Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System, Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury, Conditions for Coverage for End-Stage Renal Disease Facilities, End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, and End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices Model, 89084-89213 [2024-25486]
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89084
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 410, 413, 494, and 512
[CMS–1805–F]
RIN 0938–AV27
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System,
Payment for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals With Acute
Kidney Injury, Conditions for Coverage
for End-Stage Renal Disease Facilities,
End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program, and End-Stage
Renal Disease Treatment Choices
Model
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule updates and
revises the End-Stage Renal Disease
(ESRD) Prospective Payment System for
calendar year 2025. This rule also
updates the payment rate for renal
dialysis services furnished by an ESRD
facility to individuals with acute kidney
injury. In addition, this rule updates
requirements for the Conditions for
Coverage for ESRD Facilities, ESRD
Quality Incentive Program, and ESRD
Treatment Choices Model.
DATES: These regulations are effective
on January 1, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
ESRDPayment@cms.hhs.gov or
Nicolas Brock at (410) 786–5148 for
issues related to the ESRD Prospective
Payment System (PPS) and coverage and
payment for renal dialysis services
furnished to individuals with acute
kidney injury (AKI).
ESRDApplications@cms.hhs.gov, for
issues related to applications for the
Transitional Drug Add-on Payment
Adjustment (TDAPA) or Transitional
Add-On Payment Adjustment for New
and Innovative Equipment and Supplies
(TPNIES).
ESRDQIP@cms.hhs.gov, for issues
related to the ESRD Quality Incentive
Program (QIP).
ETC–CMMI@cms.hhs.gov, for issues
related to the ESRD Treatment Choices
(ETC) Model.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Plain Language Summary: In
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(4), a
plain language summary of this rule
may be found at https://
www.regulations.gov/.
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SUMMARY:
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Current Procedural Terminology
(CPT) Copyright Notice: Throughout this
final rule, we use CPT® codes and
descriptions to refer to a variety of
services. We note that CPT® codes and
descriptions are copyright 2020
American Medical Association (AMA).
All Rights Reserved. CPT® is a
registered trademark of the AMA.
Applicable Federal Acquisition
Regulations (FAR) and Defense Federal
Acquisition Regulations (DFAR) apply.
Table of Contents
To assist readers in referencing sections
contained in this preamble, we are providing
a Table of Contents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Cost and Benefits
II. Calendar Year (CY) 2025 End-Stage Renal
Disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment
System (PPS)
A. Background
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule, Public
Comments, and Responses to the
Comments on the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
C. Transitional Add-On Payment
Adjustment for New and Innovative
Equipment and Supplies (TPNIES)
Applications and Technical Changes for
CY 2025
D. Continuation of Approved Transitional
Add-On Payment Adjustments for New
and Innovative Equipment and Supplies
for CY 2025
E. Continuation of Approved Transitional
Drug Add-On Payment Adjustments for
CY 2025
III. Final CY 2025 Payment for Renal Dialysis
Services Furnished to Individuals With
AKI
A. Background
B. Public Comments and Responses on the
Proposal To Allow Medicare Payment for
Home Dialysis for Beneficiaries With
AKI
C. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY
2025
D. AKI and the ESRD Facility Conditions
for Coverage
IV. Updates to the End-Stage Renal Disease
Quality Incentive Program (ESRD QIP)
A. Background
B. Updates to Requirements Beginning
With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
C. Requests for Information (RFIs) on
Topics Relevant to ESRD QIP
V. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment
Choices (ETC) Model
A. Background
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
C. Request for Information
VI. Collection of Information Requirements
VII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact Analysis
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Accounting Statement
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
G. Federalism
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H. Congressional Review Act
VIII. Files Available to the Public via the
Internet
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This rule finalizes changes related to
the End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
Prospective Payment System (PPS),
payment for renal dialysis services
furnished to individuals with acute
kidney injury (AKI), the Conditions for
Coverage for ESRD facilities, the ESRD
Quality Incentive Program (QIP), and
the ESRD Treatment Choices (ETC)
Model. Additionally, this rule finalizes
and discusses policies that reflect our
commitment to achieving equity in
health care for our beneficiaries by
supporting our ability to assess whether,
and to what extent, our programs and
policies perpetuate or exacerbate
systemic barriers to opportunities and
benefits for underserved communities.
For example, we are finalizing the
proposal to allow Medicare payment for
home dialysis for beneficiaries with
acute kidney injury, which would assist
this vulnerable population with
transportation and scheduling issues
and allow them to have flexibility in
their dialysis treatment modality.
Additionally, we discuss the
incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS bundled payment beginning
January 1, 2025, which will expand
access to these drugs to the 21 percent
of the ESRD PPS population who do not
have Part D coverage. Our internal data
show that a significant portion of ESRD
beneficiaries who lack Part D coverage
are African American/Black patients
with ESRD. Our policy objectives
include a commitment to advancing
health equity, which stands as the first
pillar of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS) Strategic
Plan,1 and reflect the goals of the
Administration, as stated in the
President’s Executive Order 13985.2 We
define health equity as the attainment of
the highest level of health for all people,
where everyone has a fair and just
opportunity to attain their optimal
health regardless of race, ethnicity,
disability, sexual orientation, gender
identity, socioeconomic status,
geography, preferred language, or other
factors that affect access to care and
1 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(2022). Health Equity. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
2 86 FR 7009 (January 25, 2021). https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/
2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-supportfor-underserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment.
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health outcomes.’’ 3 In the calendar year
(CY) 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we
noted that, when compared with all
Medicare fee-for-service (FFS)
beneficiaries, Medicare FFS
beneficiaries receiving dialysis are
disproportionately young, male, African
American/Black, have disabilities and
low income as measured by eligibility
for both Medicare and Medicaid (dual
eligible status), and reside in an urban
setting (87 FR 67183). In this final rule,
we continue to address health equity for
beneficiaries with ESRD who are
members of underserved communities,
including but not limited to those living
in rural communities, those who have
disabilities, racial and ethnic minorities,
and American Indians and Alaska
Natives. The term ‘underserved
communities’ refers to populations
sharing a particular characteristic,
including geographic communities, that
have been systematically denied a full
opportunity to participate in aspects of
economic, social, and civic life.4
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1. End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
Prospective Payment System (PPS)
On January 1, 2011, we implemented
the ESRD PPS, a case-mix adjusted,
bundled PPS for renal dialysis services
furnished by ESRD facilities as required
by section 1881(b)(14) of the Social
Security Act (the Act), as added by
section 153(b) of the Medicare
Improvements for Patients and
Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L.
110–275). Section 1881(b)(14)(F) of the
Act, as added by section 153(b) of
MIPPA, and amended by section
3401(h) of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (the Affordable Care
Act) (Pub. L. 111–148), established that
beginning CY 2012, and each
subsequent year, the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human
Services (the Secretary) shall annually
increase payment amounts by an ESRD
market basket percentage increase,
reduced by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act. This rule finalizes updates to
the ESRD PPS for CY 2025.
2. Coverage and Payment for Renal
Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury
(AKI)
On June 29, 2015, the President
signed the Trade Preferences Extension
3 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
(2022). Health Equity. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
4 86 FR 7009 (January 25, 2021). https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/
2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-supportfor-underserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment.
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Act of 2015 (TPEA) (Pub. L. 114–27).
Section 808(a) of the TPEA amended
section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act to
provide coverage for renal dialysis
services furnished on or after January 1,
2017, by a renal dialysis facility or a
provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to an individual
with AKI. Section 808(b) of the TPEA
amended section 1834 of the Act by
adding a new subsection (r) that
provides for payment for renal dialysis
services furnished by renal dialysis
facilities or providers of services paid
under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act to
individuals with AKI at the ESRD PPS
base rate beginning January 1, 2017.
This final rule updates the AKI payment
rate for CY 2025. Additionally, this rule
extends payment for home dialysis and
the payment adjustment for home and
self-dialysis training to renal dialysis
services provided to beneficiaries with
AKI.
3. End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program (ESRD QIP)
The End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program (ESRD QIP) is
authorized by section 1881(h) of the
Act. The Program establishes incentives
for facilities to achieve high quality
performance on measures with the goal
of improving outcomes for ESRD
beneficiaries. This rule finalizes our
proposals to replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
measure topic and to remove National
Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Dialysis Event reporting measure
beginning with Payment Year (PY) 2027.
This rule also discusses feedback
received in response to our requests for
public comment on two topics relevant
to the ESRD QIP.
4. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment
Choices (ETC) Model
The ETC Model is a mandatory
Medicare payment model tested under
section 1115A of the Act. The ETC
Model is operated by the Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Innovation
(Innovation Center). The ETC Model
tests the use of payment adjustments to
encourage greater utilization of home
dialysis and kidney transplants, to
preserve or enhance the quality of care
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries
while reducing Medicare expenditures.
The ETC Model was finalized as part of
a final rule published in the Federal
Register on September 29, 2020, titled
‘‘Medicare Program: Specialty Care
Models to Improve Quality of Care and
Reduce Expenditures’’ (85 FR 61114),
referred to herein as the ‘‘Specialty Care
Models final rule.’’ Subsequently, the
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ETC Model has been updated three
times in the annual ESRD PPS final
rules for calendar year (CY) 2022 (86 FR
61874), CY 2023 (87 FR 67136), and CY
2024 (88 FR 76344).
This final rule makes certain changes
to the methodology CMS uses to
identify transplant failure for the
purposes of defining an ESRD
beneficiary and attributing an ESRD
beneficiary to the ETC Model. We also
solicited input from the public through
a Request for Information (RFI) on
topics pertaining to increasing equitable
access to home dialysis and kidney
transplantation. Feedback we receive
from the public will be used to inform
CMS’ thinking regarding opportunities
and barriers the Innovation Center may
address in potential successor models to
the ETC Model.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. ESRD PPS
• Update to the ESRD PPS base rate
for CY 2025: The final CY 2025 ESRD
PPS base rate is $273.82, an increase
from the CY 2024 ESRD PPS base rate
of $271.02. This amount reflects the
application of the wage index budgetneutrality adjustment factor (0.988600),
and a productivity-adjusted market
basket percentage increase of 2.2
percent as required by section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(I) of the Act, equaling
$273.82 (($271.02 × 0.988600) × 1.022 =
$273.82).
• Modification to the wage index
methodology: We are finalizing a new
ESRD-specific wage index that will be
used to adjust ESRD PPS payment for
geographic differences in area wages on
an annual basis. Beginning for CY 2025,
we will change our methodology to use
mean hourly wage data from the Bureau
of Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational
Employment and Wage Statistics
(OEWS) program and full time
equivalent (FTE) labor and treatment
volume data from freestanding ESRD
facility Medicare cost reports to produce
an ESRD-specific wage index for use,
instead of using the hospital wage index
values for each geographic area, which
are derived from hospital cost report
data. Additionally, we are finalizing
updates to the wage index to reflect the
latest core-based statistical area (CBSA)
delineations determined by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) to
better account for differing wage levels
in areas in which ESRD facilities are
located.
• Annual update to the wage index:
For CY 2025, we are finalizing updates
to the wage index using the new
methodology based on the latest
available data. This is consistent with
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our past approach to updating the ESRD
PPS wage index on an annual basis but
uses the new wage index methodology
based on data from BLS and
freestanding ESRD facility Medicare
cost reports.
• Modifications to the outlier policy:
We are finalizing several proposed
revisions to the outlier policy. For the
outlier payment methodology, we are
finalizing the use of a drug inflation
factor based on actual spending on
drugs and biological products rather
than the growth in the price proxy for
drugs used in the ESRD Bundled
(ESRDB) market basket. We are also
finalizing the use of the growth in the
ESRDB market basket price proxies for
laboratory tests and supplies to estimate
CY 2025 outlier spending for these
items. Additionally, we are finalizing
our proposal to account for the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for outlier-eligible drugs and
biological products during the postTDAPA period. Lastly, we are finalizing
the expansion of the list of eligible
ESRD outlier services to include drugs
and biological products that were or
would have been included in the
composite rate prior to establishment of
the ESRD PPS.
• Annual update to the outlier policy:
We are updating the outlier policy based
on the most current data and the final
methodology changes previously
discussed. Accordingly, we are updating
the Medicare allowable payment (MAP)
amounts for adult and pediatric patients
for CY 2025 using the latest available
CY 2023 claims data. We are updating
the ESRD outlier services fixed dollar
loss (FDL) amount for pediatric patients
using the latest available CY 2023
claims data and updating the FDL
amount for adult patients using the
latest available claims data from CY
2021, CY 2022, and CY 2023. For
pediatric beneficiaries, the final FDL
amount will increase from $11.32 to
$234.26, and the MAP amount will
increase from $23.36 to $59.60, as
compared to CY 2024 values. For adult
beneficiaries, the final FDL amount will
decrease from $71.76 to $45.41, and the
MAP amount will decrease from $36.28
to $31.02. We note that the inclusion of
composite rate drugs and biological
products will cause a significant
increase in the final FDL and MAP
amounts for pediatric patients due to
high-cost composite rate drugs
furnished to pediatric beneficiaries; this
is discussed in further detail in section
II.B.3.e of this final rule. The 1.0 percent
target for outlier payments was achieved
in CY 2023, as outlier payments
represented approximately 1.0 percent
of total Medicare payments.
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• Update to the offset amount for the
transitional add-on payment adjustment
for new and innovative equipment and
supplies (TPNIES) for CY 2025: The
final CY 2025 average per treatment
offset amount for the TPNIES for
capital-related assets that are home
dialysis machines is $10.22. This final
offset amount reflects the application of
the final productivity-adjusted ESRDB
market basket update of 2.2 percent
($10.00 × 1.022 = $10.22). There are no
capital-related assets set to receive the
TPNIES in CY 2025 for which this offset
would apply.
• Update to the Post-TDAPA Add-on
Payment Adjustment amounts: We
calculate the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment in accordance with
§ 413.234(g). The final post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amount for
Korsuva® is $0.4601 per treatment,
which will be included in the
calculation of the total post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment for each
quarter in CY 2025. The estimated postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for Jesduvroq is $0.0096 per
treatment, which will be included in the
calculation for only the fourth quarter of
CY 2025. We are finalizing our proposal
to publish the final post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for drugs
and biological products that do not have
a full year of utilization data at the time
of rulemaking after the publication of
the final rule through a Change Request
(CR). For CY 2025, this will be the case
for Jesduvroq.
• Update to the Low-Volume Payment
Adjustment (LVPA): We are finalizing
our proposal to modify the LVPA policy
to create a two-tiered LVPA whereby
ESRD facilities that furnished fewer
than 3,000 treatments per cost reporting
year will receive a 28.9 percent upward
adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate
and ESRD facilities that furnished 3,000
to 3,999 treatments will receive an 18.3
percent adjustment. We are also
finalizing that the tier determination
would be based on the median
treatment count over the past 3 cost
reporting years.
• Inclusion of oral-only drugs in the
ESRD PPS bundled payment: Under 42
CFR 413.174(f)(6), payment to an ESRD
facility for oral-only renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products is
included in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment effective January 1, 2025. In
this final rule, we are providing
information about how we will
operationalize the inclusion of oral-only
drugs into the ESRD PPS as well as
budgetary estimates of the effects of this
inclusion for public awareness. After
reviewing public comments, we are
finalizing a $36.41 increase to the
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monthly TDAPA amount for claims
which utilize phosphate binders to
account for operational costs related to
ESRD facilities providing phosphate
binders that were not addressed when
the ESRD PPS base rate was developed
for CY 2011.
2. Payment for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals With AKI
• Update to the payment rate for
individuals with AKI: We are finalizing
an update the AKI payment rate for CY
2025. The final CY 2025 payment rate
is $273.82, which reflects the final CY
2025 ESRD PPS base rate of $273.82
reduced by the home and self-dialysis
training add-on payment budgetneutrality adjustment of $0.00 (as
detailed in section III.C.3 of this final
rule).
• Payment for home dialysis for
beneficiaries with AKI: We are finalizing
our proposal to allow Medicare payment
for beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze at
home. Payment for home dialysis
treatments furnished to beneficiaries
with AKI will be made at the same
payment rate as in-center dialysis
treatments. We are finalizing our
proposal to permit ESRD facilities to bill
Medicare for the home and self-dialysis
training add-on payment adjustment for
beneficiaries with AKI, and to
implement this adjustment in a budget
neutral manner with a $0.00 reduction
to the AKI base rate. We are finalizing
modifications to the ESRD facility
conditions for coverage (CfCs) to
implement this policy change.
3. ESRD QIP
Beginning with PY 2027, we are
finalizing our proposal to replace the
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure, on which facility
performance is scored on a single
measure based on one set of
performance standards, with a Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy measure topic,
which would be comprised of four
individual Kt/V measures and scored
based on a separate set of performance
standards for each of those measures.
We are also finalizing our proposal to
remove the National Healthcare Safety
Network (NHSN) Dialysis Event
reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set beginning with PY 2027.
We are discussing feedback received in
response to our request for public
comment on a potential health equity
payment adjustment and our request for
public comment on potential future
updates to the data validation policy.
4. ETC Model
Beginning for CY 2025, we are
finalizing the proposed modification to
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the methodology used to attribute ESRD
Beneficiaries to the ETC Model,
specifically, to the definition of an
ESRD Beneficiary at 42 CFR 512.310.
Under the ETC Model, CMS attributes
ESRD beneficiaries to the ETC Model
that meet several criteria including
having a kidney transplant failure less
than 12 months after the transplant date.
We are refining the methodology we use
to identify ESRD Beneficiaries with a
kidney transplant failure to reduce the
likelihood that CMS is overestimating
the true number of transplant failures
for the purposes of the model. We
provide more detail on the finalized
modification and its rationale in section
V.B of this final rule.
We also sought input from the public
through a RFI on the future of the ETC
Model, potential successor Models and
other approaches CMS may consider to
support beneficiary access to patientcentered modalities for treatment of
ESRD.
TPNIES, a transitional add-on payment
adjustment for certain new and
innovative equipment and supplies. The
TDAPA and the TPNIES are not budget
neutral.
As discussed in section II.D of this
final rule, since no new items were
approved for the TPNIES for CY 2024
(88 FR 76431) there are no continuing
TPNIES payments for CY 2025. In
addition, since we did not receive any
applications for the TPNIES for CY
2025, there will be no new TPNIES
payments for CY 2025. As discussed in
section II.E of this final rule, the TDAPA
payment periods for Jesduvroq and
DefenCath®, will continue into CY 2025.
As described in section VII.C.5.b of this
final rule, we estimate that the
combined total TDAPA payment
amounts for Jesduvroq and DefenCath®
in CY 2025 will be approximately
$25,633,599, of which, $5,126,719 will
be attributed to beneficiary coinsurance
amounts.
3. Impacts of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
In section VII.C.5 of this final rule, we
set forth a detailed analysis of the
impacts that the final changes would
have on affected entities and
beneficiaries. The impacts include the
following:
2. Impacts of the Final Payment Rate for
Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With AKI
The impact table in section VII.C.5.c
of this final rule displays the estimated
change in Medicare payments to ESRD
facilities for renal dialysis services
furnished to individuals with AKI
compared to estimated Medicare
payments for such services in CY 2024.
The overall impact of the CY 2025
changes is projected to be a 2.3 percent
increase in Medicare payments for
individuals with AKI. Hospital-based
ESRD facilities will have an estimated
3.4 percent increase in Medicare
payments compared with freestanding
ESRD facilities that will have an
estimated 2.3 percent increase. The
overall impact reflects the effects of the
final Medicare payment rate update and
the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage
index, as well as the policy to extend
payment for AKI dialysis at home,
which is not expected to have any
impact on payment rates. As discussed
in section III.C.3, we are finalizing our
proposal to extend the ESRD PPS home
and self-dialysis training add-on
payment adjustment to AKI patients;
however, that adjustment is required to
be implemented in a budget neutral
manner for AKI payments, so it will not
have any impact on the overall payment
amounts for AKI renal dialysis services
and therefore is not included in these
estimates. We estimate that the
aggregate Medicare payments made to
ESRD facilities for renal dialysis
services furnished to individuals with
AKI, at the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS
base rate, will increase by $1 million in
CY 2025 compared to CY 2024.
A. Background
1. Impacts of the Final ESRD PPS
The impact table in section VII.C.5.a
of this final rule displays the estimated
change in Medicare payments to ESRD
facilities in CY 2025 compared to
estimated Medicare payments in CY
2024. The overall impact of the CY 2025
payment changes is projected to be a 2.7
percent increase in Medicare payments.
Hospital-based ESRD facilities will have
an estimated 4.5 percent increase in
Medicare payments compared with
freestanding ESRD facilities with an
estimated 2.6 percent increase. We
estimate that the aggregate ESRD PPS
expenditures will increase by
approximately $220 million in CY 2025
compared to CY 2024 as a result of the
proposed payment policies in this rule.
Because of the projected 2.7 percent
overall payment increase, we estimate
there will be an increase in beneficiary
coinsurance payments of 2.7 percent in
CY 2025, which translates to
approximately $40 million.
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act
provides that the ESRD PPS may
include such other payment
adjustments as the Secretary determines
appropriate. Under this authority, CMS
implemented § 413.234 to establish the
TDAPA, a transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment for certain new
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products and § 413.236 to establish the
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We estimate that, as a result of
previously finalized policies and
changes to the ESRD QIP that we are
finalizing in this final rule, the overall
economic impact of the PY 2027 ESRD
QIP will be approximately $154 million.
The $154 million estimate for PY 2027
includes $136.1 million in costs
associated with the collection of
information requirements and
approximately $17.9 million in payment
reductions across all facilities.
4. Impacts of the Proposed Changes to
the ETC Model
The final change to the definition of
an ESRD Beneficiary for the purposes of
attribution in the ETC Model is not
expected to have a net effect on the
model’s projected economic impact.
II. Calendar Year (CY) 2025 End-Stage
Renal Disease (ESRD) Prospective
Payment System (PPS)
1. Statutory Background
On January 1, 2011, CMS
implemented the ESRD PPS, a case-mix
adjusted bundled PPS for renal dialysis
services furnished by ESRD facilities, as
required by section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act, as added by section 153(b) of the
Medicare Improvements for Patients and
Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L.
110–275). Section 1881(b)(14)(F) of the
Act, as added by section 153(b) of
MIPPA and amended by section 3401(h)
of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (Affordable Care Act) (Pub. L.
111–148), established that beginning
with CY 2012, and each subsequent
year, the Secretary shall annually
increase payment amounts by an ESRD
market basket percentage increase
reduced by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act.
Section 632 of the American Taxpayer
Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) (Pub. L. 112–
240) included several provisions that
apply to the ESRD PPS. Section 632(a)
of ATRA added section 1881(b)(14)(I) to
the Act, which required the Secretary,
by comparing per patient utilization
data from 2007 with such data from
2012, to reduce the single payment for
renal dialysis services furnished on or
after January 1, 2014, to reflect the
Secretary’s estimate of the change in the
utilization of ESRD-related drugs and
biologicals 5 (excluding oral-only ESRD5 As discussed in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final
rule (83 FR 56922), we began using the term
‘‘biological products’’ instead of ‘‘biologicals’’
under the ESRD PPS to be consistent with FDA
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related drugs). Consistent with this
requirement, in the CY 2014 ESRD PPS
final rule, we finalized $29.93 as the
total drug utilization reduction and
finalized a policy to implement the
amount over a 3- to 4-year transition
period (78 FR 72161 through 72170).
Section 632(b) of ATRA prohibited
the Secretary from paying for oral-only
ESRD-related drugs and biologicals
under the ESRD PPS prior to January 1,
2016. Section 632(c) of ATRA required
the Secretary, by no later than January
1, 2016, to analyze the case-mix
payment adjustments under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(i) of the Act and make
appropriate revisions to those
adjustments.
On April 1, 2014, the Protecting
Access to Medicare Act of 2014 (PAMA)
(Pub. L. 113–93) was enacted. Section
217 of PAMA included several
provisions that apply to the ESRD PPS.
Specifically, sections 217(b)(1) and (2)
of PAMA amended sections
1881(b)(14)(F) and (I) of the Act and
replaced the drug utilization adjustment
that was finalized in the CY 2014 ESRD
PPS final rule (78 FR 72161 through
72170) with specific provisions that
dictated the market basket update for
CY 2015 (0.0 percent) and how the
market basket percentage increase
should be reduced in CY 2016 through
CY 2018.
Section 217(a)(1) of PAMA amended
section 632(b)(1) of ATRA to provide
that the Secretary may not pay for oralonly ESRD-related drugs under the
ESRD PPS prior to January 1, 2024.
Section 217(a)(2) of PAMA further
amended section 632(b)(1) of ATRA by
requiring that in establishing payment
for oral-only drugs under the ESRD PPS,
the Secretary must use data from the
most recent year available. Section
217(c) of PAMA provided that as part of
the CY 2016 ESRD PPS rulemaking, the
Secretary shall establish a process for (1)
determining when a product is no
longer an oral-only drug; and (2)
including new injectable and
intravenous products into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment.
Section 204 of the Stephen Beck, Jr.,
Achieving a Better Life Experience Act
of 2014 (ABLE) (Pub. L. 113–295)
amended section 632(b)(1) of ATRA, as
amended by section 217(a)(1) of PAMA,
to provide that payment for oral-only
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products cannot be made under the
ESRD PPS bundled payment prior to
January 1, 2025.
nomenclature. We use the term ‘‘biological
products’’ in this final rule except where
referencing specific language in the Act or
regulations.
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2. System for Payment of Renal Dialysis
Services
Under the ESRD PPS, a single pertreatment payment is made to an ESRD
facility for all the renal dialysis services
defined in section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the
Act and furnished to an individual for
the treatment of ESRD in the ESRD
facility or in a patient’s home. We have
codified our definition of renal dialysis
services at § 413.171, which is in 42
CFR part 413, subpart H, along with
other ESRD PPS payment policies.
The ESRD PPS base rate is adjusted
for characteristics of both adult and
pediatric patients and accounts for
patient case-mix variability. The adult
case-mix adjusters include five
categories of age, body surface area, low
body mass index, onset of dialysis, and
four comorbidity categories (that is,
pericarditis, gastrointestinal tract
bleeding, hereditary hemolytic or sickle
cell anemia, myelodysplastic
syndrome). A different set of case-mix
adjusters are applied for the pediatric
population. Pediatric patient-level
adjusters include two age categories
(under age 13, or age 13 to 17) and two
dialysis modalities (that is, peritoneal or
hemodialysis) (§ 413.235(a) and (b)(1)).
The ESRD PPS provides for three
facility-level adjustments. The first
payment adjustment accounts for ESRD
facilities furnishing a low volume of
dialysis treatments (§ 413.232). The
second payment adjustment reflects
differences in area wage levels
developed from core-based statistical
areas (CBSAs) (§ 413.231). The third
payment adjustment accounts for ESRD
facilities furnishing renal dialysis
services in a rural area (§ 413.233).
There are six additional payment
adjustments under the ESRD PPS. The
ESRD PPS provides adjustments, when
applicable, for: (1) a training add-on for
home and self-dialysis modalities
(§ 413.235(c)); (2) an additional payment
for high cost outliers due to unusual
variations in the type or amount of
medically necessary care (§ 413.237); (3)
a TDAPA for certain new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products
(§ 413.234(c)); (4) a TPNIES for certain
new and innovative renal dialysis
equipment and supplies (§ 413.236(d));
(5) a transitional pediatric ESRD add-on
payment adjustment (TPEAPA) of 30
percent of the per-treatment payment
amount for renal dialysis services
furnished to pediatric ESRD patients
(§ 413.235(b)(2)); and (6) a post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment for certain
new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products after the end of the TDAPA
period (§ 413.234(g)).
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3. Updates to the ESRD PPS
Policy changes to the ESRD PPS are
proposed and finalized annually in the
Federal Register. The CY 2011 ESRD
PPS final rule appeared in the August
12, 2010, issue of the Federal Register
(75 FR 49030 through 49214). That rule
implemented the ESRD PPS beginning
on January 1, 2011, in accordance with
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, as added
by section 153(b) of MIPPA, over a 4year transition period. Since the
implementation of the ESRD PPS, we
have published annual rules to make
routine updates, policy changes, and
clarifications.
Most recently, we published a final
rule, which appeared in the November
6, 2023, issue of the Federal Register,
titled ‘‘Medicare Program; End-Stage
Renal Disease Prospective Payment
System, Payment for Renal Dialysis
Services Furnished to Individuals with
Acute Kidney Injury, and End-Stage
Renal Disease Quality Incentive
Program, and End-Stage Renal Disease
Treatment Choices Model,’’ referred to
herein as the ‘‘CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule.’’ In that rule, we updated the ESRD
PPS base rate, wage index, and outlier
policy for CY 2024. We also finalized a
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment; a TPEAPA for pediatric
ESRD patients for CYs 2024, 2025, and
2026; administrative changes to the
LVPA eligibility requirements to allow
additional flexibilities for ESRD
facilities impacted by a disaster or other
emergency; clarifications on TPNIES
eligibility requirements; and, effective
January 1, 2025, requirements for ESRD
facilities to report time on machine for
in-center hemodialysis treatments, and
to report discarded amounts of renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
from single-dose containers or singleuse packages. For further detailed
information regarding these updates and
policy changes, see 88 FR 76344.
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule,
Public Comments, and Response to the
Comments on the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
The proposed rule, titled ‘‘Medicare
Program; End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System, Payment
for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals with Acute Kidney Injury,
End-Stage Renal Disease Quality
Incentive Program, and End-Stage Renal
Disease Treatment Choices Model’’ (89
FR 55760–55843), referred to as the ‘‘CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule,’’
appeared in the July 5, 2024 issue of the
Federal Register, with a comment
period that ended on August 26, 2024.
In that proposed rule, we proposed to
make a number of updates and policy
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changes for CY 2025, including annual
updates to the ESRD PPS base rate, a
new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology, changes to the list of
eligible ESRD outlier services, several
methodological changes to the outlier
policy, changes to the LVPA structure,
updates to the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts, and
updates to the offset amount for the
TPNIES.
We received 212 public comments on
our proposals, including comments
from kidney and dialysis organizations,
such as large and small dialysis
organizations, for-profit and non-profit
ESRD facilities, ESRD networks, and
dialysis coalitions. We also received
comments from patients; healthcare
providers for adult and pediatric ESRD
beneficiaries; home dialysis services
and advocacy organizations; provider
and legal advocacy organizations;
administrators and insurance groups; a
non-profit dialysis association; a
professional association; alliances for
kidney care and home dialysis
stakeholders; drug and device
manufacturers; health care systems; a
health solutions company; and the
Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission (MedPAC). Of these 212
public comments, approximately 70
were unique and approximately 130
were either duplicative submissions or
were solely a form letter. We received
approximately 110 comments from
unique submitters, which reflected a
form letter expressing support for a
piece of ESRD-related draft legislation
which would delay the inclusion of
oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS. We
note that we do not comment on draft
legislation in this rule will not be
directly responding to the support for
this draft legislation in this rule, but we
are interpreting these letters as
expressing support for a delay to the
inclusion of phosphate binders into the
ESRD PPS bundled payment and have
responded to comments which express
this sentiment in section II.B.7 of this
final rule. Additionally, we note that
many of the form letters we received
appear to be duplicative submissions
based on many names and contact
information repeating, so we wish to
encourage organizers of these and future
campaigns in the future to avoid such
duplication as it creates additional
operational considerations when
reviewing comments.
We received numerous comments on
policies for which we did not make any
proposals, including mandatory charity
care requirements in dialysis clinics,
care for undocumented patients, staff
assistance for home dialysis, addressing
disparities in the kidney transplant
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process, elevating and integrating
patient and caregiver perspectives
through a needs navigation model,
dialysis commercials for ESRD and AKI,
the continuation of TPEAPA, removing
the budget neutrality requirement for
TPEAPA, both replacing and preventing
the replacement of nephrology nurses
with other health professionals for
prolonged care, including physician
assistants or physician associates within
the minimum requirement for a dialysis
facility’s interdisciplinary team,
addressing the need for emergency
planning for dialysis services in the
event of power outages or extreme
weather conditions, removing the
prospective payment system for home
dialysis patients, increasing Medicare
Advantage (MA) program payments to
beneficiaries in certain geographic areas,
restructuring the functional categories
for renal dialysis drugs and biological
products, aligning CMMI voluntary
model benchmarks with the ESRD PPS
and its respective add-on payment
adjustments, recognizing the mandatory
network fee in cost-reports for
independent dialysis facilities,
removing or mitigating outdated barriers
to the use of digital health technology
solutions in the ESRD PPS, changing
how ESRD patients pay copays,
eliminating copays for home dialysis,
adding codes for dialysis training onto
the telehealth list, and the general need
for statutory and regulatory refinements
to the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
While we are not providing detailed
responses to these comments in this
final rule because they are out of scope
of the proposed rule, we thank the
commenters for their input and will
potentially consider the
recommendations for future rulemaking.
We received several comments related
to the requirement at § 413.198(b)(5)(i)
to report ‘‘time on machine’’ data
effective January 1, 2025. These
comments generally requested that CMS
amend or eliminate the requirement.
Some commenters reiterated their
concern that this requirement would be
burdensome and potentially hazardous.
Commenters also requested that CMS
identify a consensus definition for time
on machine, define time on machine
based on ‘‘clock time,’’ exclude home
dialysis claims from reporting
requirements, and designate a claimsbased code for an inability to report
time on machine data. We did not
include any proposals in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule to modify the
time on machine reporting requirement,
and therefore we are not addressing
these comments in this rule. We refer
commenters to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
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89089
final rule (88 FR 76344 through 76507),
and the additional guidance CMS
posted on November 22, 2023.6
However, we will consider these
comments for potential future
refinements to the requirement for
reporting of ‘‘time on machine’’ data.
We received several comments not
related to policies we proposed
regarding the TDAPA, TPNIES, TPNIES
for capital-related assets that are home
dialysis machines, the post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment, or other
potential areas where commenters
thought similar policies could be
beneficial. Several commenters
expressed concern that the ESRD PPS
does not sufficiently incentivize
innovation in dialysis care or reimburse
for innovative technologies.
Commenters’ suggestions included
extending the TDAPA and TPNIES
payment periods from 2 years to 3 years,
extending the duration of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment to
make it permanent, refining base ratesetting exercises based on TDAPA
utilization and price data, and adjusting
the base rate at the end of the TPNIES
payment period. Commenters also
suggested revisions to existing TPNIES
policies such as expanding the TPNIES
for capital related assets beyond home
dialysis machines to include in-center
dialysis machines or other equipment
and supplies that are capital related
assets. Commenters suggested that CMS
further clarify the TPNIES substantial
clinical improvement criteria, clarify
whether software can be eligible for the
TPNIES, and urged CMS to incentivize
more manufacturers to apply for
TPNIES. Several commenters suggested
that CMS create a pathway for new
clinical laboratory tests related to the
treatment of ESRD either through an
expansion of TPNIES or adoption of a
parallel Transitional Laboratory Add-on
Payment Adjustment, which the
commenters called TLAPA.
Commenters suggested changes to the
ESRD facility cost reports and billing
procedures that would allow for lineitem reporting of TDAPA, post-TDAPA,
and TPNIES related costs. We received
several comments stating that the MA
and ESRD PPS regulatory processes
should be coordinated to ensure that
beneficiaries with ESRD that are
enrolled in MA can access items
approved for the TDAPA and the
TPNIES under the ESRD PPS. Finally,
we received several comments on
Medicare coverage for certain
Humanitarian Use Devices.
6 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/mm13445esrd-acute-kidney-injury-dialysis-cy-2024updates.pdf.
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We are not providing detailed responses
to these comments in this final rule
because they are not related to the
policy proposals of the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule. We thank the
commenters for their input and will
potentially consider the
recommendations for future rulemaking.
Lastly, a commenter suggested that
CMS had not allowed for a 60-day
comment period for the proposed rule
because the beginning of the comment
period was calculated from the date the
proposed rule was made available for
public inspection on the Federal
Register website rather than the date
that it appeared in a print issue of the
Federal Register. The commenter stated
that the public comment deadline
should have been September 4, 2024.
We disagree with the commenter’s
assertion that we did not allow for the
appropriate comment period for this
rule. Section 1871(b) of the Act requires
that we provide for notice of the
proposed regulation in the Federal
Register and a period of not less than 60
days for public comment thereon. The
proposed rule was available for public
inspection on federalregister.gov (the
website for the Office of Federal
Register) on June 27, 2024. We believe
that beginning the comment period for
the proposed rule on the date it became
available for public inspection at the
Office of the Federal Register fully
complied with the statute and provided
the required notice to the public and a
meaningful opportunity for interested
parties to provide input on the
provisions of the proposed rule.
of goods and services included in renal
dialysis services.
As required under section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, CMS
developed an all-inclusive ESRDB input
price index using CY 2008 as the base
year (75 FR 49151 through 49162). We
subsequently revised and rebased the
ESRDB input price index to a base year
of CY 2012 in the CY 2015 ESRD PPS
final rule (79 FR 66129 through 66136).
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final rule (83
FR 56951 through 56964), we finalized
a rebased ESRDB input price index to
reflect a CY 2016 base year. In the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141
through 67154), we finalized a revised
and rebased ESRDB input price index to
reflect a CY 2020 base year.
Although ‘‘market basket’’ technically
describes the mix of goods and services
used for ESRD treatment, this term is
also commonly used to denote the input
price index (that is, cost categories, their
respective weights, and price proxies
combined) derived from a market
basket. Accordingly, the term ‘‘ESRDB
market basket,’’ as used in this
document, refers to the ESRDB input
price index.
The ESRDB market basket is a fixedweight, Laspeyres-type price index. A
Laspeyres-type price index measures the
change in price, over time, of the same
mix of goods and services purchased in
the base period. Any changes in the
quantity or mix of goods and services
(that is, intensity) purchased over time
are not measured.
1. CY 2025 ESRD Bundled (ESRDB)
Market Basket Percentage Increase;
Productivity Adjustment; and LaborRelated Share
b. CY 2025 ESRD Market Basket Update
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a. Background
In accordance with section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, as added by
section 153(b) of MIPPA and amended
by section 3401(h) of the Affordable
Care Act, beginning in 2012, the ESRD
PPS payment amounts are required to be
annually increased by an ESRD market
basket percentage increase and reduced
by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act. The application of the
productivity adjustment may result in
the increase factor being less than 0.0
for a year and may result in payment
rates for a year being less than the
payment rates for the preceding year.
Section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act also
provides that the market basket increase
factor should reflect the changes over
time in the prices of an appropriate mix
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We proposed to use the 2020-based
ESRDB market basket as finalized in the
CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67141 through 67154) to compute the
CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
percentage increase based on the best
available data. Consistent with
historical practice, we proposed to
estimate the ESRDB market basket
percentage increase based on IHS Global
Inc.’s (IGI) forecast using the most
recently available data at the time of
rulemaking. IGI is a nationally
recognized economic and financial
forecasting firm with which CMS
contracts to forecast the components of
the market baskets. As discussed in
section II.B.1.b.(3) of this final rule, we
are calculating the final market basket
update for CY 2025 based on the final
market basket percentage increase and
the final productivity adjustment,
following our longstanding
methodology.
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(1) CY 2025 Market Basket Percentage
Increase
Based on IGI’s first quarter 2024
forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB
market basket, the proposed CY 2025
market basket percentage increase was
2.3 percent. We also proposed that if
more recent data became available after
the publication of the proposed rule and
before the publication of this final rule
(for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket percentage increase),
we would use such data, if appropriate,
to determine the CY 2025 market basket
percentage increase in the final rule.
Accordingly, based on IGI’s third
quarter 2024 forecast of the 2020-based
ESRDB market basket, the final CY 2025
ESRDB market basket percentage
increase is 2.7 percent.
(2) Productivity Adjustment
Under section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the
Act, as amended by section 3401(h) of
the Affordable Care Act, for CY 2012
and each subsequent year, the ESRDB
market basket percentage increase shall
be reduced by the productivity
adjustment described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. The
statute 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 10year period ending with the applicable
fiscal year (FY), year, cost reporting
period, or other annual period) (the
‘‘productivity adjustment’’).
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
publishes the official measures of
productivity for the United States
economy. As we noted in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67155), the
productivity measure referenced in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act
previously was published by BLS as
private nonfarm business MFP.
Beginning with the November 18, 2021,
release of productivity data, BLS
replaced the term ‘‘multifactor
productivity’’ with ‘‘total factor
productivity’’ (TFP). BLS noted that this
is a change in terminology only and
would not affect the data or
methodology.7 As a result of the BLS
name change, the productivity measure
referenced in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act is now
published by BLS as private nonfarm
business TFP; however, as mentioned
previously, the data and methods are
unchanged. We refer readers to https://
www.bls.gov/productivity/ for the BLS
7 Total Factor Productivity in Major Industries—
2020. Available at: https://www.bls.gov/
news.release/prod5.nr0.htm.
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historical published TFP data. A
complete description of IGI’s TFP
projection methodology is available on
CMS’s website at https://www.cms.gov/
data-research/statistics-trends-andreports/medicare-program-ratesstatistics/market-basket-research-andinformation. In addition, in the CY 2022
ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61879), we
noted that effective for CY 2022 and
future years, we would be changing the
name of this adjustment to refer to it as
the productivity adjustment rather than
the MFP adjustment. We stated this was
not a change in policy, as we would
continue to use the same methodology
for deriving the adjustment and rely on
the same underlying data.
Based on IGI’s first quarter 2024
forecast, the proposed productivity
adjustment for CY 2025 (the 10-year
moving average of TFP for the period
ending CY 2025) was 0.5 percentage
point. Furthermore, we proposed that if
more recent data became available after
the publication of the proposed rule and
before the publication of this final rule
(for example, a more recent estimate of
the productivity adjustment), we would
use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2025 productivity
adjustment in the final rule.
Accordingly, based on IGI’s third
quarter 2024 forecast, the CY 2025 final
productivity adjustment remains
unchanged at 0.5 percentage point.
(3) CY 2025 Market Basket Update
In accordance with section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, we
proposed to base the CY 2025 market
basket percentage increase on IGI’s first
quarter 2024 forecast of the 2020-based
ESRDB market basket. We proposed to
then reduce the market basket
percentage increase by the estimated
productivity adjustment for CY 2025
based on IGI’s first quarter 2024
forecast. Therefore, the proposed CY
2025 ESRDB market basket update was
equal to 1.8 percent (2.3 percent market
basket percentage increase reduced by a
0.5 percentage point productivity
adjustment). Furthermore, as noted
previously, we proposed that if more
recent data became available after the
publication of the proposed rule and
before the publication of this final rule
(for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket percentage increase or
productivity adjustment), we would use
such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2025 market basket percentage
increase and productivity adjustment in
the final rule. Accordingly, the final CY
2025 ESRDB market basket update is
calculated using the final CY 2025
ESRDB market basket percentage
increase, based on IGI’s third quarter
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2024 forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB
market basket, and the final
productivity adjustment, based on IGI’s
third quarter 2024 forecast. Therefore,
the final CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
update is equal to 2.2 percent (2.7
percent market basket percentage
increase reduced by a 0.5 percentage
point productivity adjustment).
(4) Labor-Related Share
We define the labor-related share as
those expenses that are labor-intensive
and vary with, or are influenced by, the
local labor market. The labor-related
share of a market basket is determined
by identifying the national average
proportion of operating costs that are
related to, influenced by, or vary with
the local labor market. For the CY 2025
ESRD PPS payment update, we
proposed, and are finalizing, to continue
using a labor-related share of 55.2
percent, which was finalized in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67153
through 67154).
(5) Public Comments on the ESRDB
Market Basket Increase Factor,
Productivity Adjustment, Annual
Update and Labor-Related Share
We invited public comment on our
proposals related to the ESRDB market
basket update and labor-related share.
Approximately 25 unique commenters
including large dialysis organizations
(LDOs); small dialysis organizations
(SDOs), patient advocacy organizations;
nonprofit dialysis associations; two
coalitions of dialysis organizations;
professional organizations; and
MedPAC commented on the proposed
update. The following is a summary of
the public comments received on these
proposals and our responses.
Comment: Commenters generally
supported increasing the ESRD PPS base
rate and the utilization of the most
recent data available (for example, a
more recent estimate of the market
basket or productivity adjustment) to
determine the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS
update. MedPAC recommended that the
ESRD PPS base rate increase for CY
2025 should be updated by the amount
determined under current law, and
commented that analysis reported in the
March 2024 Report to the Congress:
Medicare Payment Policy concluded
that this increase is warranted based on
its analysis of payment adequacy (which
includes an assessment of beneficiary
access, supply and capacity of facilities,
facilities’ access to capital, quality, and
financial indicators for the sector). Most
other commenters, however, expressed
concerns regarding the proposed
productivity-adjusted ESRDB market
basket update, the proposed ESRD PPS
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base rate and payment adequacy under
the ESRD PPS.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support for an increase to the ESRD PPS
base rate and MedPAC’s support of the
proposed update amount. We
acknowledge that many commenters
expressed numerous concerns related to
the proposed payment rates and
payment adequacy within the ESRD
PPS. We agree with MedPAC that
increasing the payment rate according to
the established ESRD PPS methodology
is the most appropriate course of action.
We have summarized and addressed
commenters’ specific concerns
regarding the payment rate and payment
adequacy below.
Comment: Numerous commenters
expressed concerns regarding payment
rates within the ESRD PPS and the CY
2025 ESRDB market basket update. The
general opinion of commenters was that
the current ESRD PPS payment rate was
not adequate. Many of these comments
specifically indicated a belief that the
proposed CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
update was not a sufficient increase
given inflation, specifically pointing to
rising costs including labor costs. Many
of these concerns were presented in
concert with a request for a ‘‘forecast
error adjustment,’’ which we discuss
later in this section of the preamble.
Some commenters included
comparisons between the ESRD PPS
payment rates or ESRDB market basket
increases, and other figures not directly
related to the furnishing of renal
dialysis services such as other Medicare
payment systems, overall healthcare
costs and overall inflation. Most of these
comments requested that CMS take
some action to alleviate the perceived
concern regarding payment rates.
Commenters often cited certain costs
which have contributed to the rising
costs faced by ESRD facilities including
costs related to labor and wages, costs
related to training nurses and
technicians, supply costs often resulting
from limited competition for supplies or
limited purchasing power for supplies,
supply costs associated with receiving
goods in geographically isolated areas,
and costs of home dialysis supplies and
equipment. Some commenters detailed
the potential implications of inadequate
ESRD PPS payments including
worsened health outcomes, health
equity concerns, access to care issues
often resulting from ESRD facility
closures or reduction of shifts, and
inability for ESRD facilities to recruit
and retain high quality staff. Several
comments quoted MedPAC’s estimated
2024 Medicare margins for ESRD
facilities which were 0.0 percent as
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published in the March 2024 Report to
Congress.8
Response: We thank commenters for
their insight into the payment adequacy
of the ESRD PPS and the costs faced by
ESRD facilities. We recognize that the
input prices that ESRD facilities face
have increased in recent years at a rate
higher than the ESRDB market basket
forecasts have predicted. We address
commenters’ related requests for a
‘‘forecast error adjustment’’ later in this
section of the preamble. Payment rates
under the ESRD PPS are established
based on a methodology dictated by
statute, which means the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS base rate reflects the CY 2011 ESRD
PPS base rate updated by each year’s
ESRDB market basket update. The ESRD
PPS base rate has also been routinely
adjusted by certain budget-neutrality
factors, for example, budget neutrality
adjustment factors related to the annual
update to the wage index or related to
various payment adjustments like the
case mix adjustments or the LVPA.
However, we note that the construction
of these budget-neutrality factors is
calculated to offset the effect of certain
other updates and adjustments on total
spending under the ESRD PPS and
thereby maintain the level of overall
payments, so we do not believe that the
budget-neutrality factors have had a
negative impact on the total payments
under the ESRD PPS. Since CY 2011,
the only time the ESRD PPS base rate
was increased other than as part of a
routine update or adjustment was in the
CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule, when we
first incorporated calcimimetics into the
bundled payment and increased the
base rate by $9.93 (85 FR 71410). In
summary, the ESRD PPS base rate is
based on a longstanding, data driven
method provided for by statute. We did
not propose, and are not finalizing, any
changes to the ESRD PPS payment
update methodology.
We agree with commenters that
payment adequacy is important as it has
a wide variety of impacts both on ESRD
facilities and ESRD patients, many of
which have been described by
commenters. We intend to continue
monitoring the performance of the ESRD
PPS, and any changes to the ESRD PPS
payment rate or ESRDB market basket
would be made through notice and
comment rulemaking.
We recognize that MedPAC has found
that the Medicare FFS margins for ESRD
facilities are projected to be 0.0 percent
for 2024. We wish to add that MedPAC
found that Medicare marginal profit for
ESRD facilities was approximately 18
percent for 2022.9 We understand that
the Medicare FFS margin is lower than
many interested parties may believe
would be appropriate; however, we
believe that payments are sufficiently
high relative to marginal costs to
support the profitable operation of
ESRD facilities generally. While we
believe MedPAC margin estimates are
generally a reasonable metric, we note
that the ESRD PPS payment rate is
based on the change in prices of a fixed
bundle of goods and services, not based
on continuously re-aligning payment
with costs directly.
Comment: Several commenters
discussed the current difficulties of
recruiting and retaining healthcare
workers. Commenters often
characterized this as a healthcare labor
shortage and stated that the
accompanying increase in wage
inflation was a major source of
increased costs for ESRD facilities.
Many commenters indicated a belief
that the proposed CY 2025 ESRDB
market basket update or the proposed
CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate were
insufficient given this increase in labor
costs. One analysis cited by commenters
found that labor costs for ESRD facilities
rose by 23.7 percent between 2017 and
2023 whereas the ESRD PPS base rate
rose by only 14.7 percent during that
same period.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ evaluation of labor costs
for ESRD facilities. We acknowledge
that many ESRD facilities are having
increased difficulty in hiring due to
overall trends present in the healthcare
industry. We note that the ESRDB
market basket includes several price
proxies for the various cost categories of
the ESRDB market basket, including
labor. We agree with commenters that
labor costs are a significant driver of
overall rising costs for ESRD facilities;
however, they are not the only costs
faced by ESRD facilities and, therefore,
are not the only component of the
ESRDB market basket. As labor is a
substantial driver of the overall input
price increase, generally the other input
prices faced by ESRD facilities are
increasing less than labor prices, so the
overall ESRDB market basket increase
for a given year is less than the amount
by which labor prices have increased.
Our analysis of the ESRDB market
basket increases from 2017 to 2023 has
found that the ESRDB market basket
forecasted compensation prices
increased by a cumulative 20.9 percent
8 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2024/03/Mar24_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_
SEC-2.pdf.
9 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2024/03/Mar24_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_
SEC-2.pdf.
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over this time period. The actual ESRDB
market basket compensation price
growth (based on historical data) over
this time period is 23.7 percent. This
suggests the ESRDB market basket price
proxies are projecting the increased
price of labor faced by ESRD facilities
with reasonable accuracy, and we
believe that the data presented by the
commenters supports this belief.
Comment: Several commenters,
representing numerous industry
interests, stated they believe that the
ESRDB market basket is systemically
flawed, because the market basket fails
to accurately capture the changes over
time in the prices in the goods and
services included in renal dialysis
services. The commenters believed the
flaws are due to problems with the
weights and price proxies used to assess
the changes in costs year-over-year.
The commenters cited analysis from a
contractor that suggests possible flaws
in the market basket cost weights and
price proxies. First, the commenters
noted that the cost weights for capital
costs are significantly higher in the
ESRDB market basket compared to other
CMS market baskets. They suggested
that while 31 percent of the overall
capital costs are determined to be laborrelated, the price proxy for capital costs
does not use a labor-related price proxy.
The commenters suggested that the
price proxy for capital costs should be
a blended proxy that also includes a
price proxy for labor. Another area of
concern was that the weight for the ‘‘All
Other Goods and Services’’ cost category
is much larger than in other CMS
market baskets—a weight of 11.1
percent is assigned to this category in
the ESRDB market basket—and that
similar categories under the inpatient
prospective payment system (IPPS) and
skilled nursing facility (SNF) PPS have
weights of 1.2 percent and 0.3 percent,
respectively. The commenters stated
that further refining the category’s
definition under the ESRD PPS could
reduce the weight and result in a more
accurate update factor reflective of
ESRD-specific costs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestions for areas that
could benefit from technical
improvements in the design and
methodology for the ESRDB market
basket cost weights and price proxies.
We did not propose to rebase or revise
the ESRDB market basket in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule and
further note that we finalized the 2020based ESRDB market basket in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141).
At the time of the CY 2023 rulemaking
cycle, the 2020 Medicare cost report
data was the most recent, fully complete
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cost data available and reflected cost
data as submitted by freestanding ESRD
facilities.
The share of capital costs referenced
by the commenter are related to the
allocation of a portion of the capital cost
weight to the labor-related share since
fixed capital costs (for example,
construction or improvements to a
building) would include costs
associated with labor to perform the
construction in the initial price, and
that price is financed over time or
incorporated with the lease contract.
This methodology of allocating a
portion of the market basket capital cost
weight to the labor-related share is
consistent across the other CMS PPSs
such as those for SNFs, inpatient
rehabilitation facilities (IRFs), inpatient
psychiatric facilities (IPFs), and longterm care hospitals. For the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141
through 67154), we finalized the
continued use of the Producer Price
Index (PPI) Industry for Lessors of
Nonresidential Buildings (BLS series
code #PCU531120531120), to measure
the price growth of the Capital-Related
Building and Fixtures cost category.
This PPI reflects the prices of leases for
nonresidential buildings (including
professional and office buildings). The
North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS)
definition for this industry comprises
establishments primarily engaged in
acting as lessors of buildings (except
mini-warehouses and self-storage units)
that are not used as residences or
dwellings. Included in this industry are:
(1) owner-lessors of nonresidential
buildings; (2) establishments renting
real estate and then acting as lessors in
subleasing it to others; and (3)
establishments providing full service
office space, whether on a lease or
service contract basis. The
establishments in this industry may
manage the property themselves or have
another establishment manage it for
them. We continue to believe that this
is an appropriate price proxy, as it
reflects the lease or replacement value
of nonresidential buildings that would
be influenced by both labor prices, such
as those associated with construction
costs, as well as other nonlabor factors,
such as building supplies and interest
rates.
In response to the concerns related to
the ESRDB market basket cost weight for
All Other Goods and Services, as stated
in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87
FR 67145), the All Other Goods and
Services cost weight was derived by
disaggregating the Administrative and
General cost weight (calculated using
the freestanding ESRD Medicare Cost
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Report data) using the 2012 Service
Annual Survey data, which was the
most recent year of detailed expense
data (inflated to 2020 levels) published
by the Census Bureau for NAICS Code
621492: Kidney Dialysis Centers.
Though the resulting weight for this
category may differ from the weight
calculated for other indices, it
appropriately reflects the cost
distributions associated with providing
ESRD services, as prescribed by law.
We note that changing the
composition of the ESRDB market
basket or changing the price proxies
used for the ESRDB market basket
would likely not have had a significant
impact on the past forecast errors of the
ESRDB market basket, since those
forecast errors were calculated by
comparing the forecasted ESRDB market
basket update available at the time of
rulemaking to the ‘‘actual’’ ESRDB
market basket update based on that
same index. Any change to the weights
or price proxies in the ESRDB market
basket would not by itself mitigate a
forecast error. The forecast error would
only be different or mitigated if the
forecasts of alternative price proxies
were more accurate than those for the
current price proxies used in the ESRDB
market basket.
CMS is open to hearing from the
commenters and discussing any data or
analysis the industry may provide
regarding ways to ensure the Medicare
payments are appropriate and that the
market basket price proxies and weights
are accurate. We welcome any publicly
available and representative input cost
data that reflects total and categoryspecific costs for the ESRD industry the
commenters could provide. We will
consider the commenters’ suggestions
when we propose to rebase and revise
the ESRDB market basket in the future
and note that any such proposal would
occur through notice and comment
rulemaking. We rebase and revise the
CMS market baskets approximately
every 4 to 5 years so that the cost
weights reflect recent changes in the
mix of goods and services that ESRD
facilities purchase to furnish renal
dialysis services between base periods.
We last rebased in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67141 through
67153).
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the ESRDB
market basket updates are
disproportionately lower than for all
other Medicare providers reimbursed
under a PPS. The commenters stated
they understand that different cost
structures influence this outcome;
however, they noted it is important to
note these discrepancies given that all
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these healthcare sectors draw from the
same labor pools, and lower ESRD PPS
updates erode ESRD facilities’ ability to
attract caregivers in the current labor
market. One commenter noted that the
price proxy for buildings utilized by
IPPS and SNF is the ‘‘BEA—Chained
Price Index for Private Fixed Investment
in Structures, Nonresidential, Hospitals
and Special Care—vintage weighted 27
years’’ which the commenter stated is
growing at a faster rate than the price
proxy ‘‘PPI Industry for Lessors of
Nonresidential Buildings’’ which is
used by the ESRD PPS.
Response: The 2020-based ESRDB
market basket percentage increase is
equal to the weighted price change of
the individual price proxies based on
their respective cost weights. The cost
weights are primarily derived using data
from the freestanding ESRD facility
Medicare cost reports and reflect
relative shares of input costs needed to
provide renal dialysis services to ESRD
beneficiaries. Similarly, the other CMS
PPS market baskets, such as the 2022based SNF market basket and 2018based IPPS market basket, reflect the
relative share of input costs needed to
provide skilled nursing and hospital
care to Medicare beneficiaries based on
the data reported on the respective
provider cost reports.
While we understand that
commenters may compare the annual
updates in the ESRDB market basket to
other Medicare payment system market
baskets, the ESRDB market basket is
developed in accordance with section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act requiring
that the index reflect the composition of
costs associated with providing renal
dialysis services. These costs (and the
subsequent cost distributions) are
reported by ESRD facilities on the
Medicare cost reports and may differ
(appropriately) from the relative
distribution of costs of other medical
care providers, such as inpatient
hospitals or skilled nursing facilities.
Additionally, the price proxies used in
the ESRDB market basket are intended
to reflect the price pressures faced by
ESRD facilities. While some price
proxies may be similar to those used
across other CMS market baskets, in
most cases they are appropriately
different because they reflect the price
pressures faced by ESRD facilities. For
example, the rate of increase in the
ESRDB market basket compensation
category reflects the weighted average of
the price increase for occupations
employed by ESRD facilities.
At the time of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, based on the IGI’s first
quarter 2024 forecast with historical
data through the fourth quarter of 2023,
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the 2020-based ESRDB market basket
increase was forecasted to be 2.3 percent
for CY 2025, reflecting forecasted
compensation price growth of 3.6
percent. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we proposed that if more
recent data became available, we would
use such data, if appropriate, to derive
the final CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
update for the final rule. For this final
rule, we now have an updated forecast
of the price proxies underlying the
market basket that incorporates more
recent historical data and reflects a
revised outlook regarding the U.S.
economy and expected price inflation
for CY 2025. Based on IGI’s third quarter
2024 forecast with historical data
through the second quarter of 2024, we
are projecting a CY 2025 ESRDB market
basket increase of 2.7 percent (reflecting
forecasted compensation price growth of
3.8 percent). Therefore, for CY 2025 a
final ESRDB productivity-adjusted
market basket update of 2.2 percent (2.7
percent less 0.5 percentage point for the
productivity adjustment) will be
applicable, compared to the 1.8 percent
productivity-adjusted market basket
update that was proposed.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns about the labor-related share of
the ESRD PPS. These commenters
suggested that adjusting the laborrelated share could better recognize
changes in labor costs and result in a
higher overall market basket update for
the ESRD PPS. Some commenters noted
that the ESRD PPS labor-related share
for CY 2025 is 55.2 percent while the
labor-related share for SNF PPS is 70.1
percent and 67.6 or 62 percent for IPPS.
Response: The purpose of the laborrelated share is to reflect the proportion
of the national ESRD PPS base payment
rate that is adjusted by the wage index.
CMS adjusts the labor-related portion of
the base rate to account for geographic
differences in the area wage levels using
an appropriate wage index, which
reflects the relative level of wages and
wage-related costs in the geographic
area in which the ESRD facility is
located. The purpose of the labor-related
share is to allocate ESRD payment
between a labor-related portion and
non-labor-related portion for purposes
of geographic adjustment and the laborrelated share does not directly impact
the market basket update.
We define the labor-related share as
those expenses that are labor intensive
and vary with, or are influenced by, the
local labor market. The labor-related
share of a market basket is determined
by identifying the national average
proportion of costs that are related to,
influenced by, or vary with the local
labor market. In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
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final rule (87 FR 67153 through 67154),
we detailed the use of the 2020-based
ESRDB market basket cost weights to
determine the labor-related share for
ESRD facilities. Specifically, effective
for CY 2023, a labor-related share of
55.2 percent was determined based on
the sum of Wages and Salaries, Benefits,
Housekeeping, Operations &
Maintenance, 87 percent of the weight
for Professional Fees, and 46 percent of
the weight for Capital-related Building
and Fixtures expenses, which, with the
exception of the Professional Fees (0.7
percent) cost weight, were derived from
the ESRD Medicare cost reports (CMS
Form 265–11, OMB NO. 0938–0236).
While the conceptual definition of the
labor-related share used for the ESRD
PPS is similar to that used for SNF PPS
and IPPS, the cost structures for the
various providers differ substantially.
Thus, we believe the ESRD labor-related
share of 55.2 percent is appropriate, and
we are finalizing our proposal to
continue to use this labor-related share
for CY 2025 ESRD PPS payments.
We note that the labor-related share,
as previously discussed, is used to
determine the portion of the ESRD PPS
base rate which is related to labor for
the purposes of applying the ESRD PPS
wage index. We believe some of the
commenters who requested a higher
labor-related share may have believed
that increasing the labor-related share
would change the proportion of the
ESRDB market basket to which price
proxies related to labor are applied. As
discussed in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule, the ESRDB market basket cost
weights are derived from cost report
data and, therefore, are the most
appropriate measures of the proportion
of the ESRDB to which we apply each
pricy proxy. It would not be appropriate
to apply one of the labor price proxies
to other non-labor cost weights in the
ESRDB market basket.
Comment: One commenter stated that
while they understand CMS does not
have authority to waive the application
of the productivity adjustment, they
were concerned that applying a onesize-fits-all approach in an effort to
incentivize efficiencies fails to recognize
the unique challenges facing ESRD
facilities.
Response: Section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of
the Act requires the application of the
productivity adjustment described in
section 1886(b)(3)(xi)(II) of the Act. As
required by statute, the CY 2025
productivity adjustment is derived
based on the 10-year moving average
growth in economy-wide productivity
for the period ending CY 2025. We
recognize the concerns of the
commenters regarding the
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appropriateness of the productivity
adjustment; however, we are required
pursuant to section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of
the Act to apply the specific
productivity adjustment described here
and do not believe it can be removed
from the calculation of the market
basket update. As such, we are not
finalizing any changes to the use of the
productivity adjustment in the CY 2025
ESRDB market basket update.
As stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55765), the United
States Department of Labor’s Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes the
official measures of annual economywide, private nonfarm business total
factor productivity (previously referred
to as annual economy-wide, private
nonfarm business multifactor
productivity). IGI forecasts total factor
productivity consistent with BLS
methodology by forecasting the detailed
components of TFP. A complete
description of IGI’s TFP projection
methodology is available on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/dataresearch/statistics-trends-and-reports/
medicare-program-rates-statistics/
market-basket-research-andinformation. We believe our
methodology for the productivity
adjustment is consistent with sections
1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) and
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, the latter
of which states the productivity
adjustment is equal to the 10-year
moving average of changes in annual
economy-wide private nonfarm business
multi-factor productivity (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 CY 2025 proposed productivity
adjustment of 0.5 percent was based on
IGI’s forecast of the 10-year moving
average of annual economy-wide private
nonfarm business TFP, reflecting
historical data through 2022 as
published by BLS and forecasted TFP
for 2023 through 2025. The final
productivity adjustment for CY 2025 is
also 0.5 percentage point for this final
rule and is slightly higher than the
productivity adjustment for CY 2024
(0.3 percent). This higher productivity
adjustment is primarily a result of
incorporating BLS revised historical
data through 2022, the preliminary
historical growth rate in TFP for 2023,
and an updated forecast for TFP growth
for 2024 reflecting higher expected
growth in economic output.
Comment: Commenters reported that
the IGI forecast continues to
significantly underestimate the
increasing costs ESRD facilities incur
when providing services to Medicare
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beneficiaries and that the market basket
increases provided by CMS have not
kept up with the rising costs of doing
business, particularly labor costs.
Commenters stated that while they
recognize that updates to the ESRDB
market basket are set prospectively, and
some degree of forecast error is thus
inevitable, they also believe that ESRD
facilities should not be financially
disadvantaged as a result of CMS market
basket forecasting errors. Many
commenters urged CMS to reconsider its
decision not to adopt a forecast error
policy. They stated that a forecast error
adjustment for the ESRD PPS would be
needed to ensure the funding that the
Congress intended ESRD facilities to
receive would be available to support
patient care and help address health
inequities.
The commenters stated that the CMS
contractor that determines forecasted
price growth for the bundled ESRD PPS
market basket has failed to provide an
accurate update for the last 4 years
resulting in an approximately negative 7
percent forecast error since 2019. They
further stated that they believe that the
existing methodology will produce an
inaccurate annual payment update for
CY 2025. Furthermore, they stated that
the forecast errors in the ESRD PPS are
disproportionately worse than the
forecast errors in the other Medicare
payment systems and continue to urge
CMS to address what they describe as
the past underfunding of the payment
system.
A few commenters stated that the
failure to correct the known forecast
errors over the last several years is
contrary to the statutory requirement at
section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act to
update the ESRD PPS payment rate
based on the change in prices of the
ESRDB. The commenters stated that the
CMS response in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule was that its market basket
update forecast ‘‘misses’’ for CY 2021
and CY 2022 were largely due to
unanticipated inflationary and labor
market pressures as the economy
emerged from the COVID–19 Public
Health Emergency (PHE) and that an
analysis of the forecast error of the
ESRDB market basket over a longer
period shows the forecast error has been
both positive and negative. The
commenters highlighted our past
statement that the difference between
the projected and actual market basket
increases can be both positive and
negative. The commenters claimed that
this is not the reality of the current
situation, and that it would be unlikely
that the forecast errors would ‘‘miss’’ to
the same extent in the future. The
commenters also noted that it appears
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that the under-forecast of the ESRDB
market basket updates have continued
into 2023, and they stated that
preliminary evidence shows even into
2024.
The commenters requested that CMS
reconsider its decision not to adopt a
forecast error adjustment for the ESRD
PPS to account for the underestimates
from CMS’ forecasted market basket
updates in prior calendar years, and to
eliminate the risk of further substantial
forecast errors going forward by
adopting a forecast error adjustment
policy for future years modeled after the
forecast error adjustment policy in the
SNF PPS. Some commenters supported
CMS finalizing a forecast error
adjustment in this final rule effective for
CY 2025, whereas other commenters
supported CMS proposing a forecast
error adjustment effective for CY 2026.
The commenters further stated that
addressing these forecast errors is
essential to fulfill CMS’s statutory
obligation to ensure that the ESRD PPS
market basket update reflects actual
changes over time in the prices of an
appropriate mix of goods and services
included in renal dialysis services.
Several commenters noted that when
CMS first introduced the forecast error
adjustment for SNFs, the agency
explicitly determined that this type of
adjustment would not be providing a
source of new industry funding. Instead,
the commenters noted that CMS stated
that we were correcting an underforecast of pricing levels that resulted in
lower payments than we would
otherwise have made if actual, instead
of forecast, data were used. One
commenter further stated that on the
contrary in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule, CMS justified not implementing
stakeholder calls for a forecast error
adjustment for the ESRD PPS by
explaining that the cumulative underforecast of the SNF market basket
increases was not due to a PHE, which
was the case for the ESRD PPS’s underforecast in recent years. However, the
same commenter noted that CMS
finalized a forecast error adjustment for
the SNF payment system due to the
rapid increase in the price of labor and
because CMS concluded that a forecast
error adjustment was appropriate for
payment accuracy for SNFs. The
commenter further rationalized that
while the forces driving the underforecast of the ESRDB market basket
today may differ from those impacting
the SNF market basket in 2003, the
outcomes for providers are presenting in
the same manner. Commenters stated
that they believe implementation of a
retroactive cumulative forecast error
adjustment and continued forecast error
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89095
adjustment in the future is within
CMS’s existing statutory authority under
section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act.
Commenters referenced perceived
similarities between this statutory
language for the ESRD PPS and the
statutory language for the SNF PPS
annual update at section
1395rr(b)(F)(i)(I) of the Act, which CMS
utilized when finalizing the SNF PPS
forecast error adjustment.
Based on what the commenters
characterized as the same statutory
obligation and an even larger and longer
record of forecast errors, the
commenters requested CMS adopt the
same retrospective forecast error
adjustment and future forecast error
adjustment process for the ESRD PPS.
They provided further context for this
request by referencing the justification
of the forecast error adjustment policy
in the SNF PPS as precedent.
Some commenters urged CMS to
implement a one-time retrospective
adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate in
the amount of the current cumulative
forecast error calculated from the
beginning of the ESRD PPS, while
others requested such an adjustment for
the period of 2019 or 2020 through
2023. Additionally, most commenters
also supported the implementation of a
forecast error correction policy for
future years that would be triggered
when the absolute (positive or negative)
error is equal to or exceeds a 0.5
percentage point threshold. One
commenter also requested that CMS
acknowledge that the current forecast
methodology has failed to produce
accurate updates for 4 years and work
with IGI to minimize forecast misses in
the future. One commenter requested
more transparency regarding the
methodology for developing the price
forecasts that are used in the CMS
market baskets.
Response: The ESRDB market basket
updates are set prospectively, which
means that the update relies on a mix
of both historical data for part of the
period for which the update is
calculated and forecasted data for the
remainder. For instance, the CY 2025
market basket update in this final rule
reflects historical data through the
second quarter of CY 2024 and
forecasted data through the fourth
quarter of CY 2025. While there is no
precedent to adjust for market basket
forecast error in the ESRD PPS payment
update, a forecast error can be
calculated by comparing the actual
market basket increase for a given year
to the forecasted market basket increase.
Due to the uncertainty regarding future
price trends, forecast errors can be both
positive and negative, as has occurred
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since the implementation of the ESRD
PPS in CY 2011. Over most of this
history the forecast errors were small in
magnitude, with the largest error (in
absolute terms) prior to 2021 being an
over-forecast (the actual market basket
increase was less than the forecasted
market basket increase) of 0.8
percentage point in 2017. More recently
the ESRDB market basket has been
under-forecast, as noted by the
commenters, with larger errors
occurring for 2021 through 2023. The
cumulative forecast error since ESRD
PPS inception (CY 2012 to CY 2023) is
an under-forecast of 4.3 percent.10 These
recent forecast errors were largely a
function of uncertainty in the overall
economy and the health sector
specifically due to the nature of the
COVID–19 PHE and the unforeseen
inflationary environment.
We thank the commenters for their
continued feedback on the ESRDB
market basket. In the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS proposed rule we explained why
we did not believe a forecast error
adjustment was appropriate at that time.
