payment policy for inpatient admissions, we proposed to establish a 1-
year exemption from certain medical review activities for procedures
removed from the IPO list under the OPPS in CY 2020 and subsequent
years. Specifically, we proposed that procedures that have been removed
from the IPO list would not be eligible for referral to RACs for
noncompliance with the 2-midnight rule within the first calendar year
of their removal from the IPO list. These procedures would not be
considered by the BFCC-QIOs in determining whether a provider exhibits
persistent noncompliance with the 2-midnight rule for purposes of
referral to the RAC nor would these procedures be reviewed by RACs for
``patient status.'' During this 1-year period, BFCC-QIOs would have the
opportunity to review such claims in order to provide education for
practitioners and providers regarding compliance with the 2-midnight
rule, but claims identified as noncompliant would not be denied with
respect to the site-of-service under Medicare Part A. Again,
information gathered by the BFCC-QIO when reviewing procedures that are
newly removed from the IPO list could be used for educational purposes
and would not result in a claim denial during the proposed 1-year
exemption period.
In the proposed rule, we stated that we believed that a 1-year
exemption from BFCC-QIO referral to RACs and RAC ``patient status''
review of the setting for procedures removed from the IPO list under
the OPPS and performed in the inpatient setting would be an adequate
amount of time to allow providers to gain experience with application
of the 2-midnight rule to these procedures and the documentation
necessary for Part A payment for those patients for which the admitting
physician determines that the procedures should be furnished in an
inpatient setting. Furthermore, we stated our belief that this 1-year
exemption from referrals to RACs, RAC patient status review, and claims
denials would be sufficient to allow providers time to update their
billing systems and gain experience with respect to newly removed
procedures eligible to be paid under either the IPPS or the OPPS, while
avoiding potential adverse site-of-service determinations. Nonetheless,
we solicited public comments regarding the appropriate period of time
for this proposed exemption. Specifically, we stated that commenters
may indicate whether and why they believe the proposed 1-year period is
appropriate, or whether they believe a longer or shorter exemption
period would be more appropriate.
In summary, for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we proposed to
establish a 1-year exemption from site-of-service claim denials, BFCC-
QIO referrals to RACs, and RAC reviews for ``patient status'' (that is,
site-of-service) for procedures that are removed from the IPO list
under the OPPS beginning on January 1, 2020. We encourage BFCC-QIOs to
review these cases for medical necessity in order to educate themselves
and the provider community on appropriate documentation for Part A
payment when the admitting physician determines that it is medically
reasonable and necessary to conduct these procedures on an inpatient
basis. We note that we will monitor changes in site-of-service to
determine whether changes may be necessary to certain CMS Innovation
Center models.
Comment: Numerous stakeholders including medical professional
societies, health systems, hospital associations, and individuals
supported the proposal of a 1-year exemption from site-of-service claim
denials under Medicare Part A, eligibility for BFCC-QIO referrals to
RACs for noncompliance with the 2-midnight rule, and RAC reviews for
``patient status'' (that is, site-of-service) for procedures that are
removed from the IPO list under the OPPS beginning on January 1, 2020.
However, many of these commenters supported an extension of the
exemption policy past 1 year, with a majority of commenters
recommending a period of 2 years, some commenters recommending three
years or more, and others recommending that CMS permanently restrict
RAC reviews of patient status for procedures removed from the IPO list
in deference to physicians' clinical judgment. The commenters stated
that a longer period of time is necessary for providers to adjust
patterns of practice for procedures that have been removed from the IPO
list and to prepare for system-wide implementation. Some commenters
also requested that CMS maintain consistency with the policy finalized
when total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was removed from the IPO list and
limit RAC review for ``patient status'' for a period of 2 years.
Response: We appreciate the stakeholders' feedback regarding the
appropriate period of time for this exemption. After considering the
options recommended by commenters, we have decided to modify our
proposal and exempt procedures that are removed from the IPO list from
site-of-service claim denials under Medicare Part A, eligibility for
BFCC-QIO referrals to RACs for noncompliance with the 2-midnight rule,
and RAC reviews for ``patient status'' (that is, site-of-service) for a
period of 2 years beginning in CY 2020. We agree with the majority of
commenters who stated a two-year exemption period from certain medical
review activities for procedures removed from the IPO list would be
more beneficial to the provider community than a 1-year exemption, as
such a time period will be sufficient to help hospitals and clinicians
to become used to the availability of payment under both the hospital
inpatient and outpatient setting for procedures newly removed from the
IPO. Further, we were persuaded by the comments explaining that a 2-
year exemption period of exemption will allow providers time to gather
information on procedures newly removed from the IPO list to help
inform education and guidance for the broader provider community,
develop patient selection criteria to identify which patients are, and
are not, appropriate candidates for outpatient procedures and to
develop related policy protocols. We also believe that an extended
exemption period will further facilitate compliance with our payment
policy for inpatient admissions.
We believe that a 2-year exemption time period is adequate to let
providers gain experience with the application of the 2-midnight rule
to these procedures. We also believe that a 2-year exemption of the
medical review activities discussed above for procedures removed from
the IPO list will be sufficient time for providers and BFCC-QIOs to
understand the documentation necessary to support Part A payment for
those patients for which the admitting physician determines that the
procedures should be furnished in an inpatient setting. At this time,
we do not believe it is necessary to exempt procedures that have been
removed from the IPO list from the medical review activities discussed
above for a
[[Page 61365]]
period of longer than 2 years. With regard to comments recommending
that we permanently restrict RAC reviews of ``patient status'' in
deference to physicians' clinical judgment, we believe that it is
necessary to allow BFCC-QIOs to resume referring providers to the RACs
for further medical review due to exhibiting persistent noncompliance
with Medicare payment policies after the two-year exemption period.
Comment: Some commenters also requested clarifications regarding
the proposed policy with regard to BFCC-QIO reviews. One commenter
questioned if the proposed 1-year exemption from certain medical review
activities applied to BFCC-QIO referrals to RACs for review of patient
status only or if it also applied to BFCC-QIO review of medical
necessity for surgery itself. Other commenters suggested that in the
first year after a service is removed from the IPO list, the procedure
should be exempt from both BFCC-QIO medical review and RAC review.
Response: For clarification, as stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39527), this proposal does not exempt procedures
that are removed from the IPO list from the initial medical reviews of
claims for short-stay inpatient admissions conducted by BFCC-QIOs. The
proposal was intended to exempt procedures that are removed from the
IPO list from eligibility for BFCC-QIO referrals to RACs for
noncompliance with the 2-midnight rule, and RAC reviews for ``patient
status'' (that is, site-of-service) for procedures that are removed
from the IPO list under the OPPS beginning on January 1, 2020. We also
stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule that we encourage BFCC-
QIOs to review these cases for medical necessity in order to educate
themselves and the provider community on appropriate documentation for
Part A payment when the admitting physician determines that it is
medically reasonable and necessary to conduct these procedures on an
inpatient basis (84 FR 39528).
Also, as stated in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70545), section 1154(a)(1) of the Act authorizes BFCC-
QIOs to review whether services and items billed under Medicare are
reasonable and medically necessary and whether services that are
provided on an inpatient basis could be appropriately and effectively
provided on an outpatient basis. Accordingly, BFCC-QIOs will continue
to conduct initial medical reviews for both the medical necessity of
the services, and the medical necessity of the site-of-service. BFCC-
QIOs will continue to be permitted and expected to deny claims if the
service itself is determined not to be reasonable and medically
necessary. BFCC-QIOs will not make referrals to RACs for noncompliance
with the 2-midnight rule for procedures that are removed from the IPO
list within the first two years of their removal, RACs will not conduct
reviews for ``patient status'' (that is, site-of-service) for
procedures that are removed from the IPO list within the first two
years of their removal, and claims with procedures that are removed
from the IPO list that are identified as noncompliant with the 2-
midnight rule will not be denied with respect to the site-of-service
under Medicare Part A within the first 2 years of their removal
beginning on January 1, 2020.
After considering comments received, we are finalizing our policy
as proposed with one modification to the time period of the exemption.
That is, for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we are finalizing a policy
to exempt procedures that have been removed from the IPO list from
eligibility for referral to RACs for noncompliance with the 2-midnight
rule within the 2-calendar years following their removal from the IPO
list. These procedures will not be considered by the BFCC-QIOs in
determining whether a provider exhibits persistent noncompliance with
the 2-midnight rule for purposes of referral to the RAC nor will these
procedures be reviewed by RACs for ``patient status.'' During this 2-
year period, BFCC-QIOs will have the opportunity to review such claims
in order to provide education for practitioners and providers regarding
compliance with the 2-midnight rule, but claims identified as
noncompliant will not be denied with respect to the site-of-service
under Medicare Part A.
C. Method To Control Unnecessary Increases in the Volume of Clinic
Visit Services Furnished in Excepted Off-Campus Provider-Based
Departments (PBDs)
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59004
through 59014), we adopted a method to control unnecessary increases in
the volume of the clinic visit service furnished in excepted off-campus
provider-based departments (PBDs) by removing the payment differential
that drives the site-of-service decision and, as a result,
unnecessarily increases service volume. We refer readers to the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period for a detailed discussion of
the background, legislative provisions, and the changes in payment
policies we developed to address increases in the volume of covered
outpatient department (OPD) services. Below we discuss the specific
policy we finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period and its application under the OPPS for CY 2020.
For the CY 2019 OPPS, using our authority under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act to adopt a method to control unnecessary
increases in the volume of covered outpatient department services, we
applied an amount equal to the site-specific Medicare Physician Fee
Schedule (PFS) payment rate for nonexcepted items and services
furnished by a nonexcepted off-campus PBD (the PFS payment rate) for
the clinic visit service, as described by HCPCS code G0463, when
provided at an off-campus PBD excepted from section 1833(t)(21) of the
Act (departments that bill the modifier ``PO'' on claim lines).
However, we phased in the application of the reduction in payment for
the clinic visit service described by HCPCS code G0463 in the excepted
provider-based department setting over 2 years. For CY 2019, the
payment reduction was transitioned by applying 50 percent of the total
reduction in payment that was applied if these departments were paid
the site-specific PFS rate for the clinic visit service. The PFS-
equivalent rate was 40 percent of the OPPS payment for CY 2019 (that
is, 60 percent less than the OPPS rate). We provided for a 2-year
phase-in of this policy under which one-half of the total 60-percent
payment reduction (a 30-percent reduction) was applied in CY 2019.
These departments are paid approximately 70 percent of the OPPS rate
(100 percent of the OPPS rate minus the 30-percent payment reduction
that is applied in CY 2019) for the clinic visit service in CY 2019.
For CY 2020, the second year of the 2-year phase-in, we stated that
we would apply the total reduction in payment that is applied if these
departments (departments that bill the modifier ``PO'' on claims lines)
are paid the site-specific PFS rate for the clinic visit service
described by HCPCS code G0463. The PFS-equivalent rate for CY 2020 is
40 percent of the proposed OPPS payment (that is, 60 percent less than
the proposed OPPS rate) for CY 2020. Under this policy, adopted in
2019, departments would be paid approximately 40 percent of the OPPS
rate (100 percent of the OPPS rate minus the 60-percent payment
reduction that is applied in CY 2020) for the clinic visit service in
CY 2020.
In addition, as we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
[[Page 61366]]
comment period (83 FR 59013), for CY 2020, this policy will be
implemented in a non-budget neutral manner. The estimated payment
impact of this policy was displayed in Column 5 of Table 44-Estimated
Impact of the Proposed CY 2020 Changes for the Hospital Outpatient
Prospective Payment System in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. In
order to effectively establish a method for controlling the unnecessary
growth in the volume of clinic visits furnished by excepted off-campus
PBDs that does not simply increase other expenditures that are
unnecessary within the OPPS and drive different service-distorting
decisions, we believe that this method must be adopted in a non-budget
neutral manner. The impact associated with this policy is further
described in section XXVI. of this rule.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Numerous commenters, including organizations representing
health insurance plans, physician associations, specialty medical
associations and individual Medicare beneficiaries, supported moving
forward with the phase-in of this proposal. Some of these commenters
commended CMS for completing the two-year phase-in ``since it increases
the sustainability of the Medicare program and reduces costs for
Medicare patients.'' Commenters expressed that the alignment of payment
between the outpatient and physician office setting ``is an important
and necessary reform that can help reduce provider consolidation and
thereby provide beneficiaries with more care options at a lower cost.''
Commenters continued to be supportive of the immediate impact this
policy would have in lowering Medicare beneficiaries' out-of-pocket
costs.
With respect to the policy being applied in a non-budget neutral
manner, one commenter expressed support for the policy and stated that
``the Agency correctly recognized that it cannot address the payment
disparity between the outpatient hospital and physician office settings
as long as it applies payment changes within the OPPS in a budget-
neutral manner that effectively `traps' the potential savings from the
change within the OPPS.''
Several commenters suggested that CMS ``explore additional
opportunities to expand site neutral payments for all clinically
appropriate outpatient services'' beyond the clinic visit service. They
expressed that site neutral payment policies can create incentives for
providers to make decisions that lower the cost of care for
beneficiaries and the Medicare program.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. As we stated in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59005), we
continue to share the commenters' concern that the current payment
incentives, rather than patient acuity or medical necessity, are
affecting site-of-service decision-making. We continue to believe that
these shifts in the sites of service are unnecessary if the beneficiary
can safely receive the same services in a lower cost setting but
instead receives care in a higher cost setting due to payment
incentives. We remain concerned that this shift in care setting
increases beneficiary cost-sharing liability because Medicare payment
rates for the same or similar services are generally higher in hospital
outpatient departments than in physician offices.
We appreciate the comments supporting the implementation of this
policy in a non-budget neutral manner. As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS
ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59013), we believe
implementing a volume control method in a budget neutral manner would
not appropriately reduce the overall unnecessary volume of covered OPD
services, and instead would simply shift services within the OPPS
system because of payment rather than medical necessity. We also
outlined in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
59013) that while section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act requires that
certain changes made under the OPPS be made in a budget neutral manner,
this section does not apply to the volume control method under section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act. As we detailed in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 59005), ``total spending under the OPPS
is projected to further increase by more than $5 billion from
approximately $70 billion in CY 2018 through CY 2019 to nearly $75
billion. This is approximately twice the total estimated spending in CY
2008, a decade ago.'' And as for one of the drivers of this volume
increase, the ``Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) found
that, from 2011 through 2016, combined program spending and beneficiary
cost-sharing on services covered under the OPPS increased by 51
percent, from $39.8 billion to $60.0 billion, an average of 8.6 percent
per year. In its 2018 report, MedPAC also noted that `A large source of
growth in spending on services furnished in hospital outpatient
departments (HOPDs) appears to be the result of the shift of services
from (lower cost) physician offices to (higher cost) HOPDs'.'' (83 FR
59006).
Section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act, titled ``Periodic review,''
provides, in part, that the Secretary must annually review and revise
the groups, the relative payment weights, and the wage and other
adjustments described in paragraph (2) to take into account changes in
medical practice, changes in technology, the addition of new services,
new cost data, and other relevant information and factors'' (emphasis
added). Section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act, titled ``Budget neutrality
adjustment'' provides that if ``the Secretary makes adjustments under
subparagraph (A), then the adjustments for a year may not cause the
estimated amount of expenditures under this part for the year to
increase or decrease from the estimated amount of expenditures under
this part that would have been made if the adjustments had not been
made'' (emphasis added).
However, section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act is not an ``adjustment''
under paragraph (2). Unlike the wage adjustment under section
1833(t)(2)(D) of the Act and the outlier, transitional pass-through,
and equitable adjustments under section 1833(t)(2)(E) of the Act,
section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act refers to a ``method'' for controlling
unnecessary increases in the volume of covered OPD services, not an
adjustment. Likewise, sections 1833(t)(2)(D) and (E) of the Act also
explicitly require the adjustments authorized by those paragraphs to be
budget neutral, while the volume control method authority at section
1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act does not. Therefore, the volume control method
proposed under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act is not one of the
adjustments under section 1833(t)(2) of the Act that is referenced
under section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act that must be included in the
budget neutrality adjustment under section 1833(t)(9)(B) of the Act.
Moreover, section 1833(t)(9)(C) of the Act specifies that, if the
Secretary determines under methodologies described in paragraph (2)(F)
that the volume of services paid for under this subsection increased
beyond amounts established through those methodologies, the Secretary
may appropriately adjust the update to the conversion factor otherwise
applicable in a subsequent year. We continue to interpret this
provision to mean that the Secretary will have implemented a volume
control method under section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the Act in a nonbudget
neutral manner in the year in which the method is implemented, and that
the Secretary may then make further adjustments to the conversion
factor in
[[Page 61367]]
a subsequent year to account for volume increases that are beyond the
amounts estimated by the Secretary under the volume control method.
As detailed later in this section, after consideration of public
comments, we are continuing the second year of the two-year phase-in as
adopted in CY 2019 rulemaking. We will continue to take information
submitted by the commenters into consideration for future analysis.
Comment: MedPAC supported the proposal to adjust the OPPS payment
rate for clinic visits that are provided in excepted off-campus PBDs so
that it is the same as the payment rate for clinic visits provided in
nonexcepted off-campus PBDs. They note that this policy would be
consistent with past Commission recommendations for site-neutral
payments between HOPDs and freestanding physician offices, although the
recommendations it put forth in 2012 and 2014 would have applied to
several services that met certain criteria and would have adjusted
payment so that it equaled the total payment had the services been
furnished in a freestanding office and did not distinguish between on-
and off-campus services. MedPAC further noted that it shares CMS'
concerns about the rate of growth in volume and spending under the
OPPS. MedPAC also stated, perhaps inadvertently, that ``CMS proposes to
implement this policy in a budget-neutral manner.''
Response: We thank MedPAC for its comments and support of this
policy. To clarify, this policy has been phased-in in a non-budget
neutral manner.
Comment: Some commenters were concerned about the impact this
payment change might have on rural providers and safety net health
systems. Commenters suggested that CMS consider policy modifications to
reduce the impact of the payment reduction. They said this could be
accomplished by ``providing the OPPS rate to outpatient departments
located in federally designated Health Professional Shortage Areas or
Medically Underserved Areas.'' Some commenters also suggested that CMS
monitor for any potential access to care issues in rural and
underserved areas.
Response: We share the commenters' concerns about access to care,
especially in rural areas where access issues may be more pronounced
than in other areas of the country. While we understand the concerns
regarding rural hospitals, we believe that implementing with a phase-in
has helped to mitigate the immediate impact rural hospitals might
otherwise face. We will continue to monitor trends for any access to
care issues and may revisit this policy in future rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter, a large medical association, stated that
while it generally supported site neutral payments, it did not
``believe that it is possible to sustain a high-quality health care
system if site neutrality is defined as shrinking all payments to the
lowest amount paid in any setting.'' The commenter went on to state
that ``any savings from site neutrality proposals derived from OPPS
should be reinvested in improvements elsewhere in Part B, including
payments to physicians as inflation is not a factor in annual physician
payment updates and this contributes to the payment differential.'' The
commenter went on to underscore its position that ``CMS should not
implement site neutrality in a way that reduces payment to the lowest
common denominator and should reinvest savings from lowering facility
payments to other Part B services, including payments under the
physician fee schedule.''
Response: We thank the commenter for its input. As we stated in the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59005), to the
extent that similar services can be safely provided in more than one
setting, we do not believe it is prudent for the Medicare program to
pay more for these services in one setting than another. We believe the
increase in the volume of clinic visits, in particular, is due to the
payment incentive that exists to provide this service in the higher
cost setting. Because these services could likely be safely provided in
a lower cost setting, we believe that the growth in clinic visits paid
under the OPPS is unnecessary. Further, we believe that setting the
OPPS payment at the PFS-equivalent rate would be an effective method to
control the volume of these unnecessary services because the payment
differential that is driving the site-of-service decision will be
removed.
We note that the overall amount of Medicare payments to physicians
and other entities made under the PFS is determined by the PFS statute,
and the rates for individual services are determined based on the
resources involved in furnishing these services relative to other
services paid under the PFS. To the extent the commenter believes that
the PFS rate for a particular service is misvalued relative to other
PFS services, we encourage the commenter to nominate the service for
review as a potentially misvalued service under the PFS.
Comment: We received numerous comments urging CMS not to move
forward with the phase-in of this policy. Many commenters believed that
the final rule should reflect the recent decision from the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia, American Hospital
Association, et al. v. Azar, No. 1:18-cv-02841-RMC (D.D.C. Sept. 17,
2019), and that CMS, at a minimum, should maintain the 2019 payments
and not complete the second year of the phase-in. Others believed the
litigation mandated that CMS revert back to the higher payment rates.
Commenters noted that the advisory Panel on Hospital Outpatient Payment
unanimously recommended that CMS freeze the payment policy for clinic
visits furnished by excepted off-campus PBDs at CY 2019 rates and
evaluate whether beneficiary access has been compromised and whether
the volume of outpatient services has decreased. Many commenters argued
that there are several factors in the Medicare program (and outside of
hospital control) that could influence more services moving to the
hospital outpatient setting, including the hospital readmissions
reduction program, hospital value-based purchasing, and the 2-midnight
rule. Commenters reiterated their comments from the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 59005) that, relative to patients
seen in physician offices, patients seen in HOPDs:
Have more severe chronic conditions;
Have higher prior utilization of hospitals and EDs;
Are more likely to live in low-income areas;
Are 1.8 times more likely to be dually eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid;
Are 1.4 times more likely to be nonwhite;
Are 1.6 times more likely to be under age 65 and disabled;
and
Are 1.1 times more likely to be over 85 years old.
Many commenters, including numerous state hospital associations,
stated that making additional cuts to outpatient payment of the
magnitude of the second year of phase-in of the clinic visit policy
would be excessive and harmful. They expressed concern that the cuts
could endanger the critical role that HOPDs play in their communities.
Response: We continue to believe that section 1833(t)(2)(F) of the
Act grants the Secretary the authority to develop a method for
controlling unnecessary increases in the volume of covered OPD
services, including a method that controls unnecessary volume increases
by removing a payment differential that is driving a site-of-service
decision, and as a result, is unnecessarily increasing
[[Page 61368]]
service volume.\78\ We also continue to believe shifts in the sites of
service described in CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(83 FR 59013), are inherently unnecessary if the beneficiary can safely
receive the same services in a lower cost setting but instead receives
care in a higher cost setting due to the payment incentives created by
the difference in payment amounts. While we did receive some data
illustrating that certain HOPDs serve unique patient populations and
provide services to medically complex beneficiaries, we continue to
believe that this data has not demonstrated the need for higher payment
for clinic visits furnished in excepted off-campus PBDs. As we asserted
in the 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59013), the
fact that the commenters did not supply new or additional data
supporting these assertions suggests that the payment differential is
likely the main driver for unnecessary volume increases in outpatient
department services, particularly clinic visits.
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\78\ Available at: https://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ssact/title18/1833.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On September 17, 2019, the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia (the district court) entered an order vacating the
portion of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that
adopted the volume control method for clinic visit services furnished
by nonexcepted off-campus PBDs and remanded the matter to the Secretary
for further proceedings consistent with the district court's
opinion.\79\ On September 23, 2019, the Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) filed a motion requesting that the district court modify
its order to remand the matter without vacatur or, alternatively, to
stay the portion of the order vacating the rule for 60 days from the
date of the order to allow the Solicitor General time to determine
whether to authorize appeal. On October 21, 2019, the district court
denied our motion to modify and request for stay, affirmed that the
portion of the 2019 final rule that adopted the volume control method
for clinic visits furnished by excepted off-campus PBDs is vacated, and
entered final judgment. We acknowledge that the district court vacated
the volume control policy for CY 2019 and we are working to ensure
affected 2019 claims for clinic visits are paid consistent with the
court's order. We do not believe it is appropriate at this time to make
a change to the second year of the two-year phase-in of the clinic
visit policy. The government has appeal rights, and is still evaluating
the rulings and considering, at the time of this writing, whether to
appeal from the final judgment.
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\79\ American Hospital Ass'n, et al. v. Azar, No. 1:18-cv-02841-
RMC (D.D.C. Sept. 17, 2019).
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With respect to the HOP panel, section 1833(t)(9)(A) of the Act
provides that the Secretary shall consult with the Panel on policies
affecting the clinical integrity of the ambulatory payment
classifications and their associated weights under the OPPS. The Panel
met on August 19, 2019, and recommended that CMS freeze the payment
policy for off-campus clinic visits at the calendar year 2019 rates and
evaluate whether beneficiary access has been compromised and whether
the volume of outpatient services has decreased; the panel further
recommended that CMS report its findings back to the Panel for review.
We believe, for reasons outlined in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59013) and in this final rule that in order
to appropriately control unnecessary increases in the volume of clinic
visits services furnished in HOPDs, we must move forward with phasing-
in this policy. Freezing the payment rate, even at the 2019 rate, still
``traps'' the unnecessary spending within the OPPS.
The HOP Panel's recommendations, along with public comments on
provisions of the proposed rule, have been taken into consideration in
the development of this final rule with comment period. While we are
not accepting the HOP Panel's recommendation, we will continue to
monitor and study the utilization of outpatient services as recommended
by the Panel.
Comment: Many commenters referenced the ongoing litigation
(described earlier in this section) in which the district court found
that CMS exceeded its statutory authority by reducing payments for
clinic visit services furnished in excepted off-campus PBDs as a method
to control what we believe are unnecessary increases in the volume of
those services. Several comments suggested that the continued
implementation of this policy should be suspended until the ongoing
litigation is adjudicated. They stated that ``CMS should not take in
further reductions in the clinic payments for off-campus PBDs in CY
2020 or future years until the matter is resolved.''
Commenters also submitted suggestions on how CMS might remedy
payments following the district court's order vacating the portion of
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that adopted the
volume control method for clinic visits. Some suggested that CMS must
``make whole with interest'' affected PBDs. Others recommended that CMS
``make a lump sum payment to the facilities that were subject to the
2019 payment cut'' and requested that ``no additional copayment be
required from patients'' should CMS apply a retroactive remedy. One
commenter suggested that ``CMS provide as a remedy a lump sum payment
to hospitals for the difference that would have been paid had the rule
not been implemented.'' Some commenters stated that ``the remedy should
be completed at a hospital specific level, on a claim by claim basis,''
so as to ensure hospitals are adequately paid for clinic visits.
Several commenters wrote in urging CMS to restore the higher
payment rates (which they believed would be consistent with the
district court decision), promptly repay hospitals for the 2019 payment
cuts, and abandon the second phase of the payment cut for 2020. Many
noted that should the agency move forward with the second phase of the
cut, it would cause additional harm to many hospitals, and they
intended to continue pursuing legal remedies.
Another commenter suggested that while the court remanded to CMS
the issue of remediation of cuts that occurred since January 1, 2019,
they believe ``at a minimum, the final rule should reflect the court
decision and address the 30 percent cut implemented for calendar year
2019 and ensure the cuts are not finalized for 2020.''
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestions.
As noted above, on September 23, 2019, HHS filed a motion
requesting that the district court modify its order to remand the
matter without vacatur or alternatively, to stay the portion of the
order vacating the rule for 60 days from the date of the order to allow
the Solicitor General time to determine whether to authorize appeal.
This motion was denied on October 21, 2019. As we stated above, the
government has appeal rights and is still evaluating the rulings and
considering, at the time of this writing, whether to appeal from the
final judgment. For CY 2020, CMS will be going forward with the phase-
in. We respectfully disagree with the district court and continue to
believe the Secretary has the authority to address unnecessary
increases in the volume of outpatient services. CMS is still
considering how we would remedy hospitals if we either do not appeal
this ruling or do not succeed on appeal if one is so authorized.
Comment: One commenter suggested that even with the recent court
decision
[[Page 61369]]
CMS should ``explore regulatory pathways to address site of service
payment differentials in a budget neutral manner.'' Commenters gave the
example of ``prospectively chang[ing] the manner in which hospitals
allocate costs to outpatient cost centers in institutional cost
reports, particularly for cost centers where similar services can be
provided in physician offices which have no comparable overhead
costs.'' Another commenter expressed that ``[p]atients should not be
penalized and pay higher prices simply because a hospital owns the
medical practice where they receive care.'' The commenter encouraged
CMS to ``pursue a staunch defense of this proposal including, but not
limited to, the appeal of recent court rulings that undermine these
changes.'' The commenter went on to say that CMS should ``take the
necessary steps to protect its authority to implement the second year
of the two-year phase-in while the Agency takes an appeal to the D.C.
Circuit.''
Response: We thank the commenters for their submissions and support
of this policy. After consideration of public comments we received, we
will be completing the phase-in of the application of the reduction in
payment for HCPCS code G0463. Specifically, for CY 2020, we will apply
the full amount of the reduction in payment that is applied if these
departments (departments that bill the modifier ``PO'' on claims lines)
are paid the site-specific PFS rate for the clinic visit service
described by HCPCS code G0463. The PFS-equivalent rate for CY 2020 is
40 percent of the proposed OPPS payment (that is, 60 percent less than
the proposed OPPS rate). Under this policy, departments will be paid
approximately 40 percent of the OPPS rate (100 percent of the OPPS rate
minus the 60-percent payment reduction that is applied in CY 2020) for
the clinic visit service in CY 2020. Considering the effects of
estimated changes in enrollment, utilization, and case-mix, this policy
results in an estimated CY 2020 savings of approximately $800 million,
with approximately $640 million of the savings accruing to Medicare,
and approximately $160 million saved by Medicare beneficiaries in the
form of reduced copayments, when compared to if the policy were not
applied. We will continue to monitor the effect of this change in
Medicare payment policy, including the volume of these types of OPD
services. We also will continue to evaluate this policy in light of the
litigation and judicial decision as they may arise.
XI. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status and Comment Indicators
A. CY 2020 OPPS Payment Status Indicator Definitions
Payment status indicators (SIs) that we assign to HCPCS codes and
APCs serve an important role in determining payment for services under
the OPPS. They indicate whether a service represented by a HCPCS code
is payable under the OPPS or another payment system, and also, whether
particular OPPS policies apply to the code.
For CY 2020, we did not propose to make any changes to the
definitions of status indicators that were listed in Addendum D1 to the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period available on the CMS
website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/Hospital-Outpatient-Regulations-and-Notices-Items/CMS-1717-P.html?DLPage=1&DLEntries=10&10DLSort=2DLSortDir=descending.
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed 2020
definitions of the OPPS status indicators. We believe that the existing
definitions of the OPPS status indicators will continue to be
appropriate for CY 2020. Therefore, we are finalizing our proposed
policy without modifications.
The complete list of the payment status indicators and their
definitions that apply for CY 2020 is displayed in Addendum D1 to this
final rule with comment period, which is available on the CMS website
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
The CY 2020 payment status indicator assignments for APCs and HCPCS
codes are shown in Addendum A and Addendum B, respectively, to this
final rule with comment period, which are available on the CMS website
at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
B. CY 2020 Comment Indicator Definitions
In the proposed rule, we proposed to use four comment indicators
for the CY 2020 OPPS. These comment indicators, ``CH'', ``NC'', ``NI'',
and ``NP'', are in effect for CY 2019 and we proposed to continue their
use in CY 2020. The CY 2020 OPPS comment indicators are as follows:
``CH''--Active HCPCS code in current and next calendar
year, status indicator and/or APC assignment has changed; or active
HCPCS code that will be discontinued at the end of the current calendar
year.
``NC''--New code for the next calendar year or existing
code with substantial revision to its code descriptor in the next
calendar year, as compared to current calendar year for which we
requested comments in the proposed rule, final APC assignment; comments
will not be accepted on the final APC assignment for the new code.
``NI''--New code for the next calendar year or existing
code with substantial revision to its code descriptor in the next
calendar year, as compared to current calendar year, interim APC
assignment; comments will be accepted on the interim APC assignment for
the new code.
``NP''--New code for the next calendar year or existing
code with substantial revision to its code descriptor in the next
calendar year, as compared to current calendar year, proposed APC
assignment; comments will be accepted on the proposed APC assignment
for the new code.
The definitions of the OPPS comment indicators for CY 2020 are
listed in Addendum D2 to this final rule with comment period, which is
available on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/HospitalOutpatientPPS/.
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed use of
comment indicators for CY 2020. We believe that the CY 2019 definitions
of the OPPS comment indicators continue to be appropriate for CY 2020.
Therefore, we are continuing to use those definitions without
modification for CY 2020.
XII. MedPAC Recommendations
The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) was established
under section 1805 of the Act in large part to advise the U.S. Congress
on issues affecting the Medicare program. As required under the
statute, MedPAC submits reports to the Congress no later than March and
June of each year that present its Medicare payment policy
recommendations. The March report typically provides discussion of
Medicare payment policy across different payment systems and the June
report typically discusses selected Medicare issues. We are including
this section to make stakeholders aware of certain MedPAC
recommendations for the OPPS and ASC payment systems as discussed in
its March 2019 report.
A. OPPS Payment Rates Update
The March 2019 MedPAC ``Report to the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy,'' recommended that Congress update Medicare OPPS payment rates
[[Page 61370]]
by 2 percent, with the difference between this and the update amount
specified in current law to be used to increase payments in a new
suggested Medicare quality program, the ``Hospital Value Incentive
Program (HVIP).'' We refer readers to the March 2019 report for a
complete discussion on these recommendations, which is available for
download at www.medpac.gov. We appreciate MedPAC's recommendations, but
as MedPAC acknowledged in its March 2019 report, Congress would need to
change current law to enable us to implement its recommendations.
MedPAC did not comment on the proposed OPPS payment rate update.
Comments received from MedPAC for other OPPS policies are discussed in
the applicable sections of this rule.
B. ASC Conversion Factor Update
In the March 2019 MedPAC ``Report to the Congress: Medicare Payment
Policy'', MedPAC found that, based on its analysis of indicators of
payment adequacy, the number of Medicare-certified ASCs had increased,
beneficiaries' use of ASCs had increased, and ASC access to capital has
been adequate.\80\ As a result, for CY 2020, MedPAC stated that
payments to ASCs are adequate and recommended that no payment update
should be given for 2020 (that is, the update factor would be 0
percent).
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\80\ Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. March 2019 Report to
the Congress. Chapter 5: Ambulatory surgical center services.
Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/docs/default-source/reports/mar19_medpac_ch5_sec.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
59079), we adopted a policy, which we codified at 42 CFR 416.171(a)(2),
to apply the hospital market basket update to ASC payment system rates
for an interim period of 5 years. We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period for complete details regarding our
policy to use the hospital market basket update for the ASC payment
system. Therefore, consistent with our policy for the ASC payment
system, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed to apply a
2.7 percent MFP-adjusted hospital market basket update factor to the CY
2019 ASC conversion factor for ASCs meeting the quality reporting
requirements to determine the CY 2020 ASC payment amounts.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated their previous comments in their March
2019 report; specifically, that they do not support using the hospital
market basket index as an interim method for updating the ASC
conversion factor because evidence indicates the hospital market basket
index does not accurately reflect the cost of providing services in the
ASC setting.
Response: We believe providing ASCs with the same rate update
mechanism as hospitals could encourage the migration of appropriate
services from the hospital setting to the ASC setting and increase the
presence of ASCs in health care markets or geographic areas where
previously there were none or few, thus promoting better beneficiary
access to care. As published in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(84 FR 42343), based on IGI's 2019 second quarter forecast with
historical data through the first quarter of 2019, the hospital market
basket update is 3.0 percent, and the MFP adjustment is 0.4 percentage
point. Therefore, for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period we are finalizing the application of a 2.6 percent MFP-adjusted
hospital market basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC conversion
factor for ASCs meeting the quality reporting requirements to determine
the CY 2020 ASC payment amounts, as discussed at section XXVI of this
final rule with comment period.
C. ASC Cost Data
In the March 2019 MedPAC ``Report to the Congress on Medicare
Payment Policy'', MedPAC recommended that Congress require ASCs to
report cost data to enable the Commission to examine the growth of
ASCs' costs over time and analyze Medicare payments relative to the
costs of efficient providers, and that CMS could use ASC cost data to
examine whether an existing Medicare price index is an appropriate
proxy for ASC costs or an ASC specific market basket should be
developed. Further, MedPAC suggested that CMS could limit the scope of
the cost reporting system to minimize administrative burden on ASCs and
the program.\81\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ Medicare Payment Advisory Committee. March 2019 Report to
the Congress. Chapter 5: Ambulatory surgical center services.
Available at: https://www.medpac.gov/docs/default-source/reports/mar19_medpac_ch5_sec.pdf?sfvrsn=0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: MedPAC reiterated their previous comments in their March
2019 report and requested that CMS use available authority to act
quickly in gathering ASC cost data to inform ASC input costs and
determine whether an existing Medicare price index is an appropriate
proxy for ASC costs or whether an ASC-specific market basket index
should be developed. Additionally, MedPAC asserts there is sufficient
evidence that ASCs are capable of submitting cost data to CMS.
Response: We did not propose any cost reporting requirements for
ASCs in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and are not finalizing any
cost reporting requirements for ASCs in this final rule.
The full March 2019 MedPAC Report to Congress can be downloaded
from MedPAC's website at: https://www.medpac.gov.
XIII. Updates to the Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Payment System
A. Background
1. Legislative History, Statutory Authority, and Prior Rulemaking for
the ASC Payment System
For a detailed discussion of the legislative history and statutory
authority related to payments to ASCs under Medicare, we refer readers
to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74377
through 74378) and the June 12, 1998 proposed rule (63 FR 32291 through
32292). For a discussion of prior rulemaking on the ASC payment system,
we refer readers to the CYs 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018
and 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment period (76 FR 74378 through
74379; 77 FR 68434 through 68467; 78 FR 75064 through 75090; 79 FR
66915 through 66940; 80 FR 70474 through 70502; 81 FR 79732 through
79753; 82 FR 59401 through 59424; and 83 FR 59028 through 59080,
respectively).
2. Policies Governing Changes to the Lists of Codes and Payment Rates
for ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and Covered Ancillary Services
Under 42 CFR 416.2 and 42 CFR 416.166 of the Medicare regulations,
subject to certain exclusions, covered surgical procedures in an ASC
are surgical procedures that are separately paid under the OPPS, that
would not be expected to pose a significant risk to beneficiary safety
when performed in an ASC, and for which standard medical practice
dictates that the beneficiary would not typically be expected to
require active medical monitoring and care at midnight following the
procedure (``overnight stay''). We adopted this standard for defining
which surgical procedures are covered under the ASC payment system as
an indicator of the complexity of the procedure and its appropriateness
for Medicare payment in ASCs. We use this standard only for purposes of
evaluating procedures to determine whether or not they are appropriate
to be furnished to Medicare beneficiaries in ASCs. Historically, we
have defined surgical procedures as those described by Category I CPT
codes in the surgical range from 10000 through 69999 as well as those
Category III CPT codes and
[[Page 61371]]
Level II HCPCS codes that directly crosswalk or are clinically similar
to procedures in the CPT surgical range that we have determined do not
pose a significant safety risk, that we would not expect to require an
overnight stay when performed in ASCs, and that are separately paid
under the OPPS (72 FR 42478).
In the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42495), we also established
our policy to make separate ASC payments for the following ancillary
items and services when they are provided integral to ASC covered
surgical procedures: (1) Brachytherapy sources; (2) certain implantable
items that have pass-through payment status under the OPPS; (3) certain
items and services that we designate as contractor-priced, including,
but not limited to, procurement of corneal tissue; (4) certain drugs
and biologicals for which separate payment is allowed under the OPPS;
and (5) certain radiology services for which separate payment is
allowed under the OPPS. In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (79 FR 66932 through 66934), we expanded the scope of ASC
covered ancillary services to include certain diagnostic tests within
the medicine range of Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes for
which separate payment is allowed under the OPPS when they are provided
integral to an ASC covered surgical procedure. Covered ancillary
services are specified in Sec. 416.164(b) and, as stated previously,
are eligible for separate ASC payment. Payment for ancillary items and
services that are not paid separately under the ASC payment system is
packaged into the ASC payment for the covered surgical procedure.
We update the lists of, and payment rates for, covered surgical
procedures and covered ancillary services in ASCs in conjunction with
the annual proposed and final rulemaking process to update the OPPS and
the ASC payment system (Sec. 416.173; 72 FR 42535). We base ASC
payment and policies for most covered surgical procedures, drugs,
biologicals, and certain other covered ancillary services on the OPPS
payment policies, and we use quarterly change requests (CRs) to update
services covered under the OPPS. We also provide quarterly update CRs
for ASC covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary services
throughout the year (January, April, July, and October). We release new
and revised Level II HCPCS codes and recognize the release of new and
revised CPT codes by the American Medical Association (AMA) and make
these codes effective (that is, the codes are recognized on Medicare
claims) via these ASC quarterly update CRs. We recognize the release of
new and revised Category III CPT codes in the July and January CRs.
These updates implement newly created and revised Level II HCPCS and
Category III CPT codes for ASC payments and update the payment rates
for separately paid drugs and biologicals based on the most recently
submitted ASP data. New and revised Category I CPT codes, except
vaccine codes, are released only once a year, and are implemented only
through the January quarterly CR update. New and revised Category I CPT
vaccine codes are released twice a year and are implemented through the
January and July quarterly CR updates. We refer readers to Table 41 in
the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC proposed rule for an example of how this process,
is used to update HCPCS and CPT codes, which we finalized in the CY
2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 42291; 76 FR 74380
through 74384).
In our annual updates to the ASC list of, and payment rates for,
covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary services, we
undertake a review of excluded surgical procedures (including all
procedures newly proposed for removal from the OPPS inpatient list),
new codes, and codes with revised descriptors, to identify any that we
believe meet the criteria for designation as ASC covered surgical
procedures or covered ancillary services. Updating the lists of ASC
covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary services, as well as
their payment rates, in association with the annual OPPS rulemaking
cycle is particularly important because the OPPS relative payment
weights and, in some cases, payment rates, are used as the basis for
the payment of many covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary
services under the revised ASC payment system. This joint update
process ensures that the ASC updates occur in a regular, predictable,
and timely manner.
3. Definition of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures
Since the implementation of the ASC prospective payment system, we
have historically defined a ``surgical'' procedure under the payment
system as any procedure described within the range of Category I CPT
codes that the CPT Editorial Panel of the AMA defines as ``surgery''
(CPT codes 10000 through 69999) (72 FR 42478). We also have included as
``surgical,'' procedures that are described by Level II HCPCS codes or
by Category III CPT codes that directly crosswalk or are clinically
similar to procedures in the CPT surgical range that we have determined
do not pose a significant safety risk, would not expect to require an
overnight stay when performed in an ASC, and that are separately paid
under the OPPS (72 FR 42478).
As we noted in the August 7, 2007 final rule that implemented the
revised ASC payment system, using this definition of surgery would
exclude from ASC payment certain invasive, ``surgery-like'' procedures,
such as cardiac catheterization or certain radiation treatment services
that are assigned codes outside the CPT surgical range (72 FR 42477).
We stated in that final rule that we believed continuing to rely on the
CPT definition of surgery is administratively straightforward, is
logically related to the categorization of services by physician
experts who both establish the codes and perform the procedures, and is
consistent with a policy to allow ASC payment for all outpatient
surgical procedures (72 FR 42477).
However, in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59029 through 59030), after consideration of public comments
received in response to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and earlier
OPPS/ASC rulemaking cycles, we revised our definition of a surgical
procedure under the ASC payment system. We now define a surgical
procedure under the ASC payment system as any procedure described
within the range of Category I CPT codes that the CPT Editorial Panel
of the AMA defines as ``surgery'' (CPT codes 10000 through 69999) (72
FR 42476), as well as procedures that are described by Level II HCPCS
codes or by Category I CPT codes or by Category III CPT codes that
directly crosswalk or are clinically similar to procedures in the CPT
surgical range that we have determined are not expected to pose a
significant risk to beneficiary safety when performed in an ASC, for
which standard medical practice dictates that the beneficiary would not
typically be expected to require an overnight stay following the
procedure, and are separately paid under the OPPS.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters supported our revised definition and
recommended that we modify our definition of an ASC covered surgical
procedure for CY 2020 and subsequent years.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. In review of
the public comments we received, we realized that our modified
definition of an ASC covered surgical procedure was initially
[[Page 61372]]
finalized in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
59029 through 59030) but that we only referenced CY 2019 and did not
reference subsequent years. While we did not specifically propose to
continue our modified definition of surgery for CY 2020 in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we did not propose to remove any procedures
from the ASC list of covered surgical procedures that we had added as a
result of our modified definition of a surgical procedure, and,
therefore, we intended to continue our modified definition. For this
final rule with comment period, after consideration of the public
comments we are adopting a policy to continue to apply the modified
definition of a surgical procedure for CY 2020, which was finalized for
CY 2019 in our CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
59029 through 59030). We intend to address subsequent calendar years in
future rulemaking.
B. ASC Treatment of New and Revised Codes
1. Background on Current Process for Recognizing New and Revised HCPCS
Codes
Payment for ASC items and services are generally based on medical
billing codes, specifically, HCPCS codes, that are reported on ASC
claims. The HCPCS is divided into two principal subsystems, referred to
as Level I and Level II of the HCPCS. Level I is comprised of CPT
codes, a numeric and alphanumeric coding system maintained by the AMA,
and includes Category I, II, and III CPT codes. Level II of the HCPCS,
which is maintained by CMS, is a standardized coding system that is
used primarily to identify products, supplies, and services not
included in the CPT codes. Together, Level I and II HCPCS codes are
used to report procedures, services, items, and supplies under the ASC
payment system. Specifically, we recognize the following codes on ASC
claims:
Category I CPT codes, which describe surgical procedures,
diagnostic and therapeutic services, and vaccine codes;
Category III CPT codes, which describe new and emerging
technologies, services, and procedures; and
Level II HCPCS codes (also known as alphanumeric codes),
which are used primarily to identify drugs, devices, supplies,
temporary procedures, and services not described by CPT codes.
We finalized a policy in the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR
42535) to evaluate each year all new HCPCS codes that describe surgical
procedures, and to make preliminary determinations during the annual
OPPS/ASC rulemaking process regarding whether or not they meet the
criteria for payment in the ASC setting as covered surgical procedures
and, if so, whether or not they are office-based procedures. In
addition, we identify new and revised codes as ASC covered ancillary
services based upon the final payment policies of the revised ASC
payment system. In prior rulemakings, we refer to this process as
recognizing new codes. However, this process has always involved the
recognition of new and revised codes. We consider revised codes to be
new when they have substantial revision to their code descriptors that
necessitate a change in the current ASC payment indicator. To clarify,
we refer to these codes as new and revised in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
We have separated our discussion below based on when the codes are
released and whether we solicited public comments in the proposed rule
(and respond to those comments in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period) or whether we are soliciting public comments in this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (and will respond to those
comments in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period).
We note that we sought public comments in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 59034 through 59035) on the new
and revised Level II HCPCS codes effective October 1, 2018 or January
1, 2019. These new and revised codes were flagged with comment
indicator ``NI'' in Addenda AA and BB to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period to indicate that we were assigning them an
interim payment status and payment rate, if applicable, which were
subject to public comment following publication of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period. In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we stated that we will finalize the treatment of these codes under the
ASC payment system in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period.
2. April 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which We Solicited Public Comments in the
Proposed Rule
For the April 2019 update, there were no new CPT codes, however,
there were several new Level II HCPCS codes. In the April 2019 ASC
quarterly update (Transmittal 4263, CR 11232, dated March 22, 2019), we
added eight new Level II HCPCS codes to the list of covered ancillary
services. Table 25 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule displayed the
new Level II HCPCS codes that were implemented on April 1, 2019, along
with their proposed payment indicators for CY 2020.
We invited public comments on the proposed payment indicators and
payment rates for the new HCPCS codes that were recognized as ASC
ancillary services in April 2019 through the quarterly update CRs, as
listed in Table 25 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We proposed
to finalize their payment indicators in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period.
We did not receive any public comments on the proposed ASC payment
indicator assignments for the new Level II HCPCS codes implemented in
April 2019. Therefore, we are finalizing the proposed ASC payment
indicator assignments for these codes, as indicated in Table 50 below.
We note that several of the temporary drug HCPCS C-codes have been
replaced with permanent drug HCPCS J-codes, effective January 1, 2020.
Their replacement codes are also listed in Table 50. The final payment
rates for these codes can be found in Addendum BB to this final rule
with comment period (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website). In addition, the status indicator meanings can be found in
Addendum DD1 to this final rule with comment period (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website).
[[Page 61373]]
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3. July 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which We Solicited Public Comments in the
Proposed Rule
In the July 2019 ASC quarterly update (Transmittal 4076, Change
Request 10788, dated June 14, 2019), we added several separately
payable Category III CPT and Level II HCPCS codes to the list of
covered surgical procedures and ancillary services. Table 26 of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule displayed the new HCPCS codes that were
effective July 1, 2019.
In addition, through the July 2019 quarterly update CR, we also
implemented an ASC payment for one new Category III CPT code as an ASC
covered ancillary service, effective July 1, 2019. This code was listed
in Table 27 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, along with the
proposed comment indicator and payment indicator.
We invited public comments on these proposed payment indicators for
the new Category III CPT code and Level II HCPCS codes newly recognized
as ASC covered surgical procedures or covered ancillary services in
July 2019 through the quarterly update CRs, as listed in Tables 25, 26,
and 27 of the proposed rule.
We did not receive any other public comments on the proposed ASC
payment indicator assignments for the new Category III CPT codes or
Level II HCPCS codes implemented in July 2019. Therefore, we are
finalizing the proposed ASC payment indicator assignments for these
codes, as indicated in Table 51 and 52 below. We note that several of
the HCPCS C-codes have been replaced with HCPCS J-codes, effective
January 1, 2020. Their replacement codes are listed in Table 51. The
final payment rates for these codes can be found in Addendum AA and BB
to this final rule with comment period (which is available via the
internet on the CMS website). In addition, the status indicator
meanings can be found in Addendum DD1 to this final rule with comment
period (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
[[Page 61374]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.084
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.085
[[Page 61375]]
4. October 2019 HCPCS Codes for Which We Are Soliciting Public Comments
in This CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With Comment Period
In the past, we released new and revised HCPCS codes that are
effective October 1 through the October OPPS quarterly update CRs and
incorporated these new codes in the final rule with comment period.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39534), for CY 2020,
consistent with our established policy, we proposed that the Level II
HCPCS codes that will be effective October 1, 2019 would be flagged
with comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period to indicate that we have assigned the
codes an interim ASC payment indicator for CY 2020. We did not receive
any public comments on our proposal. As we stated that we would do in
the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we are inviting public comments in
this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period on the interim ASC
payment indicator for these codes that we intend to finalize in the CY
2021 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
5. January 2020 HCPCS Codes
a. New Level II HCPCS Codes for Which We Are Soliciting Public Comments
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Final Rule With Comment Period
Consistent with past practice, we are soliciting comment on the new
Level II HCPCS codes that are effective January 1, 2020 in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, thereby updating the ASC
payment system for the calendar year. These codes are released to the
public via the CMS HCPCS website, and also through the January OPPS
quarterly update CRs. We note that unlike the CPT codes that are
effective January 1 and are included in the OPPS/ASC proposed rules,
and except for the G-codes listed in Addendum O to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, most Level II HCPCS codes are not released until
November to be effective January 1. Because these codes are not
available until November, we are unable to include them in the OPPS/ASC
proposed rules. Therefore, these Level II HCPCS codes will be released
to the public through the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, January 2020 ASC Update CR, and the CMS HCPCS website.
In addition, for CY 2020, we proposed to continue our established
policy of assigning comment indicator ``NI'' in Addendum AA and
Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period to
the new Level II HCPCS codes that will be effective January 1, 2020 to
indicate that we are assigning them an interim payment indicator, which
is subject to public comment. We are inviting public comments in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period on the payment indicator
assignments, which would then be finalized in the CY 2021 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period.
b. CPT Codes for Which We Solicited Public Comments in the Proposed
Rule
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66841
through 66844), we finalized a revised process of assigning APC and
status indicators for new and revised Category I and III CPT codes that
would be effective January 1. Specifically, for the new/revised CPT
codes that we receive in a timely manner from the AMA's CPT Editorial
Panel, we finalized our proposal to include the codes that would be
effective January 1 in the OPPS/ASC proposed rules, along with proposed
APC and status indicator assignments for them, and to finalize the APC
and status indicator assignments in the OPPS/ASC final rules beginning
with the CY 2016 OPPS update. For those new/revised CPT codes that were
received too late for inclusion in the OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we
finalized our proposal to establish and use HCPCS G-codes that mirror
the predecessor CPT codes and retain the current APC and status
indicator assignments for a year until we can propose APC and status
indicator assignments in the following year's rulemaking cycle. We note
that even if we find that we need to create HCPCS G-codes in place of
certain CPT codes for the PFS proposed rule, we do not anticipate that
these HCPCS G-codes will always be necessary for OPPS purposes. We will
make every effort to include proposed APC and status indicator
assignments for all new and revised CPT codes that the AMA makes
publicly available in time for us to include them in the proposed rule,
and to avoid the resort to HCPCS G-codes and the resulting delay in
utilization of the most current CPT codes. Also, we finalized our
proposal to make interim APC and status indicator assignments for CPT
codes that are not available in time for the proposed rule and that
describe wholly new services (such as new technologies or new surgical
procedures), solicit public comments, and finalize the specific APC and
status indicator assignments for those codes in the following year's
final rule.
For the CY 2020 OPPS update, we received the CPT codes that will be
effective January 1, 2020 from AMA in time to be included in the
proposed rule. The new, revised, and deleted CPT codes were listed in
Addendum AA and Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. We
note that the new and revised CPT codes were assigned to comment
indicator ``NP'' in Addendum AA and Addendum BB of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule to indicate that the code is new for the next calendar
year or the code is an existing code with substantial revision to its
code descriptor in the next calendar year as compared to current
calendar year with a proposed ASC payment assignment, and that comments
would be accepted on the proposed ASC payment indicator.
Further, we note that the CPT code descriptors that appeared in
Addendum AA and BB were short descriptors and did not accurately
describe the complete procedure, service, or item described by the CPT
code. Therefore, we included the 5-digit placeholder codes and the long
descriptors for the new and revised CY 2020 CPT codes in Addendum O to
the proposed rule so that the public could adequately comment on the
proposed ASC payment indicator assignments. The 5-digit placeholder
codes were listed in Addendum O, specifically under the column labeled
``CY 2020 OPPS/ASC Proposed Rule 5-Digit AMA Placeholder Code''. The
final CPT code numbers are included in this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, and can be found in Addendum AA, Addendum BB, and
Addendum O.
For new and revised CPT codes effective January 1, 2020 that were
received in time to be included in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we proposed the appropriate payment indicator assignments, and
solicited public comments on the payment assignments. We stated we
would accept comments and finalize the payment indicators in this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. We note that we received
comments on the ASC payment indicator for certain new CPT codes that
will be effective January 1, 2020. These comments, and our responses,
can be found in section XIII.C.1.a.(2). of this final rule with comment
period.
Also, we note that we inadvertently omitted new CPT and new HCPCS
codes effective January 1, 2020 from Table 32 (Proposed Additions to
the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures for CY 2020) of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39544), however, we included these 12
procedures in
[[Page 61376]]
Addendum AA to the proposed rule. The procedures described by the 12
new CPT and HCPCS codes are displayed in Table 53 of this CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period.
Finally, shown in Table 28 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39565) and reprinted in Table 53 below, we summarize our process
for updating codes through our ASC quarterly update CRs, seeking public
comments, and finalizing the treatment of these new codes under the
ASC.
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C. Update to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and Covered
Ancillary Services--
1. Covered Surgical Procedures
a. Covered Surgical Procedures Designated as Office-Based
(1) Background
In the August 2, 2007 ASC final rule, we finalized our policy to
designate as ``office-based'' those procedures that are added to the
ASC Covered Procedures List (CPL) in CY 2008 or later years that we
determine are performed predominantly (more than 50 percent of the
time) in physicians' offices based on consideration of the most recent
available volume and utilization data for each individual procedure
code and/or, if appropriate, the clinical characteristics, utilization,
and volume of related codes. In that rule, we also finalized our policy
to exempt all procedures on the CY 2007 ASC list from application of
the office-based classification (72 FR 42512). The procedures that were
added to the ASC CPL beginning in CY 2008 that we determined were
office-based were identified in Addendum AA to that rule by payment
indicator ``P2'' (Office-based surgical procedure added to ASC list in
CY 2008 or later with MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs; payment based on OPPS
relative payment weight); ``P3'' (Office-based surgical procedures
added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later with MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs;
payment based on MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs); or ``R2'' (Office-based
surgical procedure added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later without MPFS
nonfacility PE RVUs; payment based on OPPS relative payment weight),
depending on whether we estimated the procedure would be paid according
to the standard ASC payment methodology based on its OPPS relative
payment weight or at the MPFS nonfacility PE RVU-based amount.
Consistent with our final policy to annually review and update the
ASC CPL to include all covered surgical procedures eligible for payment
in ASCs, each year we identify covered surgical procedures as either
temporarily office-based (these are new procedure codes with little or
no utilization data that we have determined are clinically similar to
other procedures that are permanently office-based), permanently
office-based, or non office-based, after taking into account updated
volume and utilization data.
(2) Changes for CY 2020 to Covered Surgical Procedures Designated as
Office-Based
In developing the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we followed our
policy to annually review and update the covered surgical procedures
for which ASC payment is made and to identify new procedures that may
be appropriate for ASC payment, including their potential designation
as office-based.
[[Page 61377]]
We reviewed CY 2018 volume and utilization data and the clinical
characteristics for all covered surgical procedures that are assigned
payment indicator ``G2'' (Nonoffice-based surgical procedure added in
CY 2008 or later; payment based on OPPS relative payment weight) in CY
2018, as well as for those procedures assigned one of the temporary
office-based payment indicators, specifically ``P2'', ``P3'', or ``R2''
in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59039
through 59040).