We did not propose a forecast error
adjustment in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule for these same reasons
and are not finalizing a forecast error
adjustment at this time. Specifically,
predictability in Medicare payments is
important to enable ESRD facilities to
budget and plan their operations, and
forecast error calculations are
unpredictable (88 FR 76356 through
76358). Historically, the positive
differences between the actual and
forecasted market basket increase have
offset negative differences over time.
Although we acknowledge that this has
not been the case in recent years, we
note that it may take a longer period of
time for forecast errors to balance out.
For example, in CY 2016 the cumulative
forecast error for the ESRDB market
basket since CY 2012 was 0.4 percent,
and in each year from CY 2012 to CY
2016, the cumulative forecast error was
positive, ranging from 0.2 percent to 0.5
percent. Then, beginning in CY 2017,
the cumulative forecast error was
negative, which continued through CY
2020, ranging from ¥0.4 percent to
¥0.6 percent. These examples illustrate
that over time positive and negative
differences between the actual and
forecasted market basket increase have
tended to balance out. Therefore, in
accordance with our longstanding ESRD
PPS payment update methodology, we
are finalizing to update the CY 2025
ESRD PPS base rate without the
10 This figure does not include a forecast error for
CY 2015, as section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(III) of the Act
required a 0.0 percent update for that year.
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application of a forecast error
adjustment to the ESRDB market basket.
Given the concerns raised by the
commenters, we intend to continue to
monitor the pattern of the ESRDB
market basket forecast errors to observe
if the historical experience (where errors
have balanced out) continues. Any
changes to the ESRD PPS payment
update methodology, including any
forecast error adjustment policy, would
be proposed through notice and
comment rulemaking. We acknowledge
the commenter’s request for more
transparency regarding the ESRDB
market basket forecast methodology and
have shared details in prior and this
year’s rules on these methods; however,
we are limited in the amount of
information we can provide regarding
the forecast methodology, which is
proprietary to IGI.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern about whether CMS
was adhering to Social Security Act and
the Administrative Procedure Act
requirements in declining to adopt a
forecast error adjustment. One
commenter stated that, given the past
forecast errors, they did not believe our
methodology fulfilled the requirement
to update the payment system based on
the change in prices of the ESRDB
market basket. This commenter further
stated a belief that because CMS had
determined that a forecast error
adjustment was appropriate for the SNF
PPS in 2004, we would be in violation
of the ESRD PPS’s similarly worded
statute unless we were to implement a
forecast error adjustment for the ESRD
PPS, due to the similarities between the
circumstances of SNF PPS in 2004 and
the ESRD PPS presently.
Response: We strongly disagree with
the commenter’s assertion that CMS’s
position regarding an ESRD PPS forecast
error payment adjustment conflicts with
any of the statutory requirements for the
ESRD PPS. As we have discussed
previously, we believe that the ESRDB
market basket forecast reflects the
change in prices of an appropriate mix
of goods and services included in renal
dialysis services, as required by statute.
We note that the circumstances of the
ESRD PPS in the present are not
identical to the circumstances of the
SNF PPS when we finalized a forecast
error adjustment. The cumulative
under-forecast of the SNF market basket
increases in 2004 was based on a rapid
increase in the price of labor, not due to
a PHE that rapidly increased the price
of most of the goods and services in the
ESRDB market basket. Additionally, the
increase in the price of labor uniquely
impacted the SNF PPS at that time as
the SNF PPS had only existed for a few
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years and had numerous under-forecasts
in that short timeframe. This is unlike
the current ESRD PPS environment,
where the ESRD PPS had a decade of
reasonably accurate forecasts, followed
by a PHE resulting in multiple Medicare
payment systems facing similar forecast
errors. We continue to believe these
differences in circumstances are
relevant in evaluating the forecast errors
in the ESRD PPS in recent years and
their implications for the future
performance of the payment system. We
note that when CMS finalized a forecast
error adjustment for the SNF payment
system, we concluded that a forecast
error adjustment was appropriate for
payment accuracy for SNFs; not that it
was required under the statute (68 FR
46057). For these reasons, we disagree
with the commenter’s stated belief that
a forecast error adjustment would be
required to fulfill the ESRD PPS
statutory requirements, and, at this time,
for the reasons discussed previously, we
do not believe that a forecast error
payment adjustment would be
appropriate for the ESRD PPS. We also
disagree with the commenter’s assertion
that by not implementing a forecast
error adjustment we are in violation of
the Administrative Procedure Act; as
discussed previously, our established
ESRDB market basket methodology has
been set and revised through notice and
comment rulemaking (75 FR 49151
through 49162, 79 FR 66129 through
66136, 83 FR 56951 through 56964, 87
FR 67141 through 67154). For the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we
provided a 60-day comment period, and
we have considered and responded to
all relevant comments in this final rule
explaining our reasoning for the policies
we are finalizing.
Comment: One coalition of dialysis
organizations disagreed with CMS’s
evaluation that a forecast error
adjustment would make ESRD PPS
payments less predictable. The
commenter stated that under the current
payment system providers are uncertain
whether the ESRDB market basket
forecast would be accurate for a given
year.
Response: We appreciate this
commenter’s perspective on
predictability within the ESRD PPS as
we work to improve the payment
system. Our current view on
predictability is that it is important for
ESRD facilities to be able to plan for
future years with the most complete
information possible, which we believe
would likely not be the case if the ESRD
PPS base rate would be lowered in a
given year due to an over-forecast in the
prior year. We will take this input into
consideration for future rulemaking.
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Final Rule Action: We did not
propose and are not finalizing any
changes to the ESRDB market basket
methodology for CY 2025. Thus, the
final ESRDB market basket update for
CY 2025 is 2.2 percent, representing a
ESRDB market basket percentage
increase of 2.7 percent reduced by a 0.5
percentage point productivity
adjustment.
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2. CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Indices
a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the
Act provides that the ESRD PPS may
include a geographic wage index
payment adjustment, such as the index
referred to in section 1881(b)(12)(D) of
the Act, as the Secretary determines to
be appropriate. In the CY 2011 ESRD
PPS final rule (75 FR 49200), we
finalized an adjustment for wages at
§ 413.231. Specifically, we established a
policy to adjust the labor-related portion
of the ESRD PPS base rate to account for
geographic differences in the area wage
levels using an appropriate wage index,
which reflects the relative level of
hospital wages and wage-related costs in
the geographic area in which the ESRD
facility is located. Under current policy,
we use the Office of Management and
Budget’s (OMB’s) CBSA-based
geographic area designations to define
urban and rural areas and their
corresponding wage index values (75 FR
49117). OMB publishes bulletins
regarding CBSA changes, including
changes to CBSA numbers and titles.
The bulletins are available online at
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
information-for-agencies/bulletins/.
We have also adopted methodologies
for calculating wage index values for
ESRD facilities that are located in urban
and rural areas where there are no
hospital data. For a full discussion, see
the CY 2011 and CY 2012 ESRD PPS
final rules at 75 FR 49116 through
49117 and 76 FR 70239 through 70241,
respectively. For urban areas with no
hospital data, we have computed the
average wage index value of all
hospitals in urban areas within the State
to serve as a reasonable proxy for the
wage index of that urban CBSA. For
rural areas with no hospital data, we
have computed the wage index using
the average hospital wage index values
from all contiguous CBSAs to represent
a reasonable proxy for that rural area.
We applied the statewide urban average
based on the average of all urban areas
within the State to Hinesville Fort
Stewart, Georgia (78 FR 72173), and we
applied the wage index for Guam to
American Samoa and the Northern
Mariana Islands (78 FR 72172).
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Under § 413.231(d), a wage index
floor value of 0.6000 is applied under
the ESRD PPS as a substitute wage
index for areas with very low wage
index values, as finalized in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161).
Currently, all areas with wage index
values that fall below the floor are
located in Puerto Rico and the US
Virgin Islands. However, the wage index
floor value is applicable for any area
that may fall below the floor. A further
description of the history of the wage
index floor under the ESRD PPS can be
found in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final
rule (83 FR 56964 through 56967) and
the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67161).
An ESRD facility’s wage index is
applied to the labor-related share of the
ESRD PPS base rate. In the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67153), we
finalized the use of a labor-related share
of 55.2 percent. In the CY 2021 ESRD
PPS final rule (85 FR 71436), we
updated the OMB delineations as
described in the September 14, 2018,
OMB Bulletin No. 18–04, beginning
with the CY 2021 ESRD PPS wage
index. In that same rule, we finalized
the application of a 5 percent cap on
any decrease in an ESRD facility’s wage
index from the ESRD facility’s wage
index from the prior CY. We finalized
that the transition would be phased in
over 2 years, such that the reduction in
an ESRD facility’s wage index would be
capped at 5 percent in CY 2021, and no
cap would be applied to the reduction
in the wage index for the second year,
CY 2022. In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule (87 FR 67161), we finalized a
permanent policy under § 413.231(c) to
apply a 5 percent cap on any decrease
in an ESRD facility’s wage index from
the ESRD facility’s wage index from the
prior CY. For CY 2025, as discussed in
section II.B.1.b.(4) of this final rule, the
final labor-related share to which the
wage index would be applied is 55.2
percent.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49116) and the CY 2011 final
rule on Payment Policies Under the
Physician Fee Schedule (PFS) and Other
Revisions to Part B (75 FR 73486) we
established an ESRD PPS wage index
methodology to use the most recent prefloor, pre-reclassified hospital wage data
collected annually under the hospital
inpatient prospective payment system
(IPPS). The ESRD PPS wage index
values have historically been calculated
without regard to geographic
reclassifications authorized for acute
care hospitals under sections 1886(d)(8)
and (d)(10) of the Act and utilize prefloor hospital data that are unadjusted
for occupational mix.
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89097
b. Methodology Changes for the CY
2025 ESRD PPS Wage Index
CMS has received feedback on our
longstanding ESRD PPS wage index
methodology from interested parties
through comments on routine wage
index updates in the annual ESRD PPS
proposed rules. Commenters often
suggested specific improvements for the
ESRD PPS wage index. In the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76359
through 76361), we discussed the
comments on the routine wage index
proposals from the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (88 FR 42436);
commenters, including MedPAC,
suggested that we establish an ESRD
PPS wage index for all ESRD facilities
using wage data that represents all
employers and industry-specific
occupational weights, rather than the
hospital wage data currently used.
MedPAC specifically suggested that
CMS implement the recommendations
discussed in its June 2023 Report to
Congress,11 which recommended
moving away from the current IPPS
wage index methodology in favor of a
methodology based on all employer
wage data for all Medicare PPSs with
industry specific occupational weights.
Additionally, MedPAC suggested that
the new methodology reflect local area
level differences in wages between and
within metropolitan statistical areas and
statewide rural areas and smooth wage
index differences across adjacent local
areas. MedPAC stated that, compared to
the current IPPS wage index
methodology, a methodology based on
all employer wage data with industryspecific occupational weights would
improve the accuracy and equity of
payments for provider types other than
inpatient acute care hospitals, such as
ESRD facilities.
In past years some interested parties
have contended that the methodology
used to construct the current ESRD PPS
wage index does not accurately reflect
the ESRD facility labor market. These
interested parties have noted that the
ESRD PPS wage index has been based
on the IPPS wage index, which uses
hospital data, which commenters have
stated may not be applicable for ESRD
facilities. More specifically, commenters
have suggested that the types of labor
used in ESRD facilities differ
significantly from the types of labor
used by hospitals, which may result in
the use of relative wage values across
the United States that do not accurately
match the actual relative wages paid by
ESRD facilities. For example, if ESRD
11 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2023/06/Jun23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_
SEC.pdf.
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facilities have a different proportion of
registered nurses (RNs), technicians and
administrative staff compared to
hospitals, and if wages for each of those
labor categories vary differentially
across the country, it is possible that
relative wages for ESRD facilities, given
their occupational mix, would vary
differently from relative wages for
hospitals across CBSAs. Because of this,
some commenters have specifically
requested that CMS develop an ESRD
PPS wage index based only on data from
ESRD facilities. Additionally, some
commenters have criticized the time lag
associated with using the IPPS wage
index, which is generally based on data
from four FYs prior to the rulemaking
year (see, for example, 88 FR 58961).
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(1) December 2019 Technical Expert
Panel (TEP)
In response to feedback from
interested parties on the ESRD PPS
wage index, CMS’s data contractor
hosted a Technical Expert Panel (TEP)
in December of 2019.12 During this TEP,
the contractor presented a potential
alternative approach to the wage index,
which utilized BLS data to address the
concerns of commenters, to initiate a
discussion on the ramifications of a
potential new ESRD PPS wage index
that would combine two sources of
existing data to more closely reflect the
occupational mix in ESRD facilities. The
methodology presented at this TEP
utilized publicly available wage data for
selected occupations from the BLS
OEWS survey and occupational and
fulltime equivalency (FTE) data from
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports
(Form CMS 265–11, OMB No. 0938–
0236). Specifically, this approach used
the freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports to determine the national
average occupational mix and relative
weights for ESRD facilities. Next, the
contractor applied the estimated countylevel wages based on BLS OEWS13 to
obtain occupation-specific wages in
each county. The BLS OEWS data is
updated annually using sample data
collected in six semiannual survey
panels over the prior 3-year period,
12 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/endstage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-systemtechnical-expert-panel-summary-report-may2020.pdf.
13 The OEWS program produces estimates of
employment and wages by occupation based on a
survey of business establishments. OEWS data are
released annually with a May reference date. Each
set of OEWS estimates is based on data from six
semiannual survey panels collected over a 3-year
period. For example, the May 2022 OEWS wage
estimates are based on six semiannual survey
panels from November 2019 through May 2022. We
note that we use a crosswalk between counties and
MSAs, non-MSAs and NECTAs to get county level
wage estimates.
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which allows for the inclusion of more
recent data than the hospital cost report
data that is utilized by the IPPS wage
index. Therefore, as noted during the
TEP, this new methodology would
allow CMS to adjust wage index values
to reflect relative changes in wage
conditions in a timelier fashion
compared to the current ESRD PPS wage
index methodology. Additionally, as
noted during the TEP, by utilizing FTE
data reported on the freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports, this methodology is
likely more reflective of the
occupational mix employed by ESRD
facilities than the hospital wage index.
Panelists at this TEP generally
indicated their preference for the
presented alternative wage index
methodology, because it utilized more
recent wage data from the BLS OEWS
program. Panelists also favored how the
alternative methodology was more
targeted to ESRD facilities by utilizing
FTE data from ESRD facility cost reports
in determining the occupational mix.
Some panelists voiced concerns about
using publicly available BLS geographic
area data, as the data do not disaggregate
wages by health care sector, and
therefore wages from acute care
hospitals are not differentiated from
outpatient care centers and other nonhospital health care settings. Some
panelists noted that this would result in
a wage index based on the publicly
available BLS OEWS data having some
of the same limitations for which the
use of the IPPS wage index has been
criticized—mainly that it includes wage
data from hospitals.
(2) Proposed New Methodology for
Using BLS Data To Calculate the ESRD
PPS Wage Index
Based on feedback we received in
response to past ESRD PPS proposed
rules and from the December 2019 TEP,
we developed a new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology that we believe
better reflects the ESRD facility labor
market, which we proposed in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR
55766 through 55782). Similar to the
methodology presented in the December
2019 TEP, this new methodology
utilizes two data sources: one for
occupational mix and one for
geographic wages. First, we determine a
national ESRD facility occupational mix
(NEFOM) based on cost report data from
freestanding ESRD facilities. Second, we
extract and use data from the publicly
available BLS OEWS survey on the
average wages in each CBSA for each
labor category present in the NEFOM.
We note that because the publicly
available BLS data are available at the
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA),
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non-MSA and New England City and
Town Area (NECTA) levels, and the
wage index is designated at the CBSA
level (which uses MSAs and other area
designations that differ from non-MSAs
and NECTAs), we use the area
definition dataset14 that accompanies
the BLS data to assign wages at the
county level, and map counties to
CBSAs using a crosswalk. This
crosswalk is included in Addendum B,
available on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/
End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRDPayment-Regulations-and-Notices.
(a) Description of Data Sources Utilized
in the Proposed Methodology
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule we discussed the data sources
which we utilized for the proposed new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology. We
described the data sources in detail
alongside explanations of the ways in
which we proposed to use the data,
potential benefits and weaknesses
compared to the IPPS wage index data,
and the lag associated with the data.
(i) Data From the BLS OEWS
Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Area
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates
The BLS OEWS program publishes
annual estimates of employment and
wages by occupation. Each set of OEWS
estimates is based on data from six
semiannual survey panels collected over
a 3-year period. For example, the May
2022 OEWS wage estimates, published
in April 2023, are based on six
semiannual survey panels from
November 2019 to May 2022. We
proposed to use publicly available mean
hourly wage data at the MSA level,15
which is available online at https://
www.bls.gov/oes/. OEWS wage data
collected in earlier survey panels are
‘‘aged’’ or updated to the reference date
of the estimates based on adjustment
factors derived from the OEWS survey
data using a regression model. The BLS
OEWS mean hourly wage data that was
presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule and was utilized for the
proposed new wage index methodology
described in detail later in this section
of this final rule reflect these wage aging
adjustments. Table 1 shows the
14 For more information on MSAs and non-MSAs
please see: https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/msa_
def.htm. For more information on the most recent
CBSA delineations (as discussed later in this
section) please see: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-2301.pdf.
15 We use the territory-level data for Guam and
Virgin Islands, since the MSA and non-MSA level
data is not available.
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occupation codes based on the Standard
Occupational Classification (SOC) and
the corresponding occupational title for
each SOC, alongside the common name
that we use to refer to workers in
specific occupations throughout this
final rule. The ESRD PPS common
names match the FTE categories
captured on Worksheet S–1, lines 23
through 30 of the freestanding ESRD
facility cost report form. The SOC
System is a United States government
system for classifying occupations. It is
89099
derived exactly. For the occupations
that were not necessarily specific to the
healthcare field, for example
administrative staff, we used BLS codes
that were specific for healthcare, such as
code 43–6013 for ‘‘Medical Secretaries
and Administrative Assistants.’’ In the
proposed rule, we explained that we
believe that these are the most
appropriate codes, as a more general
code may not capture the specifics of
the healthcare labor market.
used by Federal Government agencies
collecting occupational data, enabling
comparison of occupations across data
sets. When we considered the use of
BLS data we had to determine which
occupation code was appropriate for
each occupation in the NEFOM. For
many of these occupations, the
corresponding BLS code was
straightforward. For example, BLS code
29–1141 is for ‘‘Registered Nurses’’
which matches the category on the cost
reports from which the NEFOM is
TABLE 1: Crosswalk of BLS Occupation Codes to ESRD Facility Cost Reports
Occupation Classifications
BLS Occupation Title
Registered Nurses
Licensed Practical and Licensed
Vocational Nurses
Nursing Assistants
Health Technologists and
Technicians, All Other
Healthcare Social Workers
Dietitians and Nutritionists
Medical Secretaries and
Administrative Assistants
Medical and Health Services
Managers
Nurse Aides
Technicians
Social Workers
Dietitians
Administrative Staff
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Management
The BLS OEWS data used for the
analysis presented in the proposed rule
included mean wages by occupation for
all industries combined located in a
MSA (or non-MSA area or NECTA),
including the hospital industry. While
interested parties have criticized the
current ESRD PPS wage index
methodology’s sole reliance on hospital
data, we stated that inpatient hospital
data is appropriate to include in this
analysis for several reasons. Principally,
as explained later in this section, the
wage data is being weighted based on an
occupational mix that is specific to
ESRD facilities, which makes this
methodology more accurate to the wage
environment of ESRD facilities
regardless of the source of the wage
data. Additionally, ESRD facility data is
included in the BLS data, while ESRD
facilities generally are not included in
the hospital cost report data used in the
IPPS wage index (with the exception of
hospital-based ESRD facilities). Lastly,
hospitals are a major contributor to
labor markets, and it is reasonable to
believe that ESRD facilities compete
with hospitals (as well as other
healthcare facilities) when it comes to
hiring labor; as such, the inclusion of
hospital data would provide additional
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Occupation Code
29-1141
29-2061
31-1131
29-2099
21-1022
29-1031
43-6013
insight into the labor markets of these
areas.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
that a limitation of the publicly
available BLS OEWS data is that the
survey only includes information on the
wages that employers paid to their
employees. Therefore, the OEWS does
not include self-employed contract labor
wages or benefits paid to employees,
which are reflected in the IPPS wage
index. Nevertheless, we believed, and
we continue to believe, that this data
source would be an improvement over
the use of the IPPS wage index for the
ESRD PPS, as its purpose is to identify
geographic differences in wages. In the
proposed rule, we noted that assuming
wages spent on self-employed contract
labor wages and employee benefits vary
similarly to employee wages, we would
not expect any significant difference
arising from this limitation of the BLS
data. We anticipated that most traveling
nurses and technicians would be
employed by a staffing agency, and
therefore would be included in the
OEWS estimates; however, as worksite
location reporting is optional,16 we note
it is possible that some of the wages for
16 https://www.bls.gov/respondents/oes/
instructions.htm#online.
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11-9111
these traveling nurses and technicians
could be included in the MSA in which
their employing agency is located,
rather than the MSA in which they
worked. However, we noted that we
would not anticipate that this would
have an appreciable impact on the
OEWS estimates used for this
methodology. Additionally, we noted
that the OEWS would only include the
wages paid by the contract agency to
these contract workers, so the OEWS
estimates would likely not include the
full cost of the contract labor paid by the
ESRD facilities to the contracting
agency. We could not separately
estimate the prevalence of selfemployed contract labor at ESRD
facilities from the rest of contract labor,
which we believe would still provide
some insight into the potential
limitation of the exclusion of selfemployed contract labor wages from the
BLS OEWS. We noted that all contract
labor costs represent approximately 5
percent of compensation costs in the
2020-based ESRDB market basket (87 FR
67143). As discussed in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, our analysis of
freestanding ESRD facility cost report
FTE data indicated that approximately
1.3 percent of RN hours and 1.1 percent
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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ESRD PPS Colloquial Name
Registered Nurses (RN)
Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN)
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of technician hours were contract labor
in 2022. Additionally, our data showed
that the share of contract labor hours
has been relatively stable over time but
has increased slightly over the past few
years.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
that one potential concern about use of
the BLS OEWS data is that in some
cases, the BLS OEWS may not have
usable data for a county for an
occupation, which is used in the
construction of the new ESRD PPS wage
index according to the methodology
presented later in this section. This
occurs when BLS is unable to publish
a wage estimate for a specific
occupation and area because the
estimate does not meet BLS quality or
confidentiality standards.17 For
reference, among the 25,808 unique
county-occupation combinations in the
May 2022 BLS OEWS data used in the
analysis in the proposed rule, the wage
information missing rate was 5.2
percent. To impute the missing data for
the methodology presented in the
proposed rule, we performed a
regression using the most similar (by
mean hourly wage) occupation (of the
occupations we proposed to include in
the wage index methodology, presented
in Table 1) for which there was no
missing data. For dietitians we used
RNs, for technicians we used LPNs and
for nurses’ aides we used administrative
staff. The regression included controls
for whether the county is rural, the
census region in which the county is
located, and the natural logarithm of the
treatment count of the county. For the
wage index presented in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, we only had
to impute missing county-level data for
dietitians, technicians, and nurses’
aides; however, for future years, we
noted that we may have to impute data
for other occupations and will be sure
to note any imputations through notice
and comment rulemaking.
In the proposed rule, we presented an
analysis on historical BLS OEWS data
for the occupations presented in Table
1.18 We found that mean hourly wages
for these categories are increasing over
time, consistent with what we would
expect given the ESRD PPS market
basket increases. Given this analysis, we
stated that the BLS OEWS data are
17 https://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_ques.htm.
18 We note that the BLS OEWS wage data is not
intended to be used as a time-series analysis, but
rather as cross-sectional estimate of wages in a
geographic area (https://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_
ques.htm#other). We reviewed and presented this
data primarily to demonstrate the stability of the
methodology by evaluating the robustness of the
input data source.
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reasonably stable and appropriately
reflect general wage inflation trends that
ESRD facilities face.
both staff and contract labor from
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports
for each occupational category.
(ii) Data From Freestanding ESRD
Facility Cost Reports
Table 2 presents the NEFOM
calculated from the freestanding ESRD
facility cost report data from cost
reporting periods beginning on or after
January 1, 2022, and before December
31, 2022 (2022 cost report data), with
four decimal places of precision. For the
purposes of comparison, Table 2
includes both the occupational mix we
presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, as well as an updated
version of this occupational mix with
more complete CY 2022 cost report data.
In the proposed rule, we noted that CY
2022 would be the most recent complete
year of cost reporting data for both the
proposed rule and for this CY 2025
ESRD PPS final rule, as the latest 2022
cost reports could have begun in
December 2022 and ended in December
2023, although some 2022 cost reports
were not yet available at the time of the
analysis for the proposed rule. For the
approximately 1.7 percent of
freestanding ESRD facilities without
2022 cost report data available at the
time of rulemaking for the proposed
rule, 2021 cost report data was used. At
the time of proposed rulemaking, we
anticipated that we would have
complete CY 2022 cost report data;
however, this has proved not to be the
case. For this final rule, some CY 2022
cost report data was still not available,
so 2021 cost report data was used for
126 ESRD facilities. The occupational
mix weights used in the proposed new
wage index methodology are presented
in terms of the number of FTEs per 1000
treatments, although we note that the
specific denominator does not impact
the calculation, as these are relative
weights. Table 2 also includes
percentages that represent the percent of
FTEs for each occupation in the
NEFOM. For example, RNs represent
approximately 30 percent of the
NEFOM, which means that across the
nation, 30 percent of all hours worked
by employees at freestanding ESRD
facilities are worked by RNs. We note
that we did not include FTEs that were
reported as ‘‘other’’ occupations in the
cost reports in this occupational mix,
because we could not determine what
occupation(s) this represented and,
therefore, could not get appropriate
wage estimates. ‘‘Other’’ occupations
would have accounted for 3.8 percent of
the NEFOM if included.
Under § 413.198(b)(1), all ESRD
facilities must submit the appropriate
CMS-approved cost report in
accordance with §§ 413.20 and 413.24,
which provide rules on financial data
and reports, and adequate cost data and
cost finding, respectively. Generally,
these cost reports have a time range of
January 1 to December 31 of a given
year, but they can represent any 12month period. Included in these cost
reports is information on the number of
full-time equivalent (FTE) positions
employed by the ESRD facility. FTEs are
stratified by occupation type, such as
RNs, LPNs, technicians, and
administrative staff. For the purpose of
these cost reports, an FTE represents a
40-hour work week averaged across the
year. Specifically, the cost reports
define FTEs as the sum of all hours for
which employees were paid during the
year divided by 2080 hours. The cost
reports also state personnel involved in
more than one activity must have their
time prorated among those activities.
For example, an RN who provided
professional services and administrative
services is counted in both the RN line
and the administrative line according to
the number of hours spent in each
activity.
For the methodology presented in the
proposed rule, we proposed to use FTEs
to calculate the occupational mix for all
freestanding ESRD facilities. For the
purposes of this proposal, we used the
term ‘‘freestanding ESRD facilities’’ to
mean ESRD facilities that complete the
independent renal dialysis facility cost
report (Form CMS 265–11, OMB No.
0938–0050). We noted that these ESRD
facilities are a subset of ‘‘independent’’
facilities as defined at § 413.174(b), as
cost-reporting is only one of 5 criteria
used in the determination of whether an
ESRD facility is independent or
hospital-based as listed at § 413.174(c).
For the purposes of this proposal, we
referred to ESRD facilities that complete
the hospital cost report (Form CMS
2552–10, OMB No. 0938–0050) as
‘‘ESRD facilities that are financially
integrated with a hospital,’’ per the
criteria at § 413.174(c)(5). The
occupational mix data presented in the
proposed rule represented the average
proportion of hours spent on the duties
of that occupation at all freestanding
ESRD facilities nationally for CY 2022.
This national mix includes FTE data on
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
89101
TABLE 2: CY 2025 National ESRD Facility Occupational Mix (NEFOM)
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Registered
Nurse
Licensed
Practical
Nurse
Nurse Aide
Technicians
Social Worker
Administrative
staff
Dietitian
Management
0.4208
29.9690%
Updated
Freestanding
Facilities 2022
Occupational Mix
(FTEs/1000
treatments)
0.4234
0.0566
4.03IO%
0.0568
4.0224%
0.0339
0.5350
0.0661
0.1505
2.4131%
38.1040%
4.7078%
l0.7194%
0.0341
0.5381
0.0666
0.1520
2.4130%
38.0815%
4.7098%
l0.7565%
0.0635
0.0777
4.5220%
5.5337%
0.0639
0.0781
4.5237%
5.5301%
We note that the NEFOM is calculated
as a part of the proposed wage index
methodology described in detail later in
this section of this final rule, from
freestanding ESRD facilities cost reports,
and that the NEFOM is not an input in
the wage index calculation. However,
we presented the NEFOM in the
proposed rule to inform the calculation
process for any interested parties which
wish to replicate the calculation.
For this methodology, we proposed to
only utilize data from freestanding
ESRD facilities, which comprise the vast
majority of ESRD facilities. ESRD
facilities that are financially integrated
with a hospital represent approximately
4.5 percent of ESRD facilities. It was
necessary to make this distinction, as
ESRD facilities that are financially
integrated with a hospital complete a
different cost report form (Form CMS
2552–10, OMB No. 0938–0050), which
does not include all the occupational
categories included on the freestanding
facility cost report (Form CMS 265–11,
OMB No. 0938–0050). Specifically,
ESRD facilities that are financially
integrated with a hospital do not
include administrative and management
staff hours in their cost reports. FTE
data for administrative and management
staff are necessary for this analysis, so
we proposed to exclude hospitalintegrated cost reports. We stated that
we believe that the occupational mix for
freestanding ESRD facilities is likely
similar to the mix for ESRD facilities
that are financially integrated with a
hospital (which, as noted earlier, make
up a small proportion of all ESRD
facilities), such that we would not
expect significantly different results if
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Freestanding Facilities
2022 Occupational
Mix Percentage as
Presented in the
Proposed Rule
we were able to include ESRD facilities
that are financially integrated with a
hospital in this analysis.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we
conducted additional analyses to ensure
that this occupational mix data would
be appropriate for the construction of an
ESRD facility wage index. First, we
reviewed the occupational mix for ESRD
facilities on a regional level to
determine if the use of a single national
occupational mix was appropriate.
While we found some variation across
regions, the variation was relatively
small between regions, with the weight
values for each occupation being within
a few percentage points. The main
exceptions to this were in the United
States Territories, which had higher
variation in occupational mix, likely
due in large part to the relatively few
ESRD facilities in those regions.
Additionally, we found that lower
volume ESRD facilities tended to have
slightly different occupational mixes,
requiring relatively more administrative
and management staff FTEs, likely due
to the lack of economies of scale for
these occupations at lower treatment
volume levels. Second, we conducted
an analysis on the change in the
national occupational mix over the past
5 years and found little variation over
this time period. Both of these analyses
indicate that the use of a single national
occupational mix is appropriate for
constructing an ESRD facility wage
index as the occupational mix is
reasonably similar to most region’s
occupational mixes and relatively stable
over time.
Additionally, we proposed to use
treatment volume data from
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
Updated
Freestanding
Facilities 2022
Occupational Mix
Percentage
29.9628%
freestanding ESRD facilities as reported
on freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports. This treatment volume data is
used in the proposed wage index
methodology as a weight on the county
level wages when calculating the wages
for a CBSA. The calculation is described
in further detail in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b)
of this final rule.
In the proposed rule, we emphasized
the importance of accurate cost report
data for this proposed policy as well as
other current and potential policies
under the ESRD PPS, such as facilitylevel or case-mix adjustment
refinement. We strongly urged ESRD
facilities to carefully review cost report
data to ensure continued accuracy so
that future refinements to the ESRD PPS
are based on the best data possible.
(iii) IPPS Hospital Wage Index
As discussed in the proposed rule, the
proposed new wage index methodology
used the established ESRD PPS wage
index methodology, which is based on
the IPPS hospital wage index, for the
purposes of standardizing the new wage
index (step 6 in the methodology
described in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b)).
Consistent with our established ESRD
PPS methodology, we use the most
recent pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage data collected annually
under the IPPS. For the purposes of the
proposed new wage index methodology,
we referred to this older wage index
methodology as the ‘‘ESRD PPS legacy
wage index.’’ The ESRD PPS wage index
values under the legacy methodology
are calculated without regard to
geographic reclassifications authorized
for acute care hospitals under sections
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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ER12NO24.001
Occupation
Freestanding Facilities
2022 Occupational Mix
(FTEs/1000 treatments)
as Presented in the
Proposed Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act and
utilize pre-floor hospital data that are
unadjusted for occupational mix. For
CY 2025, the updated wage data are
generally for hospital cost reporting
periods beginning on or after October 1,
2020, and before October 1, 2021 (FY
2021 cost report data). Under
§ 413.231(d), a wage index floor value of
0.6000 is applied under the ESRD PPS
as a substitute wage index for areas with
very low wage index values, as finalized
in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87
FR 67161). Consistent with our
established policy of updating wage
indices in the final rule, we stated in the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule that
we intend to use the most recent IPPS
wage index for the construction of the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS legacy wage index
for the final rule (89 FR 55771). We
noted that the purpose of calculating the
ESRD PPS legacy wage index is solely
for standardizing the new ESRD PPS
wage index, ensuring that the treatment
weighted average of the new ESRD PPS
wage index is the same as it would have
been under the established
methodology. This would ensure that
the changes associated with the
proposed new wage index methodology
are contained to the wage index,
whereas changes associated with shifts
in utilization would be reflected in the
wage index budget neutrality factor. For
example, if the new methodology
resulted in a significant increase in the
number of high-wage index facilities,
the standardization factor would
decrease wage index values across the
board to keep the treatment-weighted
average of the legacy and new wage
index methodologies the same; in
contrast, if utilization trends resulted in
a significant increase in the number of
treatments furnished by ESRD facilities
in high-wage index areas, the treatment
weighted average of both the legacy and
new wage index methodologies would
increase, which would need to be
accounted for by the wage index budget
neutrality adjustment factor. This is
described in more detail in step 6 of the
proposed new wage index methodology
described in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b) of this
final rule.
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(iv) Time Lag Associated With New Data
Sources
One concern expressed by interested
parties about the current ESRD PPS
wage index methodology is that the
IPPS wage index, used as its basis, uses
data from approximately 4 fiscal years
prior. Interested parties have opined
that this delay makes the ESRD PPS
wage index less responsive to certain
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changes in wages, such as inflation.19 In
the proposed rule, we noted that the
purpose of the wage index is to reflect
geographic difference in the area wage
levels, and that national trends in
wages, including wage inflation, are
accounted for by the ESRDB market
basket percentage increase. We noted
that the IPPS wage index is generally
responsive to geographic variation in
wages, including variation stemming
from local or regional inflation.
However, as interested parties have
raised concerns about the time lag
associated with our use of the IPPS
wage data, we discussed the difference
between the time lag associated with
our use of the IPPS wage index for the
ESRD PPS and the proposed new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology.
As previously discussed in this
section, the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology that we proposed would
use data from BLS OEWS and
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports.
BLS publishes OEWS data annually
with a May reference date, with
estimates typically released in late
March or early April of the following
year. Each set of OEWS estimates is
based on six semi-annual survey
samples spanning the prior 3 years.
Wages collected in earlier survey panels
are updated to the reference date of the
estimates based on wage adjustment
factors derived from the OEWS survey
data using a regression model. The
freestanding ESRD facility cost report
data that can be analyzed at the time of
rulemaking are generally from 2 CYs
prior. Specifically, for the proposed
wage index presented in Addendum A
of the ESRD PPS proposed rule, the BLS
OEWS data represent wages as of May
2022 (based on survey panels collected
from November 2019 through May
2022), and the cost report data generally
covered cost reporting periods
beginning on or after January 1, 2022,
and before December 31, 2022.20 The
publicly available BLS OEWS data is an
average using data collected over a 3year period due to the large sample
19 In accordance with section 1886(d)(14)(E)(1) of
the Act, the IPPS wage index is required to employ
data based on ‘‘a survey conducted by the Secretary
(and updated as appropriate) of the wages and
wage-related costs of subsection (d) hospitals in the
United States.’’ The IPPS is based on the most
current audited hospital wage data from Worksheet
S–3, Parts II, III and IV of the Medicare cost report,
CMS Form 2552–10 (OMB Control Number 0938–
0050 with an expiration date of September 30,
2025) (see, for example, 88 FR 58961).
20 In cases where 2022 freestanding cost report
data were not available at the time of the proposed
rule, 2021 data was used. This was the case for 131
ESRD facilities, approximately 1.7 percent of the
ESRD facilities in this analysis. In calculating the
wage indices for this final rule there were 126 ESRD
facilities for which 2021 cost report data was used.
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Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
involved in the survey. This pooled
sampling improves stability and
predictability of the OEWS estimates
over time. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55772), we noted
that, should the proposed methodology
be finalized, we would use the most
recent update of BLS OEWS data for the
ESRD PPS final rule. Under this new
proposed methodology, BLS OEWS
estimates for May 2023 would be
utilized for the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS
wage index.
Both the ESRD facility cost report data
and the BLS OEWS data are more recent
than the data used for the IPPS wage
index. Additionally, the purpose of
using the freestanding ESRD facility cost
report data in this proposed
methodology would be to establish a
national occupational mix for ESRD
facilities, which we are calling the
NEFOM. In the proposed rule, we stated
that we intend to present the NEFOM
annually to reflect the latest complete
year of cost report data at the time of
rulemaking to inform the public of the
relative weights assigned to each
occupation. Given that freestanding
facility cost reports are submitted on a
rolling basis, the most recent data would
generally be obtained from cost reports
beginning in the CY three years prior to
the CY for which we are setting rates
(that is, for the CY 2025 proposed rule,
the latest complete year of cost report
data are from cost reports beginning in
CY 2022). Based on our analysis of prior
years’ cost report data, we did not
anticipate that the national occupational
mix would change much from year-toyear. Additionally, we noted that the
use of a single national occupational
mix for all ESRD facilities would limit
the impact of changes in employment
patterns on the wage index, as all ESRD
facilities would be similarly impacted
by a change in the NEFOM. As the wage
index is a relative value, the main way
that a change in the NEFOM would
impact an ESRD facility’s wage index
would be if the CBSA in which that
ESRD facility is located has relatively
high or low wages for an occupation
that experiences growth or shrinkage in
the NEFOM. Thus, the main driver in
changes from year-to-year under the
proposed new wage index methodology
likely would be the BLS OEWS data,
which, for the final rule, would be based
on estimates with a reference date of the
May prior to the rulemaking year.
We noted that, at the time of the
analysis conducted for the proposed
rule, the May 2023 BLS OEWS estimates
were not yet available; however, they
were available at the time of the analysis
conducted for this final rule. As
previously discussed, some ESRD
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
facilities’ CY 2022 cost reports were not
available for the proposed rule but are
available now for the final rule;
however, we still do not have complete
CY 2022 data, so we must utilize some
CY 2021 cost reports for this final rule.
In the proposed rule, we stated that
should the proposed new wage index
methodology be finalized, we would
update the wage index values based on
the most recent BLS OEWS data
available. We also proposed to use most
recent cost report data available for cost
reporting periods beginning in CY 2022
and update the NEFOM in Table 2
accordingly in the final rule (89 FR
55772). Using the most recent 2022 data
available for the calculation of the new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology in
the final rule would be consistent with
our established ESRD PPS wage index
methodology of updating ESRD facility
wage indices between the proposed and
final rules.
In the proposed rule, we noted that
our proposed new wage index
methodology does use the IPPS wage
index to create the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index, which is used to
standardize the results of the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology. We
recognized the concerns we have heard
regarding the data lag associated with
our use of the IPPS wage index for the
ESRD PPS. However, as the ESRD PPS
legacy wage index would only be used
to calculate a treatment-weighted
average of the legacy wage index to
standardize the wage index values
derived under the proposed new
methodology, the proposed new ESRD
PPS wage index would continue to
reflect the relative differences in area
wages based on the more recent BLS
OEWS data. Therefore, any effect of any
data lag of the ESRD PPS legacy wage
index on the proposed new ESRD PPS
wage index would be minimal.
(v) Comparison Between Proposed New
Wage Index Methodology Data Sources
and Hospital Wage Index Data
The other main concern that
interested parties have raised about our
current ESRD PPS wage index
methodology is that the IPPS wage
index is based on hospital cost report
data. As previously discussed,
interested parties have stated that
hospital cost report data is not
necessarily the most appropriate source
for estimating geographic differences in
wages paid by ESRD facilities. These
interested parties predominantly point
to the different occupational mix
employed by ESRD facilities as the main
89103
differentiator between inpatient
hospitals and ESRD facilities; however,
there may also be differences in wages
paid for the same occupational labor
category in the two settings. Differences
in wages within the same occupation
could arise from any number of factors,
including differences in duties, hours,
required experience, or desirability of
the position.
In the proposed rule we presented
Table 3 in the context of the proposed
new wage index methodology. Table 3
compares the national average
occupational mix and corresponding
wages for occupations employed by
freestanding ESRD facilities to that of
hospitals from IPPS data. The source of
average wages used here for ESRD
facilities is the BLS OEWS mean hourly
wage data, which is then weighted by
ESRD PPS treatment count in the
geographical area. Average IPPS wages
are derived from the IPPS occupational
survey (Form CMS–10079) as presented
in the fiscal year (FY) 2024 IPPS Public
Use File (PUF),21 representing data from
2019. The mean hourly wage data from
BLS is from the May 2022 OEWS
estimates, which are based on six panels
of survey data from November 2019
through May 2022.
TABLE 3: Comparison of Occupational Mix and Mean Hourly Wages for Selected
Occupations between Freestanding ESRD Facilities and Acute Care Hospitals
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Registered
Nurse
Licensed
Practical
Nurse
Nurse Aide
Medical Aide
Technicians
Social Worker
Administrative
staff
Dietitian
Management
Mean
Hourly
WageBLS
(Column C)
$42.97
4.0%
$27.30
2.4%
$17.34
-
-
38.1%
4.7%
10.7%
$24.42
$30.61
$19.42
4.5%
5.5%
$32.63
$60.45
Occupation
(ColumnD)
Acute Care Hospitals
Occupational Mix
(ColumnE)
Registered
Nurse
28.2%
Mean
Hourly
WageIPPS
(ColumnF)
$44.42
2.6%
$26.85
7.8%
1.5%
60.0%
$18.53
$19.51
$34.92
Licensed
Practical Nurse
Nurse Aide
Medical Aide
Other
In discussing this data in the
proposed rule, we noted that the
hospital wage data (column F) in Table
3 presents the wages paid by hospitals
to employees, as derived from the IPPS
occupational survey data, for the
purposes of comparing to the BLS data.
This data is used to adjust the hospital
21 Files related to the FY 2024 IPPS final rule are
available online at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/
payment/prospective-payment-systems/acuteinpatient-pps/fy-2024-ipps-final-rule-home-page.
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average hourly wage, calculated using
hospital cost report data, based on the
provider-specific occupational mix.
This differs from the hospital cost report
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Occupation
(Column A)
Freestanding
Facilities
Occupational
Mix
(ColumnB)
30.0%
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data used for the IPPS wage index, as
that does not break down all wages and
related costs by occupation.
Compared to hospitals, ESRD
facilities generally use slightly higher
proportions of RNs and LPNs and
significantly fewer nurse aides and
medical aides (column B). Additionally,
the freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports include additional occupational
categories to reflect the labor mix
employed by ESRD facilities.
(b) Construction of the New ESRD PPS
Wage Index
In the proposed rule, we presented
these general steps, which we stated we
would use when constructing a wage
index based on the proposed new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology; for a
more detailed look at the specific
computational steps we execute in the
code to calculate the wage index
according to the proposed methodology,
including steps related to data
collection and cleaning, we provided
the supplementary document
Addendum C of the proposed rule.
1. We calculate the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage for each
occupation for each CBSA by
multiplying the mean hourly wage data
from the BLS OEWS by the treatment
count for each county within that CBSA
and dividing by the total treatment
count of all counties within the CBSA.
We weight mean hourly wage by
treatment count to ensure that the mean
hourly wage for the CBSA is
proportional with the actual wages paid
by ESRD facilities in the CBSA. This
avoids a situation where a particularly
high or low wage county within a CBSA
has no ESRD facilities but still has a
large impact on the wage index for that
CBSA. This reasoning extends to each
instance in which we weight values by
treatment counts. We use a crosswalk
that relates counties to MSAs, nonMSAs and NECTAs.
2. We calculate the ESRD facility
mean hourly wage in each CBSA by
multiplying the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage (from step
1) for each occupation for a given CBSA
with the corresponding weight of the
NEFOM for each occupation and then
sum each category’s amount to get the
total.
3. We calculate the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage for each
occupation at the national level by
multiplying the mean hourly wage for
the occupation in each CBSA by the
treatment count of that CBSA and
dividing by the aggregated treatment
count nationally.
4. We calculate the national ESRD
facility mean hourly wage by
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multiplying the national mean hourly
wage (from step 3) for each occupation
by the corresponding weight of the
NEFOM for each occupation and then
sum each category’s amount to get the
total.
5. We divide the ESRD facility mean
hourly wage for each CBSA by the
national ESRD facility mean hourly
wage to create a raw wage index level
(that is, a wage index that has not been
normalized as described in step 6).
6. We multiply the raw wage index
level for each CBSA by a treatment
weighted average of the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS legacy wage index constructed
using the established ESRD PPS
methodology based on IPPS Medicare
cost report data and divide the product
by the treatment weighted average of
raw wage indices, which equals 1 by
construction.22 This is to ensure that the
treatment-weighted average of new BLSbased wage indices is the same as the
weighted average of the current wage
indices. By ensuring the weighted
average of the new wage index is the
same as the weighted average of the prefloor pre-reclassification IPPS wage
index we have normalized the new
wage index such that it is more
comparable to the former ESRD PPS
wage index methodology. This prevents
the possibility that the treatmentweighted average of the new wage index
is significantly different than the
treatment-weighted average of the
established methodology. We include
this step because our goal in
establishing the proposed new wage
index methodology is not to alter the
significance of the wage index in
determining each ESRD facility’s
payment, but rather to ensure that the
wage index values better reflect relative
labor costs that affect ESRD facilities
specifically. We note that because we
apply a wage index budget neutrality
adjuster (discussed in section II.B.4.b),
the new wage index methodology would
not increase total payments to ESRD
facilities even absent this step.
7. We apply the 0.6000 floor to the
wage index by replacing any wage index
values that fall below 0.6000 with a
value of 0.6000, which is the wage
index floor for the ESRD PPS as
established in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule (87 FR 67166).
After following these steps, we would
obtain the wage index values for each
CBSA (based on the new OMB
delineations as discussed later in this
section of the preamble) according to
22 Treatment weighted averages of wage indices
are calculated by multiplying the wage index value
for each CBSA by the treatment count in the CBSA
and dividing by the aggregate national treatment
count.
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the proposed ESRD PPS wage index
methodology described previously. In
the proposed rule, we noted that the 5
percent cap in year-over-year decreases
in wage index values would be applied
for each ESRD facility after the new
wage index is calculated based on the
proposed methodology for the CBSA in
which the ESRD facility is located and,
therefore, is not reflected in the
proposed wage index value for a CBSA
in Addendum A of the proposed rule,
available on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/
End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRDPayment-Regulations-and-Notices under
the page for CMS–1805–P. This was
necessary as this cap protects ESRD
facilities in the rare circumstances when
changes in policy related to the wage
index methodology or CBSA
delineations cause an ESRD facility to
be in a significantly lower wage index
area in a given year when compared to
the previous year (87 FR 67161). As
discussed later in this section, for CY
2025 we proposed to adopt new OMB
delineations of CBSAs relative to those
used in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS wage
index. As this 5 percent cap applies to
an ESRD facility, and not to a CBSA, it
would protect any ESRD facility that is
delineated into a much lower wageindex CBSA for CY 2025.
(c) Methodological Alternatives
Considered
While developing the proposed new
wage index methodology, we
considered several different alternatives
regarding both data sources used for the
new wage index methodology and
construction of the wage index itself.
We considered the feasibility of
requesting the use of confidential BLS
OEWS data. This was one suggestion
from the December 2019 TEP.
Confidential data would have some
benefits over public data, primarily that
it would provide greater disaggregation
of wages by employer type, such as
wages paid by ESRD facilities.
Additionally, confidential BLS data
could have a timeframe other than the
3-year pooled sample used in the public
data, for example, using only the most
recent year’s data. However, we noted
that the OEWS survey sample is
designed to be statistically
representative only when all 3 years of
the sample are combined, so the use of
an alternative or shorter timeframe may
not be appropriate. We determined that
the publicly available BLS data would
be the most appropriate for our wage
index, as it still provides precise
estimates of wages and would allow for
far better transparency. Additionally, we
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stated that we believed that the
inclusion of data from other employers
(meaning employers that are not ESRD
facilities) would improve the robustness
of the methodology, as ESRD facilities
compete for labor against these other
employers.
When considering the use of BLS data
we had to determine which occupation
code was appropriate for each
occupation in the NEFOM. As discussed
previously, for many of these
occupations, the corresponding BLS
code was straightforward as many of the
occupations present in the freestanding
ESRD facility cost reports matched a
single BLS code. However, for
technicians employed by ESRD facilities
we gave further consideration to two
different BLS codes. As presented in
Table 1, we proposed to use code 29–
2099 for ‘‘Health Technologists and
Technicians, All Other’’ for the
construction of the methodology to
account for the labor costs of
technicians. This is the most
appropriate category, as ‘‘technicians’’
in the freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports generally refers to dialysis
technicians, which do not fall into any
of the other BLS codes for health
technologists and technicians.
Additionally, we noted that the SOC
uses ‘‘dialysis technician’’ as an
illustrative example for code 29–2099.23
However, we had some concerns about
using this category, as it does not
specifically represent dialysis
technicians, but rather all health
technicians that do not fit in the other
categories. Because the category is nonspecific, also known as a ‘‘residual’’
category, we were concerned with the
impact of the inclusion of other, nondialysis technicians in this category. To
avoid any issues arising from the use of
a residual category, we considered using
code 29–2010 for ‘‘Clinical Laboratory
Technologists and Technicians.’’
Although this category does not fit
dialysis technicians as well, it had the
benefit of not being a residual category,
and it had fewer counties with missing
data. However, we determined that it
was most appropriate to use the most
similar category for dialysis technicians,
being the category in which data for
dialysis technicians would be included,
which is code 29–2099 ‘‘Health
Technologists and Technicians, All
Others.’’
As an alternative to using a single
national occupational mix for ESRD
facilities we considered using regional
or state-level occupational mixes. The
considered alternative would use a
23 https://www.bls.gov/soc/2018/major_
groups.htm.
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similar methodology to the construction
of the NEFOM, but with a different
occupational mix for each census region
or state and would apply the
occupational mix in the same way in the
construction of the wage index. That is,
the BLS data for a CBSA would be
weighted by the occupational mix for
the region or state in which that CBSA
is located. This alternative was
considered, in part, because of a
suggestion from a panelist at the
December 2019 TEP who pointed out
that different states have different laws
regarding staffing requirements for
ESRD facilities, which was not reflected
in the methodology presented at the
TEP. We conducted an analysis
comparing a state-level occupational
mix wage index to the national
occupational mix wage index
methodology presented previously. This
analysis found some notable differences,
including higher wage index values for
ESRD facilities in the Pacific census
region, but many regions experienced
little change. We decided against the
use of state-level or regional
occupational mixes for three main
reasons. The first is that the use of
different occupational mixes for
different ESRD facilities made the
methodology significantly more
complicated and difficult to understand.
The second is that this methodology
made it so that one ESRD facility could
be in an area with higher wages for all
occupations compared to another ESRD
facility but receive a lower wage index
value due to having an occupational
mix which favored lower-paying
occupations. In the proposed rule, we
noted that this could be perceived as
being inconsistent with the intent of the
wage index to recognize differences in
ESRD facility resource use for wages
specific to the geographic area in which
facilities are located (83 FR 56967).
Lastly, we were concerned about the
possibility that, should we use anything
other than a national occupational mix,
the state-level or regional occupational
mix could be manipulated. This would
be especially relevant for states or
regions with few ESRD facilities and,
therefore, individual ESRD facilities
would have an outsized impact on the
occupational mix for that state or region.
Accordingly, we did not propose this
alternative because we believed that the
use of a single national occupational
mix is the most appropriate for this new
ESRD facility wage index methodology.
We considered proposing a ‘‘phasein’’ policy for this wage index
methodology change, which could be
implemented in addition to the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases.
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One potential example of a phase-in
policy could be a 50/50 blended
methodology, where an ESRD facility
would receive the average of their wage
indices from the proposed new and
legacy methodologies for the first year of
implementation. However, we decided
that such a phase-in policy was
unnecessary in light of the 5 percent cap
on year-to-year wage index decreases for
ESRD facilities. We believed that an
additional, or alternative, phase-in
policy would further complicate this
change. Additionally, a phase-in policy
could hurt ESRD facilities that would
receive a higher wage-index under the
new methodology, which we do not
believe would be appropriate, as we
believe the new methodology based on
BLS data is the best approximation of
the labor costs those ESRD facilities
face.
We considered setting the NEFOM
through rulemaking separately from the
routine wage index update. Under this
alternative, we would periodically
update the NEFOM, for example every
2 years, with potentially more years of
freestanding ESRD facility cost report
data. This would mean that the NEFOM
would be a rounded input in the wage
index methodology, rather than a figure
precisely calculated as an intermediary
step in the methodology. This would
slightly simplify the calculation steps
and would allow for complete
transparency on the NEFOM. However,
we have decided to instead derive the
FTEs per 1,000 treatments for each
occupation as the weights as a part of
the wage index calculation as that
would increase the precision of this
calculation. Additionally, given the
transparency of the FTE data derived
from publicly available cost reports, we
noted that we could still publish the
NEFOM for the coming year in
rulemaking alongside the updated wage
index; however, we note that the
NEFOM we publish would have a lower
precision so replications using the
published NEFOM as an input may be
slightly off. Furthermore, compared to
setting the NEFOM through rulemaking
less frequently than annually, the
proposed methodology to calculate the
NEFOM as a part of the wage index
methodology annually would be more
responsive to national trends in
occupational mix for ESRD facilities.
Finally, we considered whether it was
most appropriate to use something other
than the mean hourly wage for the BLS
OEWS data for the construction of the
wage index. We noted that there were
always concerns when using the mean
of a data set that the figure could be
unduly influenced by outliers. One
potential alternative would be to use the
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median hourly wage data instead. The
median hourly wage is available by
occupation in publicly available BLS
data, and the median is not as
influenced by outliers as the mean. We
also considered using the geometric
mean, instead of arithmetic mean, as
that is also less influenced by outliers;
however, the geometric mean is not
provided in publicly available BLS data.
Ultimately, we determined that the
mean hourly wage is the most
appropriate for this new wage index
methodology, as any outliers are
relevant data points insofar as some
ESRD facilities may pay wages
significantly higher than the average.
c. Example Calculation Using the
Proposed New Wage Index Methodology
Table 4 is an example of a calculation
of the wage index for a hypothetical
ESRD facility in a hypothetical CBSA
under the proposed new methodology
which was presented in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule. This CBSA
contains three counties, each with a
different mean hourly wage and
treatment count. Table 4 presents the
mean hourly wage and treatment count
used in the calculation.
TABLE 4: Hypothetical BLS Data for Example
Treatment count
RN wage
LPN wage
Nurse aide wage
Technicians wage
Social worker wage
Administration wage
Dietitian wage
Management wage
County 1
200 treatments
$45
$30
$15
$30
$30
$20
$35
$60
Step 1. Calculate the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage for each
occupation for each CBSA by
multiplying the mean hourly wage data
from the BLS OEWS by the treatment
count for each county within that CBSA
and dividing by the total treatment
count of all counties within the CBSA.
RN wage = [(200 * $45) + (300 * $40)
+ (500 * $50)]/1000 = $46.0
LPN wage = [(200 * $30) + (300 * $30)
+ (500 * $35)]/1000 = $32.5
Nurse aide wage = [(200 * $15) + (300
* $20) + (500 * $10)]/1000 = $14.0
Technicians wage = [(200 * $30) + (300
* $35) + (500 * $25)]/1000 = $29.0
Social worker wage = [(200 * $30) +
(300 * $25) + (500 * $35)]/1000 =
$31.0
County 2
300 treatments
$40
$30
$20
$35
$25
$25
$30
$65
Administration wage = [(200 * $20) +
(300 * $25) + (500 * $20)]/1000 =
$21.5
Dietitian wage = [(200 * $35) + (300 *
$30) + (500 * $30)]/1000 = $31.0
Management wage = [(200 * $60) + (300
* $65) + (500 * $50)]/1000 = $56.5
Step 2. Calculate the ESRD facility
mean hourly wage in the CBSA by
multiplying the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage (from step
1) for each occupation for the CBSA
with the corresponding weight of the
NEFOM for each occupation and sum
each category’s amount to get the total.
The NEFOM for CY 2025 that we
presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule is presented again in
County 3
500 treatments
$50
$35
$10
$25
$35
$20
$30
$50
Table 5. For the purposes of ensuring
the calculation in this section is as easy
to understand as possible we are using
the percentage values from the NEFOM
rounded to the nearest tenth of a
percent. This makes the wage values
calculated in this step and step 4 more
intuitive as they would represent a
weighted average of the wages in the
CBSA. We note that in the actual
calculation of the wage index, as
described in Addendum C, we calculate
the number of FTEs per 1000 treatments
for each occupation and use those as the
weights, so that the weights have a
higher level of precision.
TABLE 5: CY 2025 National ESRD Facility Occupational Mix (NEFOM)
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2.4%
38.1%
4.7%
10.7%
4.5%
5.5%
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ER12NO24.004
Registered Nurse
Licensed Practical
Nurse
Nurse Aide
Technicians
Social Worker
Administration
Dietitian
Management
ESRD Freestanding Facilities FTE
Percentage as Presented in the
Proposed Rule (rounded)
30.0%
4.0%
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ESRD facility mean hourly wage for this
CBSA = (0.300 * $46.0) + (0.040 *
$32.5) + (0.024 * $14.0) + (0.381*
$29.0) + (0.047 * $31.0) + (0.107 *
$21.5) + (0.045 * $31.0) + (0.055 *
$56.5) = $34.75
Step 3. Calculate the treatment countweighted mean hourly wage for each
occupation at the national level by
multiplying the mean hourly wage for
the occupation in each CBSA by the
treatment count of that CBSA and
89107
dividing by the aggregated treatment
count nationally.
To simplify this calculation, assume
there are 3 CBSAs as presented in Table
6:
TABLE 6: Hypothetical Wage Data for 3 CBSAs in Example
CBSA2
CBSA3
1000 treatments
$46
$32.5
$14
$29
$31
$21.5
$31
$56.5
800 treatments
$42
$28
$20
$35
$30
$20
$35
$60
1550 treatments
$50
$35
$21
$33
$35
$18
$30
$55
Step 4. Calculate the national ESRD
facility mean hourly wage by
multiplying the national mean hourly
wage (from step 3) for each occupation
by the corresponding weight of the
NEFOM for each occupation and sum
each category’s amount to get the total.
Similarly to step 2, we are using the
percentages from the NEFOM as weights
for the purposes of this example
calculation.
National average ESRD facility wage =
(0.300 * $46.90) + (0.040 * $32.58) +
(0.024 * $18.67) + (0.381 * $32.28) +
(0.047 * $32.61) + (0.107 * $19.52) +
(0.045 * $31.49) + (0.055 * $56.64) =
$36.27
Step 5. Divide the ESRD facility mean
hourly wage for each CBSA by the
national ESRD facility mean hourly
wage to create a raw wage index level.
Raw wage index value = $34.75/$36.27
= 0.95809
Step 6. Multiply the raw wage index
for each CBSA by a treatment weighted
average of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS legacy
wage index constructed using the
established ESRD PPS methodology
based on IPPS data and divide the
product by the treatment weighted
average of raw wage indices (which
equals 1 by construction). This is to
ensure that the treatment-weighted
average of new BLS-based wage indices
is the same as the weighted average of
the current wage indices (for the
purpose of this hypothetical calculation
we have used a value of 1.00679).
Pre-floor wage index value = 0.95809 *
1.00679/1 = 0.9646
Step 7. Apply the 0.6000 floor to the
wage index by replacing any wage index
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values which fall below 0.6000 with
0.6000.
Final wage index value = 0.9646
d. Estimated Impacts of Change to Wage
Index Methodology
In the proposed rule, included a
discussion on the estimated impacts of
the new wage index methodology (89
FR 55778 through 55780). We discussed
that this methodological change would
be associated with significant changes
in wage index values, and therefore
payment amounts, for ESRD facilities.
Full impacts for the final CY 2025 ESRD
PPS wage index, alongside the updated
CBSA delineations and rural transition
policy discussed in section II.B.2.f of
this final rule, are presented in Table 19
in section VII.C.5.a of this final rule,
including application of the 5 percent
cap on year-to-year wage index
decreases. In the proposed rule we
presented a table which included the
impacts of this change with and without
the 5 percent cap on wage index
decreases. This table demonstrated how
the application of the 5 percent cap
mitigates negative changes for CY 2025
associated with the new wage index
methodology.
We noted that the 5 percent cap on
wage index decreases would apply to
ESRD facilities that are located in a
CBSA (based on CY 2025 CBSA
delineations) with a wage index value 5
percent lower than the CY 2024 wage
index value for their CBSA (based on
CY 2024 CBSA delineations). The table
in the proposed rule was presented for
the sole purpose of illustrating the
potential long-term ramifications of the
proposed new wage index methodology
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Calculated
National
3350 treatments
$46.90
$32.58
$18.67
$32.28
$32.61
$19.52
$31.49
$56.64
once sufficient time has passed such
that the 5 percent cap on year-over-year
decreases would no longer constrain the
overall effect of this new methodology
on wage index values.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
our analysis comparing the hypothetical
results of applying this new wage index
methodology in past years to the actual
ESRD PPS wage index methodology
based on the IPPS wage index for those
years. We found that the application of
the new wage index methodology
consistently yields mean and median
wage index values slightly higher than
the actual mean and median wage index
values used for those years, implying
that the wage index resulting from this
new methodology is relatively stable.
Additionally, we found that the
payment impacts based on facility type
did not change much when using data
from claim years 2019 through 2022,
with most facility types that are
projected to receive a payment increase
for CY 2025 associated with the new
wage index methodology seeing a
payment increase in past years.
Similarly, most facility types that are
projected to receive a payment decrease
in CY 2025 associated with the
proposed new wage index methodology
were found to have received payment
decreases in our hypothetical analysis of
past years. Therefore, we determined
that this new wage index methodology
is relatively stable when analyzing the
differences between the new proposed
wage index and the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index.
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RN wage
LPN wage
Nurse aide wage
Technicians wage
Social worker wage
Administration wage
Dietitian wage
Management wage
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e. CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Index
For CY 2025, we are updating the
wage indices to account for updated
wage levels in areas in which ESRD
facilities are located. We proposed to
use the new wage index methodology
described previously, in subpart b of
this section, according to the most
recent available data. We believe that
the use of this new wage index
methodology is appropriate and
responds to the feedback we have
received from interested parties
regarding the limitations of the current
wage index. Specifically, the use of BLS
OEWS data would allow for this new
wage index methodology to be more
responsive to differences in ESRD
facility wage levels across the country.
Additionally, by using occupational mix
data from the freestanding ESRD facility
cost reports, this new wage index
methodology would better reflect the
actual wage costs incurred by ESRD
facilities and be most appropriate to use
for the ESRD PPS due to several reasons
specific to ESRD facilities. First,
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports
contain detailed occupational FTE data,
which allows CMS to create a wage
index that is tailored to the wage costs
faced by ESRD facilities based on their
unique staffing needs. Dissimilarities
between hospital occupation mix and
ESRD facility occupational mix make
the use of the IPPS data less appropriate
for ESRD facilities. In addition, the
ESRD PPS has a lower labor-related
share than most other Medicare
payment systems.24 This new ESRD PPS
wage index methodology addresses
these specific circumstances.
In the proposed rule, we recognized
that there were several methodological
limitations to using a wage index based
on publicly available BLS OEWS data.
Specifically, the BLS OEWS data source
lacks information on employee benefits
and the full cost of contract labor and
includes information from hospitals and
other healthcare providers. However, we
stated that we believed that the benefits
of using this new wage index
methodology would outweigh these
limitations, as the use of BLS OEWS
wage data weighted by an occupational
mix derived from freestanding ESRD
facility cost report data would allow for
a wage index that is more representative
of the geographic variation in wages
faced by ESRD facilities.
For CY 2025, we also proposed to use
OMB’s most recent CBSA delineations
as published in OMB Bulletin No. 23–
01, which are based on the data from the
2020 decennial census, for the purposes
of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index
and rural facility adjustment. This was
consistent with our historical practice of
updating the CBSA delineations
periodically according to the most
recent OMB delineations, most recently
in the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85
FR 71430 through 71434). We discuss
this policy in greater detail in section
II.B.2.f of this final rule. For more
information on the OMB delineations,
we refer readers to the OMB Bulletin
No. 23–01: https://www.whitehouse.gov/
wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMBBulletin-23-01.pdf.
To implement the proposed change in
wage index methodology, we proposed
to amend the regulations at 42 CFR
413.196(d)(2) and 413.231(a). Effective
January 1, 2025, the amended
§ 413.196(d)(2) would state that CMS
updates on an annual basis ‘‘[t]he wage
index using the most current wage data
for occupations related to the furnishing
of renal dialysis services from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics and
occupational mix data from the most
recent complete calendar year of
Medicare cost reports submitted in
accordance with § 413.198(b).’’ The
amended § 413.231(a) would state that
‘‘CMS adjusts the labor-related portion
of the base rate to account for
geographic differences in the area wage
levels using an appropriate wage index
(established by CMS) which reflects the
relative level of wages relevant to the
furnishing of renal dialysis services in
the geographic area in which the ESRD
facility is located.’’
For CY 2025, we proposed to update
the ESRD PPS wage index to use the
most recent BLS OEWS wage data and
the most recent CY 2022 freestanding
ESRD facility cost report occupational
mix and treatment volume data
available. At the time the analysis was
conducted for the proposed rule, the
most recent BLS OEWS wage data
available represented May 2022. We
proposed that if more recent data
become available after the development
of this ESRD PPS rule and before the
publication of the ESRD PPS final rule
(for example, the April 2024 release of
May 2023 OEWS data, which was
published after the analysis performed
for the proposed rule), we would use
such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index in
the ESRD PPS final rule.
24 For example, under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the
Act, the IPPS applies a labor-related share of 62
percent for each hospital unless this would result
in lower payments to the hospital than would
otherwise be made.
(1) Alternative CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage
Index Using Established Methodology
In the proposed rule, we presented a
version of the current ESRD PPS wage
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index constructed using our established
methodology with the most recent
available data, which we referred to as
the ESRD PPS legacy wage index
methodology. The purpose of presenting
the legacy methodology with
modifications was to illustrate an
alternative to the new methodology
described previously for consideration
by interested parties to facilitate
comments on the proposed rule. The
inclusion of a CY 2025 version of the
ESRD PPS legacy wage index
methodology allowed for interested
parties to compare wage index values
under the current methodology and
proposed new methodology. For the
reasons previously discussed, we
believed and continue to believe that
the proposed new wage index
methodology based on BLS OEWS data
and ESRD Medicare cost report data is
the most appropriate for ESRD facilities;
however, we considered commenters’
input on this proposal and the
alternative wage index based on the
established methodology (updated with
the most recent data) when making a
determination about the best approach
in this final rule.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule we presented the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index, which is based on the most
recent pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage data collected annually
under the IPPS, as an alternative wage
index. Please see the proposed rule (89
FR 55781) for a detailed description of
this alternative wage index, which
followed our legacy methodology.
(2) Request for Comments on This
Proposal
In the proposed rule, we explained
our belief that our new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology more accurately
estimates the geographic variation in
wages paid by ESRD facilities when
compared to the current ESRD PPS wage
index based on the IPPS wage index. We
acknowledged that this new
methodology would represent a
significant change to the established
ESRD PPS wage index methodology,
both by changing the data sources and
the calculations for the wage index. We
requested comments on all aspects of
the new methodology, including the use
of BLS OEWS data for CBSA-level wage
estimates, the use of mean hourly wage
(rather than median hourly wage), the
use of freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports for deriving occupational mix
weights based on FTEs for each
occupation per 1000 treatments as
presented in the NEFOM, the use of the
ESRD PPS legacy wage index for
standardization, and the computational
steps used to calculate the wage index.
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We welcomed any insights into
potential methodological improvements,
particularly related to some of the
limitations of the new data sources
discussed previously, including the
absence of the cost of employee benefits
and the full cost of contract labor in the
BLS data, and the inability of this
methodology to capture differences in
ESRD facility occupational mix across
different geographic areas. In the
proposed rule we stated that we would
consider modifying the methodological
steps used to calculate the wage index
in the final rule, depending on the
comments we received. Additionally,
we requested comments on the
proposed use of the new wage index
methodology compared to the
established wage index methodology
based on the IPPS wage index which
was used to create the alternative ESRD
PPS legacy wage index. We also
requested comments on the
distributional implications of this wage
index proposal, with specific
consideration to rural areas and remote
or isolated areas such as the United
States Territories in the Pacific. Lastly,
we requested comments on our proposal
to begin using our new wage index
methodology beginning on January 1,
2025.
We invited public comment on our
proposal for our new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology and its use for CY
2025. Approximately 20 commenters
including LDOs, SDOs, provider
advocacy organizations, coalitions of
dialysis organizations, a professional
organization, several ESRD facilities,
and MedPAC commented on the
proposed new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology. The following is a
summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our
responses.
Comment: Most commenters who
expressed an opinion on the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, including
a coalition of kidney organizations,
several LDOs and MedPAC, stated that
the use of the IPPS wage index within
the ESRD PPS was flawed. Some
commenters specified reasons why the
IPPS methodology was not appropriate
for the ESRD PPS including data lag and
the fact that it is based on hospital cost
report data. The majority of these
commenters indicated that they
believed the new wage index
methodology would be an improvement
over the IPPS wage index for the ESRD
PPS. Many commenters supported the
wage index proposal and requested that
CMS finalize the proposal for CY 2025.
Response: We thank commenters for
their opinions on the proposed new
wage index methodology as well as their
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opinions on the ESRD PPS’s current use
of the IPPS wage index. We agree that
the ESRD PPS wage index proposed for
CY 2025 has advantages over use of the
IPPS wage index when applied to the
ESRD PPS. We appreciate the support
for the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology, which we are finalizing in
this rule.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed concerns over some of the
impacts of the proposed new ESRD PPS
wage index methodology. Among these
comments, the most frequently
mentioned impact was the wage index
budget neutrality adjustment factor.
Multiple commenters requested that we
implement this new wage index
methodology in a non-budget neutral
manner. Several commenters noted that
there was no statutory requirement for
budget neutrality for the ESRD PPS
wage index. Some commenters
expressed concerns about payment
adequacy within the ESRD PPS and
stated a belief that the corresponding
decrease to the ESRD PPS base rate
would lead to inadequate payments.
One commenter attributed the budget
neutrality reduction to the occupational
mix used in calculating the new wage
index methodology.
Response: We appreciate the
thoughtful comments on the impacts of
the proposed new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology. We acknowledge
that the new wage index methodology,
implemented budget neutrally, would
decrease the ESRD PPS base rate for CY
2025 relative to use of the legacy wage
index methodology for CY 2025.
However, as discussed in the proposed
rule, we note that this decrease to the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate is
predominantly due to the application of
the 5 percent cap on year-over-year
wage index decreases under
§ 413.231(c), which raises the average
ESRD PPS wage index. Although the
ESRD PPS base rate would be decreased
for CY 2025, as this cap becomes less
impactful (that is, in future years, as
fewer facilities would quality for the
application of the 5 percent cap as a
result of the change in wage index
methodology), the ESRD PPS base rate
would increase over time, eventually
attaining the level at which it would
have been otherwise. The occupational
mix has minimal impact on the budget
neutrality adjustment factor, as the
NEFOM serves as weights for the wage
index, which are applied equally to the
individual CBSA wages and national
wages in the wage index calculation
and, therefore, are essentially cancel out
concerns on their impact on the average
wage index value.
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89109
Although there is no explicit statutory
requirement to implement the ESRD
PPS wage index in a budget neutral
manner, our longstanding philosophy
within the ESRD PPS is that when we
adjust for relative resource use and the
costs for which we are adjusting are
already included in the ESRD PPS base
rate, those adjustments should be
implemented budget neutrally. Under
section 1881(b)(14)(A) of the Act our
payment system is based on total costs
from ESRD facility cost reports from
2007 and is increased annually based on
the ESRDB market basket reflecting the
changes over time in the prices of an
appropriate mix of goods and services
included in renal dialysis services.
Labor-related costs, including wages
and benefits, were included in the cost
reports used in the initial analysis (75
FR 49071 through 49083); therefore, we
generally believe it is appropriate to
implement any adjustment factors
which are based on the allocation of
those costs in a budget neutral manner.
We have received many comments
regarding concerns about payment
adequacy in response to our proposed
rule, many of which were combined
with calls to implement the new ESRD
PPS wage index in a non-budget neutral
manner. While we acknowledge
commenters’ concerns about payment
adequacy and address them in section
II.B.1.b and below in section II.B.4 of
this final rule, we note that the purpose
of the ESRD PPS wage index is to
estimate geographic variation in wages.
It would not be appropriate to make
changes to the ESRD PPS wage index
methodology to attempt to increase total
payments to address the commenters’
perceived inadequacies. We note that
the construction of the wage index
budget neutrality factor ensures that the
change in the CY 2024 and CY 2025
wage indices does not result in an
increase or decrease of estimated
aggregate payments. Although for CY
2025 the wage index budget neutrality
factor is lower than it has been in the
past years, resulting in a larger decrease
to the ESRD PPS base rate, this does not
change the fact that aggregate payments
are estimated to be unchanged
implementing the wage index
methodology for CY 2025. As noted
previously, the main driver of the lowerthan-typical budget neutrality factor is
the application of the 5 percent cap in
wage index decreases, which raises the
average wage index value for CY 2025.
Although each year’s wage index budget
neutrality factors are independent, they
are derived using the prior year’s wage
index. The higher-than-typical average
wage index value of CY 2025 results in
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a smaller budget-neutrality factor. The
smaller budget-neutrality factor results
in a larger decrease to the ESRD PPS
base rate. Consequently, this would
likely lead to a higher budget-neutrality
factor in future years where the average
wage index value would be lower than
in CY 2025, as ESRD facilities that
received the 5 percent cap in CY 2025
would receive lower wage index values
in CY 2026. This will likely result in an
increase to the ESRD PPS base rate in
CY 2026 related to the wage index
budget neutrality factor.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated support
for their wage index methodology,
which was described in the June 2023
Report to Congress, as discussed
earlier.25 MedPAC noted that their
recommended methodology would
include two features which our
proposed new wage index methodology
lacked: a methodology to smooth wage
index values across adjacent CBSAs and
a methodology to allow for variation in
wage index values within a single
CBSA.
Response: We thank MedPAC for their
recommendations. We did not propose
a smoothing methodology across CBSAs
because we do not believe it would
serve the purpose of the ESRD PPS wage
index, which is to estimate geographic
differences in area wages. Furthermore,
a smoothing methodology would
increase the complexity of the
methodology and likely involve
parameter choices that could be seen as
arbitrary. The fact that ESRD facilities
which are near each other but located in
different CBSAs would have different
wage index values is unavoidable and
persists within the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index. Under the stated
rationalization for a smoothing
methodology, ESRD facilities in
different CBSAs which are
geographically near each other would
compete for labor. We agree with this
evaluation of local labor markets, but we
note that should these ESRD facilities
and other healthcare employers in the
area be competing for labor, their wages
would likely reflect that, which would
in turn be reflected in the BLS OEWS
data and used in the new wage index
methodology. As for the
recommendation to allow variation
within a single CBSA, we acknowledge
that such a fine level of detail would
have certain advantages if the precision
of the wage index could be maintained.
However, we do not believe that there
is any way to allow such variation
without using data sources which
25 https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
2023/06/Jun23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_
SEC.pdf.
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would be lower quality, when applied
to the ESRD PPS, than the BLS OEWS.
In addition, MedPAC recommends the
use of American Community Survey
(ACS) data, which could allow for some
information on average wages, but that
information would not be specific to the
types of labor used in ESRD facilities.
We proposed this new wage index
methodology to create a wage index that
is specific to ESRD facilities, so the use
of such nonspecific data, like the ACS
data, would not align with our goals of
creating an ESRD-specific PPS wage
index. Additionally, similar to the
smoothing methodology, utilizing ACS
data to allow for further variation of
wage index values would increase the
complexity of an already complex
methodology. We believe that our new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology as
proposed, without either of these
methodological steps (that is, not
incorporating either smoothing across
CBSAs or variation within CBSAs),
strikes a balance between simplicity and
accuracy by estimating geographic
wages at the CBSA level using the
highest quality, publicly-available data,
without arbitrary model parameters. We
did not propose and, for the reasons
stated previously, we are not finalizing
in this rule either of the commenter’s
suggestions of smoothing across CBSAs
or accounting for variation within
CBSAs.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the use of the
IPPS wage index for the ESRD PPS.
Some commenters highlighted the lack
of hospital-based ESRD facility data
used in constructing the NEFOM and
stated a belief that due to this lack of
data the IPPS wage index would be
more appropriate for hospital-based
ESRD facilities. One commenter stated
that this omission would unfairly
penalize hospital-based ESRD facilities,
particularly pediatric hospital-based
ESRD facilities. One commenter
requested we make changes to the
methodology to utilize hospital-based
ESRD facilities’ cost report data in the
occupational mix, as hospital-based
ESRD facilities have hiring practices
and occupational mixes more similar to
hospitals. One commenter stated that
the omission of hospital-based ESRD
facility data would have distributional
implications due to varying ranges of
hospital-based ESRD facilities in
different geographical areas.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
insight into the extent to which the
ESRD PPS legacy wage index based on
IPPS data is appropriate for ESRD
facilities. We note that we generally
agree that the use of the IPPS wage
index for the ESRD PPS has historically
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been reasonably appropriate for
estimating geographic variation in
wages for many of the reasons the
commenters stated, however, this does
not change our belief that the new ESRD
PPS wage index is more appropriate for
the ESRD PPS moving forward
compared to the legacy methodology
based on the IPPS wage index. Many of
the objections these commenters raised
to the new methodology revolved
around the fact that the NEFOM was
based solely on freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports and, therefore, did
not include data from hospital-based
ESRD facilities. While we agree that
including data from hospital-based
ESRD facilities into the NEFOM would
be an improvement, we could not
incorporate data from hospital-based
ESRD facility cost reports into the
NEFOM in an appropriate way. As we
explained in the proposed rule (89 FR
55770), hospital-based ESRD facilities
lacked certain occupational categories
which are present in freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports, and therefore, in
the NEFOM. The omission of these
categories not only means that we do
not have data on those occupations for
hospital-based ESRD facilities, but it
also makes it impossible to
appropriately incorporate any data on
occupations present in the hospitalbased ESRD facility cost reports, since it
would not be an appropriate
comparison. We would have absolute
numbers on the clinical staff of the
hospital-based ESRD facility, which
would be useful for other analyses, but
without knowing the proportion of labor
costs spent on the omitted hospital cost
report categories, any attempt to
incorporate the present data would rely
on an assumption that the data reported
for the categories not present in the cost
report is comparable to that reported for
those categories in freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports. We did not believe
that such an assumption was necessary
as hospital-based ESRD facilities are a
significant minority of the total
population of ESRD facilities (about 5
percent), meaning their inclusion in the
NEFOM would not have a substantial
impact; furthermore, we believe
freestanding ESRD facilities are a good
proxy for the average national
occupational mix for hospital-based
ESRD facilities. Since the NEFOM only
serves as weights for the mean wages for
the occupations, we believe that the lack
of hospital-based data would not
unfairly disadvantage hospital-based
ESRD facilities, or hospital-based
pediatric ESRD facilities, since they
would receive the same wage index as
freestanding ESRD facilities in the same
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area. Furthermore, any shift to the
NEFOM associated with the
hypothetical inclusion of hospital-based
ESRD facility cost report data, should it
be possible, would not have any specific
impact on hospital-based ESRD facilities
compared to other ESRD facilities, as
the NEFOM would be applied in the
wage index calculation for all ESRD
facilities in the same way. Additionally,
we note that our analysis shows that
hospital-based ESRD facilities would,
on average, receive increased payments
under this proposed new methodology.
We disagree with the claim that the
IPPS wage index would be more
appropriate for hospital-based ESRD
facilities. Although hospital-based ESRD
facilities’ cost report data could not be
incorporated into the NEFOM, we still
believe that the freestanding ESRD
facility cost report data is a reasonable
proxy for hospital-based ESRD facilities.
Furthermore, the new wage index
methodology uses mean wage data from
the BLS OEWS for occupations related
to the furnishing of renal dialysis
services, which we believe makes the
new wage index methodology more
appropriate for hospital-based ESRD
facilities when compared to the IPPS
wage index. While it is true that
hospital-based ESRD facility data would
be included in the IPPS wage index
there are many other departments
(including but not limited to the adults
and pediatric unit, intensive care unit
and surgical intensive care unit)
included in the hospital cost reports
which we would anticipate would be
less similar to hospital-based ESRD
facilities than freestanding ESRD
facilities are. As we do not have
comprehensive occupational mix data
from hospital-based ESRD facilities, we
cannot directly evaluate the claim about
hospital-based ESRD facilities having
more similar occupational mixes to
hospitals overall than freestanding
ESRD facilities, but we would not
anticipate that this would be the case
because of the unique types of labor
required in furnishing renal dialysis
services compared to other hospital
services. Lastly, we would not
anticipate the omission of hospitalbased ESRD facilities from the NEFOM
as having any geographic distributional
implications, because the NEFOM only
serves as a set of weights in the new
wage index methodology, so any change
to the NEFOM that could potentially
arise from including hospital-based cost
reports (if that were operationally
feasible) would change the weights in
the same way for all ESRD facilities.
Comment: One commenter suggested
allowing pediatric hospital-based ESRD
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facilities to continue using the IPPSbased legacy wage index.
Response: We do not believe it would
be appropriate for hospital-based
pediatric ESRD facilities to be allowed
to receive a different wage index value,
as we believe that this new wage index
methodology is the most appropriate for
all ESRD facilities, including pediatric
and hospital-based ESRD facilities, for
the reasons discussed previously. We do
not believe that the IPPS wage index is
more applicable for hospital-based
pediatric ESRD facilities. We believe
these ESRD facilities are likely more
similar to freestanding ESRD facilities
than other divisions of hospitals
because the provision of renal dialysis
services likely dictates the occupational
mix more than the location of the ESRD
facility. That is, pediatric hospital-based
ESRD facilities utilize the occupations
for which we have utilized BLS OEWS
data, as those are the occupations
relevant in furnishing renal dialysis
services. Furthermore, as the ESRD PPS
wage index is intended to reflect the
wages in the geographic area in which
an ESRD facility is located, it generally
would not be appropriate for two ESRD
facilities in the same geographic areas to
have different methodologies determine
their wage index values, as they would
generally draw from the same
geographic labor market.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concerns with the BLS OEWS
data used in the construction of the new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology. An
LDO and a coalition of dialysis
organizations expressed concerns with
the BLS OEWS data centered around the
lack of data on employee benefits and
limitations on traveling contract labor
data. These comments emphasized both
the importance of benefits in attracting
staff and the necessity of using contract
labor, which would include labor
contracted across CBSAs. Another
coalition of dialysis organizations
suggested that we study these costs to
ensure they are accounted for in this
policy. One commenter noted that the
BLS OEWS data was not based solely on
ESRD facility wage costs and that BLS
geographic area estimates do not stratify
data by healthcare sector. One
commenter noted that evidence shows
that wages and benefits vary across
labor markets. One commenter
expressed a preference for a wage index
derived only from ESRD facility wage
data from ESRD facility cost reports.
Response: We appreciate these
detailed evaluations of the potential
limitations of the data sources used in
the proposed methodology. In the
proposed rule we acknowledged that a
lack of information on employee
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89111
benefits was a limitation of using the
BLS OEWS data source. However, we
note that the omission of benefits would
only have a significant impact on the
resulting wage index if the geographic
variation in benefit costs is different
from the geographic variation in wages.
We note that this condition is different
from the consideration one commenter
raised that wages and benefits both vary
geographically. While we cannot say for
certain whether the geographic variation
in wages is exactly the same as the
geographic variation in benefits, we
believe that ESRD facility wages are
likely a fair proxy for the way ESRD
facility benefits vary geographically,
particularly when compared to the IPPS
wage index, which is based on many
factors unrelated to the furnishing of
renal dialysis services. Our analysis of
cost report data indicates that the
percentage of labor costs associated with
benefits does not vary substantially by
geographic region, with all census
regions’ shares being between 22 and 24
percent. This is what we would expect
to see if wages and benefits vary
similarly across geographic regions. We
agree with the commenter that benefits
are an important tool in recruiting and
retaining staff, but we note that wages
are also an important tool, so we believe
that generally ESRD facilities which
need to expend additional money to
attract more staff would likely use both
increased wages and increased nonwage benefits. We note that employee
benefits represent 9.5 percent of the cost
weights in the 2020-based ESRDB (87
FR 67146) and, on average, represent
approximately 23 percent of all
compensation costs.
We note that contract labor is directly
included in this policy in two ways,
both as a part of the NEFOM and in the
BLS OEWS data, although we note that
self-employed contract workers are not
captured by the OEWS. However, we
understand the concern that the
commenters raised regarding traveling
contract laborers that may be included
in the data for a different CBSA from
where the ESRD facility is located. We
anticipate that many contract laborers
would be included in the BLS OEWS
survey data for the CBSA in which the
ESRD facility where they work is
located. We note that the BLS OEWS
data allows for the reporting of a
worker’s site of work; however, we wish
to clarify that worksite reporting does
not change the CBSA for which an
employee would be counted. That is, a
contract worker employed by an agency
that is physically located in one CBSA
but works in a different CBSA would be
included in the wage estimates for the
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CBSA in which their employing agency
is located. We wish to reiterate that, as
the wage index is relative, this would
only have a significant impact on the
wage index methodology if the way in
which traveling contract labor is
utilized varies geographically from other
wages. We intend to continue to
monitor and evaluate the performance
of the new wage index methodology,
including the extent to which contract
labor is utilized and would consider
making changes to the methodology in
future rulemaking, if warranted. We
believe the BLS OEWS wage data would
better approximate the labor costs of
ESRD facilities even if the omitted
traveling contract labor differed greatly
compared to the included wages,
because contract labor hours are
generally a small portion of total hours
for ESRD facilities. Our data suggest that
contract labor hours accounted for 1.3
percent and 1.1 percent of RN and
Technician hours in 2022, respectively.
We recognize that the BLS OEWS data
used in this methodology is not based
solely on ESRD facility wage data;
however, we note that this is also true
for the IPPS wage index. We have
decided on several occupations related
to furnishing renal dialysis services for
which to utilize BLS OEWS data. We
believe it is appropriate to include data
from other healthcare employers, as it is
likely that ESRD facilities compete with
other employers for labor. It is
technically correct to say that BLS
OEWS does not stratify their geographic
area data by healthcare sector; however,
we do not believe this is a flaw in the
methodology, as the occupations we
have chosen to utilize are, generally,
healthcare specific. Table 1 in this final
rule describes the full occupation titles
for all of the occupations included in
this wage index methodology. Many of
these are inherently healthcare specific,
such as nurses or health technologists
and technicians. However, for those
categories that may not be healthcare
specific, such as administrative staff, we
are using BLS data from the category
that is healthcare specific (that is,
Medical Secretaries and Administrative
Assistants (SOC code 43–6013)). We
believe that these categories are the
most appropriate for the types of labor
employed by ESRD facilities. Insofar as
these categories do not separate data by
type of healthcare facility, we believe
this is appropriate, as different
healthcare employers likely compete
with each other for labor. Similarly, we
do not believe a wage index based only
on ESRD facility cost report data would
be appropriate, because ESRD facilities
compete against other healthcare
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employers and, furthermore, in certain
CBSAs the number of ESRD facilities
could be very small, leading to the
ESRD facilities present having a very
large impact on the cost report data and,
therefore, the wage data for that CBSA.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed an opinion that the data
sources used in the proposed
methodology were appropriate despite
some of the limitations we discussed in
the proposed rule. Several commenters
stated that the omission of hospitalbased ESRD facility cost report data
from the NEFOM was reasonable and
did not jeopardize the methodology as
a whole. Other commenters stated that
the OEWS data provided a better
estimation of geographic wages even if
it did not include benefit data and
certain contract labor wages. Some
commenters supported the occupations
we have chosen and stated they were
appropriate for the ESRD PPS. Some
commenters, including MedPAC,
suggested that we continue to monitor
the validity of data sources and the
resulting wage indices.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and agree that the data
sources used in the new wage index
methodology are generally appropriate
for such a methodology. We intend to
continue to monitor both the data
sources and the ESRD PPS wage index
to ensure they remain appropriate for
use in the ESRD PPS.
Comment: Several commenters,
including MedPAC and a coalition of
dialysis organizations noted that several
adjustments used in the ESRD PPS, such
as the case-mix adjustments, are derived
from a model which might be
influenced by a change in the ESRD PPS
wage index. MedPAC and one LDO
requested that we conduct analysis in
future years to determine whether some
of the adjustment factors should be
changed.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ thoughts on the
interconnected relationship between the
ESRD PPS wage index and the other
adjustments used within the ESRD PPS.
We note that we have not routinely
updated the case-mix or facility-level
adjustment factors when we have made
updates to the ESRD PPS wage index in
the past. However, we acknowledge that
the new wage index methodology would
result in more significant facility-level
changes than past routine updates to the
ESRD PPS wage index. We did not
propose any changes to the ESRD PPS
case-mix adjustments or facility-level
adjustments for CY 2025. One reason for
this was because the proposed new
wage index methodology would
represent a substantial change to the
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ESRD PPS, and we believe it is
appropriate to avoid making multiple
significant methodological changes to
the wage index and other adjustment
factors concurrently as payments to
ESRD facilities could change
substantially in multiple different ways.
We generally believe it is most
appropriate to update all of the case-mix
and facility-level adjustment factors
concurrently because of the
interconnected nature of the factors. By
this we mean that the case-mix and
facility-level adjustment factors are
originally derived from a cost-regression
from the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule,
and updated in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule, which includes all such
adjustments. By including multiple
variables in the regression as adjustment
factors we can derive the appropriate
adjustment factor for each of the facilitylevel and case-mix adjustment, as the
regression isolates the marginal impact
of that facility-level or case-mix
characteristic on the cost variable. This
does not mean that it is inappropriate to
update only one of these adjustment
factors, but when we do so we generally
intend to be cautious as not to change
the adjustment factor in a way that
would lead to duplicative payment from
other adjustment factors, which could
theoretically happen if there were two
independent variables which are highly
correlated. This is part of the reason
why we proposed to update the LVPA
adjustment factors in a manner which
was budget neutral within the LVPA,
rather than reduce the ESRD PPS base
rate. We are considering how to update
the case-mix and facility-level
adjustment factors in a way which
would best align relative payments with
resource use and cost. We did not
propose to update the case-mix and
facility-level adjustment factors in the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
because we did not believe we had the
proper data to make the most
appropriate updates to the case-mix and
facility-level adjustment factors at that
time. As we explained in the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule, additional data
would serve to provide moredata to
better inform CMS’s pursuit of equitable
payment policies in the future by
helping us evaluate and monitor the
accuracy of our patient-level adjustment
factors (88 FR 76397). Specifically, we
do not yet have the data from either the
updated reporting requirement effective
January 1, 2025, for time on machine or
the updates to the cost reports to better
capture data on the costs for pediatric
patients. We believe it is most
appropriate to wait until we have these
additional data sources and update the
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case-mix and facility-level adjustment
factors at that time as these additional
data sources may allow us to better
allocate resource use. Although
sometimes substantial changes are
unavoidable, they can create challenges
for ESRD facilities when planning for
future payment years, so we believe it
is most prudent to make such a
substantial change when we have the
most appropriate data. We are not
finalizing any changes to the case-mix
or facility-level adjustment factors
related to the new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology, but we intend to
consider whether such changes would
be appropriate in future years.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concerns with the use of a
single national occupational mix for all
ESRD facilities. Several interested
parties expressed concerns with the
application of a wage index based on a
national occupational mix to the U.S.
Territories in the Pacific, stating that
they believed a regional occupational
mix would be more appropriate. One
commenter suggested CMS allow some
ESRD facilities to continue to receive
the legacy wage index based on the IPPS
wage index.
Response: The NEFOM’s purpose in
the wage index methodology is to
weight the BLS OEWS mean wage data
so that the resulting wage index would
be more representative of the actual
wage costs faced by ESRD facilities. We
believe that a single national
occupational mix achieves this goal in
the most straightforward way. The new
wage index methodology is the most
appropriate estimation of wages for
ESRD facilities. Although some types of
ESRD facilities, such as ESRD facilities
located in U.S. Territories, may have
some other costs that are higher due to
their location, if these costs are not
directly related to wages it would not be
appropriate for them to be reflected in
the wage index methodology. As
discussed earlier, we do not believe it
would be appropriate for different ESRD
facilities in a given CBSA to receive
different wage index values, so we are
not finalizing any exceptions to the new
wage index methodology that would
allow certain ESRD facilities or facility
types to receive the legacy wage index.
Comment: One commenter stated that
it would not be appropriate to apply a
different wage index value to hospitalbased ESRD facilities compared to other
units of the hospital as they would have
the same hiring practices.
Response: We recognize that hospitalbased ESRD facilities likely share some
practices with the hospital in which
they are located. However, we do not
agree with this assertion. We believe it
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is reasonable for a hospital-based ESRD
facility to receive a different wage index
from other units in the hospital, as the
labor employed by ESRD facilities is
different from the labor employed by
other parts of a hospital. We note that
under the current payment systems,
hospitals functionally receive different
payment rates for labor for different
units, as the payment rates are based on
more than the wage index, including the
labor-related share and the base
payment rate. Furthermore, we do not
believe it would be appropriate for
hospital-based ESRD facilities to receive
different payment rates from similar
ESRD facilities in the same CBSA, as we
would generally expect ESRD facilities
in the same CBSA to face similar labor
costs both in mean hourly wage and in
the types of labor employed.
Comment: One commenter stated a
concern that the NEFOM had a large
portion of dialysis technicians which,
according to the commenter, would hurt
independent ESRD facilities.
Response: We believe the commenter
is saying that independent ESRD
facilities utilize dialysis technicians at a
lower rate than LDOs, and therefore
would likely utilize more nurse labor.
Our analysis of occupational mix data
does not indicate that this statement is
true. Our analysis showed that
independent ESRD facilities had a
slightly lower ratio of nurses to
technicians compared to LDOs. The
largest difference we found between
independent ESRD facilities and LDOs
was that independent ESRD facilities
had higher rates of administrative staff
and management, likely due to
economies of scale for these occupations
leading to larger organizations requiring
relatively fewer of these staff compared
to direct patient care staff. We would
note that our analysis did find that
regional dialysis organizations utilized
significantly fewer technicians
compared to both LDOs and
independent facilities, instead hiring
significantly more nurse aides (which
are more similar in wages to technicians
than RNs). Separate from this analysis,
we acknowledge the commenter’s stated
belief that some ESRD facilities would
have an occupational mix that differs
from the NEFOM, but we disagree with
the statement that this would ‘‘hurt’’
those ESRD facilities. The purpose of
the ESRD PPS wage index is to best
estimate the geographic variation in
wages and, to that point, this new wage
index better estimates how wages faced
by ESRD facilities vary across different
geographic areas. In this methodology,
the NEFOM serves to weight the BLS
OEWS wage data in a way that is
generally appropriate for ESRD
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facilities. While some ESRD facilities
would certainly have occupational
mixes that differ from the NEFOM, we
do not believe it would be more
appropriate to pay according to each
ESRD facility’s occupational mix. ESRD
facilities make hiring decisions based on
their local labor market and other
relevant factors, which may result in
occupational mixes that differ from the
NEFOM. This is consistent with the
philosophy behind a PPS where we
provide payment to ESRD facilities,
which they can allocate to costs in the
most efficient and appropriate manner
for them.
Comment: One commenter stated that
CMS did not adequately demonstrate
that the proposed new wage index
methodology would more accurately
reflect ESRD facilities’ labor markets.
This commenter believed that
implementing the new wage index
methodology would be detrimental for
some ESRD facilities.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s apprehension regarding
such a significant methodological
change. We believe that we have
adequately explained why the proposed
new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology better estimates the
realities of the labor markets for ESRD
facilities. With respect to the
commenter’s desire for CMS to
‘‘demonstrate’’ the accuracy of the wage
index methodology, we note that by its
nature the wage index reflects an
estimate of the general economic
conditions in a labor market, and there
is no more objective measure of those
conditions against which its accuracy
could be measured. We conducted an
analysis of the cost versus payment ratio
under the proposed new ESRD PPS
wage index methodology and the legacy
wage index methodology which found
that, on average, ESRD facilities had a
cost versus payment ratio of 0.997 under
the proposed new methodology
(without the application of the 5 percent
cap) and 0.991 under the legacy
methodology. Using this metric, the
proposed new wage index methodology
better aligns payment with resource use
compared to the legacy methodology.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the 5 percent cap
on wage index decreases. Some of these
commenters stated that they believed
the 5 percent cap would help smooth
the transition between the legacy and
proposed new methodologies. One LDO
stated that they did not believe any
other sort of transition would be
necessary given the 5 percent cap.
MedPAC reiterated support for a
symmetrical cap on wage index
increases. Another LDO suggested that a
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symmetric cap on wage index increases
could ameliorate some of the impact of
this new wage index methodology on
the ESRD PPS base rate resulting from
budget neutrality.
Response: We appreciate the
continued support for the cap on yearover-year wage index decreases. We
agree that this 5 percent cap would help
mitigate the negative impacts of this
policy on certain ESRD facilities in
certain years, allowing for a transition
period for these ESRD facilities to adjust
their business planning. We did not
propose any changes to the 5 percent
cap policy for CY 2025 and are not
finalizing any changes. When we
finalized the 5 percent cap in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161),
we explained why we did not believe a
symmetrical cap on increases would be
appropriate. We still believe that
capping increases in wage index values
would be inappropriate, as the new
wage index value is the most
appropriate for these ESRD facilities.
The purpose of the cap is to increase the
predictability of ESRD PPS payment for
ESRD facilities and mitigate instability
and significant negative impacts to
ESRD facilities resulting from
significant changes to the wage index. In
the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule we
explained that the transition policies are
not intended to curtail the positive
impacts of certain wage index changes,
so it would not be appropriate to also
apply the 5 percent cap to wage index
increases (87 FR 67159). Although, we
appreciate the suggestion for
ameliorating the other commenters’
budget neutrality concerns, as
discussed, we do not believe that a cap
on increases to wage index values
would be appropriate, and we are not
finalizing a cap on increases to wage
index values.
Comment: One commenter raised
concerns that the ESRD PPS wage index
methodology did not include overtime
wages. Specifically, the commenter
emphasized that some geographic areas
have laws which dictate rates for
overtime, for example time-and-a-half,
which would lead to higher relative
costs compared to ESRD facilities in
areas which did not have such
legislation.
Response: We acknowledge that the
BLS OEWS mean hourly wage data is
not intended to capture overtime by its
definition of wages. However, we do not
believe that this is an issue with the
methodology. Our goal in designing the
new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology was to better estimate
geographic variation in wages, which
this new methodology does. We
interpret the commenter’s main concern
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to be that because some geographic
areas have legislation which dictates
certain overtime rates, overtime costs
would likely vary differently from nonovertime wages. Although the
commenter is accurate in noting that
regulations regarding overtime differ
across the country, since overtime rates
are generally based on non-overtime
hourly wages, we believe it’s reasonable
to assume that on average places with
higher non-overtime wages would
generally have higher overtime wages.
While non-overtime wages paid by
ESRD facilities may not be a perfect
proxy for overtime wages paid by ESRD
facilities, we believe that they are a
fairly good proxy and that use of the
BLS OEWS data is nonetheless superior
to using the IPPS wage index. In other
words, we believe that most variation
between geographic areas is captured by
the variation in base wages utilized by
the proposed new wage index
methodology.
We appreciate the commenter raising
this concern, and we have considered
how we could incorporate overtime
labor costs into this methodology. There
are some technical limitations to the
inclusion of overtime labor costs into
this methodology, as overtime is not
included in the BLS OEWS data source,
and the source of the increased cost
resulting from overtime could derive
from either different overtime payment
rates or different overtime utilization
amounts. We did not propose to include
overtime in the mean wage data used in
the proposed new wage index
methodology, and we are not finalizing
any such changes in this final rule. We
will consider proposing changes to
account for overtime wages, if
appropriate and feasible, in future
rulemaking years.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that we did not present the
uncapped wage index value for each
ESRD facility.
Response: The uncapped wage index
value for each ESRD facility was
available in Addendum A to the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, as the
uncapped wage index value for an ESRD
facility is simply the wage index value
for the CBSA in which the ESRD facility
is located. We did not include that value
in Addendum B, as that could have
caused confusion, since the wage index
after the application of the 5 percent cap
would apply for CY 2025.
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the 0.6000 wage index floor.
Several commenters requested CMS
perform further analysis on the wage
index floor and expressed a belief that
such analysis would support an increase
in the wage index floor. Commenters
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specifically suggested that a wage index
floor of 0.7000 would be appropriate.
These commenters specifically
highlighted Puerto Rico and enumerated
certain labor costs which they stated
contributed to the cost of care in Puerto
Rico.
Response: We thank commenters for
the continued support of the wage index
floor. We did not propose to change the
wage index floor for CY 2025 and are
not finalizing any changes in this final
rule. We will continue to monitor the
appropriateness of the current wage
index floor, as well as the extent to
which ESRD facilities in U.S. Territories
may face certain higher costs and will
consider any further changes through
notice-and-comment rulemaking in
future years.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated
concerns that a wage index floor is not
appropriate, as it distorts area wage
indices.
Response: We appreciate the
continued evaluation of the impact of
the wage index floor. We did not
propose, and are not finalizing, any
changes to the wage index floor. We will
take these concerns into consideration
when determining whether further
changes to the wage index floor are
needed in future rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters,
including one letter from several
interested parties concerning the U.S.
Pacific Territories, expressed concerns
over the impact of the proposed wage
index methodology on the U.S. Pacific
Territories. This letter from the
interested parties stated that they
believed that this new wage index
methodology was a ‘‘one-size fit all’’
approach that would have negative
impacts on marginalized communities.
This letter expressed some support for
the alternative state-level occupational
mix which we discussed in the
proposed rule, which would result in
higher payments to for ESRD facilities
in the Pacific Census region and
expressed criticism for our choice to
propose the simpler methodology using
a national occupation mix. One ESRD
facility located in the Northern
Marianas Island noted that ESRD
facilities in these regions face higher
costs due to the nature of the isolated
regions requiring importation of goods,
including medication. This commenter
requested that we develop a new
methodology that would better account
for actual wages rather than state-level
wages.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their insight on the impact of the
proposed wage index policy on ESRD
facilities in the U.S. Pacific Territories.
We note that the purpose of the wage
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index is to reflect the geographic
variation in wages faced by ESRD
facilities. We believe that this new wage
index methodology achieves this goal,
especially when compared to the legacy
methodology based on the IPPS wage
index. We recognize that this new
policy will lead to a decrease in
payment to ESRD facilities in the U.S.
Pacific Territories. However, we note
that the BLS OEWS data indicates that
this is appropriate, as the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology represents
the most recently available BLS OEWS
mean wage estimates for the U.S. Pacific
Territories. We do not agree with the
characterization of this policy as a ‘‘one
size fits all’’ approach, as this
methodology uses BLS OEWS data
which is CBSA specific.
We considered as an alternative statelevel or regional occupational mixes
rather than the proposed NEFOM
reflecting the national occupational mix.
Our concern with the state-level
occupational mix policy was that it was
a significantly more complicated
alternative to a policy that already
represented a significant increase in
complexity to the legacy methodology.
In addition, the use of a state-level
occupational mix for weighting the
mean hourly wage data would allow it
to be possible that an area could have
lower average hourly wages for all
occupations but receive a higher wage
index when compared to another area.
It is accurate that the state-level
occupational mix alternative would lead
to higher payments to ESRD facilities in
the U.S. Pacific Territories compared to
the proposed methodology, but we wish
to clarify that payments to these ESRD
facilities would decrease under either
methodology, because the main driver
of the decrease in wage index values is
the OEWS mean hourly wage data. The
difference between payments for ESRD
facilities in the U.S. Pacific Territories
using state-level occupational mix data
and the proposed national occupational
mix was less than one percent.
We acknowledge that for the U.S.
Pacific Territories the CBSA-level
OEWS data serves functionally as a
territory-level wage measure due to each
of these territories containing exactly
one CBSA; however we believe that this
is appropriate. We note that the current
IPPS wage index is also determined at
the CBSA level and, therefore, combines
the wages for the entire territory for
each of Guam, American Samoa and the
Northern Marianas Islands. Lastly, we
appreciate the insight into additional
costs paid by ESRD facilities in the U.S.
Pacific Territories. We note that many of
the additional costs listed were nonlabor costs, and that the wage index
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serves to estimate the geographic
difference in wages. We acknowledge
that there is some evidence that nonlabor costs may be relatively higher in
regions which require importation of
most goods, including the U.S. Pacific
Territories; however, it would not be
appropriate to address these higher
costs through the wage index. We
intend to carefully evaluate both the
labor and non-labor costs for the U.S.
Pacific Territories and other outlying
regions of the United States and will
consider whether any additional
policies are warranted in future
rulemaking.
Comment: One association
commented that they commissioned an
analysis of the impacts of the proposed
new wage index methodology, which
found that independent and small ESRD
facilities would be worse off within
industry segments under the new wage
index methodology.
Response: Our analysis does not
concur exactly with the conclusion the
commenter drew about the new wage
index methodology. As we presented in
Table 6 of the proposed rule, our
analysis showed that small ESRD
facilities would receive higher payments
under the new wage index
methodology. Our analysis does show
that independent ESRD facilities would
receive lower payments. However, since
the new wage index methodology is
derived from the best available wage
data, we believe this is appropriate, as
the underlying BLS OEWS mean wage
data indicates that the areas in which
these independent ESRD facilities are
located have lower relative mean wages
compared to the legacy wage index.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concerns that hospital cost report data
was excluded from the calculation of
the wage index budget neutrality factor.
Response: We wish to clarify that
hospital cost reports were not included
in the analysis for the NEFOM because
of differences in the labor categories
between the hospital-based and
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports.
Hospital-based ESRD facilities were
included in the claims data that were
used for determining the budget
neutrality adjustment factor for the CY
2025 ESRD PPS wage index. We agree
with the commenter that it is important
to include hospital-based ESRD
facilities in any impacts analysis,
including the analysis used to
determine average payments under the
final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index,
which was used to determine the wage
index budget-neutrality factor. Omitting
these hospital-based ESRD facilities
would reduce the accuracy of the
analysis without any good reason.
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Comment: A few commenters
recommended CMS allow ESRD
facilities to reclassify their CBSA for the
wage index, similar to the IPPS, which
allows hospitals to reclassify.
Response: We appreciate this
suggestion, and we recognize that many
ESRD facilities stated that they would
be better suited for an adjacent CBSA.
However, our belief is that allowing
reclassifications would not be
appropriate for the ESRD PPS, as we
believe the most appropriate wage index
for an ESRD facility is for the CBSA in
which it is located. We believe our new
wage index methodology better
estimates the actual wages paid by
ESRD facilities in a given CBSA by
utilizing data from the BLS OEWS. We
did not propose to allow
reclassifications under the proposed
new wage index methodology, similar to
how we did not allow reclassifications
under the legacy methodology, and we
are not finalizing any such changes in
this final rule. We discuss our reasoning
for not allowing reclassifications for the
wage index for the ESRD PPS in further
detail in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule (88 FR 76360 through 76361).
Comment: One commenter, while
discussing the proposed wage index
budget-neutrality adjustment factor,
stated an expectation that we would
adjust the base rate down in future years
according to this policy.
Response: We want to clarify that we
do not anticipate significant repeated
downward adjustments to the ESRD PPS
base rate as a result of this proposal. The
lower-than-typical wage index budgetneutrality adjustment factor is primarily
a result of the application of the 5
percent cap on year-over-year wage
index decreases, which is particularly
impactful in CY 2025 due to the
significant proposed change to the wage
index methodology. We note that
although this 5 percent cap could apply
for multiple years in a row as a result
of the adoption of the new wage index
methodology, each year it is applied, the
affected ESRD facilities’ wage index
values would become closer to the wage
index values for their CBSAs, until their
wage index values would be equal their
CBSA’s wage index value. In future
years we anticipate the 5 percent cap
would cause fewer ESRD facilities to
receive wage index values higher than
that of their CBSA, so the wage index
budget-neutrality factor for CY 2026
would be higher than the wage index
budget-neutrality factor for CY 2025. We
note that the wage index budgetneutrality adjustment factor is
multiplicative, so a ‘‘higher’’ value
would lead to either a smaller decrease
in the ESRD PPS base rate, should the
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value still remain below 1, or to an
increase to the ESRD PPS base rate,
should the value rise above 1.
Comment: One commenter generally
supported the idea of the proposal but
noted the complexity of the proposal
and requested additional time to review
the new wage index methodology and
impacts. One LDO suggested further
analysis and potentially another TEP to
continue to refine and test the
methodology.
Response: We believe the 60-day
timeframe provided a sufficient
opportunity for interested parties to
review the proposed rule and provide
comments. To help interested parties
understand the complexities and
impacts of this proposal we included 3
addenda to the proposed rule.
Addendum B included facility level
impacts for all of our proposed policies,
including the proposed change in the
wage index methodology, as well as a
side-by-side comparison of wage index
values under the proposed new wage
index and the legacy wage index based
on IPPS data. Addendum C included a
detailed methodological breakdown for
this proposed new wage index
methodology. We believe that this
provided the public with ample
information to thoroughly review the
policy in the time available. In the
proposed rule, we explained that we
believe it would be beneficial to
implement this proposed new wage
index methodology alongside the moreroutine updates to the CBSA
delineations according to OMB 23–01.
Additionally, we believe that this new
wage index methodology is more
appropriate for ESRD facilities and,
therefore, should be implemented as
soon as feasible. Similarly, we believe
that we have sufficient information to
determine that this policy is an
improvement to the use of the IPPS
wage index for the ESRD PPS and that
holding another TEP would be an
unnecessary delay for this policy. We
are not finalizing any delay to the
implementation date for this new wage
index methodology, but we intend to
carefully monitor the new ESRD PPS
wage index, maintain a dialogue with
interested parties, and consider further
modifications to the methodology in
future rulemaking.
Final Rule Action: After considering
the comments received on this proposal,
we are finalizing the use of the new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology for
CY 2025 without modification.
Consistent with prior years, we are
updating the CY 2025 proposed ESRD
PPS wage index with the most recent
available data. Most notably, this
includes the release of the May 2023
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f. Implementation of New OMB Labor
Market Delineations
market area in which the ESRD facility
is geographically located. In the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we
proposed a new wage index
methodology that would similarly be
based on the labor market in which an
ESRD facility is located. ESRD facility
labor market areas are delineated based
on the CBSAs established by OMB. In
accordance with our established
methodology, we have historically
adopted through rulemaking CBSA
changes that are published in the latest
OMB bulletin. Generally, OMB issues
major revisions to statistical areas every
10 years, based on the results of the
decennial census. However, OMB
occasionally issues minor updates and
revisions to statistical areas in the years
between the decennial censuses.
In the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule
(79 FR 66137 through 66142), we
finalized changes to the ESRD PPS wage
index based on the newest OMB
delineations, as described in OMB
Bulletin No. 13–01 26 issued on
February 28, 2013. We implemented
these changes with a 2-year transition
period (79 FR 66142). OMB Bulletin No.
13–01 established revised delineations
for United States Metropolitan
Statistical Areas, Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, and Combined
Statistical Areas based on the 2010
Census. OMB Bulletin No. 13–01 also
provided guidance on the use of the
delineations of these statistical areas
using standards published on June 28,
2010, in the Federal Register (75 FR
37246 through 37252).
On July 15, 2015, OMB issued OMB
Bulletin No. 15–01,27 which updated
and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 13–
01 issued on February 28, 2013. These
updates were based on the application
of the 2010 Standards for Delineating
Metropolitan and Micropolitan
Statistical Areas to the United States
Census Bureau population estimates for
July 1, 2012, and July 1, 2013.
On August 15, 2017, OMB issued
OMB Bulletin No. 17–01,28 which
updated and superseded OMB Bulletin
No. 15–01 issued on July 15, 2015.
These updates were based on the
application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Areas to the
United States Census Bureau population
estimates for July 1, 2014, and July 1,
(1) Background
As previously discussed in this final
rule, the wage index used for the ESRD
PPS was historically calculated using
the most recent pre-floor, prereclassified hospital wage data collected
annually under the IPPS and is assigned
to an ESRD facility based on the labor
26 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/bulletins/2013/
b13-01.pdf.
27 https://www.bls.gov/bls/omb-bulletin-15-01revised-delineations-of-metropolitan-statisticalareas.pdf.
28 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/bulletins/2017/b17-01.pdf.
BLS OEWS data as well as updated CY
2022 cost report data. We note that,
contrary to our expectation, some CY
2022 cost report data was still not
available at the time of the analysis
conducted for this final rule, so we are
finalizing to use CY 2021 cost report
data where necessary. We believe that
omitting these ESRD facilities without
CY 2022 cost report data would be
inappropriate, and CY 2021 cost report
data is the most reasonable proxy for
this missing data. Additionally, we are
finalizing the proposed updates to 42
CFR 413.196(d)(2) and 413.231(a) to
codify the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology with one change. To avoid
confusion in connection with the use of
the phrase ‘‘most recent complete year
of Medicare cost reports,’’ as some CY
2022 freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports are not available, we are
finalizing to instead revise 413.196(d)(2)
to read ‘‘most recent full year of
Medicare cost reports.’’ This change
clarifies our original intention to use the
most recent completed cost-reporting
CY, which is CY 2022 because CY 2023
cost reports beginning in November of
2023 (and ending November of 2024)
would not be finished at the time of this
final rule’s publishing. This avoids
confusion insofar as the word
‘‘complete’’ could refer either to the year
(as intended) or the dataset of cost
reports (which is not complete, as some
CY 2022 cost reports were still not
available at the time of this final
rulemaking).
The final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage
index is set forth in Addendum A to this
final rule and is available on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/
Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-ServicePayment/ESRDpayment/End-StageRenal-Disease-ESRD-PaymentRegulations-and-Notices. Addendum A
provides a crosswalk between the CY
2024 wage index and the proposed CY
2025 wage index. Addendum B to this
final rule provides an ESRD facility
level impact analysis. Addendum B is
available on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/
End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRDPayment-Regulations-and-Notices.
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2015. In OMB Bulletin No. 17–01, OMB
announced a new urban CBSA, Twin
Falls, Idaho (CBSA 46300).
On April 10, 2018, OMB issued OMB
Bulletin No. 18–03 29 which updated
and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 17–
01 issued on August 15, 2017. On
September 14, 2018, OMB issued OMB
Bulletin No. 18–04,30 which updated
and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 18–
03 issued on April 10, 2018. OMB
Bulletin Numbers 18–03 and 18–04
established revised delineations for
Metropolitan Statistical Areas,
Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and
Combined Statistical Areas, and
provided guidance on the use of the
delineations of these statistical areas.
These updates were based on the
application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Areas to the
United States Census Bureau population
estimates for July 1, 2015, and July 1,
2016. In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final
rule (85 FR 71430 through 71434), we
finalized changes to the ESRD PPS wage
index based on the most recent OMB
delineations from OMB Bulletin No 18–
04. This was the most recent time we
have updated the labor market
delineations used for the ESRD PPS and,
therefore, reflects the labor market
delineations we used for CY 2024 (88
FR 76360).
In the July 16, 2021, Federal Register
(86 FR 37777), OMB finalized a
schedule for future updates based on
results of the decennial Census updates
to commuting patterns from the
American Community Survey, an
ongoing survey conducted by the
Census Bureau. In accordance with that
schedule, on July 21, 2023, OMB
released Bulletin No. 23–01. A copy of
OMB Bulletin No. 23–01 may be
obtained at https://www.whitehouse.
gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMBBulletin-23-01.pdf. According to OMB,
the delineations reflect the 2020
Standards for Delineating Core Based
Statistical Areas (‘‘the 2020 Standards’’),
which appeared in the Federal Register
on July 16, 2021 (86 FR 37770 through
37778), and the application of those
standards to Census Bureau population
and journey-to-work data (that is, 2020
Decennial Census, American
Community Survey, and Census
Population Estimates Program data).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we explained that we believe it is
important for the ESRD PPS to use, as
29 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2018/04/OMB-BULLETIN-NO.-18-03Final.pdf.
30 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2018/09/Bulletin-18-04.pdf.
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soon as reasonably possible, the latest
available labor market area delineations
to maintain a more accurate and up-todate payment system that reflects the
reality of population shifts and labor
market conditions. We believe that
using the most current OMB
delineations would increase the
integrity of the ESRD PPS wage index
system by creating a more accurate
representation of geographic variations
in wage levels, especially given the
proposed new wage index methodology
discussed previously. We carefully
analyzed the impacts of adopting the
new OMB delineations and found no
compelling reason to delay
implementation. Therefore, we
proposed to adopt the updates to the
OMB delineations announced in OMB
Bulletin No. 23–01 effective for CY 2025
under the ESRD PPS for use in
determining both the wage index and
the rural adjustment for ESRD facilities.
We proposed that this would be
implemented along with the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, if
finalized, or along with the alternative
ESRD PPS legacy wage index based on
IPPS data, should the proposed new
wage index methodology not be
finalized.
As previously discussed, we finalized
a 5 percent cap on any decrease to a
provider’s wage index from its wage
index in the prior year in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161). We
did not propose any additional
transition policy for the CY 2025 wage
index as we believe the 5 percent cap
effectively mitigates the negative impact
of large wage index decreases for an
ESRD facility in a single year. In
addition, we proposed to phase out the
rural adjustment for ESRD facilities that
are transitioning from rural to urban
based on these CBSA revisions, as
discussed in section II.B.2.f.(2) of this
final rule. For a further discussion of
changes to OMB’s CBSA delineations,
including a list of changes to specific
CBSAs, see the FY 2025 IPPS proposed
rule (89 FR 36139).
We invited public comment on our
proposal to use the updated CBSA
delineations. We received four
comments regarding our proposal to use
the updated CBSA delineations. The
following is a summary of the public
comments received on this proposal and
our responses.
Comment: One commenter expressed
specific support for our use of the
updated CBSA delineations according to
the most recent OMB delineations set
forth in OMB Bulletin No. 23–01.
Several other comments referenced our
proposal to update the CBSA
delineations; however, no other
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89117
comment expressed a strong opinion on
this policy. These comments that
referenced the proposal generally
included it alongside other proposals
that appeared to be the focus of the
comment, such as the new wage index
methodology.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters for reviewing the proposal
to update CBSA delineations and
appreciate the commenter for expressing
support for the updated delineations.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the
comments received, we are finalizing
our use of the most recent CBSA
delineations from OMB Bulletin 23–01
for ESRD PPS wage index and rural
adjustment for CY 2025 and beyond,
consistent with prior updates to CBSA
delineations.
(2) Proposal To Phase Out the Rural
Facility Adjustment for Facilities
Affected by Changes to CBSAs
In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule
(80 FR 69001), we established a policy
to provide a 0.8 percent payment
adjustment to the base rate for ESRD
facilities located in a rural area. This
adjustment was based on a regression
analysis, which indicated that the per
diem cost of providing renal dialysis
services for rural facilities was 0.8
percent higher than that of urban
facilities after accounting for the
influence of the other variables included
in the regression. This 0.8 percent
adjustment has been part of the ESRD
PPS each year since it was finalized
beginning for CY 2016, and its inclusion
in the ESRD PPS is codified at
§ 413.233.
As previously discussed in this final
rule, we proposed a change to the ESRD
PPS wage index methodology as well as
changes to the CBSA delineations. In
the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we
finalized a policy to cap year-to-year
decreases in the wage index for any
ESRD facility at 5 percent (87 FR
67161). The primary purpose of this
change was to mitigate the negative
effect associated with an ESRD facility
being reclassified into a lower wage
index CBSA as a result of changes in
OMB’s most recent CBSA delineations.
We anticipated that the proposed
change to the CBSA delineations and
the changes to the wage index
methodology, if finalized, would lead to
numerous ESRD facilities having a
significant decrease in wage index value
in CY 2025 compared to CY 2024.
As previously discussed, we are
finalizing the adoption of OMB Bulletin
No. 23–01, which will determine
whether an ESRD facility is classified as
urban or rural for purposes of the rural
facility adjustment in the ESRD PPS.
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Although the rural facility adjustment is
not directly related to the wage index,
the application of both is determined by
the CBSA in which an ESRD facility is
located and, therefore, is potentially
subject to significant changes associated
with the new CBSA delineations. It is
reasonable to conclude that these
proposed shifts in the CBSA
delineations, in combination with the
wage index methodological changes
finalized in this final rule, could lead to
a year-over-year decrease in payment
greater than what a 5 percent decrease
to the wage index would cause even if
the decrease in the wage index value
alone would be less than 5 percent. To
mitigate the scope of changes that
would impact ESRD facilities in any
single year, we proposed to implement
a 3-year phase out of the rural facility
adjustment for ESRD facilities that are
located in a CBSA that was categorized
as rural in CY 2024 and is recategorized
as urban in CY 2025, as a result of the
updates to the CBSA delineations
associated with the proposed adoption
of OMB Bulletin No. 23–01.
We stated that overall, we believe
implementing updated OMB
delineations would result in the rural
facility adjustment being applied where
it is appropriate to adjust for higher
costs incurred by ESRD facilities in
rural locations. However, in the
proposed rule we recognized that
implementing these changes would
have different effects among ESRD
facilities and that the loss of the rural
facility adjustment could lead to some
hardship for ESRD facilities that had
anticipated receiving the rural facility
adjustment in CY 2025. Therefore, we
stated it would be appropriate to
consider whether a transition period
should be used to implement these
changes. For ESRD facilities located in
a county that transitioned from rural to
urban in OMB Bulletin 23–01, we
considered whether it would be
appropriate to phase out the rural
facility adjustment for affected ESRD
facilities. Adoption of the updated
CBSAs in OMB Bulletin 23–01, which
we are finalizing as proposed, will
change the status of 44 ESRD facilities
currently designated as ‘‘rural’’ to
‘‘urban’’ for CY 2025 and subsequent
CYs. As such, these 44 newly urban
ESRD facilities would no longer receive
the 0.8 percent rural facility adjustment.
Consistent with the rural transition
policy proposed for IPFs and IRFs for
FY 2025 (89 FR 23188, 89 FR 22267
through 22268) we proposed a 3-year,
budget neutral phase-out of the rural
facility adjustment for ESRD facilities
located in the 54 rural counties that
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would become urban under the new
OMB delineations, given the potentially
significant payment impacts for these
ESRD facilities. We believed that a
phase-out of the rural facility
adjustment transition period for these
44 ESRD facilities would be appropriate,
because we expected these ESRD
facilities would experience a steeper
and more abrupt reduction in their
payments compared to other ESRD
facilities. We proposed to adopt these
new CBSA delineations in a year in
which we also proposed substantial
methodological changes to our wage
index. We noted that, while these
proposed changes, would increase
payment accuracy across the ESRD PPS,
we also recognize that some ESRD
facilities could lose the rural facility
adjustment and receive a significantly
lower wage index value in the same
year. We stated that it would be
appropriate for this transition policy to
be budget-neutral compared to ending
the rural adjustment for these facilities
in CY 2025 because it is an extension of
the rural facility adjustment, which was
implemented budget-neutrally, and a
result of the change in CBSA
delineations, which was proposed to be
implemented budget-neutrally alongside
the wage index changes. The reasoning
behind this proposal is similar to the
reasoning behind the 5 percent cap on
year-to-year decreases in wage index
values, which was finalized in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161),
as it would ameliorate unexpected
negative impacts to certain ESRD
facilities. This rural phase-out in
combination with the 5 percent cap
policy would best reduce the negative
effects on any single ESRD facility
resulting from changes to the CBSA
delineations. Therefore, we proposed to
phase out the rural facility adjustment
for these facilities to reduce the impact
of the loss of the CY 2024 rural facility
adjustment of 0.8 percent over CYs
2025, 2026, and 2027, consistent with
the similar IPF and IRF proposals
previously discussed. This policy would
allow ESRD facilities that are classified
as rural in CY 2024 and would be
classified as urban in CY 2025 to receive
two-thirds of the rural facility
adjustment for CY 2025, or a 0.53
percent adjustment. For CY 2026, these
ESRD facilities would receive one-third
of the rural facility adjustment, or a 0.27
percent adjustment. For CY 2027, these
ESRD facilities would not receive a rural
facility adjustment. We believed, and
continue to believe, that a 3-year
budget-neutral phase-out of the rural
facility adjustment for ESRD facilities
that transition from rural to urban status
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under the new CBSA delineations
would best accomplish the goals of
mitigating the loss of the rural facility
adjustment for existing CY 2024 rural
ESRD facilities. The purpose of the
gradual phase-out of the rural facility
adjustment for these ESRD facilities is to
mitigate payment reductions and
promote stability and predictability in
payments for existing rural ESRD
facilities that may need time to adjust to
the loss of their CY 2024 rural payment
adjustment or that experience a
reduction in payments solely because of
this re-designation. This policy would
be specifically for the 44 ESRD facilities
that are rural in CY 2024 that become
urban in CY 2025. We did not propose
a transition policy for urban ESRD
facilities that become rural in CY 2025
because these ESRD facilities will
receive the full rural facility adjustment
of 0.8 percent beginning January 1,
2025, so they would not experience the
same adverse effects as an ESRD facility
that unexpectedly loses the rural facility
payment adjustment. We noted that we
understand that compared to rural
payment adjustments in other Medicare
payment systems, the ESRD PPS rural
facility adjustment is not large in
magnitude (for example, the rural
adjustments for IPFs and IRFs are 17
percent and 14.9 percent, respectively),
but we stated that it is important for
ESRD facilities to be able to reasonably
predict what their payments from the
ESRD PPS would be in the next year.
We invited public comment on our
proposal for a rural transition policy.
One interested party commented on this
proposal. The following is a summary of
the public comment received on this
proposal and our response.
Comment: One commenter expressed
support for the rural transition policy
and stated that this policy would avoid
disruption of patient care.
Response: We thank the commenter
and agree that this policy would help to
stabilize payments for ESRD facilities in
CBSAs which are losing their rural
status for CY 2025.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the
comments on this proposal, we are
finalizing the rural transition phase-out
policy as proposed. For ESRD facilities
that were in CBSAs designated as rural
for CY 2024, but that would be
designated as urban for CY 2025, claims
for renal dialysis services provided to
all adult ESRD patients would receive 2/
3rds of the rural adjustment, or a 0.53
percent adjustment factor, for CY 2025
and 1/3rd of the rural adjustment, or a
0.27 percent adjustment factor, for CY
2026. Similarly, this transition would be
applied for the current rural facility
adjustment factor of 0.978 used for the
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MAP calculation to determine the
outlier payment made under § 413.237
for any eligible adult ESRD patient. This
0.978 adjustment factor represents a 2.2
percent reduction to the predicted MAP
amount, so we will apply 2/3rds of the
adjustment factor for CY 2025 and 1/3rd
of the adjustment factor for CY 2026.
For CY 2025 the rural transition
adjustment factor applied to the outlier
MAP calculation will be 0.9853 and for
CY 2026 the rural facility transition
adjustment factor applied to the outlier
MAP calculation will be 0.9927.
3. CY 2025 Update to the Outlier Policy
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a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act
requires that the ESRD PPS include a
payment adjustment for high-cost
outliers due to unusual variations in the
type or amount of medically necessary
care, including variability in the amount
of erythropoiesis stimulating agents
(ESAs) necessary for anemia
management. Some examples of the
patient conditions that may be reflective
of higher facility costs when furnishing
dialysis care are frailty and obesity. A
patient’s specific medical condition,
such as secondary hyperparathyroidism,
may result in higher per treatment costs.
The ESRD PPS recognizes that some
patients require high-cost care, and we
have codified the outlier policy and our
methodology for calculating outlier
payments at § 413.237.
Section 413.237(a)(1) enumerates the
following items and services that are
eligible for outlier payments as ESRD
outlier services: (i) Renal dialysis drugs
and biological products that were or
would have been, prior to January 1,
2011, separately billable under
Medicare Part B; (ii) Renal dialysis
laboratory tests that were or would have
been, prior to January 1, 2011,
separately billable under Medicare Part
B; (iii) Renal dialysis medical/surgical
supplies, including syringes, used to
administer renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were or would
have been, prior to January 1, 2011,
separately billable under Medicare Part
B; (iv) Renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were or would
have been, prior to January 1, 2011,
covered under Medicare Part D,
including renal dialysis oral-only drugs
effective January 1, 2025; and (v) Renal
dialysis equipment and supplies, except
for capital-related assets that are home
dialysis machines (as defined in
§ 413.236(a)(2)), that receive the
transitional add-on payment adjustment
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as specified in § 413.236 after the
payment period has ended.31
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49142), CMS stated that for
purposes of determining whether an
ESRD facility would be eligible for an
outlier payment, it would be necessary
for the ESRD facility to identify the
actual ESRD outlier services furnished
to the patient by line item (that is, date
of service) on the monthly claim. Renal
dialysis drugs, laboratory tests, and
medical/surgical supplies that are
recognized as ESRD outlier services
were specified in Transmittal 2134,
dated January 14, 2011.32 We use
administrative issuances and guidance
to continually update the renal dialysis
service items available for outlier
payment via our quarterly update CMS
Change Requests, when applicable. For
example, we use these issuances to
identify renal dialysis oral drugs that
were or would have been covered under
Part D prior to 2011 to provide unit
prices for determining the imputed
MAP amounts. In addition, we use these
issuances to update the list of ESRD
outlier services by adding or removing
items and services that we determined,
based our monitoring efforts, are either
incorrectly included or missing from the
list.
Under § 413.237, an ESRD facility is
eligible for an outlier payment if its
imputed (that is, calculated) MAP
amount per treatment for ESRD outlier
services exceeds a threshold. In past
years, the MAP amount has reflected the
average estimated expenditure per
treatment for services that were or
would have been considered separately
billable services prior to January 1,
2011. The threshold is equal to the
ESRD facility’s predicted MAP per
treatment plus the fixed dollar loss
(FDL) amount. As described in the
following paragraphs, the ESRD
facility’s predicted MAP amount is the
national adjusted average ESRD outlier
services MAP amount per treatment,
further adjusted for case-mix and
facility characteristics applicable to the
claim. We use the term ‘‘national
adjusted average’’ in this section of this
final rule to more clearly distinguish the
31 Under § 413.237(a)(1)(vi), as of January 1, 2012,
the laboratory tests that comprise the Automated
Multi-Channel Chemistry panel are excluded from
the definition of outlier services.
32 Transmittal 2033 issued August 20, 2010, was
rescinded and replaced by Transmittal 2094, dated
November 17, 2010. Transmittal 2094 identified
additional drugs and laboratory tests that may also
be eligible for ESRD outlier payment. Transmittal
2094 was rescinded and replaced by Transmittal
2134, dated January 14, 2011, which included one
technical correction. https://www.cms.gov/
Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/
downloads/R2134CP.pdf.
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calculation of the average ESRD outlier
services MAP amount per treatment
from the calculation of the predicted
MAP amount for a claim. The average
ESRD outlier services MAP amount per
treatment is based on utilization from
all ESRD facilities, whereas the
calculation of the predicted MAP
amount for a claim is based on the
individual ESRD facility and patient
characteristics of the monthly claim. In
accordance with § 413.237(c), ESRD
facilities are paid 80 percent of the per
treatment amount by which the imputed
MAP amount for outlier services (that is,
the actual incurred amount) exceeds
this threshold. ESRD facilities are
eligible to receive outlier payments for
treating both adult and pediatric
dialysis patients.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
and codified in § 413.220(b)(4), using
2007 data, we established the outlier
percentage—which is used to reduce the
per treatment ESRD PPS base rate to
account for the proportion of the
estimated total Medicare payments
under the ESRD PPS that are outlier
payments—at 1.0 percent of total
payments (75 FR 49142 through 49143).
We also established the FDL amounts
that are added to the predicted outlier
services MAP amounts. The outlier
services MAP amounts and FDL
amounts are different for adult and
pediatric patients due to differences in
the utilization of separately billable
services among adult and pediatric
patients (75 FR 49140). As we explained
in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75
FR 49138 through 49139), the predicted
outlier services MAP amounts for a
patient are determined by multiplying
the adjusted average outlier services
MAP amount by the product of the
patient-specific case-mix adjusters
applicable using the outlier services
payment multipliers developed from the
regression analysis used to compute the
payment adjustments.
Lastly, in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule, we finalized an update to the
outlier methodology to better target 1.0
percent of total Medicare payments (87
FR 67170 through 67177). We explained
that for several years, outlier payments
had consistently landed below the target
of 1.0 percent of total ESRD PPS
payments (87 FR 67169). Commenters
raised concerns that the methodology
we used to calculate the outlier payment
adjustment since CY 2011 results in
underpayment to ESRD facilities, as the
base rate has been reduced by 1.0
percent since the establishment of the
ESRD PPS to balance the outlier
payment (85 FR 71409, 71438 through
71439; 84 FR 60705 through 60706; 83
FR 56969). In response to these
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concerns, beginning with CY 2023, we
began calculating the adult FDL
amounts based on the historical trend in
FDL amounts that would have achieved
the 1.0 percent outlier target in the 3
most recent available data years. We
stated in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule that we would continue to calculate
the adult and pediatric MAP amounts
for CY 2023 and subsequent years
following our established methodology.
In that same CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule, we provided a detailed discussion
of the methodology we use to calculate
the MAP amounts and FDL amounts (87
FR 67167 through 67169).
For CY 2025, we proposed several
methodological and policy changes to
the ESRD PPS outlier policy to address
a number of concerns that interested
parties have raised in recent years. We
noted that although the 1.0 percent
outlier target was achieved in CY 2023,
it was not achieved in the majority of
the years since the establishment of the
ESRD PPS in 2011. We stated that we
expect each of these proposed changes
would support the ability of the ESRD
PPS to continue targeting outlier
payments at 1.0 percent in CY 2025 and
subsequent years. We discuss each of
these proposed changes in detail in the
following sections.
b. Expansion of ESRD Outlier Services
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(1) Background and Current Issues
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
we finalized a policy that only renal
dialysis services that were or would
have been separately billable prior to
the inception of the ESRD PPS would be
eligible for the outlier payment. In the
CY 2011 ESRD PPS proposed rule we
explained that we believed that any
unusual variation in the cost of the renal
dialysis services comprising the base
rate under the ESRD PPS would likely
to be due to variation in the items and
services that were, at that time,
separately billable under Part B or renal
dialysis service drugs and biological
products that were then covered under
Part D (74 FR 49988). We received some
comments at that time that requested
CMS consider alternative ways to
determine outlier eligibility, including
expanding eligibility to all renal dialysis
services. However, we noted that we did
not have adequate data at that time to
include all Composite Rate Services
(that is, renal dialysis services included
in the composite payment system
established under section 1881(b)(7) of
the Act and the basic case-mix adjusted
composite payment system established
under section 1881(b)(12) of the Act, as
defined in regulation at § 413.171) in the
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outlier calculation (74 FR 49989, 75 FR
49135).
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed
rule we issued a comment solicitation
on the potential expansion of outlier
payments to composite rate supplies,
drugs, and biological products (83 FR
34332). In this RFI, we detailed that
such a change could promote
appropriate payment for composite rate
drugs once the TDAPA period has
ended. Commenters’ responses to this
comment solicitation were mixed (83 FR
56969 through 56970). One commenter
expressed that such a change would
promote and incentivize the
development of innovative new
therapies and devices to treat the highly
vulnerable ESRD adult and pediatric
patient populations. Some commenters
responded specifically regarding the
TDAPA that extending availability of
outlier payments would be particularly
important when no additional money is
being added to the base rate for the
drug, as is the case with most drugs and
biological products receiving the
TDAPA. However, some commenters,
including MedPAC, did not agree that
such an expansion of the outlier eligible
services would improve care, generally
indicating that expanding the list of
ESRD outlier services would hamper the
outlier payment’s functionality. One
commenter stated that the purpose of
the outlier adjustment was to pay for
unusually costly patients, not new drugs
and biological products, which the
commenter noted the outlier payment
was unable to do adequately. MedPAC
commented that an outlier policy
should act as a stop-loss insurance for
medically necessary care, and outlier
payments are needed when the ESRD
PPS’ payment adjustments do not
capture all of the factors affecting
providers’ costs of delivering care. To
that end, MedPAC stated that to develop
an effective outlier policy, CMS must
first develop accurate patient-level and
facility-level payment adjustments.
MedPAC further cautioned that should
CMS expand the list of eligible ESRD
outlier services, we should be clear as
to what would qualify for the outlier
payment.
In subsequent years, we took steps to
expand the outlier policy to include
certain potentially costly renal dialysis
services that would have been included
in the composite rate prior to the ESRD
PPS. In the CY 2020 ESRD PPS final
rule we finalized that any new and
innovative renal dialysis equipment or
supply would be eligible for the outlier
adjustment after the end of the TPNIES
period, regardless of whether it would
have been separately billable prior to
2011 (84 FR 60697). In that rule, we
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explained that we believed allowing
these items to be outlier eligible after
the end of the TPNIES period would
allow for these new and innovative
supplies to be competitive with the
other equipment and supplies also
accounted for in the ESRD PPS base rate
by establishing a level playing field
where products could gain market share
by offering the best practicable
combination of price and quality (84 FR
60693). In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final
rule, we finalized that capital-related
assets that are home dialysis machines
will not become ESRD outlier services at
the end of the TPNIES payment period
(85 FR 71399). We explained that as
assets, capital-related home dialysis
machines are distinct from operating
expenses such as the disposable
supplies and leased equipment with no
conveyed ownership rights. Unlike
assets, these latter items are generally
accounted for on a per patient basis and
therefore, when used in excess of the
average, constitute outlier use, which
makes them eligible for outlier
payments (85 FR 71424).
The definition of ESRD outlier
services is codified at § 413.237(1)(a).
Currently, drugs and biological products
that were or would have been paid
under the composite rate are not
considered ESRD outlier services, and
costs for these drugs are not included in
the calculation for outlier payments on
ESRD PPS claims. Current regulations at
§ 413.171 define Composite Rate
Services as: ‘‘Items and services used in
the provision of outpatient maintenance
dialysis for the treatment of ESRD and
included in the composite payment
system established under section
1881(b)(7) and the basic case-mix
adjusted composite payment system
established under section 1881(b)(12) of
the Act.’’ Under our longstanding
policy, drugs and biological products
that are substitutes for composite rate
drugs and biological products are
considered to be included in the
composite rate portion of the ESRD PPS.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75
FR 49048), we cited existing guidance in
the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual,
Pub. 100–02, chapter 11, section 30.4.1,
which explicitly stated, ‘‘drugs used in
the dialysis procedure are covered
under the facility’s composite rate and
may not be billed separately. Drugs that
are used as a substitute for any of these
items, or are used to accomplish the
same effect, are also covered under the
composite rate.’’ This guidance remains
in effect and was subsequently redesignated to section 20.3.F of the same
chapter.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule
(88 FR 76391), we finalized a policy to
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pay, beginning for CY 2024, a postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment for
any new renal dialysis drug or
biological product that is considered
included in the ESRD PPS base rate that
has previously been paid for using the
TDAPA under § 413.234(c)(1). This
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment generally will be applied for
a period of 3 years following the end of
the TDAPA period for those products.
We finalized that the post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amount will be
calculated based on the most recent
available 12 months of claims data and
the latest available full calendar quarter
of average sales price (ASP) data (88 FR
76396). We explained that we divide the
total expenditure of the new renal
dialysis drug or biological product by
the total number of ESRD PPS
treatments furnished during the same
12-month period. In addition, we
finalized that we adjust the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount
paid on claims by the patient-level casemix adjustment factors; accordingly, we
apply a reduction factor to the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount to account for the application of
the patient-level case-mix adjustment
factors. We codified these policies by
revising § 413.234(c)(1)(i) and adding
regulations at § 413.234(b)(1)(iii),
(c)(1)(ii), (c)(3), and (g) that describe the
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment and the calculation we use
to determine the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount. In
addition, we amended § 413.230 by
adding reference to the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment in the
calculation of the ESRD PPS per
treatment payment amount.
In the same CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule, we summarized comments
regarding the outlier policy as it
pertains to the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment (88 FR 76396). One
commenter pointed out that the CY
2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule did not
indicate whether the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment would apply to products for
which a post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment is calculated. In response,
CMS stated that under current policy,
after the end of the TDAPA period, a
drug or biological product is considered
an eligible outlier service only if it
meets the requirements of
§ 413.237(a)(1). We clarified that any
renal dialysis drug or biological product
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
would be considered an eligible ESRD
outlier service only if it meets the
requirements of § 413.237(a)(1).
However, we further clarified that under
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current policy, Korsuva®, the only renal
dialysis drug with a TDAPA period
ending in CY 2024, would not be
considered an eligible ESRD outlier
service after the end of its TDAPA
period, because it is a substitute for
diphenhydramine hydrochloride, which
was included in the composite rate prior
to 2011, and therefore does not meet the
requirements of § 413.237(a)(1) (that is,
it would not have been, prior to January
1, 2011, separately billable under
Medicare Part B).