Our review of the CY 2018 volume and utilization data resulted in
our identification of 9 covered surgical procedures that we believed
met the criteria for designation as permanently office-based. We
understood the data to indicate that these procedures are performed
more than 50 percent of the time in physicians' offices, and we
believed that the services are of a level of complexity consistent with
other procedures performed routinely in physicians' offices. The CPT
codes that we proposed to permanently designate as office-based for CY
2020 were listed in Table 29 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
which is reprinted below as Table 54.
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[[Page 61378]]
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As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(83 FR 59036), the office-based utilization for CPT codes 36902 and
36905 (dialysis vascular access procedures) was greater than 50
percent. However, we did not designate CPT codes 36902 and 36905 as
office-based procedures for CY 2019. These codes became effective
January 1, 2017 and CY 2017 was the first year we had claims volume and
utilization data for CPT codes 36902 and 36905. We shared commenters'
concerns that the available data were not adequate to make a
determination that these procedures should be office-based, and
believed it was premature to assign office-based payment status to
those procedures for CY 2019. For CY 2019, CPT codes 36902 and 36905
were assigned payment indicators of ``G2''--Non office-based surgical
procedure added in CY 2008 or later; payment based on OPPS relative
weight.
In reviewing the CY 2018 volume and utilization data for CPT code
36902 we determined that the procedure was performed more than 50
percent of the time in physicians' offices based on 2018 volume and
utilization data.
However, the office-based utilization for CPT code 36902 has fallen
from 62 percent based on 2017 data to 52 percent based on 2018 data. In
addition, there was a sizeable increase in claims for this service in
ASCs--from approximately 14,000 in 2017 to 38,000 in 2018. As
previously stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule (83 FR 59036),
when we believe that the available data for our review process are
inadequate to make a determination that a procedure should be office-
based, we either make no change to the procedure's payment status or
make the change on a temporary basis, and reevaluate our decision when
more data become available for our next evaluation. In light of these
changes in utilization and due to the high utilization of this
procedure in all settings (over 125,000 claims in 2018), we believe it
may be premature to assign office-based payment status to CPT code
36902 at this time.
Therefore, for CY 2020, we did not propose to designate CPT code
36902 as an office-based procedure, but proposed to continue to assign
CPT code 36902 a payment indicator of ``G2''--nonoffice-based surgical
procedure paid based on OPPS relative weights.
The CY 2018 volume and utilization data for CPT code 36905 show the
procedure was not performed more than 50 percent of the time in
physicians' offices. Therefore, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule,
we did not propose to assign an office-based designation for CPT code
36905. Therefore the procedure will retain its payment indicator of
``G2''--non office-based surgical procedure based on OPPS relative
weights.
The comments and our responses to the comment are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters supported our decision to refrain from
proposing to designate CPT code 36902 as an office-based procedure and
to continue to assign both CPT codes 36902 and 36905 a payment
indicator of ``G2''--nonoffice-based surgical procedure paid based on
OPPS relative weights.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of our proposal.
After reviewing the public comments we received, we are finalizing our
proposal to assign CPT code 36902 a payment indicator of ``G2''--
nonoffice-based surgical procedure paid based on OPPS relative weights.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that CPT codes 31634, 31647,
50727, 59414, and 61880 should not be designated as office-based
procedures and that the level of complexity is not consistent with
other procedures performed routinely in physicians' offices
Response: We agree with the commenters. We inadvertently proposed
to assign office-based designations to CPT codes 31634, 31647, 50727,
59414, and 61880. The volume and utilization data for these procedures
do not suggest the procedures are performed more than 50 percent of the
time in physicians' offices, and we do not believe that the services
are of a level of complexity consistent with other procedures performed
routinely in physicians' offices. Therefore, CPT codes 31634, 50727,
59414, 61880 are assigned payment indicators ``G2''--non office-based
surgical procedure based on OPPS relative weights--for CY 2020.
Additionally, as CPT code 31647 exceeds our device offset percentage
threshold of 30 percent for device-intensive designation, we are
assigning this procedure a payment indicator of ``J8''--device-
intensive procedure; paid at adjusted rate--for CY 2020. These
procedures and their assigned payment indicators can be found in
Addendum AA to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal with modification, to designate the four ASC
covered surgical procedures in Table 55 as permanently office-based for
CY 2020 and subsequent years.
[[Page 61379]]
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We also reviewed CY 2018 volume and utilization data and other
information for 12 procedures designated as temporarily office-based in
Tables 57 and 58 in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(83 FR 59039 through 59040). Of these 12 procedures, there were very
few claims in our data and no claims data for 11 procedures described
by CPT codes 10005, 10007, 10009, 10011, 11102, 11104, 11106, 65785,
67229, 0402T and 0512T. Consequently, we proposed to maintain the
temporary office-based designations for these 11 CPT codes for CY 2020.
The procedures for which the proposed office-based designations for CY
2020 are temporary are also indicated by asterisks in Addendum AA to
the proposed and final rule (which are available via the internet on
the CMS website).
The volume and utilization data for the one remaining procedure
that has a temporary office-based designation for CY 2019, described by
CPT code 38222 (Diagnostic bone marrow; biopsy(ies) and aspiration(s)),
are sufficient to indicate that this covered surgical procedures was
not performed predominantly in physicians' offices and, therefore, we
proposed to assign a nonoffice-based payment indicator--``G2''--to this
code for CY 2020.
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to designate the
procedures shown in Table 56 below as temporarily office-based. The
procedures for which the office-based designation for CY 2020 is
temporary are indicated by an asterisk in Addendum AA to this final
rule with comment period (which is available via the internet on the
CMS website).
[[Page 61380]]
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[[Page 61381]]
For CY 2020, we proposed to designate 7 new CY 2020 CPT codes for
ASC covered surgical procedures as temporarily office-based, as
displayed in Table P31X. After reviewing the clinical characteristics,
utilization, and volume of related procedure codes, we determined that
the procedures in Table 30 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
described by the new CPT codes would be predominantly performed in
physicians' offices. We stated that we believed the procedure described
by CPT codes 93X00 (Duplex scan of arterial inflow and venous outflow
for preoperative vessel assessment prior to creation of hemodialysis
access; complete bilateral study) and 93X01 (Duplex scan of arterial
inflow and venous outflow for preoperative vessel assessment prior to
creation of hemodialysis access; complete unilateral study) was
clinically similar to HCPCS code G0365 (Vessel mapping of vessels for
hemodialysis access (services for preoperative vessel mapping prior to
creation of hemodialysis access using an autogenous hemodialysis
conduit, including arterial inflow and venous outflow)), which is
currently on the list of covered surgical procedures and assigned a
proposed payment indicator ``R2''--Office-based surgical procedure
added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later without MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs;
payment based on OPPS relative payment weight--for CY 2020. As such, we
proposed to add CPT codes 93X00 and 93X01 in Table 30 of the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule to the list of temporarily office-based covered
surgical procedures.
Because we have no utilization data for the procedures specifically
described by these new CPT codes, we proposed to make the office-based
designation temporary rather than permanent, and we will reevaluate the
procedures when data become available. The procedures for which the
proposed office-based designation for CY 2020 is temporary are
indicated by asterisks in Addendum AA to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
We did not receive any public comments on our proposal. Therefore,
we are finalizing our proposal, without modification, to designate the
procedures shown in Table 57 below as temporarily office-based. The
procedures for which the office-based designation for CY 2020 is
temporary are indicated by an asterisk in Addendum AA to this final
rule with comment period (which is available via the internet on the
CMS website).
[[Page 61382]]
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[[Page 61383]]
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b. ASC Covered Surgical Procedures To Be Designated as Device-Intensive
(1) Background
We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59040 through 59041), for a summary of our existing
policies regarding ASC covered surgical procedures that are designated
as device-intensive.
(2) Changes to List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures Designated as
Device-Intensive for CY 2020
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
590401 through 59043), for CY 2019, we modified our criteria for
device-intensive procedures to better capture costs for procedures with
significant device costs. We adopted a policy to allow procedures that
involve surgically inserted or implanted, high-cost, single-use devices
to qualify as device-intensive procedures. In addition, we modified our
criteria to lower the device offset percentage threshold from 40
percent to 30 percent. Specifically, for CY 2019 and subsequent years,
we adopted a policy that device-intensive procedures would be subject
to the following criteria:
All procedures must involve implantable devices assigned a
CPT or HCPCS code;
The required devices (including single-use devices) must
be surgically inserted or implanted; and
The device offset amount must be significant, which is
defined as exceeding 30 percent of the procedure's mean cost.
Corresponding to this change in the cost criterion we adopted a policy
that the default device offset for new codes that describe procedures
that involve the implantation of medical devices will be 31 percent
beginning in CY 2019. For new codes describing procedures that are
payable when furnished in an ASC involving the implantation of a
medical device, we adopted a policy that the default device offset
would be applied in the same manner as the policy we adopted in section
IV.B.2. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR
58944 through 58948). We amended Sec. 416.171(b)(2) of the regulations
to reflect these new device criteria.
In addition, as also adopted in section IV.B.2. of CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period, to further align the device-intensive
policy with the criteria used for device pass-through status, we
specified, for CY 2019 and subsequent years, that for purposes of
satisfying the device-intensive criteria, a device-intensive procedure
must involve a device that:
Has received Food and Drug Administration (FDA) marketing
authorization, has received an FDA investigational device exemption
(IDE) and has been classified as a Category B device by the FDA in
accordance with 42 CFR 405.203 through 405.207 and 405.211 through
405.215, or meets another appropriate FDA exemption from premarket
review;
Is an integral part of the service furnished;
Is used for one patient only;
Comes in contact with human tissue;
Is surgically implanted or inserted (either permanently or
temporarily); and
Is not any of the following:
++ Equipment, an instrument, apparatus, implement, or item of this
type for which depreciation and financing expenses are recovered as
depreciable assets as defined in Chapter 1 of the Medicare Provider
Reimbursement Manual (CMS Pub. 15-1); or
++ A material or supply furnished incident to a service (for
example, a suture, customized surgical kit, scalpel, or clip, other
than a radiological site marker).
Based on our modified device-intensive criteria, for CY 2020, we
proposed to update the ASC CPL to indicate procedures that are eligible
for payment according to our device-intensive procedure payment
methodology, based on the proposed individual HCPCS code device-offset
percentages using the CY 2018 OPPS claims and cost report data
available for the CY 2020 OPP/ASC proposed rule.
The ASC covered surgical procedures that we proposed to designate
as device-intensive, and therefore subject to the device-intensive
procedure payment methodology for CY 2020, are assigned payment
indicator ``J8'' and are included in ASC Addendum AA to the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website). The CPT code, the CPT code short descriptor, and the proposed
CY 2020 ASC payment indicator, and an indication of whether the full
credit/partial credit (FB/FC) device adjustment policy would apply
because the procedure is designated as device-intensive are also
included in Addendum AA to the proposed rule (which is available via
the internet on the CMS website). In addition, we note that in our CY
2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37158 through 37159), we proposed to
apply our device-intensive procedure payment methodology to device-
intensive procedures under the ASC payment system only when the device-
intensive procedure is furnished with a surgically-inserted or
implanted device (including single-used medical devices). We
inadvertently omitted language finalizing this policy for CY 2019. For
CY 2020 and subsequent calendar years, we proposed to only apply our
device-intensive procedure payment methodology to device-intensive
procedures under the ASC payment system when the device-intensive
procedure is furnished with a surgically
[[Page 61384]]
inserted or implanted device (including single use medical devices).
The payment rate under the ASC payment system for device-intensive
procedures furnished with an implantable or inserted medical device
would be calculated by applying the device offset percentage based on
the standard OPPS APC ratesetting methodology to the OPPS national
unadjusted payment to determine the device cost included in the OPPS
payment rate for a device intensive ASC covered surgical procedure,
which we then set as equal to the device portion of the national
unadjusted ASC payment rate for the procedure. We calculate the service
portion of the ASC payment for device intensive procedures by applying
the uniform ASC conversion factor to the service (non-device) portion
of the OPPS relative payment weight for the device-intensive procedure.
Finally, we sum the ASC device portion and ASC service portion to
establish the full payment for the device-intensive procedure under the
revised ASC payment system. (82 FR 59409)
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Commenters continued to support the policy we implemented
last year to lower the device offset percentage threshold to 30 percent
for purposes of designating device-intensive procedures.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: Some commenters requested that device implants, which we
interpret to mean surgically inserted or implanted, single-use devices,
be included in ASC payment at invoice price based on manufacturer
reported pricing or at device pass-through payment as described in
section IV.A of this final rule with comment period so that the payment
rate for these device-intensive procedures would more appropriately
reflect the cost of care and encourage migration from the more
expensive hospital setting to the ASC setting.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendation. As
discussed in this section, the ASC payment rate for surgical procedures
includes payment for device costs, which are packaged into the
procedure payment. For device-intensive procedures and procedures using
pass-through devices, the device portion is held equal to the device
portion under the OPPS using the standard ratesetting methodology. We
believe this methodology provides consistency with device-intensive
policies under the OPPS and provides an appropriate payment for the
device costs for device-intensive procedures in the ASC setting.
Comment: Some commenters stated that we calculate the device
portions of a service in two ways. The first, using the device offset
from APC payment rates developed under the comprehensive ratesetting
methodology, and, the second using the device offset from the APC
payment rates developed under the standard (non-comprehensive)
ratesetting methodology. Commenters requested that we designate device-
intensive procedures using only our standard (non-comprehensive)
ratesetting methodology for determining whether the cost of a device
exceeds our device-intensive threshold of 30 percent as they believed
that method is more consistent with the overall ASC payment system.
Response: As we stated in the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (79 FR 66924), under 42 CFR 416.167 and 416.171, most
ASC payment rates are based on the OPPS relative payment weights, and
our ASC policy with respect to device-intensive procedures is designed
to be consistent with the OPPS. ``Device-intensive'' identifies those
procedures with significant device costs and applies to services that
are performed both in the hospital outpatient department and the ASC
setting. We believe that the device-intensive methodology for ASCs
should align with the device-intensive policies for OPPS, and,
therefore, procedures should not be device-intensive in the ASC setting
if they are not device-intensive in the hospital outpatient setting.
The device offset percentage for device-intensive procedures under the
OPPS are based on the comprehensive ratesetting methodology. However,
to be assigned device-intensive status in the ASC setting, the
procedure must be identified as device-intensive in the hospital
outpatient setting and have a device offset percentage exceeds the 30
percent threshold as calculated using our standard ratesetting
methodology as stated in 42 CFR 416.171(b)(2). Additionally, for
purposes of the ASC payment system, the device amount is calculated by
applying the device offset percentage calculated under our standard
ratesetting methodology to the APC payment weights calculated under our
standard ratesetting methodology.
Comment: One commenter requested that we re-evaluate the device-
intensive designation for CPT code 22869 (Insertion of interlaminar/
interspinous process stabilization/distraction device, without open
decompression or fusion, including image guidance when performed,
lumbar; single level). The commenter stated the ASC payment rate was
too low to reflect the cost of the device in ASCs in California, and,
therefore, the device offset should be increased.
Response: After reviewing the most recently available claims data
for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, CPT code 22869
has a device offset percentage of 74.0 percent and a device offset
amount of $8,383.12. The offset percentage increased by 2.9 percentage
points from 71.1 percent in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule and the
device offset amount increased by 3.0 percent from $8,141.12. We note
that device cost information for CPT code 22869 has only been available
from CY 2017 claims (for CY 2019 ratesetting) and CY 2018 claims (for
CY 2020 ratesetting) and therefore we are unable to draw any historical
comparisons to determine if the CY 2020 device offset is inconsistent
with historical device offsets for this procedure. For this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, the device cost of $8,383.12
for CPT code 22869 is based on 372 claims and we believe represents our
best estimate of the cost of devices for performing the surgical
procedure in CY 2020. Further, we note that 50 percent of the final ASC
payment rate (both the device portion and non-device portion) is
adjusted by the ASC wage index to reflect variation in labor costs. We
believe the ASC payment rate for CPT code 22869 provides an appropriate
payment for both device and non-device costs for facilities in all
areas of the country.
Comment: One commenter requested that CPT code 50590 (Lithotripsy,
extracorporeal shock wave) be assigned device-intensive status.
Response: We thank the commenter for its request. Based on the most
recently available claims data for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period, the device offset percentage for CPT code 50590
continues to be below the 30 percent threshold and, therefore, is
ineligible to be assigned device-intensive status.
c. Adjustment to ASC Payments for No Cost/Full Credit and Partial
Credit Devices
Our ASC payment policy for costly devices implanted in ASCs at no
cost/full credit or partial credit, as set forth in Sec. 416.179 of
our regulations, is consistent with the OPPS policy that was in effect
until CY 2014. Specifically, the OPPS policy that was in effect through
CY 2013 provided a reduction in OPPS payment by 100 percent of the
device offset amount when a hospital furnishes a specified device
without cost or with a full credit
[[Page 61385]]
and by 50 percent of the device offset amount when the hospital
receives partial credit in the amount of 50 percent or more of the cost
for the specified device (77 FR 68356 through 68358). The established
ASC policy reduces payment to ASCs when a specified device is furnished
without cost or with full credit or partial credit for the cost of the
device for those ASC covered surgical procedures that are assigned to
APCs under the OPPS to which this policy applies. We refer readers to
the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR 68742
through 68744) for a full discussion of the ASC payment adjustment
policy for no cost/full credit and partial credit devices.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 37159), we noted that,
as discussed in section IV.B. of the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (78 FR 75005 through 75006), we finalized our proposal
to modify our former policy of reducing OPPS payment for specified APCs
when a hospital furnishes a specified device without cost or with a
full or partial credit. Formerly, under the OPPS, our policy was to
reduce OPPS payment by 100 percent of the device offset amount when a
hospital furnished a specified device without cost or with a full
credit and by 50 percent of the device offset amount when the hospital
received partial credit in the amount of 50 percent or more (but less
than 100 percent) of the cost for the specified device. For CY 2014, we
finalized our proposal to reduce OPPS payment for applicable APCs by
the full or partial credit a provider receives for a replaced device,
capped at the device offset amount.
Although we finalized our proposal to modify the policy of reducing
payments when a hospital furnishes a specified device without cost or
with full or partial credit under the OPPS, in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (78 FR 75076 through 75080), we
finalized our proposal to maintain our ASC policy for reducing payments
to ASCs for specified device-intensive procedures when the ASC
furnishes a device without cost or with full or partial credit. Unlike
the OPPS, there is currently no mechanism within the ASC claims
processing system for ASCs to submit to CMS the actual credit received
when furnishing a specified device at full or partial credit.
Therefore, under the ASC payment system, we finalized our proposal for
CY 2014 to continue to reduce ASC payments by 100 percent or 50 percent
of the device offset amount when an ASC furnishes a device without cost
or with full or partial credit, respectively.
All ASC covered device-intensive procedures are subject to the no
cost/full credit and partial credit device adjustment policy.
Specifically, when a device-intensive procedure is performed to implant
a device that is furnished at no cost or with full credit from the
manufacturer, the ASC would append the HCPCS ``FB'' modifier on the
line in the claim with the procedure to implant the device. The
contractor would reduce payment to the ASC by the device offset amount
that we estimate represents the cost of the device when the necessary
device is furnished without cost or with full credit to the ASC. We
continue to believe that the reduction of ASC payment in these
circumstances is necessary to pay appropriately for the covered
surgical procedure furnished by the ASC.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59043
through 59044), for partial credit, we adopted a policy to reduce the
payment for a device-intensive procedure for which the ASC receives
partial credit by one-half of the device offset amount that would be
applied if a device was provided at no cost or with full credit, if the
credit to the ASC is 50 percent or more (but less than 100 percent) of
the cost of the new device. The ASC will append the HCPCS ``FC''
modifier to the HCPCS code for the device-intensive surgical procedure
when the facility receives a partial credit of 50 percent or more (but
less than 100 percent) of the cost of a device. To report that the ASC
received a partial credit of 50 percent or more (but less than 100
percent) of the cost of a new device, ASCs have the option of either:
(1) Submitting the claim for the device replacement procedure to their
Medicare contractor after the procedure's performance, but prior to
manufacturer acknowledgment of credit for the device, and subsequently
contacting the contractor regarding a claim adjustment, once the credit
determination is made; or (2) holding the claim for the device
implantation procedure until a determination is made by the
manufacturer on the partial credit and submitting the claim with the
``FC'' modifier appended to the implantation procedure HCPCS code if
the partial credit is 50 percent or more (but less than 100 percent) of
the cost of the replacement device. Beneficiary coinsurance would be
based on the reduced payment amount. As finalized in the CY 2015 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66926), to ensure our policy
covers any situation involving a device-intensive procedure where an
ASC may receive a device at no cost or receive full credit or partial
credit for the device, we apply our ``FB''/``FC'' modifier policy to
all device-intensive procedures.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we did not propose any
changes to these policies and we are finalizing continuing our existing
policies for CY 2020.
d. Additions to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures
(1) Additions to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures for CY
2020
As finalized in section XII.A.3. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59029 through 59030), we revised our
definition of ``surgery'' for CY 2019 to include certain ``surgery-
like'' procedures that are assigned codes outside the CPT surgical
range. For CY 2020 and subsequent years we proposed to adopt the
modified definition we finalized for CY 2019, to include procedures
that are described by Category I CPT codes that are not in the surgical
range but directly crosswalk or are clinically similar to procedures in
the Category I CPT code surgical range that we have determined do not
pose a significant safety risk, would not be expected to require an
overnight stay when performed in an ASC, and are separately paid under
the OPPS. We also proposed to continue to include in our definition of
surgical procedures those procedures described by Category I CPT codes
in the surgical range from 10000 through 69999 as well as those
Category III CPT codes and Level II HCPCS codes that directly crosswalk
or are clinically similar to procedures in the CPT surgical range that
we have determined do not pose a significant safety risk, that we would
not expect to require an overnight stay when performed in ASCs, and
that are separately paid under the OPPS.
We conducted a review of HCPCS codes that currently are paid under
the OPPS, but not included on the ASC CPL, and that meet our proposed
definition of surgery to determine if changes in technology or medical
practice affected the clinical appropriateness of these procedures for
the ASC setting. Based on this review, we proposed to update the list
of ASC covered surgical procedures by adding total knee arthroplasty, a
knee mosaicplasty procedure and three coronary intervention procedures
(as well as the three associated add-on codes for the coronary
intervention procedures) to the list for CY 2020, as was shown in Table
32 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. After
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reviewing the clinical characteristics of these procedures and
consulting with stakeholders and our clinical advisors, we determined
that these eight procedures would not be expected to pose a significant
risk to beneficiary safety when performed in an ASC and would not be
expected to require active medical monitoring and care of the
beneficiary at midnight following the procedure. The regulations at
Sec. 416.166(c) list general exclusions from the list of ASC covered
surgical procedures based primarily on factors relating to safety,
including procedures that generally result in extensive blood loss,
require major or prolonged invasion of body cavities, or directly
involve major blood vessels. We assessed each of the proposed added
procedures against the regulatory safety criteria and determined that
these procedures meet each of the criteria. Although the proposed
coronary intervention procedures may involve blood vessels that could
be considered major, as stated in the August 2, 2007 ASC final rule (72
FR 42481), we believe the involvement of major blood vessels is best
considered in the context of the clinical characteristics of individual
procedures, and we do not believe that it is logically or clinically
consistent to exclude certain cardiac procedures from the list of ASC
covered surgical procedures on the basis of the involvement of major
blood vessels, yet continue to provide ASC payment for similar
procedures involving major blood vessels that have a history of safe
performance in ASCs, such as CPT code 36473 (Mechanicochemical
destruction of insufficient vein of arm or leg, accessed through the
skin using imaging guidance) and CPT code 37223 (Insertion of stents
into groin artery, endovascular, accessed through the skin or open
procedure). Based on our review of the clinical characteristics of the
procedures and their similarity to other procedures that are currently
included on the ASC CPL, we believe these procedures can be safely
performed in an ASC. Therefore, we proposed to include these three
coronary intervention procedures on the list of ASC covered surgical
procedures for CY 2020. We also proposed to add their respective add-on
procedures which are packaged under the ASC payment system.
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we solicited public comments
on whether the total knee arthroplasty (TKA) procedure, CPT code 27447
(Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and plateau; medial and lateral
compartments with or without patella resurfacing (total knee
arthroplasty)), should be added to the ASC CPL. In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR 59411 through 59412) we noted
that some commenters stated that many ASCs are equipped to perform
these procedures and orthopedic surgeons in ASCs are increasingly
performing these procedures safely and effectively on non-Medicare
patients and appropriate Medicare patients. However, other commenters
noted that the majority of ASCs were not well-equipped to safely
perform TKA procedures on patients and that the majority of Medicare
patients are not suitable candidates to receive joint arthroplasty
procedures in an ASC setting. For CY 2018, we did not finalize adding
TKA to the ASC covered surgical procedures list, but noted that we
would take the suggestions and recommendations into consideration for
future rulemaking.
In this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule, we continue to promote site-
neutrality, where possible, between the hospital outpatient department
and ASC settings. Further, we agree with commenters that there is a
small subset of Medicare beneficiaries who may be suitable candidates
to receive TKA procedures in an ASC setting based on their clinical
characteristics. For example, based on Medicare Advantage encounter
data, we estimate over 800 TKA procedures were performed in an ASC on
Medicare Advantage enrollees in 2016. We believe that beneficiaries not
enrolled in an MA plan should also have the option of choosing to
receive the TKA procedure in an ASC setting based on their physicians'
determinations.
As we stated in the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42483 through
42484), we exclude procedures that would otherwise pose a significant
safety risk to the typical Medicare beneficiary. However, we believe
physicians should continue to play an important role in exercising
their clinical judgment when making site-of-service determinations,
including for TKA. In light of the information commenters submitted in
support of adding TKA to the ASC CPL in response to our CY 2018 public
comment solicitation, we proposed to add TKA to the ASC CPL in CY 2020.
We note that TKA procedures were still predominantly performed in
the inpatient hospital setting in CY 2018 (82 percent of the time)
based on professional claims data, and we are cognizant of the fact
that the majority of beneficiaries may not be suitable candidates to
receive TKA in an ASC setting. We believe that appropriate limits are
necessary to ensure that Medicare Part B payment will only be made for
TKA procedures performed in the ASC setting when that setting is
clinically appropriate. Therefore, we solicited public comment on the
appropriate approach to provide safeguards for Medicare beneficiaries
who should not receive the TKA procedure in an ASC setting.
Specifically, we solicited public comment on methods to ensure
beneficiaries receive surgical procedures in the ASC setting only as
clinically appropriate. For instance, we stated that CMS could issue a
new modifier that indicates the physician believes that the beneficiary
would not be expected to require active medical monitoring and care at
midnight following a particular procedure furnished in the ASC setting.
CMS could require that such a modifier be included on the claims line
for a surgical procedure performed in an ASC. Alternatively, given the
importance of post-operative care in making determinations about
whether the ASC is an appropriate setting for a procedure, CMS could
require that an ASC has a defined plan of care for each beneficiary
following a surgical procedure. We also stated that we could establish
certain requirements for ASCs that choose to perform certain surgical
procedures on Medicare patients, such as requiring an ASC to have a
certain amount of experience in performing a procedure before being
eligible for payment for performing the procedure under Medicare. We
solicited comment on these options, and other options, for ensuring
that beneficiaries receive surgical procedures, including TKA, that do
not pose a significant safety risk when performed in an ASC.
In light of the information we received from commenters in support
of adding TKA to the ASC CPL in response to our comment solicitation in
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we stated our belief that TKA would
meet our regulatory requirements established under Sec. Sec. 416.2 and
416.166(b) for covered surgical procedures in the ASC setting.
Therefore, we proposed to add TKA to the ASC CPL as shown in Table 32
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. At that time we stated our
intent to consider appropriate safeguards and limitations for surgical
procedures furnished in the ASC setting based on public comments we
receive.
As we stated in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR 59054
through 59055), section 1833(i)(1) of the Act requires us, in part, to
specify, in consultation with appropriate medical organizations,
surgical procedures that are appropriately performed on an inpatient
basis in a hospital, but can be safely performed in an ASC, and to
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review and update the ASC covered surgical procedures list at least
every 2 years.
We also solicited comment on how CMS should think about the role of
the ASC CPL compared to state regulations and market forces in
providing payment for certain surgical procedures in an ASC and whether
any modifications should be made to the ASC CPL. Comments on this topic
could help formulate the basis for future policy development regarding
how we determine what procedures are payable for Medicare fee-for-
service beneficiaries in the ASC setting and maintain the balance
between safety and access. Finally, we solicited comment on how our
proposed additions to the list of ASC covered surgical procedures might
affect rural hospitals to the extent rural hospitals rely on providing
such procedures.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Many commenters supported our proposal to add three
coronary intervention procedures as well as the additional three
procedures that represented their associated add-on procedures to the
ASC CPL. They stated that our proposed additions meet our criteria to
be included on the ASC CPL and that claims analyses, clinical trials,
expert consensus and clinical guidelines, among other materials
supported the inclusion of such coronary intervention procedures on the
ASC CPL. Further, many ASC commenters contended that ASCs are well-
equipped to safely perform these procedures on Medicare beneficiaries.