Most recently, we have heard
concerns from interested parties that
excluding drugs and biological products
that are substitutes for—or are used to
achieve the same effect as—composite
rate drugs and biological products from
the definition of ESRD outlier services
could limit the ability of the ESRD PPS
outlier adjustment to appropriately
recognize the drivers of cost for renal
dialysis services. We considered these
concerns, as well as the comments we
received in response to prior
rulemaking, to develop proposed
changes to the definition of ESRD
outlier services.
(2) Definition of ESRD Outlier Services
Effective for CY 2025, we proposed to
change the definition of ESRD outlier
services at § 413.237(a)(1) to include
drugs and biological products that were
or would have been included in the
composite rate prior to the
establishment of the ESRD PPS. We
noted that this proposal would expand
outlier eligibility to longstanding drugs
and biological products that were
historically included in the composite
rate, as well as newer drugs and
biological products that are currently
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment. As
discussed in section II.B.3.c of this final
rule, we proposed and are finalizing
technical changes to the calculation of
outlier payments that will appropriately
account for the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment for ESRD outlier
services that are drugs and biological
products.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we stated that we considered the
original intent behind the policy to limit
outlier payments to drugs that were or
would have been separately billable
prior to 2011, which was that these
drugs were likely the main drivers of the
variation in the costs of treatment (74
FR 49988). We explained that we
continue to believe an important aspect
of the outlier adjustment should be its
ability to target ESRD cases that are
unusually costly. We noted that if the
outlier adjustment methodology failed
to recognize the main drivers of
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89121
variation in the costs of ESRD treatment,
then it could result in cases that are not
unusually costly qualifying for the
outlier adjustment, which would mean
the impact of the outlier adjustment
would be diluted. We also noted that
many of the responses to the comment
solicitation in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
proposed rule expressed concerns that
expanding the scope of ESRD outlier
services would potentially dilute the
impact of the outlier adjustment. We
explained that for CY 2025 we
considered the potential impact of
expanding the definition of ESRD
outlier services to include additional
drugs and biological products not
currently included. We stated that we
agree with the commenters who noted
that the purpose of the outlier payment
is not to pay for new drugs and
biological products (83 FR 56969). We
further stated that in the CY 2011 ESRD
PPS final rule (75 FR 49134), CMS
established the current outlier policy,
including the 1.0 percent outlier target,
because it struck an appropriate balance
between our objective of paying an
adequate amount for the costliest, most
resource-intensive patients while
providing an appropriate level of
payment for those patients who do not
qualify for outlier payments. We noted
that under our current policy, new renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
that are paid for using the TDAPA are
not considered ESRD outlier services.
As we explained in the CY 2016 ESRD
PPS final rule (80 FR 69023), this is
because during the TDAPA period we
make a payment adjustment for the
specific drug in addition to the base
rate, whereas outlier services have been
incorporated into the base rate. In
contrast, we noted that the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment is paid on
all claims, and drugs that are included
in the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount are considered
included in the ESRD PPS base rate. We
explained that as a result, the amount
paid under the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment does not
correspond to the amount of a drug or
biological product used on a claim,
which would not be accounted for in
any existing payment adjustment other
than the outlier adjustment. For
example, we stated that our analysis
shows that patients using Korsuva®
have costs of approximately $150 per
treatment; however, because this drug is
not recognized as an ESRD outlier
service, these costs are not accounted
for in determining the payment amount
for the claim. Beginning April 1, 2024,
the CY 2024 post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment for Korsuva®
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increases the payment amount per
treatment by approximately $0.25,
which is adjusted by the patient-level
case-mix adjusters applicable to the
claim. In aggregate, the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment accounts
for 65 percent of the cost of furnishing
Korsuva®; however, this payment is
spread across all ESRD PPS treatments.
In the proposed rule, we explained
that we did not propose to expand
outlier eligibility to drugs and biological
products that are paid for using the
TDAPA during the TDAPA period, as
the TDAPA amount is based on the full
price (100 percent of ASP) for the
amount of such drugs that is utilized
and billed on the claim.
We further explained that we
considered only expanding the
definition of ESRD outlier services to
include drugs and biological products
that were previously paid for using the
TDAPA. We noted the suggestion of past
commenters that new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products are likely
to be drivers of cost, because these drugs
are typically more expensive. We
explained that we recognized the
importance of supporting access to new
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products under the ESRD PPS through
the establishment of the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment beginning
in CY 2024 (88 FR 76391). We further
noted that in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule we agreed with commenters
who expressed concerns that the ESRD
PPS’ current mechanisms may not fully
account for the costs of these new drugs
(88 FR 76388). We noted that several
commenters stated that the outlier
adjustment and the ESRDB market
basket updates cannot adequately
account for these costs, and several
organizations noted that if additional
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products with significant costs were
incorporated into the outlier payment
calculation, the threshold to qualify for
outlier payments would increase
dramatically, thus adversely affecting
access to products traditionally eligible
for the outlier payment adjustment. We
described comments which expressed
that this increase in the outlier
threshold may also raise health equity
concerns because, as we noted in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67170
through 67171), the outlier adjustment
protects access for beneficiaries whose
care is unusually costly. We recognized
that if the outlier threshold were to
increase significantly due to significant
use of a new renal dialysis drug or
biological product after the end of the
TDAPA period, then ESRD facilities
might be incentivized to avoid treating
costlier beneficiaries.
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We stated that we believe it would be
appropriate for the definition of ESRD
outlier services to include all drugs and
biological products that previously were
paid for using the TDAPA. We
explained that the inclusion of these
drugs and biological products would
help ensure appropriate payment when
a patient’s treatment is exceptionally
expensive due to an ESRD facility
furnishing such drugs or biological
products to the patient whose treatment
requires them. In the CY 2011 ESRD
PPS proposed rule, we explained that
significant variations in formerly
separately billable items and services
could impair access to appropriate care,
as an ESRD facility may have a
disincentive to provide adequate
treatment to those ESRD patients likely
to have significantly higher than average
costs (74 FR 49988). We stated in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule that we
believe ESRD facilities may face similar
disincentives for furnishing drugs and
biological products that previously
received payment under the TDAPA.
We further stated that we believe this
change would also align with the
statutory authority for the outlier
adjustment under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act by
protecting patients’ access to medically
necessary care through a payment
adjustment that more fully recognizes
unusual variations in the type or
amount of such care. Specifically, we
explained that we believe this change
would encourage ESRD facilities to take
on ESRD patients who would
potentially require expensive new drugs
and biological products, promoting
health equity for these patients who
require costlier care. Additionally, we
noted that the technical changes we
proposed, and which we are finalizing
in section II.B.3.c of this final rule,
would limit the impact of such drugs
and biological products on the outlier
threshold calculation, thereby enabling
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to
continue to protect access for
beneficiaries whose care is unusually
costly.
We stated that in light of the past
comments that we described in the
proposed rule, we further considered
whether expanding eligibility to all
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products that are Composite Rate
Services, as defined at § 413.171, would
be appropriate. We reiterated that the
purpose of the outlier adjustment is to
protect access for beneficiaries whose
care is unusually costly. We stated that
although we continue to expect that the
main drivers of cost would be drugs and
biological products that were previously
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separately billable under Part B or Part
D, or were previously paid for using the
TDAPA, we nevertheless recognize that
some patients could require higher
utilization of composite rate drugs and
biological products, which may result in
the overall cost of their renal dialysis
care being unusually high. For example,
as we noted in section II.B.3.e of the
proposed rule, our analysis identified
that certain composite rate drugs are
significant drivers of cost for pediatric
patients, and therefore the proposed
inclusion of those drugs as ESRD outlier
services would improve the ability of
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to
target payment for pediatric patients
whose care is exceptionally costly. We
stated that including composite rate
drugs and biological products in the
calculation of the outlier adjustment
could appropriately support care for
such ESRD patients, because payments
under the outlier adjustment would
better align with resource use.
We explained that we also considered
the comments from MedPAC in
response to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
proposed rule. Specifically, MedPAC
stated that to develop an effective
outlier policy, CMS must first develop
accurate patient-level and facility-level
payment adjustments. As we stated in
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule,
interested parties have encouraged CMS
to develop a patient cost model that is
based on a single patient-level cost
variable that accounts for all composite
rate and formerly separately billable
services (88 FR 76399). We noted that
we finalized the collection of time on
machine data, beginning for CY 2025,
which we stated would allow for a
higher proportion of composite rate
costs to be allocated to patients with
longer renal dialysis treatment times,
and ultimately inform CMS refinements
to existing patient-level adjusters,
including age and comorbidities (88 FR
76400). We stated that we believe
expanding the definition of ESRD
outlier services could further support
our understanding of the costs of
Composite Rate Services, because it
would encourage more comprehensive
reporting of renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were formerly
included in the composite rate for the
purposes of calculating outlier
payments. We further stated that this
increased reporting would in turn
support future revisions to patient-level
adjustment factors that consider more
complete information about costs at the
patient level.
We stated that we do not agree that
the proposed inclusion of composite
rate drugs and biological products
would dilute the impact of the outlier
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adjustment, as some commenters in
response to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
proposed rule suggested. Rather, we
explained that our analysis indicates the
inclusion of these drugs and biological
products would appropriately recognize
the situations when the provision of
these services is unusually costly,
which we estimate would increase the
amount of outlier payment per outliereligible claim, thereby more effectively
protecting access for beneficiaries
whose care is exceptionally costly. We
stated that if we made no changes to our
outlier methodology or the definition of
ESRD outlier services for CY 2025, the
average outlier payment for outliereligible cases among pediatric patients
would be $25.02, and the average outlier
payment for adult patients would be
$53.45. We noted that under the
proposed changes to outlier eligibility,
the average outlier payment for
pediatric and adult patients would
increase to $73.24 and $57.16,
respectively. Furthermore, we explained
that the inclusion of composite rate
drugs and biological products would
increase the pediatric MAP amount by
a large amount, reflecting the utilization
of certain high-cost composite rate
drugs. We explained that although the
proposed CY 2025 adult MAP amount
was lower than the final CY 2024 adult
MAP amount, the proposed adult MAP
amount for CY 2025 was approximately
$0.79 higher than it would have been
absent the proposed policy changes in
this rule, which we stated demonstrates
that the inclusion of composite rate
drugs and biological products would
result in a higher MAP amount for
adults.
In summary, we stated that the
inclusion of composite rate drugs and
biological products as ESRD outlier
services would include more costs in
the calculation of the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment for each case. We explained
that as a result, fewer claims would
qualify for outlier payments, but the
amount of outlier payment per claim
would be higher. Therefore, we stated
that rather than diluting the impact of
the outlier adjustment, these proposed
changes would increase the impact of
the outlier adjustment.
We proposed to amend the language
at 42 CFR 413.237 by adding a new
paragraph (a)(1)(vii), which would add
to the list of renal dialysis services
defined as ESRD outlier services the
following: ‘‘Renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that are Composite
Rate Services as defined in § 413.171.’’
We invited public comment on our
proposal to include renal dialysis drugs
and biological products that are
composite rate services in the definition
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of ESRD outlier services. Approximately
13 commenters commented on this
proposal. These commenters included
LDOs, drug manufacturers, a nonprofit
dialysis organization, a nonprofit kidney
care alliance, a professional
organization of nephrologists, a
coalition of dialysis organizations, and
MedPAC. The following is a summary of
the public comments received on this
proposal and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services. One
LDO stated its belief that new drugs
regardless of their status as a former
composite rate service should be eligible
for outlier payment. Similarly, a
professional organization of
nephrologists stated that if the proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services is
finalized, it would educate its members
about this change and the importance of
pediatric dialysis units appropriately
billing for use of alteplase and other
qualifying drugs to collect the outlier
payment when appropriate. This
commenter requested that CMS
highlight any specific requirements for
billing.
MedPAC likewise expressed support
for expanding ESRD outlier services to
include drugs and biological products
that were or would have been included
in the composite rate prior to the ESRD
PPS. MedPAC reiterated its position that
CMS should develop an outlier policy
that addresses variation in the total cost
of providing the entire ESRD PPS
payment bundle, thereby avoiding the
potential for misidentifying outliers (for
example, a patient with very high costs
for outlier-eligible services may have
offsetting, lower costs for outlierineligible services). MedPAC further
explained that considering the cost of
the full ESRD PPS payment bundle
would be more patient-centric and
would align the ESRD PPS outlier
policy with the policies that Medicare
uses for other PPSs. One commenter
expressed that CMS’s continued
reliance upon a distinction between
‘‘composite rate’’ and other products
continues to confound the goals of
moving the ESRD PPS toward a modern
standard of care.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in support of the proposed
change to the definition of ESRD outlier
services. We agree with commenters
that the proposed definition would
more broadly recognize ESRD PPS
patients whose care is costlier.
Regarding the commenter’s statement
that the distinction between renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
that were formerly separately billable
and those that were or would have been
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89123
historically paid under the composite
rate does not best serve the goals of the
ESRD PPS, we note that this distinction
derives from the statutory definition of
renal dialysis services in section
1881(b)(14)(B)(iii) of the Act. However,
we recognize that providing payment
under the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment
for former composite rate and noncomposite rate services would better
serve CMS’s goals, specifically CMS’s
longstanding efforts to develop a
comprehensive patient cost model for
the purposes of considering future
refinements to the ESRD PPS
adjustment factors.
In response to the request for specific
billing guidance, we direct readers to
the Medicare Claims Processing Manual
(CPM), Chapter 8. ESRD facilities are
instructed to report all renal dialysis
drugs and biological products on the
claim. Specific information about
revenue codes and other billing
requirements are found in section 50.2
of Chapter 8 of the CPM.
Comment: Several commenters,
including LDOs, drug manufacturers, a
nonprofit dialysis organization, a
coalition of dialysis organizations, and a
professional organization of
nephrologists expressed that the
proposed change to the definition of
ESRD outlier services does not address
what commenters stated is an
underlying lack of payment adequacy
for new drugs that are renal dialysis
services. One LDO acknowledged that
access to outlier funds is a small step in
the right direction but stated that CMS
policy for incorporating such drugs into
the PPS is insufficient to adequately
compensate dialysis providers. This
commenter further stated that new
drugs that represent a substantial
clinical improvement should be
incorporated into the bundled payment
with new money regardless of their
placement in a functional category. As
an example of how the commenter
believes the current policy is flawed,
this commenter noted that lack of
adequate payment has artificially
depressed access to Korsuva® treatment
and that nephrologists are reluctant to
prescribe a therapy that does not have
adequate long-term funding. Several
commenters stated that approximately
16 percent of the ESRD patient
population has severe pruritus for
which Korsuva® is indicated. These
commenters noted that if all of these
patients were to receive Korsuva®, the
total outlier payment for that one drug
would be $350 million for CY 2025,
more than three times the current
outlier pool. Another commenter stated
that changes still need to be made to fix
the base rate and support innovation in
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new drugs, biological products, and
devices for pediatric kidney patients.
Several commenters stated that CMS
should not finalize the proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services but
should instead advance funding
mechanisms that would appropriately
safeguard patient access to new drugs
and biological products after the twoyear TDAPA period expires.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns regarding
payment for new renal dialysis drugs
and biological products under the ESRD
PPS. As the commenters pointed out,
and as we have previously stated, the
purpose of the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment is not to pay for new drugs
and biological products. Rather, the
purpose of the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment is to protect access to care
for beneficiaries whose care is
exceptionally costly. In the proposed
rule, we stated that including new renal
dialysis drugs that previously received
payment using the TDAPA would help
ensure appropriate payment when a
patient’s treatment is exceptionally
expensive due to an ESRD facility
furnishing such drugs or biological
products to the patient whose treatment
requires them.
We disagree with commenters who
stated that lack of adequate payment has
artificially depressed access to Korsuva®
treatment and that nephrologists are
reluctant to prescribe a therapy that the
commenters stated does not have
adequate long-term funding.
Nephrologists and ESRD patients make
decisions about which drugs and
biological products best serve the
patients’ needs, and these decisions
depend on a number of factors
including but not limited to
considerations about the efficacy for the
individual patient, side effects and
interactions with other drugs and
biological products the patient may be
taking, and considerations related to
affordability for the patient. As we
explained in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
final rule, the purpose of providing the
TDAPA for drugs that fall into an
existing functional category is to help
ESRD facilities to incorporate new drugs
and make appropriate changes in their
businesses to adopt such drugs; provide
additional payment for such associated
costs, as well as promote competition
among drugs and biological products
within the ESRD PPS functional
categories (83 FR 56935). A new renal
dialysis drug or biological product must
demonstrate to patients and
nephrologists that it presents value
relative to existing treatment options,
and the TDAPA further allows new
products to become competitive by
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providing payment at 100 percent of
ASP for the new drug or biological
product. We expect that nephrologists
and patients would consider all relevant
factors and all available treatment
options, and make the most appropriate
decision for each patient. We do not
believe we can infer that utilization of
Korsuva® was depressed due to lack of
adequate payment during the TDAPA
period, because payment under the
TDAPA for Korsuva® was based on 100
percent of ASP. Furthermore, in the CY
2024 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized
a policy to pay a post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment for a period of 3
years following the payment of TDAPA.
We stated that one goal of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment is
to support continued access to new
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products and to support ESRD facilities’
long-term planning and budgeting for
such drugs after the TDAPA period (88
FR 76393). Therefore, we believe that
ESRD PPS policy provides appropriate
and adequate payment in the short term
during the 2-year TDAPA period, in the
medium term during the 3 years of
payment under the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment following the
payment of TDAPA, and during the long
term when such new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products are paid
for under the ESRD PPS base rate with
no adjustment and are expected to
compete with other drugs and biological
products in the ESRD PPS.
We also cannot assume that
utilization of Korsuva® should be higher
than it was during the TDAPA period or
that it would increase in response to the
proposed outlier policy changes. We
note that utilization of Korsuva® during
the TDAPA period was significantly
lower than the 16 percent figure cited by
the commenters. We anticipate that the
utilization of Korsuva® in CY 2025
would align with the levels of
utilization observed during the TDAPA
period, as these levels best reflect the
actual prescribing patterns of
nephrologists for that drug.
Nevertheless, if utilization for Korsuva®
were to increase significantly in CY
2025, then under our longstanding
outlier methodology we would take
such changes in utilization into
consideration when establishing the
FDL and MAP amounts prospectively in
future years. As we have stated, we
establish the outlier FDL and MAP
amounts each year at a level that our
analysis indicates would effectively
protect access for the costliest
beneficiaries while maintaining an
appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for all
other beneficiaries.
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Lastly, we do not believe that the
current definition of ESRD outlier
services better supports payment for
new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products than the proposed definition,
because it excludes new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products that are
substitutes for drugs and biological
products that were included in the
composite rate. That is, the current
definition of ESRD outlier services
excludes certain new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products that may
be significant drivers of cost, and
therefore we do not believe it would be
more appropriate to maintain the
existing definition of ESRD outlier
services. We believe our proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services
would be more appropriate, because it
would recognize all renal dialysis drugs
and biological products that are
significant drivers of cost for ESRD
patients. Therefore, as discussed later in
this final rule, we are finalizing our
proposed revision to the definition of
ESRD outlier services. We refer readers
to section II.B.4 of this CY 2025 ESRD
PPS final rule for a discussion about
payment for innovation and the ESRD
PPS base rate.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated its
prior concerns from the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS proposed rule about how CMS
estimates the ESRD PPS’s case-mix
adjustments, including patient-level
adjustments, and the accuracy of the
adjustments’ coefficients. MedPAC
stated that these coefficients are used to
calculate the Medicare allowable
payment amount, which when
combined with the fixed dollar loss
amount, determines which treatments
will receive an outlier payment.
Therefore, MedPAC stated that to ensure
the ability of the outlier policy to
account for beneficiaries with high
costs, the agency must improve the
accuracy of the ESRD PPS’s patient- and
facility-level payment adjustments.
Response: We agree with MedPAC’s
assessment of the importance of
accurate ESRD PPS case-mix
adjustments for the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment. As we noted in the
proposed rule, we believe expanding the
definition of ESRD outlier services
could further support our understanding
of the costs of Composite Rate Services,
because it would encourage more
comprehensive reporting of renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
that were formerly included in the
composite rate for the purposes of
calculating outlier payments. In
addition, we anticipate that this
increased reporting would support
future revisions to patient-level
adjustment factors that consider more
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complete information about the cost of
furnishing renal dialysis services to a
patient.
Comment: One commenter stated that
a smaller outlier percentage on the order
of 0.5 percent would be preferable to
maintaining the existing 1.0 percent
outlier percentage. This commenter
encouraged CMS to consider exercising
its discretion to set a lower outlier
percentage.
Response: While we agree that section
1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act provides
the Secretary with discretion to set an
appropriate outlier percentage under the
ESRD PPS, we note that we continue to
believe the 1.0 percent target is more
appropriate than a lower outlier
percentage. As discussed in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49134), we
established the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage because it struck an
appropriate balance between our
objective of paying an adequate amount
for the costliest, most resource-intensive
patients while providing an appropriate
level of payment for those patients who
do not qualify for outlier payments. We
continue to believe the 1.0 percent
target strikes the appropriate balance,
and as we further noted in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67171), a
reduced outlier percentage may not
provide the appropriate level of
payment for outlier cases and may not
protect access for beneficiaries whose
care is unusually costly. This is because
if we were to decrease the target outlier
percentage, we would need to
significantly increase the FDL amounts,
which would make it more difficult for
ESRD facilities to receive outlier
payment based on their claims. We did
not propose to reduce the outlier
percentage for CY 2025, and we are not
finalizing any such reduction in this
rule.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern about the burden of
reporting renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were or would
have been paid under the composite rate
before the establishment of the ESRD
PPS, and about the reliability of such
reported data. One commenter stated
that these drugs would not make any
difference in a facility getting an outlier
payment because of the relatively
inexpensive cost of such drugs
compared to new high-cost drugs on the
market now or in the future. Other
commenters acknowledged that the
reporting of information on composite
rate drugs is not as comprehensive as
other data elements but stated that this
is because ESRD facilities have never
been required to report information
about composite rate drugs and
biological products because such
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information does not serve any ESRD
PPS-related purpose. Several
commenters stated that the observed
disparity in alteplase utilization
described in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule is a difference in
reporting and not a meaningful clinical
or operational difference. An LDO and
a coalition of dialysis organizations
expressed concerns about CMS’s ability
to calculate MAP and FDL amounts for
CY 2025 given the lack of complete
information about utilization of
composite rate drugs and biological
products.
Response: We appreciate the concerns
that commenters raised about the
completeness of data on the utilization
of composite rate drugs and the
perceived burden associated with
reporting these drugs on ESRD PPS
claims. We disagree with the
commenters who stated that composite
rate drugs and biological products
would not make any difference in a
facility receiving payment under the
outlier adjustment. As we explained in
the proposed rule, we found that certain
composite rate drugs such as alteplase
were significant drivers of cost for
pediatric patients. Although we
acknowledge that some composite rate
drugs and biological products are
relatively low-cost, our analysis has
found that this is not generally true of
all composite rate drugs. We believe it
would be most appropriate to make
payment under the outlier adjustment
for any renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that do cause a
patient’s ESRD treatment to be
exceptionally costly.
We further disagree with the
commenters who stated that the
proposed definition of ESRD outlier
services would expand reporting burden
for ESRD facilities. Section 60.2 of
Chapter 8 of the CPM states that
effective January 1, 2011, section 153b
of the MIPPA requires that all drugs and
biologicals used in the treatment of
ESRD are included in the ESRD PPS
payment amount and must be billed by
the ESRD facility. Although we
acknowledge that many ESRD facilities
have not historically included
composite rate drugs and biological
products on ESRD PPS claims, we
remind readers that ESRD facilities have
long been encouraged to report all renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
on ESRD PPS claims, including
composite rate drugs. In the CY 2016
ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69033), we
clarified that ESRD facilities should
begin reporting on their monthly claims
those composite rate drugs that are on
the consolidated billing list. Therefore,
the proposal to change the definition of
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ESRD outlier services would not change
the requirements for ESRD facilities to
report composite rate drugs on ESRD
PPS claims. In fact, we observe in our
analysis of ESRD PPS claims data that
hospital-based ESRD facilities are
already more consistently reporting
composite rate items and services,
which in part explains the outsized
impact of composite rate drugs and
biological products on the FDL and
MAP amounts for pediatric patients,
who more frequently receive renal
dialysis services from hospital-based
ESRD facilities. In addition to reporting
differences, we believe the differential
rates of alteplase utilization between
pediatric patients and adult patients
could be related to higher rates of
catheter use among pediatric patients.
Lastly, we do not agree with the
concerns that commenters articulated
about CMS’s ability to calculate MAP
and FDL amounts for CY 2025 given the
lack of complete information about
utilization of composite rate drugs and
biological products. Our longstanding
methodology for prospectively setting
the MAP and FDL amounts uses the best
available year of ESRD PPS claims,
which is generally the most recent
available year, to simulate claims for the
upcoming CY. Additionally, we use the
three most recent years to calculate the
FDL amount which would have
achieved the 1 percent outlier target. In
any given year, changes in utilization of
ESRD outlier services from the historical
claims data to the upcoming CY can
result in over- or under-estimates of the
outlier percentage. CMS relies on the
information reported by ESRD facilities
for accurate modeling of ESRD PPS
outlier payments. To the extent that the
proposed change to the definition of
ESRD outlier services further
encourages ESRD facilities to report
when composite rate drugs and
biological products are used, we believe
this would result in future claims data
that is more complete and better fit for
not only estimating future outlier
payments, but also for analyzing
comprehensive patient-level cost
information to potentially inform future
revisions to ESRD PPS adjustment
factors.
Comment: Several commenters,
including LDOs, drug manufacturers, a
nonprofit dialysis organization, and a
coalition of dialysis organizations,
expressed concern that the proposed
change to the definition of ESRD outlier
services could result in outlier
payments that exceed the 1.0 percent
outlier percentage. Some commenters
stated that since the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage was achieved in CY 2023,
CMS should use caution before making
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further changes to the outlier policy.
One commenter suggested that CMS
might be required to reduce the ESRD
PPS base rate if the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage is exceeded in future years.
Response: We are reiterating that our
longstanding methodology establishes
FDL and MAP amounts prospectively.
That is, we establish the outlier FDL and
MAP amounts each year at a level that
our analysis indicates will effectively
protect access for the costliest
beneficiaries while maintaining an
appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for all
other beneficiaries. If our analysis
indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier
payments that are below 1.0 percent, we
would reduce the FDL and MAP
amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. Alternatively, if our analysis
indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier
payments that are above 1.0 percent, we
would increase the FDL and MAP
amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. In this methodology, we do not
make modifications to the base rate in
response to either exceeding or falling
short of the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage target.
Final Rule Action: After consideration
of the comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to amend the language at 42
CFR 413.237 by adding a new paragraph
(a)(1)(vii), which adds the following to
the list of renal dialysis services defined
as ESRD outlier services: ‘‘Renal dialysis
drugs and biological products that are
Composite Rate Services as defined in
§ 413.171.’’ The final CY 2025 FDL and
MAP amounts are discussed in section
II.B.3.e of this final rule.
c. Changes to Predicted MAP
Calculation for Outlier Eligibility
As we discussed in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67169), a claim is
eligible for outlier payment when its
imputed MAP amount exceeds the sum
of the predicted MAP amount and the
fixed dollar loss threshold. The
predicted MAP amount for a claim is
based on the national average MAP
amount, adjusted by the case-mix
adjustment factors that apply for that
claim’s patient-level and facility-level
characteristics. As a result, when a
claim’s adjustment factors increase the
payment amount per treatment, the
claim’s predicted MAP is also increased.
This is because we expect that more
complex patients would require a higher
amount of spending for outlier services.
However, this higher expected cost is
recognized through a higher per
treatment payment amount. In other
words, a more complex patient must
have even higher costs than are already
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accounted for in the adjustment factors
compared to a less complex patient to
be considered unusually costly. By
increasing the predicted MAP based on
the case-mix adjustment factors, the
ESRD PPS outlier policy ensures that
only cases that are unusually costly are
considered for outlier payment.
As previously discussed in this final
rule, we finalized a post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment in the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule. The post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment for certain
new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products is generally applied for 3 years
after the end of the TDAPA period (88
FR 76388 through 76397). The amount
of this post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment that is applied to an ESRD
PPS claim is adjusted by any applicable
patient-level case-mix adjustments
under § 413.235, and this adjusted
amount is added to the payment amount
for each ESRD PPS treatment billed. We
explained in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule that during this 3-year postTDAPA add-on payment period, a drug
or biological product would be eligible
for the outlier add-on payment if it met
all of the other criteria for the outlier
payment (88 FR 76396). The only drug
or biological product which was set to
end its TDAPA period in CY 2024 (and
therefore would receive the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
that year) was Korsuva®, which is a
substitute for a composite rate drug and,
therefore, not outlier eligible under
existing § 413.237(a)(1) (88 FR 76396).
Accordingly, we did not propose any
changes to the ESRD PPS outlier
methodology to account for the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment in
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule as
that would not have affected payments
for CY 2024.
As discussed in section II.B.3.b of this
final rule, we are finalizing our proposal
to expand outlier eligibility to include
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products that are Composite Rate
Services as defined in § 413.171. This
means that new drugs and biological
products that are included in the
calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount will
become outlier eligible after the end of
the TDAPA period, regardless of
whether they are substitutes for
composite rate drugs or biological
products.
Accordingly, in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule, we also proposed
changes to the ESRD PPS outlier
methodology to account for any future
drugs and biological products which are
outlier eligible during the post-TDAPA
period. We proposed to add the casemix adjusted post-TDAPA add-on
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payment adjustment amount to the
predicted MAP for a patient. We stated
that this is appropriate because the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount represents average utilization of
a drug or biological product, and is
added to the payment amount, adjusted
by the case-mix adjusters for the patient.
We stated that this proposal would
prevent duplicate payment for these
drugs and biological products by
accounting for the portion of the cost for
these drugs or biological products
which is included in the ESRD PPS
bundled payment. We noted that this
change would not affect the calculation
of the imputed MAP for a claim,
because a claim’s imputed MAP would
include the actual utilization of the drug
or biological product that is included in
the calculation of the post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment, if that drug or
biological product is billed on the claim.
We explained that we considered
modifying the average MAP amount to
account for outlier eligible drugs and
biological products that are already
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount, rather than proposing to
modify the predicted MAP amount for
each claim. However, we noted two
main limitations with taking such an
approach. First, the average MAP is set
annually for an entire year and does not
change from quarter to quarter; in
contrast, the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount can change
from quarter to quarter depending on
when a drug or biological product’s
TDAPA period ends, and depending on
the number of drugs and biological
products included in the calculation.
Second, our longstanding methodology
for calculating the predicted MAP for
outlier payments applies the outlier
services multipliers to the average MAP.
However, when we calculate the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for a claim, we apply the ESRD
PPS case-mix adjusters, which are
different from the outlier services
multipliers. We stated that we believe it
would be most appropriate to continue
to apply the ESRD PPS case-mix
adjusters to the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for the
purposes of outlier calculation, so that
the estimate of a claim’s expected
spending would align with the
calculation used for the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment. For these
reasons, we stated that we believe that
it is more appropriate and more
operationally feasible to apply the casemix adjusted post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount to the
predicted MAP for claims during the
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quarters in which the drug or biological
product is receiving the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment, rather than
publishing different average MAPs for
different quarters of a single year.
For CY 2025, we explained that the
impact of this technical modification
would be a small increase to the
pediatric and adult FDL amounts, due to
the small post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount calculated for each
quarter of CY 2025, which is discussed
in section II.B.6 of this final rule. We
noted that without this proposed
methodological change, the pediatric
FDL amount would increase by $0.68.
Likewise, we noted that the adult FDL
amount would increase by $0.89. We
stated that this proposed
methodological change would avoid
those increases, resulting in the
proposed CY 2025 adult and pediatric
MAP and FDL amounts shown in Table
7 of the proposed rule. We noted that
although the effect would be small for
CY 2025, the increase would be larger
in potential future situations when
utilization of a drug or biological
product during the post-TDAPA period
could be higher.
We invited public comment on our
proposal to apply the case-mix adjusted
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount to the predicted
MAP for claims during the quarters in
which the drug or biological product is
receiving the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment. Two commenters
commented on this proposal. The
following is a summary of the public
comments received on these proposals
and our responses.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated its
concerns about how CMS estimates the
ESRD PPS case-mix adjustments and
recommended that CMS must improve
the accuracy of the patient- and facilitylevel adjustments.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendation, and as discussed
earlier in this final rule, we believe that
the proposed change to the definition of
ESRD outlier services, combined with
the collection of time on machine data
beginning January 1, 2025, will
contribute to CMS’s ability to develop a
patient cost model for the purposes of
considering future refinements to the
patient- and facility-level adjustments.
We believe the application of the casemix adjusted post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment to the predicted
MAP is the most technically appropriate
methodology for calculating the
predicted MAP in CY 2025 and future
years. We would incorporate any
relevant revisions to the patient-level
case-mix adjustments into this
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calculation in future years, as
appropriate.
Comment: One commenter stated that
CMS should not include TDAPA or
TPNIES values in outlier calculation for
any future drugs or equipment and
supplies that may be eligible for these
adjustments as they are clearly not
eligible for outlier services during the
TDAPA or TPNIES period.
Response: We agree that under our
longstanding policy, which CMS
established in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule (80 FR 69023), it would not be
appropriate to include the payment
amount for a new drug or biological
product in the outlier calculation during
the TDAPA period. Accordingly, we
have excluded drugs that are receiving
the TDAPA from the outlier calculation,
and our calculations of the FDL and
MAP amounts do not include TDAPA
utilization as outlier-eligible utilization
for drugs and biological products that
will be paid under the TDAPA in the
upcoming CY. However, we note that
under § 413.220(b)(4), we established
the outlier percentage is 1.0 percent of
total payments (75 FR 49142 through
49143). By definition, total ESRD PPS
expenditures for the non-outlier
components include the base rate,
TDAPA, TPNIES, post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment, and other
applicable adjustments. Additionally,
since the TPNIES and TDAPA are
components of the non-outlier portion
of the total ESRD PPS spending, to
remove them would shrink the base for
which the total outlier target payment
amount is calculated, and therefore
increase the FDL and outlier threshold.
In addition, as we finalized in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we rely on
historical TDAPA and TPNIES spending
amounts to calculate the ‘‘alternative’’
retrospective FDL calculations for ESRD
outlier services, which allows our
projection of the FDL to appropriately
account for increased utilization of
ESRD outlier services in years when a
new renal dialysis drug or biological
product becomes an ESRD outlier
service after the end if its TDAPA
period (87 FR 67172 through 67175).
We are clarifying that we did not
propose to include TDAPA or TPNIES
values in the outlier calculation for CY
2025. Rather, the proposed
incorporation of the post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment to the predicted
MAP would apply only for ESRD outlier
services if the TDAPA period for such
drugs or biological products has already
ended, as they are excluded from the
outlier calculation during the TDAPA
period based on our longstanding
policy, as discussed in the prior
paragraph.
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89127
Final Rule Action: After consideration
of the comments received, we are
finalizing our proposal to apply the
case-mix adjusted post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount to the
predicted MAP for claims during the
quarters in which the drug or biological
product is receiving the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment.
d. Technical Modifications to the
Inflation Factors Used for the Outlier
Calculations
(1) Background
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
we finalized our ESRD PPS outlier
methodology, which included our
methodology for updating data from
past years to the CY for which CMS is
establishing payment rates (75 FR
49134). In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule, we finalized an update to the
outlier methodology to better target 1.0
percent of total Medicare payments (87
FR 67170 through 67177) by
prospectively calculating the adult FDL
amounts based on the historical trend in
FDL amounts that would have achieved
the 1.0 percent outlier target in the 3
most recent available data years. In that
final rule we also clarified our
longstanding methodology for updating
data from prior years for the purposes of
the outlier calculations (87 FR 67167).
For drugs and biological products, we
use a blended 4-quarter moving average
of the ESRDB market basket price
proxies for pharmaceuticals to inflate
drug prices to the CY for which CMS is
establishing payment rates. For
laboratory tests, we inflate prices to the
CY for which CMS is establishing
payment rates using a CPI forecast to
estimate changes for years in which a
new data reporting period will take
place for the purpose of setting Clinical
Laboratory Fee Schedule (CLFS) rates.33
For supplies, we apply a 0 percent
inflation factor, because these prices are
based on predetermined fees or prices
established by the Medicare contractor.
In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule
(87 FR 67173), we noted that MedPAC
supported the proposed revisions to the
FDL methodology, but also urged CMS
to refine its approach for applying the
pricing data that the agency uses to
project future spending for outlier
services, particularly for drugs.
Specifically, MedPAC suggested CMS
use a drug price inflation factor based
on ASP values and noted that the ASP
data that CMS uses to determine
33 Since 2018, there has been no updated
reporting for most clinical diagnostic laboratory
tests; therefore, the forecast estimate used since CY
2018 for the ESRD PPS outlier methodology has
been 0.
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facilities’ actual outlier payments might
be a more accurate data source on drug
prices than the ESRDB market basket
pharmaceutical price proxies that are
currently used.
For CY 2025, we stated that we have
undertaken analysis of prices for ESRD
outlier services and proposed several
technical changes to the inflation
factors, which are discussed in the
following sections.
(2) Changes to the Inflation Factor for
Outlier Eligible Drugs and Biological
Products
As described earlier, we use a blended
4-quarter moving average of the ESRDB
market basket price proxy for
Pharmaceuticals to inflate drug prices to
the upcoming CY for the purpose of
estimating spending for outlier drugs
and biological products in that CY. In
the proposed rule, we explained that
historically, this 4-quarter moving
average is a positive factor, meaning that
our longstanding methodology for
modeling outlier spending amounts
assumes that prices for ESRD outlier
drugs and biological product will
increase. For example, we noted that the
projection of the CY 2025 price growth
for ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products, based on the ESRDB market
basket price proxy for Pharmaceuticals
for the CY 2025, was 1.9 percent, based
on the IGI 1st quarter 2024 forecast with
historical data through the 4th quarter of
2023.
We explained that to compare the
actual changes in prices for ESRD
outlier drugs and biological products
against the assumed rate of change
derived from the ESRDB market basket
price proxies, we constructed an index
of prices for ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products. As we discussed in
section II.B.3.b of the proposed rule, we
proposed to expand the definition of
ESRD outlier services to include renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
that were or would have been included
in the composite rate prior to the
establishment of the ESRD PPS.
Accordingly, our constructed drug price
index included these drugs and
biological products as well as drugs and
biological products that have
historically been included in the
definition of ESRD outlier services.
We stated that because the list of
ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products changes over time, we
proposed to derive a chained Laspeyres
price index of the drugs and biological
products included in the definition of
the ESRD outlier services. We explained
that a chained Laspeyres price index
does not require a fixed basket of drugs
and biological products during the
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observation window. We explained that
we constructed and then trended
forward the year-over-year change in
price index levels for this outlier drug
index to calculate a projected inflation
factor for ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products for CY 2025, using
the following steps:
Step 1: We obtained the annual list of
ESRD outlier service drugs and
biological products that appear in ESRD
PPS claims during the CYs 2017 through
2023. These include both composite rate
and formerly separately billable drugs
and biological products.
Step 2: We obtained quarterly ASP for
each drug and biological product during
the same period 2017 through 2023,
substituting annual ASP when quarterly
information was not available.
Step 3: We obtained quarterly
utilization data for each drug and
biological product for the period 2017
through 2023.
Step 4: For each quarter, we
established the base period as the prior
quarter and held utilization fixed at the
base period. We then constructed a
Laspeyres price index based on all drugs
and biological products that had price
information in that quarter and the prior
quarter.
Step 5: We chained together the
quarterly indices starting from the 1st
quarter 2017 through the 4th quarter
2023 to express price changes in the 4th
quarter 2017 relative to the 1st quarter
2017. This step was repeated for all
prior quarters, keeping the starting
period fixed at the 1st quarter 2017.
Step 6: We calculated the percentage
change between the current and prior
4th quarter chained price index for each
year for CY 2021, 2022, and 2023, which
we used as the annual drug price
inflation factor for each year.
Step 7: Using the chained price
indexes for the three most recent CYs
(2021, 2022, and 2023), we used a linear
regression to project forward these three
historical inflation factors to determine
the CY 2025 inflation factor.
Using this methodology, we
calculated a projected inflation factor of
-0.7 percent, meaning that prices for
ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products were projected to be 0.7
percent lower in CY 2025 relative to the
prices of the ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products in than in CY 2024.
We noted that our analysis of year-over
year changes in prices for ESRD outlier
drugs and biological products shows a
consistent, downward trend in prices,
which stands in contrast to the positive
inflation factors we have historically
used to model outlier payments. As a
result, we stated that our modeling of
outlier spending in prior years has
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assumed that outlier prices will
increase, when the ASP data shows that,
overall, the prices have decreased.
Based on the results of our analysis,
we stated that we believe applying an
inflation factor based on the actual
change in prices for ESRD outlier drugs
and biological products would enable
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to
better target 1.0 percent of outlier
payments in CY 2025, because such an
inflation factor would better reflect the
observed historical trend in spending
and utilization for such drugs and
biological products. We noted that
although we have historically used the
ESRDB market basket price proxy for
Pharmaceuticals as the basis of our
inflation assumptions for outlier
modeling, and we believe that market
basket price proxies would continue to
be a reasonable and technically
appropriate source for such
assumptions, the market basket price
proxies serve a distinctly different
purpose than the inflation factors used
in the outlier modeling. As we
explained in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule (87 FR 67147), we select the
most appropriate wage and price
proxies currently available to represent
the rate of price change for each cost
category in the ESRDB market basket. In
contrast, we explained that the purpose
of the inflation factors used in our
outlier modeling is to represent the
expected rate of change in price and
utilization, so that we can prospectively
set accurate FDL and MAP amounts that
will result in outlier payments that
equal 1.0 percent of total ESRD PPS
payments. We stated that decreasing our
estimates of future outlier spending, as
we proposed to do, would result in
lower FDL and MAP amounts, thereby
increasing the number of claims that
could be eligible for the outlier payment
adjustment and the amount of outlier
payments that would be paid on each
claim. We stated that revising our
assumptions about future spending for
ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products would improve the ability of
the ESRD outlier adjustment to pay for
the costliest ESRD PPS claims.
Therefore, we proposed to use the
projected inflation factor for ESRD
outlier services that are drugs and
biological products derived from the
historical trend in prices and utilization
for ESRD outlier drugs, as described in
the previous paragraph.
(3) Changes to the Inflation Factors for
Outlier Eligible Laboratory Tests and
Supplies
In the proposed rule, we explained
that CMS uses different methodologies
for the inflation factors for laboratory
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tests and supplies. We explained that
we inflate laboratory test prices to the
upcoming CY using a CPI forecast to
estimate changes for years in which a
new data reporting period will take
place for the purpose of setting CLFS
rates; however, the forecast estimate
used since CY 2018 for the ESRD PPS
outlier methodology has been 0, because
there has been no updated reporting for
most clinical diagnostic laboratory tests
since the CY 2018 CLFS. We further
explained that for supplies, we apply a
0 percent inflation factor, because these
prices are based on predetermined fees
or prices established by the Medicare
contractor. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we explained that we
chose to use these factors so that the
MAP would be based on pricing
mechanisms currently in place for these
services (74 FR 49991).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we noted that the ESRDB market
basket uses price proxies for goods and
services included in furnishing renal
dialysis services to determine the
ESRDB market basket update. For
example, we stated that the market
basket price proxy for laboratory
services is the PPI Industry for Medical
and Diagnostic Laboratories (BLS series
code #PCU621511621511) representing
the change in the price of laboratory
services conducted by medical and
diagnostic laboratories reported on the
ESRD facility cost reports. Similarly, we
stated that the market basket price proxy
for supplies is the PPI Commodity for
Surgical and Medical Instruments (BLS
series code #WPU1562) representing the
change in the price of medical supplies
reported on the ESRD facility cost
reports.
We stated that we considered whether
these longstanding assumptions about
price changes for laboratory tests and
supplies would be appropriate for
modeling changes in spending for
outlier-eligible laboratory tests and
supplies. Unlike with drugs and
biological products, we explained that
we do not have detailed historical
pricing data for ESRD outlier laboratory
tests and supplies to permit us to
perform a similar analysis for these
services as we did for drugs and
biological products. However, we stated
that we can compare the historical
inflation factors we have used to the
growth in the market basket price
proxies for these categories of renal
dialysis services. For supplies, we noted
that we would typically assume a 0
percent update; however, we noted that
the average 10-year historical growth in
the PPI Commodity for Surgical and
Medical Instruments is 0.9 percent.
Likewise, we stated that in years when
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there is a CLFS data reporting period,
we would typically use an inflation
factor for laboratory tests based on a CPI
projection, reduced by the productivity
adjustment, through June of the year
prior to the update year; however, we
noted that the average 10-year historical
annual growth for the PPI Industry for
Medical and Diagnostic Laboratories
was ¥0.4 percent.
Beginning for CY 2025, we proposed
to use the ESRDB market basket price
proxies for laboratory tests and supplies
for the purpose of calculating the
growth in estimated spending for these
outlier services in the upcoming CY. We
stated that these would replace the
current inflation factors which are used
for laboratory tests and supplies.
Compared to the current inflation
factors we use, we stated that we
anticipate the market basket price
proxies for laboratory tests and supplies
would more appropriately reflect the
change in prices of the laboratory tests
and supply costs that are used by ESRD
facilities. We stated that we believe
using the market basket price proxies
would better allow the ESRD PPS to
estimate the changes in the prices of
laboratory tests and supplies, which
would improve the ability for CMS to
target outlier payments at 1.0 percent of
total ESRD PPS payments. We noted
that decreasing our estimates of future
outlier spending would result in lower
FDL and MAP amounts, thereby
increasing the number of claims that
could be eligible for the outlier payment
adjustment and the amount of outlier
payment that would be paid on each
claim. We further stated that revising
our assumptions about future spending
for ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products would improve the ability of
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to pay
for the costliest ESRD PPS claims.
We invited public comments on our
proposed changes to the inflation factors
for outlier eligible drugs and biological
products, laboratory tests, and supplies.
Approximately 4 commenters including
MedPAC, a non-profit kidney
organization, a coalition of dialysis
organizations, and one LDO commented
on these proposed technical changes.
The following is a summary of the
public comments received on these
proposals and our responses.
Comment: MedPAC expressed
support for CMS’s proposal to modify
its method for calculating the increase
in future spending for outlier drugs and
biological products. MedPAC stated that
this proposal is consistent with the
Commission’s comment letter on the CY
2024 proposed rule, in which the
Commission urged CMS to use a drug
price inflation factor based on ASP
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89129
values to project future spending for
outlier services. MedPAC further noted
that the ASP data used by CMS to
determine facilities’ actual outlier
payments might be a more accurate data
source for drug prices than the ESRDB
market basket pharmaceutical price
proxies that are currently used.
Response: We appreciate the support
for the proposed technical changes to
the inflation factors.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that since the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage was achieved in CY 2023,
CMS should not finalize the proposed
changes to the inflation factors. In
particular, commenters expressed
concern that the proposed inflation
factor for drugs and biological products
is negative as compared to the ESRDB
price proxy that CMS has historically
used. Commenters suggested that CMS
might be required to reduce the ESRD
PPS base rate if the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage is exceeded in future years.
Response: We appreciate the concerns
of commenters about these proposed
technical modifications. CMS’s analysis
of year-over-year price changes for
ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products reveals a consistent downward
trend. However, should prices for
outlier drugs and biological products
begin to increase as reflected in the ASP
prices, such changes would be reflected
in future updates to the chained
Laspeyres drug price index.
We are reiterating that our
longstanding methodology establishes
FDL and MAP amounts prospectively.
That is, we establish the outlier FDL and
MAP amounts each year at a level that
our analysis indicates will effectively
protect access for the costliest
beneficiaries while maintaining an
appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for all
other beneficiaries. If our analysis
indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier
payments that are below 1.0 percent, we
would reduce the FDL and MAP
amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. Alternatively, if our analysis
indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier
payments that are above 1.0 percent, we
would increase the FDL and MAP
amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. In this methodology, we do not
make modifications to the base rate in
response to either exceeding or falling
short of the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage.
Final Rule Action: After consideration
of the comments, we are finalizing our
proposed changes to the inflation factors
for outlier eligible drugs and biological
products, laboratory tests, and supplies.
For ESRD outlier drugs and biological
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products, we will use the projected
inflation factor for ESRD outlier services
that are drugs and biological products
derived from the historical trend in ASP
prices and utilization for ESRD outlier
drugs. For ESRD outlier laboratory tests
and supplies, we will use the growth in
the PPI Industry for Medical and
Diagnostic Laboratories and the PPI
Commodity for Surgical and Medical
Instruments, respectively. In section
II.B.3.e of this final rule, we present the
final CY 2025 MAP and FDL amounts
calculated using these inflation factors.
e. CY 2025 Update to the Outlier
Services MAP Amounts and FDL
Amounts
For CY 2025, we proposed to update
the MAP amounts for adult and
pediatric patients using the latest
available CY 2023 claims data. We
proposed to update the ESRD outlier
services FDL amount for pediatric
patients using the latest available CY
2023 claims data, and to update the
ESRD outlier services FDL amount for
adult patients using the latest available
claims data from CY 2021, CY 2022, and
CY 2023, in accordance with the
methodology finalized in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67170
through 67174). We stated that the latest
available CY 2023 claims data showed
outlier payments represented
approximately 1.0 percent of total
Medicare payments. We did not receive
any comments on this proposal, and we
are finalizing the CY 2025 FDL and
MAP amounts based on the latest
available data.
We are updating the ESRD outlier
services FDL amount for pediatric
patients using the latest available CY
2023 claims data and updating the
ESRD outlier services FDL amount for
adult patients using the latest available
claims data from CY 2021, CY 2022, and
CY 2023, in accordance with the
methodology finalized in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67170
through 67174). The latest available CY
2023 claims data shows that outlier
payments represented approximately
1.0 percent of total Medicare payments.
The impact of this final update is
shown in Table 7, which compares the
outlier services MAP amounts and FDL
amounts used for the outlier policy in
CY 2024 with the updated estimates for
this final rule for CY 2025. The
estimates for the final CY 2025 MAP
amounts, which are included in column
II of Table 7, are inflation adjusted to
reflect projected 2025 prices for ESRD
outlier services, in accordance with the
final changes to the inflation factors
discussed in section II.B.3.d of this final
rule.
TABLE 7: Outlier Policy: Impact of Updated Data for the Outlier Policy
Column I
Column II
Final outlier policy for CY 2024
Final outlier policy for CY 2025
(based on 2022 data, price inflated (based on 2023 data, price inflated
to 2024)*
to 2025)**
verage outlier services MAP amount
er treatment
Standardization for outlier
services
MIPPA reduction
Adjusted average outlier services
MAP amount
Fixed-dollar loss amount that is added
o the predicted MAP to determine the
outlier threshold
Patient-month-facilities qualifying for
outlier payment
Age< 18
Age>= 18
$22.30
$37.92
1.0691
0.9763
0.98
$23.36
0.98
$36.28
$11.32
$71.76
20.86%
Age< 18
Age>= 18
1.0432
0.98
0.9768
0.98
$59.60
$31.02
$234.26
$45.41
6.09%
7.05%
4.87%
As demonstrated in Table 7, the
estimated FDL per treatment that
determines the CY 2025 outlier
threshold amount for adults (column II;
$45.41) is lower than that used for the
CY 2024 outlier policy (column I;
$71.76). The lower threshold is
accompanied by a decrease in the
adjusted average MAP for outlier
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services from $36.28 to $31.02. For
pediatric patients, there is an increase in
the FDL amount from $11.32 to $234.26.
There is a corresponding increase in the
adjusted average MAP for outlier
services among pediatric patients, from
$23.36 to $59.60. We note that this
substantial increase in the outlier
threshold for pediatric patients reflects
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the inclusion of certain composite rate
drugs for outlier consideration, notably
Healthcare Common Procedure Coding
System (HCPCS) code J2997 (Injection,
alteplase recombinant, 1 mg). As a
result, we estimate that a smaller
proportion of pediatric patients will
receive outlier payments, but the
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2022, and 2023.
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
average outlier payment amounts will
be significantly higher.
We estimate that the percentage of
patient months qualifying for outlier
payments in CY 2025 will be 7.05
percent for adult patients and 6.09
percent for pediatric patients, based on
the 2023 claims data and methodology
changes in sections II.B.3.c and II.B.3.d
of this final rule.
f. Outlier Percentage
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49081) and under
§ 413.220(b)(4), we reduced the per
treatment base rate by 1.0 percent to
account for the proportion of the
estimated total payments under the
ESRD PPS that are outlier payments as
described in § 413.237. In the 2023
ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized a
change to the outlier methodology to
better achieve this 1.0 percent target (87
FR 67170 through 67174). Based on the
CY 2023 claims, outlier payments
represented approximately 1.0 percent
of total payments, which has been our
policy goal since the establishment of
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment. We
believe the methodological changes to
the outlier calculation and the change to
the definition of ESRD outlier services,
which we are finalizing for CY 2025,
will continue to effectively set the
outlier MAP and FDL amounts for CY
2025 and future years, enabling the
ESRD PPS to continue targeting outlier
payments at 1.0 percent of total
payments. We also note that the
recalibration of the FDL amounts will
result in no change in payments to
ESRD facilities for beneficiaries with
renal dialysis items and services that are
not eligible for outlier payments.
4. Final Impacts to the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS Base Rate
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a. ESRD PPS Base Rate
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49071 through 49083), CMS
established the methodology for
calculating the ESRD PPS per-treatment
base rate, that is, the ESRD PPS base
rate, and calculating the per-treatment
payment amount, which are codified at
§§ 413.220 and 413.230. The CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule also provides a
detailed discussion of the methodology
used to calculate the ESRD PPS base
rate and the computation of factors used
to adjust the ESRD PPS base rate for
projected outlier payments and budget
neutrality in accordance with sections
1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) and 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii)
of the Act, respectively. Specifically, the
ESRD PPS base rate was developed from
CY 2007 claims (that is, the lowest per
patient utilization year as required by
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section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act),
updated to CY 2011, and represented
the average per treatment MAP for
composite rate and separately billable
services. In accordance with section
1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act and our
regulation at § 413.230, the pertreatment payment amount is the sum of
the ESRD PPS base rate, adjusted for the
patient specific case-mix adjustments,
applicable facility adjustments,
geographic differences in area wage
levels using an area wage index, and
any applicable outlier payment, training
adjustment add-on, the TDAPA, the
TPNIES, the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment, and the TPEAPA
for CYs 2024, 2025 and 2026.
b. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY
2025
We are finalizing an ESRD PPS base
rate for CY 2025 of $273.82. This will
be a 1.0 percent increase from the CY
2024 ESRD PPS base rate of $271.02.
This final update reflects several factors,
described in more detail as follows:
Wage Index Budget-Neutrality
Adjustment Factor: We compute a wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment
factor that is applied to the ESRD PPS
base rate. For CY 2025, we did not
propose any changes to the
methodology used to calculate this
factor, which is described in detail in
the CY 2014 ESRD PPS final rule (78 FR
72174). We computed the CY 2025 wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment
factor using treatment counts from the
2023 claims and facility-specific CY
2024 payment rates to estimate the total
dollar amount that each ESRD facility
would have received in CY 2024. The
total of these payments became the
target amount of expenditures for all
ESRD facilities for CY 2025. Next, we
computed the estimated dollar amount
that would have been paid for the same
ESRD facilities using the proposed CY
2025 ESRD PPS wage index and
proposed labor related share for CY
2025. As discussed in section II.B.2 of
this final rule, the ESRD PPS wage
index for CY 2025 includes the new
wage index methodology based on BLS
data, and the use of the most recent
OMB delineations based on 2020-census
data.34 The total of these payments
becomes the new CY 2025 amount of
wage adjusted expenditures for all ESRD
facilities. The wage index -budgetneutrality factor is calculated as the
target amount divided by the new CY
2025 amount. When we multiplied the
wage index budget-neutrality factor by
the applicable CY 2025 estimated
34 https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
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89131
payments, aggregate Medicare payments
to ESRD facilities would remain budget
neutral when compared to the target
amount of expenditures. That is, the
wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment factor ensures that the wage
index updates and revisions do not
increase or decrease aggregate Medicare
payments. The final CY 2025 wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment
factor is 0.988600. This final CY 2025
wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment factor reflects the impact of
all final wage index policy changes,
including the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage
index using the new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology based on BLS data,
the 5 percent cap on year-to-year
decreases in wage index values, the
updated CBSA delineations, the 3 year
rural phase-out for ESRD facilities in
currently-rural CBSAs that will become
urban under the new delineations, and
the labor-related share (which we did
not propose to change from CY 2024).
We note that the application of the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases
has a sizable impact on the budgetneutrality factor this year due to the
new wage index methodology. That is,
because a substantial number of ESRD
facilities would have experienced a
greater than 5 percent decrease in their
wage index value as a result of the new
wage index methodology, the budgetneutrality adjustment factor needed to
offset the effect of limiting those
decreases to 5 percent is larger than we
expect it would be in a typical year. We
note that the final CY 2025 wage index
budget-neutrality factor does not
include any impacts associated with the
TPEAPA, as was the case with last
year’s combined wage index-TPEAPA
budget-neutrality factor. This is
consistent with how we have
historically applied budget neutrality
for case-mix adjusters, including
pediatric case-mix adjusters. We do not
routinely apply a budget-neutrality
factor to account for changes in overall
payment associated with changes in
patient case-mix in years in which we
do not propose any changes to the casemix adjustment amount. Although the
TPEAPA was established under the
authority in section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of
the Act, which does not require budget
neutrality, we stated in the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule that we were
implementing the TPEAPA in a budget
neutral manner because it was similar to
the pediatric case-mix adjusters, and it
accounts for costs which would have
been included in the cost reports used
in the analysis conducted when we
created the ESRD PPS bundled payment
in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (88
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FR 76378). Because the adjustment to
maintain budget neutrality associated
with the TPEAPA was accounted for in
the CY 2024 combined wage index and
TPEAPA budget neutrality factor, it
would not be appropriate to apply a
budget-neutrality factor for the TPEAPA
for CY 2025.
Market Basket Update: Section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(I) of the Act provides
that, beginning in 2012, the ESRD PPS
payment amounts are required to be
annually increased by an ESRD market
basket percentage increase. As
discussed in section II.B.1.b.(1) of this
final rule, the latest CY 2025 projection
of the ESRDB market basket percentage
increase is 2.7 percent. In CY 2025, this
amount must be reduced by the
productivity adjustment described in
section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act,
as required by section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) of the Act. As
previously discussed in section
II.B.1.b.(2) of this final rule, the latest
CY 2025 projection of the productivity
adjustment is 0.5 percentage point, thus
yielding a final CY 2025 productivityadjusted ESRDB market basket update of
2.2 percent for CY 2025. Therefore, the
final CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate is
$273.82 (($271.02 × 0.988600) × 1.022 =
$273.82). In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55766), the
productivity-adjusted ESRDB market
basket update was 1.8 percent
(reflecting a 2.3 percent market basket
percentage increase reduced by a 0.5
percentage point productivity
adjustment). We proposed that if more
recent data became available after the
publication of the proposed rule and
before the publication of the final rule
(for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket percentage increase or
productivity adjustment), we would use
such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
update in the final rule.
We invited public comment on our
proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate.
Approximately 25 unique commenters
including LDOs; SDOs, patient
advocacy organizations; nonprofit
dialysis associations; two coalitions of
dialysis organizations; professional
organizations; and MedPAC commented
on the proposed payment rate. Many of
these comments primarily focused on
the proposed CY 2025 productivityadjusted ESRDB market basket update,
which we discuss and respond to in
section II.B.1.b.(5) of this final rule. The
following is a summary of the other
public comments received on the
proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate
and our responses.
Comment: All commenters supported
increasing the ESRD PPS base rate. Most
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commenters indicated a belief that the
proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS payment
rates were too low. Commenters
generally stated that the cause of these
lower-than-appropriate payment rates
was a combination of the proposed CY
2025 ESRDB market basket percentage
increase and prior ESRDB market basket
percentage increases being lower-thanappropriate. Only MedPAC stated a
belief that the proposed CY 2025 ESRD
PPS payment rate was appropriate.
Response: We appreciate the support
for increasing payments under the ESRD
PPS. We agree with MedPAC that
payment rates under the ESRD PPS are
generally appropriate. We concur with
the commenters’ general consensus that
perceived inadequacies in the proposed
CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate are related
to the perceived inadequacies of the
ESRDB market basket. We have
primarily addressed commenters’
concerns related to the ESRDB market
basket update in section II.B.1.b.(5) of
this final rule. We wish to reiterate that
the ESRD PPS base rate is calculated
annually using the ESRDB market
basket update and applying any
applicable budget-neutrality factors, so
the ESRD PPS base rate for a given year
is constructed using several factors
which are each derived from the best
available data, as described in section
II.B.1 and in section II.B.4. While we
understand the concerns of commenters
regarding the payment rates, we strongly
believe that any change to this
methodology should be data driven. We
will take commenters’ concerns into
consideration for future rulemaking
years to determine if any changes to the
ESRD PPS base rate calculation or
ESRDB market basket methodology are
appropriate. Any changes to the ESRD
market basket methodology or ESRD
PPS base rate calculation would be
made through notice and comment
rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters stated
a belief that increasing the ESRD PPS
base rate by 0.8 percent was not
sufficient.
Response: We note that the proposed
ESRDB productivity-adjusted market
basket increase for CY 2025 was 1.8
percent (reflecting a proposed ESRDB
market basket increase of 2.3 percent
reduced by the statutorily-mandated
proposed productivity adjustment
estimated to be 0.5 percentage point).
The proposed 0.8 percent increase to the
ESRD PPS base rate was lower than the
market basket increase as it also
reflected the application of the proposed
wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment factor of 0.990228. Since the
wage index budget neutrality factor is
calculated to ensure that the changes
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between the CY 2024 and CY 2025 wage
indices do not result in an increase or
decrease of estimated aggregate
payments, the application to the ESRD
PPS base rate does not result in a
decrease to total ESRD PPS payments.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS base
rate of $273.20 is only $43.57 more than
the CY 2011 ESRD PPS base rate of
$229.63. This commenter stated a belief
that this has contributed to the ongoing
net closures of ESRD facilities in recent
years.
Response: We acknowledge that the
ESRD PPS base rate has not increased as
much as costs have for ESRD facilities;
however, we note that the ESRD PPS
base rate is not meant to be interpreted
as an average or typical payment rate for
renal dialysis services furnished to
ESRD patients, because the ESRD PPS
base rate is adjusted by several factors
including the wage index and several
case-mix and facility-level adjusters.
Generally, these adjusters are
implemented in a budget-neutral
manner, which usually decreases the
ESRD PPS base rate to account for the
usually positive adjustment factor. For
example, when we updated the casemix adjustment factors in the CY 2016
ESRD PPS final rule, we applied a
refinement budget-neutrality adjustment
factor of 0.960319, which decreased the
ESRD PPS base rate by approximately
nine and a half dollars without reducing
total estimated payments for CY 2016
(80 FR 69013). Thus, we do not believe
it is appropriate to judge the payment
adequacy of the ESRD PPS based on the
base rate alone without accounting for
the other adjustment factors, which
heavily influence the actual payment
amount received by ESRD facilities. The
actual payment rate is generally higher
than the unadjusted ESRD PPS base
rate. The ESRD PPS base rate
incorporates offsetting adjustments to
maintain budget neutrality which, as
discussed, have generally reduced the
ESRD PPS base rate, so it should not be
evaluated in isolation. As these
adjustment factors have generally
increased since the inception of the
ESRD PPS in CY 2011, we believe that
this increase in the ESRD PPS base rate
from CY 2011 to CY 2025 is appropriate.
Comment: Many commenters who
opined that the current payments under
the ESRD PPS were too low included
potential implications of a lower-thanappropriate payment rate. These
implications included concerns related
to quality of care, ability for ESRD
facilities to remain open, ability for
ESRD facilities to remain staffed,
reduction of the hours of operation at
ESRD facilities, and access concerns.
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One commenter highlighted potential
health equity concerns related to what
they characterized as lower-thanappropriate payments. This commenter
stated that dialysis patients are
disproportionately African American/
Black, live in medically underserved
areas and are low income, so lowerthan-appropriate payments would risk
perpetuating health disparities.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concerns regarding the
wide range of potential implications of
the proposed payment rate update. We
note that we are statutorily required to
increase the ESRD PPS base rate by a
ESRDB market basket increase factor
that reflects the forecasted change in
prices of an appropriate mix of goods
and services included in renal dialysis
services. The final CY 2025 market
basket update is 2.2 percent according
to the latest available projection of the
ESRDB market basket and productivity
adjustment, which we note is 0.4
percentage point higher than the
proposed ESRDB market basket update.
We recognize that many commenters are
concerned about payment adequacy,
and we agree that it is important to
ensure payments to ESRD facilities are
adequate. We note that MedPAC’s 2024
Report to Congress 35 projected a 2024
aggregate FFS Medicare margin for
ESRD facilities of 0.0 percent. While we
understand why interested parties may
perceive these margins as being too low,
we note that they indicate that in
general ESRD facilities are being paid a
reasonable amount given their costs.
We appreciate the thoughtful
comments on the health equity
implications of the ESRD PPS payment
rate. We agree with the commenters that
appropriate payments for renal dialysis
services are important due to the
potential vulnerability of many ESRD
beneficiaries and the health disparities
they may experience. We did not
propose any changes to the ESRD PPS
payment update methodology to further
account for health equity, and we are
statutorily required to update ESRD PPS
payments based on the change in prices
as measured by the ESRDB market
basket. We intend to continue to
consider a wide range of potential
options for how we can address health
equity concerns, for example, through
refined case-mix and facility-level
adjustment factors, in future
rulemaking.
Comment: We received some
comments which specifically discussed
ESRD facilities in Puerto Rico and the
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appropriateness of the current ESRD
PPS base rate there. One comment
stated that relative rates between MA
and FFS Medicare were larger than in
the mainland United States. This
commenter also mentioned several cost
factors that were unique to Puerto Rico,
including energy issues, laboratory
costs, costs related to the importations
of goods to areas outside the mainland
United States, local legislation on
administrative staff at ESRD facilities,
and high property insurance rates.
Response: We appreciate the insight
into the specific costs related to
operating ESRD facilities in Puerto Rico.
We believe that the ESRDB market
basket appropriately accounts for all of
the costs which the commenters
described; however, we acknowledge
that there could be geographic variation
in these costs which would not be
captured by the ESRDB market basket
update. We understand that MA
payment is critical for many ESRD
facilities; however, MA payment rates
are not the subject of this ESRD PPS
rulemaking, and we are not
substantively responding to any
comments regarding MA payment rates
in this final rule. We may consider how
we could address the unique costs
associated with the geographic isolation
of U.S. Territories in the ESRD PPS in
future policymaking.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the ESRD PPS does not adequately
support innovation. These commenters
generally expressed that payments
under the ESRD PPS are not enough to
incentivize new products, drugs,
biological products, or other efficiencies
to be developed for treatment of ESRD.
Many of these comments were
combined with more specific concerns
regarding outlier payments for renal
dialysis drugs that received the TDAPA
after the end of the TDAPA period and
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts, which we address
in sections II.B.3 and II.B.6 respectively.
Response: Under section
1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, the ESRD
PPS is based on a fixed bundle of goods
and services using data from 2007, 2008
or 2009, whichever had the lower perpatient utilization. Therefore, in the CY
2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we derived
the ESRD PPS base rate from 2007 cost
report data (75 FR 49152) which has
been, and continues to be, annually
updated based on the ESRDB market
basket, reflecting the changes over time
in the prices of an appropriate mix of
the goods and services involved in
furnishing renal dialysis services. Per
this statutory scheme, the ESRD PPS is
not designed to provide additional
payment for new and innovative good or
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89133
services through the ESRD PPS base
rate. To promote innovation and achieve
other objectives, we have finalized
several policies using the statutory
authority at section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of
the Act to provide temporarily increased
payment to ESRD facilities that use
certain new and innovative renal
dialysis services. These include the
TDAPA for certain new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products (80 FR
69023), the TPNIES for certain new and
innovative renal dialysis equipment and
supplies (84 FR 60684), the TPNIES for
certain capital related assets that are
home dialysis machines when used in
the home for a single patient (85 FR
71416) and, most recently, the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment for
certain new drugs and biological
products after the TDAPA period ends
(88 FR 76388 through 76397). All of
these add-on payment adjustments serve
to provide increased payment compared
to the ESRD PPS base rate, which we
believe appropriately recognizes
innovation through increased payment.
As the statute specifically requires that
the ESRD PPS be based on a fixed
bundle of goods and services, we do not
believe it would be appropriate to
directly increase the ESRD PPS base rate
for new goods and services which are
broadly similar to goods and services
within the ESRDB market basket, such
as drugs and biological products in
existing ESRD PPS functional
categories.
Final Rule Action: We are not
finalizing any changes to our
methodology for calculating the ESRD
PPS base rate. The final CY 2025 ESRD
PPS base rate is $273.82, as described
previously in this final rule.
5. Update to the Average per Treatment
Offset Amount for Home Dialysis
Machines
In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule
(85 FR 71427), we expanded eligibility
for the TPNIES under § 413.236 to
include certain capital-related assets
that are home dialysis machines when
used in the home for a single patient. To
establish the TPNIES basis of payment
for these items, we finalized the
additional steps that the Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs)
must follow to calculate a pre-adjusted
per treatment amount, using the prices
they establish under § 413.236(e) for a
capital-related asset that is a home
dialysis machine, as well as the
methodology that CMS uses to calculate
the average per treatment offset amount
for home dialysis machines that is used
in the MACs’ calculation, to account for
the cost of the home dialysis machine
that is already in the ESRD PPS base
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rate. For purposes of this final rule, we
refer to this as the ‘‘TPNIES offset
amount.’’
The methodology for calculating the
TPNIES offset amount is set forth in
§ 413.236(f)(3). Section 413.236(f)(3)(v)
states that effective January 1, 2022,
CMS annually updates the amount
determined in § 413.236(f)(3)(iv) by the
ESRD bundled market basket percentage
increase factor minus the productivity
adjustment factor. The TPNIES for
capital-related assets that are home
dialysis machines is based on 65
percent of the MAC-determined preadjusted per treatment amount, reduced
by the TPNIES offset amount, and is
paid for 2 CYs.
There are currently no capital-related
assets that are home dialysis machines
set to receive TPNIES for CY 2025, as
the TPNIES payment period for the
Tablo® System ended on December 31,
2023, and there are no TPNIES
applications for CY 2025. However, as
required by § 413.236(f)(3)(v), we
proposed to update the TPNIES offset
amount annually according to the
methodology described previously.