However, some commenters stated that without defined criteria for risk
stratification, beneficiaries would be exposed to significant risk if
these procedures were added to the ASC CPL. Additionally, some
commenters believed the percutaneous coronary intervention procedures
should be performed in a hospital setting where there is an available
on-site cardiac surgical backup and intensive care unit in the event of
an emergency.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We assessed
each of the procedures we proposed to add to the ASC CPL against the
regulatory safety criteria and determined that these procedures meet
each of the criteria. Although the proposed coronary intervention
procedures may involve blood vessels that could be considered major, as
stated in the August 2, 2007 ASC final rule (72 FR 42481), we believe
the involvement of major blood vessels is best considered in the
context of the clinical characteristics of individual procedures. We do
not believe that it is appropriate to exclude certain cardiac
procedures from the list of ASC covered surgical procedures because
they involve major blood vessels, yet continue to provide ASC payment
for similar procedures involving major blood vessels that have a
history of safe performance in ASCs, such as CPT code 36473
(Mechanicochemical destruction of insufficient vein of arm or leg,
accessed through the skin using imaging guidance) and CPT code 37223
(Insertion of stents into groin artery, endovascular, accessed through
the skin or open procedure). Based on our review of the clinical
characteristics of the procedures and their similarity to other
procedures that are currently included on the ASC CPL, we believe these
three coronary intervention procedures (CPT codes 92920, 92928, and
HCPCS code C9600) and three associated add-on procedures (CPT code
92921, 92929, and HCPCS code C9601) can be safely performed in the ASC
setting, for certain Medicare patients and note that the physician
should determine whether a particular case would be a good candidate to
be furnished in the ASC setting rather than the hospital setting based
on the clinical assessment of the patient. We agree with commenters who
stated that expert consensus, clinical guidelines, and clinical studies
establish that percutaneous coronary interventions can be safely
performed in an ASC setting. While we acknowledge that a majority of
Medicare beneficiaries may not be suitable candidates to receive these
procedures in an ASC setting due to factors such as age and
comorbidities, we believe it is important to make these procedures
payable in the ASC setting, in order to ensure access to these coronary
intervention procedures for those beneficiaries who are appropriate
candidates to receive them in an ASC setting.
Therefore, in this final rule with comment period, we are
finalizing our proposal without modification to add three coronary
intervention procedures as well as three associated add-on procedures.
These procedures are:
CPT code 92920 (Percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty; single major coronary artery or branch),
CPT code 92921 (Percutaneous transluminal coronary
angioplasty; each additional branch of a major coronary artery (list
separately in addition to code for primary procedure)),
CPT code 92928 (Percutaneous transcatheter placement of
intracoronary stent(s), with coronary angioplasty when performed;
single major coronary artery or branch),
CPT code 92929 (Percutaneous transcatheter placement of
intracoronary stent(s), with coronary angioplasty when performed; each
additional branch of a major coronary artery (list separately in
addition to code for primary procedure)),
CPT code C9600 (Percutaneous transcatheter placement of
drug eluting intracoronary stent(s), with coronary angioplasty when
performed; single major coronary artery or branch), and
CPT code C9601 (Percutaneous transcatheter placement of
drug-eluting intracoronary stent(s), with coronary angioplasty when
performed; each additional branch of a major coronary artery (list
separately in addition to code for primary procedure)) to the ASC CPL.
Comment: Many commenters supported our proposal to add TKA to the
ASC CPL for CY 2020 and subsequent years.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of our proposal.
Comment: One commenter requested that we delay adding TKA to the
ASC CPL until more data can be collected on the impact of case-mix and
patient populations for participants in the CMS Innovation Center's
Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Initiative.
Response: We believe there are a small number of less medically
complex TKA patients that could appropriately receive TKA in an ASC
setting. Because we believe this group will be small, we do not believe
our proposal would have a substantial impact on the patient-mix for the
Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Advanced (BPCI Advanced) or the
Initiative and Comprehensive Care Joint Replacement (CJR) models.
Therefore, we do not believe any delay in the implementation of our
proposed addition to the ASC CPL is warranted.
Comment: Some commenters opposed our proposal to add TKA to the ASC
CPL. These commenters stated that the Medicare population would not be
suitable candidates to receive TKA in an ASC setting and that
complications arising from TKA could be devastating and life-
threatening if not performed in a hospital setting. Specifically,
patients could be at risk for the development of deep vein thrombosis
with the potential to propagate lethal pulmonary embolus, anesthesia-
related risks, as well as other risks. Some commenters also noted that
CMS eliminated the requirement that ASCs have a written transfer
agreement with a nearby hospital and the requirement that their
physicians have admitting privileges at a hospital. Further, some
commenters noted that in the absence of the physician self-referral
law, which does not apply to
[[Page 61388]]
procedures performed in an ASC, there will be no other safeguard
against a physician's profitable, but clinically inappropriate,
referral to an ASC in which the physician has an ownership interest.
Response: We agree with commenters that the majority of Medicare
beneficiaries would not be suitable candidates to receive TKA
procedures in an ASC setting. Factors such as age, comorbidity, and
body mass index are among the many factors that must be taken into
account to determine if performing a TKA procedure in an ASC would be
appropriate for a particular Medicare beneficiary. However, we believe
there are a small number of less medically complex beneficiaries that
could appropriately receive the TKA procedure in an ASC setting and we
believe physicians should continue to play an important role in
exercising their clinical judgment when making site-of-service
determinations, including for TKA. While we acknowledge that the
physician self-referral law does not apply to TKA performed in an ASC,
physicians should be aware of other Federal and state laws that may
potentially limit this activity, such as the Anti-Kickback Statute.
Comment: Commenters also noted that beneficiary coinsurance for TKA
procedures could be higher in the ASC setting and therefore did not
support our proposal, or recommended that we notify beneficiaries that
the coinsurance for a TKA procedure could be lower in a hospital
outpatient setting.
Response: We are aware that beneficiaries may incur greater cost-
sharing for TKA procedures in an ASC setting under our proposal.
However, this would not be an occurrence that is unique to TKA. Section
1833(t)(8)(C)(i) of the Act limits the amount of beneficiary copayment
that may be collected for a procedure paid under the OPPS (including
items such as drugs and biologicals) performed in a year to the amount
of the inpatient hospital deductible for that year. We note that this
section of the Act does not apply to the ASC payment system. Rather,
ASC cost-sharing is described by 1833(a)(4) of the Act and there may be
instances where beneficiary cost-sharing in an ASC may be higher than
beneficiary cost-sharing in a hospital outpatient department for the
same procedure. We note that the ASC payment rate for a TKA procedure
is $8,609.17 for CY 2020 while the CY 2020 OPPS payment rate is
$11,899.39. This means that ASC coinsurance would be $1,721.83 while
hospital OPPS coinsurance would have been $2,379.88, but for the
statutory cap limiting it to the inpatient deductible amount ($1,364 in
CY 2019). However, the payment rates are publicly available and despite
the higher cost-sharing, some beneficiaries, especially those with
supplemental insurance, may still choose to have their procedure
performed in the ASC setting.
In addition, as we stated in the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (82 FR 59389), section 4011 of the 21st Century Cures
Act (Pub. L. 114-255) requires the Secretary to make available to the
public via a searchable website, with respect to an appropriate number
of items and services, the estimated payment amount for the item or
service under the OPPS and ASC payment system and the estimated
beneficiary liability applicable to the item or service. We implemented
this provision by providing our Outpatient Procedure Price Lookup tool
available via the internet at https://www.medicare.gov/procedure-price-lookup. This web page allows beneficiaries to compare their potential
cost-sharing liability for procedures performed in the hospital
outpatient setting versus the ASC setting. We believe this tool allows
beneficiaries to be informed of potential cost-sharing amounts and
therefore mitigates the commenters' concern about providing payment for
procedures in an ASC setting even if the beneficiary cost-sharing in an
ASC would be greater than in the hospital outpatient department
setting.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that CMS work closely with
specialty societies regarding best practices and any appropriate
limitations or conditions for Medicare Part B payment for TKA in the
ASC setting. Other commenters stated that our suggestions, such as
requiring a modifier or a plan of care, were unnecessary and would
increase administrative burden by complicating the processes for
scheduling, performing and billing for ASCs, without improving
beneficiary safety because physicians are best-equipped to determine
the clinical appropriateness of the site of service for their patients.
Some commenters did not support our suggested approaches and believed
that such requirements would be superfluous and provide no beneficial
oversight to ensure patient safety. Two orthopedic specialty societies
supported the concept of having defined plans of care for each
beneficiary following a surgical procedure. One orthopedic specialty
society requested that we re-establish the requirement that ASCs have
formal arrangements with a nearby hospital in case a patient is unable
to go home following a procedure. Other commenters suggested that a
defined plan of care requirement is already an existing Condition for
Coverage for ASCs.
Response: We agree with commenters that ASCs are currently required
to follow the discharge protocols following a surgical procedure, as
set out at 42 CFR 416.52(c). For example, our regulations require that
each patient be provided written discharge instructions and overnight
supplies; prescription and physician contact information; and post-
operative instructions; and that patients be discharged in the company
of a responsible adult, except those patients exempted by the attending
physician.
We remind ASCs that beneficiaries should receive discharge care
instructions that meet our requirements following a TKA procedure as
well as other surgical procedures. ASCs should also review our State
Operations Manual for further guidance on this condition for coverage,
as well as others.
With respect to reinstating the requirement that ASCs have a formal
transfer agreement with a nearby hospital, we note that such issue is
related to Conditions for Coverage and is outside the scope of this
final rule with comment.
After considering the public comments we received, and in response
to commenters' support for this proposal, we are finalizing our
proposal without modification to add TKA, CPT code 27447 (Arthroplasty,
knee, condyle and plateau; medial and lateral compartments with or
without patella resurfacing (total knee arthroplasty)), to the ASC CPL
for CY 2020 and subsequent years.
Based on the public comments we received, we are not finalizing any
of the additional requirements on which we sought comment, such as
adding a modifier or requiring an ASC to have a certain amount of
experience in performing a procedure before being eligible for payment
for performing the procedure under Medicare.
Comment: Commenters who responded to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule also requested that CMS add several additional procedures to the
ASC CPL, which we had not proposed to add to the ASC CPL in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule. These additional procedures are listed in Table
58.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
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Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendations. We
reviewed all of the services that commenters requested that we add to
the ASC CPL. Of these procedures, we did not consider procedures that
are unconditionally packaged under the OPPS (identified by status
indicator ``N'' in addendum B of this final rule with comment period)
as such procedures would not meet our requirement for ASC covered
surgical procedures at Sec. 416.166(b) that the procedure be
separately paid under the OPPS.
Of the procedures listed in Table 58, CPT codes 57267, 62290,
62291, 92938, 92973, 92978, 92979, 93463, 93563, 93564, 93565, 93566,
93567, 93568, 93571, 93572, and C9605 are unconditionally packaged
under the ASC payment system. For the procedures identified by CPT
codes 92960, 93312, 93313, 93315, and 93530, we do not believe these
procedures meet our criteria as established under Sec. 416.166(b) and
would pose a significant safety risk to beneficiaries if performed in
an ASC setting. For the procedures identified by CPT codes 27412,
57282, 57283, 57425, 62365, 62367, and 62368, we will continue to
review whether these procedures meet the criteria to be added to the
ASC CPL and take commenters input into consideration in future
rulemaking.
(2) Comment Solicitation on Coronary Intervention Procedures
For CY 2020, as discussed above, we proposed to add three coronary
intervention procedures (along with the codes describing their
respective add-on procedures) that involve major blood vessels that we
believe can be safely performed in an ASC setting and would not pose a
significant safety risk to beneficiaries if performed in an ASC
setting. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, in addition to the
three coronary intervention procedures (and their three add-on codes)
we proposed to add to the ASC CPL, we also reviewed several other
coronary intervention procedures. While we did not believe the
procedures included in Table P33 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
met our criteria for inclusion on the ASC CPL at that time, and we did
not propose to add such procedures to the ASC CPL for CY 2020, we
solicited public comments on whether stakeholders believe these
procedures can be safely performed in an ASC setting. Additionally, we
requested that commenters provide any materials supporting their
position, in particular information and data that specifically address
the requirements in our regulations at Sec. Sec. 416.2 and 416.166 (84
FR 39544). For example, we requested that commenters provide
information that supports their position as to whether each of these
procedures would be expected to pose a significant risk to beneficiary
safety when performed in an ASC, whether standard medical practice
dictates that the beneficiary would typically be expected to require
active medical monitoring and care at midnight following the procedure
(``overnight stay''), and whether the procedure would fall under our
general exclusions for covered surgical procedures at Sec. 416.166(c)
(for example, would it generally result in extensive blood loss). We
stated that we would consider public comments we receive in future
rulemaking cycles.
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Comment: Some commenters supported adding all of the procedures
listed in Table 33 of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Other
commenters recommended adding CPT codes 92937, 92938, 92973, C9604, and
C9605. These commenters stated these percutaneous transluminal
revascularization procedures through coronary artery bypass graft meet
our established criteria for addition to the ASC CPL and that claims
data, clinical trials, and clinical guidelines support their addition.
Other commenters did not support adding any of the procedures list
in Table 59 as listed above. The commenters stated that these
procedures often carry the risk of serious possible complications, such
as in-facility death, damage to or perforations of coronary arteries,
and intramural hematoma, among others. Therefore, commenters indicated,
such procedures should only be performed in hospital settings that
include rapid access to on-site cardiac surgery as well as intensive
care units.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' feedback and
recommendations. Additionally, we note that we had the incorrect long
descriptor for CPT 92973 displayed in our CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule. In the proposed rule, we had the long descriptor as
``Percutaneous transcatheter placement of drug eluting intracoronary
stent(s), with coronary angioplasty when performed; single major
coronary artery or branch.'' The correct long descriptor for CPT 92973
should be ``Percutaneous transluminal coronary thrombectomy mechanical
(list separately in addition to code for primary procedure)'' and is
displayed in Table 59 of this final rule with comment period.
Based on the public comments we received, we believe the procedures
listed in Table 59 would expose beneficiaries to significant safety
risk if performed in an ASC setting at this time and would not meet our
criteria established under Sec. 416.166(b). Specifically, we believe
that transluminal revascularization of a bypass graft carries an
inherent higher risk of complication and may require the assistance of
on-site cardiac surgical backup. Additionally, we believe atherectomy
procedures carry a greater risk of complication than coronary
intervention procedures without an atherectomy procedure. Therefore, at
this time, we believe that adding any of the procedures identified in
Table 59 of this final rule with comment period to the ASC CPL would
expose
[[Page 61394]]
beneficiaries to significant risk. We believe that such procedures
should be performed in a hospital setting with an immediate response
available in case of emergencies.
We received no comments on our proposal to add CPT code 29867
(Arthroscopy, knee, surgical; osteochondral allograft (for example,
mosaicplasty)) to the ASC CPL for CY 2020 and subsequent years.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal without modification to add CPT codes: 27447,
29867, 92920, 92921, 92928, 92929, and HCPCS codes C9600 and C9601 to
the ASC CPL. We have determined these procedures would not be expected
to pose a significant risk to beneficiary safety when performed in an
ASC, that standard medical practice would not dictate that the
beneficiary would typically be expected to require active medical
monitoring and care at midnight following the procedure, and are
separately paid under the OPPS. The 8 procedures we are adding to the
ASC CPL, including the long descriptors and the final CY 2020 payment
indicators, are displayed in Table 60.
Additionally, we note that we inadvertently omitted new CPT and new
HCPCS codes effective January 1, 2020 from Table 32, Proposed Additions
to the List of ASC Covered Surgical Procedures for CY 2020, of our CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39544); however, we included these
12 procedures in Addendum AA to our proposed rule. The procedures
described by the 12 new CPT and HCPCS codes meet our criteria
established under Sec. Sec. 416.2 and 416.166 for addition to the ASC
CPL and are displayed in Table 60. These 12 procedures include--
CPT code 15769 (Grafting of autologous soft tissue, other,
harvested by direct excision (for example, fat, dermis, fascia));
CPT code 15771 (Grafting of autologous fat harvested by
liposuction technique to trunk, breasts, scalp, arms, and/or legs; 50
cc or less injectate);
CPT code 15773 (Grafting of autologous fat harvested by
liposuction technique to face, eyelids, mouth, neck, ears, orbits,
genitalia, hands, and/or feet; 25 cc or less injectate);
CPT code 33016 (Pericardiocentesis, including imaging
guidance, when performed);
CPT code 46948 (Hemorrhoidectomy, internal, by transanal
hemorrhoidal dearterialization, 2 or more hemorrhoid columns/groups,
including ultrasound guidance, with mucopexy, when performed);
CPT code 62328 (Spinal puncture, lumbar, diagnostic; with
fluoroscopic or CT guidance);
CPT code 62329 (Spinal puncture, therapeutic, for drainage
of cerebrospinal fluid (by needle or catheter); with fluoroscopic or CT
guidance);
CPT Code 64451 (Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or
steroid; nerves innervating the sacroiliac joint, with image guidance
(that is, fluoroscopy or computed tomography));
CPT Code 64625 (Radiofrequency ablation, nerves
innervating the sacroiliac joint, with image guidance (that is,
fluoroscopy or computed tomography));
CPT Code 66987 (Extracapsular cataract removal with
insertion of intraocular lens prosthesis (1-stage procedure), manual or
mechanical technique (for example, irrigation and aspiration or
phacoemulsification), complex, requiring devices or techniques not
generally used in routine cataract surgery (for example, iris expansion
device, suture support for intraocular lens, or primary posterior
capsulorrhexis) or performed on patients in the amblyogenic
developmental stage; with endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation);
CPT Code 66988 (Extracapsular cataract removal with
insertion of intraocular lens prosthesis (1 stage procedure), manual or
mechanical technique (for example, irrigation and aspiration or
phacoemulsification); with endoscopic cyclophotocoagulation); and
CPT code 0587T (Percutaneous implantation or replacement
of integrated single device neurostimulation system including electrode
array and receiver or pulse generator, including analysis, programming,
and imaging guidance when performed, posterior tibial nerve).
We did not receive comments on the addition of these codes to the
ASC CPL and are finalizing without modification. The table below shows
all additions to the ASC CPL for CY 2020, these additions are also
reflected in Addendum AA.
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BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
2. Covered Ancillary Services
Consistent with the established ASC payment system policy (72 FR
42497), we proposed to update the ASC list of covered ancillary
services to reflect the payment status for the services under the CY
2020 OPPS. We stated in the proposed rule that maintaining consistency
with the OPPS may result in proposed changes to ASC payment indicators
for some covered ancillary services because of changes that are being
proposed under the OPPS for CY 2020. For example, if a covered
ancillary service was separately paid under the ASC payment system in
CY 2019, but is proposed for packaged status under the CY 2020 OPPS, to
maintain consistency with the OPPS, we would also propose to package
the ancillary service under the ASC payment system for CY 2020. We
proposed to continue this reconciliation of packaged status for
subsequent calendar years. Comment indicator ``CH'', which is discussed
in section XIII.F. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, is used in
Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which is available
via the internet on the CMS website) to indicate covered ancillary
services for which we proposed a change in the ASC payment indicator to
reflect a proposed change in the OPPS treatment of the service for CY
2020.
Comment: One commenter requested that we add CPT code 91040
(Esophageal balloon distension study, diagnostic, with provocation when
performed) to our list of covered ancillary services. Commenter stated
that esophageal balloon distension studies are often performed in
conjunction with esophagogastroduodenoscopy procedures.
Response: Services listed in our list of covered ancillary services
must be integral to the performance of a covered surgical procedure.
Based on the description of the procedure, we do not believe this
service is integral to the performance of the surgical procedures
identified by the commenter, specifically CPT codes 43235
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible, transoral; diagnostic, including
collection of specimen(s) by brushing or washing, when performed
(separate procedure)), 43236 (Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; with directed submucosal injection(s), any substance), or
43239 (Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible, transoral; with biopsy,
single or multiple), or other surgical procedures. Therefore, we are
not adding CPT code 91040 to the list of ASC covered ancillary services
for CY 2020.
All ASC covered ancillary services and their proposed payment
indicators for CY 2020 are included in Addendum BB to the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS
website).
D. Update and Payment for ASC Covered Surgical Procedures and Covered
Ancillary Services
1. ASC Payment for Covered Surgical Procedures
a. Background
Our ASC payment policies for covered surgical procedures under the
revised ASC payment system are fully described in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (72 FR 66828 through 66831). Under our
established policy, we use the ASC standard ratesetting methodology of
multiplying the ASC relative payment weight for the procedure by the
ASC conversion factor for that same year to calculate the national
unadjusted payment rates for procedures with payment indicators ``G2''
and ``A2''. Payment indicator ``A2'' was developed to identify
procedures that were included on the list of ASC covered surgical
procedures in CY 2007 and, therefore, were subject to transitional
payment prior to CY 2011. Although the 4-year transitional period has
ended and payment indicator ``A2'' is no longer required to identify
surgical procedures subject to transitional payment, we retained
payment indicator ``A2'' because it is used to identify procedures that
are exempted from the application of the office-based designation.
The rate calculation established for device-intensive procedures
(payment indicator ``J8'') is structured so only the service portion of
the rate is subject to the ASC standard ratesetting methodology. In the
CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59028 through
59080), we updated the CY 2018 ASC payment rates for ASC covered
surgical procedures with payment indicators of ``A2'', ``G2'', and
``J8'' using CY 2017 data, consistent with the CY 2019 OPPS update. We
also updated payment rates for device-intensive procedures to
incorporate the CY 2019 OPPS device offset percentages calculated under
the standard APC ratesetting methodology, as discussed earlier in this
section.
Payment rates for office-based procedures (payment indicators
``P2'', ``P3'', and ``R2'') are the lower of the PFS nonfacility PE
RVU-based amount or the amount calculated using the ASC standard rate
setting methodology for the procedure. In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period, we updated the payment amounts for office-
based procedures (payment indicators ``P2'', ``P3'', and ``R2'') using
the most recent available MPFS and OPPS data. We compared the estimated
CY 2018 rate for each of the office-based procedures, calculated
according to the ASC standard rate setting methodology, to the PFS
nonfacility PE RVU-based amount to determine which was lower and,
therefore, would be the CY 2018 payment rate for the procedure under
our final policy for the revised ASC payment system (Sec. 416.171(d)).
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR
75081), we finalized our proposal to calculate the CY 2014 payment
rates for ASC covered surgical procedures according to our established
methodologies, with the exception of device removal procedures.
[[Page 61398]]
For CY 2014, we finalized a policy to conditionally package payment for
device removal procedures under the OPPS. Under the OPPS, a
conditionally packaged procedure (status indicators ``Q1'' and ``Q2'')
describes a HCPCS code where the payment is packaged when it is
provided with a significant procedure but is separately paid when the
service appears on the claim without a significant procedure. Because
ASC services always include a covered surgical procedure, HCPCS codes
that are conditionally packaged under the OPPS are always packaged
(payment indicator ``N1'') under the ASC payment system. Under the
OPPS, device removal procedures are conditionally packaged and,
therefore, would be packaged under the ASC payment system. There would
be no Medicare payment made when a device removal procedure is
performed in an ASC without another surgical procedure included on the
claim; therefore, no Medicare payment would be made if a device was
removed but not replaced. To ensure that the ASC payment system
provides separate payment for surgical procedures that only involve
device removal--conditionally packaged in the OPPS (status indicator
``Q2'')--we continued to provide separate payment since CY 2014 and
assigned the current ASC payment indicators associated with these
procedures.
b. Update to ASC Covered Surgical Procedure Payment Rates for CY 2020
We proposed to update ASC payment rates for CY 2020 and subsequent
years using the established rate calculation methodologies under Sec.
416.171 and using our definition of device-intensive procedures, as
discussed in section XII.C.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
Because the proposed OPPS relative payment weights are generally based
on geometric mean costs, the ASC system would generally use geometric
means to determine proposed relative payment weights under the ASC
standard methodology. We proposed to continue to use the amount
calculated under the ASC standard ratesetting methodology for
procedures assigned payment indicators ``A2'' and ``G2''.
We proposed to calculate payment rates for office-based procedures
(payment indicators ``P2'', ``P3'', and ``R2'') and device-intensive
procedures (payment indicator ``J8'') according to our established
policies and, for device-intensive procedures, using our modified
definition of device-intensive procedures, as discussed in section
XII.C.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule. Therefore, we
proposed to update the payment amount for the service portion of the
device-intensive procedures using the ASC standard rate setting
methodology and the payment amount for the device portion based on the
proposed CY 2020 OPPS device offset percentages that have been
calculated using the standard OPPS APC ratesetting methodology. Payment
for office-based procedures would be at the lesser of the proposed CY
2020 MPFS nonfacility PE RVU-based amount or the proposed CY 2020 ASC
payment amount calculated according to the ASC standard ratesetting
methodology.
As we did for CYs 2014 through 2019, for CY 2020, we proposed to
continue our policy for device removal procedures, such that device
removal procedures that are conditionally packaged in the OPPS (status
indicators ``Q1'' and ``Q2'') would be assigned the current ASC payment
indicators associated with these procedures and would continue to be
paid separately under the ASC payment system.
Our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: We received several comments from professional societies
expressing concern about assigning CPT codes 36465, 36466, and 31298 to
a P2 payment indicator and CPT code 36482 to a P3 payment indicator.
Commenters also expressed concerns with the appropriateness of the ASC
payment policy to assign procedures to the lowest published payment
rate across multiple payment systems, based upon CMS's determination
that the level of complexity for a procedure is consistent with
procedures performed in a physician's office. Commenters agreed with
the proposal not designate CPT code 36902 as an office-based procedure
and continue to assign CPT code 36902 a payment indicator of ``G2''--
nonoffice-based surgical procedure paid based on OPPS relative weights.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' input. Based on our
analysis of the latest hospital outpatient and ASC claims data used for
this final rule with comment period, we are updating ASC payment rates
for CY 2020 using the established rate calculation methodologies under
Sec. 416.171 of the regulations and using our finalized modified
definition of device-intensive procedures, as discussed in section
XIII.C.1.b of this final rule with comment period. We do not generally
make additional payment adjustments to specific procedures. As such, we
are finalizing the proposed APC assignment and payment indicators for
CPT codes 36465, 36466, 31298, 36482, and 36902 as discussed in
XIII.C.1.A of this final rule with comment period.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with the proposed CY 2020 ASC
payment rates for the surgical procedures described by the following
CPT/HCPCS codes, requesting that CMS increase payment in the ASC
setting:
HCPCS code C9754 (Creation of arteriovenous fistula,
percutaneous; direct, any site, including all imaging and radiologic
supervision and interpretation, when performed and secondary procedures
to redirect blood flow)
HCPCS code C9755 (Creation of arteriovenous fistula,
percutaneous using magnetic-guided arterial and venous catheters and
radiofrequency energy, including flow-directing procedures (for
example, vascular coil embolization with radiologic supervision and
interpretation, when performed) and fistulogram(s), angiography,
venography, and/or ultrasound, with radiologic supervision and
interpretation, when performed)
CPT code 37243 (Vascular embolization or occlusion,
inclusive of all radiological supervision and interpretation,
intraprocedural roadmapping, and imaging guidance necessary to complete
the intervention; for tumors, organ ischemia, or infarction)
CPT code 53854 (Transurethral destruction of prostate
tissue by radiofrequency generated water vapor thermotherapy)
CPT code 22869 (Insertion of interlaminar/interspinous
process stabilization/distraction device, without open decompression or
fusion, including image guidance when performed, lumbar; single level)
CPT code 22870 (Insertion of interlaminar/interspinous
process stabilization/distraction device, without open decompression or
fusion, including image guidance when performed, lumbar; second level
(List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
Response: We update the data on which we establish payment rates
each year through rulemaking and note that ASC rates are derived from
OPPS payment rates which are required to be reviewed and updated at
least annually under section 1833(t)(9) of the Act. ASC payment is
dependent upon the APC assignment for each procedure. Based on our
analysis of the latest hospital OPPS and ASC claims data used for this
final rule with comment period, we are updating ASC payment rates for
CY 2020 using the established rate calculation methodologies under
Sec. 416.171 of the regulations and our
[[Page 61399]]
definition of device-intensive procedures, as discussed in section
XII.C.1.b. of this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period. We
do not generally make additional payment adjustments to specific
procedures. Therefore, we are finalizing the payment indicators for
HCPCS codes C9754 and C9755 and CPT codes 37243, 53854, 22869, and
22870 for CY 2020.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS eliminate the
prohibition against billing for services using an unlisted CPT surgical
procedure code.
Response: Under Sec. 416.166(c)(7), covered surgical procedures do
not include procedures that can only be reported using a CPT unlisted
surgical procedure code. Therefore, such procedures are not currently
payable under the ASC payment system. As discussed in the August 2,
2008 final rule (72 FR 42484 through 42486), it is not possible to know
what specific procedure would be represented by an unlisted code. We
are required to evaluate each surgical procedure for potential safety
risk and the expected need for overnight monitoring and to exclude such
procedures from ASC payment. It is not possible to evaluate procedures
reported by unlisted CPT codes according to these criteria. Therefore,
we are not accepting this recommendation.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposed policies without modification, to calculate the
CY 2020 payment rates for ASC covered surgical procedures according to
our established methodologies using the modified definition of device-
intensive procedures. For covered office-based surgical procedures, the
payment rate is the lesser of the final CY 2020 MPFS nonfacility PE
RVU-based amount or the final CY 2020 ASC payment amount calculated
according to the ASC standard ratesetting methodology, the final
payment indicators and rates set forth in this final rule with comment
period are based on a comparison using the PFS PE RVUs and the
conversion factor effective January 1, 2020. For a discussion of the
PFS rates, we refer readers to the CY 2020 PFS final rule with comment
period.
c. Limit on ASC Payment Rates for Low Volume Device-Intensive
Procedures
As stated in section XIII.D.1.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule, the ASC payment system generally uses OPPS geometric mean costs
under the standard methodology to determine proposed relative payment
weights under the standard ASC ratesetting methodology. However, for
low-volume device-intensive procedures, the proposed relative payment
weights are based on median costs, rather than geometric mean costs, as
discussed in section IV.B.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule.
While we believe this policy generally helps to provide more
appropriate payment for low-volume device-intensive procedures, these
procedures can still have data anomalies as a result of the limited
data available for these procedures in our ratesetting process. For the
Level 5 Intraocular APC, which includes only HCPCS code 0308T (insj
ocular telescope prosth), based on the CY 2018 claims data available
for the proposed rule, the geometric mean cost and median cost under
the standard ASC ratesetting methodology is $67,946.51 and $111,019.30,
respectively. As described in section IV.B.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, a device-intensive procedure that is assigned to a
clinical APC with fewer than 100 total claims for all procedures is
considered ``low-volume'' and the cost of the procedure is based on
calculations using the APC's median cost instead of the APC's geometric
mean cost. Since this APC meets the criteria for low-volume device-
intensive procedure designation, the ASC relative weight would be based
on the median cost rather than the geometric mean cost. We note that
this median cost for this APC is significantly higher than either the
OPPS geometric mean cost or median cost based on the OPPS comprehensive
ratesetting methodology, which are $28,122.51 and $19,269.55,
respectively. This very large difference in cost calculations between
these two settings is largely attributable to the APC's low claims
volume and to the comprehensive methodology used under the OPPS which
is not utilized in ratesetting under the ASC payment system. The cost
calculation for this APC under the ASC payment system is primarily
based on charges from one hospital with a significantly higher device
cost center cost-to-charge ratio and significantly higher charges when
compared to other hospitals providing the procedure.
If the ASC payment system were to base the CY 2020 payment rate for
HCPCS code 0308T on the median cost of $111,019.30, the ASC payment
rate would be several times greater than the OPPS payment rate for
HCPCS code 0308T. We note that the median cost under the OPPS
ratesetting methodology based on CY 2018 claims data is closer to the
historical average for the median cost of HCPCS code 0308T
(approximately $19,000). In addition, given that the outpatient
hospital setting is generally considered to have higher costs than the
ASC setting and that the payment rates for both settings are based on
hospital outpatient cost data, we do not believe there should be a
scenario where the payment rate for a low-volume device-intensive
procedure under the ASC payment system is significantly greater than
payment under the OPPS.
Therefore, for CY 2020 and subsequent years, we proposed to limit
the ASC payment rate for low-volume device-intensive procedures to a
payment rate equal to the OPPS payment rate for that procedure. Under
this proposal, where the ASC payment rate based on the standard ASC
ratesetting methodology for low volume device-intensive procedures
would exceed the rate paid under the OPPS for the same procedure, we
proposed to establish an ASC payment rate for such procedures equal to
the OPPS payment rate for the same procedure. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule, we noted that this policy would only affect HCPCS code
0308T, which has very low claims volume (7 claims used for ratesetting
in the OPPS). We proposed to amend Sec. 416.171(b) of the regulations
to reflect the proposed new limit on ASC payment rates for low-volume
device-intensive procedures. CMS' existing regulation at Sec.
416.171(b)(2) requires the payment of the device portion of a device-
intensive procedure at an amount derived from the payment rate for the
equivalent item under the OPPS using our standard ratesetting
methodology. We proposed to add paragraph (b)(4) to Sec. 416.171 to
require that, notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2), low volume device-
intensive procedures where the otherwise applicable payment rate
calculated based on the standard methodology for device-intensive
procedures would exceed the payment rate for the equivalent procedure
set under the OPPS, the payment rate for the procedure under the ASC
payment system would be equal to the payment rate for the same
procedure under the OPPS.
Covered surgical procedures and their proposed payment rates for CY
2020 are listed in Addendum AA of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(which is available via the internet on the CMS website).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS consider adopting a
consistent payment methodology for low volume procedures, regardless of
whether a procedure is assigned to a clinical or New Technology APC.
The commenter noted that 0308T is one of only two procedures to which
CMS has applied
[[Page 61400]]
either of the low volume payment methodologies. The commenter suggested
CMS could determine the payment rate for low volume, device-intensive
procedures in clinical APCs by using 4 years of claims data and
gathering input through the public comment period on whether arithmetic
mean, geometric mean, or median should be the basis for the payment
amount.
Response: We appreciate the stakeholder's comments regarding
changes in estimated costs based on the claims data available for
ratesetting. In our CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (81
FR 79660 through 79661), we finalized our policy that the payment rate
for any device-intensive procedure that is assigned to a clinical APC
with fewer than 100 total claims for all procedures in the APC be
calculated using the median cost instead of the geometric mean cost. We
believe using the median cost instead of the geometric mean cost has
generally provided an appropriate payment for low-volume device-
intensive procedures in cases where there are no data anomalies.
However, we note that we are adding paragraph (b)(4) to Sec. 416.171
to require that, notwithstanding paragraph (b)(2), low volume device-
intensive procedures where the otherwise applicable ASC payment rate
calculated based on the standard methodology for device-intensive
procedures would exceed the payment rate for the equivalent procedure
set under the OPPS, the payment rate for the procedure under the ASC
payment system would be equal to the payment rate for the same
procedure under the OPPS to address such data anomalies in the future.
Additionally, as we noted in our CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84
FR 39453-39454), one of the objectives of establishing New Technology
APCs is to generate sufficient claims data for a new procedure so that
it can be assigned to an appropriate clinical APC. In cases where
procedures are assigned to New Technology APCs have very low annual
volume, we may use up to 4 years of claims data in calculating the
applicable payment rate for the prospective year. We believe our
payment policy for low-volume new technology procedures provides an
appropriate payment for new technology procedures so that they may be
assigned to an appropriate clinical APC in the future. Further, we
believe this payment policy should only be applicable to procedures
assigned to New Technology APCs and not to all clinical APCs since we
believe it would be less common for a clinical APC to have fewer than
100 total claims than a new technology APC.
After consideration of the public comment we received, we are
finalizing our proposed policy without modification, to limit the ASC
payment rate for a low-volume device-intensive procedure to a payment
rate equal to the OPPS payment rate for that procedure, including our
proposed regulation text at Sec. 416.171(b)(4).
2. Payment for Covered Ancillary Services
a. Background
Our payment policies under the ASC payment system for covered
ancillary services generally vary according to the particular type of
service and its payment policy under the OPPS. Our overall policy
provides separate ASC payment for certain ancillary items and services
integrally related to the provision of ASC covered surgical procedures
that are paid separately under the OPPS and provides packaged ASC
payment for other ancillary items and services that are packaged or
conditionally packaged (status indicators ``N'', ``Q1'', and ``Q2'')
under the OPPS. In the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC rulemaking (77 FR 45169 and 77
FR 68457 through 68458), we further clarified our policy regarding the
payment indicator assignment of procedures that are conditionally
packaged in the OPPS (status indicators ``Q1'' and ``Q2''). Under the
OPPS, a conditionally packaged procedure describes a HCPCS code where
the payment is packaged when it is provided with a significant
procedure but is separately paid when the service appears on the claim
without a significant procedure. Because ASC services always include a
surgical procedure, HCPCS codes that are conditionally packaged under
the OPPS are generally packaged (payment indictor ``N1'') under the ASC
payment system (except for device removal procedures, as discussed in
section IV. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule). Thus, our policy
generally aligns ASC payment bundles with those under the OPPS (72 FR
42495). In all cases, in order for those ancillary services also to be
paid, ancillary items and services must be provided integral to the
performance of ASC covered surgical procedures for which the ASC bills
Medicare.
Our ASC payment policies generally provide separate payment for
drugs and biologicals that are separately paid under the OPPS at the
OPPS rates and package payment for drugs and biologicals for which
payment is packaged under the OPPS. However, as discussed in section
XIII.D.3. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, for CY 2019, we
finalized a policy to unpackage and pay separately at ASP + 6 percent
for the cost of non-opioid pain management drugs that function as
surgical supplies when furnished in the ASC setting, even though
payment for these drugs continues to be packaged under the OPPS. We
generally pay for separately payable radiology services at the lower of
the PFS nonfacility PE RVU-based (or technical component) amount or the
rate calculated according to the ASC standard ratesetting methodology
(72 FR 42497). However, as finalized in the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (75 FR 72050), payment indicators for all nuclear
medicine procedures (defined as CPT codes in the range of 78000 through
78999) that are designated as radiology services that are paid
separately when provided integral to a surgical procedure on the ASC
list are set to ``Z2'' so that payment is made based on the ASC
standard ratesetting methodology rather than the MPFS nonfacility PE
RVU amount (``Z3''), regardless of which is lower (42 CFR
416.171(d)(1)).
Similarly, we also finalized our policy to set the payment
indicator to ``Z2'' for radiology services that use contrast agents so
that payment for these procedures will be based on the OPPS relative
payment weight using the ASC standard ratesetting methodology and,
therefore, will include the cost for the contrast agent (Sec.
416.171(d)(2)).
ASC payment policy for brachytherapy sources mirrors the payment
policy under the OPPS. ASCs are paid for brachytherapy sources provided
integral to ASC covered surgical procedures at prospective rates
adopted under the OPPS or, if OPPS rates are unavailable, at
contractor-priced rates (72 FR 42499). Since December 31, 2009, ASCs
have been paid for brachytherapy sources provided integral to ASC
covered surgical procedures at prospective rates adopted under the
OPPS.
Our ASC policies also provide separate payment for: (1) Certain
items and services that CMS designates as contractor-priced, including,
but not limited to, the procurement of corneal tissue; and (2) certain
implantable items that have pass-through payment status under the OPPS.
These categories do not have prospectively established ASC payment
rates according to ASC payment system policies (72 FR 42502 and 42508
through 42509; Sec. 416.164(b)). Under the ASC payment system, we have
designated corneal tissue
[[Page 61401]]
acquisition and hepatitis B vaccines as contractor-priced. Corneal
tissue acquisition is contractor-priced based on the invoiced costs for
acquiring the corneal tissue for transplantation. Hepatitis B vaccines
are contractor-priced based on invoiced costs for the vaccine.
Devices that are eligible for pass-through payment under the OPPS
are separately paid under the ASC payment system and are contractor-
priced. Under the revised ASC payment system (72 FR 42502), payment for
the surgical procedure associated with the pass-through device is made
according to our standard methodology for the ASC payment system, based
on only the service (non-device) portion of the procedure's OPPS
relative payment weight if the APC weight for the procedure includes
other packaged device costs. We also refer to this methodology as
applying a ``device offset'' to the ASC payment for the associated
surgical procedure. This ensures that duplicate payment is not provided
for any portion of an implanted device with OPPS pass-through payment
status.
In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (79 FR 66933
through 66934), we finalized that, beginning in CY 2015, certain
diagnostic tests within the medicine range of CPT codes for which
separate payment is allowed under the OPPS are covered ancillary
services when they are integral to an ASC covered surgical procedure.
We finalized that diagnostic tests within the medicine range of CPT
codes include all Category I CPT codes in the medicine range
established by CPT, from 90000 to 99999, and Category III CPT codes and
Level II HCPCS codes that describe diagnostic tests that crosswalk or
are clinically similar to procedures in the medicine range established
by CPT. In the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we also
finalized our policy to pay for these tests at the lower of the PFS
nonfacility PE RVU-based (or technical component) amount or the rate
calculated according to the ASC standard ratesetting methodology (79 FR
66933 through 66934). We finalized that the diagnostic tests for which
the payment is based on the ASC standard ratesetting methodology be
assigned to payment indicator ``Z2'' and revised the definition of
payment indicator ``Z2'' to include a reference to diagnostic services
and those for which the payment is based on the PFS nonfacility PE RVU-
based amount be assigned payment indicator ``Z3,'' and revised the
definition of payment indicator ``Z3'' to include a reference to
diagnostic services.
b. Payment for Covered Ancillary Services for CY 2020
We proposed to update the ASC payment rates and to make changes to
ASC payment indicators, as necessary, to maintain consistency between
the OPPS and ASC payment system regarding the packaged or separately
payable status of services and the proposed CY 2020 OPPS and ASC
payment rates and subsequent year payment rates. We also proposed to
continue to set the CY 2020 ASC payment rates and subsequent year
payment rates for brachytherapy sources and separately payable drugs
and biologicals equal to the OPPS payment rates for CY 2020 and
subsequent year payment rates.
We note that stakeholders requested that we propose to add CPT code
91040 (Esophageal balloon distension study, diagnostic, with
provocation when performed) to the ASC Covered Procedures List (CPL)
and ASC list of covered ancillary services as it is integral to the
performance of covered surgical procedures such as CPT code 43235
(Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible, transoral; diagnostic, including
collection of specimen(s) by brushing or washing, when performed
(separate procedure)) and 43239 (Esophagogastroduodenoscopy, flexible,
transoral; with biopsy, single or multiple). Based on available data
and other information related to CPT code 91040, we do not believe this
diagnostic test is integral to the covered surgical procedures of CPT
codes 43235 or 43239. Therefore, we did not propose to add CPT code
91040 as a covered ancillary service.
Covered ancillary services and their proposed payment indicators
for CY 2020 are listed in Addendum BB of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (which is available via the internet on the CMS website). For
those covered ancillary services where the payment rate is the lower of
the proposed rates under the ASC standard rate setting methodology and
the PFS final rates, the proposed payment indicators and rates set
forth in the proposed rule are based on a comparison using the proposed
PFS rates effective January 1, 2020. For a discussion of the PFS rates,
we refer readers to the CY 2020 PFS proposed rule, which is available
on the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-Federal-Regulation-Notices.html.
3. CY 2020 ASC Packaging Policy for Non-Opioid Pain Management
Treatments
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59066
through 59072), we finalized the policy to unpackage and pay separately
at ASP+6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies when they are furnished in the ASC
setting for CY 2019. We also finalized conforming changes to Sec.
416.164(a)(4) to exclude non-opioid pain management drugs that function
as a supply when used in a surgical procedure from our policy to
package payment for drugs and biologicals for which separate payment is
not allowed under the OPPS into the ASC payment for the covered
surgical procedure. We added a new Sec. 416.164(b)(6) to include non-
opioid pain management drugs that function as a supply when used in a
surgical procedure as covered ancillary services that are integral to a
covered surgical procedure. Finally, we finalized a change to Sec.
416.171(b)(1) to exclude non-opioid pain management drugs that function
as a supply when used in a surgical procedure from our policy to pay
for ASC covered ancillary services an amount derived from the payment
rate for the equivalent item or service set under the OPPS.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we noted
that we will continue to analyze the issue of access to non-opioid
alternatives in the OPPS and ASC settings as we implement section 6082
of the Substance Use-Disorder Prevention that Promotes Opioid Recovery
and Treatment for Patients and Communities Act (SUPPORT for Patients
and Communities Act or SUPPORT Act) (Pub. L. 115-271), enacted on
October 24, 2018. We also discussed our policy to unpackage and pay
separately at ASP+6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain management
drugs that function as surgical supplies when furnished in the ASC
setting in section II.A.3.b. of the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (83 FR 58854 through 58860). As required under section
6082(b) of the SUPPORT Act, we will continue to review and revise ASC
payments for non-opioid alternatives for pain management, as
appropriate. For more information on our implementation of section 6082
of the SUPPORT for Patients and Communities Act and related proposals,
we refer readers to section II.A.3.b. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule.
The comments and our responses are set forth below.
[[Page 61402]]
Comment: Multiple commenters, including individual stakeholders,
hospital and physician groups, national medical associations, device
manufacturers, and groups representing the pharmaceutical industry,
supported the proposal to continue unpackage and pay separately for the
cost of non-opioid pain management drugs that function as surgical
supplies, such as Exparel, in the ASC setting for CY 2020. These
commenters believed that packaged payment for non-opioid alternatives
presents a barrier to care and that separate payment for non-opioid
pain management drugs would be an appropriate response to the opioid
drug abuse epidemic.
Other commenters, including MedPAC, did not support this proposal
and stated that the policy was counter to the OPPS packaging policies
created to increase the size of payment bundles in the OPPS, which
increases incentives for efficient delivery of care. MedPAC noted that
they prefer a policy that maintains the packaging of drugs that
function as supplies in surgical procedures.
Response: We appreciate these comments. After reviewing the
information provided by the commenters, we continue to believe the
separate payment is appropriate for non-opioid pain management drugs
that function as surgical supplies when furnished in the ASC setting
for CY 2020. We note that preliminary data suggest that utilization of
Exparel has increased significantly in the ASC setting in 2019. We
intend to continue to monitor Exparel utilization in the ASC setting
and monitor whether there is an associated decrease under Part B or D
in opioids once more data are available.
Comment: Several commenters supported the assignment of status
indicator ``K'' (Nonpass-Through Drugs and Nonimplantable Biologicals,
Including Therapeutic Radiopharmaceuticals) and continuing to pay
separately for the drug Prialt (HCPCS J2278, injection, ziconitide), a
non-narcotic pain reliever administered via intrathecal injection. The
commenters discussed data indicating that Prialt potentially could
lower opioid use, including opioids such as morphine. In addition to
continued separate payment, several commenters recommended CMS reduce
or eliminate the coinsurance for the drug in order to increase
beneficiary access. The commenters noted due to the drug's significant
cost, the 20 percent coinsurance would put the drug out of reach for
beneficiaries. Additionally, the commenters discussed that there is not
enough financial incentive for providers to use Prialt in their
patients compared to lower cost opioids. Commenters claimed that Prialt
is only paid at invoice costs, which they believe discourages provider
use.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback and for their
support of the continued assignment of status indicator ``K'' to HCPCS
J2278. The corresponding ASC payment indicator for HCPCS J2278 would be
``K2''. Prialt is paid at its average sales price (ASP) plus 6 percent
according to the ASP methodology under the OPPS, and therefore, is also
paid at ASP plus 6 percent in the ASC setting. We note that under
1833(a)(1)(G) of the Act, the payment is subject to applicable
deductible and coinsurance, and we are unaware of statutory authority
to alter beneficiary coinsurance for payments made in the ASC setting.
We note that because the dollar value of beneficiary coinsurance is
directly proportionate to the payment rate (which is ASP+6 percent for
HCPCS code J2278), a lower sales price for the drug (which would lead
to a lower Medicare payment rate under the current policy) would be
necessary for beneficiaries to have a lower coinsurance amount.
Comment: Many commenters requested that the drug Omidria (HCPCS
code C9447, injection, phenylephrine ketorolac), be excluded from the
packaging policy once its pass-through status expires on September 30,
2020. Omidria is indicated for maintaining pupil size by preventing
intraoperative miosis and reducing postoperative ocular pain in
cataract or intraocular surgeries. The commenters stated that the
available data and multiple peer-reviewed articles on Omidria support
the packaging exclusion. Commenters asserted the use of Omidria
decreases patients' need for fentanyl during surgeries and another
commenter believes that Omidria reduces opioid use after cataract
surgeries. In addition, commenters asserted that the OPPS and ASC
payment system do not address the cost of packaged products used by
small patient populations. Therefore, the OPPS and ASC payment
structures for packaged supplies creates an access barrier and patients
are forced to use inferior products that have increased complication
risk and require the continued use of opioids to manage pain. One
commenter referenced the results of a study that Omidria reduces the
need for opioids during cataract surgery by nearly 80 percent while
decreasing pain scores by more than 50 percent.
Response: We thank commenters for their feedback on Omidria.
Omidria received pass-through status for a 3-year period from 2015 to
2017. After expiration of its pass-through status, it was packaged
under both the OPPS and ASC payment system. Subsequently, Omidria's
pass-through status under the OPPS was reinstated in October 2018
through September 30, 2020 as required by section 1833(t)(6)(G) of the
Act, as added by section 1301(a)(1)(C) of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141), which means that Omidria
continues to be paid separately under the ASC payment system through
September 30, 2020. While our analysis supports the commenter's
assertion that there was a decrease in the utilization of Omidria in
2018 following its pass-through expiration, we note that there could be
many reasons that utilization declines after the pass-through period,
including the availability of other alternatives on the market (many of
which had been used for several years before Omidria came on the market
and are sold for a lower price), the lack of separate payment being
available, or physician preference.
Further, our clinical advisors' review of the clinical evidence
submitted concluded that the study the commenter submitted was not
sufficiently compelling or authoritative to overcome contrary evidence.
Moreover, the results of a CMS analysis of cataract procedures
performed on Medicare beneficiaries in the OPPS between January 2015
and July 2019 comparing procedures performed with Omidria to procedures
performed without Omidria did not demonstrate a significant decrease in
fentanyl utilization during the cataract surgeries in the OPPS when
Omidria was used. Our findings also did not suggest any decrease in
opioid utilization post-surgery for procedures involving Omidria. As a
result, we do not have compelling evidence to exclude Omidria from
packaging after its current pass-through expires on September 30, 2020.
While we were not able to perform similar analysis using ASC data, we
expect that the results may be similar. We will continue to analyze the
evidence and monitor utilization of this drug.
Comment: One commenter requested that MKO Melt, a non FDA-approved,
compounded drug comprised of midazolam/ketamine/ondansetron for
exclusion from the packaging policy per section 1833(t)(22)(A)(i) of
the Act. The commenter contended that MKO Melt is a drug functioning as
surgical supply in the ASC setting. The commenter provided a reference
to a study titled, ``Anesthesia for opioid addicts: Challenges for
perioperative physician''
[[Page 61403]]
by Goyal et al., on the need for pain management in the opioid-
dependent patient. The commenter also referenced a review article,
``Perioperative Management of Acute Pain in the Opioid-dependent
Patient,'' by Mitra et al., on the special needs of opioid-dependent
patients in surgeries and the potential opioid relapse in those
patients who are recovering from opioid use disorder. Additionally, the
commenter referenced a clinical trial registered in clinicaltrials.gov
(NCT03653520) that supports sublingual MKO Melt for use during cataract
surgeries to replace opioids. The study looked at 611 patients that
were divided into three arms: (1) MKO melt arm, (2) diazepam/tramadol/
ondansetron arm, (3) diazepam only arm. The study concluded that the
MKO melt arm had the lowest incidence for supplemental injectable
anesthesia to control pain.
Response: We thank the commenter for the comment. Based on
information submitted, we are not able to validate that MKO Melt
reduces the use of opioids. We note that ketamine, one component of MKO
melt, exhibits some addictive properties. Moreover, we did not identify
any evidence that MKO Melt is effective for patients with a prior
opioid addiction nor did we receive any data demonstrating that the
current ASC packaging policy incentivized providers to use opioids over
MKO Melt. In accordance with section 1833(i)(8) of the Act, the fact
that there is no HPCPS code for the drug, and lack of FDA approval, we
were not able to identify any compelling evidence that MKO Melt should
be excluded from packaged payment.
Comment: Several commenters, including individual physicians,
medical associations, and device manufacturers commented supporting
separate payment for continuous peripheral nerve blocks as they
significantly reduce opioid use. One commenter suggested that CMS
provide separate payment for HCPCS code A4306 (Disposable drug delivery
system, flow rate of less than 50 ml per hour) in the hospital
outpatient department setting and the ASC setting because packaging
represents a cost barrier for providers. The commenter contended that
continuous nerve block procedures have been shown in high quality
clinical studies to reduce the use of opioids, attaching studies for
review. They believe that separate payment for A4306 will remove the
financial disincentive for HOPDs and ASCs, encouraging continuous nerve
blocks as a non-opioid alternative for post-surgical pain management.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion. We examined the
data for A4306 and noted an overall trend of increasing utilization
from CY 2014 through CY 2017. Additionally, the geometric mean cost for
A4306 was approximately $30 each year during that four-year period. We
acknowledge that use of these items may help in the reduction of opioid
use. However, we note that packaged payment of such an item does not
prevent the use of these items. We do not believe that the current
utilization trends for HCPCS code A4306 in the ASC setting suggest that
the packaged payment is preventing use and remind readers that payment
for packaged items is included in the payment for the primary service.
We share the commenter's concern about the need to reduce opioid use
and will take the commenter's suggestion regarding the need for
separate payment for HCPCS code A4306 in the ASC setting into
consideration for future rulemaking.
Comment: Multiple commenters identified other non-opioid pain
management alternatives that they believe decrease the dose, duration,
and/or number of opioid prescriptions beneficiaries receive during and
following an outpatient visit or procedure (especially for
beneficiaries at high-risk for opioid addiction) and may warrant
separate payment for CY 2020. Commenters representing various
stakeholders requested separate payments for various non-opioid pain
management treatments, such as continuous nerve blocks
(neuromodulation, radiofrequency ablation, implants for lumbar
stenosis, protocols (ERAS[supreg]) IV acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen,
Polar ice devices for postoperative pain relief, THC oil, acupuncture,
and dry needling procedures.
For neuromodulation, several commenters noted that spinal cord
stimulators (SCS) may lead to a reduction in the use of opioids for
chronic pain patients. One manufacturer of SCS devices commented that
SCS provides the opportunity to potentially stabilize or decrease
opioid usage and that neuromodulation retains its efficacy over
multiple years. Regarding barriers to access, the commenter noted that
Medicare beneficiaries often do not have access to SCS until after they
have exhausted other treatments, which often includes opioids. The
commenter presented evidence from observational studies that use of SCS
earlier in a patient's treatment could help reduce opioid use while
controlling pain, and suggested that CMS look for ways to incorporate
SCS earlier in the treatment continuum, suggesting CMS develop
additional education and outreach efforts and incentives for
appropriate referrals of patients with chronic pain to comprehensive
pain management practices for consultation and evaluation prior to the
administration of opioids. The commenter suggested that CMS could
provide alerts to providers regarding the benefits of pain management
consultation with a qualified pain management professional prior to the
administration of opioids for chronic conditions.
Another commenter asserted that the standard endpoints, such as a
greater than 50 percent reduction in pain, that are used to determine
if a neuromodulation-based non-opioid pain alternative therapy is
effective are well-established and validated in all types of clinical
trials and that CMS should establish a general, national coverage
determination for neuromodulation-based non-opioid pain therapy based
on these endpoints, rather than taking the time to create and process
specific national coverage determinations or local coverage
determinations. The commenter suggested that this would be a much
faster and streamlined process for enhancing Medicare beneficiary
access to neuromodulation-based pain management therapies.
One manufacturer of a high-frequency SCS device stated that
additional payment was warranted for non-opioid pain management
treatments because they provide an alternative treatment option to
opioids for patients with chronic leg or back pain. The commenter
provided supporting studies which claimed that patients treated with
their high-frequency SCS device reported a statistically significant
average decrease in opioid use compared to the control group. This
commenter also submitted data that showed a decline in the mean daily
dosage of opioid medication taken and that fewer patients were relying
on opioids at all to manage their pain when they used the
manufacturer's device.
Other commenters wrote regarding their personal experiences in
regards to radiofrequency ablation for sacral iliac joints and knees.
One commenter referenced several studies, one of which found a decrease
in analgesic medications associated with radiofrequency ablation;
however, it did not provide evidence regarding a decrease in opioid
usage.
One national hospital association commenter recommended that while
``certainly not a solution to the opioid epidemic, unpackaging
appropriate non-opioid therapies, like Exparel, is a low-cost tactic
that could change long-
[[Page 61404]]
standing practice patterns without major negative consequences.'' This
same commenter suggested that Medicare consider separate payment for IV
acetaminophen, IV ibuprofen, and Polar ice devices for postoperative
pain relief after knee procedures. The commenter also noted that
therapeutic massage, topically applied THC oil, acupuncture, and dry
needling procedures are very effective therapies for relief of both
postoperative pain and long-term and chronic pain. Several other
commenters expressed support for IV acetaminophen.