We are finalizing a CY 2025 TPNIES
offset amount for capital-related assets
that are home dialysis machines of
$10.22, based on the final CY 2025
ESRDB productivity-adjusted market
basket update of 2.2 percent (final 2.7
percent market basket percentage
increase reduced by the final 0.5
percentage point productivity
adjustment). Applying the final update
factor of 1.022 to the CY 2024 offset
amount resulted in the CY 2025 offset
amount of $10.22 ($10.00 × 1.022 =
$10.22). This is slightly higher than the
proposed CY 2025 TPNIES offset
amount for capital related assets that are
home dialysis machines of $10.18. We
did not receive any comments on our
proposal to update the TPNIES offset for
capital-related assets for CY 2025.
6. Post-TDAPA Add-On Payment
Adjustment Updates
a. Updates to the Post-TDAPA Add-On
Payment Adjustment Amounts for CY
2025
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule
we finalized an add-on payment
adjustment for certain new renal
dialysis drugs and biological products,
which would be applied for 3 years after
the end of the TDAPA period (88 FR
76388 through 76397). This adjustment,
known as the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment, is adjusted by the
patient-level case-mix adjuster and is
applied to every ESRD PPS claim. In
that final rule we also clarified that for
each year of the post-TDAPA period we
would update the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts based on
utilization and ASP of the drug or
biological product. For CY 2024 there is
one drug, Korsuva® (difelikefalin),
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment. In
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76397), we finalized that the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for Korsuva® would be $0.2493
and would begin on April 1, 2024.
For CY 2025, we will have two drugs
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment.
The post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment period for one of these
drugs, Korsuva®, began on April 1,
2024, so, conditional upon the
continued receipt of the latest full
calendar quarter of ASP data as
described in § 413.234(c)(3), Korsuva®
will be included in the calculation for
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment for the entirety of CY 2025.
The other drug, Jesduvroq (daprodustat),
began its 2-year TDAPA period on
October 1, 2023, so its post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment period will
begin on October 1, 2025, conditional
upon the continued receipt of the latest
full calendar quarter of ASP data.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule we presented the proposed postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amounts for Korsuva® and Jesduvroq
based on the most recently available
utilization data at the time. Consistent
with the methodology finalized in the
CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76388 through 76389), we proposed to
update these calculations with the most
recent available data in the final rule.
Based on the most recent utilization
data, and following the calculation
explained in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule (88 FR 76388 through 76389)
and § 413.234(g), the final post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount for
Korsuva® is $0.4601 for all 4 quarters of
CY 2025, an increase from the proposed
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount of $0.4047. Under
that same methodology, the current
estimate of the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for
Jesduvroq is $0.0096 for only the last
quarter of CY 2025, an increase from the
proposed post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount of $0.0019. We note
that utilization data available for
Jesduvroq available at the time the
analysis was conducted for this final
rule includes only data from October
2023 through June 2024. Table 8 shows
the final post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts for each quarter of
CY 2025.
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Quarter
Final Add-on amount
Add-on amount for
Total post-TDAPA add-
for Korsuva®
Jesduvroq
on payment adjustment
(Estimate)
amount
Ql (January- March)
$0.4601
0
$0.4601
Q2 (April - June)
$0.4601
0
$0.4601
Q3 (July - September)
$0.4601
0
$0.4601
Q4 (October - December)
$0.4601
$0.0096
$0.4697
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We invited public comment on our
proposed CY 2025 post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts.
Approximately 8 commenters including
coalitions of dialysis organizations and
several drug manufacturers commented
on the proposed post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts. The
following is a summary of the public
comments received on these proposals
and our responses.
Comment: We received several
comments that reiterated concerns about
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment calculation that we
addressed in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule, in which we finalized the
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment (88 FR 76388 through
76397). Commenters requested CMS
calculate the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount based only
on TDAPA claims that included the
drug or biological product and then only
apply the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment to claims with that drug or
biological product. Commenters
generally stated that this methodology
would better support innovation and
expressed access concerns for expensive
drugs and biological products with low
utilization after the TDAPA period.
Some commenters included figures that
they believed would be more
appropriate amounts for the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for Korsuva®, generally
calculated using the suggested
methodological changes.
Response: We did not propose a new
methodology for the calculation of the
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment for the same reasons we did
not finalize the requested methodology
in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88
FR 76395). Specifically, calculating the
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount by dividing the total
payment for the drug or biological
product across only those patients who
utilize it would directly incentivize
utilization of a particular drug or
biological product, which can result in
overutilization. We note that in future
rulemaking we may propose changes to
the case-mix adjustment factors, which
could result in higher payments for
treatments provided to some patients
who utilize drugs or biological products
that previously received the TDAPA,
should the analysis show that treating
these patients is more costly.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the
comments, we are finalizing a postTDAPA addon payment adjustment
amount of $0.4601 for Korsuva® that
would be included in the calculation of
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount for all four quarters
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of CY 2025. Additionally, we are
presenting an estimated post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount of
$0.0096 for Jesduvroq, which would be
included in the calculation of the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for the fourth quarter of CY
2025. As discussed later in this section
of the final rule, this presented postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for Jesduvroq will be updated in
a CR once we have a full year’s worth
of utilization data available for the
analysis.
a. Proposal To Publish Post-TDAPA
Add-On Payment Adjustment Amounts
After the Final Rule in Certain
Circumstances
As discussed in the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule (88 FR 76393) and
codified at 42 CFR 413.234(g), we have
finalized a post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment, which is based on
the most recent year of utilization data
and is calculated annually in each
rulemaking cycle. Under § 413.234(g)(1),
CMS bases the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment calculation on the
most recent 12-month period of
utilization for the new renal dialysis
drug or biological product and the most
recent available full calendar quarter of
ASP data. However, when a drug or
biological product begins its TDAPA
period in the fourth quarter of a CY,
and, therefore, would be included in the
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment calculation beginning in the
fourth quarter 2 CYs later, there would
likely not be a full year’s worth of
utilization data available at the time of
proposed or final rulemaking for that CY
due to the time-lag associated with
collecting and processing utilization
data for the final rule. For example, at
the time of rulemaking for last year’s
ESRD PPS final rule, we had data
available through June 2023 when
calculating the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for
Korsuva® (88 FR 73697). However, for a
drug or biological product that began its
TDAPA period in October of the prior
year, data from October through June
would only represent 9 months of data.
We believe it is important to have a full
year’s utilization data when determining
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount so that the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
appropriately captures the utilization of
the drug or biological product as
required by § 413.234(g)(1).
We proposed that when there is
insufficient data at the time of
rulemaking, we will publish the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount via CR once we have a full 12
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89135
months of data. Specifically, we will
publish the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount in a CR
under the following circumstances: (1) a
drug or biological product is ending its
TDAPA period during the CY, and
therefore under § 413.234(c)(1) will
begin being included in the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount calculation during that CY; and
(2) that drug or biological product does
not have at least 12 full months of
utilization data at the time the final rule
is developed. Under this proposal, we
would still include an estimated postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount in the proposed rule and update
that estimated amount in the final rule,
but we would note that the estimated
amount presented in the final rule is
subject to change. We note that the final
post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount published after the
final rule could be higher or lower than
the estimated amount presented in the
final rule. We do not anticipate having
less than a full year’s utilization data at
the time of rulemaking for drugs and
biological products that begin receiving
TDAPA payments in quarters other than
the fourth quarter of the year; however,
should such an instance arise, we would
similarly publish the post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amount in a CR
once 12 months of utilization data are
available. We would indicate the
quarterly release CR in which we intend
to publish the final post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount.
For CY 2025, there is one TDAPA
drug, Jesduvroq, which is ending its
TDAPA period in CY 2025 and for
which, at the time of proposed
rulemaking, we did not anticipate
having a full 12 months’ worth of
utilization data at the time of final
rulemaking. As such, we stated that
under this proposal we would indicate
in the final rule that we intend to
publish the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for CY
2025 for Jesduvroq once we have a full
year of utilization data. We generally
intend to publish this updated postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount two calendar quarters prior to
the end of the TDAPA period, as this
would allow for sufficient time to gather
and analyze a year’s worth of utilization
data. We stated that for this drug, and
for any drug or biological product that
begins its TDAPA period in the fourth
quarter of a CY, we would generally
publish the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount at the
beginning of the second quarter of the
last CY of that drug or biological
product’s TDAPA period (that is, two
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calendar quarters before the drug is
included in the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount). However,
should circumstances arise that prevent
us from calculating a post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amount at that
time, we would publish the final postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount at a later time.
We noted that this approach to
publishing the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount calculation
would not impact any drug or biological
product that has at least one full year’s
worth of utilization data at the time
when the analysis for the final rule is
developed, nor would it impact any
drug or biological product that is
already included in the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment calculation
for a given CY. We do not intend to
routinely update post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts quarterly,
as we believe this will make it more
difficult for ESRD facilities to estimate
payments. However, for drugs or
biological products that lack a full year’s
worth of utilization data at the time
when the analysis for the final rule is
developed, we believe it is appropriate
to take this additional step to ensure
that their post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment is based on 12 months of
utilization data as required by
§ 413.234(g)(1).
We invited public comment on our
proposal to update post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts after the
final rule is published in situations
where 12 months of utilization data is
not available at the time of the analysis
calculated for the ESRD PPS final rule.
We did not receive any comments on
this proposal.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing
our proposal to publish the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount
after the final rule in certain
circumstances, as we believe it is most
consistent with § 413.234(g)(1), which
requires that the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount be
calculated using 12 months of
utilization data.
7. Inclusion of Oral-Only Drugs Into the
ESRD PPS Bundled Payment
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a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(A)(i) of the Act
requires the Secretary to implement a
payment system under which a single
payment is made to a provider of
services or a renal dialysis facility for
renal dialysis services in lieu of any
other payment. Section 1881(b)(14)(B) of
the Act defines renal dialysis services,
and subclause (iii) of that section states
that these services include other drugs
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16:53 Nov 08, 2024
Jkt 265001
and biologicals 36 that are furnished to
individuals for the treatment of ESRD
and for which payment was made
separately under this title, and any oral
equivalent form of such drug or
biological.
When we implemented the ESRD PPS
in 2011 (75 FR 49030), we interpreted
this provision as including not only
injectable drugs and biological products
used for the treatment of ESRD (other
than ESAs and any oral form of ESAs,
which are included under clause (ii) of
section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act), but
also all oral drugs and biological
products used for the treatment of ESRD
and furnished under title XVIII of the
Act. We also concluded that, to the
extent oral-only drugs or biological
products used for the treatment of ESRD
do not fall within clause (iii) of section
1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act, such drugs or
biological products would fall under
clause (iv) of that section, and constitute
other items and services used for the
treatment of ESRD that are not described
in clause (i) of section 1881(b)(14)(B) of
the Act.
We finalized and issued payment
policies for oral-only renal dialysis
service drugs or biological products in
the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR
49038 through 49053). In that rule, we
defined renal dialysis services at
§ 413.171 as including drugs and
biological products with only an oral
form. We also finalized a policy to delay
payment for oral-only drugs under the
ESRD PPS until January 1, 2014.
Accordingly, we codified the delay in
payment for oral-only renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products at
§ 413.174(f)(6), and provided that
payment to an ESRD facility for renal
dialysis service drugs and biological
products with only an oral form would
be incorporated into the ESRD PPS
payment rates effective January 1, 2014,
once we had collected and analyzed
adequate pricing and utilization data.
Since oral-only drugs are generally not
a covered service under Medicare Part
B, this delay of payment under the
ESRD PPS also allowed coverage to
continue under Medicare Part D for
those beneficiaries with such coverage.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS proposed
rule (74 FR 49929), we noted that the
only oral-only drugs that we identified
were phosphate binders and
calcimimetics, specifically, cinacalcet
36 As discussed in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final
rule (83 FR 56922), we began using the term
‘‘biological products’’ instead of ‘‘biologicals’’
under the ESRD PPS to be consistent with FDA
nomenclature. We use the term ‘‘biological
products’’ in this final rule except where
referencing specific language in the Act or
regulations.
PO 00000
Frm 00054
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
hydrochloride, lanthanum carbonate,
calcium acetate, sevelamer
hydrochloride, and sevelamer
carbonate. All of these drugs fall into
the ESRD PPS functional category for
bone and mineral metabolism.
Since then, the Congress has acted
three times to further delay the
inclusion of oral-only renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products in
the ESRD PPS. Specifically, as
discussed in section II.A.1 of this final
rule, ATRA in 2013, as amended by
PAMA in 2014, and amended by ABLE
in 2014, ultimately delayed the
inclusion of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS until January 1, 2025.
Section 217(c)(1) of PAMA also
required us to adopt a process for
determining when oral-only drugs are
no longer oral-only and to incorporate
them into the ESRD PPS bundled
payment. Section 217(a)(2) of PAMA
further amended section 632(b)(1) of
ATRA by requiring that, in establishing
payment for oral-only drugs under the
ESRD PPS, the Secretary must use data
from the most recent year available. In
the CY 2016 ESRD PPS proposed rule
(80 FR 37839), we noted that when the
existing oral-only drugs (which were, at
that time, only phosphate binders and
calcimimetics) were determined no
longer to be oral-only drugs, we would
pay for them using the TDAPA. We
stated that this would allow us to collect
data reflecting current utilization of
both the oral and injectable or
intravenous forms of the drugs, as well
as payment patterns and beneficiary copays, before we add these drugs to the
ESRD PPS bundled payment.
In 2017, when an injectable
calcimimetic became available, CMS
issued a Change Request37 to add all
calcimimetics, including oral and
injectable forms, to the ESRD PPS
bundled payment beginning in CY 2018.
CMS paid the TDAPA for calcimimetics
for a period of 3 years (CY 2018 through
CY 2020). When the TDAPA period
ended, we went through rulemaking (85
FR 71410) to increase the ESRD PPS
base rate beginning in CY 2021 to
incorporate the cost of calcimimetics.
Most recently, in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67185 through
67186), we finalized a revision to the
regulatory definition of an oral-only
drug, effective January 1, 2025, to clarify
our longstanding policy by specifying
that an oral-only drug has no injectable
functional equivalent. The effective date
of this revised definition will coincide
37 https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMatters
Articles/downloads/mm10065.pdf and https://
www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/
transmittals/2018downloads/r1999otn.pdf.
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with the January 1, 2025, incorporation
of oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS
under § 413.174(f)(6). The revised
definition of oral-only drugs reflects that
drugs with similar end-action effects are
treated as equivalent under the ESRD
PPS, consistent with our approach to
designating drugs into ESRD PPS
functional categories.
b. Current Policy for Oral-Only Drugs in
CY 2025
Existing regulations at § 413.174(f)(6)
state that effective January 1, 2025, oralonly drugs will be paid for under the
ESRD PPS. Although oral-only drugs are
excluded from the ESRD PPS bundled
payment until January 1, 2025, they are
currently recognized as renal dialysis
services as defined in regulation at
§ 413.171. Accordingly, CMS is
planning to incorporate oral-only drugs
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment
beginning January 1, 2025, using the
TDAPA, as described in the CY 2016
ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69027) and
subsequent rules.
As we stated in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67180), if an
injectable equivalent or other form of
administration of phosphate binders
were to be approved by FDA prior to
January 1, 2025, the phosphate binders
would no longer be considered oral-only
drugs and would no longer be paid for
outside the ESRD PPS. We stated that
we would pay for the oral and any nonoral version of the drug using the
TDAPA under the ESRD PPS for at least
2 years, during which time we would
collect and analyze utilization data. We
stated that if no other injectable
equivalent (or other form of
administration) of phosphate binders is
approved by the FDA prior to January 1,
2025, we would pay for these drugs
using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS
for at least 2 years beginning January 1,
2025. CMS will use the same process
that it used for calcimimetics to
incorporate phosphate binders into the
ESRD PPS beginning January 1, 2025.
CMS discussed its process for
incorporating calcimimetics in CMS
Transmittal 1999, dated January 10,
2018, and in MLN Matters Number:
MM10065.38 39 We stated that pricing for
phosphate binders under the TDAPA
would be based on pricing
methodologies available under section
1847A of the Act. A new renal dialysis
drug or biological product is paid for
using the TDAPA, which is based on
38 https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Transmittals/2018Downloads/
R1999OTN.pdf.
39 https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/
Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/
MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM10065.pdf.
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16:53 Nov 08, 2024
Jkt 265001
100 percent of ASP. If ASP is not
available then the transitional drug addon payment adjustment is based on 100
percent of wholesale acquisition cost
(WAC) and, when WAC is not available,
the payment is based on the drug
manufacturer’s invoice. In such cases,
CMS will undertake rulemaking to
modify the ESRD PPS base rate, if
appropriate, to account for the cost and
utilization of phosphate binders in the
ESRD PPS bundled payment.
We note that on October 17, 2023, a
new oral phosphate lowering agent
received FDA marketing approval.
According to the FDA-approved labeling
for this drug, XPHOZAH® (tenapanor) is
indicated to reduce serum phosphorus
in adults with chronic kidney disease
who are on dialysis as add-on therapy
in patients who have an inadequate
response to phosphate binders or who
are intolerant of any dose of phosphate
binder therapy. CMS has identified
XPHOZAH® to be a renal dialysis
service because it is used to treat or
manage a condition associated with
ESRD, per its approved indication.
XPHOZAH® tablets are taken orally,
usually twice a day with meals. CMS
has also determined that XPHOZAH®
meets the current regulatory definition
of an oral-only drug as defined at
§ 413.234(a), and therefore, in
accordance with § 413.174(f)(6), is not
paid for under the ESRD PPS until
January 1, 2025. Consistent with
policies adopted in the CY 2016 and CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rules (see 80 FR
69025 and 87 FR 67183), XPHOZAH®
will be included in the ESRD PPS
effective January 1, 2025, using the drug
designation process under § 413.234.
As set forth in § 413.174(f)(6),
effective January 1, 2025, payment to an
ESRD facility for renal dialysis service
drugs and biological products with only
an oral form furnished to ESRD patients
will be incorporated within the
prospective payment system rates
established by CMS in § 413.230, and
separate payment will no longer be
provided. As noted earlier in this
section, we have recently published
operational guidance, including
information about the TDAPA amount,
HCPCS codes, and ASP reporting
requirements and timelines for
phosphate binders at https://www.cms.
gov/files/document/including-oral-onlydrugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf.
We note that we will use the same
process that we used for calcimimetics
to incorporate phosphate binders into
the ESRD PPS beginning January 1,
2025, and that we will not be following
this process for any other oral drugs or
biological products. Manufacturers
would need to apply for a HCPCS code
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89137
and the TDAPA for any other oral drugs
or biological products to be eligible for
the TDAPA.
Finally, we note that the TDAPA
amount is not applied to claims for
renal dialysis services provided to
beneficiaries with acute kidney injury.40
When ESRD facilities were paid the
TDAPA for calcimimetics and the latter
were incorporated into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment for patients with
ESRD, the TDAPA was not paid for
claims for renal dialysis services
provided to beneficiaries with acute
kidney injury. Similarly, ESRD facilities
will not be paid the TDAPA for
phosphate binders for renal dialysis
services provided to beneficiaries with
acute kidney injury. This is discussed
below in section III.E of this final rule.
We note that for any other oral-only
drugs, such as XPHOZAH®, we will
apply our drug designation process as
we do for all new renal dialysis drugs
and biological products, consistent with
§ 413.234 and the policy finalized in CY
2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69027)
and reiterated in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule (87 FR 67180).
c. Operational Considerations Related to
the Incorporation of Oral-Only Drugs
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49043), we explained that there
were certain advantages to delaying the
implementation of payment for oralonly drugs and biological products
under the ESRD PPS. These advantages
included allowing ESRD facilities
additional time to make operational
changes and logistical arrangements to
furnish oral-only renal dialysis service
drugs and biological products to their
patients.
In November 2023, in accordance
with section 632(d) of ATRA, the
Government Accountability Office
(GAO) published a Report to
Congressional Committees titled, ‘‘EndStage Renal Disease: CMS Plans for
including Phosphate Binders in the
Bundled Payment.’’ (GAO–24–
106288).41 The report summarized the
current status of payment for the
phosphate binders as well as identifying
areas of operational concerns. These
include challenges related to hiring the
staff needed for ESRD facilities to
provide phosphate binders to patients,
complexities relating to system updates
needed to accommodate the volume and
broad array of phosphate binders, and
costs related to dispensing, storage, and
40 https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/
files/hhs-guidance-documents/mm102811.pdf and
https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/
Guidance/Transmittals/2017Downloads/
R1941OTN.pdf.
41 https://www.gao.gov/assets/d24106288.pdf.
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transportation. The considerations
identified in the GAO report generally
align with the comments we have
received on past ESRD PPS proposed
rules. The GAO also interviewed
dialysis organization representatives
who stated that they are preparing to
make the anticipated adjustments
needed to dispense the phosphate
binders.
With respect to considerations related
to staffing, we note that the ESRD PPS
includes payment for staffing related to
the provision of renal dialysis services.
We believe there are several strategies
that ESRD facilities could employ to
efficiently use available staff time to
provide phosphate binders. There are
parallels between the administration of
phosphate binders and the
administration of oral calcimimetics,
which are also typically taken every
day. First, we expect that patients with
ESRD generally receive treatment for at
least 3 hours per session, typically three
times per week. We believe that during
this treatment window there is generally
staff availability to provide the patient
with pre-packaged medication, which
we note could include medication for
multiple days. Second, ESRD facilities
could maximize the efficiency of staff
time by mailing the prescriptions, to the
extent that doing so is consistent with
state pharmacy laws. For example, the
GAO report identified that one large
dialysis organization only mails oral
prescriptions to patients’ homes, while
others mail the medication to either the
ESRD facility or the patient’s home.
Third, the GAO report identified that
some ESRD facilities contract with
outside pharmacies rather than
operating their own pharmacy. By
contracting with outside pharmacies,
ESRD facilities could reduce or avoid
the need to hire additional pharmacists
and pharmacy staff to manage the
volume of prescriptions.
Another challenge identified by the
dialysis organizations was the
complexity of dispensing phosphate
binders because of the broad array of
phosphate binders and the high volume
of pills.42 We acknowledge there are six
common types of phosphate binders as
compared to only one type of
calcimimetics. The GAO report also
noted that unlike calcimimetics,
phosphate binders are typically taken
with every meal and snack. We note that
although Medicare will begin paying for
phosphate binders under the ESRD PPS
beginning January 1, 2025, we are not
establishing any requirements regarding
how or where patients take these
medications. These decisions are made
42 Ibid.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
and will continue to be made by the
patient, nephrologist, and care team.
We recognize that updates may be
required to ESRD facilities’ systems,
including electronic medical records,
billing systems, and inventory
management systems to accommodate
new procedures for dispensing
phosphate binders. As we previously
noted, we initially delayed the
incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS in 2011, in part to allow
ESRD facilities to make such operational
changes and logistical arrangements. In
addition, we have provided operational
guidance on the CMS website at https://
www.cms.gov/files/document/includingoral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundledpayment.pdf that addresses HCPCS
coding, billing, and price information.
We expect that ESRD facilities will be
able to make these system changes in
advance of January 1, 2025.
As discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule, dialysis
organizations have expressed concerns
surrounding CMS using ASP to
determine the TDAPA amount added to
the ESRD PPS base rate for phosphate
binders, which they believe does not
adequately provide for dispensing
cost.43 Under current TDAPA policy,
CMS intended to pay the TDAPA based
on 100 percent of ASP for phosphate
binders for at least 2 years. However, as
noted in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55797), CMS
recognized that updates may be required
to ESRD facilities’ systems, including
electronic medical records, billing
systems, and inventory management
systems to accommodate new
procedures for dispensing phosphate
binders. In addition, we recognized the
high percentage of ESRD beneficiaries
that have at least one phosphate binder
prescription and the large volume of
phosphate binder prescriptions and
stated that we were considering whether
it may be appropriate to make
additional payment to account for
incremental operational costs in excess
of 100 percent of ASP, such as
dispensing fees, when paying the
TDAPA for phosphate binders. Unlike
drugs and biological products for which
payment is already included in the
ESRD PPS base rate, including all other
drugs and biological products in
existing functional categories,
dispensing fees and other costs are not
currently included in the ESRD PPS
base rate for phosphate binders.
Therefore, in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we also stated that we
were considering whether a potential
change in TDAPA amount policy for
43 Ibid.
16:53 Nov 08, 2024
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phosphate binders to account for such
costs would be consistent with the
TDAPA policy as finalized in the CY
2019 and CY 2020 ESRD PPS final rules
(83 FR 56948 and 84 FR 60673 through
60676). In the proposed rule, we noted
one potential example we could
consider would be paying 106 percent
of ASP for 2 years as we did for
calcimimetics. As discussed in the CY
2011 ESRD PPS final rule, the amounts
added to the ESRD PPS base rate for oral
drugs at that time were based on data
from Part D, which included dispensing
fees (75 FR 49043). We solicited
comments on the extent to which 100
percent of ASP is an appropriate
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders
and whether there are any costs
associated with the inclusion of
phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment that may not be
accounted for by 100 percent of ASP. In
the proposed rule we noted that CMS
may finalize a change in the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders after
considering comments on this topic.
As noted earlier, we have issued
guidance 44 about the process we will
use for paying the TDAPA for the
phosphate binders and for their
incorporation into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment. This guidance
addresses several key topics including
billing information, information about
the discarded drug policy, and
information for manufacturers about
reporting timelines for ASP data.
We invited public comment on the
TDAPA payment methodology for the
January 1, 2025, incorporation of oralonly drugs in the ESRD PPS.
Approximately 162 commenters
including LDOs; provider advocacy
organizations; nonprofit dialysis
associations; coalitions of dialysis
organizations; a network of dialysis
organizations; professional
organizations; long-term care pharmacy
association; ESRD facilities; ESRD
beneficiaries, a trade association and
pharmaceutical manufacturers, along
with MedPAC, commented on the
TDAPA payment methodology for the
January 1, 2025, incorporation of oralonly drugs in the ESRD PPS. Of the 162
comments on oral-only drugs, we
received 22 responses directly pertinent
to the TDAPA methodology for the
January 1, 2025, incorporation of oralonly drugs in the ESRD PPS. The
remaining comments were out-of-scope,
including 133 form letters, of which
approximately 110 were from a unique
44 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/
prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renaldisease-esrd and https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-ppsbundled-payment.pdf.
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submitter. The following is a summary
of the public comments received on
these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Multiple commenters
expressed appreciation that CMS
recognized the operational concerns and
associated costs that were raised by
ESRD facilities in the 2023 GAO
report.45 However, they expressed
concern that CMS does not fully
understand the costs and burdens
associated specifically with staff time
and dispensing of these drugs.
Numerous commenters expressed
concerns regarding the incremental
operational costs and burden of
incorporating phosphate binders into
the ESRD PPS bundled payment. The
commenters’ concerns included, but
were not limited to, distribution fees,
mailing fees, storage fees, and increases
in labor costs.
Response: CMS thanks the
commenters for their appreciation and
for sharing concerns regarding the costs
and burden of incorporating phosphate
binders into the ESRD PPS bundled
payment. CMS has addressed these
specific concerns in the responses to
comments that follow in this rule. CMS
recognizes that the introduction of oralonly medications into the ESRD PPS
bundle can present some new logistic
challenges. CMS is recognizing these
costs through the modification to the
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders
in this final rule. In accordance with
section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act,
§ 413.171 defines renal dialysis services
to include oral-only renal dialysis
services drug and biologicals. Oral-only
renal dialysis service drugs and
biological products were included in the
definition of renal dialysis services in
the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR
49044). At that time CMS finalized a
policy to delay payment for these drugs
under the ESRD PPS until January 1,
2014, to allow ESRD facilities to plan for
the logistic challenges like those
interested parties note in their
comments. Legislation further delayed
this date to January 1, 2025, and CMS
ultimately updated the regulations at 42
CFR 413.174(f)(6) to finalize the date of
the incorporation of oral-only drugs into
the ESRD PPS bundled payment as
January 1, 2025. CMS believes that the
passage of over a decade since
implementation of the ESRD PPS has
provided sufficient time for interested
parties to make the operational changes
and logistical arrangements needed to
furnish oral-only renal dialysis service
45 ‘‘End-Stage renal Disease: CMS Plans for
Including Phosphate Binders in the Bundled
Payment.’’ (GAO–24–106288, Nov. 2023).
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16:53 Nov 08, 2024
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drugs and biological products to their
patients.
Comment: Numerous commenters
stated that CMS should finalize the
payment of a dispensing fee to account
for such incremental operational costs
when phosphate binders are added to
the ESRD PPS bundled payment. They
stated that the dispensing of oral
medications to be taken daily will result
in incremental operational costs and
that these costs and dispensing fees are
not included in the ESRD PPS base rate.
An LDO and a coalition of dialysis
organizations noted that every dialysis
provider likely will implement a
process that is most cost effective and
efficient based on their footprint,
organizational structure, patient
population and other specific
circumstances. Commenters stated that
while the processes and procedures may
vary by ESRD facility, every ESRD
facility will incur distribution, storage,
and staff expenses that are not
accounted for in the ASP data, and this
is an important distinction from the
current processes related to
calcimimetics. These other costs are
discussed in the comments and
responses that follow.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, CMS recognized the high
percentage of ESRD beneficiaries that
have at least one phosphate binder
prescription and the large volume of
phosphate binder prescriptions and
noted that we were considering whether
it may be appropriate to make
additional payment to account for
incremental operational costs in excess
of 100 percent of ASP, such as
dispensing fees, when paying the
TDAPA for phosphate binders. We
stated that unlike drugs and biological
products for which payment is already
included in the ESRD PPS base rate,
including all other drugs and biological
products in existing ESRD PPS
functional categories, dispensing fees
and other costs are not currently
included in the ESRD PPS base rate for
phosphate binders (89 FR 55797). CMS
believes that payment for the
incremental operational costs, such as
distribution fees, mailing fees, storage
fees, and increases in labor costs
incurred by the ESRD facilities for the
provision of phosphate binders should
align with resource use; that is, ESRD
facilities’ outlay to provide the
phosphate binders to the Medicare
beneficiaries. In lieu of a dispensing fee,
as discussed later in this section, we are
finalizing a flat rate increase to the
proposed 100 percent of ASP TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis
organizations commented that
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89139
distribution costs, both dispensing fees
and mailing fees, are not included in
100 percent of ASP. An LDO stated that
CMS suggested that ESRD facilities can
implement efficiencies by having
phosphate binder prescriptions mailed
to the patient’s home to the extent
possible under state pharmacy laws.
They noted, however, that this still
represents a new cost to ESRD facilities
that is not accounted for in a drug’s
ASP. One commenter who is a
pharmacy solutions company stated that
the range of dispensing fees tends to be
$5 to $30 for any given dispense, and
incremental operational costs might
include costs associated with call
centers and pharmacists to receive
prescriptions from ESRD facilities, as
well as the internal processing costs
associated with converting that into
fillable medications. The commenter
also stated that there is labor associated
with the actual fulfillment of oral
medications, which includes both
quality control such as operational
checks, and despite automation there is
additional regulatory burden and
oversight that is applied to mail order
pharmacies. They stated that all these
activities will result in incremental
operational costs. The commenter stated
that it is reasonable to expect that ESRD
facilities, depending on their size and
scale, might pay more than what would
be incurred in mailing fees to dispense
oral medications through a pharmacy.
Commenters noted that these types of
distribution costs exist regardless of
whether the oral-only drugs are
dispensed from a retail or mail or
central pharmacy.
Multiple commenters stated that the
ESRD facilities will be paying pharmacy
charges to obtain the drugs through
them. Commenters expressed concern
that ESRD facilities will incur
additional costs that should not be
theirs to shoulder. A non-profit dialysis
association noted that increased
payment for these incremental
operational costs is important,
particularly now when according to the
commenter ESRD facilities are at a
financial breaking point. The
commenter noted that the logistics
involved with getting the phosphate
binders to a patient can be more
expensive than the drugs themselves.
They stated that these costs are even
greater when beneficiaries are based in
rural communities, putting their ESRD
facilities at an even greater
disadvantage.
An organization of pediatric
nephrologists supported the TDAPA
amount based on 100 percent of ASP for
oral phosphate binders. While the
organization appreciated that adding
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oral-only drugs to the bundled payment
will improve patient access, they are
concerned that these drugs are
expensive, and pediatric centers will
not be able to afford them. The
organization stated that pediatric
patients with kidney disease are mainly
dialyzed in pediatric hospitals, which
are not able to get bulk pricing deals for
these drugs. By adding oral-only drugs
to the ESRD PPS bundled payment
without an appropriate increase in
payment, the organization stated that
there will be a huge cost to the pediatric
hospitals that they cannot absorb. The
commenter identified additional
concerns about access, as these are not
first-line drugs for pediatrics and there
is often significant prior authorization
involved in procuring these drugs for
pediatric patients. They stated that the
provision of phosphate binders for the
pediatric ESRD population would
include compounding charges and
dispensary costs.
Several commenters noted that there
will be mailing fees either in terms of
obtaining drugs from pharmacies or
sending the drugs directly to the
patient’s home, which is where they are
taken. The pharmacy solutions company
stated that the home delivery of
medications is preferred by
beneficiaries. The commenter predicted
that most dialysis providers will rely on
mail order or shipping from a central
pharmacy to their clinics for
distribution; others may rely on local
retail pharmacies. The commenter
stated that for home delivery, each
prescription must be shipped to a
patient’s home through a carrier like the
United States Postal Service, FedEx,
UPS, etc. Thus, each dispense incurs an
additional expense of $3 to $25
depending on weight and shipping
method. The commenter also noted that
given the number of types of phosphate
binders used per patient, and the sheer
volume of pills needed, there will be
increased shipping costs previously
unaccounted for in the ESRD PPS base
rate for oral phosphate binders. A
coalition of dialysis providers stated
that shipping costs alone are expected to
be significant, as pills must be packaged
to ensure the medication is not damaged
during transit, and shipping costs are
likely to escalate year over year, as will
the contract costs with mail-order
pharmacies.
Drug manufacturers encouraged CMS
to finalize a change in the TDAPA
amount to 106 percent of ASP for
phosphate binders. They stated that 100
percent of ASP does not consider the
substantial cost for dispensing oral-only
drugs particularly for the high volume
of pills associated with phosphate
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binders, which a large majority of
Medicare ESRD beneficiaries utilize. An
LDO and a coalition of dialysis
organizations commented on the
distribution of phosphate binders to a
subpopulation of patients with housing
instability, for whom mailing
medications to a home is not an option.
Based on an assessment of the LDO’s
patient population, as well as internal
and external assets and capabilities in
efficiently ordering and distributing a
large volume of oral drugs, they
assessed that mailing medications to
patient homes, arguably the least
burdensome process for facility staff, is
viable for only a subset of their
population. Because many patients have
unstable housing situations, the LDO
stated that they cannot rely on mail
order for every patient.
Multiple commenters noted that all
these distribution options will incur
new costs previously unaccounted for in
the original underlying bundled
payment and that are not covered by
100 percent of ASP, including
additional staff time and facility
infrastructure costs. Unlike the current
process used for calcimimetics, staff
will be required to accept and store
individual prescriptions for each
patient. An LDO stated phosphate
binders currently flow through retail
and mail order pharmacies, and that
they will continue to flow through those
channels when the payment changes
from Part D to Part B. The LDO
suggested that it would be appropriate
for CMS to adjust the TDAPA payment
amount to recognize Part B pharmacy
supply fees paid for oral drugs paid as
part of a physician’s service, or in this
case as part of the renal dialysis service.
Response: CMS thanks the
commenters for sharing the challenges
accompanying the complexity of
dispensing phosphate binders because
of the broad array of phosphate binders
and the high volume of pills. We
acknowledge there are six common
types of phosphate binders as compared
to only one calcimimetic. CMS also
acknowledges the range of dispensing
fees for the high volume of phosphate
binders required to manage ESRD
patients, along with the impact of
potentially higher pharmacy supply fees
on the rural community. We understand
the concerns expressed by the
commenters about ASP, and that small
ESRD facilities may be unable to
negotiate the lower drug prices
attributed to volume, and inaccessibility
to supply chain discounts. These unique
challenges of the high volume of
phosphate binders that ESRD facilities
must provide to beneficiaries would be
magnified by a higher cost-to-payment
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ratio for the smaller ESRD facilities. We
recognize that unstable housing
situations with some ESRD beneficiaries
would affect the distribution of
phosphate binders through mail order,
which may be a preferred way for ESRD
facilities to manage this process. In
consideration of the incremental
operational costs that will be incurred
by the ESRD facilities, as noted later in
this section, CMS has decided to
finalize an increase to the current 100
percent of ASP calculation of the
TDAPA amount paid to ESRD facilities
for the inclusion of phosphate binders.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations noted that ESRD facilities
will need to update information
technology systems to facilitate these
changes. Changes are required to update
electronic medical records, billing
systems, and inventory management.
The commenter also stated that
e-prescribing is also a complex process
that involves interactions with state
regulatory authorities and that ESRD
facilities will need to stand-up or
expand their internal ability to engage
with e-prescribing systems and contract
with e-prescribing platforms to facilitate
this policy change for phosphate
binders. The coalition stated that all
these changes represent both significant
up-front costs and investments as well
as ongoing administrative requirements
to ensure operational connectivity and
seamless delivery to the beneficiary.
The commenter stated that ASP does
not cover any of information technology
costs for ESRD facilities to distribute
phosphate binders to beneficiaries.
Response: CMS acknowledges that
there will be changes needed in the IT
systems for ESRD facilities to
accommodate the updates and
methodological changes accompanying
the inclusion of the phosphate binders
in the ESRD PPS. These changes and
updates affect electronic medical
records, billing systems, and inventory
management systems. However, since
publication of the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule, our existing regulations at
§ 413.174(f)(6) have stated that effective
January 1, 2025, oral-only drugs, which
includes phosphate binders, will be
paid for under the ESRD PPS. As
previously discussed, we initially
delayed the incorporation of oral-only
drugs into the ESRD PPS in 2011, in
part to allow ESRD facilities to make
such operational changes and logistical
arrangements. In addition, we have
provided detailed operational guidance
on the implementation of the TDAPA
policy as it pertains to phosphate
binders to ensure that facilities have
clear instructions on compliance and
payment processes to facilitate a smooth
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transition,46 which addresses HCPCS
coding, billing, and price information
for phosphate binders. We expect that
ESRD facilities will be able to make
these system changes in advance of
January 1, 2025. CMS will continue to
issue operational guidance as necessary
for the smooth implementation of the
incorporation of phosphate binders into
the ESRD PPS bundled payment. As
discussed later in this section, CMS is
finalizing an increase in the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders, which
may help to offset the costs associated
with the logistic steps that the
commenter described.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis
organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists, a drug
manufacturer and a health care system
noted that supporting the provision of a
significant volume of pills to patients
along with the storage costs associated
with maintaining the drugs at the ESRD
facility if the decision is to distribute
the drugs to patients during their
dialysis treatment sessions is an
additional cost to the ESRD facility. An
LDO stated that the storage and
distribution of oral calcimimetic
medications are different from what
they would be with phosphate binders.
Commenters noted that because there is
one oral calcimimetic medication, and
half of their patient population on
calcimimetic treatment (approximately
25 percent) receives this drug three
times per week chairside, the storage
and distribution processes are much
simpler. They stated that ESRD facilities
can maintain a supply of calcimimetics
with relatively low burden compared to
phosphate binders. The commenters
stated that with more than 80 percent of
ESRD patients being prescribed
phosphate binders, and with more than
six different types of oral phosphate
binders and various dosages of each,
phosphate binders represent a 225
percent relative increase over, and
addition to, the percent of patients to
whom the ESRD facilities are currently
delivering calcimimetics. The coalition
stated that the scale of operational
requirements needed to deliver
calcimimetics simply pales in
comparison to what will be required to
deliver phosphate binders to
beneficiaries through the ESRD PPS.
The commenters also noted that
because of the size of the pills and the
quantity required for each prescription,
most ESRD facilities are not equipped to
store and dispense this volume of oral
medication. They stated that phosphate
46 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundledpayment.pdf.
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binders represent an exponential
increase in the volume of pills dialysis
providers will need to acquire,
distribute, store, and manage for their
patients each month and year. The
relative difference between managing
360 pills per year per patient for
cinacalcet as compared with 3,240 pills
per year per patient for calcium
carbonate is 800 percent.
An LDO stated that the ESRD PPS
bundled payment might have included
storage administration fees for drugs
that were previously separately billable
(largely intravenous agents) when CMS
established the bundled payment.
However, they noted that the claims
data CMS analyzed at that time omitted
these oral medications. The LDO
commented that it is incorrect to assume
that the storage costs and dispensing
fees for intravenous agents, which
represent the vast majority of dialysisprovided drugs accounted for when the
bundled payment was created, are
equivalent to the administration and
mailing costs associated with oral-only
medications. A coalition of dialysis
organizations stated that while their
member ESRD facilities have increased
their familiarity with dispensing oral
drugs since the inception of the ESRD
PPS, the difference between distributing
several hundred pills to 25 percent of
their patients each year and distributing
thousands of large pills to 80 percent of
the ESRD facilities’ patients each year
requires a significant expansion of their
pharmaceutical distribution operations
on a massive scale. The commenter
stated that the ESRD facilities cannot
simply repurpose existing systems to
meet this goal—they must build,
rebuild, and significantly expand the
scale of their operations to
accommodate a vastly larger number of
patients taking exponentially more pills
than they have ever provided before.
The development, maintenance, and
ongoing clinical management of these
processes represent significant costs to
ESRD facilities, which are not covered
by setting the TDAPA for phosphate
binders at 100 percent of ASP.
The LDO commented that intravenous
agents and oral-only drugs differ in
several respects. Most notably,
intravenous agents are usually
administered to patients while on
dialysis. Thus, there is centralized
shipping and administration of those
products. In contrast, the commenter
stated, under state and other pharmacy
laws, a significant number of the oralonly drugs will be shipped and
dispensed directly to the patient’s
home. This delivery model incurs fixed
costs, such as shipping and
administration fees, which differ from
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those associated with the previously
separately billable intravenous drugs.
A coalition of dialysis organizations
stated that ESRD facilities would also
have to construct or install on-site
storage with appropriate temperature
controls and security measures
compliant with state pharmacy laws and
requirements. If the patient misses or
changes their appointment, or if the
delivery of their prescription is delayed
by the shipping carrier, this process
breaks down. The coalition stated that
CMS’s suggestion regarding labor
allocation for in-center distribution of
phosphate binders does not address the
needs of patients using home dialysis, is
not simple, and is not without costs.
The commenter stated that having an
ESRD facility staff member hand a
patient their pre-packaged medication is
the final step in a long, complex, and
costly process. They stated that none of
those costs will be supported if CMS
sets the TDAPA amount for phosphate
binders at 100 percent of ASP.
A non-profit treatment and research
center stated that given the difficulties
associated with dispensing these
medications in the ESRD facility, these
facilities may have to restrict the
formulary of available medications,
which may mean that some patients
have difficulty accessing the optimal
medication for them. A health care
system stated that because of significant
cost considerations, they are concerned
that ESRD facilities may limit patient
choice by offering fewer phosphate
binders based on the cost to facilities.
In their comment, MedPAC refers to
their comment in the CY 2019 proposed
rule that stated that the ASP + 6 percent
policy that is applied to many Part B
drugs was developed to reimburse
physicians for the cost of drugs that they
purchase directly and commonly
administer in their offices. MedPAC also
stated that while the ASP payment
policy never stated what cost the ‘‘+6
percent’’ was intended to cover, they
noted that reimbursing dialysis facilities
is considerably different from
reimbursing physicians. First, the
variation in physicians’ purchasing
power, whether they practice solo, as
part of a group, or in a health system,
is likely to result in considerably more
variation in the acquisition price for a
drug compared to the acquisition prices
for dialysis facilities. If the intent of the
‘‘+6 percent’’ was to address acquisition
price variation, MedPAC stated that
they believe that rationale is diminished
for dialysis facilities. MedPAC also
stated that the TDAPA amount is in
addition to the ESRD PPS base rate,
which already includes payment for the
cost of storage and administration of
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ESRD-related drugs. Therefore, if the
intent of the ‘‘+6 percent’’ was to
address storage and administration
costs, MedPAC believes these costs are
already addressed through the ESRD
PPS bundled payment and do not
contribute to the rationale for paying
106 percent of ASP for the TDAPA.
Response: We agree with MedPAC
that the 106 percent of ASP percent
policy was developed to pay physicians
for the cost of drugs and that the
TDAPA is an add-on payment
adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate,
which already accounts for the cost of
storage and administration of renal
dialysis drugs. However, CMS
recognizes the unique costs associated
with the provision of phosphate binder
drugs and believes it is appropriate to
consider a potential change in the
TDAPA payment policy for these drugs.
CMS believes it is appropriate to make
an incremental addition to the TDAPA
amount to specifically account for
incremental operational costs in excess
of 100 percent of ASP for furnishing
phosphate binders, such as distribution
fees, mailing fees, excess storage fees,
and increases in labor costs. Unlike
other drugs and biological products for
which payment is already included in
the ESRD PPS base rate, including all
other drugs and biological products in
existing ESRD PPS functional
categories, these incremental
operational costs, such as security of
medications in storage, are not currently
included in the ESRD PPS base rate for
phosphate binders. We noted this in the
analysis conducted to establish the base
rate in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule,
and we did not include phosphate
binders in that analysis due to a lack of
data (75 FR 49043). CMS is making a
provision for a fixed additional amount
for each monthly claim that includes
phosphate binders, which will increase
the TDAPA amount to account for these
unaddressed incremental operational
costs in CY 2025 and CY 2026.
Regarding the concern about the
difficulties associated with dispensing
phosphate binders in the ESRD facility,
and the risk that these facilities may
have to restrict the formulary of
available medications, which may mean
that some patients have difficulty
accessing the optimal medication for
them, we believe that physicians and
their patients should make the decision
together on the appropriate form of the
drug for treatment. It is not our intent
to interfere with that decision making
process. As the number of drugs within
each ESRD PPS functional category
increases and market share competition
from the manufacturers is a factor, we
anticipate easier access, more choices in
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care, and lower prices. We acknowledge
that payment policies may have
unintended consequences as identified
by the commenters. However, it is our
expectation that ESRD facilities will
follow the physician’s plan of care for
the patient. Under the ESRD facility
CfCs (for example, §§ 494.70(a)(12) and
494.90(a)(3)), if a physician determines
that a particular phosphate binder is
clinically best for a particular patient,
the ESRD facility is obligated to make
that drug available to the patient. In the
CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we
specifically stated that we expect ESRD
facilities to provide the appropriate
medications, at the appropriate dosage,
based upon individual patient needs.
We expect the patient’s nephrologist
and the interdisciplinary team to
identify medication needs in accordance
with the individual patient’s plan of
care (75 FR 49038). CMS will be closely
monitoring drug utilization at the
beneficiary and facility level for these
types of issues.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis
organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists and drug
manufacturers commented that
complying with state pharmacy laws for
the distribution of phosphate binders is
an additional cost. For example, these
commenters noted that some states, like
Alabama and Arkansas, do not allow
ESRD facilities to distribute oral drugs
directly to the patients, so there are
additional contracting costs incurred.
An LDO commented that ESRD facilities
are limited by state rules in their ability
to maintain a stock of medications that
are dispensed to patients for
consumption at home. They stated that
CMS’s recommendation that ESRD
facilities could provide the patient with
prepackaged medication when they are
at the facility is not aligned with the
reality of how ESRD facilities operate.
They also stated that since they are not
licensed to package medications, they
will need to pay pharmacies to provide
the medication so it can be distributed
by registered nurses in their ESRD
facilities to their patients. This fee is not
included in the ASP, and the
commenter stated that they will incur
additional costs.
Another coalition of dialysis
organizations commented that ESRD
facilities are working diligently to stand
up contracting and procurement
agreements with manufacturers,
distributors, mail-order pharmacies, and
other entities to facilitate these changes
to the payment system. The coalition
notes that each provider must ensure
compliance with federal rules as well as
state pharmacy laws, which can vary
significantly and prevent providers from
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having uniform policies and protocols
across the country, creating
inefficiencies that cannot be mitigated.
Whether standing-up or significantly
expanding these operations from their
current, limited state to manage the
phosphate binders, the coalition noted
that ESRD facilities will need to invest
in significant legal, administrative, and
compliance staff resources to initiate
and continuously maintain these
operations going forward. The coalition
also stated that some of their members
noted that they will also need to help
beneficiaries understand the limitations
based on state pharmacy laws of what
they can and cannot address with them
about their prescription in the facility,
as many state pharmacy laws require
questions about prescriptions to be
answered only by the pharmacist or
prescribing clinician.
An organization of pediatric
nephrologists stated that pediatric
hospitals providing pediatric dialysis
often do not have a license to dispense
for Medicare.
A trade association stated that the
dispensing flexibilities of pre-packaged
mailed medications that extend to
community-dwelling beneficiaries or
contracting with external pharmacies to
furnish the medications not dispensed
during an in-center dialysis session,
may not apply to those beneficiaries in
long-term care facilities (LTCs), due to
Federal or State nursing home
regulations. In addition, this trade
association stated that furnishing the
oral-only phosphate binder medications
to beneficiaries receiving home dialysis
in a nursing facility will create
excessive burdens on facility staff to
establish ‘‘work-around’’ processes to
intake, store, and dispense these oralonly dialysis medications in a manner
different than their standard operating
procedures for all other residents. The
trade association wrote that such ‘‘workarounds’’ increase the risk for missed
medication administration and increase
LTC provider operating costs, which
may disincentivize providers from
offering in-center dialysis room, akin to
a ‘‘den’’ in a private home, or home
dialysis services within the LTC facility,
thereby limiting beneficiary care
options.
A coalition of dialysis organizations
stated that CMS should ensure that
other providers, such as SNFs, are
notified of forthcoming changes to the
ESRD PPS regarding the provision of
phosphate binders and work with those
providers to ensure a smooth transition.
Coalitions of dialysis organizations and
a nephrology nurses association
requested additional guidance from
CMS regarding the complexity of
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phosphate binder management for ESRD
patients in the SNF setting. A trade
association also requested that CMS
address how ESRD and LTC facilities
should address the unique operational
considerations related to the
incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS when the beneficiary’s
current home is a LTC facility. The
association requested CMS to explain
how the oral-only phosphate binder
medications for Medicare dialysis
patients should be made available to the
LTC provider in a manner that complies
with the Federal and State LTC provider
regulations, whether it be from the
ESRD facility, mail delivery or through
an LTC pharmacy. The same
commenters wanted to know if
assurances will be provided that the
costs of these medications directly
related to the ESRD benefit and services
will not be passed on to the SNF.
Finally, the commenter questioned
what, if any, are the documentation
needs and requirements to be exchanged
between the SNF and the ESRD facility.
Response: CMS expects that facilities
should be prepared logistically for the
inclusion of phosphate binders in the
ESRD PPS bundled payment, given that
the regulation establishing the current
effective date was codified in 2016. This
would include the logistics and
contractual agreements for distributing
the phosphate binders, whether incenter or for those patients receiving
home dialysis, any need for increased
storage due to the number of pills, and
efficient use of ESRD facility labor. CMS
is planning to hold at least two open
door forums to inform interested parties
about ESRD PPS policy and answer
questions related to implementation of
the incorporation of phosphate binders
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment. In
addition, CMS has a payment mailbox
for incoming questions regarding the
ESRD PPS payment policies. That
mailbox address is: ESRDPAYMENT@
cms.hhs.gov.
Regarding the commenter’s concerns
about pediatric hospitals’ licensure to
dispense phosphate binders, we believe
the commenter is referring to
regulations that prevent certain hospital
pharmacies from providing drugs to
patients to take home. We note that we
expect ESRD facilities would contract
with a pharmacy as necessary, and this
would be the case for hospital-based
ESRD facilities as well. Some hospitals
may not have outpatient pharmacies, as
would most freestanding ESRD
facilities, but would be able to contract
with a pharmacy to make phosphate
binders available to patients. We note
that the additional $36.41 increase to
the TDAPA amount for phosphate
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binders would be intended cover
incremental operational costs associated
with such a contract.
CMS expects that LTC facilities will
ensure that the current procedures they
are using to supply oral drugs, such as
calcimimetics, comply with the Federal
and State LTC facility regulations.
Accordingly, the same process should
be followed for phosphate binders. In
accordance with the statutory definition
of renal dialysis services at section
1881(b)(14)(B)(iii) of the Act, § 413.171
defines phosphate binders as a renal
dialysis service. Renal dialysis services
have always been included within the
scope of the Part A extended care
benefit under section 1861(h)(7) of the
Act that provides for coverage of those
services (not specified elsewhere in
section 1861(h)) that are generally
furnished by, or under arrangements
made by, SNFs. However, dialysis
services described under section
1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act may be
unbundled when furnished by an
outside dialysis supplier. Given this, the
SNF rarely bills separately for renal
dialysis services. Rather, such services
are billed for separately under the
Medicare Part B dialysis benefit by the
outside supplier. The incorporation of
oral only drugs did not change the
existing ESRD facility CfCs or associated
guidance for providing home dialysis
services in a LTC facility. Currently,
CMS does not plan to update the QSO
18–24 guidance. As explained in QSO
18–24, collaborative care planning and
delineated division of responsibilities is
critical to the successful
implementation of a patient’s dialysis
plan of care.47 Listed below are the
clinical areas that should be addressed
in an agreement between an ESRD
facility and LTC facility when home
dialysis services are provided to
residents of a LTC facility. This is not
an exhaustive list, nor does it represent
mandatory elements of a written
agreement. This guidance is a resource
for dialysis facilities to refer to prior to
furnishing home dialysis care to nursing
home residents. Guidance on clinical
areas that should be addressed in an
agreement include:
• Methods for enabling timely
communication and collaboration
between the ESRD facility and nursing
home care team;
• Ensuring a safe and sanitary
environment where the dialysis
treatments occur;
• Ensuring active participation of the
nursing home care team in the
47 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/qso-1824-esrd-revised.pdf.
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development and implementation of an
individualized care plan;
• Delineation of patient monitoring
responsibilities before, during, and after
each treatment, ensuring any state
scope-of-practice laws and limitations
are adhered to when delineating
responsibilities;
• Processes that ensure a review of
the qualifications, training, competency
verification, and monitoring of all
personnel, patients, and caregivers
(family members or friends) who
administer dialysis treatments in the
nursing home;
• Procedures for preparing nursing
home staff to appropriately address and
respond to dialysis-related
complications and provide emergency
interventions, as needed; and
• Procedures to make sure that all
equipment necessary for the resident’s
dialysis treatment is available and
maintained in working condition.
Comment: A trade association
questioned if CMS intends to update the
QSO–18–24–ESRD guidance prior to
implementation to assure that both the
ESRD facility and the LTC provider
clearly understand what may need to be
updated in their agreements, policies
and procedures, and training needs
resulting from the revised payment
methodologies and the potential shift in
how these oral-only phosphate binder
medications are made available to the
LTC provider.
Response: The incorporation of oralonly drugs under the ESRD PPS will not
change the existing ESRD facility CfCs
or associated guidance for providing
home dialysis services in a LTC facility.
Currently, CMS does not plan to update
the QSO 18–24 guidance. As explained
in QSO 18–24, collaborative care
planning and delineated division of
responsibilities is critical to the
successful implementation of a patient’s
dialysis plan of care.
Comment: A non-profit treatment and
research center stated that there will be
difficulty managing these medications
for patients residing in nursing homes
whether for short-term rehabilitation or
as long-term residents. They stated that
nursing homes have existing processes
for obtaining medication for their
patients which does not include
obtaining it from ESRD facilities. The
ESRD facilities will need to collaborate
with any nursing facility in which their
patients reside to arrange for the
delivery of the medication. Further, the
commenter stated that the nursing
homes will ask for payment for the time
their staff spend in providing the
medication to the patient. They will
need to have a pharmacist deliver the
medication to the nurse caring for a
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patient and then the nurse will have to
provide the medication to the patient as
prescribed.
Response: As noted previously, renal
dialysis services have always been
included within the scope of the Part A
extended care benefit under section
1861(h)(7) of the Act that provides for
coverage of those services (not specified
elsewhere in section 1861(h)) that are
generally furnished by, or under
arrangements made by, SNFs. However,
dialysis services described under
section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act may be
unbundled when furnished by an
outside dialysis supplier. Therefore,
LTCs can provide renal dialysis
services, including provision of
phosphate binders, to their residents in
an ‘‘under arrangement’’ agreement with
an ESRD facility.48 Any payment
arrangements, such as payment for the
LTC staff time, with the ESRD facilities
would involve contractual arrangements
with the ESRD facility and the LTC
facility. Alternatively, if the LTC is a
Medicare-certified dialysis facility, it
can provide renal dialysis services.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists, a drug
manufacturer, and a health care system
all stated that adjusting drug supplies
when a physician changes a patient’s
prescription to another product (which
often occurs) is a cost not covered by
100 percent of ASP. In a comment from
an LDO, they stated that their data
suggests that relative to calcimimetics,
phosphate binder prescriptions change
frequently. They noted that
approximately 23 percent of patients on
a phosphate binder have a change in
their prescription each month. The
commenters stated that assuming mail
delivery is used for appropriate patients,
ESRD facilities will incur the cost of
delivery, which in some cases may be
more than once per month depending
on the rate of prescription changes.
Response: CMS recognizes that there
may be changes in the patient’s
prescription for phosphate binders to
address the patient’s side-effects from a
current phosphate binder or to adjust
following the results of laboratory
testing. As a cost control measure, ESRD
facilities could adjust the prescribed
amounts to avoid additional mailing
fees or could negotiate deeper
discounted pricing from mail service
pharmacies for long term, chronic
therapies such as phosphate binder
prescriptions. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule (80 FR 69033), we discussed
48 https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/MedicareContracting/ContractorLearningResources/
Downloads/ja0435.pdf.
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our existing policy since the inception
of the ESRD PPS that all renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products
prescribed for ESRD patients, including
the oral forms of renal dialysis
injectable drugs, must be reported by
ESRD facilities, and the units reported
on the monthly claim must reflect the
amount expected to be taken during that
month. We stated that ESRD facilities
should use the best information they
have in determining the amount
expected to be taken in a given month,
including fill information from the
pharmacy and the patient’s plan of care.
CMS notes that Medicare does not pay
for drugs that are not in single-use
packaging that have been dispensed and
discarded. As noted in an October 2022
review article about mineral bone
disorders in kidney disease patients,
decisions about the use and dose of
specific phosphate binders should be
based on progressive or persistent
hyperphosphatemia.49 Additionally,
changes in phosphate binder
prescriptions most often occur in
patients with ESRD who are new to
dialysis 50 and may have higher costs.
CMS provides an onset adjustment of
32.7 percent, which is a Medicare
payment adjustment for patients with
ESRD who are eligible for Medicare
during their first 120 days of chronic
renal dialysis. As noted in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS proposed rule (74 FR 49952)
the higher costs of the new patients may
be due to stabilization of the patient’s
condition, along with administrative
and labor costs associated with the
patients being new to dialysis.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations and a health care system
disagreed with the language in the
proposed rule that suggested there
would be no additional labor cost
incurred when phosphate binders are
added to the ESRD PPS bundled
payment. The commenters stated that
they anticipate that adding new duties
associated with the distribution of
phosphate binders will take significant
time away from existing patient care
activities. As a result, many ESRD
facilities may find themselves having to
hire additional health care professionals
and other staff to maintain the same
level of care provided today. The
coalition and health care facility also
stated that ESRD facilities continue to
49 Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23(20), 12223; https://
doi.org/10.3390/ijms232012223, Mineral Bone
Disorders in Kidney Disease Patients: The Ever
Current Topic.
50 Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, 2022, 21(7);
https://doi.org/10.1080/14740338.2022.2044472.
An update on phosphate binders for the treatment
of hyperphosphatemia in chronic kidney disease
patients on dialysis: a review of safety profiles.
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face significant labor costs and, while
the tight labor market has abated
somewhat, hiring additional staff
remains a significant expense. An LDO
noted that CMS suggested that ESRD
facilities can efficiently use staff time by
providing patients with pre-packaged
medication that would include
medications for multiple days.
However, the LDO, along with a
coalition of ESRD facilities commented
that this represents a new cost to ESRD
facilities that is not accounted for in a
drug’s ASP. They commented that what
CMS presents as a simple solution is the
end-result of a complex system that will
require a significant up-front and
ongoing investments of resources and
staff time. To execute CMS’s suggestion,
the commenters noted that ESRD
facilities need to contract with a
pharmacy to dispense, fill, and ‘‘prepackage’’ the medication and arrange for
delivery to the facility in advance of
each patient’s scheduled appointment.
Facility staff would need to receive,
inventory, store, and manage
medication for all their patients on-site
and then ensure that all pharmacy
processes are coordinated with
scheduled patient appointments. The
LDO stated that under Part B, phosphate
binders will continue to be distributed
through pharmacies whether those
prescriptions are mailed to the patient
or to the facility. Regardless of where
the patient receives the prescription
(facility or home), the burden of
managing oral phosphate binders
through the facility affects every
member of the staff. The LDO stated that
the ESRD facility staff will need to
manage medication orders, call in new
prescriptions, conduct medication
management, maintain delivery logs
when prescriptions are delivered to the
facility, review and maintain refill
requests, educate patients on usage, and
manage disposal of unused oral
medications. Because many patients
will lose the low-income subsidy and
other beneficiary protections in Part D,
the LDO noted, some facility staff time
will now be dedicated to assisting
patients who have trouble affording
their medications.
A non-profit treatment and research
center stated that not only are there
costs incurred when their registered
nurses dispense the medications to the
patients, provide counseling about the
medications and answer any questions
patients may have, but the nurses will
be taken away from their current patient
care responsibilities to perform these
functions, which the commenters noted
will negatively impact the patients
under their care. A health care system
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also stated that increasing the number of
pharmacies will increase the
administrative cost of providing services
and the complexity of tracking the drugs
for the ESRD facility.
The LDO stated that while
approximately 25 percent of their
patient population is on calcimimetic
therapy, whereas approximately 70 to
80 percent of their population is on
phosphate binder therapy, CMS cannot
assume that because ESRD facilities are
managing calcimimetics, the
infrastructure is in place to manage
phosphate binders. They stated that
there will be a significant amount of
staff time devoted to managing
phosphate binders through the ESRD
facility, which will almost certainly be
required to hire additional staff to
reduce the burden on clinical staff. The
LDO stated that these areas represent
the ongoing costs to providers and do
not include startup costs of building
storage capacity and upgrading IT
systems to accommodate changed
workflow and new business functions.
A coalition of dialysis organizations
expressed the importance of medication
management with ESRD patients, as
they may have multiple co-morbidities
and polypharmacy, and there is a
potential for medication-related errors.
This makes continuity of care and
medication management systems
important. They stated that CMS does
not cover ESRD facilities’ ongoing
expenses to provide medication
management for the phosphate binders.
Response: CMS has carefully
considered the operational
considerations and costs raised in the
comments. With respect to
considerations for ESRD facility staffing,
CMS notes that the ESRD PPS includes
payment for staffing related to the
provision of most renal dialysis
services. However, we acknowledge that
there are some areas such as IT
synchronization and the advancements
in the delivery systems that had not
been considered, when establishing
both the ESRD PPS base rate and the
current policy for TDAPA payments at
100 percent of ASP. These costs were
considered in formulating the increased
TDAPA payment which is intended to
account for incremental operational
costs associated with furnishing
phosphate binders. CMS does believe
there are several strategies that ESRD
facilities could employ to efficiently use
available staff time to provide
phosphate binders. There are parallels
between the administration of
phosphate binders and the
administration of oral calcimimetics,
which are also typically taken every
day. First, we expect that patients with
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ESRD generally receive treatment for at
least 3 hours per session, typically three
times per week. We believe that during
this treatment window there is generally
staff availability to provide the patient
with pre-packaged multiple-day doses
of their medication (should state law
allow). Second, ESRD facilities could
maximize the efficiency of staff time by
mailing the prescriptions, to the extent
that doing so is consistent with state
pharmacy laws. For example, the GAO
report identified that one large dialysis
organization only mails oral
prescriptions to patients’ homes, while
others mail the medication to either the
ESRD facility or the patient’s home.
Third, the GAO report identified that
some ESRD facilities outsource labor by
contracting with outside pharmacies
rather than operating their own
pharmacy. By contracting with outside
pharmacies, ESRD facilities could
reduce or avoid the need to hire
additional pharmacists and pharmacy
staff to manage the volume of
prescriptions. CMS acknowledges that
these suggestions may not be fully
applicable for LTC or SNF facilities.
CMS will continue to engage and
communicate with these facilities to
ensure continuity of care and will
continue to monitor patient outcomes
under this policy change.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations stated that while ESRD
facilities and clinical teams, such as
dietitians, are involved in the current
management of bone and mineral
metabolism and hyperphosphatemia,
the process is currently managed under
the auspices of the prescribing
physician working within the formulary
confines of the beneficiary’s Part D plan
or other source of drug coverage, which
is managed largely outside of the ESRD
facility. Migration of phosphate binders
from Part D to Part B imposes new
clinical administrative responsibility on
ESRD facilities to develop clinical
protocols and formularies, educate their
clinician partners and clinical staff, and
manage ongoing clinical evaluation and
monitoring to ensure they are meeting
the needs of our patients on an ongoing
basis to manage a class of drugs for
which they were previously not
responsible. The coalition stated that
the development, maintenance, and
ongoing clinical management of these
processes represent significant costs to
ESRD facilities to hire and continuously
employ clinical leaders across ESRD
facilities and educate and train clinical
staff on evolving educational protocols
and educate beneficiaries on complex
clinical issues. They noted that although
ESRD facilities certainly already employ
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many clinicians, the expansion of the
bundled payment to include phosphate
binders represents an expansion of the
duties their clinical teams need to
undertake, which will result in an
expansion of their clinical teams. They
stated that ASP would not cover any of
these clinical operations expenses
required for ESRD facilities to take on
the responsibility of managing the
phosphate binders for ESRD patients.
Response: As discussed in the CY
2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69010),
we issued sub-regulatory guidance that
instructs ESRD facilities to include all
composite rate drugs and biological
products furnished to the beneficiary on
the monthly claim form (Change
Request 8978, issued December 2, 2014).
In CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR
66149 through 66150), we discussed the
drug categories that we consider to be
used for the treatment of ESRD with the
expectation that all of those drugs and
biological products would be reported
on the claim. Along with capturing cost
to align payment with resource use, we
expected that ESRD facilities would be
aware of all renal dialysis service drugs
and biological products being taken by
their dialysis patients in the event of a
medical adverse event during dialysis.
In addition, the ESRD QIP includes
measures for coordination of care in the
Care Coordination domain, which
accounts for 30 percent of an ESRD
facility’s Total Performance Score. The
QIP also includes a reporting measure
for dialysis events. We have heard from
interested parties that they are aware of
and manage, with the patient’s
physician, the drugs and biological
products taken by their ESRD patients.
Therefore, CMS does not believe that
the management of phosphate binders
done in conjunction with the ESRD
patient’s physician, represents a new
clinical administrative responsibility.
CMS will continue monitoring
beneficiary utilization of phosphate
binders, as well as beneficiary health
outcomes that might be related to
phosphate binder treatment, as it
includes these drugs in the bundled
payment. In addition, CMS is
monitoring these metrics across
beneficiary characteristics, including
race or ethnicity and dual eligibility
status, to ensure that vulnerable
populations are not harmed by this
change.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations commented on the ESRD
facilities’ responsibility to educate
ESRD beneficiaries on an ongoing basis.
They stated that the migration of
Medicare payment for phosphate
binders from Part D to Part B would be
a significant change for beneficiaries.
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For some, this change would start with
ensuring they understand that their
phosphate binders will now be managed
by their ESRD facility rather than
through their local pharmacy. However,
the commenter noted that some
beneficiaries may experience a change
in their recommended prescription
related to the change from their prior
drug coverage and will need clinical,
dietary, and social work education in
support of that change.
Response: Under the CfCs for ESRD
facilities (73 FR 20480), the standard for
patient education located at § 494.90(d)
mandates that the plan of care include
education and training for patients and
family members or caregivers or both, in
aspects of the dialysis experience and
dialysis management, which includes
medications they are taking. The plan of
care would include a change in a
patient’s recommended prescription and
would include the need for clinical,
dietary, and social work education in
support of that change. ESRD
beneficiary education is a longstanding
CfC requirement.
Comment: An LDO expressed
appreciation of CMS’s interest in
exploring options for paying providers
for costs in addition to the drug
acquisition costs and acknowledgement
that drug dispensing fees were included
in the original bundling of oral drugs in
2011. An interested party requested that
CMS consider the incremental
operational costs involved when adding
phosphate binders to the ESRD bundled
payment, noting that the current
proposal does not account for these
costs, which could lead to increased
financial strain on ESRD facilities. The
commenter stated that a fair dispensing
fee or a similar mechanism should be
implemented to cover these additional
expenses.
An LDO and a health care system
requested CMS to consider that payment
at 100 percent of ASP is inconsistent
with Part B drug payment generally,
where providers are typically paid at
106 percent of ASP percent or receive
additional dispensing fees for certain
drugs. Numerous commenters agreed
that CMS should finalize the TDAPA
payment for phosphate binders at 106
percent of ASP, rather than 100 percent
of ASP, to account for additional facility
incremental operational costs. One LDO
stated that they strongly believe the
savings CMS will obtain from including
these drugs in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment will cover the additional costs
associated with appropriately
recognizing dispensing and other
incremental operational costs. The nonprofit dialysis organization also
recommended that beginning January 1,
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2025, CMS should begin collecting and
analyzing data to inform a mid-year
correction to the TDAPA amount if data
suggest that 106 percent of ASP is
insufficient.
MedPAC commented that CMS
should maintain its existing TDAPA
policy to incorporate oral-only
phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS.
The commission wrote that in their
comment in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, they stated that the 106
percent of ASP policy that is applied to
many Part B drugs was developed to
reimburse physicians for the cost of
drugs that they purchase directly and
commonly administer in their offices.51
MedPAC stated that while the ASP
payment policy never stated what cost
the ‘‘+6 percent’’ was intended to cover,
they noted that payment to ESRD
facilities is considerably different from
payment to physicians. MedPAC stated
that the variation in physicians’
purchasing power, whether they
practice solo, as part of a group, or in
a health system, is likely to result in
considerably more variation in the
acquisition price for a drug compared to
the acquisition prices for ESRD
facilities. If the intent of the ‘‘+6
percent’’ was to address acquisition
price variation, MedPAC believed that
rationale was diminished for ESRD
facilities. In their comment letter,
MedPAC referenced their comment on
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed rule,
that setting the TDAPA at 100 percent
of ASP appears to be a well-founded
policy. Further, they stated that as CMS
explained when the agency reduced the
TDAPA amount for calcimimetics in CY
2020 from 106 percent of ASP to 100
percent of ASP, setting the payment
level with the average sales price of the
drug limits the financial burden on
beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Response: As discussed previously,
CMS agrees with MedPAC that the 106
percent of ASP policy was developed to
reimburse physicians for the cost of
drugs and that the TDAPA is an add-on
payment adjustment to the ESRD PPS
base rate, which already accounts for
the cost of storage and administration of
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products. However, we also recognize
that there are incremental operational
costs with inclusion of phosphate
binders into the ESRD PPS, that were
not factored into the original payment
policy. As described later in this
51 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.2018.