Response: We appreciate the detailed responses from commenters on
this topic. At this time, we have not found compelling evidence for
other non-opioid pain management alternatives described above to
warrant separate payment under the OPPS or ASC payment systems for CY
2020, however we plan to take these comments and suggestions into
consideration for future rulemaking. We agree that providing incentives
to avoid or reduce opioid prescriptions may be one of several
strategies for addressing the opioid epidemic. To the extent that the
items and services mentioned by the commenters are effective
alternatives to opioid drugs, we encourage providers to use them when
medically appropriate. We note that some of the items and services
mentioned by commenters are not covered by Medicare, and we do not
intend to establish payment for noncovered items and services. We look
forward to working with stakeholders as we further consider suggested
refinements to the OPPS and the ASC payment system that will encourage
use of medically necessary items and services that have demonstrated
efficacy in decreasing opioid prescriptions or opioid abuse or misuse
during or after an outpatient visit or procedure.
After reviewing the non-opioid pain management alternatives
suggested by the commenters as well as the studies and other data
provided to support the request for separate payment, we have not
determined that separate payment is warranted at this time for most of
the non-opioid pain management alternatives discussed above. However,
we continue to believe the separate payment is appropriate for non-
opioid pain management drugs that function as surgical supplies, like
Exparel, when furnished in the ASC setting and are finalizing this
policy for CY 2020.
Comment: Several commenters addressed payment barriers that may
inhibit access to non-opioid pain management treatments previously
discussed throughout this section. Several commenters disagreed with
CMS's assessment that current payment policies do not represent
barriers to access for certain non-opioid pain management alternatives.
One commenter encouraged CMS to provide timely insurance coverage for
evidence-informed interventional procedures early in the course of
treatment when clinically appropriate, noting that they hope CMS will
reconsider its position and provide mechanisms for separate payment and
patient access to evidence-based, FDA approved and cleared medical
device enabled interventions that would provide alternatives to opioid
pain management interventions. Several other commenters encouraged CMS
to more broadly evaluate all of its packaging policies to help ensure
patient access to appropriate therapies and to assess how packaging
affects the utilization of a medicine and use the results of that
evaluation to guide future policy development.
Response: We appreciate the various, insightful comments we
received from stakeholders regarding barriers that may inhibit access
to non-opioid alternatives for pain treatment and management in order
to more effectively address the opioid epidemic. We will take these
comments into consideration for future consideration. Many of these
comments have been previously addressed throughout this section.
After consideration of the public comments that we received, we are
finalizing the policy to continue to unpackage and pay separately at
ASP + 6 percent for the cost of non-opioid pain management drugs that
function as surgical supplies when they are furnished in the ASC
setting for CY 2020 as proposed. We will continue to analyze the issue
of access to non-opioid alternatives in the OPPS and ASC settings as we
implement section 6082 of the SUPPORT Act and section 1833(i)(8). This
policy is also discussed in section II.A.3.b. of this final rule with
comment period.
E. New Technology Intraocular Lenses (NTIOLs)
New Technology Intraocular Lenses (NTIOLs) are intraocular lenses
that replace a patient's natural lens that has been removed in cataract
surgery and that also meet the requirements listed in 42 CFR 416.195.
1. NTIOL Application Cycle
Our process for reviewing applications to establish new classes of
NTIOLs is as follows:
Applicants submit their NTIOL requests for review to CMS
by the annual deadline. For a request to be considered complete, we
require submission of the information that is found in the guidance
document entitled ``Application Process and Information Requirements
for Requests for a New Class of New Technology Intraocular Lenses
(NTIOLs) or Inclusion of an IOL in an Existing NTIOL Class'' posted on
the CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ASCPayment/NTIOLs.html.
We announce annually, in the proposed rule updating the
ASC and OPPS payment rates for the following calendar year, a list of
all requests to establish new NTIOL classes accepted for review during
the calendar year in which the proposal is published. In accordance
with section 141(b)(3) of Public Law 103-432 and our regulations at
Sec. 416.185(b), the deadline for receipt of public comments is 30
days following publication of the list of requests in the proposed
rule.
In the final rule updating the ASC and OPPS payment rates
for the following calendar year, we--
++ Provide a list of determinations made as a result of our review
of all new NTIOL class requests and public comments;
++ When a new NTIOL class is created, identify the predominant
characteristic of NTIOLs in that class that sets them apart from other
IOLs (including those previously approved as members of other expired
or active NTIOL classes) and that is associated with an improved
clinical outcome.
++ Set the date of implementation of a payment adjustment in the
case of approval of an IOL as a member of a new NTIOL class
prospectively as of 30 days after publication of the ASC payment update
final rule, consistent with the statutory requirement.
++ Announce the deadline for submitting requests for review of an
application for a new NTIOL class for the following calendar year.
2. Requests To Establish New NTIOL Classes for CY 2020
We did not receive any requests for review to establish a new NTIOL
class for CY 2020 by March 1, 2019, the due date published in the CY
2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59072).
3. Payment Adjustment
The current payment adjustment for a 5-year period from the
implementation date of a new NTIOL class is $50 per lens. Since
implementation of the process for adjustment of payment amounts for
NTIOLs in 1999, we have not revised the payment adjustment amount, and
we did not proposing to
[[Page 61405]]
revise the payment adjustment amount for CY 2020.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: Two commenters requested that we re-evaluate our payment
adjustment for new NTIOL class. Commenters noted that our $50 payment
adjustment has not been adjusted since CY 1999 and that the stagnant
payment adjustment has been a barrier to intraocular lens innovation.
One commenter requested that the $50 be inflated to 2020 dollars and
updated by inflation in subsequent years. Another commenter requested
that we updated the $50 payment adjustment to $100, which is the
approximate dollar amount of our $50 payment adjustment had we
increased the adjustment based on the increase in CPI-U for medical
care.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendation. We did
not propose revising the payment adjustment amount for CY 2020.
However, we will take commenters recommendations into consideration in
future rulemaking.
After consideration of the public comments we received, we are
finalizing our proposal to maintain the payment adjustment of a new
NTIOL class at $50 per lens for CY 2020 without modification.
F. ASC Payment and Comment Indicators
1. Background
In addition to the payment indicators that we introduced in the
August 2, 2007 final rule, we created final comment indicators for the
ASC payment system in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66855). We created Addendum DD1 to define ASC payment
indicators that we use in Addenda AA and BB to provide payment
information regarding covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary
services, respectively, under the revised ASC payment system. The ASC
payment indicators in Addendum DD1 are intended to capture policy-
relevant characteristics of HCPCS codes that may receive packaged or
separate payment in ASCs, such as whether they were on the ASC CPL
prior to CY 2008; payment designation, such as device-intensive or
office-based, and the corresponding ASC payment methodology; and their
classification as separately payable ancillary services, including
radiology services, brachytherapy sources, OPPS pass-through devices,
corneal tissue acquisition services, drugs or biologicals, or NTIOLs.
We also created Addendum DD2 that lists the ASC comment indicators.
The ASC comment indicators included in Addenda AA and BB to the
proposed rules and final rules with comment period serve to identify,
for the revised ASC payment system, the status of a specific HCPCS code
and its payment indicator with respect to the timeframe when comments
will be accepted. The comment indicator ``NI'' is used in the OPPS/ASC
final rule to indicate new codes for the next calendar year for which
the interim payment indicator assigned is subject to comment. The
comment indicator ``NI'' also is assigned to existing codes with
substantial revisions to their descriptors such that we consider them
to be describing new services, and the interim payment indicator
assigned is subject to comment, as discussed in the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (74 FR 60622).
The comment indicator ``NP'' is used in the OPPS/ASC proposed rule
to indicate new codes for the next calendar year for which the proposed
payment indicator assigned is subject to comment. The comment indicator
``NP'' also is assigned to existing codes with substantial revisions to
their descriptors, such that we consider them to be describing new
services, and the proposed payment indicator assigned is subject to
comment, as discussed in the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70497).
The ``CH'' comment indicator is used in Addenda AA and BB to the
proposed rule (which are available via the internet on the CMS website)
to indicate that the payment indicator assignment has changed for an
active HCPCS code in the current year and the next calendar year, for
example if an active HCPCS code is newly recognized as payable in ASCs;
or an active HCPCS code is discontinued at the end of the current
calendar year. The ``CH'' comment indicators that are published in the
final rule with comment period are provided to alert readers that a
change has been made from one calendar year to the next, but do not
indicate that the change is subject to comment.
2. ASC Payment and Comment Indicators for CY 2020
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we proposed new and revised
Category I and III CPT codes as well as new and revised Level II HCPCS
codes. Therefore, proposed Category I and III CPT codes that are new
and revised for CY 2020 and any new and existing Level II HCPCS codes
with substantial revisions to the code descriptors for CY 2020 compared
to the CY 2019 descriptors are included in ASC Addenda AA and BB to
this proposed rule were labeled with proposed comment indicator ``NP''
to indicate that these CPT and Level II HCPCS codes were open for
comment as part of the proposed rule. Proposed comment indicator ``NP''
meant a new code for the next calendar year or an existing code with
substantial revision to its code descriptor in the next calendar year,
as compared to current calendar year; and denoted that comments would
be accepted on the proposed ASC payment indicator for the new code.
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, we stated that we would
respond to public comments on ASC payment and comment indicators and
finalize their ASC assignment in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period. We referred readers to Addenda DD1 and DD2 of the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (which are available via the internet on
the CMS website) for the complete list of ASC payment and comment
indicators proposed for the CY 2020 update. We did not receive any
public comments on the ASC payment and comment indicators. Therefore,
we are finalizing their use as proposed without modification. Addenda
DD1 and DD2 to this final rule with comment period (which are available
via the internet on the CMS website) contain the complete list of ASC
payment and comment indicators for CY 2020.
G. Calculation of the ASC Payment Rates and the ASC Conversion Factor
1. Background
In the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42493), we established our
policy to base ASC relative payment weights and payment rates under the
revised ASC payment system on APC groups and the OPPS relative payment
weights. Consistent with that policy and the requirement at section
1833(i)(2)(D)(ii) of the Act that the revised payment system be
implemented so that it would be budget neutral, the initial ASC
conversion factor (CY 2008) was calculated so that estimated total
Medicare payments under the revised ASC payment system in the first
year would be budget neutral to estimated total Medicare payments under
the prior (CY 2007) ASC payment system (the ASC conversion factor is
multiplied by the relative payment weights calculated for many ASC
services in order to establish payment rates). That is, application of
the ASC conversion factor was designed to result in aggregate Medicare
expenditures under the revised ASC payment system in CY 2008 being
equal to aggregate Medicare
[[Page 61406]]
expenditures that would have occurred in CY 2008 in the absence of the
revised system, taking into consideration the cap on ASC payments in CY
2007, as required under section 1833(i)(2)(E) of the Act (72 FR 42522).
We adopted a policy to make the system budget neutral in subsequent
calendar years (72 FR 42532 through 42533; Sec. 416.171(e)).
We note that we consider the term ``expenditures'' in the context
of the budget neutrality requirement under section 1833(i)(2)(D)(ii) of
the Act to mean expenditures from the Medicare Part B Trust Fund. We do
not consider expenditures to include beneficiary coinsurance and
copayments. This distinction was important for the CY 2008 ASC budget
neutrality model that considered payments across the OPPS, ASC, and
MPFS payment systems. However, because coinsurance is almost always 20
percent for ASC services, this interpretation of expenditures has
minimal impact for subsequent budget neutrality adjustments calculated
within the revised ASC payment system.
In the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (72 FR 66857
through 66858), we set out a step-by-step illustration of the final
budget neutrality adjustment calculation based on the methodology
finalized in the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42521 through 42531)
and as applied to updated data available for the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period. The application of that methodology to the
data available for the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
resulted in a budget neutrality adjustment of 0.65.
For CY 2008, we adopted the OPPS relative payment weights as the
ASC relative payment weights for most services and, consistent with the
final policy, we calculated the CY 2008 ASC payment rates by
multiplying the ASC relative payment weights by the final CY 2008 ASC
conversion factor of $41.401. For covered office-based surgical
procedures, covered ancillary radiology services (excluding covered
ancillary radiology services involving certain nuclear medicine
procedures or involving the use of contrast agents, as discussed in
section XII.D.2. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule), and certain
diagnostic tests within the medicine range that are covered ancillary
services, the established policy is to set the payment rate at the
lower of the MPFS unadjusted nonfacility PE RVU-based amount or the
amount calculated using the ASC standard ratesetting methodology.
Further, as discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (72 FR 66841 through 66843), we also adopted alternative
ratesetting methodologies for specific types of services (for example,
device-intensive procedures).
As discussed in the August 2, 2007 final rule (72 FR 42517 through
42518) and as codified at Sec. 416.172(c) of the regulations, the
revised ASC payment system accounts for geographic wage variation when
calculating individual ASC payments by applying the pre-floor and pre-
reclassified IPPS hospital wage indexes to the labor-related share,
which is 50 percent of the ASC payment amount based on a GAO report of
ASC costs using 2004 survey data. Beginning in CY 2008, CMS accounted
for geographic wage variation in labor costs when calculating
individual ASC payments by applying the pre-floor and pre-reclassified
hospital wage index values that CMS calculates for payment under the
IPPS, using updated Core Based Statistical Areas (CBSAs) issued by OMB
in June 2003.
The reclassification provision in section 1886(d)(10) of the Act is
specific to hospitals. We believe that using the most recently
available pre-floor and pre-reclassified IPPS hospital wage indexes
results in the most appropriate adjustment to the labor portion of ASC
costs. We continue to believe that the unadjusted hospital wage
indexes, which are updated yearly and are used by many other Medicare
payment systems, appropriately account for geographic variation in
labor costs for ASCs. Therefore, the wage index for an ASC is the pre-
floor and pre-reclassified hospital wage index under the IPPS of the
CBSA that maps to the CBSA where the ASC is located.
Generally, OMB issues major revisions to statistical areas every 10
years, based on the results of the decennial census. On February 28,
2013, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 13-01, which provides the
delineations of all Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Metropolitan
Divisions, Micropolitan Statistical Areas, Combined Statistical Areas,
and New England City and Town Areas in the United States and Puerto
Rico based on the standards published on June 28, 2010 in the Federal
Register (75 FR 37246 through 37252) and 2010 Census Bureau data. (A
copy of this bulletin may be obtained at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/2013/b13-01.pdf.) In the FY
2015 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (79 FR 49951 through 49963), we
implemented the use of the CBSA delineations issued by OMB in OMB
Bulletin 13-01 for the IPPS hospital wage index beginning in FY 2015.
OMB occasionally issues minor updates and revisions to statistical
areas in the years between the decennial censuses. On July 15, 2015,
OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 15-01, which provides updates to and
supersedes OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 that was issued on February 28, 2013.
OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 made changes that are relevant to the IPPS and
ASC wage index. We refer readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (81 FR 79750) for a discussion of these changes and
our implementation of these revisions. (A copy of this bulletin may be
obtained at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/2015/15-01.pdf.)
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 17-01, which
provided updates to and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 that was
issued on July 15, 2015. We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final
rule with comment period (83 FR 58864 through 58865) for a discussion
of these changes and our implementation of these revisions. (A copy of
this bulletin may be obtained at https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/bulletins/2017/b-17-01.pdf.)
For CY 2020, the proposed CY 2020 ASC wage indexes fully reflect
the OMB labor market area delineations (including the revisions to the
OMB labor market delineations discussed above, as set forth in OMB
Bulletin Nos. 15-01 and 17-01).
We note that, in certain instances, there might be urban or rural
areas for which there is no IPPS hospital that has wage index data that
could be used to set the wage index for that area. For these areas, our
policy has been to use the average of the wage indexes for CBSAs (or
metropolitan divisions as applicable) that are contiguous to the area
that has no wage index (where ``contiguous'' is defined as sharing a
border). For example, for CY 2014, we applied a proxy wage index based
on this methodology to ASCs located in CBSA 25980 (Hinesville-Fort
Stewart, GA) and CBSA 08 (Rural Delaware).
When all of the areas contiguous to the urban CBSA of interest are
rural and there is no IPPS hospital that has wage index data that could
be used to set the wage index for that area, we determine the ASC wage
index by calculating the average of all wage indexes for urban areas in
the state (75 FR 72058 through 72059). (In other situations, where
there are no IPPS hospitals located in a relevant labor market area, we
continue our current policy of calculating an urban or rural area's
wage index by calculating the average of the wage indexes for CBSAs (or
metropolitan
[[Page 61407]]
divisions where applicable) that are contiguous to the area with no
wage index.)
2. Calculation of the ASC Payment Rates
a. Updating the ASC Relative Payment Weights for CY 2020 and Future
Years
We update the ASC relative payment weights each year using the
national OPPS relative payment weights (and PFS nonfacility PE RVU-
based amounts, as applicable) for that same calendar year and uniformly
scale the ASC relative payment weights for each update year to make
them budget neutral (72 FR 42533). Consistent with our established
policy, we proposed to scale the CY 2020 relative payment weights for
ASCs according to the following method. Holding ASC utilization, the
ASC conversion factor, and the mix of services constant from CY 2018,
we proposed to compare the total payment using the CY 2019 ASC relative
payment weights with the total payment using the CY 2020 ASC relative
payment weights to take into account the changes in the OPPS relative
payment weights between CY 2019 and CY 2020. We proposed to use the
ratio of CY 2019 to CY 2020 total payments (the weight scalar) to scale
the ASC relative payment weights for CY 2020. The proposed CY 2020 ASC
weight scalar is 0.8452 and scaling would apply to the ASC relative
payment weights of the covered surgical procedures, covered ancillary
radiology services, and certain diagnostic tests within the medicine
range of CPT codes, which are covered ancillary services for which the
ASC payment rates are based on OPPS relative payment weights.
Scaling would not apply in the case of ASC payment for separately
payable covered ancillary services that have a predetermined national
payment amount (that is, their national ASC payment amounts are not
based on OPPS relative payment weights), such as drugs and biologicals
that are separately paid or services that are contractor-priced or paid
at reasonable cost in ASCs. Any service with a predetermined national
payment amount would be included in the ASC budget neutrality
comparison, but scaling of the ASC relative payment weights would not
apply to those services. The ASC payment weights for those services
without predetermined national payment amounts (that is, those services
with national payment amounts that would be based on OPPS relative
payment weights) would be scaled to eliminate any difference in the
total payment between the current year and the update year.
For any given year's ratesetting, we typically use the most recent
full calendar year of claims data to model budget neutrality
adjustments. At the time of the proposed rule, we had available 98
percent of CY 2018 ASC claims data.
The comments and our responses to the comments are set forth below.
Comment: A majority of commenters believe that CMS needs to reduce
the disparity in payments between ASCs and HOPDs. Commenters stated
that ASC payment rates are less than 50 percent of the HOPD payment
rates for some high volume procedures. Many of these same commenters
support the discontinuation of the ASC weight scalar, which they
believe is the cause of the payment gap between ASCs and HOPDs.
Commenters suggested that the ASC weight scalar as currently applied
may make it economically infeasible for ASC facilities to continue to
perform Medicare cases, which would hurt beneficiaries and limit their
access to high-quality outpatient surgical care. They suggested that
eliminating the secondary rescaling that is currently applied to ASC
payments would allow ASCs to continue to provide quality surgical care
for Medicare patients.
Several commenters requested that CMS apply the same OPPS relative
weights to ASC services and discontinue rescaling the ASC relative
weights. They provided that while they understand the additional
scaling factor that CMS applies to the ASC APC weight maintains budget
neutrality within the ASC payment system, this scaling contributes to
the large payment differentials for similar services between the ASC
and HOPD systems.
Response: We note that applying the weight scalar in calculation of
ASC payment rates, for this final rule with comment period it is
0.8550, ensures that the ASC payment system remains budget neutral. We
understand the commenters do not believe that calculation of the weight
scalar in the ASC is necessary and their belief that its application
leads to large payment differentials for similar services between the
OPPS and ASC payment systems. However, as noted in previous rulemaking
(83 FR 59076), we do not believe that the ASC cost structure is
identical to the hospital cost structure. Further, we do not collect
cost data from ASCs, and therefore we are unsure of the actual
differences in costs between the two sites of service. We have not
witnessed beneficiary access issues when it comes to receiving care in
an ASC and note that there are more ASCs than there are hospitals; we
do not agree that the current ASC payment methodology has created an
access to care issue for ASCs. Additionally, the ASC payment system was
not designed to mirror that of the OPPS; a large part of the value of
ASCs is that they provide a lower cost option for surgical procedures
than some other settings.
To create an analytic file to support calculation of the weight
scalar and budget neutrality adjustment for the wage index (discussed
below), we summarized available CY 2017 ASC claims by ASC and by HCPCS
code. We used the National Provider Identifier for the purpose of
identifying unique ASCs within the CY 2018 claims data. We used the
supplier zip code reported on the claim to associate state, county, and
CBSA with each ASC. This file, available to the public as a supporting
data file for the proposed rule, is posted on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/LimitedDataSets/ASCPaymentSystem.html.
b. Updating the ASC Conversion Factor
Under the OPPS, we typically apply a budget neutrality adjustment
for provider level changes, most notably a change in the wage index
values for the upcoming year, to the conversion factor. Consistent with
our final ASC payment policy, for the CY 2017 ASC payment system and
subsequent years, in the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79751 through 79753), we finalized our policy to
calculate and apply a budget neutrality adjustment to the ASC
conversion factor for supplier level changes in wage index values for
the upcoming year, just as the OPPS wage index budget neutrality
adjustment is calculated and applied to the OPPS conversion factor. For
CY 2020, we calculated the proposed adjustment for the ASC payment
system by using the most recent CY 2018 claims data available and
estimating the difference in total payment that would be created by
introducing the proposed CY 2020 ASC wage indexes. Specifically,
holding CY 2018 ASC utilization, service-mix, and the proposed CY 2020
national payment rates after application of the weight scalar constant,
we calculated the total adjusted payment using the CY 2019 ASC wage
indexes and the total adjusted payment using the proposed CY 2020 ASC
wage indexes. We used the 50-percent labor-related share for both total
adjusted payment calculations. We then compared the total adjusted
payment calculated with the CY 2019 ASC wage indexes to the total
adjusted payment calculated with the proposed CY 2020 ASC wage
[[Page 61408]]
indexes and applied the resulting ratio of 1.0008 (the proposed CY 2020
ASC wage index budget neutrality adjustment) to the CY 2019 ASC
conversion factor to calculate the proposed CY 2020 ASC conversion
factor.
Section 1833(i)(2)(C)(i) of the Act requires that, if the Secretary
has not updated amounts established under the revised ASC payment
system in a calendar year, the payment amounts shall be increased by
the percentage increase in the Consumer Price Index for all urban
consumers (CPI-U), U.S. city average, as estimated by the Secretary for
the 12-month period ending with the midpoint of the year involved. The
statute does not mandate the adoption of any particular update
mechanism, but it requires the payment amounts to be increased by the
CPI-U in the absence of any update. Because the Secretary updates the
ASC payment amounts annually, we adopted a policy, which we codified at
Sec. 416.171(a)(2)(ii)), to update the ASC conversion factor using the
CPI-U for CY 2010 and subsequent calendar years.
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59075
through 59080), we finalized our proposal to apply the hospital market
basket update to ASC payment system rates for an interim period of 5
years (CY 2019 through CY 2023), during which we will assess whether
there is a migration of the performance of procedures from the hospital
setting to the ASC setting as a result of the use of a hospital market
basket update, as well as whether there are any unintended
consequences, such as less than expected migration of the performance
of procedures from the hospital setting to the ASC setting. In
addition, we finalized our proposal to revise our regulations under
Sec. 416.171(a)(2), which address the annual update to the ASC
conversion factor. During this 5-year period, we intend to assess the
feasibility of collaborating with stakeholders to collect ASC cost data
in a minimally burdensome manner and could propose a plan to collect
such information. We refer readers to that final rule for a detailed
discussion of the rationale for these policies.
As stated in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39552), the
hospital market basket update for CY 2020 was to be 3.2 percent, as
published in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19402),
based on IHS Global Inc.'s (IGI's) 2018 fourth quarter forecast with
historical data through the third quarter of 2018. For this CY 2020
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, as published in the FY 2019
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42343), based on IGI's 2019 second
quarter forecast with historical data through the first quarter of
2019, the hospital market basket update for CY 2020 is 3.0 percent.
We finalized the methodology for calculating the MFP adjustment in
the CY 2011 PFS final rule with comment period (75 FR 73394 through
73396) and revised it in the CY 2012 PFS final rule with comment period
(76 FR 73300 through 73301) and the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70500 through 70501). As stated in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39553), the proposed MFP adjustment for
CY 2020 was projected to be 0.5 percentage point, as published in the
FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule (84 FR 19402) based on IGI's 2018
fourth quarter forecast. For this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, as published in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule
(84 FR 42343) based on IGI's 2019 second quarter forecast, the final
MFP adjustment for CY 2020 is 0.4 percentage point.
For CY 2020, we proposed to utilize the hospital market basket
update of 3.2 percent minus the MFP adjustment of 0.5 percentage point,
resulting in an MFP-adjusted hospital market basket update factor of
2.7 percent for ASCs meeting the quality reporting requirements.
Therefore, we proposed to apply a 2.7 percent MFP-adjusted hospital
market basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor for
ASCs meeting the quality reporting requirements to determine the CY
2020 ASC payment amounts. The ASCQR Program affected payment rates
beginning in CY 2014 and, under this program, there is a 2.0 percentage
point reduction to the update factor for ASCs that fail to meet the
ASCQR Program requirements. We referred readers to section XIV.E. of
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59138
through 59139) and section XIV.E. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
for a detailed discussion of our policies regarding payment reduction
for ASCs that fail to meet ASCQR Program requirements. We proposed to
utilize the hospital market basket update of 3.2 percent reduced by 2.0
percentage points for ASCs that do not meet the quality reporting
requirements and then subtract the 0.5 percentage point MFP adjustment.
Therefore, we proposed to apply a 0.7 percent MFP-adjusted hospital
market basket update factor to the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor for
ASCs not meeting the quality reporting requirements. We also proposed
that if more recent data are subsequently available (for example, a
more recent estimate of the hospital market basket update and MFP), we
would use such data, if appropriate, to determine the CY 2020 ASC
update for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period.
For CY 2020, we proposed to adjust the CY 2019 ASC conversion
factor ($46.532) by the proposed wage index budget neutrality factor of
1.0008 in addition to the MFP-adjusted hospital market basket update
factor of 2.7 percent discussed above, which results in a proposed CY
2020 ASC conversion factor of $47.827 for ASCs meeting the quality
reporting requirements. For ASCs not meeting the quality reporting
requirements, we proposed to adjust the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor
($46.532) by the proposed wage index budget neutrality factor of 1.0008
in addition to the quality reporting/MFP-adjusted hospital market
basket update factor of 0.7 percent discussed above, which results in a
proposed CY 2020 ASC conversion factor of $46.895.
The comments and our responses are set forth below.
Comment: The majority of commenters supported continued use of the
hospital market basket for updating ASC payments on an annual basis.
Some commenters suggested that aligning the update factors between the
OPPS and ASC settings will encourage the migration of care to the ASC
setting by making ASC payment more competitive with hospital payment,
while other commenters supported the decision as it would promote site-
neutrality between the two settings of care through more competitive
payment. However, other commenters, despite their support for the use
of the hospital market basket to update ASC payment rates, believed
that the migration of services to ASCs would be limited due to the ASC
budget neutrality adjustments. Commenters stated that CMS' current
approach to maintaining budget neutrality in the ASC payment system
caused increasing differentials in payment for services provided in the
ASC and HOPD settings, and there was no evidence of corresponding
changes in capital and operating costs between the ASC and HOPD
settings to support this growing payment differential. Commenters noted
that widening the gap in payments could make it economically difficult
for ASCs to perform certain procedures, discouraging ASCs from
furnishing those procedures and thereby discouraging the migration of
services from the HOPD to the ASC setting. MedPAC did not support using
the hospital market basket index as an interim method for updating the
ASC
[[Page 61409]]
conversion factor, noting that evidence has indicated the hospital
market basket index does not accurately reflect the costs of ASCs.
MedPAC noted the differences in cost structure between the HOPD and ASC
settings could be attributed to a number of factors, including
different patient populations, expenses, employee compensation, and
regulations.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. We believe
providing ASCs with the same rate update as hospitals encourages the
migration of services from the hospital setting to the ASC setting and
could increase the presence of ASCs in health care markets or
geographic areas where previously there were none or few. The migration
of services from the higher cost hospital outpatient setting to the ASC
setting is likely to result in savings to beneficiaries and the
Medicare program. This policy also gives both physicians and
beneficiaries greater choice in selecting the best care setting.
In addition, we acknowledge MedPAC's comment regarding the
collection of ASC cost data and differences in cost structure between
the HOPD and ASC settings. We appreciate these comments and will take
these comments into consideration in future policy development.