MedPAC comment on CMS’s proposed rule on the
end-stage renal disease payment system for CY
2019. https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/
uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/defaultletters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_medpac_
comment_v2_sec.pdf.
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section, CMS is making a provision for
an increase in the calculation of the
amount for the TDAPA for phosphate
binders through a flat rate addition for
two years to account for these
unforeseen incremental operational
costs.
Comment: A hospital association
requested that CMS pay ESRD facilities
for the costs associated not only with
drug acquisition, but also with storing,
managing and distributing oral drugs
that are not consumed with the
treatment. An LDO noted that in the
proposed rule, CMS suggests that
payment for phosphate binders at 106
percent of ASP may be appropriate for
the 2-year TDAPA period. The LDO and
a drug manufacturer agreed that this
approach would be consistent with CMS
policy for calcimimetics and would also
be consistent with Part B drug payment
policies generally. However, a nonprofit treatment and research center
stated that for some phosphate binder
medications like sevelamer and calcium
acetate, the 6 percent above ASP likely
will not cover the costs they will have
to pay to the pharmacy, much less the
costs incurred when their registered
nurses dispense the medications to the
patients, provide counseling about the
medications and answer any questions
patients may have.
To maintain consistency with the
treatment of calcimimetics during their
first 2 years of TDAPA, to align with the
way Medicare pays for drugs and
biological products under the Hospital
Outpatient PPS’s pass-through payment
policy, and to minimize administrative
burden on CMS and ESRD facilities,
multiple commenters recommend that
CMS adopt the methodology outlined in
section 1847A of the Act, which sets
payment at the 106 percent of ASP; if
ASP is not available, the payment is
based on the Wholesale Acquisition
Cost (WAC). Alternatively, an LDO
urged CMS to use the flat rate part B
supply fee for oral drugs under the
Physician Fee Schedule as a precedent
to provide the same payment
adjustment for oral Part B renal dialysis
drugs.
MedPAC opposed the TDAPA amount
based on 106 percent of ASP for
phosphate binders in their comment
and noted that when CMS reduced the
TDAPA amount for calcimimetics in CY
2020 from 106 percent of ASP to 100
percent of ASP, MedPAC stated that
CMS explained that setting the payment
amount at 100 percent of ASP of the
drug limits the financial burden on
beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Response: Consistent with our
discussion in the CY 2020 ESRD PPS
final rule (84 FR 60675), we continue to
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believe that 100 percent of ASP is a
reasonable basis for payment for the
TDAPA for new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that fall within an
existing functional category, because
there are already dollars in the per
treatment base rate for the new drug’s
respective functional category. We
further believe 100 percent of ASP is a
reasonable basis for the TDAPA amount
for new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that do not fall
within an existing functional category
because the ESRD PPS base rate has
dollars built in for administrative
complexities and overhead costs for
drugs and biological products. However,
we note that the original analysis in the
CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule excluded
phosphate binders, which are a
longstanding renal dialysis service, and
their associated costs, so a higher
payment amount to capture these
additional costs would be warranted. In
addition, we believe the 106 percent of
ASP payment could induce ESRD
facilities to choose the higher priced
phosphate binders for the higher
payment rate. As detailed below, CMS
is increasing the TDAPA amount for
phosphate binders for two years in an
amount similar to 106 percent of ASP to
pay for the additional incremental
operational costs of phosphate binder
inclusion in the ESRD PPS while
striking a balance between accessibility
and efficiency and economy for the
Medicare program.
Comment: Numerous commenters
stated that CMS should adopt a
dispensing fee using a rate of 106
percent of ASP for phosphate binders to
align the ESRD PPS policies with those
applied to other Medicare providers.
They stated that both the Medicare Part
D and Medicaid programs provide for
dispensing fees. Under Part D, they
noted that the dispensing fees are set
through negotiations between the plan
and pharmacy. Medicaid amounts are
significantly higher and in the range of
$9 to $12 per prescription, which the
commenter noted would translate into a
$0.69 to $0.92 per treatment amount in
the context of the ESRD PPS, according
to an analysis cited by the commenter.
The commenters also noted that in
accordance with section 1861(s) of the
Act, Medicare Part B includes a $24
dispensing fee, which would be
approximately $1.85 per treatment in
the ESRD PPS context. Additionally, the
commenters stated that according to the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
Chapter 17, § 90.4, CMS also provides a
dispensing fee to hospital outpatient
departments (HOPD) and ambulatory
surgical centers (ASC), but relies upon
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106 percent of ASP rather than a flat
rate. The commenters stated that CMS
decided to maintain the 106 percent of
ASP policy in the HOPD and ASC
settings after conducting a multi-year
analysis of hospital cost reports. This
analysis sought to determine the average
overhead costs associated with
providing drugs to patients, and CMS
decided to adopt 106 percent of ASP as
the payment amount. The commenters
indicated that even though in the
context of some HOPD/ASC products
the add-on may result is higher payment
amounts, CMS adopted this approach
because of its administrative simplicity.
Similarly, in these settings, the
commenters stated that CMS also has
adopted 106 percent of ASP as the basis
for paying for separately payable nonpass-through drugs. One criterion a drug
must meet to receive this separate
payment is that the cost exceeds $135
per day.
The commenters stated that adopting
a 106 percent of ASP policy as the basis
of a dispensing fee rate would also align
with the treatment of drugs in these
other payment systems. They indicated
that one analysis of phosphate binders
demonstrates that the increase in per
treatment payment for a 30-day supply
of a phosphate binder could range from
$1.46 to $8.03. The commenters stated
that these amounts are not significantly
different than those CMS finds
acceptable in the HOPD/ASC setting or
the other dispensing fee programs.52
The commenters requested that CMS
adopt the 106 percent of ASP policy that
it relies upon in other parts of the
Medicare program, which the
commenters described as
straightforward and transparent.
Response: As CMS stated in the CY
2020 ESRD PPS final rule (84 FR 60676),
we believe moving from pricing
methodologies available under section
1847A of the Act, (106 percent of ASP)
to 100 percent of ASP for all new renal
dialysis drugs and biological products
regardless of whether they fall within an
ESRD PPS functional category strikes a
balance between the increase to
Medicare expenditures (subsequently
increasing beneficiary co-insurance) and
addressing stakeholder concerns
discussed in section II.B.1.e of the CY
2019 ESRD PPS final rule (83 FR 56932).
As an example of how the flat addition
to the TDAPA amount would impact
beneficiary copayment when compared
to 106 percent of ASP, if a beneficiary’s
monthly utilization for a given
phosphate binder totaled $1,000 (100
percent of ASP) + $36.41= $1,036.41,
52 MedPAC.
Report to the Congress: Outpatient
Dialysis Services (Mar. 2024).
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89147
the beneficiary co-pay would be
$207.28. However, if the same
phosphate binder were to be paid a
TDAPA amount derived from 106
percent of ASP ($1,000 * 1.06 = $1,060),
then the beneficiary’s copay would be
$212 ($1,060 * 0.20 = $212). During the
CY 2024 ESRD PPS rulemaking cycle,
CMS indicated that it preferred to adopt
policies that are less complex and more
transparent. As noted later in this
section of the preamble, we are
finalizing the incorporation of a flat-rate
add-on amount to the TDAPA, as
allowed by section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of
the Act, for phosphate binders, which
we believe reflects a similarly
transparent and straightforward
approach. We believe this fixed addition
to the TDAPA amount for phosphate
binders is relatively simple while being
more predictable and more transparent
than the requested 106 percent of ASP
methodology, because ESRD facilities
would not have their additional
payment based on the ASP of the drug
prescribed. Additionally, this fixed
increase methodology would achieve
many of the benefits described by
commenters without incentivizing use
of higher-cost phosphate binders.
Comment: Commenters generally
agreed that payment of 100 percent of
ASP would be insufficient to cover the
incremental operational costs of
including phosphate binders in the
ESRD PPS bundled payment. In their
comments letters, both MedPAC (citing
their 2023 Report to Congress) 53 and
LDOs have recognized the inherent
incentives that a percentage-based
payment policy creates in encouraging
use of higher cost drugs when less
expensive therapeutic alternatives are
available.
A coalition for dialysis organizations
recognized that utilizing 106 percent of
ASP ties the value of the dispensing fee
to ASP, which may present issues where
ESRD facility incremental operational
costs exceed 6 percent of ASP. They
stated that they understand why some
other payment systems have instead
provided fixed dispensing fees that are
intended to reimburse for incremental
operational costs independent of ASP
and arrive at the fixed dispensing fee
through different mechanisms,
including some that are set in statute.
Although MedPAC did not support
setting the TDAPA amount at 106
percent of ASP to account for
dispensing fees, which are intended to
cover reasonable costs that are directly
53 Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.2023.
Report to the Congress: Medicare and the health
care delivery system. Washington, DC:MedPAC.
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related to providing the drug,54
MedPAC did state in the comment that
there is no consensus on the original
intent of the percentage add-on to ASP.
MedPAC stated that if CMS elects to
include a dispensing fee in the TDAPA
for phosphate binders, the agency
should examine the dispensing fees for
phosphate binders paid under Part D to
assess if such data are appropriate to use
under the ESRD PPS, noting that, in
2021, the median Part D dispensing fee
was $0.50 per claim for the six common
types of phosphate binders furnished to
beneficiaries on dialysis. In their
comment letter, the Commission
indicated that it has also found that
under Part D, dispensing fees for generic
drugs are typically a fixed dollar
amount (that is, not always related to
the price of the product), and that
similar to dispensing fees paid in the
commercial sector, Part D plans
typically pay dispensing fees of $1 per
claim or less.55 As an alternative to 106
percent of ASP, the LDOs, coalitions of
dialysis organizations and the
professional association of nephrologists
would also support, and there is
precedent for, a flat rate addition to the
ASP. One LDO recommended a flat fee
instead of a percentage of the cost of the
medication. The LDO stated that
dispensing expenses do not fluctuate
based on the cost of the medication. The
commenter estimated that dispensing
fees would be roughly $11 and shipping
fees would be approximately $15 per
prescription. Other commenters stated
that for certain conditions, Medicare
Part B covers outpatient prescription
drugs and biological products when
they are part of a physician’s service or
used with covered durable medical
equipment. For those drugs, Medicare
Part B pays pharmacies a supply fee for
each prescription. The commenters
referred to 42 CFR 414.1001 and stated
that pharmacies are paid $24 for the first
30-day period, and $16 for each
subsequent 30-day period. On a per
treatment basis, this would equate to
approximately $1.23 to $1.85 when a
patient receives 13 treatments in a
month. Commenters suggested that CMS
54 Under 42 CFR 423.100, dispensing fees are
costs incurred at the point of sale in excess of the
ingredient cost of a covered Part D drug. Dispensing
fees include pharmacy costs such as checking
insurance status, performing quality assurance,
physical delivery, special packaging, and salaries of
pharmacists and other pharmacy workers as well as
the costs associated with maintaining the pharmacy
facility and acquiring and maintaining technology
and equipment.
55 The Commission’s calculation is based on Part
D prescription drug event data from CMS.
According to our stakeholder interviews, this
amount is in line with most commercial insurance.
https://www.medpac.gov/wpcontent/uploads/2023/
10/Generic-prices-Part-D-April-2024-SEC.pdf.
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should recognize that under Part B,
ESRD facilities will be required to pay
for these pharmacy services.
Response: CMS has reviewed all of
the comments regarding implementation
of the inclusion of phosphate binders in
the ESRD PPS bundled payment. In the
CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule, we stated
that for at least 2 years we will pay for
the existing oral-only drugs—phosphate
binders and calcimimetics—using the
TDAPA, which will be calculated based
on the payment methodologies under
section 1847A of the Act (80 FR 69027),
which can include 106 percent of ASP.
Following finalization of the CY 2016
ESRD PPS final rule, the regulation at
§ 413.234(c)(2) stated the TDAPA is paid
until sufficient claims data for rate
setting analysis for the new injectable or
intravenous product is available, but not
for less than two years. In the CY 2019
ESRD PPS final rule CMS stated that to
balance the price controls inherent in
any PPS we believe that we needed to
take numerous issues into consideration
to revise the basis for TDAPA payment.
These issues included the use of the
best available data, the avoidance of use
of the highest price drugs for higher
payment, and cost-sharing for
beneficiaries. We noted that we are, and
will continue to be, conscious of ESRD
facility resource use and recognize the
financial barriers that may be preventing
uptake of innovative new drugs and
biological products.
Therefore, we proposed to revise
§ 413.234(c) under the authority of
section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, to
reflect that we would base the TDAPA
payments on 100 percent of ASP instead
of the pricing methodologies available
under section 1847A of the Act (which
includes 106 percent of ASP)(83 FR
56943–56944).
As we discussed previously, we
believe that a flat increase to the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders would be
most appropriate. We believe an
increase in the payment adjustment
amount that approximates 6 percent of
ASP would provide the appropriate
payment for incremental operational
costs associated with ESRD facilities
furnishing phosphate binders. We
considered the differences in the
availability of data for calculating the
appropriate TDAPA amount for
calcimimetics and phosphate binders.
Prior to the TDAPA payment for
calcimimetics in CY 2018, only those
ESRD beneficiaries with Part D had
access to the oral calcimimetic,
Sensipar, but there was no utilization
data for the injectable calcimimetic,
Parsabiv, which would serve as a
substitute for the oral calcimimetic.
However, CMS was able to obtain data
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on phosphate binder utilization among
ESRD PPS beneficiaries who had Part D
coverage for phosphate binders to
estimate expenditures, and there is no
injectable phosphate binder for which
we do not have utilization data.
Therefore, with the knowledge of
utilization of phosphate binders in Part
D, coupled with the percentage of ESRD
PPS beneficiaries who do not have Part
D coverage, we believe we have
adequate data to be able to calculate an
appropriate amount to pay the TDAPA
for phosphate binders for at least two
years. Taking into account the estimates
that were put forth by the commenters
for the incremental operational costs to
the ESRD facilities for supplying the
phosphate binders to the ESRD
facilities, along with our use of the Part
D data, we have determined that a fixed
amount derived from 6 percent of ASP
of a monthly weighted average of the six
most common phosphate binders based
on past Part D utilization data best
aligns payment with resource use and
mitigates the incentive to use of the
most expensive phosphate binders to
obtain higher TDAPA payment and
ultimately a higher dollar addition to
the ESRD PPS base rate at the end of the
TDAPA period. This aligns with the
commenters’ suggestions of using a flat
rate adjustment instead of 106 percent
of ASP. We are finalizing a flat rate
increase to the TDAPA amount for
phosphate binders, derived from 6
percent of the weighted average of
Medicare expenditures for phosphate
binders per month under Part D, for the
first two years of TDAPA payment to
ESRD facilities. The CY 2025 flat rate
increase to the TDAPA amount will be
$36.41. This payment adjustment is
included for every monthly ESRD PPS
claim that includes phosphate binders.
We will consider changes to this
amount through future rulemaking if
appropriate; for example, this amount
could be recalculated derived from the
best available updated data for the
second year of TDAPA payment for
phosphate binders, potentially utilizing
data from Part B.
Additionally, we are finalizing
regulatory language at 413.234(c)(4),
which states that we would pay an
increased amount through the TDAPA
for phosphate binders for two years. The
increase to the TDAPA amount would
be the equivalent of the monthly
weighted average of 6 percent of ASP,
calculated for each of the first two years
of TDAPA payment for the phosphate
binders.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis
organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists and a nonprofit treatment and research center
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stated that, due to the 2 percent
reduction in Medicare FFS payments
under sequestration, 100 percent of ASP
equates to roughly ASP minus 1.6
percent, which the commenters stated
does not cover the cost of acquiring
phosphate binders. They commented
that many medium and small ESRD
facilities do not have the economies of
scale and must purchase drugs at a
significant percentage above the ASP.
As a result, 100 percent of ASP is
actually less than the acquisition cost of
these drugs and will have a negative
financial impact on these ESRD
facilities. A non-profit treatment and
research center noted that since the ASP
is reduced by 1.6 percent because of the
sequestration cuts, the gap between
resource use and payment is even
greater. A professional organization of
dialysis providers and an LDO stated
that Medicare only pays 80 percent of
costs. For patients who are dual eligible
receiving Medicaid, this remaining 20
percent goes unreimbursed, which,
following sequestration, equates to 78.4
percent. Similar results would occur for
patients without a secondary insurance
if they are unable to pay the remaining
20 percent cost-sharing amount. An
LDO asserted that for patients without
secondary insurance, only 60 percent of
the nonpayment is covered by bad debt.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns about payment
adequacy; however, we noted that these
concerns generally fall outside the scope
of ESRD PPS policy. Sequestration is a
mandatory spending reduction that
affects Medicare Part B payments
broadly, including payments under the
ESRD PPS.56 Reductions in Medicare
payments due to sequestration fall
outside the scope of the ESRD PPS
policy and are required under the
Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L.
112–25). In addition, the 20 percent
beneficiary copayment amount is
required by statute, and we did not
propose any changes to this amount.
Section 1833 of the Act governs
payments of benefits for Part B services
and the cost sharing amounts for
services that are considered medical and
other health services. In general, many
Part B services are subject to a payment
structure that requires beneficiaries to
be responsible for a 20 percent
coinsurance after the deductible (and
Medicare pays 80 percent). With respect
to renal dialysis services furnished by
ESRD facilities to individuals with
ESRD, under section 1881(b)(2)(A) of
56 A general description of Medicare
sequestration from the Congressional Research
Service is available at https://sgp.fas.org/crs/misc/
R45106.pdf.
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the Act, Medicare pays 80 percent of the
total amount per treatment and the
individual pays 20 percent (74 FR
50005). Some dual eligible beneficiaries
could have their coinsurance
reimbursed via Medicaid in some
circumstances.57
Similarly, we did not propose any
changes to the ESRD PPS bad debt
policy, which is also dictated by statute.
For instance, we have long interpreted
Title I, section 153(b)(4) of MIPPA as
providing that bad debt payments are
available only for covered services
under the composite rate.58 In addition,
section 1861(v)(1) of the Act,
implemented at §§ 413.89 & 413.215(b),
imposes certain reductions in the
amount of bad debts otherwise treated
as allowable costs which are attributable
to deductibles and coinsurance
amounts. Currently, general
requirements and policies for payment
of bad debts attributable to unpaid
Medicare deductibles and co-insurance
are found in chapter 3 of the Provider
Reimbursement Manual, Part 1 (PRM)
(CMS Pub. 15–1) and cost reporting
worksheets and instructions in the PRM
Part 2 (CMS Pub. 15–2).
We acknowledge that some ESRD
facilities may pay more or less than ASP
for renal dialysis drugs and biological
products that they purchase, since ASP
represents an average, but we note that
payment of the TDAPA based on ASP is
consistent with the principles of
prospective payment underlying the
ESRD PPS more broadly. As stated
earlier in this final rule, we are
finalizing an increase to the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders to
account for certain administrative costs
not included in the ESRD PPS base rate,
but this increase is not intended to
account for sequestration costs,
beneficiary copayment amounts, or bad
debts.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis
organizations requested that CMS
address what they consider to be a gap
in the current Medicare guidance to
support including phosphate binders
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
Specifically, regarding the reporting of
oral drugs, the coalition notes that the
current Medicare Benefit Policy Manual
states that for oral or other forms of
renal dialysis drugs that are filled at the
57 https://www.cms.gov/outreach-and-education/
medicare-learning-network-mln/mlnproducts/
downloads/medicare_beneficiaries_dual_eligibles_
at_a_glance.pdf.
58 See the November 17, 2004 Decision of the
Administrator (https://www.cms.gov/Regulationsand-Guidance/Review-Boards/OfficeAttorney
Advisor/Downloads-3/2004-D43.pdf) and Medicare
Benefit Policy Manual, Chapter 11, § 80 (https://
www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/
manuals/downloads/bp102c11.pdf).
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89149
pharmacy for home use, ESRD facilities
should report one line item per
prescription, but only for the quantity of
the drug expected to be taken during the
claim billing period.59 A non-profit
treatment and research center stated that
patients will be given all of their
medications at one time, presumably a
few days before the start of a new
month. They noted that if a patient
misplaces the medication, they will
need to obtain a new supply from the
ESRD facility. Since the ESRD facility is
not paid for the lost medication, the lost
medication will cost the ESRD facility
significant money. The commenter also
stated that the doses prescribed for these
medications depend on blood tests
which are performed monthly, typically
during the mid-week dialysis treatment
of the first week of the month. The
results become available a few days later
and are then reviewed by nephrologists
who may prescribe dose changes in
phosphate lowering medication or may
prescribe a different phosphate lowering
medication. In that case, the ESRD
facility would have to provide the
patient an additional supply of
medication and would have to pay
additional fees to the pharmacy. In the
event the medication is changed, the
facility would again not be paid for the
unused medication. A professional
organization of nephrologists stated that
ESRD facilities absorb the costs of
unused medications when patients are
hospitalized, transfer to other facilities,
die, or receive a kidney transplant. A
coalition of dialysis providers provided
additional illustrative examples of when
the current payment policy does not
work financially for ESRD facilities,
including patient hospitalization or
when the patient is on vacation over 30
days, patient death and changes in
ESRD facility. To align the reporting and
payment with similar provisions for
hospitals and skilled nursing facilities
(SNFs), coalitions of dialysis
organizations referred to the Medicare
Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 17,
§ 90.4 and requested that CMS require
reporting on claims of one of the
following:
• Both the quantity of the drug
expected to be taken during the claim
billing period and any unused quantity
of drug that was prescribed under a
prescription that was later revised.
• The total amount of the drug
provided during the claim billing
period.
The coalition of dialysis providers
claimed that these changes would
alleviate the financial losses to ESRD
59 Medicare Benefit Policy Manual Chapter 11—
End Stage Renal Disease § 20.3.C.
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facilities. The commenter stated that
these changes do not need to be
included in the CY 2025 final rule but
can be done through guidance prior to
the end of CY 2024 to apply to the
forthcoming inclusion of phosphate
binders in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment to limit unnecessary losses for
an already strained payment system.
The commenter also stated that making
these changes to the billing rules is also
necessary for CMS to have accurate
utilization data of the phosphate binders
during the TDAPA period for the
purpose of future rate setting exercises.
The commenter believes that without
these changes, not only will ESRD
facilities experience real-time losses due
to circumstances outside their control,
but those losses will be baked into
depressed utilization data used to
update the base rate after the end of the
TDAPA period for the phosphate
binders, locking those losses into the
ESRD PPS in perpetuity. In addition, the
commenter noted that other providers,
including hospitals, pharmacies and
skilled nursing facilities, are all
permitted by Medicare to submit claims
for the full prescription dispensed in
good faith to the beneficiary. They
requested that CMS align the ESRD PPS
billing policies with that of other health
care providers rather than imposing
what they characterized as unique and
unnecessary burdens on a fragile
payment system serving the most
vulnerable patients.
Response: CMS thanks the
commenters for their recommendations.
Per the regulation at § 413.198(b)(5),
each ESRD facility must submit data
and information of the types and in the
formats established by CMS for the
purpose of estimating patient-level and
facility-level variation in resource use
involved in furnishing renal dialysis
services. At § 413.198(b)(5)(ii), this
includes information reported on ESRD
PPS claims about the total number of
billing units (or the expected number of
billing units), for renal dialysis drugs
and biological products provided to
beneficiaries for use while receiving
home dialysis services as defined in
§ 413.217(b), which includes home
dialysis services, support, and
equipment as identified in § 410.52, to
be included in the ESRD PPS effective
January 1, 2011.
As we noted previously in this
section, in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final
rule (80 FR 69033), we discussed our
existing policy since the inception of
the ESRD PPS that all renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products
prescribed for ESRD patients, including
the oral forms of renal dialysis
injectable drugs, must be reported by
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ESRD facilities, and the units reported
on the monthly claim must reflect the
amount expected to be taken during that
month. We did not propose a change to
the reporting requirements regarding the
drugs expected to be taken during the
claim billing period and any unused
quantity of that drug that was prescribed
under a prescription that was later
revised, along with the total amount
prescribed during the billing period.
However, we thank the commenter for
their suggestions and will take the
commenter’s suggestions into
consideration in future rulemaking.
Discarded drugs or biological products
that are not in single use containers or
single dose packaging are not billable
under the ESRD PPS.60 Similarly, we
believe it would be most appropriate to
make a future modification to the ESRD
PPS base rate, if warranted, based on
actual phosphate binder utilization and
not discarded amounts. We expect that
ESRD facilities will employ strategies to
reduce discarded amounts of phosphate
binders, which best serves the interest
of efficient resource use and is
consistent with the goals of the ESRD
PPS.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis
organizations recommended that CMS
should amend the cost reports and
update billing and payment policies in
advance of the TDAPA period for
phosphate binders. The current ESRD
Facility Cost Report revision includes
one line item for the TDAPA and one
line item for the TPNIES. At the time
this was implemented, there was only
one drug receiving the TDAPA and one
supply item receiving the TPNIES. At
present and in the coming years, the
commenter expects there will be
multiple drugs and devices receiving
the TDAPA and the TPNIES in the same
year. The commenter stated that CMS
and other policymakers would find it
important and useful to be able to track
costs associated with individual
products receiving the TDAPA and
TPNIES rather than have them reported
in the aggregate. The commenter
recommended that CMS add several line
items for each of the TDAPA and
TPNIES reporting sections and provide
instructions that each product receiving
the TDAPA or the TPNIES are to be
reported separately on their distinct
line-items. The commenter stated that
CMS should also ensure that ESRD
facilities have clear instructions for
60 In the CY 24 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized
a new policy to require the use of the JW or JZ
modifier on claims to track discarded amounts of
single-dose container and single-use package renal
dialysis drugs and biological products paid for
under the ESRD PPS, effective January 1, 2025 (88
FR 76346, 76383–76386).
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reporting the TDAPA for phosphate
binders during the TDAPA period and
that facilities have clear instructions for
reporting the phosphate binders after
they are bundled into the base rate after
the end of the TDAPA period. The
commenter stated that it is imperative
that CMS amend the cost report and
instructions in advance of the launch of
the TDAPA period and end of the
TDAPA period to ensure the integrity of
dialysis facility cost reporting.
Further, the coalition requested CMS
to make changes to billing procedures to
make it easier for ESRD facilities to
identify the correct TDAPA and TPNIES
payments to report on the cost report. At
present, they state that when CMS pays
a claim that includes the TDAPA or
TPINIES, ESRD facilities simply receive
one payment for the adjusted base rate
plus the TDAPA or TPNIES amount.
The TDAPA or TPNIES is not indicated
on a separate line item by CMS. The
coalition stated that while the ESRD
PPS is a bundled payment system with
a standardized base rate, most claims
are adjusted based on a dozen patient
and facility characteristics. As a result,
the commenter stated that to accurately
report TDAPA and TPNIES payments on
the Cost Report, ESRD facilities need to
crosswalk each reimbursement to
relevant patient claims or medical
records to identify those for whom
TDAPA or TPNIES payment was
requested, then determine if and at what
amount the TDAPA or TPNIES was
paid, noting that the TDAPA and
TPNIES payment amount fluctuates
over the course of the year, and then
report those figures on the cost report on
an ESRD facility basis. For some ESRD
facilities this is a manual, and not an
automated exercise. The commenter
requested that CMS amend billing and
payment procedures to flag TDAPA and
TPNIES payments separately on an
itemized report so that ESRD facilities
can more effectively and efficiently
identify and flag these items for accurate
reporting onto the Cost Report.
Response: CMS thanks the
commenters for their suggestions
regarding the cost reports. We are
currently evaluating changes to the
ESRD PPS cost reports and will take
these suggestions into consideration for
future cost report modifications.
Comment: A drug manufacturer
questioned why the phosphate-lowering
agent XPHOZAH® is receiving disparate
treatment from phosphate binders with
respect to the TDAPA. The drug
manufacturer stated that they view CMS
as treating XPHOZAH® similar to a
phosphate binder for the purposes of
inclusion in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment, but different from a phosphate
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binder for the purposes of a potential
increase to the ESRD PPS base rate after
the end of the TDAPA period.
Response: Existing Medicare
regulations state that effective January 1,
2025, oral-only drugs will be paid for
under the ESRD Prospective Payment
System (PPS). Although oral-only drugs
are not included in the ESRD PPS
bundled payment until January 1, 2025,
they are currently recognized as renal
dialysis services as defined in
regulation. Accordingly, CMS is
planning to incorporate oral-only drugs
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment
beginning January 1, 2025, using the
TDAPA, as described in the calendar
year (CY) 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80
FR 69027) and subsequent rules. In the
CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67179) we stated that we finalized and
issued the payment policies for oralonly renal dialysis service drugs or
biological products in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49038
through 49053). In that rule we defined
renal dialysis services at § 413.171 as
including other drugs and biologicals
that are furnished to individuals for the
treatment of ESRD and for which
payment was made separately prior to
January 1, 2011, under Title XVIII of the
Act, including drugs and biologicals
with only an oral form. Although we
included oral-only renal dialysis service
drugs and biologicals in the definition
of renal dialysis services in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49044), we
also finalized a policy to delay payment
for these drugs under the ESRD PPS
until January 1, 2014. In the CY 2011
ESRD PPS proposed rule (74 FR 49929),
we noted that the only oral-only drugs
that we identified were phosphate
binders and calcimimetics, specifically,
cinacalcet hydrochloride, lanthanum
carbonate, calcium acetate, sevelamer
hydrochloride, and sevelamer
carbonate. All of these drugs fall into
the ESRD PPS functional category for
bone and mineral metabolism. In the
manufacturer’s press release on October
17, 2023, they noted that XPHOZAH® is
a phosphate-lowering therapy, and it is
not a phosphate binder.61
As for the commenter’s concern
regarding CMS’s treatment of
XPHOZAH® with respect to a potential
increase in the ESRD PPS base rate after
the end of the TDAPA period, we note
that we have been consistent in treating
XPHOZAH® as an oral-only drug that is
considered included in the ESRD PPS
base rate because it falls within the bone
and mineral metabolism ESRD PPS
61 https://ir.ardelyx.com/news-releases/newsrelease-details/fda-approves-xphozahr-tenapanorfirst-class-phosphate-absorption.
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functional category. XPHOZAH® is a
renal dialysis service under the
definition at § 413.171 and is to be
included in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment effective January 1, 2025,
according to § 413.174(f)(6). Any other
oral renal dialysis drug or biological
product without an injectable
equivalent or other form of
administration would also be included
in the ESRD PPS bundled payment
effective January 1, 2025. We note that
XPHOZAH®, should it apply for the
TDAPA, would receive the same
consideration and treatment as other
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products in existing ESRD PPS
functional categories which are
considered included in the ESRD PPS
base rate. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule we explained that we would
modify the ESRD PPS base rate after the
end of the TDAPA period only for
calcimimetics and phosphate binders,
but that we would not follow this
process for any other potential future
oral-only drugs in the bone and mineral
functional category or any other
functional category, as calcimimetics
and phosphate binders were the only
two drugs for which 2007 utilization
data was available at the time the ESRD
PPS base rate was first developed for
which payment was delayed (80 FR
69025). In particular, the intention
behind CMS’s policy is that funds
would be added to the base rate to
account for phosphate binders because
the costs associated with phosphate
binders would have been included in
the initial calculation of the base rate in
CY 2011 if not for CMS’s (and
subsequently congress’) decision to
temporarily delay their inclusion.
However, the delay was always with the
intention that the costs would
eventually be included in the ESRD PPS
base rate. This is not true of other drugs
or biological products that were not in
use in the timeframe analyzed for the
initial development of the ESRD PPS
base rate, but that are considered
included in the base rate because they
fall within an existing functional
category.
From a policy perspective, the ESRD
PPS bundled rate is intended to
encourage efficient resource use, and
CMS therefore only would add funds, if
appropriate, to the base rate for drugs
that have a new function not accounted
for when the initial base rate was
developed or, in the case of
calcimimetics and phosphate binders,
that were intended to be included at the
time the base rate was first developed
but were temporarily excluded. As
discussed previously, XPHOZAH® is
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89151
not a phosphate binder (nor is it a
calcimimetic), so under our established
methodology it would be treated in the
same way as all other new drugs (80 FR
69027). We note that any specific
considerations regarding modification of
the ESRD PPS base rate to account for
phosphate binders, such as whether to
incorporate data from drugs or
biological products with a similar endaction effect that may be a substitute for
phosphate binders, will be made
through notice and comment
rulemaking in the future. We will
consider the commenter’s suggestions
related to how the ESRD PPS treats new
renal dialysis drugs and biological
products in existing functional
categories which are considered
included in the base rate for potential
future rulemaking related to TDAPA
and other payment policies under the
ESRD PPS.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed support for a delay for the
inclusion of either oral-only drugs and
biological products or phosphate
binders, in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment. We received 110 form letters
from unique submitters that did not
relate to policies proposed in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, but
rather expressed support for -draft
legislation that would delay the
inclusion of certain oral-only drugs and
biological products into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment. One drug
manufacturer requested CMS refrain
from incorporating phosphate-lowering
therapies into the ESRD PPS in January
2025. The drug manufacturer suggested
that CMS should respond to stakeholder
concerns regarding access issues and
public health data on harms to patients.
Response: We did not propose any
changes to § 413.174(f)(6) to modify the
date of the incorporation of the oralonly drugs into the ESRD PPS. We note
that in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
we stated that the delay in incorporating
oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment would allow
additional time to address several issues
including the following: the
determination of oral-only drug pricing
and utilization; adequate beneficiary
education; assessment of potential
problems which may arise in
connection with the provision of oral
drugs prior to the system’s expansion to
include oral-only drugs; analysis
regarding the ability of ESRD facilities
to provide oral-only ESRD drugs; and,
evaluation of indicators applicable to
the monitoring of certain patient
conditions treated with oral-only drugs,
such as bone loss and mineral
metabolism associated with the
provision of calcimimetics and
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phosphate binders, which could assist
in determining the impact of the fully
bundled ESRD PPS, and any
unintentional consequences that might
ensue, on quality of care (75 FR 49043
through 49044). CMS has actively been
engaged in addressing the
aforementioned issues since that rule
was finalized 13 years ago in
preparation for inclusion of the oralonly drugs into the ESRD PPS. Our data
analysis has shown that because not all
ESRD PPS beneficiaries have had Part D
coverage some have lacked equal access
to either calcimimetics or phosphate
binders. Inclusion in the ESRD PPS
bundled payment provides patients
access to all the drugs and biological
products in all the ESRD PPS functional
categories, including those included in
the bone and mineral metabolism
functional category, averting potential
harm to those Medicare beneficiaries
currently lacking access to some of
those drugs and biological products.
Comment: A coalition for dialysis
organizations recommended that CMS
should align MA and ESRD PPS policies
in advance of the TDAPA period for
phosphate binders and future inclusion
of phosphate binders in the ESRD PPS
base rate to ensure MA beneficiaries
will receive necessary medication.
Response: With respect to MA, per
section 1852(a)(1) of the Act and its
implementation regulations (42 CFR
422.100 and 422.101(a)), Medicare
Advantage organizations (MAOs) must
cover items and services, including
drugs, for which benefits are available
under Parts A and B in the Traditional
Medicare program, subject to limited
exclusions. We note that phosphate
binders are not subject to the limited
exclusions at section 1852(a)(1) of the
Act and, therefore, must be covered by
MAOs. Specifically, in accordance with
section 1852(a)(1) if the Act and 42 CFR
422.100 and 422.101(a), and as noted
in 62 section 10.4 of chapter 4 of the
Medicare Managed Care Manual,63
MAOs must provide coverage of, by
furnishing, arranging for, or making
payment for, generally all services that
are covered by Part A and Part B of
Medicare and that are available to
beneficiaries residing in the plan’s
service area. Services may be provided
outside of the service area of the plan if
the services are accessible and available
to enrollees. In addition, with respect to
coverage of Traditional Medicare
benefits such as Part B drugs, MAOs
must comply with applicable Medicare
statutes, regulations, national coverage
determinations (NCDs) and local
coverage determinations (LCDs) of
Medicare contractors with jurisdiction
for claims in the geographic area in
which services are covered under the
MA plan (42 CFR 422.101(b)). In
general, an MA plan that offers Part D
benefits (MA–PD) must determine
whether payment for the drug is
allocated under Parts B or D, consistent
with Traditional Medicare and Part D
program drug coverage policies (see
Appendix C, Attachment II, Question 5
of Chapter 6 64 Medicare Prescription
Drug Benefit Manual for additional
detail). Concerning how Part D sponsors
will determine whether a drug is
covered under Part B, it is important to
keep in mind that in most cases Part B
drug coverage should not impact
payment decisions by Part D sponsors
since Part B coverage is generally in a
provider setting or physician’s office
rather than for drugs dispensed at a
pharmacy. A Part D sponsor cannot
deny payment for a particular drug on
the basis that it is covered under Part B
in some instances and Part D in others
unless there is Part B coverage as the
drug is prescribed and dispensed or
administered in that particular instance.
The fact that a claim is received for a
drug that is sometimes covered by Part
B is not a basis for denial since the Part
D sponsor would have to determine
whether the drug is being prescribed
and dispensed or administered on the
basis under which Part B coverage is
available. This will generally involve
interaction between the Part D sponsor
and the Medicare Part B contractor with
jurisdiction in that geographic area for
that drug. Regarding new drugs, as
decisions are made nationally or by
individual A/B MAC contractors, this
information will be available on the
CMS and contractor websites. MA–PD
coordinated care plans must coordinate
all benefits administered by the plan
with respect to drugs for which payment
as so prescribed and dispensed or
administered to an individual may be
available under Part A or Part B, or
under Part D (42 CFR 422.112(b)(7)). As
a result of the rules and regulations
described here, MAOs must cover oralonly ESRD drugs under their plans, as
these are drugs under Part B and are not
subject to the limited exclusions under
section 1852(a)(1) of the Act.
Final Rule Action: After consideration
of all the comments received, we agree
with commenters that there are
additional costs associated with ESRD
facilities furnishing phosphate binders
63 https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/
files/hhs-guidance-documents/chapter4-finalmay2012_0.pdf
64 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/prescriptiondrug-coverage/prescriptiondrugcovcontra/
downloads/part-d-benefits-manual-chapter-6.pdf.
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that are not currently included in the
ESRD PPS base rate and that were not
addressed when the ESRD PPS base rate
was developed in CY 2011. This
differentiates phosphate binders from
other drugs and biological products in
existing ESRD PPS functional
categories, which justifies a change to
the TDAPA policy, as phosphate
binders were excluded from the analysis
performed for the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
final rule due to a lack of data available
at the time of rulemaking. Consistent
with past policies, we consider drugs
and biological products in existing
ESRD PPS functional categories to be
included in the ESRD PPS base rate. The
ESRD PPS base rate includes money for
the costs, such as dispensing fees,
associated with furnishing other drugs
(in existing functional categories) paid
for using the TDAPA. We are finalizing
to pay the TDAPA for phosphate
binders at 100 percent of ASP, increased
by a fixed amount calculated at an
amount that we believe most
appropriately approximates 6 percent of
ASP. For CY 2025, as utilization data
and ASP reporting are currently
unavailable, we are finalizing to use the
weighted average of Medicare
expenditures for phosphate binders per
month under Part D for all phosphate
binders used in a month, based on
estimates for CY 2025 phosphate binder
utilization using utilization patterns in
CY 2023 among Part D eligible
beneficiaries. For CY 2025, this amount
is $36.41, which will be added to any
monthly claim for which there is a
TDAPA payment for phosphate binders.
For CY 2025 and 2026, the TDAPA
amount for a phosphate binder is based
on 100 percent of ASP plus an
additional amount based on 6 percent of
per-patient phosphate binder spending
derived from utilization and cost data.
We are finalizing two changes to
§ 413.234(c) to codify this change in
TDAPA policy for phosphate binders.
First, we are amending paragraph (c) to
note that we would not pay the TDAPA
at 100 percent of ASP in this
circumstance by adding in language
which reads ‘‘except as provided in
paragraph (c)(4) of this section.’’
Second, we are adding paragraph (c)(4)
which reads: ‘‘For calendar years 2025
and 2026, the transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment amount for a
phosphate binder is based on 100
percent of ASP plus an additional
amount based on 6 percent of perpatient phosphate binder spending
derived from utilization and cost data.’’
As discussed previously, for calendar
year 2025, the additional amount is
estimated based on the weighted
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average of Medicare expenditures for
phosphate binders per month under Part
D for all phosphate binders used in a
month, derived from estimates for CY
2025 phosphate binder utilization using
utilization patterns in CY 2023 among
Part D eligible beneficiaries. . We intend
to reevaluate this amount in rulemaking
next year; for example, for calendar year
2026, we may consider updating the
additional amount quarterly derived
from the actual phosphate binder
utilization and ASP reported under
Medicare Part B in the most recently
available quarter, if appropriate.
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d. Expected Impact of Incorporation of
Oral-Only Drugs
We anticipate that the incorporation
of oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS
will increase access to these drugs for
beneficiaries. We estimate that there
will be an increase in Medicare
spending as a result of this increase in
access. Specifically, CMS has been
monitoring and analyzing data regarding
beneficiary access to Medicare Part D
drugs; increases in expenditures for
renal dialysis drugs paid under
Medicare Part D; health equity
implications of varying access to
Medicare Part D drugs among patients
with ESRD; and ESRD facility behavior
regarding drug utilization. We have seen
that incorporating Medicare Part D
drugs into the ESRD PPS has had a
significant positive effect of expanding
access to such drugs for beneficiaries
who do not have Medicare Part D
coverage, with significant positive
health equity impacts. For example,
based on the results of our ESRD PPS
monitoring analyses, in December 2017,
prior to incorporation of calcimimetics
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment,
utilization was at 28.97 percent for
African American/Black beneficiaries
but went up to 35.31 percent in January
2018 and eventually to 39.04 percent in
at the end of the TDAPA period for
calcimimetics in December 2021. This
10.07 percentage point increase in
utilization reflects the significant access
improvement for African American/
Black beneficiaries of incorporating
formerly oral-only drugs into the ESRD
PPS.
Lastly, as part of the preparation for
the inclusion of phosphate binders into
the ESRD PPS, CMS has monitored Part
D utilization of, and spending for,
phosphate binders. We have developed
budgetary estimates of the changes in
Medicare Part B and Part D spending,
which are discussed in section VII.C.1
of this final rule.
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8. Changes to the Low-Volume Payment
Adjustment (LVPA)
a. Background on the LVPA
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act
provides that the ESRD PPS shall
include a payment adjustment that
reflects the extent to which costs
incurred by low-volume facilities (as
defined by the Secretary) in furnishing
renal dialysis services exceed the costs
incurred by other facilities in furnishing
such services, and for payment for renal
dialysis services furnished on or after
January 1, 2011, and before January 1,
2014, such payment adjustment shall
not be less than 10 percent. Therefore,
the ESRD PPS provides a facility-level
payment adjustment to ESRD facilities
that meet the definition of a low-volume
facility.
Under § 413.232(b), a low-volume
facility is an ESRD facility that, based
on the submitted documentation: (1)
furnished less than 4,000 treatments in
each of the 3 cost reporting years (based
on as-filed or final settled 12consecutive month costs reports,
whichever is most recent, except as
specified in paragraphs (g)(4) and (5))
preceding the payment year; and (2) has
not opened, closed, or received a new
provider number due to a change in
ownership (except where the change in
ownership results in a change in facility
type or as specified in paragraph (g)(6))
in the 3 cost reporting years (based on
as-filed or final settled 12-consecutive
month cost reports, whichever is most
recent) preceding the payment year.
In addition, under § 413.232(c), for
purposes of determining eligibility for
the LVPA, the number of treatments
considered furnished by the ESRD
facility equals the aggregate number of
treatments furnished by the ESRD
facility and the number of treatments
furnished by other ESRD facilities that
are both under common ownership
with, and 5 road miles or less from, the
ESRD facility in question. To receive the
LVPA, an ESRD facility must submit a
written attestation statement to its
Medicare Administrative Contractor
(MAC) confirming that it meets the
requirements as specified in § 413.232
and qualifies as a low-volume ESRD
facility. For purposes of determining
eligibility for the LVPA, ‘‘treatments’’
mean total hemodialysis equivalent
treatments (Medicare and nonMedicare). For peritoneal dialysis
patients, one week of peritoneal dialysis
is considered equivalent to three
hemodialysis treatments (80 FR 68994).
Section 413.232(e) generally imposes a
yearly November 1 deadline for
attestation submissions unless
extraordinary circumstances justify an
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89153
exception and specifies exceptions for
certain years where the deadline is in
December or January. The November 1
attestation timeframe provides 60 days
for a MAC to verify that an ESRD facility
meets the LVPA eligibility criteria (76
FR 70236). The ESRD facility would
then receive the LVPA for all the
Medicare-eligible treatments in the
payment year. Once an ESRD facility is
determined to be eligible for the LVPA,
a 23.9 percent increase is applied to the
ESRD PPS base rate for all treatments
furnished by the ESRD facility (80 FR
69001).
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
(75 FR 49118 through 49125), we
finalized the methodology used to target
the appropriate population of ESRD
facilities that were low-volume facilities
based on a treatment threshold. After
consideration of public comments, we
originally established an 18.9 percent
adjustment for ESRD facilities that
furnish less than 4,000 treatments
annually and indicated that this
increase to the base rate would
encourage small ESRD facilities to
continue providing access to care.
In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS proposed
rule (80 FR 37819), we analyzed ESRD
facilities that met the definition of a
low-volume facility under § 413.232(b)
as part of the updated regression
analysis and found that these ESRD
facilities still had higher costs compared
to other ESRD facilities. A regression
analysis of low-volume facility claims
from CYs 2012 and 2013 and cost report
data indicated a multiplier of 1.239;
therefore, we proposed an updated
LVPA adjustment factor of 23.9 percent
in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS proposed rule
(80 FR 37819) and finalized this policy
in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80
FR 69001). This update was
implemented budget neutrally alongside
numerous other changes to the case-mix
and facility-level adjusters. In CY 2022,
352 ESRD facilities received the LVPA.
Using the most recent available data for
CY 2023, the number of ESRD facilities
receiving the LVPA was 330.
In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule
(85 FR 71443), we finalized a policy to
allow ESRD facilities flexibility for
LVPA eligibility due to the COVID–19
Public Health Emergency (PHE). Under
§ 413.232(g)(4), for purposes of
determining ESRD facilities’ eligibility
for payment years 2021, 2022, and 2023,
we only considered total dialysis
treatments for any 6 months of their
cost-reporting period ending in 2020. In
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76344), we finalized changes to the
LVPA regulation at § 413.232 that allow
ESRD facilities affected by disasters and
other emergencies to qualify for
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exceptions to certain eligibility
requirements for the LVPA. Facilities
may close and reopen if they experience
an emergency, or they may temporarily
exceed the 4,000-treatment threshold if
they take on additional patients
displaced by an emergency and still
qualify for the LVPA.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
in the proposed rule that we are
analyzing claims and cost data regarding
dialysis treatment levels and cost to
inform options for potentially tailoring
our methodology to meet the
requirements of the statute, while
simultaneously collecting additional
data on geographic isolation of ESRD
facilities. The ESRD PPS has separate
(1) Current Issues and Concerns
facility-level payment adjustments for
As discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD
low-volume facilities, as set forth in 42
PPS proposed rule, interested parties,
CFR 413.232, and facilities in rural
including MedPAC and the GAO,65 have areas, as set forth in § 413.233. To avoid
recommended that we make refinements overlap with these existing facility-level
to the LVPA to better target ESRD
adjustments, we stated that we are
facilities that are critical to beneficiary
analyzing the impact of potentially
access to dialysis care in remote or
creating a new payment adjustment and
isolated areas.66 These groups and other considering innovative methodological
interested parties have also expressed
options, such as the local dialysis need
concern that the strict treatment count
methodology on which we requested
used to determine eligibility introduces
information in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
a ‘‘cliff-effect’’ that may incentivize
proposed rule (88 FR 42441 through
ESRD facilities to restrict their patient
42445).
caseload to remain below the 4,000
In addition, interested parties
treatments per year for the LVPA
expressed that the eligibility criteria for
threshold.67
the LVPA are very explicit and leave
We considered several changes to the
little room for flexibility in certain
LVPA eligibility criteria to address the
circumstances (85 FR 71442). Some also
concerns that interested parties,
viewed the attestation process as
including the GAO and MedPAC, raised burdensome to ESRD facilities and
about targeting LVPA payments to ESRD believed it may discourage participation
facilities that are necessary to protect
by small ESRD facilities with limited
access to care and are not located near
resources that would otherwise qualify
other ESRD facilities. Specifically, these for the LVPA.68 Given these concerns,
interested parties requested that we take we considered alternative approaches to
into consideration the geographic
the LVPA that would reduce burden,
isolation of an ESRD facility within the
remove negative incentives that may
LVPA methodology. Section
result in gaming, and better target ESRD
1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act requires
facilities that are critical for beneficiary
that the LVPA must reflect the extent to access.
which costs incurred by low-volume
CMS’s contractor has held three
facilities (as defined by the Secretary) in Technical Expert Panels (TEPs) to
furnishing renal dialysis services exceed discuss potential refinements to the
the costs incurred by other facilities in
ESRD PPS.69 During the 2018, 2019, and
furnishing such services. Our analysis
2020 TEPs, panelists, including
found that isolated low-volume facilities representatives from ESRD facilities,
do not face higher costs than other lowindependent researchers, patient
volume facilities. Therefore, we stated
advocates, and representatives from
in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule professional associations and industry
that we do not believe that this
groups (86 FR 36397), discussed
requested change reconciles with the
limitations of the current LVPA
central statutory requirements and
methodology and potential alternatives.
limitations for the LVPA, and we stated
In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS proposed
that we are considering alternative
rule, we included a RFI to inform LVPA
approaches, including potentially
payment reform (86 FR 36398 through
addressing this issue through a new
36399). All fourteen responses to the CY
payment adjustment separate from the
2022 ESRD PPS RFI for LVPA wrote in
LVPA based on section
support of either eliminating or revising
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act. We noted
the current LVPA or rural facility
adjustment.70 One small dialysis
65
https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/
import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/
reports/jun20_ch7_reporttocongress_sec.pdf.
66 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/endstage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-systemtechnical-expert-panel-summary-report-april2021.pdf.
67 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/endstage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-systemtechnical-expert-panel-summary-report-april2021.pdf.
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68 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/endstage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-systemtechnical-expert-panel-summary-report-april2021.pdf.
69 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-feefor-service-payment/esrdpayment/educational_
resources.
70 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cy-2022esrd-pps-rfi-summary-comments.pdf.
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organization within a large non-profit
health system responded that it is
reliant upon the LVPA and the rural
facility adjustment and supports both
adjustments, albeit with modifications.
MedPAC renewed its support for a new
Low-Volume and Isolated (LVI)
adjustment with a recommendation for
a three-tiered approach for treatment
thresholds, which would incorporate
geographic isolation into its
methodology and may disincentivize
gaming. MedPAC called upon CMS to
provide clear and timely criteria for
ESRD facility eligibility and ensure the
LVPA methodology is transparent. In
concurrence with MedPAC, a coalition
of dialysis organizations, three large
dialysis organizations (LDOs), a nonprofit kidney organization, and a
provider advocacy coalition commented
that the rural facility adjustment should
be eliminated and a LVI methodology
should be adopted, as they considered
a methodology based upon census tracts
to be both complicated and lacking
transparency. Numerous commenters
wrote in support of a tiered adjustment
to mitigate the cliff effect and gaming.
Commenters raised concerns regarding
the reliance of the census tract
methodology used by the rural facility
adjustment upon ‘driving time’ as a data
measure, noting this presents legitimate
equity issues. ESRD facilities that have
relied upon both the LVPA and rural
payment adjustments to remain
operational expressed opposition to
elimination of either adjustment.71
In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS proposed
rule LVPA RFI, we sought input on
alternative approaches to the LVPA
methodology (86 FR 36398 through
36399).72 Specifically, we requested
input on—(1) whether a distinction
other than census tract information
should be considered; and (2) what
criteria should be used to determine the
threshold(s) of adjusted latent demand
(in treatment counts) which determine
LVPA eligibility. Additionally, we
explored the LVI adjustment that
MedPAC recommended in its June 2020
Report to Congress. Under the LVI
methodology, a determination that a
facility is low volume and isolated
would be based on that facility’s
distance from the nearest facility and its
total treatment volume. Regarding the
LVI methodology, we requested input
on the concerns for facilities that would
lose the LVPA under the LVI
methodology and the potential for
gaming within the LVI methodology. In
71 The materials from the TEPs and summary
reports can be found at https://www.cms.gov/
medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/
esrdpayment/educational_resources.
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addition, we requested input regarding
the extent that the LVI methodology
captures more isolated (and most often
rural) facilities, and whether a separate
rural facility adjustment should be
maintained. As previously discussed,
our most recent analysis of cost report
data does not support the claim that
isolated low-volume ESRD facilities face
higher costs than non-isolated ESRD
facilities; therefore, the LVI
methodology would not adhere to the
statutory requirement for the LVPA set
forth at section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the
Act.
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(2) CY 2024 RFI on Potential Changes to
the LVPA
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed
rule (88 FR 42430 through 42544), we
issued a RFI regarding several possible
modifications to the current LVPA
methodology.73 We provided
commenters the option of maintaining a
single LVPA threshold, establishing
LVPA tiers, or utilizing a continuous
function. We received 23 comments in
response to the RFI, all of which had
differing opinions. A coalition of
dialysis organizations recommended a
two-tiered approach, while MedPAC
reiterated their support for a LVI
adjustment. A common theme among a
handful of comments was concern about
administrative burden and transparency
regarding the methodology that is
chosen. Most commenters believed that
the issue of payment cliffs is substantial,
but many did not believe any of the
options presented in the RFI could
successfully eliminate gaming
completely. CMS will continue to
consider these comments to potentially
inform future rulemaking.
(3) CY 2024 RFI on the Rural Facility
Adjustment
We have considered several changes
to the LVPA eligibility criteria to
address the concerns that the GAO and
MedPAC raised about targeting LVPA
payments to ESRD facilities that are
necessary to protect access to care and
are not located near other ESRD
facilities. As previously discussed, we
do not believe the suggestion to
consider facilities’ geographic isolation
reconciles with the central statutory
requirements and limitations for the
LVPA, and we are considering
alternative approaches, including
potentially addressing this issue
through a new payment adjustment
separate from the LVPA based on
section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act.
The LVPA and rural adjusters
currently result in increased payments
to some geographically isolated ESRD
facilities, but these adjusters do not
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specifically target geographically
isolated ESRD facilities. Interested
parties, including MedPAC and the
GAO, have recommended that CMS
make refinements to the LVPA and rural
adjusters to better target ESRD facilities
that are critical to beneficiary access to
dialysis care in remote or isolated areas.
The GAO and MedPAC, among others,
have also raised concerns about
targeting LVPA payments to ESRD
facilities that are not located near other
ESRD facilities to protect access to care.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed
rule’s LVPA RFI (88 FR 42441 through
42445), we solicited comments on a
potential new payment adjustment that
accounts for isolation, rurality, and
other geographical factors, including
local dialysis need (LDN). The LDN
methodology, as described in the CY
2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule (88 FR
42430 through 42544), would consider
LDN instead of basing payment strictly
upon a rural designation, as provided
for by §§ 413.233 and 413.231(b)(2). In
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule’s
LVPA RFI, we suggested the utilization
of census tracts to identify geographic
areas with low demand, then calculating
latent demand by multiplying the
number of beneficiaries near (‘‘near’’
was defined by driving time to ESRD
facilities) an ESRD facility by the
average number of treatments for ESRD
beneficiaries. The threshold to qualify
for the LVPA could then be applied by
determining the amount of adjusted
latent demand. The ESRD facilities that
fall below the threshold would be
eligible. The statutory requirements for
the LVPA under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act generally
would not allow for CMS to account for
geographic isolation outside of the
extent to which low-volume facilities
face higher costs in furnishing renal
dialysis services than other facilities,
and preliminary analysis found that, in
general, low-volume facilities that are
rural, isolated, or located in lowdemand areas did not have higher costs
than low-volume ESRD facilities overall.
Because of this, the LDN methodology
would be implemented under the
authority in section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of
the Act, which states that the ESRD PPS
may include such other payment
adjustments as the Secretary determines
appropriate.
We received 23 comments in response
to the LVPA RFI, all of which had
differing opinions.74 Some commenters
supported eliminating the rural adjuster
and reallocating its funds to either the
LVPA or to a new adjustment that
74 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cy-2024esrd-pps-lvpa-rfi-summary-comments.pdf.
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considers LDN. Others stated the rural
facility adjustment should be removed,
and those dollars be incorporated into
one of the tiered LVPA methodologies.
Many commenters noted that a LVPA, a
rural facility adjustment, and a possible
LDN-based adjustment would be
redundant. A coalition of dialysis
organizations stated that CMS’s reliance
on zip codes to identify rural facilities
is no longer an adequate proxy for
facilities in need, and cited data that
many rural facilities enjoy a large
patient count and positive profit
margins. Other commenters supported
the rural facility adjustment, explaining
that it was especially appropriate in
conjunction with a modified LVPA
methodology, since under the options
presented by CMS in the RFI, many
facilities would experience significant
decreases in payment. They claimed
that the additional funds provided by
the rural facility adjustment would
protect against the closure of rural
facilities. Several commenters expressed
concern about administrative burden
and transparency in a general sense, no
matter the methodology chosen.
Generally, commenters were opposed
to a payment adjustment based on the
LDN methodology, reiterating many of
the concerns raised during the 2020
TEP. A coalition of dialysis
organizations voiced the concern that
the LDN methodology would take away
providers’ ability to make financial
decisions about their operations, since
they would not be able to predict their
eligibility for the LDN payment
adjustment nor the amount they would
receive. They maintained that the LDN
may not target the appropriate facilities
and could provide opportunities for
gaming. The coalition also claimed that
the central issue faced by these facilities
is low patient count, which they stated
that the LDN methodology would not
recognize, and thus the adjustment
could be provided to facilities that are
isolated, but have high patient counts,
and are not in need of an additional
payment adjustment. A coalition of
dialysis organizations and a non-profit
dialysis association both stated that the
current LVPA provision to aggregate the
treatments of facilities under common
ownership that are not at least 5 miles
apart is an important feature that
discourages gaming, one that is not
included in the LDN methodology.
Furthermore, the coalition noted that
the LDN methodology would lack
stability, given that patient location
varies over time. MedPAC suggested
that if the LDN were adopted, CMS
should ensure that the methodology is
transparent; for example, making the
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specifications and results for the
regression equation available on CMS’s
website and in the Federal Register. In
addition, MedPAC stated that CMS
should note how often the model would
be updated, discuss how census tract
populations changing over time would
affect the stability of the adjustment,
and how the approach would address
MedPAC’s anticipated increase in home
dialysis use.
In addition to the questions outlined
in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule
LVPA RFI, as discussed in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, CMS has also
considered incorporating isolation
criteria into the rural facility
adjustment, where payment of the
adjustment could be limited to ESRD
facilities that are isolated from other
ESRD facilities, or a higher adjustment
could be applied for isolated rural
facilities than for non-isolated rural
facilities. Alternatively, the current rural
facility adjustment could be replaced by
an adjustment based solely on isolation.
We noted that recent analysis has
confirmed that, in general, low-volume
facilities that are rural, isolated, or
located in low-demand areas did not
have higher costs than low-volume
ESRD facilities overall. This analysis
aligns with suggestions from various
commenters, including MedPAC, to
refine or remove the rural facility
adjustment to better target ESRD
facilities that are critical to beneficiary
access and are likely not being
adequately targeted under the current
methodology. However, we noted that
many ESRD facilities which receive the
rural facility adjustment are critical to
patient access and that these ESRD
facilities may be relying on the
additional payment from the rural
facility adjustment for the coming years.
As discussed in section II.B.2.f.(2) of
this final rule, we proposed to
implement a phase-out policy for ESRD
facilities that lose the rural facility
adjustment as a result of being
redesignated from a rural area to an
urban area in the most recent CBSA
delineations. We are not finalizing any
other changes to the rural facility
adjustment in this final rule.
for vulnerable beneficiaries in
underserved communities, including
rural and isolated communities, by
increasing payments to certain ESRD
facilities in these areas to align with
their higher costs. As noted in the CY
2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 68967
through 69077), we aim to target the
benefit of the LVPA to facilities that
serve the access needs of patients in
remote locations. In the CY 2022 ESRD
PPS final rule (86 FR 61874 through
62026), we detailed our commitment to
achieving equity in health care
outcomes for our beneficiaries using the
definition of equity set forth in
Executive Order 13985,75 which places
emphasis on individuals who belong to
underserved communities. In the CY
2023 ESRD PPS proposed rule RFI (87
FR 38464 through 38586), we reiterated
our commitment to achieving equity in
health care and noted that we aim to
align ESRD facility resource use with
payment. Recent feedback from
interested parties indicates that the
current LVPA payment structure may
lead some ESRD facilities to treat fewer
patients to avoid a payment cliff.
Proposing a revised methodology that
would reduce the incentive for gaming,
as the GAO described, would help
advance health equity by removing the
incentive for some ESRD facilities to
limit access to renal dialysis services.
We would expand access through
payments that incrementally align
resource use with payment to ESRD
facilities that furnish different volumes
of treatment.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we proposed to refine the LVPA
methodology to include two tiers based
on treatment volume with different
payment adjustments for each tier. This
methodology would be similar to the
methodology described in the CY 2024
ESRD PPS proposed rule RFI (88 FR
42430 through 42544), but with
methodological changes to improve
consistency in an ESRD facility’s tier
assignment from year to year.
We analyzed cost report data from
ESRD facilities to develop the tiered
thresholds and adjustment amounts for
the proposed LVPA. This analysis used
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b. Tiered LVPA Methodology
The goals of the ESRD PPS (including
the LVPA) are to align resource use with
payment, advance health equity, and
protect access to renal dialysis services
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a logarithmic regression model that
controls for various geographical and
facility level characteristics, including
facility type and region, to estimate cost
differences based on treatment volume.
We also simulated attestation patterns
by excluding a stratified random sample
of ESRD facilities who are eligible for
LVPA payment but do not submit LVPA
attestations. This step allowed us to
account for the fact that a portion of
ESRD facilities that were within the
treatment volume threshold routinely
did not attest to meeting the LVPA
requirements for other reasons. We
analyzed numerous different potential
tiered payment structures based on this
analysis, where the estimated cost for
the tier uses the upper bound of the
treatment count for that tier. Based on
the results of this analysis, we proposed
a two-tiered approach; we believe the
two-tiered approach is appropriate
because it strikes a balance between
simplicity for ESRD facilities,
sufficiently large tiers to allow for
treatment volume variation from one
year to the next, and payment adequacy
for current low-volume facilities,
particularly those with the lowest
volume.
Table 9 presents our proposed twotiered LVPA methodology, which is
based on data from ESRD facility cost
reports such that the reporting periods
include some part of the period between
January 1, 2020, to December 31, 2022
(that is, beginning or ending during
these 3 CYs). We noted that we have
required budget neutrality for any
change to the LVPA methodology, so
any proposed changes to the LVPA
cannot increase or decrease total
estimated ESRD PPS payments;
therefore, the two sets of potential
adjustment factors in Table 9 would be
implemented budget-neutrally. The
second column presents the unscaled
adjusters, which if implemented, would
cause the ESRD PPS base rate to be
reduced by a factor of 0.999262, or
approximately $0.20, to achieve budget
neutrality. The third column presents
the adjusters scaled down by a factor of
0.815 to maintain the LVPA payment
amount under the existing methodology
of $26.7 million based on the expected
CY 2025 LVPA payments. Using the
scaled adjusters would maintain budget
neutrality without lowering the ESRD
PPS base rate.
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TABLE 9: Proposed L VP A Methodology with Two Tiers
Tier
LVPA Adjusters without
LVPA Adjusters with
Number of Eligible CMS
Scaling
Scaling
Certification Numbers
(CCNs)
Tier 2 (3,000 - 3,999)
22.2%
The adjustment factors in the second
column are derived from the regression
explained previously. These results
indicate that facilities which furnish
less than 3,000 treatments have costs
that are 34.9 percent higher than nonlow-volume facilities, and facilities that
furnish between 3,000 and 3,999
treatments have costs that are 22.2
percent higher. The adjustment factors
in the third column, which are scaled
down, reflect the same relationship
between the two tiers of low-volume
facilities and non-low-volume facilities.
We explained that we believe a twotier scaled approach is appropriate
because it would increase payments to
facilities with the lowest volume while
keeping payment changes contained
within the LVPA. In CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule (80 FR 68972 through 69004)
when we last updated the LVPA
adjustment factor, we also updated most
of the facility-level and case-mix
adjusters. At that time, it was
appropriate to apply a budget-neutrality
factor that represented all of the changes
to the facility-level and case-mix
adjusters. However, we only proposed
changes to the LVPA in the CY 2025
18.1%
ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760
through 55843) and believed it would be
most appropriate to contain the changes
within the current LVPA by applying a
scaling factor to the LVPA adjusters.
We also analyzed a three-tiered option
that would include a tier for ESRD
facilities furnishing between 4,000 and
5,000 treatments, which is presented in
Table 10. As noted previously, we
considered both scaled and unscaled
adjustment factors, with both
maintaining budget neutrality. Our
analysis showed that the scaled, threetiered option would reduce payments
for facilities furnishing less than 3,000
treatments as compared to both the
current LVPA methodology and the
proposed two-tiered scaled
methodology. Because payments for
facilities furnishing between 4,000 and
5,000 treatments would increase,
payments for the lowest-volume
facilities would need to decrease to
maintain budget neutrality, which we
did not believe would align with the
goals of the LVPA outlined previously.
We explained that if we were to propose
a three-tiered option, we believe budget
neutralizing the base rate rather than
128
scaling the adjustment factors would
better align with these goals. Our
analysis shows that an unscaled threetiered adjustment would result in a
$0.99 reduction to the base rate. We
sought comment on our proposed
scaled, two-tier proposal and on the
alternative three-tier LVPA structure.
We noted that, should this alternative be
finalized, we would make changes to
§ 413.232(b)(1) to reflect the increased
LVPA threshold of 5,000. As discussed
further in the next subsection, we also
proposed to determine an ESRD
facility’s LVPA tier based on the median
treatment count volume of the last three
cost-reporting years, rather than using a
single year treatment count. Therefore,
expanding LVPA eligibility to ESRD
facilities that furnished fewer than 5,000
treatments in each of the past three costreporting years would also increase the
number of ESRD facilities that would
qualify for tier 1 and tier 2, since ESRD
facilities which furnished between
4,000 and 4,999 treatments in one of the
past 3 years and fewer than 4,000 (or
3,000 for tier 1) in the other 2 years
could qualify in these tiers.
TABLE 10: Alternative L VP A Methodology with Three Tiers
LVPA Adjusters with
Scaling
Scaling
Number of Eligible CCNs
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c. Final Changes to the LVPA for CY
2025
We proposed a two-tiered LVPA using
the scaled adjusters presented in the
second column of Table 9. ESRD
facilities that fall into the first tier (those
that furnish fewer than 3,000
treatments) would receive a payment
adjustment of 28.4 percent. Those that
fall in the second tier (those that furnish
3,000 or more treatments but fewer than
4,000 treatments) would receive a
payment adjustment of 18.1 percent.
Outside of the change to the LVPA
amount, this change would not impact
how the LVPA is applied to ESRD PPS
payments.
We stated that one potential
complication with a tiered approach to
the LVPA is that there would still be
payment cliffs present between the tiers.
This may discourage ESRD facilities
from increasing their treatment volume
in a given year, especially if it is
uncertain whether the ESRD facility’s
treatment volume in future years will
stay at the increased level. To address
this, we proposed to determine an ESRD
facility’s LVPA tier based on the median
treatment count volume of the last three
cost-reporting years, rather than using a
single year treatment count. This
methodology would smooth payments
over years, increasing stability and
predictability in payments to lowvolume facilities. We also proposed
that, should a facility receive an
exception under § 413.232(g)(5) in one
or more of the past three cost-reporting
years, the median treatment count of the
unaffected cost-reporting years would
be used to make the facility’s tier
determination. We note that the median
of two numbers is the average of those
numbers, and the median of one number
is that number. In the case that a facility
does not have cost-reporting data from
the last 3 years that are unaffected by a
disaster or other emergency, we would
assign the facility to a tier based on their
last full year of unaffected treatment
volume, assuming all LVPA eligibility
criteria are met.
We stated that we believe that the
proposed median treatment approach
would promote stability, especially for
facilities whose treatment counts are on
the margins of a tier. We also believe
that the proposed smoothing
methodology for determining the
treatment volume tier for which an
ESRD facility qualifies is better than the
alternative of using the highest tier (in
terms of treatment volume) for which an
ESRD facility has qualified in each of
the past years. For example, if we used
the highest tier of the last 3 years and
a facility furnishes 3,500 treatments in
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one of the past 3 years, it would be
categorized as tier 2 even if it furnished
fewer than 3,000 treatments in the other
2 years. We believe that the proposed
smoothing would mitigate the
introduction of a cliff-effect within the
tiers.
By contrast, under the proposed
smoothing methodology, if the costreporting data indicated that the facility
furnished 2,500, 2,999, and 3,500
treatments in the 3 years preceding the
payment year, the median tier would be
identified (tier 1 in this case), and the
facility would (in the proposed two-tier
system with scaling) receive a 28.4
percent payment adjustment for all of
the treatments furnished during the
payment year. We expect that any
higher or lower payments from year to
year under this policy would balance
out over time without putting additional
burden on the MACs. The structure of
the proposed scaled, two-tier LVPA
methodology is presented in Table 9,
and the structure of the alternative
three-tier unscaled LVPA methodology
is presented in Table 10. For the
purposes of comparison, we have
included the scaled and unscaled
version of both of the potential LVPA
structures.
We noted that we did not propose any
changes to the methodology for
determining eligibility for the LVPA
under § 413.232(b)(1), as the purpose of
this change is to better allocate
payments within the LVPA, not to
expand the LVPA to facilities that have
furnished more than 4,000 treatments in
one of the past three cost-reporting
years. We would continue to determine
eligibility for the LVPA based on a
facility’s treatment count in each of the
three cost-reporting years preceding the
payment year as set forth in
§ 413.232(b)(1) and would not consider
the median treatment count over that
period for purposes of determining
eligibility. Likewise, we did not propose
any changes to § 413.232(g)(5), which
allows for an exception to the
requirement at § 413.232(b)(1) in the
case of a disaster or other emergency. In
the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR
49030 through 49214), we stated that we
believe a 3-year waiting period serves as
a safeguard against facilities that have
the opportunity to take a financial loss
in establishing facilities that are
purposefully small. In response to the
CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule RFI
(88 FR 42430 through 42544), several
interested parties commented that they
believe CMS should maintain the 3-year
attestation to determine eligibility for
the LVPA, as it is an important
safeguard against gaming. In addition, if
we were to use the median tier
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methodology to determine LVPA
eligibility, we estimate that the
adjustment factors would decrease,
because the scaling factor used to
maintain budget neutrality within the
LVPA would be smaller to account for
a larger amount of ESRD facilities
qualifying for the LVPA.
We stated that, if finalized, the
proposed median treatment count
methodology for determining an eligible
ESRD facility’s LVPA tier would
improve the stability and predictability
of the LVPA by basing tier
determination on the median treatment
count of the last 3 years as opposed to
the treatment count for each of the last
3 years, where facilities could be
disqualified from a higher adjustment
based on marginal changes. The
proposed tiered smoothing methodology
would also better align payment with
resource use by minimizing the impact
of the payment cliff between the LVPA
tiers in a transparent and reproducible
fashion. We solicited comments on each
aspect of our proposal: (1) the tiered
structure of the LVPA; (2) using the
median treatment count volume to
determine the LVPA payment tier for
ESRD facilities that are eligible for the
adjustment; and (3) the scaling of the
adjusters to maintain LVPA payments at
the same level. As previously discussed,
we also considered an alternative threetiered structure, which would have the
effect of reducing the base rate by $0.99.
We solicited comments on whether this
alternative methodology could be more
appropriate than the proposed
methodology.
We invited public comment on our
proposal to change the LVPA
methodology to include two tiers, use
the median treatment count volume to
determine the LVPA payment tier for
eligible facilities, and to scale the
adjusters to maintain budget neutrality
without lowering the ESRD PPS base
rate. Approximately 12 commenters
including a non-profit dialysis
organization, a non-profit kidney
organization, multiple large dialysis
organizations, a provider advocacy
organization, a non-profit organization
of ESRD networks, a non-profit kidney
care alliance, a coalition of dialysis
organizations, a small dialysis
organization within a large non-profit
health system, and MedPAC commented
on the proposed changes to the LVPA
methodology. The following is a
summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS’s proposed changes to
the LVPA methodology, agreeing that
introducing two tiers would help reduce
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the burden of payment cliffs. Some of
these commenters encouraged CMS to
continue refining the LVPA as more
data becomes available, and to continue
evaluating the impact of creating
additional tiers. Nearly all commenters
expressed support for our proposal to
use the median treatment count volume
to determine the LVPA payment tier for
eligible facilities.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and dedication to
advancing health equity and protecting
access to renal dialysis services for
vulnerable beneficiaries. CMS will
continue to monitor the ESRD PPS
LVPA methodology to ensure that
payments are appropriately aligned with
resource use and adequately target lowvolume facilities and make refinements,
if appropriate, through rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters cited
analysis suggesting that CMS may have
underestimated the number of facilities
projected to furnish more than 3,000
treatments during CY 2025 in the CY
2025 impact file 76 and expressed
concern that the adjuster amounts CMS
calculated for both tier structures
described in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule may be inaccurate. Many
of these commenters were also
concerned that the two- and three-tiered
structures presented in the proposed
rule had the same adjusters despite a
greater number of ESRD facilities
qualifying for the LVPA under the threetiered structure.
Response: The dialysis treatment
counts reported in the impact tables in
Addendum B represent Fee-For-Service
(FFS) treatments furnished by each
facility during 2023. LVPA tier
assignment is based on facility size,
which encompasses all treatments
(Medicare FFS, MA, or non-Medicare)
furnished during CYs 2020, 2021, and
2022, including treatments by ESRD
facilities under common ownership and
located within a 5-driving mile radius.
The CY 2023 facility size information
was considered separately from the FFS
treatment during our analysis.
The two- and three-tier LVPA
structures in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule appear identical as both
represent estimates of expected cost
differentials derived from a common
model that measures association
between facility size and cost. The
adjusters from the common model are
stable because they are based on the
overall relationship between cost and
volume, not on the number of tiers into
which facilities are divided. These
estimates appear in the second columns
76 The CY 2025 impact file can be found in
Addendum B of the proposed rule.
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of Tables 9 and 10 in this final rule.
However, once facilities are assigned to
a category and payment budget
neutrality is applied, the adjusters for
the two- and three-tier proposals
diverge, as shown by the third columns
in each respective table where the
adjustment factors are scaled to
maintain total LVPA payments at the
same level.
Comment: Several interested parties
expressed concern that the facilities in
the second tier under the proposed twotier LVPA methodology (furnishing
between 3,000 and 3,999 treatments per
year) would receive a lower adjustment
compared to the current LVPA policy.
Response: We maintain our belief that
a two-tier scaled approach is
appropriate, as it replaces a one-size-fits
all approach with one where payments
more closely align with cost while
keeping payment changes contained
within the population of LVPA
facilities. Maintaining budget neutrality
in this manner when transitioning to a
tiered structure necessitates payment
adjustments that differ from the current
adjuster at each tier. Therefore, it is
unavoidable that the tier 2 LVPA
facilities receive a lower LVPA
adjustment factor under the tiered
system while holding total LVPA
payments at the same level.
We also maintain our belief that it is
appropriate to implement a scaled
approach as opposed to a budget
neutrality factor applied to all ESRD
PPS payments. We reiterate that when
we last updated the LVPA adjustment
factor in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final
rule (80 FR 68972 through 69004), we
also updated most of the facility-level
and case-mix adjusters and applied a
budget neutrality factor that represented
all of those changes. Since we only
proposed changes to the LVPA in the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89
FR 55760 through 55843), we noted that
it would be most appropriate to contain
the changes within the current LVPA by
applying a scaling factor to the LVPA
adjusters.
Comment: MedPAC supported the
proposal for a two-tier LVPA for existing
ESRD facilities as well as maintaining
budget neutrality with respect to the
current LVPA policy but expressed
multiple concerns about extending the
LVPA to new ESRD facilities. MedPAC
suggested that the two-tier proposal is
an improvement over the current policy,
but that they ultimately support a
statutory change that would replace
both the LVPA and the rural facility
adjustment with a single payment
adjustment that considers distance to
the next nearest facility and treatment
volume. MedPAC stated that such an
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89159
adjustment would eliminate extra
payments to low-volume facilities in
close proximity to another facility and
high-volume rural facilities.
Response: CMS appreciates the
support expressed by MedPAC for the
proposed changes to the LVPA
methodology and its input on future
refinements that could preserve access
to renal dialysis services. CMS also
shares MedPAC’s concerns about
extending the LVPA to new ESRD
facilities, as this could result in
decreased payment to the lowestvolume ESRD facilities. As we
discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through
55843), CMS aims to align resource use
with payment, advance health equity
and protect access to renal dialysis
services for vulnerable beneficiaries in
underserved communities, including
rural and isolated communities, by
increasing payments to certain ESRD
facilities in these areas to align with
their higher costs. We acknowledge
MedPAC’s continued support for an
LVPA that incorporates geographic
isolation but reiterate that such an
adjustment would not be consistent
with the statutory requirements for the
LVPA unless geographic isolation is
found to influence the extent to which
low-volume ESRD facilities face higher
costs, and we agree that such an
adjustment would require a statutory
change.
Comment: Multiple commenters once
again called for the elimination of the
rural facility adjustment and for its
funds to be allocated to support a more
robust LVPA, either within the current
bounds of eligibility or to include ESRD
facilities that furnish up to 6,000
treatments per year. Many of these
commenters reiterated their support for
MedPAC’s LVI methodology and noted
several concerns regarding the three-tier
model presented by CMS in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule. Some
commenters stated that the three-tier
model presented by CMS would cause
substantial overlap between facilities
receiving the LVPA and the rural facility
adjustment, and that a large number of
rural facilities are high-volume to an
extent that may not warrant additional
payment.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through
55843), CMS noted that recent analysis
has confirmed, in general, that lowvolume facilities that are rural, isolated,
or located in low-demand areas did not
have higher costs than low-volume
ESRD facilities overall. This analysis
broadly aligns with suggestions from
various commenters, including
MedPAC, to refine or remove the rural
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facility adjustment to better target ESRD
facilities that are critical to beneficiary
access and are likely not being
adequately targeted under the current
methodology. However, CMS found
that, on treatment weighted basis, over
65 percent of rural providers have no
other providers in a 5-driving mile
distance, and that this fraction increases
to 83 percent for providers eligible for
both the rural facility adjustment and
the LVPA. These findings indicate that
the overlapping payments for both the
LVPA and rural facility adjustments are
primarily going to small and isolated
providers and align with our belief that
many ESRD facilities which receive the
rural facility adjustment are critical to
patient access and may be relying on the
additional payment from the rural
facility adjustment for the coming years.
We are not finalizing any changes to the
rural facility adjustment at this time, but
we are open to considering potential
refinements to the definition of a rural
ESRD facility in the future by
considering alternate rural designations.
Any future changes would consider the
impact on rural ESRD facilities.
Additionally, we note that the rural
facility adjustment for the ESRD PPS is
relatively small compared to other
payment systems, at 0.8 percent, and
that the suggested elimination of this
adjustment would only account for
about one third of the budget neutrality
adjustment required for our alternative
3-tiered adjustment, which would
expand the LVPA to ESRD facilities that
furnish up to 5,000 treatments per year.
Therefore, the funds currently
associated with the rural facility
adjustment would not be able to ‘‘pay
for’’ expanding the LVPA to the
commenter’s suggested 6,000 treatment
volume threshold without a significant
budget neutrality reduction to the ESRD
PPS base rate.
CMS also reiterates that because
payments for facilities furnishing
between 4,000 and 5,000 treatments
would increase under the three-tier
methodology presented in the proposed
rule, payments for the lowest-volume
facilities would need to decrease to
maintain budget neutrality, and we do
not believe this would align with the
goals of the LVPA. We thank the
commenters who presented analysis
demonstrating why the three-tier
methodology we presented may yield
decreased payment to the lowestvolume facilities and how alternative
methodologies, including MedPAC’s
LVI methodology, could potentially
yield more equitable payment
distribution to LVPA-eligible facilities.
CMS intends to consider the provided
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analyses to inform future notice and
comment rulemaking pertaining to the
LVPA methodology.
Comment: A small dialysis
organization within a large non-profit
health system commented asking for
additional clarification regarding the
median tier calculation in the instance
where a facility receives an exception
for taking on additional patients due to
a disaster or emergency.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through
55843), we proposed that, should a
facility receive an exception under
§ 413.232(g)(5) in one or more of the
past three cost-reporting years, the
median treatment count of the
unaffected cost-reporting years would
be used to make the facility’s tier
determination. We noted that the
median of two numbers is the average
of those numbers, and the median of
one number is that number. In the case
that a facility does not have costreporting data from the last 3 years that
are unaffected by a disaster or other
emergency, we would assign the facility
to a tier based on their last full year of
unaffected treatment volume, assuming
all LVPA eligibility criteria are met. For
example, if cost-reporting data indicated
that an ESRD facility furnished 2,500,
2,999, and 4,500 treatments in the 3
years preceding the payment year, but
received an exception under
§ 413.232(g)(5) during the year it
furnished 4,500 treatments, the median
treatment count from the two prior years
(2,500 and 2,999) would be used
determine the facility’s LVPA tier,
which would place the facility in tier 1
under the proposed two-tier
methodology. The facility would then
receive a 28.4 percent payment
adjustment for all of the treatments
furnished during the payment year.
Comment: Some interested parties
commented that it is necessary to
conduct analysis of the Pacific
territories separately from the general
Pacific census region to consider the
unique costs that are exclusive to small
island economies. The commenters
cited air freight shipping costs,
operational costs for utilities, limited
availability of local healthcare
professionals, and a lack of economies
of scale as factors that may be raising
the per-treatment costs across the
Pacific territories. The interested parties
acknowledged that CMS is barred from
accounting for geographic isolation
outside of the extent to which lowvolume facilities face higher costs in
furnishing renal dialysis services than
other facilities, but claimed that CMS
may have concluded that low-volume
facilities that are rural, isolated, or
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located in low-demand areas generally
did not have higher costs than lowvolume ESRD facilities overall without
adequately considering the unique
situation of the Pacific territories. The
commenters urged CMS to refine the
LVPA to better target isolated ESRD
facilities such as those in the Pacific
islands and requested the Secretary to
consider exercising the authority
provided under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) to establish other
payment adjustments for the Pacific
territories in the case that CMS is unable
to better target these facilities due to
statutory constraints.
Response: In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
proposed rule’s LVPA RFI (88 FR 42441
through 42445), we solicited comments
on a potential new payment adjustment
that accounts for isolation, rurality, and
other geographical factors, including
local dialysis need (LDN). CMS stated
that the statutory requirements for the
LVPA under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii)
of the Act generally would not allow for
CMS to account for geographic isolation
outside of the extent to which lowvolume facilities face higher costs in
furnishing renal dialysis services than
other facilities, and preliminary analysis
found that, in general, low-volume
facilities that are rural, isolated, or
located in low-demand areas did not
have higher costs than low-volume
ESRD facilities overall. Because of this,
we clarified that the LDN methodology
could only be implemented under the
authority in section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of
the Act, which states that the ESRD PPS
may include such other payment
adjustments as the Secretary determines
appropriate. Commenters were generally
opposed to the LDN methodology for a
variety of factors, and many supported
MedPAC’s LVI methodology in place of
the existing LVPA and rural facility
adjustments. The statute generally
would not permit MedPAC’s approach
recommending payment directed at
isolated facilities under the LVPA, and
our preliminary analysis shows that the
funds from the rural adjuster alone
cannot support a third LVPA tier while
maintaining budget neutrality and
without decreasing payment to the
lowest volume facilities. CMS is
committed to achieving equity in
healthcare outcomes for our
beneficiaries, and we reiterate that the
statutory requirement for the LVPA
requires it reflect the extent to which
low-volume ESRD facilities face higher
costs. We intend to continue to evaluate
whether geographic isolation is
associated with higher costs for lowvolume ESRD facilities and, should we
find such evidence, we would be able to
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consider alternative methodologies to
the LVPA similar to MedPAC’s LVI in
potential future rulemaking. Should our
future analysis show that isolated, lowvolume ESRD facilities incur greater
costs than other low-volume ESRD
facilities, we would consider, if
appropriate, making further refinements
to the LVPA methodology through
rulemaking. We recognize that the U.S.
Pacific Territories are uniquely isolated
compared to mainland ESRD facilities,
so a different set of isolation criteria
may apply distinctly to these ESRD
facilities and, should they have higher
costs than other LVPA facilities, support
incorporating such isolation criteria into
the LVPA under the current statute.
However, we do not believe it would be
appropriate to define isolation criteria
based on predetermined ESRD facilities
that we believe should be considered
isolated. Additionally, as there are
relatively few ESRD facilities in the U.S.
Pacific Territories, any isolation criteria
which would only identify these ESRD
facilities would likely be very restrictive
and not appropriate to be applied to the
ESRD PPS overall. Therefore, we do not
believe it would be most appropriate to
address the higher costs that the
commenter described through the
LVPA. We intend to further consider the
unique challenges and costs which are
faced by ESRD facilities in the U.S
Pacific Territories, and other similarly
isolated places, and address these
challenges and costs, if warranted,
through an appropriate payment
mechanism, such as an adjustment
under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv), in
potential future rulemaking.
CMS appreciates the unique
challenges that ESRD facilities in the
U.S. Pacific Territories face and the
higher costs that might accompany
them. However, we note that the LVPA
is generally not constructed to account
for factors outside of the costs that ESRD
facilities incur as a result of furnishing
a small number of treatments. CMS has
also noted that there are ESRD facilities
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that may be eligible for the LVPA but
have not submitted attestations to their
MACs. CMS encourages these facilities
to attest for purposes of the LVPA as we
continue to consider appropriate ways
to support Pacific Territory facilities
that are critical to beneficiary access to
renal dialysis services.
Final Rule Action: After considering
the comments, we are finalizing as
proposed the scaled two-tier LVPA
methodology, where ESRD facilities that
fall into the first tier will receive a
payment adjustment of 28.9 percent and
those that fall in the second tier will
receive a payment adjustment of 18.3
percent. The structure of this
methodology can be found in Table 11.
We are also finalizing as proposed the
tiered smoothing methodology, where
an ESRD facility’s LVPA tier will be
determined based on the median
treatment count volume of the last three
cost-reporting years, rather than using a
single year treatment count.
TABLE 11: Final LVPA Methodology with Two Tiers
Tier
LVPA Adjusters with
Number of Eligible CMS
Scaling
Certification Numbers
(CCNs)
We note that the final LVPA adjusters
under the two-tier methodology are
marginally different from those
presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule. The final LVPA adjusters
presented in Table 11 reflect the use of
more recent claims data in our analysis
for this final rule, which results in
changes to the scaling factor used to
maintain total estimated LVPA
payments at the same amount.
CMS reiterates that we did not
propose and are not finalizing any
changes to the methodology for
determining eligibility for the LVPA
under § 413.232(b)(1), as the purpose of
the finalized changes is to better allocate
payments within the LVPA, not to
expand the LVPA to facilities that have
furnished more than 4,000 treatments in
one of the past three cost-reporting
years. We will continue to determine
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18.3%
128
eligibility for the LVPA based on a
facility’s treatment count in each of the
three cost-reporting years preceding the
payment year as set forth in
§ 413.232(b)(1) and would not consider
the median treatment count over that
period for purposes of determining
eligibility. Likewise, we did not propose
and are not finalizing any changes to
§ 413.232(g)(5), which allows for an
exception to the requirement at
§ 413.232(b)(1) in the case of a disaster
or other emergency.
d. Summary of RFI on Improving the
LVPA for New ESRD Facilities
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule (89 FR 55760 through 55843), we
sought comment on several approaches
to modifying the LVPA methodology to
ensure that payments are accurately
aligned with resource use, adequately
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target low-volume facilities, and strive
for healthcare equity for ESRD
beneficiaries. We issued an RFI to seek
feedback from the public on potential
changes to the LVPA eligibility criteria,
including the potential modification of
the 3-year cost-reporting data
requirement, and what commenters
believe would be the best way for a new
low-volume ESRD facility to
demonstrate or attest that it expects to
be low-volume. We also sought
information regarding the potential
implementation of a reconciliation
process for ESRD facilities that fail to
furnish a low enough treatment volume
to qualify for the LVPA or their
predicted tier. We also questioned
commenters about the cost differences
for providers of low-volume home
dialysis and providers of low-volume
in-center dialysis, and whether the
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LVPA be an appropriate pathway to
support the provision of home dialysis
through increased payment. In
particular, we sought input and
responses to the following
considerations, requests, and questions:
• Whether the LVPA or another
adjustment, such as the LDN
methodology discussed earlier, would
be the most appropriate payment
pathway to support access to renal
dialysis services in areas that do not
currently have sufficient capacity to
furnish these services to all Medicare
beneficiaries.
• What would be the most
appropriate way or ways for a new
ESRD facility to demonstrate or attest
that it expects to be low-volume?
• The potential for future
reconciliation process as an appropriate
accommodation for new ESRD facilities.
• Whether a reconciliation process
would be an effective tool for making
appropriate payments to existing ESRD
facilities that have three or more years
of cost reporting data.
• Would a reconciliation process be
operationally straightforward and
understandable for an ESRD facility that
has opened in the past 3 years?
• Would a reconciliation process
make it more difficult for ESRD facilities
to plan and budget for future payment
years? Is this outweighed by the
potential benefit of earlier access to the
LVPA for these new facilities?
• Would it be useful or feasible to
implement a reconciliation process for
ESRD facilities that have not opened in
the past 3 years but, for whatever
reason, may have furnished a low
enough treatment volume to qualify for
the LVPA?
• Could the LVPA be changed in any
way to better support ESRD facilities
opening in underserved areas? Are there
any costs specific to low-volume
facilities for which the current LVPA
does not account?
• How are the costs for providers of
low-volume home dialysis different
from the costs for providers of lowvolume in-center dialysis? Could the
LVPA be an appropriate pathway to
support the provision of home dialysis
through increased payment?
We did not receive any new feedback
in response to our RFI regarding LVPA
eligibility or the attestation process for
new ESRD facilities. A handful of
commenters reiterated their stance from
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS RFI on the
LVPA. Some commenters thanked CMS
for our consideration of public
comments as we continue to refine the
LVPA methodology. We received one
comment from an LDO in response to
our RFI regarding the cost differences
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for low-volume home dialysis versus incenter dialysis providers. The comment
explained that staffing dynamics make
the 4,000-treatment LVPA threshold
inapplicable for home dialysis programs
but cautioned that a home dialysisspecific LVPA threshold may not
address the challenges faced by lowvolume home programs as the treatment
aggregation mechanism within the
LVPA disqualifies many of these
programs due to their proximity to
commonly owned in-center programs.
We thank the commenters for their
detailed and thoughtful comments,
including those who responded to the
RFI. While we are not responding to
these comments in this CY 2025 ESRD
PPS final rule, we intend to take them
into consideration for future rulemaking
and future policy development.
C. Transitional Add-On Payment
Adjustment for New and Innovative
Equipment and Supplies (TPNIES)
Applications and Technical Changes for
CY 2025
1. Background
In the CY 2020 ESRD PPS final rule
(84 FR 60681 through 60698), we
established the transitional add-on
payment adjustment for new and
innovative equipment and supplies
(TPNIES) under the ESRD PPS, under
the authority of section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, to support
ESRD facility use and beneficiary access
to these new technologies. For
additional background on the TPNIES
we refer readers to the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule (88 FR 76410 through
76412).
As indicated in § 413.236(c) CMS
includes the summary of each TPNIES
application and our analysis of the
eligibility criteria for each application in
the annual ESRD PPS proposed rule and
announces the results in the annual
ESRD PPS final rule. Because we did
not receive any applications for the
TPNIES for CY 2025, no TPNIES
application summaries, CMS analyses,
or results have been included in this
final rule.
2. Technical Changes to § 413.236(b)(4)
and § 413.236(c)
As part of the TPNIES eligibility
requirements in § 413.236(b)(4), a
covered equipment or supply must have
a complete HCPCS Level II code
application submitted, in accordance
with the HCPCS Level II coding
procedures on the CMS website, by the
HCPCS Level II code application
deadline for biannual Coding Cycle 2 for
durable medical equipment, orthotics,
prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS)
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items and services as specified in the
HCPCS Level II coding guidance on the
CMS website prior to the particular CY.
We have identified a minor error in
§ 413.236(b)(4). Specifically, we
inadvertently transposed the words
orthotics and prosthetics within the
DMEPOS acronym. The acronym was
intended to read durable medical
equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and
supplies (DMEPOS) instead of durable
medical equipment, orthotics,
prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS).
As described in the HCPCS Level II
Coding Procedures, HCPCS Level II is a
standardized coding system that is used
primarily to identify drugs, biologicals
and non-drug and non-biological items,
supplies, and services not included in
the CPT® code set jurisdiction, such as
ambulance services and durable medical
equipment, prosthetics, orthotics, and
supplies (DMEPOS) when used outside
a physician’s office.
While the HCPCS level II Coding
Procedures include DMEPOS as an
example of items for which HCPCS
Level II codes are established, we
believe that the phrase non-drug and
non-biological items more broadly
reflects all items, supplies, and services
for which HCPCS Level II codes are
established and aligns with the HCPCS
Level II coding procedures on the CMS
website. Therefore, we proposed a
technical change at § 413.236(b)(4) to
remove the reference to the phrase
durable medical equipment, orthotics,
prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS) and
replace it with the phrase non-drug and
non-biological items. We are also adding
the word supplies. These technical
changes would better reflect the broader
category of non-drug and non-biological
item coding in the HCPCS Level II
Coding Procedures available on the
CMS website.77
We did not receive any comments on
our proposed technical changes to
§ 413.236(b)(4). We are finalizing the
technical changes as proposed at
§ 413.236(b)(4) and also finalizing the
corresponding edit at § 413.236(c) for
the same reasons that we identified for
the proposed edit.
D. Continuation of Approved
Transitional Add-On Payment
Adjustments for New and Innovative
Equipment and Supplies for CY 2025
In this section of the final rule, we
identify any items previously approved
for the TPNIES and for which payment
77 Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) Level II Coding Procedures. Available at:
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/coding/
medhcpcsgeninfo/downloads/2018-11-30-hcpcslevel2-coding-procedure.pdf. Accessed on January
16, 2024.
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is continuing for CY 2025. As described
in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, no
new items were approved for the
TPNIES for CY 2024 (88 FR 76431). As
such there are no items previously
approved for the TPNIES for which
payment is continuing in CY 2025.
E. Continuation of Approved
Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments for CY 2025
Under § 413.234(c)(1), a new renal
dialysis drug or biological product that
is considered included in the ESRD PPS
base rate is paid the TDAPA for 2 years.
In July 2023, CMS approved Jesduvroq
(daprodustat) for the TDAPA under the
ESRD PPS, effective October 1, 2023.
Implementation instructions are
specified in CMS Transmittal 12157,
dated July 27, 2023, and available at:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
r12157cp.pdf.
In April 2024, CMS approved
DefenCath® (taurolidine and heparin
sodium) for the TDAPA under the ESRD
PPS, effective July 1, 2024.
Implementation instructions are
specified in CMS Transmittal 12628,
dated May 9, 2024, and available at:
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r12628CP.pdf.
Table 12 identifies the two new renal
dialysis drugs for which the TDAPA
payment period as specified in
§ 413.234(c)(1) will continue in CY
2025: Jesduvroq (daprodustat) that was
approved for the TDAPA effective in CY
2023 and DefenCath® (taurolidine and
heparin sodium) that was approved for
the TDAPA effective in CY 2024. Table
12 also identifies the products’ HCPCS
coding information as well as the
payment adjustment effective dates and
end dates.
TABLE 12: Continuation of Approved Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments
Long Descriptor
J0889
Daprodustat, oral, 1 mg, (for ESRD
on dialysis)
Instillation, taurolidine 1.35 mg and
heparin sodium 100 units (central
venous catheter lock for adult
patients receiving chronic
hemodialysis)
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Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS monitor anemia
outcomes with hypoxia-inducible factor
prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor (HIF–PHI)
versus erythropoiesis stimulating agent
(ESA) therapy.
Response: We thank the commenter
for the recommendation and note that
Jesduvroq (daprodustat) is a HIF–PHI.78
CMS engages in ongoing monitoring and
analysis of the ESRD PPS to identify
trends in beneficiary health outcomes.
An overview of the ESRD PPS claimsbased monitoring program is provided
on the CMS website.79 CMS will
continue the claims-based monitoring in
CY 2025, inclusive of all drugs
approved for the TDAPA. CMS intends
to monitor anemia and cardiovascular
outcomes among beneficiaries using
Jesduvroq (daprodustat) and ESAs.
78 Jesduvroq Prescribing Information. Accessed
October 10, 2024. Available at: https://gskpro.com/
content/dam/global/hcpportal/en_US/Prescribing_
Information/Jesdvroq/pdf/JESDUVROQ-PI-MG.PDF.
79 ESRD Prospective Payment System (ESRD PPS)
Claims-Based Monitoring Program-Overview of
2010–2022 Claims-Based Monitoring Program.
Accessed September 13, 2024. Available at: https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-servicepayment/esrdpayment/esrd-claims-basedmonitoring.
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Payment
Adjustment
Effective Date
10/1/2023
Payment Adjustment End Date
7/1/2024
6/30/2026
9/30/2025
III. Final CY 2025 Payment for Renal
Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With AKI
A. Background
The Trade Preferences Extension Act
of 2015 (TPEA) (Pub. L. 114–27) was
enacted on June 29, 2015, and amended
the Act to provide coverage and
payment for dialysis furnished by an
ESRD facility to an individual with AKI.
Specifically, section 808(a) of the TPEA
amended section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act
to provide coverage for renal dialysis
services furnished on or after January 1,
2017, by a renal dialysis facility or a
provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to an individual
with AKI. Section 808(b) of the TPEA
amended section 1834 of the Act by
adding a subsection (r) to provide
payment, beginning January 1, 2017, for
renal dialysis services furnished by
renal dialysis facilities or providers of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act to individuals with AKI at the
ESRD PPS base rate, as adjusted by any
applicable geographic adjustment
applied under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)
(II) of the Act and adjusted (on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section
1834(r) of the Act) by any other
adjustment factor under section
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1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act that the
Secretary elects.
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule,
we finalized several coverage and
payment policies to implement
subsection (r) of section 1834 of the Act
and the amendments to section
1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act, including the
payment rate for AKI dialysis (81 FR
77866 through 77872 and 77965). We
interpret section 1834(r)(1) of the Act as
requiring the amount of payment for
AKI dialysis services to be the base rate
for renal dialysis services determined
for a year under the ESRD PPS base rate
as set forth in § 413.220, updated by the
ESRD bundled market basket percentage
increase factor minus a productivity
adjustment as set forth in
§ 413.196(d)(1), adjusted for wages as set
forth in § 413.231, and adjusted by any
other amounts deemed appropriate by
the Secretary under § 413.373. We
codified this policy in § 413.372 (81 FR
77965).
B. Public Comments and Responses on
the Proposal To Allow Medicare
Payment for Home Dialysis for
Beneficiaries With AKI
1. Background
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule,
we indicated that we did not expect
beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze at
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home; therefore, the home dialysis
benefit was not extended to
beneficiaries with AKI (81 FR 77870).
There were commenters who advocated
for beneficiaries to have the option to
dialyze in a home setting, particularly
those beneficiaries who started
peritoneal dialysis (PD) in the hospital
and desired to continue PD after
discharge. However, other commenters
indicated that beneficiaries with AKI
needed close supervision during
dialysis. Additionally, some
commenters indicated that dialysis for
AKI is a short-term treatment, and
beneficiaries would not have time to
learn to administer a home therapy.
Therefore, we finalized the AKI
payment policy in the CY 2017 ESRD
PPS final rule as proposed without
extending the AKI benefit to home
dialysis beneficiaries. We indicated that
we would gather data on the AKI
beneficiary population and the extent of
home training necessary to safely selfadminister dialysis in the home, and
that we would consider the use of home
dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI in the
future as we find that it may be
beneficial for subsets of beneficiaries.
In past years we have received
comments regarding the site of renal
dialysis services for Medicare
beneficiaries with AKI, with the most
recent comments received in response
to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule
to update to the AKI dialysis payment
rate (88 FR 76433). We have monitored
data for beneficiaries with AKI and
researched data in journal articles
discussing the potential to expand
dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI to a
home setting, as noted in the CY 2017
ESRD PPS final rule (81 FR 77871).
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule,
we clarified that the ESRD Facility CfCs
apply to ESRD facilities, not to ESRD
beneficiaries, and noted that the ESRD
facility CfCs would be the appropriate
regulatory location for standards
addressing care provided to
beneficiaries with AKI in ESRD
facilities. We finalized a policy that our
CfCs would not need to be revised to
address the provision of dialysis
treatment to beneficiaries with AKI (81
FR 77871 through 77872).
In December 2020, CMS’s data
contractor held a TEP that considered
data related to utilization review and
cost of AKI treatments since 2017. The
TEP solicited input regarding how
reported costs align with realized costs
of treatment for beneficiaries with AKI.
During the TEP, participants suggested
that we extend Medicare payment for
beneficiaries with AKI to allow them to
dialyze in a home setting. Additionally,
the TEP indicated that beneficiaries
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with AKI could benefit from different
treatment regimens. The TEP noted that
more frequent, gentler dialysis with a
lower ultrafiltration rate would be a
viable option for some beneficiaries.
Members of the panel commented on
the similar treatment frequencies
observed for beneficiaries with AKI and
ESRD, stating that the payment system
is currently constructed to facilitate the
standard treatment plan for beneficiaries
with AKI. Panelists recommended that
the ESRD PPS should be flexible in
terms of number of treatments for
beneficiaries with AKI, so that those
who need more frequent treatments are
not impeded from receiving them.
Panelists related instances of hospitals
starting a patient on PD, which can be
done frequently in the home setting,
only to convert the patient to a more
standard treatment regimen such as
three in-center hemodialysis treatments
per week before discharging the patient
to a dialysis facility. Panelists also
advocated that we provide Medicare
payment for beneficiaries with AKI to be
treated at home.
We solicited comments regarding
potentially modifying the site of renal
dialysis services for beneficiaries with
AKI and payment for AKI in the home
setting as a RFI in the CY 2022 ESRD
PPS proposed rule (86 FR 36322,
36408). We received 16 comments from
LDOs, patient advocacy groups,
professional organizations, small
dialysis organization within a large nonprofit health system, and non-profit
organizations. Most of the comments
favored providing a payment option for
beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze in a
home setting; however, some
commenters expressed concerns about
doing so. A small dialysis organization
within a large non-profit health system
indicated that beneficiaries with AKI
may have chronic kidney disease at a
lesser stage, such as, Stage 3 or Stage 4
chronic kidney disease (CKD) rather
than ESRD; however, the AKI makes
dialysis necessary. This commenter
noted that if the AKI were to cause the
beneficiary’s underlying Stage 3 or Stage
4 CKD to progress to ESRD in the future,
training them to use a home modality
during the AKI episode could prepare
the patient for a home modality if they
are diagnosed as having ESRD. One LDO
indicated there is evidence that PD,
which is typically used in the home
setting, is associated with better
preservation of residual kidney function
compared to hemodialysis. A national
organization of beneficiaries and kidney
health care professionals advocated that
PD may be learned quickly, reduces
rapid hemodynamic changes that may
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potentiate kidney injury and impede
recovery, and does not require a highrisk central venous catheter to provide
treatment. We note that these comments
are specific to PD as a treatment
modality; however, when considering
such a policy we would include
payment for both PD and hemodialysis
(HD) in the home setting for
beneficiaries with AKI, consistent with
our payment policy for home dialysis
for patients with ESRD.
Most recently, as noted in the CY
2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76433),
we received 10 public comments on our
proposal to update the payment rate for
renal dialysis services furnished to
individuals with AKI. Commenters
included a coalition of dialysis
organizations, a non-profit dialysis
organization, a trade association, a renal
product development company, and
multiple large dialysis organizations.
Most of the commenters requested that
we allow payment for beneficiaries with
AKI to select home dialysis modalities
by changing the current policy, even
though it was not proposed in the CY
2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we acknowledged there have been
concerns in the past regarding the safety
of beneficiaries with AKI dialyzing at
home (89 FR 55806). However, we
explained that we carefully reviewed
the totality of the information and
evidence presented to the agency and
now recognize that current information
regarding beneficiaries with AKI
dialyzing in a home setting supports
more frequent dialysis at a lower
ultrafiltration rate. We stated that the
ability to dialyze at a lower
ultrafiltration rate supports a decrease
in hemodynamic fluctuation and the
complications associated with it, which
in turn support recovery of kidney
function.
2. Technical Analysis
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we noted that although there is
only limited research regarding the use
of home dialysis for the treatment of
AKI, several studies support the use of
home dialysis to generally improve
access to dialysis and provide care that
better meets patient needs (89 FR 55806
through 55807). We noted that many of
the studies related to home dialysis in
the AKI patient population use PD as
the treatment modality, which we
explained is consistent with comments
received during the December 2020 TEP
and comments received during
rulemaking as noted previously.
Additionally, we stated that data from
the United States Renal Data System
(USRDS) Annual Data Report (ADR),
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indicated the percentage of incident
dialysis patients performing home HD
was only 0.4 percent in 2021, and a
significant majority of dialysis patients
performing home dialysis chose PD.80
We stated that we believe the choice of
a home modality would be comparable
in the beneficiary population for those
with AKI as those initiating chronic
maintenance dialysis for ESRD.
However, we affirmed that payment
would be provided for either modality
of home dialysis. For example, PD was
used frequently for patients during the
COVID–19 PHE due to challenging
situations such as supply shortages,
staffing shortages, and limited surgical
availability for the placement of a
venous access. In the proposed rule, we
noted that a multicenter, retrospective,
observational study of 94 patients who
received acute PD in New York City in
the spring of 2020 indicated that rapid
deployment of acute PD was feasible.
We stated that the rates of death and
renal recovery were like those of
patients with AKI requiring kidney
replacement therapy (KRT) in other
cohorts. Of those who were discharged
on dialysis, four were discharged on PD,
and one was discharged on HD.81
We further noted that the
International Society for Peritoneal
Dialysis (ISPD) reiterated in the 2020
guidelines, updated from the 2014
guidelines for PD in AKI, that PD should
be considered a suitable modality for
treatment of AKI in all settings. This
was a strong recommendation from the
ISPD based on evidence rated at the
second highest level used by ISPD.82
Researchers found little to no difference
between PD and hemodialysis in allcause mortality, recovery of kidney
function, or infection as a
complication.83 We noted that this
finding was augmented by an article
that reviewed the resurgence of PD for
the treatment of AKI since the COVID–
19 PHE. The article listed cost
effectiveness, low infrastructure
requirements, ease of staff training, and
more rapid recovery of renal function as
benefits to the use of PD to treat AKI.
We identified a survey of nephrologists
from three international conferences
which reported that 50.8 percent and
36.4 percent of respondents stated that
PD was suitable for treating AKI in the
wards and ICU, respectively. We found
that PD is the predominant therapy used
80 Annual Data Report | USRDS (nih.gov), https://
usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/end-stage-renaldisease/2-home-dialysis.
81 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/
pii/S0085253821004567.
82 https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/
0896860820970834.
83 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29199769/.
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to treat pediatric patients with AKI, and
until the mid to late 1990s was the
predominant therapy to treat adults
with AKI, but the use of this therapy has
waned since the advent of pump driven
continuous kidney replacement
therapy.84
We noted that most studies regarding
recovery of kidney function in patients
with AKI were based around
hospitalized patients. We further noted
that there were very limited studies
suggesting that self-care dialysis can
yield faster recovery of kidney function;
however, the results were not
conclusive.85 We identified that one
study of hospitalized patients with AKI
indicated that a median of 10 patients
recovered kidney function more quickly
utilizing PD.86 We noticed another
study of hospitalized patients with AKI
that indicated that while the recovery of
kidney function was similar in PD and
HD (28 and 26 percent) there was a
significantly shorter time to the recovery
of kidney function for patients with AKI
that utilized PD.87
We identified additional information
from CMS AKI monitoring data, in
which we found that current provision
of AKI dialysis is very similar to the
provision of ESRD dialysis. Data noted
in the 2021 Quarter 4 public use file
(PUF) 88 for AKI showed that
hemoglobin for beneficiaries with ESRD
averaged 10.6 gm/dL while the average
hemoglobin for beneficiaries with AKI
averaged 9 gm/dL. Although the data
further suggested that beneficiaries with
AKI were less likely to be prescribed an
ESA than patients with ESRD, we
identified research that indicated that
patients using PD have a lower rate of
anemia that those using HD.
Additionally, patients receiving PD
require lower doses of ESAs and iron
than patients receiving HD.89 We
observed that this might indicate that
dialyzing in a home environment could
be effective to manage anemia in
beneficiaries with AKI more
appropriately, as the USRDS ADR
indicated incident patients with ESRD
typically choose PD as a home modality
84 https://academic.oup.com/ckj/article/16/2/
210/6696026.
85 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/
PMC4594060/.
86 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/
10.1111/1744-9987.12660.
87 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/
pii/S0085253815528664.
88 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/
prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renaldisease-esrd/esrd-prospective-payment-systemesrd-pps-overview-claims-based-monitoringprogram.
89 https://academic.oup.com/ckj/article/16/12/
2493/7210548.
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89165
over home HD.90 We stated that we
believed that beneficiaries with AKI
would make similar choices.
Furthermore, the AKI PUF data showed
that approximately 8 percent of
beneficiaries with ESRD experienced
incidences of fluid overload, while
beneficiaries with AKI experienced
episodes for which congestive heart
failure was reported within 30, 60, and
90 days (which can be related to fluid
overload) at rates of around 42 percent,
50 percent, and 53 percent,
respectively.91 This data was
concerning because fluid overload in
beneficiaries with AKI can be
detrimental to recovering kidney
function. Additionally, this data
supported conclusions drawn from an
article involving the review of 1754
patients with AKI requiring dialysis.
The article indicated that treatment
protocols for patients with AKI were
like those of incident ESRD patients
despite the underlying differences in
treatment goals. The article further
indicated that most patients with AKI
who recovered had discontinued
dialysis without ever having been
weaned from their initial dialysis
prescription, suggesting there may be
substantial opportunity to wean dialysis
sooner.92 We continue to support the
significant need to individualize the
treatment of every kidney patient, but
particularly beneficiaries with AKI, as
this omission could result in a missed
opportunity to recover kidney function.
We stated that we believed the
proposal to provide payment for
beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze in a
home setting aligns closely with the
CMS Strategic Pillars 93 of expanding
access, engaging the ESRD community
by being responsive to TEPs and RFIs,
and driving innovation to promote
patient centered care. We did not have
utilization data for beneficiaries with
AKI using a home modality available,
but we used the USRDS ADR, which
indicated that disparities currently exist
for self-care dialysis in the home setting
for the ESRD beneficiary population,
with fewer African American/Black and
Hispanic beneficiaries choosing a home
dialysis modality. Additionally, fewer
Medicare and Medicaid dual eligible
90 Annual Data Report | USRDS (nih.gov), https://
usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/end-stage-renaldisease/2-home-dialysis.
91 https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/
prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renaldisease-esrd/esrd-prospective-payment-systemesrd-pps-overview-claims-based-monitoringprogram.
92 https://journals.lww.com/jasn/abstract/2023/
12000/initial_management_and_potential_
opportunities_to.9.aspx.
93 https://www.cms.gov/about-cms/what-we-do/
cms-strategic-plan.
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beneficiaries choose a home dialysis
modality.94 We noted that the ability for
beneficiaries with AKI to choose selfcare dialysis in a home setting would
offer a pathway to reduce these current
disparities (insofar as the AKI
population mirrors the ESRD
beneficiary population) by promoting
access to treatment, as well as removing
a disparity in care between AKI
beneficiaries and ESRD beneficiaries.
We continue to believe it is crucial that
the policy revisions to payment for AKI
renal dialysis consider health equity
and the effects on underserved
populations. We identified that the rate
of AKI was about 81 percent higher
among African American/Black
beneficiaries than among White
beneficiaries.95 We noted that we had
reviewed comments and concerns from
interested parties and agreed that home
dialysis could benefit beneficiaries with
AKI. We noted that issues with fluid
management could be managed with
more frequent, gentler modalities, such
as PD. We stated that we trusted that
providing an avenue to expand
treatment modalities would encourage
individualized and patient-centered
treatment plans for beneficiaries with
AKI, for example, addressing anemia
and ESA management. We will continue
to monitor outcomes for beneficiaries
with AKI with the expectation that AKI
PUF are being reviewed in quality
improvement efforts by ESRD facilities
that provide services to beneficiaries
with AKI.
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3. Home Dialysis Benefit for
Beneficiaries With AKI
As we explained in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55806), we
did not extend the home dialysis benefit
to beneficiaries with AKI when we
initially implemented the benefit (81 FR
77870). However, as discussed in the
proposed rule (89 FR 55806 and 55807),
we reviewed AKI monitoring data that
showed the outcomes for anemia, ESA
use, and fluid management are not
necessarily reflective of the specific,
individualized care, and close
supervision by qualified staff currently
required during the in-center dialysis
process. We further noted that research
demonstrated the use of PD correlated
with positive outcomes for fluid
management and a lower rate of anemia
with less utilization of ESAs and iron.
In the proposed rule we indicated that
research related to home dialysis in the
94 https://usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/endstage-renal-disease/2-home-dialysis.
95 Annual Data Report | USRDS (nih.gov), https://
usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/chronic-kidneydisease/4-acute-kidney-injury.
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AKI patient population has primarily
discussed results using PD as the
modality; however, we would provide
payment for either PD or HD as a home
modality. We noted our goal was for
beneficiaries with AKI to receive the
necessary care to improve their
condition, recover kidney function, and
be weaned from dialysis treatment. We
also noted that the literature exhibits a
high correlation between the use of PD
treatment for beneficiaries with AKI and
positive outcomes for fluid
management, infection rates, mortality,
and recovery of kidney function.96
Additionally, we reviewed research that
demonstrated that the use of PD to
manage the care of beneficiaries with
AKI as a result of COVID–19 was
successful and that beneficiaries who
had successfully begun a treatment
regime that could transition from the
hospital to a home modality should not
have to change treatment to an in-center
treatment modality.
We proposed, based on the current
research we cited (89 FR 55806 through
55807), to extend the home dialysis
benefit as defined at 42 CFR 410.52 to
beneficiaries with AKI for either PD or
HD. As discussed in section III.C.1 of
this final rule, we proposed that the
payment amount for home dialysis for
AKI beneficiaries would be the same as
the payment amount for in-center
dialysis for AKI beneficiaries, consistent
with payment parity within the ESRD
PPS. This payment amount would be
the ESRD PPS base rate, adjusted for
geographic area, as described in section
III.C.2 of this final rule. Additionally, as
discussed in section III.C.3 of this final
rule, we proposed to extend the training
add-on payment adjustment for home
and self-dialysis training in the same
amount as for patients with ESRD, on a
budget neutral basis. We proposed to
revise § 413.373, which currently states
‘‘The payment rate for AKI dialysis may
be adjusted by the Secretary (on a
budget neutral basis for payments under
section 1834(r)) by any other adjustment
factor under subparagraph (D) of section
1881(b)(14) of the Act,’’ by adding
paragraph (a) before ‘‘The payment rate’’
that reads ‘‘CMS applies the wageadjusted add-on per treatment
adjustment for home and self-dialysis
training as set forth at § 413.235(c) to
payments for AKI dialysis claims that
include such training.’’ We proposed to
move the current language to paragraph
(b) with a technical revision to add ‘‘of
the Act’’ after ‘‘section 1834(r)’’.
Furthermore, as discussed in section
III.D of this final rule, we proposed
changes to the ESRD facility CfCs that
96 https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29199769/.
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would accommodate the provision of
home dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI
and help ensure safe and high-quality
care for Medicare beneficiaries in this
setting.
We proposed to amend § 410.52 to
provide Medicare payment for the
treatment of patients with AKI in the
home setting. We proposed to revise
§ 410.52 to read ‘‘Medicare Part B pays
for the following services, supplies, and
equipment furnished to a patient with
ESRD or an individual with Acute
Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in
§ 413.371 of this chapter in his or her
home:’’ by striking the words ‘‘an ESRD
patient’’ after ‘‘to’’ and adding the words
‘‘a patient with ESRD or an individual
with Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) as
defined in § 413.371 of this chapter’’
after ‘‘to’’. We also proposed to revise
§ 413.374(a) to read: ‘‘The AKI dialysis
payment rate applies to renal dialysis
services (as defined in subparagraph (B)
of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act)
furnished under Part B by a renal
dialysis facility or provider of services
paid under section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act, including home services, supplies,
and equipment, and self-dialysis.’’
We invited public comment on our
proposal for extending the home
dialysis benefit to beneficiaries with
AKI. Approximately 27 commenters
including LDOs; regional health
systems; a home dialysis services
provider; a coalition of dialysis
organizations; a provider advocacy
organization; a non-profit dialysis
association; an advocacy group for
people living with a serious illness; a
non-profit organization of ESRD
networks; a non-profit organization for
environmental health and justice; a
professional organization of pediatric
nephrologists; a professional
organization of nephrologists; a home
dialysis stakeholder alliance; a national
organization of patients and kidney
health care professionals; a hospital
association; a non-profit kidney care
alliance; a non-profit kidney
organization; device manufacturers; a
patient-led dialysis organization; and
ESRD patients commented on the
proposed regulation. The following is a
summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our
responses.
Comment: Many commenters were
overwhelmingly in favor of the proposal
to extend the home dialysis benefit to
beneficiaries with AKI. The commenters
agreed that while evidence is limited,
experience from the COVID–19 PHE
supports modifying payment policy to
ensure home modalities would be
available for appropriate patients with
AKI. A patient with ESRD spoke to the
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importance the proposal would have in
empowering beneficiaries, in reducing
their travel burden, and in enhancing
their general quality-of-life. A LDO
expressed they were ‘‘excited,’’ and a
home dialysis services provider
expressed their ‘‘enthusiastic support’’
for the proposed policy change. Some
commenters indicated that the proposal
is an important step forward in
mitigating health disparities.
Additionally, some commenters
expressed that providing patients with
AKI access to home modalities,
particularly PD, could support recovery
of kidney function because of positive
clinical outcomes. A few commenters
spoke about the quality-of-life benefits
and the positive move toward patientcentered care the proposal could
generate. One commenter agreed that
there are safety concerns surrounding
home dialysis for beneficiaries with
AKI, but that these can be mitigated
with appropriate training. Finally, some
commenters indicated that training
beneficiaries with AKI for a home
dialysis modality could be beneficial if
the beneficiary did not recover kidney
function and progressed to having
ESRD.
Response: CMS appreciates the
support from commenters for the
proposal to extend the home dialysis
benefit with appropriate training to
beneficiaries with AKI. We agree with
commenters that extending the home
dialysis benefit with appropriate
training to beneficiaries with AKI could
advance positive outcomes for
beneficiaries who choose a home
dialysis modality.
Comment: A hospital association
expressed confusion about the
frequency of care received by chronic
maintenance home dialysis patients and
by extension the frequency of care a
patient with AKI could receive in the
home setting. Additionally, the same
commenter indicated concern that the
proposed rule does not include
treatment of transplant patients with
late graft recovery in the AKI definition.
Response: A beneficiary with AKI and
their health care provider would still
determine the best frequency of care.
CMS would provide payment for home
dialysis treatments furnished to AKI
beneficiaries at the ESRD PPS base rate
determined for the year under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act, as statutorily
required at section 1834(r)(1) of the Act.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule
CMS explained that home dialysis
treatments are paid the same rate as incenter treatments (75 FR 49058).
Additionally, CY 2011 ESRD final rule
provided an explanation that a week of
home dialysis is converted into three
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equivalent in-center HD treatments. In
the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule we
stated that there is no weekly limit on
the number of dialysis treatments that
will be paid for beneficiaries with AKI
(81 FR 77867). AKI is defined statutorily
at section 1834(r)(2) of the Act. CMS
cannot change the definition of AKI to
include beneficiaries who have had a
kidney transplant that experience late
graft recovery. Beneficiaries that have
had a transplant are still covered under
the ESRD benefit for three years posttransplant. Therefore, the beneficiary
that had a transplant could dialyze in an
outpatient ESRD facility under the
ESRD benefit.
Comment: One commenter questioned
how to use CPT codes such as 90945
(Dialysis procedure other than
hemodialysis) and 90947 (Dialysis
procedure other than hemodialysis
requiring repeated evaluations by a
physician or other qualified health care
professional, with or without substantial
revisions of dialysis prescription) when
billing for home dialysis rather than incenter.
Response: We refer the commenter to
the Medicare Claims Processing Manual
Chapter 8 § 170, which indicates that
codes 90935, 90937, 90945, or 90947 are
only used if the place of service on the
claim is an inpatient hospital. This is
because all physicians’ outpatient renalrelated services are included in payment
made under the monthly capitation
payment.97
Final Rule Action: After consideration
of the comments received, we are
finalizing our proposal to extend the
home dialysis benefit to beneficiaries
with AKI, as proposed. Accordingly, we
are finalizing our proposal to revise
§ 410.52 to read: ‘‘Medicare Part B pays
for the following services, supplies, and
equipment furnished to a patient with
ESRD or an individual with Acute
Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in
§ 413.371 of this chapter in his or her
home.’’ We are also finalizing our
proposal to revise § 413.374(a) to read:
‘‘The AKI dialysis payment rate applies
to renal dialysis services (as defined in
subparagraph (B) of section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act) furnished under Part B by a
renal dialysis facility or provider of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act, including home services,
supplies, and equipment, and selfdialysis.’’
97 https://www.cms.gov/regulations-andguidance/guidance/manuals/downloads/
clm104c08.pdf.
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89167
C. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY
2025
1. CY 2025 AKI Dialysis Payment Rate
The payment rate for AKI dialysis is
the ESRD PPS base rate determined for
a year under section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act, which is the finalized ESRD PPS
base rate, including the applicable
annual market basket update,
geographic wage adjustments, and any
other discretionary adjustments, for
such year. We note that ESRD facilities
could bill Medicare for non-renal
dialysis items and services and receive
separate payment in addition to the
payment rate for AKI dialysis. As
discussed in section II.B.4 of this final
rule, the final ESRD PPS base rate is
$273.82, which reflects the application
of the CY 2025 wage index budgetneutrality adjustment factor of 0.988600
and the CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
percentage increase of 2.7 percent
reduced by the productivity adjustment
of 0.5 percentage point, that is, 2.2
percent. Accordingly, we are finalizing
a CY 2025 per treatment payment rate
of $273.82 (($271.02 × 0. 988600) ×
1.022 = $273.82) for renal dialysis
services furnished by ESRD facilities to
individuals with AKI. Additionally, we
have applied a $0.00 budget neutrality
adjustment to the AKI per treatment
base rate as discussed in section III.C.3
of this final rule to address the training
add-on payment adjustment for home
dialysis modalities in the AKI
beneficiary population. We did not
receive specific comments related to the
CY 2025 AKI dialysis payment rate. We
discuss general comments on the ESRD
PPS base rate in section II.B.4 of this
final rule, and we discuss comments
related to the budget neutrality
reduction to the AKI payment rate to
account for the training add-on payment
adjustment in section III.C.3 of this final
rule.
2. Geographic Adjustment Factor
Under section 1834(r)(1) of the Act
and regulations at § 413.372, the amount
of payment for AKI dialysis services is
the base rate for renal dialysis services
determined for a year under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act (updated by the
ESRDB market basket percentage
increase and reduced by the
productivity adjustment), as adjusted by
any applicable geographic adjustment
factor applied under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act.
Accordingly, we apply the same wage
index under § 413.231 that is used
under the ESRD PPS. As discussed in
section II.B.2.b of this final rule, we are
finalizing a new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology, which utilizes BLS OEWS
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data and freestanding ESRD facility cost
report data. We proposed to use this
same methodology when adjusting AKI
dialysis payments to ESRD facilities,
consistent with our historical practice of
using the ESRD PPS wage index for AKI
dialysis payments. The AKI dialysis
payment rate is adjusted by the wage
index for a particular ESRD facility in
the same way that the ESRD PPS base
rate is adjusted by the wage index for
that ESRD facility (81 FR 77868).
Specifically, we apply the wage index to
the labor-related share of the ESRD PPS
base rate that we utilize for AKI dialysis
to compute the wage adjusted pertreatment AKI dialysis payment rate. We
also apply the wage index policies
regarding the 0.600 wage index floor (87
FR 67161 through 67166) and the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases (87
FR 67159 through 67161) to AKI
dialysis payments to ESRD facilities.
ESRD facilities would utilize the same
staff to provide renal dialysis services to
and educate beneficiaries with AKI as
those beneficiaries with ESRD.
Therefore, utilizing the same wage
index methodology would be
appropriate in accordance with
§ 413.372, which addresses the payment
rate for AKI dialysis and refers to
§ 413.231 for the wage adjustment. As
stated previously, we are finalizing a CY
2025 AKI dialysis payment rate of
$273.82, adjusted by the ESRD facility’s
wage index. We did not receive specific
comments related to the CY 2025 AKI
geographic adjustment factor. We
discuss general comments related to the
new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology in section II.B.2 of this
final rule.
3. Other Adjustments to the AKI
Payment Rate
Section 1834(r)(1) of the Act also
provides that the payment rate for AKI
dialysis may be adjusted by the
Secretary (on a budget neutral basis for
payments under section 1834(r)) by any
other adjustment factor under
subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act. As discussed in the previous
section of this final rule, we proposed
to extend AKI dialysis payment to home
dialysis.
As we explained in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55807), we
considered our existing payment
policies for home dialysis for
beneficiaries with ESRD in
implementing payment for home
dialysis in the AKI patient population.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we
explained that although we included
payments for providing training to
beneficiaries in computing the ESRD
PPS base rate, we agreed with
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commenters that we should pay for
home dialysis training as a training addon payment adjustment under the ESRD
PPS to account for the cost of providing
training to beneficiaries on the use of
home dialysis modalities. Thus, we
finalized the home dialysis training addon payment adjustment of $33.44 per
treatment as an additional payment
made under the ESRD PPS when oneon-one home dialysis training is
furnished by a nurse for either
hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis
training and retraining (75 FR 49063).
We clarified our policy on payment for
home dialysis training again in the CY
2013 ESRD PPS final rule, in which we
stated that training costs are included in
the ESRD PPS base rate; however, we
also provide a training add-on payment
adjustment for each home and selfdialysis training treatment furnished by
a Medicare-certified home dialysis
training facility (77 FR 67468). We
explained in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
final rule that it is not the intent of the
training add-on payment adjustment to
reimburse a facility for all of the training
costs furnished during training
treatments. Rather, the single ESRD PPS
base rate, all applicable case-mix and
facility-level adjustments, as well as the
add-on payment should be considered
the Medicare payment for each training
treatment and not the training add-on
payment alone (81 FR 77854).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule we considered making payment for
home dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI
under the ESRD PPS base rate without
a training add-on payment adjustment
for home modality training (89 FR
55807). As we noted in section III.A. of
the final rule, the ESRD PPS base rate
upon which the AKI dialysis payment
rate is established contains monies for
training related costs. However, we
stated in the proposed rule (89 FR
55809) that we are concerned that not
providing a home and self-dialysis
training add-on payment adjustment for
AKI dialysis may limit access to home
dialysis care for the AKI beneficiary
population. As previously noted,
incorporation of an adjustment factor
under subparagraph (D) of section
1881(b)(14) of the Act into AKI dialysis
payments must be done on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section
1834(r) of the Act. Therefore, we stated
that establishing a training add-on
payment adjustment for training for
home and self-care dialysis could have
an impact on the AKI base rate.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we
reviewed options for applying budget
neutrality to a home and self-dialysis
training add-on payment adjustment for
beneficiaries with AKI. We considered
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applying a budget neutrality adjustment
factor by reducing the AKI dialysis
payment rate amount (which is based on
the ESRD PPS base rate and is then
adjusted for wages according to
§ 413.372) for renal dialysis services
provided to patients with AKI to
account for the training add-on payment
adjustment. We provided an example
for a potential calculation based on
ESRD PPS data in the proposed rule (89
FR 55809). Additionally, we noted our
concern that a decrease in the AKI
dialysis payment rate to account for the
home dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment might create a disincentive
for ESRD facilities to treat beneficiaries
with AKI. We welcomed comments
regarding budget neutralizing the home
dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment and solicited comments on
other venues where beneficiaries might
receive training for a home dialysis
modality (89 FR 55809).
We proposed, in accordance with
section 1834(r)(1) of the Act and
§ 413.373, to extend the home and selfdialysis training add-on payment
adjustment under § 413.235(c) to
payments for renal dialysis services
provided to beneficiaries with AKI
using a home modality. We proposed to
make payment for a home and selfdialysis training add-on payment
adjustment at the same amount
currently applicable under the ESRD
PPS of $95.60 with a limit of 15 training
treatments for PD and a limit of 25
training treatments for HD per patient
excluding retraining sessions (75 FR
49063). Additional information
regarding the maximum number of
training treatments for which CMS
provides payment under the ESRD PPS
is located in the Medicare Claims
Processing Manual.98 We requested
data, either actual or estimated,
regarding the number of training
sessions provided to beneficiaries with
AKI and the number of beneficiaries
with AKI using a home modality (89 FR
55809) to use this information to make
a determination on a training add-on
payment adjustment in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS final rule or in future
rulemaking for subsequent years.
We invited public comment on our
proposal for a payment adjustment for
training of beneficiaries with AKI that
elect to dialyze in a home setting.
Approximately 27 commenters
including LDOs; a coalition of dialysis
organizations; a regional health system;
a provider advocacy organization; a
non-profit dialysis association; and a
98 https://www.cms.gov/regulations-andguidance/guidance/manuals/downloads/
clm104c08.pdf.
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home dialysis stakeholder alliance
commented on the proposed payment
adjustment for training of beneficiaries
with AKI that elect to dialyze in a home
setting. The following is a summary of
the public comments received on these
proposals and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters stated
concerns regarding budget neutrality.
The commenters indicated that they
believe the home dialysis training addon payment adjustment was previously
budget neutralized in the ESRD PPS CY
2017 final rule. Additionally, they
stated that they believe ESRD facilities
that have provided services to
beneficiaries with AKI have been
underpaid since the budget
neutralization in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
final rule. A few of the commenters
indicated that beneficiaries with AKI
that progressed to ESRD would already
have received training for home dialysis
and would not need to receive training
as a beneficiary with ESRD. They
believed this satisfied the budget
neutrality requirement. Additionally,
some commenters urged that CMS delay
implementation of budget neutrality for
these training add-on payment
adjustments for AKI beneficiaries until
sufficient data was collected on home
utilization in the AKI beneficiary
population.
Response: We appreciate the concerns
of commenters that believe the training
add-on payment adjustment was
previously budget neutralized and
therefore budget neutrality should not
be a factor in this rule. We find that
interpretation to be inconsistent with
the statute because it would result in
increased total AKI payments for CY
2025 relative to what they would be if
CMS did not incorporate the training
add-on payment adjustment. CMS
rejected this premise in the ESRD PPS
CY 2017 final rule where we indicated
we interpret the payment rate for AKI to
be the finalized base payment rate for
ESRD, as the statute was clear that the
payment rate for AKI dialysis must be
the ESRD PPS base rate determined for
a year under section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act (81 FR 77867). CMS is compelled by
section 1834(r)(1) of the Act to apply
budget neutrality to the AKI payment to
maintain total payments under section
1834(r) of the Act when incorporating
an adjustment factor under
subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act.
CMS appreciates the commenters that
expressed that training beneficiaries
with AKI for home dialysis would offset
the training for the beneficiaries who
progress to ESRD. However, the
beneficiaries who progress to ESRD
would be eligible for the onset add-on
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payment adjustment, since both the
training add-on payment adjustment
and onset add-on payment adjustment
cannot be applied at the same time (75
FR 49063). Furthermore, we would not
rule out that some beneficiaries with
AKI might require retraining after their
disease progresses to ESRD. We do not
believe that training beneficiaries to
perform self-dialysis would create
budget neutrality if their disease should
progress to ESRD. Additionally, we
appreciate the commenter who
suggested that budget neutrality be
delayed until sufficient data was
collected. However, this would not be
consistent with our general
interpretation of statutes requiring
budget neutrality, such as section
1834(r)(1) of the Act, as payments
would increase for CY 2025. Generally,
when we implement policies within the
ESRD PPS budget neutrally, we do so
based on estimates for the rulemaking
year rather than retrospectively, and we
do not adjust such adjustment post-hoc.
For example, when we implemented the
LVPA in CY 2011 we applied a budgetneutrality adjustment factor to the CY
2011 ESRD PPS base rate which
accounted for all budget-neutral
payment adjustments, including the
LVPA, by holding total estimated
payments for CY 2011 constant (75 FR
49194). Because this downward
adjustment to the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
base rate carried forward into future
years (in which the base rate is only
increased by the applicable annual
market basket increase), it continues to
offset the spending associated with
those budget-neutral payment
adjustments in future years as well.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that CMS had overestimated the utilization of home
modalities in the AKI beneficiary
population. These commenters believe
that providers and patients would need
time to receive education about
beneficiaries with AKI receiving dialysis
in a home setting and that growth would
be slow. These commenters believe that
because of the over-estimation of
utilization there is the potential to
disincentivize ESRD facilities from
providing services to beneficiaries with
AKI. Additionally, some of the
commenters indicated that CMS had
over-estimated the number of training
sessions that would be required for
beneficiaries with AKI to successfully
manage a home modality. These
commenters indicated that initial
training for a home dialysis modality
may be provided while the beneficiary
is hospitalized. They indicated that
beneficiaries with AKI would likely
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only require 5 to 6 training sessions to
successfully manage a home dialysis
modality.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters that provided information
regarding CMS’s estimation of
utilization in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55809). We agree
with commenters that the majority of
beneficiaries with AKI who choose a
home dialysis modality likely will be
those that transition from the hospital
utilizing PD as their home treatment
modality. Additionally, we agree that
utilization of home modalities for
beneficiaries with AKI will be
dependent on education to providers
and patients. We have reviewed the
available data considering these
comments and have made revisions to
the calculation for budget neutrality.
After considering the comments on the
use of PD for AKI, we have determined
that it would be more reasonable to
estimate utilization for home AKI based
on in-center PD utilization. We found
that from 2017 through 2023, there were
10 beneficiaries with AKI that received
PD in-center. For the calculation of
budget neutrality, this is approximately
2 beneficiaries with AKI per year
receiving PD. As we agree with
commenters that beneficiaries with AKI
likely will receive partial training in the
hospital to manage the home dialysis
modality, we will estimate 6 training
treatments for beneficiaries with AKI
transitioning to a home modality. Lastly,
as the training add-on payment
adjustment would be adjusted by the
wage index for the ESRD facility
furnishing the training, we will multiply
the training add-on payment adjustment
amount of $95.60 by the average wage
index for AKI, which is 1.0204. Using
this data, we could estimate a cost of
training to be $1170.60 (2 × 6 × $95.60
× 1.0204) or $0.0042. ($1170.60/
279,000) per AKI treatment. Since the
per treatment budget neutrality estimate
would round to $0.00, we believe that
applying this amount of reduction to the
AKI base payment will be negligible.
While budget neutrality was applied to
the AKI base rate for home training for
beneficiaries with AKI, we note that the
actual amount of the reduction to the
AKI payment per treatment rounds to
$0.00, and therefore the AKI CY 2025
base rate would be $273.82 ($273.82 ¥
$0.00) using this estimate. We plan to
monitor data related to AKI including
the uptake of home dialysis. We may
revisit the calculation for budget
neutrality as appropriate in the future.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that training within a nursing facility
should be paid only if the patient was
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transitioning to home dialysis outside of
the nursing facility.
Response: We note the commenter
addressed concerns regarding training of
beneficiaries with AKI in nursing
facilities. CMS addressed this in the
ESRD PPS CY 2011 final rule. Nursing
caregivers at nursing facilities are not
paid through the ESRD PPS (75 FR
49057). Therefore, training provided by
nursing caregivers at nursing facilities
would not be paid through the ESRD
PPS. A nursing home resident that is
independently performing home
dialysis treatments would be eligible for
a training add-on adjustment if there is
the expectation the beneficiary can
successfully complete the training and
perform self-dialysis.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing
our proposal to extend a payment
adjustment for training of beneficiaries
with AKI that elect to dialyze in a home
setting, beginning January 1, 2025.
Specifically, we are finalizing our
proposal to provide a payment for home
dialysis training and home dialysis
modalities for beneficiaries with AKI,
with certain changes to the proposed
methodology for calculating budget
neutrality. As discussed previously, we
are finalizing the requirement for a pertreatment budget neutrality reduction of
$0.00 ($1146.84/279,000) which would
be applied to the AKI base payment rate.
We are codifying this requirement in
regulation at § 413.373. As discussed in
section III.C.3. of this final rule, we are
finalizing the addition of a wageadjusted training add-on payment
adjustment per treatment for home and
self-dialysis training as set forth at
§ 413.235(c) to payments for AKI
dialysis claims. Furthermore, we are
codifying in regulation at § 410.52, as
discussed in section III.C.3. of this final
rule, to provide Medicare payment for
the treatment of patients with AKI in the
home setting.
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D. AKI and the ESRD Facility
Conditions for Coverage
1. Statutory and Regulatory Background
ESRD is a kidney impairment that is
irreversible and permanent. Dialysis is a
process for cleaning the blood and
removing excess fluid artificially with
special equipment when the kidneys
have failed. People with ESRD require
either a regular course of dialysis or
kidney transplantation to live. Given the
high costs and absolute necessity of
transplantation or dialysis for people
with failed kidneys, Medicare provides
health care coverage to qualifying
individuals diagnosed with ESRD,
regardless of age, including coverage for
kidney transplantation, maintenance
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dialysis, and other health care needs.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is different
than ESRD; it is an acute decrease in
kidney function due to kidney damage
or kidney failure that may require
dialysis. Unlike people with ESRD, most
individuals with AKI who require
dialysis are expected to regain kidney
function within three months. People
with either ESRD or AKI can receive
outpatient dialysis services from
Medicare-certified ESRD facilities, also
called dialysis facilities.
The Medicare ESRD program became
effective July 1, 1973, and initially
operated under interim regulations
published in the Federal Register on
June 29, 1973 (38 FR 17210). In the July
1, 1975, Federal Register (40 FR 27782),
we published a proposed rule that
proposed to revise sections of the ESRD
requirements. On June 3, 1976, the final
rule was published in the Federal
Register (41 FR 22501). Subsequently,
the ESRD Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L.
95–292), amended title XVIII of the
Social Security Act (the Act) by adding
section 1881. Sections 1881(b)(1) and
1881(f)(7) of the Act further authorize
the Secretary to prescribe health and
safety requirements (known as
conditions for coverage or CfCs) that a
facility providing dialysis and
transplantation services to dialysis
patients must meet to qualify for
Medicare payment. In addition, section
1881(c) of the Act establishes ESRD
Network areas and Network
organizations to assure that dialysis
patients are provided appropriate care.
The ESRD facility CfCs were first
adopted in 1976 and comprehensively
revised in 2008 (73 FR 20369). The
Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015
(TPEA) (Pub. L. 114–27) was enacted on
June 29, 2015, and amended the Act to
provide coverage and payment for
dialysis furnished by an ESRD facility to
an individual with AKI. Specifically,
section 808(a) of the TPEA amended
section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act to
provide coverage for renal dialysis
services furnished on or after January 1,
2017, by a renal dialysis facility or a
provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to an individual
with AKI. Section 808(b) of the TPEA
amended section 1834 of the Act by
adding a subsection (r) to provide
payment, beginning January 1, 2017, for
renal dialysis services furnished by
renal dialysis facilities or providers of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act to individuals with AKI at the
ESRD PPS base rate, as adjusted by any
applicable geographic adjustment
applied under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act and
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adjusted (on a budget neutral basis for
payments under section 1834(r) of the
Act) by any other adjustment factor
under section 1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act
that the Secretary elects.
Medicare pays for routine
maintenance dialysis provided by
Medicare-certified ESRD facilities, also
known as dialysis facilities. To gain
certification, the State survey agency or
CMS-approved accrediting organization
performs an on-site survey of the facility
to determine if it meets the ESRD
facility CfCs at 42 CFR part 494. If a
survey indicates that a facility is in
compliance with the conditions, and all
other Federal requirements are met,
CMS then certifies the facility as
qualifying for Medicare payment.