Comment: Multiple commenters expressed their opposition to
collecting ASC cost data, due to the anticipated administrative burden
associated with collecting this data. Commenters suggested that
collecting ASC cost data would prevent ASCs from providing efficient
low-cost care. MedPAC suggested that CMS begin collecting ASC cost data
immediately, forgoing the final four years of its planned five-year
period to assess the feasibility of collaborating with stakeholders to
collect ASC cost data in a minimally burdensome manner and potentially
to propose a plan to collect such information. MedPAC suggested that
CMS use its existing authority and resources to act quickly in
gathering ASC cost data. MedPAC noted that beneficial information could
be gathered to inform ASC payment updates and asserted that there is
sufficient evidence that ASC can capably submit cost data.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. As discussed in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we intend to
assess the feasibility of collaborating with stakeholders to collect
ASC cost data in a minimally burdensome manner and potentially propose
a plan to collect such information over a 5-year period (83 FR 59077).
We will continue to assess the feasibility of collaborating with
stakeholders to collect ASC cost data in a minimally burdensome manner
for future policy development.
After consideration of the public comments we received, consistent
with our proposal that if more recent data are subsequently available
(for example, a more recent estimate of the hospital market basket
update and MFP), we would use such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2020 ASC update for the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period, we are incorporating more recent data to determine the final CY
2020 ASC update. Therefore, for this CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period, the hospital market basket update for CY 2020 is 3.0
percent, as published in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR
42343), based on IGI's 2019 second quarter forecast with historical
data through the first quarter of 2019. The MFP adjustment for this CY
2020 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period is 0.4 percentage point,
as published in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42343)
based on IGI's 2019 second quarter forecast.
For CY 2020, we are finalizing the hospital market basket update of
3.0 percent minus the MFP adjustment of 0.4 percentage point, resulting
in an MFP-adjusted hospital market basket update factor of 2.6 percent
for ASCs meeting the quality reporting requirements. Therefore, we
apply a 2.6 percent MFP-adjusted hospital market basket update factor
to the CY 2019 ASC conversion factor for ASCs meeting the quality
reporting requirements to determine the CY 2020 ASC payment rates.
3. Display of Final CY 2020 ASC Payment Rates
Addenda AA and BB to this final rule (which are available on the
CMS website) display the final updated ASC payment rates for CY 2020
for covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary services,
respectively. For those covered surgical procedures and covered
ancillary services where the payment rate is the lower of the proposed
rates under the ASC standard ratesetting methodology and the MPFS final
rates, the final payment indicators and rates set forth in this final
rule are based on a comparison using the finalized PFS rates that would
be effective January 1, 2020. For a discussion of the PFS rates, we
refer readers to the CY 2020 PFS final rule that is available on the
CMS website at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/PFS-Federal-Regulation-Notices.html.
The final payment rates included in addenda AA and BB to this final
rule reflect the full ASC payment update and not the reduced payment
update used to calculate payment rates for ASCs not meeting the quality
reporting requirements under the ASCQR Program. These addenda contain
several types of information related to the proposed CY 2020 payment
rates. Specifically, in Addendum AA, a ``Y'' in the column titled ``To
be Subject to Multiple Procedure Discounting'' indicates that the
surgical procedure would be subject to the multiple procedure payment
reduction policy. As discussed in the CY 2008 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (72 FR 66829 through 66830), most covered surgical
procedures are subject to a 50-percent reduction in the ASC payment for
the lower-paying procedure when more than one procedure is performed in
a single operative session.
Display of the comment indicator ``CH'' in the column titled
``Comment Indicator'' indicates a change in payment policy for the item
or service, including identifying discontinued HCPCS codes, designating
items or services newly payable under the ASC payment system, and
identifying items or services with changes in the ASC payment indicator
for CY 2020. Display of the comment indicator ``NI'' in the column
titled ``Comment Indicator'' indicates that the code is new (or
substantially revised) and that comments will be accepted on the
interim payment indicator for the new code. Display of the comment
indicator ``NP'' in the column titled ``Comment Indicator'' indicates
that the code is new (or substantially revised) and that comments will
be accepted on the ASC payment indicator for the new code.
The values displayed in the column titled ``Final CY 2020 Payment
Weight'' are the proposed relative payment weights for each of the
listed services for CY 2020. The proposed relative payment weights for
all covered surgical procedures and covered ancillary services where
the ASC payment rates are based on OPPS relative payment weights were
scaled for budget neutrality. Therefore, scaling was not applied to the
device portion of the device-intensive procedures, services that are
paid at the MPFS nonfacility PE RVU-based amount, separately payable
covered ancillary services that have a predetermined national payment
amount, such as drugs and biologicals and brachytherapy sources that
are separately paid under the OPPS, or services that are contractor-
priced or paid at reasonable cost in ASCs. This
[[Page 61410]]
includes separate payment for non-opioid pain management drugs.
To derive the final CY 2020 payment rate displayed in the ``Final
CY 2020 Payment Rate'' column, each ASC payment weight in the ``Final
CY 2020 Payment Weight'' column was multiplied by the final CY 2020
conversion factor of $47.747. The conversion factor includes a budget
neutrality adjustment for changes in the wage index values and the
annual update factor as reduced by the productivity adjustment. The
final CY 2020 ASC conversion factor uses the CY 2020 MFP-adjusted
hospital market basket update factor of 2.6 percent (which is equal to
the projected hospital market basket update of 3.0 percent minus a
projected MFP adjustment of 0.4 percentage point).
In Addendum BB, there are no relative payment weights displayed in
the ``Final CY 2020 Payment Weight'' column for items and services with
predetermined national payment amounts, such as separately payable
drugs and biologicals. The ``Final CY 2020 Payment'' column displays
the proposed CY 2020 national unadjusted ASC payment rates for all
items and services. The proposed CY 2020 ASC payment rates listed in
Addendum BB for separately payable drugs and biologicals are based on
ASP data used for payment in physicians' offices in 2019.
Addendum EE provides the HCPCS codes and short descriptors for
surgical procedures that are proposed to be excluded from payment in
ASCs for CY 2020.
XIV. Requirements for the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR)
Program
A. Background
1. Overview
CMS seeks to promote higher quality and more efficient healthcare
for Medicare beneficiaries. Consistent with these goals, CMS has
implemented quality reporting programs for multiple care settings
including the quality reporting program for hospital outpatient care,
known as the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program,
formerly known as the Hospital Outpatient Quality Data Reporting
Program (HOP QDRP). The Hospital OQR Program is generally aligned with
the quality reporting program for hospital inpatient services known as
the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program, formerly known
as the Reporting Hospital Quality Data for Annual Payment Update
(RHQDAPU) Program.
We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 58820 through 58822) where we discuss our Meaningful
Measures Initiative and our approach in evaluating quality program
measures.
2. Statutory History of the Hospital OQR Program
We refer readers to the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (75 FR 72064 through 72065) for a detailed discussion of the
statutory history of the Hospital OQR Program.
3. Regulatory History of the Hospital OQR Program
We refer readers to the CY 2008 through 2019 OPPS/ASC final rules
with comment period (72 FR 66860 through 66875; 73 FR 68758 through
68779; 74 FR 60629 through 60656; 75 FR 72064 through 72110; 76 FR
74451 through 74492; 77 FR 68467 through 68492; 78 FR 75090 through
75120; 79 FR 66940 through 66966; 80 FR 70502 through 70526; 81 FR
79753 through 79797; 82 FR 59424 through 59445; and 83 FR 59080 through
59110) for the regulatory history of the Hospital OQR Program. We have
codified certain requirements under the Hospital OQR Program at 42 CFR
419.46.
B. Hospital OQR Program Quality Measures
1. Considerations in the Selection of Hospital OQR Program Quality
Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74458 through 74460) for a detailed discussion of the
priorities we consider for the Hospital OQR Program quality measure
selection. We did not propose any changes to these policies in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
2. Retention of Hospital OQR Program Measures Adopted in Previous
Payment Determinations
We previously adopted a policy to retain measures from a previous
year's Hospital OQR Program measure set for subsequent years' measure
sets in the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (77 FR
68471) whereby quality measures adopted in a previous year's rulemaking
are retained in the Hospital OQR Program for use in subsequent years
unless otherwise specified. For more information regarding this policy,
we refer readers to that final rule with comment period. We codified
this policy at 42 CFR 419.46(h)(1) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59082). We did not propose any changes to
these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
3. Removal of Quality Measures From the Hospital OQR Program Measure
Set
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (74 FR
60635), we finalized a process to use the regular rulemaking process to
remove a measure for circumstances for which we do not believe that
continued use of a measure raises specific patient safety concerns.\82\
We codified this policy at 42 CFR 419.46(h)(3) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (83 FR 59082). We did not propose any
changes to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39554).
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\82\ We initially referred to this process as ``retirement'' of
a measure in the 2010 OPPS/ASC proposed rule, but later changed it
to ``removal'' during final rulemaking.
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a. Considerations in Removing Quality Measures From the Hospital OQR
Program
(1) Immediate Removal
In the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (74 FR 60634
through 60635), we finalized a process for immediate retirement, which
we later termed ``removal,'' of Hospital OQR Program measures, based on
evidence that the continued use of the measure as specified raises
patient safety concerns.\83\ We codified this policy at 42 CFR
419.46(h)(2) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83
FR 59082). We did not propose any changes to these policies in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554).
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\83\ We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (77 FR 68472 through 68473) for a discussion of our
reasons for changing the term ``retirement'' to ``removal'' in the
Hospital OQR Program.
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(2) Consideration Factors for Removing Measures
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59083
through 59085), we clarified, finalized, and codified at 42 CFR
419.46(h)(2) and (3) an updated set of factors \84\ and policies for
determining whether to remove measures from the Hospital OQR Program.
We refer readers to that final rule with comment period for a detailed
discussion of our policies regarding measure removal. The factors are:
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\84\ We note that we previously referred to these factors as
``criteria'' (for example, 77 FR 68472 through 68473); we now use
the term ``factors'' in order to align the Hospital OQR Program
terminology with the terminology we use in other CMS quality
reporting and pay-for-performance (value-based purchasing) programs.
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Factor 1. Measure performance among hospitals is so high
and
[[Page 61411]]
unvarying that meaningful distinctions and improvements in performance
can no longer be made (``topped out'' measures).
Factor 2. Performance or improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
Factor 3. A measure does not align with current clinical
guidelines or practice.
Factor 4. The availability of a more broadly applicable
(across settings, populations, or conditions) measure for the topic.
Factor 5. The availability of a measure that is more
proximal in time to desired patient outcomes for the particular topic.
Factor 6. The availability of a measure that is more
strongly associated with desired patient outcomes for the particular
topic.
Factor 7. Collection or public reporting of a measure
leads to negative unintended consequences other than patient harm.
Factor 8. The costs associated with a measure outweigh the
benefit of its continued use in the program.
b. Removal of Quality Measure From the Hospital OQR Program Measure
Set: OP-33: External Beam Radiotherapy (NQF# 1822)
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554 through 39556),
we proposed to remove one measure from the Hospital OQR Program for the
CY 2022 payment determination as discussed below. Specifically,
beginning with the CY 2022 payment determination, we proposed to remove
OP-33: External Beam Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases under removal
Factor 8, the costs associated with a measure outweigh the benefit of
its continued use in the program.
We refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70507 through 70510), where we adopted OP-33: External
Beam Radiotherapy (NQF# 1822), beginning with the CY 2018 payment
determination and for subsequent years. This measure assesses the
``percentage of patients (all-payer) with painful bone metastases and
no history of previous radiation who receive External Beam Radiotherapy
(EBRT) with an acceptable dosing schedule.'' \85\ We adopted this
measure to address the performance gap in EBRT treatment variation,
ensure appropriate use of EBRT, and prevent the overuse of radiation
therapy (80 FR 70508).
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\85\ 80 FR 70508.
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We believe that removing OP-33 from the Hospital OQR Program is
appropriate at this time because the costs associated with this measure
outweigh the benefit of its continued use in the program (removal
Factor 8). The Hospital OQR Program implemented the OP-33 measure using
``radiation delivery'' Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes,
which are appropriate for hospital-level measurement. We have
identified issues with reporting this measure, finding that more
questions are received about how to report the OP-33 measure than about
any other measure in the program. In addition, the measure steward has
received feedback on data collection of the measure in the outpatient
setting, and has indicated new and significant concerns regarding the
``radiation delivery'' CPT coding used to report the OP-33 measure in
the Hospital OQR Program including complicated measure exclusions,
sampling concerns, and administrative burden.
``Radiation delivery'' CPT codes require complicated measure
exclusions, and the use of ``radiation delivery'' CPT codes causes the
administration of EBRT to different anatomic sites to be considered
separate cases for this measure. The numerator for this measure
includes all patients, regardless of age, with painful bone metastases,
and no previous radiation to the same anatomic site who receive EBRT
with any of the following recommended fractionation schemes: 30Gy/
10fxns, 24Gy/6fxns, 20Gy/5fxns, and 8Gy/1fxn. The denominator for this
measure includes all patients with painful bone metastases and no
previous radiation to the same anatomic site who receive EBRT.\86\ As
noted above, each anatomic site is considered a different case, and as
a result it is necessary to determine when EBRT has been administered
to different anatomic sites. This determination is not possible without
completing a detailed manual review of the patient's record, creating
burden and difficulty in determining which sites and instances of EBRT
administration are considered cases and should be included in the
denominator for the measure. These challenges in determining which
cases are included in the denominator for the measure result in
difficulty in determining if sample size requirements for the measure
are being met.
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\86\ National Quality Forum. NQF #1822 External Beam
Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases. Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=70374.
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Further, current information systems do not automatically calculate
the total dose provided, so manual review of patient records by
practice staff is also required in order to determine the total dose
and fractionation scheme, which in turn is used to determine which
cases fall into the numerator for this measure. This manual review of
patient records is a labor-intensive process that contributes to burden
and difficulty in reporting this measure. As a result, we believe that
the complexity of reporting this measure places substantial
administrative burden on facilities. This also reflects observations
made by the measure steward that implementing the measure in the
outpatient setting has proven overly burdensome, given that facilities
have noted confusion regarding when the administration of EBRT to
different numbers and locations of bone metastases are considered
separate cases. These issues identifying cases have led to questions
about sampling and difficulty determining if sample size requirements
are met. Additional burdens associated with this measure have come to
our attention, including complicated measure exclusions, sampling
concerns, and administrative burden. These challenges cause difficulty
in tracking and reporting data for this measure and additional
administrative burden, as evidenced by numerous questions about how to
report this measure received by CMS and its contractors.
This EBRT measure was also adopted into another CMS quality
reporting program, the PPS-Exempt Cancer Hospital Quality Reporting
(PCHQR) Program (79 FR 50278 through 50279). That program initially
used ``radiation planning'' CPT codes billable at the physician level,
but beginning in March 2016, the PCHQR program updated the measure to
enable the use of ``radiation delivery'' CPT codes.\87\ In the FY 2020
IPPS/LTCH PPS final rule (84 FR 42513), we finalized the removal of the
measure from the PCHQR Program because the burden associated with the
measure outweighs the value of its inclusion in the PCHQR Program.
Specifically, the PCHQR Program removed the measure because it is
overly burdensome and because the measure steward is no longer
maintaining the measure. As such, the PCHQR Program stated it can no
longer ensure that the measure is in line with clinical guidelines and
standards (84 FR 42513). We note that while the version of the measure
using ``radiation planning'' CPT codes is less burdensome, Hospital
Outpatient
[[Page 61412]]
Departments (HOPDs) do not have access to physician billing data, and
so it is not operationally feasible to use ``radiation planning'' CPT
codes (as opposed to the current ``radiation delivery'' CPT codes) for
the EBRT measure in the Hospital OQR Program.
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\87\ QualityNet. 2018 EBRT Measure Information Form. Available
at: https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?cid=1228774479863&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier4&c=Page.
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This measure was originally adopted to address the performance gap
in EBRT treatment variation, ensure appropriate use of EBRT, and
prevent the overuse of radiation therapy. While we still believe that
these goals are important, the benefits of this measure have
diminished. Stakeholder feedback has shown that this measure is
burdensome and difficult to report. Since the measure steward is no
longer maintaining this measure,\88\ we no longer believe that we can
ensure that the measure is in line with clinical guidelines and
standards. Thus, considering these circumstances, we believe the costs
associated with this measure outweigh the benefit of its continued use
in the program (removal Factor 8).
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\88\ See language about measure steward no longer maintaining
this measure in the FY 2020 IPPS/LTCH PPS proposed rule at 84 FR
19502 through 19503.
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Therefore, in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554
through 39556), we proposed to remove the measure beginning with
October 2020 encounters used in the CY 2022 payment determination and
for subsequent years. We wish to clarify here in this final rule that
the measure would be removed beginning with CY 2020 encounters (January
2020) used in the CY 2022 payment determination and for subsequent
years rather than beginning in October 2020 as incorrectly noted in the
proposed rule. We refer readers to our response to comments below. We
considered removing this measure beginning with the CY 2021 payment
determination, but we decided to propose to delay removal until the CY
2022 payment determination to be sensitive to facilities' planning and
operational procedures given that data collection for this measure
began during CY 2019 for the CY 2021 payment determination. We believe
that this proposed removal date balances reporting burden while
recognizing that HOPDs must use resources to modify information systems
and reporting processes to discontinue reporting the measure.
In summary, we proposed to remove OP-33: External Beam Radiotherapy
for Bone Metastases (NQF #1822) from the Hospital OQR Program beginning
with the CY 2022 payment determination and for subsequent years under
removal Factor 8.
We provided a summary of the comments received and our responses to
those comments.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposal to remove EBRT for
Bone Metastases (OP-33) from the Hospital OQR Program beginning in CY
2022. Several commenters stated that they support the removal of OP-33
from the Hospital OQR Program for the reasons CMS outlined in the
proposed rule. Specifically, several commenters stated that they
support the removal of OP-33 from the Hospital OQR Program because the
measure is burdensome and because it is no longer being maintained by
the measure steward so it may no longer be aligned with clinical
guidelines. A few commenters stated that they support the removal of
OP-33 to align with the removal of the measure from PCHQR and because
the measure is no longer endorsed by the National Quality Forum (NQF).
Response: We thank the commenters for their support to remove EBRT
for Bone Metastases (OP-33) from the Hospital OQR Program due to burden
and alignment issues. While NQF endorsement is not a requirement for
measure inclusion in the Hospital OQR Program, it can be considered
when assessing a measure (section 1833(t)(17)(C)(i) of the Act).
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS clarify the last
reporting date for EBRT for Bone Metastases (OP-33) if it is removed
and recommended that removal should begin with January 1, 2020
encounters rather than October 2020 encounters. A few commenters
requested that the removal of OP-33 begin with the Calendar Year 2021
payment determination rather than the Calendar Year 2022 payment
determination due to the significant burden of the reporting
requirements. One commenter recommended CMS to remove OP-33 as soon as
possible.
Response: Regarding the timeframe for measure removal, in the CY
2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39554 through 39556), we proposed to
remove OP-33: External Beam Radiotherapy for Bone Metastases (NQF
#1822) from the Hospital OQR Program beginning with the CY 2022 payment
determination and for subsequent years under removal Factor 8. We chose
this timeframe to be sensitive to facilities' planning and operational
procedures given that data collection for this measure began during CY
2019 for the CY 2021 payment determination. We realize that in our
proposal on pages 84 FR 39554 through 39556, we inadvertently stated
that we wished to remove the measure beginning with October 2020
encounters used in the CY 2022 payment determination and for subsequent
years. We refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70521 through 70522) where we finalized that beginning
with the CY 2017 payment determination, hospitals must report data
submitted via a Web-based tool between January 1 and May 15 of the year
prior to the payment determination with respect to the encounter period
of January 1 to December 31 of 2 years prior to the payment
determination year. For the CY 2022 payment determination, the data
submission window for this measure would then be January 1, 2021 to May
15, 2021 for the January 1, 2020 through December 31, 2020 encounter
period. Thus, as OP-33 is a Web-based measure, its removal from the
Hospital OQR Program beginning with the CY 2022 payment determination
would also begin with January 1, 2020 encounters rather than October
2020 encounters. So, we are finalizing a modification of what was
proposed to correct that we are removing the measure beginning with
January 2020 encounters used for the CY 2022 payment determination and
for subsequent years. For the OP-33 measure, the final data submission
of data collected for CY 2019 encounters will be required by May 15,
2020 for use toward CY 2021 payment determinations; hospitals would not
be required to collect data for OP-33 as of January 1, 2020 encounters.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern about the proposal to
remove EBRT for Bone Metastases (OP-33) from the Hospital OQR Program.
One commenter stated that the OP-33 measure gives valuable information
for monitoring hospital performance improvement. One commenter stated
that the OP-33 measure is valuable because it gauges overuse of health
services in a setting where overuse exposes people unnecessarily to
radiation, putting patients at risk of harm. This commenter stated that
though one of the reasons provided for the removal of OP-33 is that it
is difficult and burdensome for healthcare providers to report; the
commenter recommends that CMS adopt a measurement framework that
prioritizes consumer needs over industry preference. The commenter also
stated that because the measure steward is no longer maintaining the
measure, CMS should either continue to maintain the measure or identify
an entity to act as the measure steward to allow the
[[Page 61413]]
measure to remain in the Hospital OQR Program.
Response: We thank the commenters for these suggestions regarding
EBRT for Bone Metastases (OP-33). We agree that ensuring appropriate
use of EBRT and preventing the overuse of radiation therapy which were
goals of the OP-33 measure are important for safeguarding patients and
consumers. We proposed to remove OP-33 under removal Factor 8, the
costs associated with a measure outweigh the benefit of its continued
use in the program as stakeholder feedback has shown that this measure
is burdensome and difficult to report. Regarding measure maintenance,
as stated, the measure steward is no longer maintaining this measure
and there are issues with the measure as specified. We do not seek to
become the steward for this measure as we do not believe that we can
maintain this measure in the Hospital OQR Program in a way that ensures
that the measure is in line with clinical guidelines and standards and
has specifications that are not overly burdensome for which to collect
data. Our Meaningful Measures Initiative provides a measurement
framework that prioritizes patient and consumer needs while limiting
provider burden. Consistent with this framework, we note that the
Hospital OQR Program continues to have quality measures that assess
appropriate use of radiation (OP-8: MRI Lumbar Spine for Low Back Pain,
OP-10: Abdomen CT--Use of Contrast Material, OP-13: Cardiac Imaging for
Preoperative Risk Assessment for Non-Cardiac, Low-Risk Surgery, and OP-
23: Head CT or MRI Scan Results for Acute Ischemic Stroke or
Hemorrhagic Stroke who Received Head CT or MRI Scan Interpretation
Within 45 minutes of ED Arrival).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing a
modification of what was proposed for the removal of OP-33 from the
Hospital OQR Program. Instead of removing the measure beginning with
October 2020 encounters as inadvertently stated, we are finalizing
removal beginning with January 2020 encounters used in the CY 2022
payment determination and for subsequent years.
4. Summary of Hospital OQR Program Measure Sets for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination
We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59099 through 59102) for a summary of the previously
finalized Hospital OQR Program measure sets for the CY 2020 and CY 2021
payment determinations and subsequent years.
We did not propose to add any measures; however, we did propose and
are finalizing the removal of one measure for the CY 2022 payment
determination and subsequent years for the Hospital OQR Program. Table
61 summarizes the finalized Hospital OQR Program measure set for the CY
2022 payment determination and subsequent years (including previously
adopted measures and excluding one measure finalized for removal in
this final rule).
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.102
[[Page 61414]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.103
5. Hospital OQR Program Measures and Topics for Future Consideration
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39557), we requested
comment on the potential future adoption of four patient safety
measures as well as future outcome measures generally.
a. Request for Comment on the Potential Future Adoption of Four Patient
Safety Measures
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39557) we sought
comment on the potential future adoption of four patient safety
measures for the Hospital OQR Program that were previously adopted for
the ASCQR Program: ASC-1: Patient Burn; ASC-2: Patient Fall; ASC-3:
Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Implant; and ASC-4: All-
Cause Hospital Transfer/Admission.\89\ We refer readers to the CY 2012
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74497 through 74499),
where we adopted these measures (referred to as NQF #0263, NQF #0266,
NQF #0267, and NQF #0265 at the time) in the ASCQR Program. We note
that data collection for these measures was suspended in the ASCQR
Program due to concerns with their data submission method using quality
data codes (QDCs) in the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59117 through 59123; 59134 through 59135); however, we
refer readers to section XV.B.5. of the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule
(84 FR 39567), in which the ASCQR Program requested public comment on
updating the submission method for these measures in the future. We
requested public comment on potentially adding these measures with the
updated submission method using a CMS online data submission tool, to
the Hospital OQR Program in future rulemaking. These measures are
currently specified for the ASC setting. If specified for the hospital
outpatient setting, we would seek collaboration with the measure
steward.
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\89\ ASCQR Specifications Manual, discussing these measures,
available at: https://qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=1228772475754.
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We believe these measures could be valuable to the Hospital OQR
Program because they would allow us to monitor these types of events
and prevent their occurrence to ensure that they remain rare, and
because they provide critical data to beneficiaries and further
transparency for care provided in the outpatient setting that could be
useful in choosing a HOPD. In addition, these measures address an
important Meaningful Measure Initiative quality priority, Making Care
Safer by Reducing Harm Caused in the Delivery of Care.\90\ There has
been broad stakeholder support for these measures in the ASC setting;
stakeholders believe these measures provide important data for
facilities and patients because they are serious and the occurrence of
these events should be zero (83 FR 59118). A few commenters noted in
the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period that it would be
beneficial to also include these ASCQR Program measures in the Hospital
OQR Program in order to provide patients with more meaningful data to
compare sites of service (83 FR 59119). The future addition of these
measures would further align the Hospital OQR and ASCQR Programs, which
would benefit patients because these are two outpatient settings that
patients may be interested in comparing, especially if they are able to
choose in which of these two settings they receive care.
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\90\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Meaningful
Measures Hub. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/MMF/General-info-Sub-Page.html.
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Although NQF endorsement for these ASC measures was removed (in
February 2016 for the All-Cause Hospital Transfer/Admission measure;
\91\ in May 2016 for the Patient
[[Page 61415]]
Burn \92\ and the Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant \93\ measures; and in June 2018 for the
Patient Fall measure \94\), as one commenter pointed out in the CY 2019
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, the NQF endorsement of the ASC
measures was removed as endorsement was allowed to lapse by the measure
steward, not because they failed the endorsement maintenance process
(83 FR 59119). If specified for the HOPD setting, we plan to coordinate
with the measure steward to seek NQF endorsement for those measures.
These measures are discussed in more detail below.
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\91\ National Quality Forum. 0265 All-Cause Hospital Transfer/
Admission. Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0265.
\92\ National Quality Forum. 0263 Patient Burn. Available at:
https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0263.
\93\ National Quality Forum. 0267 Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong
Patient, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Implant. Available at: https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0267.
\94\ National Quality Forum. 0266 Patient Fall. Available at:
https://www.qualityforum.org/QPS/0266.
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(1) Patient Burn
The ASCQR Patient Burn measure assesses the percentage of
admissions experiencing a burn prior to discharge. The numerator for
this measure is defined as ASC admissions experiencing a burn prior to
discharge and the denominator is defined as all ASC admissions.\95\ We
believe this measure, if specified for the hospital outpatient setting,
would allow HOPDs, Medicare beneficiaries, and other stakeholders to
develop a better understanding of the incidence of these events. In the
CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74497 through
74498), we adopted this measure for the ASCQR Program because ASCs
serve surgical patients who may face the risk of burns during
ambulatory surgical procedures and we believe monitoring patient burns
is valuable to patients and other stakeholders. HOPDs also serve
surgical patients who may face the risk of burns during outpatient
procedures, so we believe this measure would be valuable for the HOPD
setting. Further, we have reviewed studies demonstrating the high
impact of monitoring patient burns because patient burns are serious
reportable events in healthcare \96\ and because patient burns are
preventable.97 98
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\95\ ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures developed and
tested by the ASC Quality Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
\96\ National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable Events in
Healthcare 2006 Update. Washington, DC: NQF, 2007. Available at:
https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/Serious_Reportable_Events_in_Healthcare%E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
\97\ ECRI Institute. New clinical guide to surgical fire
prevention. Health Devices 2009 Oct;38(10):314-32.
\98\ 170. National Fire Protection Association (NFPA). NFPA 99:
Standard for health care facilities. Quincy (MA): NFPA; 2005.
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(2) Patient Fall
The ASCQR Program Patient Fall measure assesses the percentage of
admissions experiencing a fall. The numerator for this measure is
defined as ASC admissions experiencing a fall within the confines of
the ASC and excludes ASC admissions experiencing a fall outside the
ASC. The denominator is defined as all ASC admissions and excludes ASC
admissions experiencing a fall outside the ASC.\99\ We believe this
measure, if specified for the hospital outpatient setting, would enable
HOPDs to take steps to reduce the risk of falls. In the CY 2012 OPPS/
ASC final rule with comment period (76 FR 74498), we adopted this
measure for the ASCQR Program because falls, particularly in the
elderly, can cause injury and loss of functional status; because the
use of anxiolytics, sedatives, and anesthetic agents may put patients
undergoing outpatient surgery at increased risk for falls; and because
falls in healthcare settings can be prevented through the assessment of
risk, care planning, and patient monitoring. These same risks for
patient falls are a concern in the HOPD setting. Further, we have
reviewed studies demonstrating the high impact of monitoring patient
burns because patient falls are serious reportable events in healthcare
\100\ and because patient falls are preventable.\101\
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\99\ ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures developed and
tested by the ASC Quality Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
\100\ National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable Events in
Healthcare--2006 Update: A Consensus Report. March 2007. Available
at: https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/Serious_Reportable_Events_in_Healthcare%E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
\101\ Boushon B, Nielsen G, Quigley P, Rutherford P, Taylor J,
Shannon D. Transforming Care at the Bedside How-to Guide: Reducing
Patient Injuries from Falls. Cambridge, MA: Institute for Healthcare
Improvement; 2008.
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(3) Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong Procedure, Wrong
Implant
The ASCQR Program Wrong Site, Wrong Side, Wrong Patient, Wrong
Procedure, Wrong Implant measure assesses the percentage of admissions
experiencing a wrong site, wrong side, wrong patient, wrong procedure,
or wrong implant. The numerator for this measure is defined as ASC
admissions experiencing a wrong site, a wrong side, a wrong patient, a
wrong procedure, or a wrong implant, and the denominator is defined as
all ASC admissions.\102\ We believe this measure, if specified for the
hospital outpatient setting, would provide important HOPD information
about surgeries and procedures performed on the wrong site/side, and
wrong patient. In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(76 FR 74498 through 74499), we adopted this measure for the ASCQR
Program because surgeries and procedures performed on the wrong site/
side, and wrong patient can result in significant impact on patients,
including complications, serious disability or death. We also stated
that while the prevalence of such serious errors may be rare, such
events are considered serious reportable events. These same significant
impacts on patients apply for the HOPD setting. Further, we have
reviewed studies demonstrating the high impact of monitoring wrong
site, wrong side, wrong patient, wrong procedure, wrong implant
procedures and surgeries because these types of errors are serious
reportable events in healthcare \103\ and because these errors are
preventable.\104\
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\102\ ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures developed and
tested by the ASC Quality Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
\103\ National Quality Forum. Serious Reportable Events in
Healthcare--2006 Update: A Consensus Report. March 2007. Available
at: https://www.qualityforum.org/Publications/2007/03/Serious_Reportable_Events_in_Healthcare%E2%80%932006_Update.aspx.
\104\ American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. ACOG
committee opinion #464: patient safety in the surgical environment.
Obstet Gynecol. 2010;116(3):786-790.
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(4) All-Cause Hospital Transfer/Admission
The All-Cause Hospital Transfer/Admission measure assesses the rate
of admissions requiring a hospital transfer or hospital admission upon
discharge. The numerator for this measure is defined as ASC admissions
requiring a hospital transfer or hospital admission upon discharge from
the ASC and the denominator is defined as all ASC admissions.\105\ We
believe this measure, if specified for the hospital outpatient setting,
would be valuable for HOPDs. In the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (76 FR 74499), we adopted this measure for ASCs because
the transfer or admission of a surgical patient from an outpatient
setting to an acute care setting can be an indication of a
complication, serious medical error,
[[Page 61416]]
or other unplanned negative patient outcome. We also stated that while
acute intervention may be necessary in these circumstances, a high rate
of such incidents may indicate suboptimal practices or patient
selection criteria. These same potential negative patient outcomes
apply to the HOPD setting. Further, we have reviewed studies
demonstrating the high impact of monitoring patient transfers and
admissions because facilities can take steps to prevent and reduce
these types of events.106 107
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\105\ ASC Quality Collaboration. Quality measures developed and
tested by the ASC Quality Collaboration. Available at: https://ascquality.org/documents/2019-Summary-ASC-QC-Measures.pdf.
\106\ Coley KC, Williams BA, DaPos SV, Chen C, Smith RB.
Retrospective evaluation of unanticipated admissions and
readmissions after same day surgery and associated costs. J Clin
Anesth. 2002 Aug; 14(5):349-53.
\107\ Junger A, Klasen J, Benson M, Sciuk G, Hartmann B, Sticher
J, Hempelmann G. Factors determining length of stay of surgical day-
case patients. Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2001 May;18(5):314-21.
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We have provided a summary of the comments received and our
responses to those comments.
Comment: Many commenters were supportive of the potential future
specification of ASC-1, ASC-2, ASC-3, and ASC-4 for the hospital
outpatient setting and the potential future addition of these measures
to the Hospital OQR Program. Several commenters stated that these four
measures should be adopted in the Hospital OQR Program in order to
align with the ASCQR Program and to provide meaningful data for
patients to compare performance in ASCs and HOPDs. A few commenters
stated that these four patient safety measures should be adopted in the
Hospital OQR Program because they focus on areas of critical
importance. A few commenters supported the plan for CMS to work with
the measure developer to improve the data submission methods and to
ensure the measures are appropriately specified for the hospital
outpatient setting. A few commenters recommended expedited development
and implementation of these measures in the hospital outpatient
setting.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support for the
potential future specification of ASC-1, ASC-2, ASC-3, and ASC-4 for
the hospital outpatient setting and the potential future addition of
these measures to the Hospital OQR Program.
Comment: Many commenters provided recommendations regarding
potentially specifying ASC-1, ASC-2, ASC-3, and ASC-4 for the hospital
outpatient setting and potentially adding these measures to the
Hospital OQR Program in the future. Several commenters stated that
decisions made by the NQF about these measures should be considered and
prioritized by CMS. Several commenters suggested that these measures
should be specified for the HOPD setting, field tested, reliability
tested, and reviewed by the Measure Applications Partnership (MAP)
before inclusion in the Hospital OQR Program. Several commenters
suggested that, with respect to ASC-4, CMS should consider overlap with
OP-36 Hospital Visits after Hospital Outpatient Surgery and should
assess the need for clinical risk adjustment in the HOPD setting. A few
commenters provided recommendations about potential data submission
methods for these measures in the Hospital OQR Program, with some
specifically supporting the use of an online data submission tool such
as QualityNet. However, several commenters did not support using the
QualityNet online tool (or a similar online tool) for submission, and
one commenter suggested that if a manual abstraction process is
required, hospitals should be provided ample time to test and implement
the measures. One commenter recommended that CMS work with HOPDs and
ASCs to identify current forums where these safety issues are
documented, discussed, and remedied. One commenter recommended that
these measures should apply to all adult patients, not just Medicare
fee-for-service patients.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations
regarding potentially specifying ASC-1, ASC-2, ASC-3, and ASC-4 for the
hospital outpatient setting, interface with existing ASCQR Program
measures, data submission methods, risk adjustment issues, and
potentially adding these measures to the Hospital OQR Program in the
future. We note that as currently specified, these measures apply to
all patients and they are not limited to fee-for-service Medicare
patients.\108\
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\108\ ASCQR Specifications Manuals are available at https://www.qualitynet.org/asc/specifications-manuals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Many commenters expressed concern to the potential future
specification of ASC-1, ASC-2, ASC-3, and ASC-4 for the hospital
outpatient setting and the potential future addition of these measures
to the Hospital OQR Program. Several expressed concern that the
measures are not endorsed by the National Quality Forum. A few
commenters stated that they believe because these measures were
designed specifically for ASCs, they would not be appropriate for use
in the hospital outpatient setting. Several commenters expressed
concern about adding these measures to the Hospital OQR Program because
the events of interest are already rare, and a few pointed out that
hospitals are already required to implement policies and processes to
mitigate the risk of these events and several states have mandatory
reporting of these types of events. A few commenters stated concerns
about the burden that would be created if these measures are added to
the Hospital OQR Program. One commenter stated that because these
events are rare in the outpatient setting, the data is at risk of
becoming identifiable if disclosed and publicly reported. One commenter
stated that adding these measures to the Hospital OQR Program would not
contribute to the CMS Meaningful Measurement goal.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations and
raising these important concerns regarding the use of the ASC-1 through
ASC-4 measures for the Hospital OQR Program. We will take these
suggestions into consideration as we consider adding these measures to
the Hospital OQR Program in the future.
b. Future Outcome Measures
In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39558), we also
requested public comment on future measure topics for the Hospital OQR
Program. Specifically, we requested public comment on any outcome
measures that would be useful to add as well as feedback on any process
measures that should be eliminated from the Hospital OQR Program to
further our goal of developing a comprehensive set of quality measures
for informed decision-making and quality improvement in HOPDs. We are
moving towards greater use of outcome measures and away from use of
clinical process measures across our Medicare quality reporting
programs to better assess the results of care. The current measure set
for the Hospital OQR Program includes measures that assess process of
care, imaging efficiency patterns, care transitions, (Emergency
Department) ED throughput efficiency, Health Information Technology
(health IT) use, care coordination, and patient safety. Measures are of
various types, including those of process, structure, outcome, and
efficiency. Through future rulemaking, we intend to propose new
measures that support our goal of achieving better health care and
improved health for Medicare beneficiaries who receive health care in
the HOPD setting, while aligning quality measures across the Medicare
program to the extent possible.
[[Page 61417]]
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add more measures to
the Hospital OQR Program that would align with the ASCQR Program. One
commenter suggested that CMS incorporate patient experience, safety and
reliability, clinical quality, and provider engagement measures in the
Hospital OQR Program. One commenter recommended that CMS include the
Adult Immunization Status measure in the Hospital OQR Program.
Response: We thank the commenters for these recommendations for
additional measures for the Hospital OQR Program. We agree that
alignment with the ASCQR Program is an important consideration; to that
end, as discussed in section XIV.B.a of this final rule with comment
period, we requested comment on the use of the ASCQR Program's ASC-1
through ASC-4 measures for the Hospital OQR Program.
We thank the commenters for their responses and will take these
suggestions into consideration as we develop future Hospital OQR
Program measures and topics.
6. Maintenance of Technical Specifications for Quality Measures
CMS maintains technical specifications for previously adopted
Hospital OQR Program measures. These specifications are updated as we
modify the Hospital OQR Program measure set. The manuals that contain
specifications for the previously adopted measures can be found on the
QualityNet website at: https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=1196289981244. We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59104 through 59105), where we changed the frequency of
the Hospital OQR Program Specifications Manual release beginning with
CY 2019 and for subsequent years, such that we will release a manual
once every 12 months and release addenda as necessary. We did not
propose any changes to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed
rule (84 FR 39558).
7. Public Display of Quality Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2014 and CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rules
with comment period (78 FR 75092 and 81 FR 79791 respectively) for our
previously finalized policies regarding public display of quality
measures. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39558), we did
not propose any changes to our previously finalized public display
policies.
C. Administrative Requirements
1. QualityNet Account and Security Administrator
The previously finalized QualityNet security administrator
requirements, including setting up a QualityNet account and the
associated timelines, are described in the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75108 through 75109). We codified these
procedural requirements at 42 CFR 419.46(a) in that final rule with
comment period. We did not propose any changes to our requirements for
the QualityNet account and security administrator in the CY 2020 OPPS/
ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
2. Requirements Regarding Participation Status
We refer readers to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75108 through 75109), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70519) and the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (83 FR 59103 through 59104) for requirements for
participation and withdrawal from the Hospital OQR Program. We codified
these procedural requirements regarding participation status at 42 CFR
419.46(a) and (b). We did not propose any changes to our participation
status policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
D. Form, Manner, and Timing of Data Submitted for the Hospital OQR
Program
1. Hospital OQR Program Annual Payment Determinations
In the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 75110
through 75111) and the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(80 FR 70519 through 70520), we specified our data submission
deadlines. We codified these submission requirements at 42 CFR
419.46(c).
We refer readers to the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (80 FR 70519 through 70520), where we finalized our proposal to
shift the quarters upon which the Hospital OQR Program payment
determinations are based beginning with the CY 2018 payment
determination. The deadlines for the CY 2022 payment determination and
subsequent years are illustrated in Table 62.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO19.104
In the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period, we
finalized a policy to align the initial data submission timeline for
all hospitals that did not participate in the previous year's Hospital
OQR Program and made conforming revisions at 42 CFR 419.46(c)(3). We
did not propose any changes to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
2. Requirements for Chart-Abstracted Measures Where Patient-Level Data
Are Submitted Directly to CMS for the CY 2022 Payment Determination and
Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68481 through 68484) for
[[Page 61418]]
a discussion of the form, manner, and timing for data submission
requirements of chart-abstracted measures for the CY 2014 payment
determination and subsequent years. We did not propose any changes to
these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
The following previously finalized Hospital OQR Program chart-
abstracted measures will require patient-level data to be submitted for
the CY 2022 payment determination and subsequent years:
OP-2: Fibrinolytic Therapy Received Within 30 Minutes of
ED Arrival (NQF #0288);
OP-3: Median Time to Transfer to Another Facility for
Acute Coronary Intervention (NQF #0290);
OP-18: Median Time from ED Arrival to ED Departure for
Discharged ED Patients (NQF #0496); and
OP-23: Head CT Scan Results for Acute Ischemic Stroke or
Hemorrhagic Stroke Patients who Received Head CT Scan Interpretation
Within 45 Minutes of ED Arrival (NQF #0661).
3. Claims-Based Measure Data Requirements for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
Currently, the following previously finalized Hospital OQR Program
claims-based measures are required for the CY 2022 payment
determination and subsequent years:
OP-8: MRI Lumbar Spine for Low Back Pain (NQF #0514);
OP-10: Abdomen CT--Use of Contrast Material;
OP-13: Cardiac Imaging for Preoperative Risk Assessment
for Non-Cardiac, Low Risk Surgery (NQF #0669);
OP-32: Facility 7-Day Risk-Standardized Hospital Visit
Rate after Outpatient Colonoscopy (NQF #2539);
OP-35: Admissions and Emergency Department Visits for
Patients Receiving Outpatient Chemotherapy; and
OP-36: Hospital Visits after Hospital Outpatient Surgery
(NQF #2687).
We refer readers to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (83 FR 59106 through 59107), where we established a 3-year
reporting period for OP-32: Facility 7-Day Risk-Standardized Hospital
Visit Rate after Outpatient Colonoscopy beginning with the CY 2020
payment determination and for subsequent years. In that final rule with
comment period (83 FR 59136 through 59138), we established a similar
policy under the ASCQR Program. We did not propose any changes to these
policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39559).
4. Data Submission Requirements for the OP-37a-e: Outpatient and
Ambulatory Surgery Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and
Systems (OAS CAHPS) Survey-Based Measures for the CY 2022 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79792 through 79794) for a discussion of the previously
finalized requirements related to survey administration and vendors for
the OAS CAHPS Survey-based measures. In addition, we refer readers to
the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (82 FR 59432
through 59433), where we finalized a policy to delay implementation of
the OP-37a-e OAS CAHPS Survey-based measures beginning with the CY 2020
payment determination (2018 reporting period) until further action in
future rulemaking. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560),
we did not propose any changes to the previously finalized requirements
related to survey administration and vendors for the OAS CAHPS Survey-
based measures.
5. Data Submission Requirements for Measures for Data Submitted Via a
Web-Based Tool for the CY 2022 Payment Determination and Subsequent
Years
We refer readers to the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75112 through 75115) and the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (80 FR 70521) and the CMS QualityNet website
(https://www.qualitynet.org/dcs/ContentServer?c=Page&pagename=QnetPublic%2FPage%2FQnetTier2&cid=1205442125082) for a discussion of the requirements for measure data submitted
via the CMS QualityNet website for the CY 2017 payment determination
and subsequent years. In addition, we refer readers to the CY 2014
OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (78 FR 75097 through 75100) for
a discussion of the requirements for measure data submitted via the CDC
NHSN website. In the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560), we
did not propose any changes to our policies regarding the submission of
measure data submitted via a web-based tool. However, as discussed in
section XIV.B.3.b. of this final rule, we are finalizing our proposal
with modification to remove OP-33: EBRT for Bone Metastases beginning
with the CY 2022 payment determination and for subsequent years; so the
following previously finalized quality measures will require data to be
submitted via a web-based tool for the CY 2022 payment determination
and subsequent years with the exception of OP-31: Cataracts:
Improvement in Patient's Visual Function within 90 Days Following
Cataract Surgery (NQF #1536): for which data submission remains
voluntary:
OP-22: Left Without Being Seen (NQF #0499) (via CMS'
QualityNet website);
OP-29: Endoscopy/Polyp Surveillance: Appropriate Follow-up
Interval for Normal Colonoscopy in Average Risk Patients (NQF #0658)
(via CMS' QualityNet website); and
OP-31: Cataracts: Improvement in Patient's Visual Function
within 90 Days Following Cataract Surgery (NQF #1536) (via CMS'
QualityNet website).
6. Population and Sampling Data Requirements for the CY 2021 Payment
Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2011 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (75 FR 72100 through 72103) and the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (76 FR 74482 through 74483) for discussions of our
population and sampling requirements. We did not propose any changes to
our population and sampling requirements for chart-abstracted measures
in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560).
7. Hospital OQR Program Validation Requirements
We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68484 through 68487), the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66964 through 66965), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR 70524), and the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (82 FR 59441 through 59443), and 42 CFR
419.46(e) for our policies regarding validation. We did not propose any
changes to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR
39560).
8. Extraordinary Circumstances Exception (ECE) Process for the CY 2021
Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68489), the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (78 FR 75119 through 75120), the CY 2015 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (79 FR 66966), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (80 FR 70524), the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with
comment period (81 FR 79795), the CY 2018 OPPS/ASC final rule with
[[Page 61419]]
comment period (82 FR 59444), and 42 CFR 419.46(d) for a complete
discussion of our extraordinary circumstances exception (ECE) process
under the Hospital OQR Program. We did not propose any changes to our
ECE policy in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560).
9. Hospital OQR Program Reconsideration and Appeals Procedures for the
CY 2021 Payment Determination and Subsequent Years
We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68487 through 68489), the CY 2014 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period (78 FR 75118 through 75119), the CY 2016 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (80 FR 70524), the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC
final rule with comment period (81 FR 79795), and 42 CFR 419.46(f) for
our reconsideration and appeals procedures. We did not propose any
changes to our reconsideration and appeals procedures in the CY 2020
OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560).
E. Payment Reduction for Hospitals That Fail To Meet the Hospital OQR
Program Requirements for the CY 2020 Payment Determination
1. Background
Section 1833(t)(17) of the Act, which applies to subsection (d)
hospitals (as defined under section 1886(d)(1)(B) of the Act), states
that hospitals that fail to report data required to be submitted on
measures selected by the Secretary, in the form and manner, and at a
time, specified by the Secretary will incur a 2.0 percentage point
reduction to their Outpatient Department (OPD) fee schedule increase
factor; that is, the annual payment update factor. Section
1833(t)(17)(A)(ii) of the Act specifies that any reduction applies only
to the payment year involved and will not be taken into account in
computing the applicable OPD fee schedule increase factor for a
subsequent year.
The application of a reduced OPD fee schedule increase factor
results in reduced national unadjusted payment rates that apply to
certain outpatient items and services provided by hospitals that are
required to report outpatient quality data in order to receive the full
payment update factor and that fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program
requirements. Hospitals that meet the reporting requirements receive
the full OPPS payment update without the reduction. For a more detailed
discussion of how this payment reduction was initially implemented, we
refer readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(73 FR 68769 through 68772).
The national unadjusted payment rates for many services paid under
the OPPS equal the product of the OPPS conversion factor and the scaled
relative payment weight for the APC to which the service is assigned.
The OPPS conversion factor, which is updated annually by the OPD fee
schedule increase factor, is used to calculate the OPPS payment rate
for services with the following status indicators (listed in Addendum B
to the proposed rule, which is available via the internet on the CMS
website): ``J1'', ``J2'', ``P'', ``Q1'', ``Q2'', ``Q3'', ``R'', ``S'',
``T'', ``V'', or ``U''. In the CY 2017 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (81 FR 79796), we clarified that the reporting ratio does not
apply to codes with status indicator ``Q4'' because services and
procedures coded with status indicator ``Q4'' are either packaged or
paid through the Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule and are never paid
separately through the OPPS. Payment for all services assigned to these
status indicators will be subject to the reduction of the national
unadjusted payment rates for hospitals that fail to meet Hospital OQR
Program requirements, with the exception of services assigned to New
Technology APCs with assigned status indicator ``S'' or ```T''. We
refer readers to the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period
(73 FR 68770 through 68771) for a discussion of this policy.
The OPD fee schedule increase factor is an input into the OPPS
conversion factor, which is used to calculate OPPS payment rates. To
reduce the OPD fee schedule increase factor for hospitals that fail to
meet reporting requirements, we calculate two conversion factors--a
full market basket conversion factor (that is, the full conversion
factor), and a reduced market basket conversion factor (that is, the
reduced conversion factor). We then calculate a reduction ratio by
dividing the reduced conversion factor by the full conversion factor.
We refer to this reduction ratio as the ``reporting ratio'' to indicate
that it applies to payment for hospitals that fail to meet their
reporting requirements. Applying this reporting ratio to the OPPS
payment amounts results in reduced national unadjusted payment rates
that are mathematically equivalent to the reduced national unadjusted
payment rates that would result if we multiplied the scaled OPPS
relative payment weights by the reduced conversion factor. For example,
to determine the reduced national unadjusted payment rates that applied
to hospitals that failed to meet their quality reporting requirements
for the CY 2010 OPPS, we multiplied the final full national unadjusted
payment rate found in Addendum B of the CY 2010 OPPS/ASC final rule
with comment period by the CY 2010 OPPS final reporting ratio of 0.980
(74 FR 60642).
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR 68771
through 68772), we established a policy that the Medicare beneficiary's
minimum unadjusted copayment and national unadjusted copayment for a
service to which a reduced national unadjusted payment rate applies
would each equal the product of the reporting ratio and the national
unadjusted copayment or the minimum unadjusted copayment, as
applicable, for the service. Under this policy, we apply the reporting
ratio to both the minimum unadjusted copayment and national unadjusted
copayment for services provided by hospitals that receive the payment
reduction for failure to meet the Hospital OQR Program reporting
requirements. This application of the reporting ratio to the national
unadjusted and minimum unadjusted copayments is calculated according to
Sec. 419.41 of our regulations, prior to any adjustment for a
hospital's failure to meet the quality reporting standards according to
Sec. 419.43(h). Beneficiaries and secondary payers thereby share in
the reduction of payments to these hospitals.
In the CY 2009 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (73 FR
68772), we established the policy that all other applicable adjustments
to the OPPS national unadjusted payment rates apply when the OPD fee
schedule increase factor is reduced for hospitals that fail to meet the
requirements of the Hospital OQR Program. For example, the following
standard adjustments apply to the reduced national unadjusted payment
rates: The wage index adjustment; the multiple procedure adjustment;
the interrupted procedure adjustment; the rural sole community hospital
adjustment; and the adjustment for devices furnished with full or
partial credit or without cost. Similarly, OPPS outlier payments made
for high cost and complex procedures will continue to be made when
outlier criteria are met. For hospitals that fail to meet the quality
data reporting requirements, the hospitals' costs are compared to the
reduced payments for purposes of outlier eligibility and payment
calculation. We established this policy in the OPPS beginning in the CY
2010 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (74 FR 60642). For a
complete discussion of the OPPS outlier calculation and eligibility
criteria, we
[[Page 61420]]
refer readers to section II.G. of the proposed rule.
2. Reporting Ratio Application and Associated Adjustment Policy for CY
2020
We proposed to continue our established policy of applying the
reduction of the OPD fee schedule increase factor through the use of a
reporting ratio for those hospitals that fail to meet the Hospital OQR
Program requirements for the full CY 2020 annual payment update factor.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (84 FR 39560), the proposed
reporting ratio was 0.980, which when multiplied by the proposed full
conversion factor of $81.398 equaled a proposed conversion factor for
hospitals that fail to meet the requirements of the Hospital OQR
Program (that is, the reduced conversion factor) of $79.770. We
proposed to continue to apply the reporting ratio to all services
calculated using the OPPS conversion factor. For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39560), we proposed to apply the reporting ratio,
when applicable, to all HCPCS codes to which we have proposed status
indicator assignments of ``J1'', ``J2'', ``P'', ``Q1'', ``Q2'', ``Q3'',
``R'', ``S'', ``T'', ``V'', and ``U'' (other than new technology APCs
to which we have proposed status indicator assignment of ``S'' and
``T''). We proposed to continue to exclude services paid under New
Technology APCs. We proposed to continue to apply the reporting ratio
to the national unadjusted payment rates and the minimum unadjusted and
national unadjusted copayment rates of all applicable services for
those hospitals that fail to meet the Hospital OQR Program reporting
requirements. We also proposed to continue to apply all other
applicable standard adjustments to the OPPS national unadjusted payment
rates for hospitals that fail to meet the requirements of the Hospital
OQR Program. Similarly, we proposed to continue to calculate OPPS
outlier eligibility and outlier payment based on the reduced payment
rates for those hospitals that fail to meet the reporting requirements.
For the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC final rule, the final reporting ratio is
0.981, which when multiplied by the final full conversion factor of
80.784 equals a final conversion factor for hospitals that fail to meet
the requirements of the Hospital OQR Program (that is, the reduced
conversion factor) of 79.250. We also are finalizing the remainder of
our proposals regarding the payment reduction for hospitals that fail
to meet the Hospital OQR Program requirements for CY 2019 payment.
XV. Requirements for the Ambulatory Surgical Center Quality Reporting
(ASCQR) Program
A. Background
1. Overview
We refer readers to section XIV.A.1. of this final rule with
comment period for a general overview of our quality reporting programs
and to the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 58820
through 58822) where we discuss our Meaningful Measures Initiative and
our approach in evaluating quality program measures.
2. Statutory History of the ASCQR Program
We refer readers to the CY 2012 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (76 FR 74492 through 74494) for a detailed discussion of the
statutory history of the ASCQR Program.
3. Regulatory History of the ASCQR Program
We seek to promote higher quality and more efficient health care
for beneficiaries. This effort is supported by the adoption of widely
accepted quality of care measures. We have collaborated with relevant
stakeholders to define such measures in most healthcare settings and
currently measure some aspect of care for almost all settings of care
available to Medicare beneficiaries. These measures assess structural
aspects of care, clinical processes, patient experiences with care, and
clinical outcomes. We have implemented quality measure reporting
programs for multiple healthcare settings. To measure the quality of
ASC services and to make such information publicly available, we
implemented the ASCQR Program. We refer readers to the CYs 2014 through
2019 OPPS/ASC final rules with comment period (78 FR 75122; 79 FR 66966
through 66987; 80 FR 70526 through 70538; 81 FR 79797 through 79826; 82
FR 59445 through 59476; and 83 FR 59110 through 59139, respectively)
for an overview of the regulatory history of the ASCQR Program. We have
codified certain requirements under the ASCQR Program at 42 CFR, part
16, subpart H (42 CFR 416.300 through 416.330).
B. ASCQR Program Quality Measures
1. Considerations in the Selection of ASCQR Program Quality Measures
We refer readers to the CY 2013 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment
period (77 FR 68493 through 68494) for a detailed discussion of the
priorities we consider for ASCQR Program quality measure selection. We
did not propose any changes to these policies in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC
proposed rule (84 FR 39562).
2. Policies for Retention and Removal of Quality Measures From the
ASCQR Program
a. Retention of Previously Adopted ASCQR Program Measures
We previously finalized a policy that quality measures adopted for
an ASCQR Program measure set for a previous payment determination year
be retained in the ASCQR Program for measure sets for subsequent
payment determination years, except when they are removed, suspended,
or replaced as indicated (76 FR 74494 and 74504; 77 FR 68494 through
68495; 78 FR 75122; and 79 FR 66967 through 66969). We did not propose
any changes to this policy in the CY 2020 OPPS/ASC proposed rule (83 FR
39562).
b. Removal Factors for ASCQR Program Measures
In the CY 2019 OPPS/ASC final rule with comment period (83 FR 59111
through 59115), we clarified, finalized and codified at 42 CFR 416.320
an updated set of factors \109\ and the process for removing measures
from the ASCQR Program. The factors are:
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\109\ We note that we previously referred to these factors as
``criteria'' (for example, 79 FR 66967 through 66969); we now use
the term ``factors'' in order to align the ASCQR Program terminology
with the terminology we use in other CMS quality reporting and pay-
for-performance (value-based purchasing) programs.
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Factor 1. Measure performance among ASCs is so high and
unvarying that meaningful distinctions and improvements in performance
can no longer be made (``topped-out'' measures).
Factor 2. Performance or improvement on a measure does not
result in better patient outcomes.
Factor 3. A measure does not align with current clinical
guidelines or practice.
Factor 4. The availability of a more broadly applicable
(across settings, populations, or conditions) measure for the topic.
Factor 5. The availability of a measure that is more
proximal in time to desired patient outcomes for the particular topic.