Medicare payment for outpatient
maintenance dialysis is limited to
facilities meeting these conditions. As of
March 2024, there are approximately
7,700 Medicare-certified dialysis
facilities in the United States,99
providing dialysis services and
specialized care to people with ESRD;
3,700 of which provide home dialysis
services, including training and
support.100
The ESRD facility CfCs found at 42
CFR part 494, consist of the health and
safety standards that all Medicare
participating dialysis facilities must
meet. These standards set baseline
requirements for patient safety,
infection control, care planning, staff
qualifications, record keeping, and other
matters to ensure that all patients with
kidney failure receive safe and
appropriate care. In addition, the CfCs
require patients to be informed about all
treatment modalities (hemodialysis or
peritoneal dialysis) and settings (home
dialysis modalities or in-facility
hemodialysis) (§ 494.70(a)(7)). A
dialysis facility that is certified to
provide services to home patients must
ensure that home dialysis services are at
least equivalent to those provided to infacility patients and meet all applicable
conditions of § 494.100. The patient’s
interdisciplinary team must oversee
training of the home dialysis patient, the
designated caregiver, or self-dialysis
patient before the initiation of home
dialysis or self-dialysis (as defined in
§ 494.10). Dialysis facilities monitor
home dialysis by documenting adequate
comprehension of the training;
retrieving and reviewing complete selfmonitoring data and other information
at least every two months; and
99 https://qcor.cms.gov/active_
nh.jsp?which=7&report=active_nh.jsp.
100 https://qcor.cms.gov/active_
nh.jsp?which=7&report=active_nh.jsp.
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maintaining this information in the
patient’s medical record.
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule
(81 FR 77834), we clarified that ESRD
facility CfCs apply to ESRD facilities,
not to people with ESRD, and noted that
the ESRD facility CfCs would be the
appropriate regulatory location for
standards addressing care provided to
beneficiaries with AKI in ESRD
facilities. While the language of the
ESRD facility CfCs does not directly
address treatment of beneficiaries with
AKI, we believe that the current ESRD
facility requirements are sufficient to
ensure that such patients are dialyzed
safely. For example, infection control
protocols are the same for any
individual receiving hemodialysis,
regardless of the cause or likely
trajectory of their kidney disfunction.
For the areas in which care and care
planning may differ, such as frequency
of certain patient assessments, we note
that the CfCs set baseline standards and
do not limit additional or more frequent
services that may be necessary for
beneficiaries with AKI receiving
temporary dialysis as they recover
kidney function.
During the development of the CY
2017 ESRD PPS final rule, we did not
anticipate that beneficiaries with AKI
would be candidates for home dialysis
due to the likely short-term duration of
treatment and the unique needs of AKI.
Therefore, we did not propose to extend
the home dialysis benefit to
beneficiaries with AKI at that time (81
FR 77870). The initial concerns about
the appropriateness of dialysis at home
for individuals with AKI have been
allayed by the existing scientific
evidence of the effectiveness of that
modality in this population. By revising
the CfCs to facilitate beneficiaries with
AKI utilizing home dialysis, we would
increase patient options for renal
replacement treatment beyond in-center
hemodialysis and better empower these
patients to make decisions about their
care. We encourage readers to refer to
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
for this detailed discussion (CMS–1805–
P).
2. Provisions of the Proposed
Regulations and Analysis and Response
to Public Comments
In response to the proposed rule, we
received 22 comments pertaining to the
expansion of home dialysis for AKI
patients, with 6 comments specifically
mentioning the conforming changes to
the CfCs. Commenters included patient
care organizations, dialysis facilities,
and individual patients. To support
treatment location choices for
individuals with AKI requiring dialysis
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and to align with the coverage changes,
we proposed conforming changes
throughout the ESRD facility CfCs at 42
CFR part 494. We noted that the phrase
‘‘ESRD patients’’ is exclusive of
beneficiaries with AKI, while phrase
‘‘kidney failure’’ is inclusive of people
whose kidney function is inadequate
such that dialysis is necessary to
maintain or prolong life. This can be a
temporary (AKI) or permanent (ESRD)
condition. Accordingly, we proposed to
amend the definitions of home dialysis
and self-dialysis at §§ 494.10,
494.70(c)(1)(i), and 494.130 introductory
text by removing the descriptor ‘‘ESRD.’’
In addition, we proposed to amend the
following requirements: §§ 494.70(a)(1)
and (10) and 494.80 introductory texts
by revising the phrase ‘‘ESRD’’ to say
‘‘kidney failure;’’ § 494.90(b)(4) by
revising the phrase ‘‘ESRD care’’ to say
‘‘dialysis care;’’ § 494.100(a)(3)(i) by
revising the phrase ‘‘management of
ESRD’’ to say ‘‘management of their
kidney failure;’’ § 494.120 introductory
text by revising the phrase ‘‘serve ESRD
patients’’ to say ‘‘serve patients with
kidney failure;’’ and lastly § 494.170
introductory text by revising the phrase
‘‘provider of ESRD services’’ to say
‘‘provider of dialysis services.’’
Comment: All the comments
expressed support for the expansion of
coverage for home dialysis to
beneficiaries with AKI, with a couple
specifically agreeing with the
conforming changes in the CFCs.
Commenters cited many benefits
including choosing hours that work best
for the patient, reducing travel burden
(especially for patients in rural areas),
and saving on healthcare costs. In
addition to increasing access to home
dialysis for all AKI patients,
commenters indicated that they believe
this policy supports our goal to expand
home dialysis services for those AKI
patients that proceed to ESRD.
Commenters stated that the provision
would reduce health disparities
associated with home dialysis services.
Commenters agreed that ‘‘patient’’ and
‘‘kidney failure’’ are the appropriate
terminology for the CfCs to encompass
both ESRD & AKI patients.
One commenter shared concerns
about the safety of getting dialysis at
home for what will generally be a short
or limited period. Another commenter
requested clarification on application of
this policy to residents of long-term care
facilities.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and taking the time to
respond. We believe that patients with
AKI are medically complex, and the
clinical decision regarding the next
stage of treatment should be evaluated
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89171
by a physician or other licensed
advanced practitioner and agreed upon
mutually among the patient, care
partners, and physician. Importantly,
the entire armamentarium of treatment
options must be available to provide the
most patient-centered care and allow for
the best outcomes. This policy aligns
with the broader goals of patientcentered care and individualized
treatment plans. We believe the current
CfCs for home dialysis services provide
sufficient training, education, and safety
standards for AKI patients to safely
dialyze at home, regardless of the
duration of the services. We view home
therapies as supervised care that is of at
least similar quality and intensity to incenter hemodialysis and highlight our
commitment to ensuring the success of
all patients with AKI, regardless of
whether they are receiving dialysis in
the home or in a hemodialysis facility.
Additionally, the home dialysis CfCs are
applicable to home dialysis suppliers
who provide such services in long-term
care settings, since these locations are
considered to be a patient’s home. The
Quality, Safety and Oversight Group
(QSOG) has published sub-regulatory
guidance (QSO–18–24–ESRD) that
addresses patients receiving home
dialysis services in nursing homes. This
guidance is applicable to AKI patients
receiving home dialysis services in LTC
facilities.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing
our proposal to amend the ESRD facility
CfCs to be inclusive of patients with
AKI, without modification. For the
reasons discussed in section III.B. of this
final rule, we are extending coverage of
home dialysis services to beneficiaries
with AKI, allowing them flexibility in
choosing their preferred treatment
modality (hemodialysis vs. peritoneal
dialysis) and location (in-center vs.
home). Since the ESRD facility CfCs
apply to ESRD facilities as a whole, not
to solely to their patients with ESRD, we
are providing clarifying revisions to the
CfCs to align with the final coverage
changes.
3. Expected Impact
Beneficiaries with AKI requiring
dialysis represent a small subset of
individuals treated in outpatient
dialysis facilities. Specifically, around
12,000 patients will be eligible for this
optional service.101 Expanding coverage
to include beneficiaries with AKI will
not present any changes in burden on
ESRD facilities or establish new
information collections subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
101 USRDS
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E. Clarification About Medicare
Payment for Phosphate Binders for
Beneficiaries With AKI
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we did not propose any policies
related to payment for phosphate
binders for beneficiaries with AKI
during the period beginning January 1,
2025, when these drugs will be
incorporated into the ESRD PPS and
paid for using the TDAPA. While we
did not receive any public comments on
this topic, we are taking the opportunity
in this final rule to provide clarity on
this issue.
Under our longstanding policy, we
have not applied any ESRD PPS
adjustments to the AKI payment
amount, other than the wage index
adjustment. When we established the
AKI benefit in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
final rule, we adopted regulations at
§ 413.372, which specify that only the
adjustment for wages as set forth in
§ 413.231 shall apply to the amount of
payment for AKI dialysis services. We
also finalized regulations at § 413.373,
which state that any other adjustment
factor under subparagraph (D) of section
1881(b)(14) of the Act that may be
applied to the payment for AKI dialysis
services is applied on a budget neutral
basis for payments under section
1834(r). We stated in the CY 2017 ESRD
PPS final rule that we were not
adjusting the payment amount by any
other factors at that time but indicated
that we would potentially do so in
future years (81 FR 77868). In that same
final rule, we further explained that we
finalized a policy to pay separately for
all items and services that are not part
of the ESRD PPS base rate. We
explained that once we have substantial
data related to the AKI population and
its associated utilization, we would
determine the appropriate steps toward
further developing the AKI payment rate
(81 FR 77868).
In the CY 2018 ESRD PPS final rule,
a commenter requested that we clarify
whether the TDAPA applies to AKI
renal dialysis services. In response, we
stated that we would issue additional
program guidance that would address
the application of the TDAPA to AKI
services and other billing guidance. We
stated that if we determine that it is
appropriate for the TDAPA to apply to
AKI services, we would consider that to
be a substantive payment policy, which
would be established through notice
and comment rulemaking (82 FR
50756). CMS subsequently issued
guidance 102 103 which clarified that
102 https://www.cms.gov/regulations-andguidance/guidance/transmittals/2017downloads/
r1941otn.pdf.
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ESRD facilities would not be
responsible for furnishing calcimimetics
to individuals with AKI while
calcimimetics were being paid for under
the TDAPA. We further explained that
Sensipar (HCPCS code J0604) remained
payable under Medicare Part D for AKI
beneficiaries until the costs were rolled
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment, at
which point it would transition to the
bundled payment amount. With regard
to Parsabiv (HCPCS code J0606), we
stated that this drug was not indicated
for AKI and therefore no bills should be
submitted for Parsabiv in the AKI
population.
We believe that with respect to
Medicare payment for phosphate
binders for beneficiaries with AKI, it is
appropriate to maintain the same policy
which applied for calcimimetics during
the period in which they were paid for
using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS.
Section 1834(r) of the Act requires that
any adjustments made to the AKI
payment amount under 1881(b)(14)(D)
of the Act, other than the applicable
geographical adjustment factor applied
under subparagraph (D)(iv)(II) of the
Act, must be applied on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section
1834(r) of the Act. Because the TDAPA
is a non-budget neutral add-on payment
adjustment under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, we do not
believe that it is appropriate to apply
the TDAPA to claims for AKI dialysis
under section 1834(r) of the Act. More
specifically, if we were to apply the
TDAPA to AKI payments, we believe
that section 1834(r) of the Act would
require us to apply a budget neutrality
adjustment factor, which would reduce
the AKI dialysis payment rate and be
contrary to the policy objective of the
TDAPA to provide additional payment
for certain new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products.
We also believe that consistent with
our policy for calcimimetics during CY
2018 through CY 2020, allowing
phosphate binders to remain separately
payable under Part D for beneficiaries
with AKI that have a Part D medicallyaccepted indication meets the
requirements under section 1834(r) of
the Act and the requirements under
§ 413.374(a) to make payment under the
AKI dialysis payment rate for renal
dialysis services (as defined in
subparagraph (B) of section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act) furnished under Part B by a
renal dialysis facility or provider of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14)
of the Act. We have not interpreted
these statutory and regulatory
103 https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/
files/hhs-guidance-documents/mm102811.pdf.
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requirements to apply to renal dialysis
drugs and biological products that are
not considered included in the ESRD
PPS base rate. Specifically, we note that
oral-only drugs are renal dialysis
services under subparagraph (B) of
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act; however,
we have not paid for these drugs as part
of the AKI dialysis payment rate,
because they were not included in the
ESRD PPS base rate. If we had
interpreted section 1834(r) of the Act
and § 413.374(a) to require payment
under the AKI dialysis payment rate for
oral-only renal dialysis drugs and
biological products, then we would
have been required to include payment
for these drugs in the AKI dialysis
payment rate before payment was
included under the ESRD PPS, which
we believe would have conflicted with
the statutory requirements of ATRA, as
amended by PAMA, and amended by
ABLE, which ultimately delayed the
inclusion of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS until January 1, 2025. Rather,
we have interpreted the requirements of
section 1834(r) of the Act and
§ 413.374(a) to provide a single payment
for those renal dialysis services that are
considered included in the ESRD PPS
base rate. Consistent with that
interpretation, as discussed earlier in
this final rule, we explained in subregulatory guidance that oral
calcimimetics remained separately
payable under part D for AKI
beneficiaries until they were
incorporated into the ESRD PPS base
rate.
For this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule,
we are clarifying that we are
maintaining the same policy for
phosphate binders provided to
beneficiaries with AKI that we applied
to calcimimetics. That is, we are
clarifying that ESRD facilities will not
be responsible for furnishing phosphate
binders to individuals with AKI while
phosphate binders are being paid for
using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS.
As discussed in section II.B.7 of this
final rule, CMS published guidance
containing information about the
HCPCS codes for phosphate binders at
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-ppsbundled-payment.pdf. None of the
drugs described by these HCPCS codes
is indicated for patients with AKI, and
therefore we do not expect these drugs
will be provided for the treatment of
AKI and billed for on AKI claims. To the
extent that phosphate binders are
provided to AKI beneficiaries other than
for the treatment of their AKI, such as
for preexisting chronic kidney disease,
they will remain separately payable
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
under Part D for beneficiaries with AKI
that have a Part D medically-accepted
indication until they are incorporated
into the ESRD PPS base rate. We believe
this policy will provide appropriate
payment for phosphate binders
furnished to beneficiaries with AKI.
IV. Updates to the End-Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program
(ESRD QIP)
A. Background
For a detailed discussion of the ESRD
QIP’s background and history, including
a description of the Program’s
authorizing statute and the policies that
we have adopted in previous final rules,
we refer readers to the citations
provided at IV.A of the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule (88 FR 76433). We have
also codified many of our policies for
the ESRD QIP at 42 CFR 413.177 and
413.178.
B. Updates to Requirements Beginning
With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
1. PY 2027 ESRD QIP Measure Set
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure, a
comprehensive measure on which
facilities are scored for each payment
year using one set of performance
standards, with a Kt/V measure topic
comprised of four individual Kt/V
measures, beginning with PY 2027 (89
FR 55814 through 55815). We also
proposed to remove the National
Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)
Dialysis Event reporting measure from
the ESRD QIP measure set beginning
with PY 2027 (89 FR 55815 through
55816). Table 12 of the proposed rule
summarized the previously finalized
and proposed updated measures that we
would include in the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
measure set (89 FR 55813). As discussed
in IV.B.2 and IV.B.3 of this final rule,
we are finalizing our updates to the PY
89173
2027 ESRD QIP measure set as
proposed. We describe the finalized PY
2027 ESRD QIP measure set in Table 13,
which includes the previously finalized
measures and the measures we are
finalizing in this final rule. In the
proposed rule, we stated that the
technical specifications for current
measures that would remain in the
measure set for PY 2027 can be found
in the CMS ESRD Measures Manual for
the 2024 Performance Period (89 FR
55812).104 We also noted that the
proposed technical specifications for the
measures in the proposed Kt/V measure
topic can be viewed at https://
www.cms.gov/medicare/quality/endstage-renal-disease-esrd-qualityincentive-program/technicalspecifications-esrd-qip-measures.
Finally, we stated that if the Kt/V
measure topic is finalized, these
specifications will be included in the
CMS ESRD Measures Manual for the
2025 Performance Period.
TABLE 13: Finalized PY 2027 ESRD QIP Measure Set
2496
Based onCBE
#2979
BasedonCBE
#0323, #0321,
#2706,and
#1423*
2978
1454
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
1463
Based onCBE
#0418
Based onCBE
#1460
Measure Title and Description
In-Center Hemodialysis Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (ICH CARPS) Survey
Administration, a clinical measure
Measure assesses patients' self-reported experience of care through percentage of patient responses to
multiple survey questions.
Standardized Readmission Ratio (SRR), a clinical measure
Ratio of the number of observed unplanned 30-day hospital readmissions to the number of expected
unplanned 30-day readmissions.
Standardized Transfusion Ratio (STrR), a clinical measure
Ratio of the number of observed eligible red blood cell transfusion events occurring in patients dialyzing at
a facility to the number of eligible transfusions that would be expected.
(Kt/V) Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic, a clinical measure topic
Four measures of dialysis adequacy where K is dialyzer clearance, tis dialysis time, and Vis total body
water volume. The individual Kt/V measures would be adult hemodialysis (HD) Kt/V, adult peritoneal
dialysis (PD) Kt/V, pediatric HD Kt/V, and pediatric PD Kt/V.
Hemodialysis Vascular Access: Long-Term Catheter Rate clinical measure
Measures the use of a catheter continuously for 3 months or longer as of the last hemodialysis treatment
session of the month.
Hypercalcemia, a reporting measure
Proportion of patient-months with 3-month rolling average of total uncorrected serum or plasma calcium
greater than 10.2 mg/dL.
Standardized Hospitalization Ratio (SHR), a clinical measure
Risk-adjusted SHR of the number of observed hospitalizations to the number of expected hospitalizations.
Clinical Depression Screening and Follow-Up, a clinical measure
Facility reports in ESRD Quality Reporting System (EQRS) one of four conditions for each qualifying
patient treated during performance period.
National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Bloodstream Infection (BSI) in Hemodialysis Patients, a
clinical measure
104 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/esrdmeasures-manual-v91.pdf.
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105 In previous years, we referred to the
consensus-based entity by corporate name. We have
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updated this language to refer to the consensusbased entity more generally.
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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ConsensusBased
Entity105
(CBE) #
0258
89174
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ConsensusBased
Entity105
(CBE) #
NIA
2988
3636
NIA
NIA
NIA
Measure Title and Description
The Standardized Infection Ratio (SIR) ofBSis will be calculated among patients receiving hemodialysis at
outpatient hemodialysis centers.
Percentage of Prevalent Patients W aitlisted (PPPW), a clinical measure
Percentage of patients at each facility who were on the kidney or kidney-pancreas transplant waitlist
averaged across patients prevalent on the last day of each month during the performance period.
Medication Reconciliation for Patients Receiving Care at Dialysis Facilities (MedRec), a reporting measure
Percentage of patient-months for which medication reconciliation was performed and documented by an
eligible professional.
COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage Among Healthcare Personnel (HCP), a reporting measure
Percentage of HCP who are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccination.
Facility Commitment to Health Equity, a reporting measure
Facilities will receive two points each for attesting to five different domains of commitment to advancing
health equity for a total often points.
Screening for Social Drivers of Health, a reporting measure
Percentage of patients at a dialysis facility who are 18 years or older screened for all five health-related
social needs (HRSNs) (food insecurity, housing instability, transportation needs, utility difficulties, and
interpersonal safety).
Screen Positive Rate for Social Drivers of Health, a reporting measure
Percentage of patients at a dialysis facility who are 18 years or older screened for all five HRSNs (food
insecurity, housing instability, transportation needs, utility difficulties, and interpersonal safety), and who
screened positive for one or more of the HRSNs.
*We are finalizing our proposal to replace the KtN Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with the
KtN Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027, as discussed in section IV.B.2 of this final rule.
We note that, although the KtN Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic is not endorsed by the CBE, the four individual
KtN measures that are included in the measure topic are CBE-endorsed.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
2. Replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive Clinical
Measure With a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic Beginning With the PY
2027 ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(2)(A)(i) states that the
ESRD QIP must evaluate facilities based
on measures of dialysis adequacy.
Beginning with the PY 2027 ESRD QIP,
we proposed to replace the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure, a single
comprehensive measure on which
facility performance is calculated using
one set of performance standards for
each payment year, with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic, a measure
topic comprising four individual Kt/V
measures on which facility performance
is calculated using performance
standards for each individual Kt/V
measure (89 FR 55814 through
55815).106 In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we proposed to remove
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure under
106 For further information related to the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure, we refer readers to 77 FR 67487 through
67490, 79 FR 66197 through 66198, and 80 FR
69053 through 69057.
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§ 413.178(c)(5)(i)(E), which is Measure
Removal Factor 5 (a measure that is
more strongly associated with desired
patient outcomes for the particular topic
becomes available), and proposed to
replace it with the proposed Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
which consists of four individual Kt/V
measures. Under this proposed update,
we stated that the individual Kt/V
measures would be adult hemodialysis
(HD) Kt/V, adult peritoneal dialysis (PD)
Kt/V, pediatric HD Kt/V, and pediatric
PD Kt/V (89 FR 55814).
By replacing the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with four separate measures,
we noted that we would be able to
assess Kt/V performance more
accurately based on whether the patient
is an adult or child and what type of
dialysis modality the patient is
receiving. We also proposed to score the
four measures as a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic and to limit
the total weight of that topic to 11
percent of the total performance score
(TPS), which we stated is the weight of
the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure. We
noted that these proposals would
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continue to maintain Kt/V measurement
as an important part of the quality of
care assessed by the ESRD QIP (89 FR
55814). Facilities are eligible to receive
an individual Kt/V measure score if they
treat at least 11 eligible patients using
the modality addressed by that
particular measure. For example, a
facility treating at least 11 eligible
pediatric HD patients during the
applicable performance period would be
scored on the Kt/V Pediatric HD
measure. In the proposed rule, we stated
that we would calculate a facility’s
measure topic score by first calculating
the facility’s performance on each of the
Adult HD Kt/V, Adult PD Kt/V,
Pediatric HD Kt/V, and Pediatric PD Kt/
V measures, as applicable, using the
applicable achievement threshold,
benchmark, and improvement threshold
for the payment year (89 FR 55814).
Second, we would calculate the total
number of eligible patients for
weighting each of these measure scores
to calculate a single measure topic
score. We would calculate this total
number by summing all eligible patients
included in the denominator for each
individual measure. Third, we would
calculate the weighted score for each
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
measure within the measure topic by
dividing the number of patients
included in the denominator for each
individual measure by the total number
of eligible patients for all of the
measures within the measure topic and
multiplying by the respective measure
score. Finally, we would add the
weighted measure scores together and
round them to the nearest integer. An
Measure
Score
8
6
9
5
Measure
KtN Adult HD
KtN Adult PD
KtN Pediatric HD
KtN Pediatric PD
89175
example of how we would calculate the
measure topic score for a facility that
treats the minimum number of patients
to be eligible for scoring on all four of
the measures is provided below.
# Patients in
denominator
60
30
15
20
Weighted Score
8 * (60/125) = 3.84
6 * (30/125) = 1.44
9 * (15/125) = 1.08
5 * (20/125) = 0.80
We noted in the proposed rule that a
facility would not need to be eligible for
scoring on all four individual measures
to receive a measure topic score (89 FR
55814). For example, a facility that
exclusively treats adult HD patients and,
for that reason, is eligible to be scored
on only the Kt/V Adult HD measure
would receive a topic score that is the
same score as its individual Kt/V
measure score. We stated that the
proposed measure topic scoring
considers both a facility’s individual
ESRD patient population and the
treatment modalities it offers, and then
weights its performance on the topic
proportionately to its overall ESRD
patient population. As a result, we
believe that a facility’s measure topic
score will be more reflective of its actual
performance among its patient
population and offered modalities than
its current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure score,
which is a composite assessment that
blends the Kt/V measure data of all
patients treated at that facility.
We noted that we previously adopted
a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic that included three of the four
measures that we were now proposing
to include in the topic (adult HD Kt/V,
adult PD Kt/V, and pediatric HD Kt/V)
in the CY 2013 ESRD PPS final rule (77
FR 67487 through 67490). In the CY
2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66197
through 66198), we updated the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic to
include the pediatric PD Kt/V measure
as well. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final
rule (80 FR 69053 through 69057), we
replaced the Kt/V Dialysis Measure
Topic with the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure, which assesses the percentage
of all patient-months for both adult and
pediatric patients whose average
delivered dose of dialysis (either
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hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) met
the specified threshold during the
performance period. This change
allowed more facilities to be eligible for
measure scoring, which in turn allowed
us to evaluate the care provided to a
greater proportion of ESRD patients.
At the time we finalized the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure, three facilities were
eligible for scoring on the pediatric HD
Kt/V measure, six facilities were eligible
for scoring on the pediatric PD Kt/V
measure, 1,402 facilities were eligible
for scoring on the adult PD Kt/V
measure, and 6,117 facilities were
eligible for scoring on the adult HD Kt/
V measure. Given the relatively low
numbers of facilities eligible for scoring
on the pediatric HD Kt/V, pediatric PD
KT/V, and adult PD Kt/V measures at
that time, we adopted the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure to help ensure that data
reflecting those patient populations
contributed to facilities’ total
performance scores. Since the CY 2016
ESRD PPS final rule, however, we noted
that Kt/V measure data (using the PY
2024/CY 2022 ESRD QIP eligible facility
list, CY 2022 EQRS data, and CY 2022
claims data) indicates that more
facilities are treating greater numbers of
pediatric HD patients and pediatric PD
patients, as well as greater numbers of
adult PD patients, and therefore would
be eligible to be scored on the
individual measures based on an 11patient case minimum (89 FR 55815).
For example, there are now 21 pediatric
HD facilities and 28 pediatric PD
facilities with at least 11 qualifying
patients. We stated that this shows a 600
percent increase in facilities eligible to
be scored on the pediatric HD Kt/V
measure, and a 366 percent increase in
facilities eligible to be scored on the
pediatric PD Kt/V measure, since the CY
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2016 ESRD PPS final rule (89 FR 55815).
Additionally, there are now 2,538
facilities eligible for scoring on the adult
PD Kt/V measure, an 81 percent
increase since the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule. By contrast, we noted that the
number of facilities eligible for scoring
on the adult HD Kt/V measure has
increased by 14 percent during that
same period of time.
In light of the increase in the
proportions of pediatric HD patients,
pediatric PD patients, and adult PD
patients being treated at ESRD facilities
since the time we adopted the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure, we have determined
that it is appropriate and more reflective
of facility performance to reintroduce
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic in the ESRD QIP. In addition, we
stated in the proposed rule that the
proposed measure topic scoring
methodology will more accurately
capture facility performance with
respect to dialysis adequacy because it
assesses those facilities based on
performance standards tailored
according to Kt/V measurements that
reflect ESRD patient age and treatment
modality (89 FR 55815).
We noted that the proposed
replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic would also not affect a
facility’s measure data reporting
requirements. A facility would continue
to report the same Kt/V measure data
into EQRS and Medicare claims as it
would for the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure. However, under the proposed
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
the measure data would be used to score
the facility on four individual Kt/V
measures, as applicable based on their
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ESRD patient population and treatment
modalities.
In the proposed rule, we stated that
the proposed replacement of the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic would also
advance the CMS National Quality
Strategy Goals by scoring facilities on
measure data that more accurately
reflects the quality of care provided to
different kinds of ESRD patients on
different treatment modalities (89 FR
55815). We noted that the proposed Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic
would allow us to evaluate dialysis
adequacy in adult HD patients, adult PD
patients, pediatric HD patients, and
pediatric PD patients by scoring
facilities in a way that accounts for
differences in patient populations and
treatment modalities. Therefore, this
proposed update would ensure that a
facility’s performance on the measure
topic more accurately reflects the
quality of care provided by the facility.
We welcomed public comment on
this proposal to replace the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic consisting of
an adult HD Kt/V measure, an adult PD
Kt/V measure, a pediatric HD Kt/V
measure, and a pediatric PD Kt/V
measure, for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP and
subsequent years. The comments we
received, and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the proposal to
remove the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure and replace it with a Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
noting that the measure topic will more
accurately reflect a facility’s
performance based on different patient
populations and treatment modalities.
Several commenters expressed the belief
that the proposed Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic will provide a
more nuanced assessment of dialysis
adequacy which will enhance the
accuracy and relevance of quality
assessments within the program. A few
commenters also expressed support for
the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic, noting that the current
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure lacks transparency in
terms of performance regarding patient
population or dialysis modality, and
also masks underlying social disparities
in dialysis adequacy. A commenter
expressed support for the proposal to
replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with a
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
noting that it does not change the
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current Kt/V data reporting
requirements so there is minimal
administrative burden associated with
the proposed change.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for the proposal to
replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with
the four individual Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy measures. A commenter
expressed appreciation that the
proposed update would align with other
publicly reported data programs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: A commenter expressed
support for the inclusion of the
pediatric HD Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
measure and the pediatric PD Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy measure, noting that
including these measures in the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic will
help account for meaningful differences
between pediatric and adult patient
populations.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS adopt the
original reporting requirements that
assessed performance at the individual
measure level, noting that reporting
facility performance on the individual
Kt/V measures would provide greater
transparency to patients, caregivers, and
health care providers. These
commenters believed that such
reporting requirements would be
consistent with the legislative intent
underlying the statutory authority of the
ESRD QIP. A different commenter
expressed concern that the measure data
is not sufficiently transparent and that
patients would not be able to assess a
facility’s performance relative to their
specific treatment modality.
Response: We believe that the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure,
an adult PD Kt/V measure, a pediatric
HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD
Kt/V measure, strikes a balance between
scoring a facility on its overall quality
of care related to Kt/V dialysis adequacy
while also reflecting its performance on
Kt/V dialysis adequacy specific to
different patient populations and
treatment modalities. We note that
information regarding a facility’s
performance on the individual
measures, as well as the resulting
measure topic score, is provided during
the preview period and in final reports
shared with the facility. We believe that
this approach to measuring dialysis
adequacy will further incentivize
improvement on dialysis adequacy
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performance standards, consistent with
section 1881(h) of the Act. We also note
that data regarding facility performance
on individual Kt/V dialysis adequacy
measures is available through Dialysis
Facility Compare, which reports the Kt/
V dialysis adequacy measures
individually on Care Compare. We will
continue to monitor the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic as it is
implemented to ensure that it is
sufficiently transparent in a way that is
meaningful to patients, caregivers, and
health care providers.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS ensure that the
new individual measures do not impose
new administrative or reporting burdens
on care providers that may divert
resources away from patient care.
Response: As we stated in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, the
replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic would not affect a
facility’s measure data reporting
requirements, and therefore would not
impose new administrative or reporting
burdens on care providers (89 FR
55815). A facility would continue to
report the same Kt/V measure data into
EQRS and Medicare claims as it does for
the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure.
Comment: A commenter
recommended including a measurement
of residual kidney function (RKF) when
appropriate in the determination of the
HD Kt/V measure, noting the
importance of taking RKF into account
when assessing dialysis adequacy and
the potential benefit to patient
outcomes. Another commenter
recommended that CMS adopt an
alternate measure of dialysis adequacy
for HD patients by looking at the percent
of patients leaving dialysis at +/¥ 2 kg
above/below their estimated dry weight.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these recommendations and will
take them into consideration for future
updates. We consider the current HD
Kt/V measure specifications to be
sufficient for purposes of assessing
dialysis adequacy among HD patients
because these specifications reflect
current clinical practices in dialysis
adequacy measurement and assess
measurable data that may incentivize
improvement in quality of care provided
to HD patients. However, we will
continue to monitor the HD Kt/V
dialysis adequacy measures and will
also continue to monitor scientific
advances in the field of ESRD care to
assess appropriate alternative measures
of dialysis adequacy for consideration in
future rulemaking.
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Comment: A commenter expressed
concern regarding the use of Kt/V as a
measure of dialysis adequacy for PD
patients, noting that it may not be the
most appropriate metric for patients
who are new to dialysis or who have
residual kidney function. This
commenter recommended that CMS
explore alternative measures of
assessing dialysis adequacy for PD
patients in future rulemaking.
Response: We thank the commenters
for these recommendations and will
take them into consideration for future
updates. The current PD Kt/V measure
considers residual kidney function as
part of the measure calculation, and
excludes patients who have been on
ESRD treatment for less than 91 days as
of the first day of the reporting month,
which makes it an appropriate metric
for all PD patients who have residual
kidney function and have been on ESRD
treatment long enough to be eligible for
inclusion in the measure’s
calculations.107 We consider the current
PD Kt/V measure specifications to be
sufficient for purposes of assessing
dialysis adequacy among PD patients
because these specifications reflect
current clinical practices in dialysis
adequacy measurement and assess
measurable data that may incentivize
improvement in quality of care provided
to PD patients. However, we will
continue to monitor the PD Kt/V
dialysis adequacy measures for potential
unintended consequences and will also
continue to monitor scientific advances
in the field of ESRD care to assess
appropriate alternative measures of
dialysis adequacy for PD patients for
consideration in future rulemaking.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern regarding the
potential impact of the proposed Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic on
home dialysis patients. A commenter
expressed concern that the PD Kt/V
measures could have unintentional
consequences such as incentivizing incenter dialysis over home dialysis,
which the commenter believed would
result in diminished patient experience.
A different commenter expressed
concern that the proposed Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic will not
sufficiently capture dialysis adequacy
for home dialysis patients and
recommended that CMS continue to
explore ways to measure quality of care
for home dialysis patients.
Response: For facilities offering both
in-center dialysis and home dialysis
treatment options, the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic will more
107 https://www.cms.gov/files/document/esrd-
measures-manual-v100.pdf.
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accurately reflect a facility’s dialysis
adequacy performance by differentiating
between the Kt/V measure data of all
patients treated at that facility and
assessing facilities based on the Kt/V
measurements according to ESRD
patient age and treatment modality.
Because of this differentiation, we
expect that the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic will better reflect the
quality of care provided to patients on
home dialysis, without incentivizing incenter hemodialysis over home dialysis.
We expect that care providers will
assess whether in-center hemodialysis
or home dialysis would be more
appropriate for a patient based on the
patient’s specific case and treatment
plan. However, we will continue to
monitor the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic as it is implemented to
assess the impact on the home dialysis
patient population.
Comment: A few commenters did not
support the proposal to replace the Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic. A commenter
expressed concern that the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure is topped out. This commenter
stated that replacing the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic comprised of individual
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measures will
not be effective because the commenter
believed that those individual measures
are also topped out, and therefore
recommended changing the current Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure to a reporting measure
instead. Another commenter
recommended that, instead of the
proposed update to measure Kt/V data
by different modalities and patient ages,
CMS should measure dialysis adequacy
based on patient differences.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s assertion that the
individual Kt/V measures are topped
out and therefore would make the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic
ineffective as a measure of a facility’s
dialysis adequacy performance. Quality
measures that have been in use for
several years may reach a stage where
meaningful differences and
improvement in performance are no
longer achievable. These measures are
referred to as ‘‘topped-out’’ and
considered for removal from CMS
quality improvement or value-based
purchasing programs such as the ESRD
QIP. When developing proposals for the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we
assessed the ESRD QIP measure set to
identify any measures that may be
appropriate for removal due to their
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89177
topped-out status. Based on our
analysis, the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure was the only measure
that achieved topped-out status.
Furthermore, a facility’s score on the Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure,
an adult PD Kt/V measure, a pediatric
HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD
Kt/V measure, would be unique to each
facility based on its own patient
populations and their specific treatment
modalities. This approach takes patient
differences into account when
measuring dialysis adequacy.
Final Rule Action: After considering
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic consisting of an adult
HD Kt/V measure, an adult PD Kt/V
measure, a pediatric HD Kt/V measure,
and a pediatric PD Kt/V measure, for the
PY 2027 ESRD QIP and subsequent
years.
3. Removal of the NHSN Dialysis Event
Reporting Measure From the ESRD QIP
Measure Set Beginning With PY 2027
To ensure continued impact and
effectiveness of our measure set on
facility performance, we proposed to
remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure beginning with PY
2027 (89 FR 55815). When we first
adopted the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure in the CY 2012 ESRD
PPS final rule (76 FR 70268 through
70269), we stated that reporting dialysis
events to the NHSN by all facilities
supports national goals for patient
safety, including the reduction of
Hospital Acquired Infections (HAIs). In
the CY 2014 ESRD PPS final rule, we
replaced the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure with the NHSN
Bloodstream Infection (BSI) clinical
measure (78 FR 72204 through 72207).
We introduced the clinical version of
the measure to hold facilities
accountable for monitoring and
preventing infections in the ESRD
population, and to hold facilities
accountable for their actual clinical
performance on the measure. In the CY
2017 ESRD PPS final rule (81 FR 77879
through 77882), we reintroduced the
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
to complement the NHSN BSI clinical
measure as a way to incentivize
facilities to report complete and
accurate monthly dialysis event data in
compliance with the NHSN Dialysis
Event protocol.108 In reintroducing the
108 For further information related to the NHSN
Dialysis Event reporting measure, we refer readers
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measure, we noted our concerns that
facilities were not consistently reporting
monthly dialysis event data, given the
incentive to achieve high clinical
performance scores on the NHSN BSI
clinical measure. We stated that this
may have been an unintended
consequence of replacing the previous
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
with the NHSN BSI clinical measure (81
FR 77879). Therefore, in the CY 2017
ESRD PPS final rule, we reintroduced
the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure to be included in the ESRD QIP
measure set along with the NHSN BSI
Clinical Measure.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we stated that, based on our
analyses, facilities are consistently
reporting monthly dialysis event data,
and have been doing so for several years
(89 FR 55815). In an assessment of
ESRD QIP measure rate performance
trends during PY 2020 through PY 2022,
performance in the 5th percentile
through the 100th percentile was 100
percent on the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure for all three
performance years, meaning that most
eligible facilities reported data on the
measure for each of those years.109 If
most eligible facilities are reporting
NHSN Dialysis Event measure data each
year and measure performance levels at
the 5th percentile and the 100th
percentile are the same each year, then
NHSN dialysis event data are now
reported consistently and the measure is
not likely to drive improvements in
care.
We stated that our proposal to remove
the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure is consistent with evolving the
program to focus on a measure set of
high-value, impactful measures that
have been developed to drive care
improvements for a broader set of ESRD
patients (89 FR 55816). As such, we
proposed to remove this measure from
the ESRD QIP measure set under
§ 413.178(c)(5)(i)(A), which is Measure
Removal Factor 1 (measure performance
among the majority of ESRD facilities is
so high and unvarying that meaningful
to 76 FR 70268 through 70269 and 78 FR 72204
through 72207.
109 Partnership for Quality Measurement. 2023
Measure Set Review (MSR): End Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program (ESRD–QIP).
September 2023. Available at: https://p4qm.org/
sites/default/files/2023-09/MSR-Report-ESRD-QIP20230911.pdf.
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distinctions in improvements or
performance can no longer be made).
Although we believe that removing this
measure would enable facilities to focus
on the remaining measures in the ESRD
QIP measure set, we noted that facilities
would still be required to fully comply
with the NHSN Dialysis Event protocol
and report all dialysis event data,
including BSI, for the NHSN BSI
Clinical Measure.
We welcomed public comment on our
proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis
Event reporting measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set, beginning with PY
2027. The comments we received, and
our responses are set forth below.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the proposal to
remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set, beginning with PY 2027. A
few commenters expressed support for
the proposed removal because the
measure is unlikely to drive
improvements in care due to consistent
reporting and high compliance. A few
commenters expressed the belief that
removing the measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set will allow dialysis
centers to focus on impactful measures
and meaningful improvements in care.
A few commenters recommended that
CMS continue to reduce the number of
measures in the ESRD QIP and focus on
incentivizing improvements in critical
and meaningful quality measures. A
commenter expressed support for the
proposed removal of the NHSN Dialysis
Event reporting measure because
facilities will still be required to comply
with NHSN dialysis event protocol for
the NHSN BSI clinical measure. A
different commenter expressed support
for the proposed removal because it
would align the ESRD QIP with other
publicly reported data programs.
Another commenter expressed support
for the proposal to remove the NHSN
Dialysis Event reporting measure
because the commenter believed the
measure created incentives to decrease
reported events that would potentially
negatively impact patient care.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: A few commenters did not
support the proposal to remove the
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
from the ESRD QIP measure set,
beginning with PY 2027. A commenter
recommended that CMS retain the
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NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure,
noting that facilities would still need to
report the data to comply with Dialysis
Event protocol as part of the NHSN BSI
clinical measure and therefore removing
the measure from the ESRD QIP would
not alleviate facility burden. A different
commenter expressed concern with the
proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis
Event reporting measure, believing that
the removal will lead to facilities
underreporting adverse events and
recommended retaining the measure to
encourage and incentivize accurate
reporting to NHSN.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback. Although we
endeavor to minimize facility burden to
the extent feasible, we proposed to
remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set because measure
performance among the majority of
ESRD facilities is so high and unvarying
that meaningful distinctions in
improvements or performance can no
longer be made. Additionally, removing
the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure would enable facilities to focus
on the remaining measures in the ESRD
QIP measure set. We do not anticipate
that removing the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set will lead to underreporting,
as facilities would still be required to
fully comply with the NHSN Dialysis
Event protocol and report all dialysis
event data (that is, BSI, IV antimicrobial
starts, and pus, redness, and swelling)
for the NHSN BSI Clinical Measure.
Final Rule Action: After considering
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis
Event reporting measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set, beginning with PY
2027.
4. Revisions to the Clinical Care and
Reporting Measure Domains Beginning
With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule
(88 FR 76481 through 76482), we
finalized revisions to the ESRD QIP
measure domains beginning with PY
2027. The measure domains and
weights we finalized in the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule were depicted in
Table 13a of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55816) and are
depicted in this final rule in Table 14a.
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TABLE 14a: Previously Finalized PY 2027 ESRD QIP Measure Domains and Weights
SHR clinical measure
SRR clinical measure
PPPW measure
7.50
7.50
7.50
Clinical Depression Screening and Follow-Up measure
7.50
Screen Positive Rate for Social Drivers of Health
reporting measure
1.43
Facility Commitment to Health Equity reporting
measure
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applied to a facility’s measure topic
score, instead of being applied, as it is
now, to a facility’s score on the single
Kt/V Comprehensive Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure.
Given our proposal to remove the
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
from the ESRD QIP beginning with PY
2027, we also proposed to update the
individual measure weights in the
Reporting Domain to accommodate the
proposed new number of measures (89
FR 55816). Consistent with our
approach in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule, we proposed to assign
individual measure weights to reflect
the proposed updated number of
measures in the Reporting Measure
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Domain so that each measure is
weighted equally (87 FR 67251 through
67253). Although we proposed to
change the number of measures and the
weights of the individual measures in
the Reporting Measure Domain, we did
not propose to change the weight of any
of the five domains. The measures that
would be included in each domain,
along with the proposed new measure
weights, for PY 2027 were depicted in
Table 13b of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55817). These
measure domains and weights, which
we are finalizing as proposed, are
depicted in this final rule in Table 14b.
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In the proposed rule, we proposed to
revise the Clinical Care Domain
beginning with PY 2027 to reflect our
proposal to replace the Kt/V
Comprehensive Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with a
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
and to revise the measure weights in the
Reporting Measure Domain to reflect
our proposal to remove the NHSN
Dialysis Event reporting measure from
the ESRD QIP measure set (89 FR
55816). Under our proposal, we stated
that the weight of the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Topic would continue to be
the same as the current weight of the Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
Measure, but that weight would be
1.43
1.43
1.43
1.43
1.43
89180
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 14b: ESRD QIP Measure Domains and Weights for PY 2027
SHR clinical measure
SRR clinical measure
PPPW measure
7.50
7.50
7.50
Clinical Depression Screening and Follow-Up measure
7.50
Pediatric Hem
Lon -Term Catheter Rate clinical measure
STrR clinical measure
12.00
12.00
Screen Positive Rate for Social Drivers of Health
re ortin measure
Facility Commitment to Health Equity reporting
measure
1.67
1.67
e
1.67
We welcomed public comment on
these proposals to update the Clinical
Care Measure Domain and Reporting
Measure Domain. The comments we
received, and our responses are set forth
below.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed support for the proposal to
weight the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic at 11 percent. A few
commenters expressed appreciation that
the weight appropriately reflects the
statutorily required nature of the
measure, while also allowing flexibility
to assign more weight to other measures
for which there is greater room for
improvement. Another commenter
expressed support for the proposed
weight for the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic because it is the same
weight as the current Kt/V Dialysis
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Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern with the proposal to
weight the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic at 11 percent, believing
that the proposed measure weight will
disproportionately impact certain types
of facilities. A commenter expressed
concern that the proposed measure
weight for the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic disproportionately
impacts home dialysis-only facilities,
noting that they are not eligible for
scoring on certain other measures.
Another commenter recommended that
CMS not limit the measure weight to 11
percent, and to only score pediatric
facilities on pediatric-specific or cohortneutral measures to ensure that the QIP
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is relevant to pediatric programs. This
commenter expressed the belief that
such steps are necessary to prevent
unfair or inaccurate penalties based on
ESRD QIP measures that are not relevant
to the pediatric patient population.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and appreciate their
concerns. The Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic will more accurately
reflect a facility’s dialysis adequacy
performance by differentiating between
the Kt/V measure data of all patients
treated at that facility and assessing
facilities based on the Kt/V
measurements according to ESRD
patient age and treatment modality.
Although facilities are only scored on
measures they are eligible for based on
their reported data, we acknowledge
that home dialysis facilities and
pediatric facilities may be
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*We are fmalizing our proposal to replace the KtN Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a KtN
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027, as discussed in section IV.B.2 of this fmal rule.
**Weare finalizing our proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure beginning with PY 2027,
as discussed in section IV.B.3 of this fmal rule.
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disproportionately impacted because
they are not eligible to be scored on
certain ESRD QIP measures due to their
specific patient population. However,
we have concluded that the importance
of accurately measuring dialysis
adequacy for home dialysis ESRD
patients and pediatric ESRD patients to
incentivize improvements in the quality
of care provided to those patient
populations outweighs possible
concerns regarding potential
disproportionate impacts. Because
facilities are not scored on measures for
which they are not eligible based on
their reported data, their score reflects
the quality of care provided to patients
based on the measures for which they
are eligible. We will continue to assess
potential policies aimed at expanding
measure eligibility for these facilities in
future rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS limit the total weight of Kt/V
measures to 11 percent because the
commenter believed that the measure is
topped out in many cases.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we proposed that the
weight of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Topic would be 11 percent, the same
weight as the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive Measure (89 FR 55816).
Under our proposal, the total weight of
the Kt/V measures would be 11 percent
under the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the weights of
individual measures in the Reporting
Measure Domain do not adequately
reflect the burden associated with each
measure’s criteria and reporting
requirements. A commenter
recommended that the Reporting
Measure Domain carry a higher weight
to reflect the significance of the
individual reporting measures, as well
as the substantial burden associated
with compliance.
Response: We take numerous factors
into account when determining
appropriate domain and measure
weights, including clinical evidence,
opportunity for improvement, clinical
significance, and patient and provider
burden (83 FR 56995 through 56996).
We also consider (1) the number of
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measures and measure topics in a
domain; (2) how much experience
facilities have had with the measures
and measure topics in a domain; and (3)
how well the measures align with
CMS’s highest priorities for quality
improvement for patients with ESRD (79
FR 66214). We assign weights to the
measure domains based on the clinical
value and meaningfulness of the
measures to patients, and the burden of
complying with individual measure
requirements. We believe that the
Reporting Measure Domain weights are
appropriate to incentivize the provision
of high-quality health care for all ESRD
QIP measures.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed the belief that the ESRD QIP’s
focus on meaningful measures should
be reflected in the weights assigned to
measure domains and individual
measures. To ensure that the ESRD QIP
takes a clinically driven approach to
incentivizing improvement, a few
commenters recommended that CMS
work with organizations and care
providers in the ESRD community to
identify potential modifications to the
individual measure weights. A few
commenters expressed concern
regarding the weighting distribution of
individual measures relative to the
growing number of measures in the
ESRD QIP measure set. These
commenters expressed the belief that
there are too many individual measures
within the ESRD QIP measure set, and
that scoring facilities based on nearly 20
individual measures means that a
facility’s performance on each
individual measure has little impact on
the facility’s overall score. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
reduce the ESRD QIP measure set by
moving certain measures to Dialysis
Facility Compare or by removing certain
measures altogether where appropriate.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the weights should reflect clinical
value and meaningfulness to patients,
which we took into account in
developing our measure domains and
individual measure weights. We expect
that the measure domains and weights
provide facilities with meaningful
incentives to improve performance on
measures that align with clinical value
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89181
and importance to patients. We note
that we have developed the ESRD QIP
measure set specifically to ensure that
facilities focus on the most relevant
clinical topics that will lead to
improved quality of care and better
outcomes for patients. Although we aim
to minimize facility burden as much as
feasible, we disagree that reducing the
number of measures in the ESRD QIP
should be a goal, absent justification
under our measure removal factors
codified at § 413.178(c)(5)(i).
Final Rule Action: After considering
public comments, we are finalizing our
proposals to update the Clinical Care
Measure Domain and Reporting
Measure Domain, beginning with PY
2027 as proposed, and therefore, are
finalizing the ESRD QIP measure
domains and measure weights provided
in Table 14b in this section of the final
rule.
5. Performance Standards for the PY
2027 ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act
requires the Secretary to establish
performance standards with respect to
the measures selected for the ESRD QIP
for a performance period with respect to
a year. The performance standards must
include levels of achievement and
improvement, as determined
appropriate by the Secretary, and must
be established prior to the beginning of
the performance period for the year
involved, as required by sections
1881(h)(4)(B) and (C) of the Act. We
refer readers to the CY 2013 ESRD PPS
final rule (76 FR 70277), as well as
§ 413.178(a)(1), (3), (7), and (12), for
further information related to
performance standards.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule
(88 FR 76480 through 76481), we set the
performance period for the PY 2027
ESRD QIP as CY 2025 and the baseline
period as CY 2023. In the proposed rule,
we estimated the performance standards
for the PY 2027 clinical measures in
Table 14 using data from CY 2022,
which was the most recent data
available (89 FR 55818). We are
updating these performance standards
for all measures, using CY 2023 data, in
this final rule, in Table 15.
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TABLE 15: Updated Performance Standards for the ESRD QIP Clinical Measures for PY
2027
Achievement
Threshold (15th
Percentile of
National
Performance)
Median (50th
Percentile of
National
Performance)
Benchmark (90th
Percentile of National
Performance)
Vascular Access Type (VAT)
Long-Term Catheter Rate
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic**
Adult Hemodialysis (HD) Kt/V
95.79%
98.34%
99.68%
Pediatric Hemodialysis (HD) Kt/V
81.25%
92.37%
100.00%
Adult Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) Kt/V
87.34%
94.85%
99.04%
Pediatric Peritoneal Dialysis (PD)
66.49%
82.06%
95.18%
Kt/V
Standardized Readmission Ratio"
34.27*
26.50*
16.18
NHSNBSI
0.642
0.215
0
Standardized Hospitalization Ratioh
166.60*
129.14*
87.98*
Standardized Transfusion Ratioh
48.29*
26.19*
8.46
8.12%*
16.73%*
33.90%*
PPPW
Clinical Depression
88.21%
94.34%
100.00%
ICH CARPS: Nephrologists'
58.20%*
67.90%*
79.15%*
Communication and Caring
55.68%
63.83%
74.22%
ICH CARPS: Quality of Dialysis Center
Care and Operations
ICH CARPS: Providing Information to
74.49%*
81.09%*
87.80%*
Patients
49.33%*
62.22%*
76.57%*
ICH CARPS: Overall Rating of
Nephrologists
51.78%
65.18%
79.68%
ICH CARPS: Overall Rating of Dialysis
Center Staff
55.76%
69.69%
84.10%
ICH CARPS: Overall Rating of the
Dialysis Facility
*Values are the same fmal performance standards for those measures for PY 2026. In accordance with our
longstanding policy, we are using those numerical values for those measures for PY 2027 because they are higher
standards than the PY 2027 numerical values for those measures.
**We are finalizing our proposal to replace the KtN Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027, as discussed in section IV.B.2 of this fmal
rule.
"Rate calculated as a percentage of hospital discharges
hRate per 100 patient-years
Data sources: VAT measure: 2023 EQRS; SRR, SHR, STrR: 2023 Medicare claims; Kt/V: 2023 EQRS and 2023
Medicare claims; NHSN: 2023 CDC; ICH CARPS: CMS 2023; PPPW: 2023 EQRS and 2023 Organ Procurement
and Transplantation Network (OPTN); Clinical Depression: 2023 EQRS.
In addition, we summarize in Table
16 our requirements for successful
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reporting on our previously finalized
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reporting measures for the PY 2027
ESRD QIP.
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TABLE 16: Requirements for Successful Reporting of ESRD QIP Reporting Measures for
PY2027
Measure
MedRec
Reporting Frequency
Monthly
Hypercalcemia
COVID-19
Vaccination
Coverage Among
HCP
Facility
Commitment to
Health Equity
Monthly
At least one week of data each
month, submitted quarterly
Screening for
Social Drivers of
Health
Annually
Screen Positive
Rate for Social
Drivers of Health
Annually
Domains to which facility must attest affirmatively:
• Equity is a Strategic Priority
• Data Collection
• Data Analysis
• Quality Improvement
• Leadership Engagement
Number of eligible patients who were screened for all
fiveHRSNs:
• Food insecurity,
• Housing instability,
• Transportation needs,
• Utility difficulties, or
• Interpersonal safety.
Number of eligible patients with 'Yes' or 'No' (nonmissing) screening responses for each of the five
HRSNs.
6. Eligibility Requirements for the PY
2027 ESRD QIP
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In the proposed rule, we proposed to
update eligibility requirements as part
of our proposal to replace the Kt/V
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Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic beginning
with PY 2027 (89 FR 55819). Our
previously finalized and proposed new
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minimum eligibility requirements are
described in Table 16 of the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55820)
and provided in Table 17 of this final
rule.
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Annually
Data Elements
• Date of the medication reconciliation.
• Type of eligible professional who completed the
medication reconciliation:
o physician,
o nurse,
o advanced registered nurse practitioner (ARNP),
o physician assistant (PA),
o pharmacist, or
o pharmacy technician personnel
• Name of eligible professional
Total uncorrected serum or plasma calcium lab values
Cumulative number of HCP eligible to work in the
facility for at least one day during the reporting period
and who are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccination.
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TABLE 17: Previously Finalized and Proposed New Eligibility Requirements for Scoring
on ESRD QIP Measures Beginning with PY 2027
Measure
Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure
Topic: Adult HD Kt/V
(Clinical)*
Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure
Topic: Pediatric HD
Kt/V (Clinical)*
Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure
Topic: Adult PD Kt/V
(Clinical)*
Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure
Topic: Pediatric PD
Kt/V (Clinical)*
VAT: Long-term
Catheter Rate (Clinical)
Hypercalcemia
(Reporting)
Minimum data requirements
11 qualifying patients
NIA
Small facility adjuster
11-25 qualifying patients
11 qualifying patients
NIA
11-25 qualifying patients
11 qualifying patients
NIA
11-25 qualifying patients
11 qualifying patients
NIA
11-25 qualifying patients
11 qualifying patients
NIA
11-25 qualifying patients
11 qualifying patients
NIA
NHSN BSI (Clinical)
11 qualifying patients
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
Before October 1 prior
to the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
SRR (Clinical)
STrR (Clinical)
SHR (Clinical)
ICH CARPS (Clinical)
11 index discharges
10 patient-years at risk
5 patient-years at risk
Facilities with 30 or more survey-eligible
patients during the calendar year
preceding the performance period must
submit survey results. Facilities would
not receive a score if they do not obtain a
total of at least 30 completed surveys
during the performance period
11 qualifying patients
NIA
NIA
NIA
11-41 index discharges
10-21 patient-years at risk
5-14 patient-years at risk
Before October 1 prior
to the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
NIA
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
NIA
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MedRec (Reporting)
11 qualifying patients
PPPW (Clinical)
COVID-19 Vaccination
Coverage Among HCP
(Reporting)
11 qualifying patients
NIA
Facility Commitment to
Health Equity
(Reporting)
11 qualifying patients
Screening for Social
Drivers of Health
(Reporting)
11 qualifying patients
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11-25 qualifying patients
NIA
NIA
11-25 qualifying patients
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
NIA
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Screen Positive Rate for
Social Drivers of Health
(Reporting)
11 qualifying patients
Before September 1 of
the performance
period that applies to
the program year.
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NIA
* We are finalizing our proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027, as discussed in section IV.B.2 of this fmal rule.
**Weare finalizing our proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure beginning with PY 2027,
as discussed in section IV.B.3 of this fmal rule.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
We welcomed public comment on
these proposals to update the minimum
eligibility requirements to reflect the
proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic. We did not receive any
comments on our proposals to update
the minimum eligibility requirements to
reflect the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing
our proposals to update the minimum
eligibility requirements to reflect the Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
beginning with PY 2027 as proposed,
and therefore, are finalizing the ESRD
QIP eligibility requirements provided in
Table 17 in this section of the final rule.
7. Payment Reduction Scale for the PY
2027 ESRD QIP
Under our current policy, a facility
does not receive a payment reduction
for a payment year in connection with
its performance under the ESRD QIP if
it achieves a TPS that is at or above the
minimum TPS (mTPS) that we establish
for the payment year. We have defined
the mTPS in our regulations at
§ 413.178(a)(8).
Under § 413.177(a), we implement the
payment reductions on a sliding scale
using ranges that reflect payment
reduction differentials of 0.5 percent for
each 10 points that the facility’s TPS
falls below the mTPS, up to a maximum
reduction of 2 percent. In the proposed
rule, we stated that for PY 2027, we
estimated using available data that a
facility must meet or exceed an mTPS
of 51 to avoid a payment reduction (89
FR 55821). We noted that the mTPS
estimated in the proposed rule was
based on data from CY 2022 instead of
the PY 2027 baseline period (CY 2023)
because CY 2023 data were not yet
available. We presented the estimated
payment reduction scale in Table 17 of
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
(89 FR 55821). We stated our intention
to update and finalize the mTPS and
associated payment reduction ranges for
PY 2027, using CY 2023 data, in this CY
2025 ESRD PPS final rule. We have now
finalized the payment reductions that
will apply to the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
using updated CY 2023 data. The mTPS
for PY 2027 will be 51, and the finalized
payment reduction scale is shown in
Table 18.
TABLE 18: Updated Payment Reduction Scale for PY 2027 Based on the Most Recently
Available Data
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0%
50-41
0.5%
40-31
1.0%
30-21
1.5%
20-0
2.0%
requested information regarding
potential updates to the data validation
policy to encourage accurate,
comprehensive reporting of ESRD QIP
data (89 FR 55822 through 55823).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, we noted that each of these
sections in the proposed rule is a RFI
only (89 FR 55821). In accordance with
the implementing regulations of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), specifically 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(4),
these general solicitations are exempt
from the PRA. Facts or opinions
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submitted in response to general
solicitations of comments from the
public, published in the Federal
Register or other publications,
regardless of the form or format thereof,
provided that no person is required to
supply specific information pertaining
to the commenter, other than that
necessary for self-identification, as a
condition of the agency’s full
consideration, are not generally
considered information collections and
therefore not subject to the PRA.
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C. Requests for Information (RFIs) on
Topics Relevant to ESRD QIP
As discussed in the following
sections, in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule we requested information
on two topics to inform future revisions
to the ESRD QIP. First, we requested
information regarding potential future
modifications to the existing ESRD QIP
scoring methodology to reward facilities
based on their performance and the
proportion of their patients who are
dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid (89 FR 55822). Second, we
100-51
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We stated that respondents are
encouraged to provide complete but
concise responses (89 FR 55821). These
RFIs are issued solely for information
and planning purposes; they do not
constitute a Request for Proposal (RFP),
applications, proposal abstracts, or
quotations. These RFIs do not commit
the United States Government to
contract for any supplies or services or
make a grant award. Further, we noted
that we were not seeking proposals
through these RFIs and will not accept
unsolicited proposals. Responders were
advised that the United States
Government will not pay for any
information or administrative costs
incurred in response to these RFIs; all
costs associated with responding to
these RFIs will be solely at the
interested party’s expense. Not
responding to these RFIs does not
preclude participation in any future
procurement, if conducted. It is the
responsibility of the potential
responders to monitor these RFI
announcements for additional
information pertaining to this request.
We noted that we will not respond to
questions about the policy issues raised
in these RFIs. CMS may or may not
choose to contact individual responders.
Such communications would only serve
to further clarify written responses.
Contractor support personnel may be
used to review RFI responses.
Responses to this notice are not offers
and cannot be accepted by the United
States Government to form a binding
contract or issue a grant. We stated that
information obtained as a result of these
RFIs may be used by the United States
Government for program planning on a
non-attribution basis (89 FR 55822).
Respondents should not include any
information that might be considered
proprietary or confidential. These RFIs
should not be construed as a
commitment or authorization to incur
cost for which reimbursement would be
required or sought. All submissions
become United States Government
property and will not be returned.
Finally, we noted that CMS may
publicly post the comments received, or
a summary thereof.
populations continue to be priorities for
CMS as outlined in the CMS National
Quality Strategy.110 CMS defines
‘‘health equity’’ as the attainment of the
highest level of health for all people,
where everyone has a fair and just
opportunity to attain their optimal
health regardless of race, ethnicity,
disability, sexual orientation, gender
identity, socioeconomic status,
geography, preferred language, or other
factors that affect access to care and
health outcomes.111 We are working to
advance health equity by designing,
implementing, and operationalizing
policies and programs that reduce
avoidable differences in health
outcomes.
The ESRD QIP adopted three new
health-equity focused quality measures
in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88
FR 76437 through 76446; 76466 through
76480). Although commenters were
generally supportive of the new
measures, a few commenters
recommended that the ESRD QIP take
additional action to support facilities
that treat patient populations with
higher proportions of health-related
social needs (HRSNs) (88 FR 76473). In
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule,
we stated that we are considering
updating our scoring methodology in
future rulemaking to add Health Equity
Adjustment bonus points to a facility’s
TPS that would be calculated using a
methodology that incorporates a
facility’s performance across all five
domains for the payment year and its
proportion of patients with dual
eligibility status (DES), meaning those
who are eligible for both Medicare and
Medicaid coverage (89 FR 55822).
In the 2016 Report to Congress on
Social Risk Factors and Performance
Under Medicare’s Value-Based
Purchasing Programs, the Office of the
Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation (ASPE) reported that
beneficiaries with social risk factors had
worse outcomes and were more likely to
receive a lower quality of care.112
Patients with DES experience significant
disparities are also likely to be more
medically complex and remain one of
1. Request for Public Comment on
Future Change to the Scoring
Methodology To Add a New Adjustment
That Rewards Facilities Based on Their
Performance and the Proportion of Their
Patients Who Are Dually Eligible for
Medicare and Medicaid
Achieving health equity, addressing
health disparities, and closing the
performance gap in the quality of care
provided to disadvantaged,
marginalized, or underserved
110 Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
(2022) CMS National Quality Strategy. Available at:
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-InitiativesPatient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-BasedPrograms/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
111 Health Equity Strategic Pillar. Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services. https://
www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
112 Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health &
Human Services. First Report to Congress on Social
Risk Factors and Performance in Medicare’s ValueBased Purchasing Program. 2016. Available at:
https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/migrated_
legacy_files/171041/ASPESESRTCfull.pdf.
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the most vulnerable
populations.113 114 115 DES remains the
strongest predictor of negative health
outcomes.116
We recently finalized a Health Equity
Adjustment scoring policy for the
Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP)
Program (88 FR 59092 through 59106)
and the Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF)
VBP Program (88 FR 53304 through
53316). These policies provide Health
Equity Adjustment bonus points to top
tier performing hospitals and SNFs with
a high proportion of patients with DES,
and each program’s policy is tailored to
meet the needs of the specific program.
For example, in the Hospital VBP
Program, the Health Equity Adjustment
bonus is calculated based on a hospital’s
performance on each of the four
measure domains and its proportion of
patients with DES (88 FR 59095 through
59096). In the SNF VBP Program, the
Health Equity Adjustment bonus is
calculated based on a facility’s
performance on each measure and its
proportion of patients with DES (88 FR
53309 through 53311).
Our policy for scoring performance on
the ESRD QIP is codified at § 413.178(e).
In the proposed rule, we requested
public comment on potential future
modifications to the existing scoring
methodology to reward excellent care to
underserved populations (89 FR 55822).
We also noted that any Health Equity
Adjustment bonus for the ESRD QIP
would need to align with the Program’s
statutory requirements under section
1881(h) of the Act. We welcomed public
comment on the following:
• Would a Health Equity Adjustment
be valuable to the ESRD QIP?
++ If a Health Equity Adjustment
would be valuable to the ESRD QIP,
how should it be structured?
113 Johnston, K.J., & Joynt Maddox, K.E. (2019).
The Role of Social, Cognitive, And Functional Risk
Factors In Medicare Spending For Dual And
Nondual Enrollees. Health Affairs (Project Hope),
38(4), 569–576. https://doi.org/10.1377/
hlthaff.2018.05032.
114 Johnston, K.J., & Joynt Maddox, K.E. (2019).
The Role of Social, Cognitive, and Functional Risk
Factors in Medicare Spending for Dual and
Nondual Enrollees. Health Affairs (Project Hope),
38(4), 569–576. https://doi.org/10.1377/
hlthaff.2018.05032.
115 Wadhera, R.K., Wang, Y., Figueroa, J.F.,
Dominici, F., Yeh, R.W., & Joynt Maddox, K.E.
(2020). Mortality and Hospitalizations for Dually
Enrolled and Nondually Enrolled Medicare
Beneficiaries Aged 65 Years or Older, 2004 to 2017.
JAMA, 323(10), 961–969. https://doi.org/10.1001/
jama.2020.1021.
116 Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning
and Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health &
Human Services. Second Report to Congress on
Social Risk Factors and Performance in Medicare’s
Value-Based Purchasing Program. 2020. Available
at: https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/second-reportcongress-social-risk-medicares-value-basedpurchasing-programs.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
++ If a Health Equity Adjustment
would not be valuable to the ESRD QIP,
why not?
• Are there other approaches that the
ESRD QIP could propose to adopt to
effectively address healthcare
disparities and advance health equity?
We received comments in response to
this request for information and have
summarized them here.
Comment: Many commenters
provided feedback on a Health Equity
Adjustment. Several commenters
expressed support for a Health Equity
Adjustment, believing that it would be
valuable to the ESRD QIP. Several
commenters noted that ESRD is more
prevalent among patient populations
with higher social risk factors or from
lower socioeconomic status or
communities of color and observed that
a Health Equity Adjustment could help
promote more equitable care by
rewarding excellent performance to
underserved populations. Several
commenters expressed support for a
Health Equity Adjustment specific to
the ESRD QIP, believing that it will help
to reduce disparities among facilities
that treat a greater proportion of DES
patients. A few of these commenters
observed that a Health Equity
Adjustment may help to mitigate the
impact of payment reductions that may
disproportionately impact facilities that
care for a greater proportion of lowincome patients. A few other
commenters noted that many facilities
require more resources and specific care
expertise to meet the care needs relevant
to this patient population, and that a
Health Equity Adjustment may further
incentivize parity among care providers
by providing them with resources
necessary to provide high quality care to
a complex patient population. A
commenter expressed support for
adopting a bonus scoring methodology
for a Health Equity Adjustment in the
ESRD QIP, noting that such a framework
would align with current Health Equity
Adjustments implemented in IPPS, SNF
VBP, and ETC Model.
A few commenters agreed that a
Health Equity Adjustment would be
valuable to the care providers and
patients. These commenters
recommended that CMS engage with
organizations and care providers in the
ESRD community to discuss potential
Health Equity Adjustment options and
related policies for inclusion in future
rulemaking, which commenters
believed would be helpful to ensure that
a future Health Equity Adjustment is
developed and implemented in a
meaningful way.
Several commenters expressed
support for structuring the Health
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Equity Adjustment as a bonus that is
applied to a facility’s TPS. A few
commenters recommended adding a
Health Equity Adjustment bonus to a
facility’s TPS based on its performance
in each of the five measure domains
included in the TPS, adjusted for the
facility’s proportion of
socioeconomically disadvantaged
patients. A few commenters
recommended that a Health Equity
Adjustment be calculated based on a
facility’s performance across select
measure domains, rather than all 5
measure domains. A commenter noted
that fewer dialysis facilities are eligible
for scoring on ICH CAHPS due to
measure eligibility requirements, and
therefore recommended that CMS
exclude the Patient & Family
Engagement domain from the measure
performance calculation for purposes of
calculating the Health Equity
Adjustment. Another commenter
recommended that a facility’s
performance within each measure
domain should be assessed
independently, such that a facility may
be eligible for Health Equity Adjustment
bonus points based on its performance
in each domain. This commenter
recommended that facility performance
is grouped into three tiers for each
domain, and that eligibility for HEA
points be calculated based on the
facility’s performance within a given
domain’s tertile. A different commenter
recommended that CMS calculate
potential Health Equity Adjustment
bonus points based on a facility’s
performance in Coordination, Clinical
Care, and Safety measure domains
relative to the quintile of that domain
score.
Several commenters offered
recommendations regarding Health
Equity Adjustment bonus application. A
commenter recommended that a future
Health Equity Adjustment policy be
designed to award bonus points to
facilities that serve greater proportions
of underserved patient populations and
have higher quality performance. A
commenter recommended that CMS
consider structuring the Health Equity
Adjustment as a positive payment
adjustment tied to improved health
outcomes for DES patients, citing the
health equity incentives in the ETC and
IOTA models. Another commenter
suggested that Health Equity
Adjustment bonus points be awarded
based on the percentage of patients from
underserved populations treated at the
facility. This commenter believed that
this approach would help to ensure that
facilities caring for patients in
underserved communities have
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89187
adequate resources, observing that such
facilities are more likely to be impacted
by payment penalties which may result
in decreased ability to provide care to
such patient populations.
A few commenters recommended that
CMS apply a Health Equity Adjustment
bonus to a facility’s TPS in a way that
would allow facilities to move to a
lesser payment reduction tier or a zeropayment reduction tier, believing that
such a methodology would support
facilities serving greater proportions of
DES patients. A commenter
recommended that Health Equity
Adjustment bonus points should be
limited to a maximum of 10 points to
appropriately reward facilities for
delivering excellent performance to
underserved populations while also not
skewing the TPS or creating unintended
incentives.
A commenter requested that any
Health Equity Adjustment policy not
require changes to the current process
for calculating a facility’s TPS or to the
payment reduction scales. This
commenter suggested the potential
equity points be combined as a
weighted average that uses the same
weights as the TPS. The commenter
recommended a methodology that
included: (1) multiplying the measure
performance scalar by a logistic
exchange function representing the
facility in the percent of DES patientmonths, which would provide the prescaled Health Equity Adjustment bonus;
(2) multiplying the pre-scaled Health
Equity Adjustment bonus by 10 to scale
the Health Equity Adjustment bonus for
incorporation into the TPS; and (3)
adding the Health Equity Adjustment
points to the existing TPS for a
maximum value of 100 points. Pursuant
to this commenter’s recommended
framework, although facilities would be
assessed against a modified TPS, the
payment reduction scale would be set
based on unmodified TPS ranges.
A few commenters recommended that
a Health Equity Adjustment should be
structured so that it is not budget
neutral, and therefore would not
negatively impact facilities that don’t
qualify for the Health Equity
Adjustment bonus. A few commenters
observed that potential unintended
consequences may result from a Health
Equity Adjustment in the ESRD QIP,
due to the unique nature of the program.
These few commenters observed that a
Health Equity Adjustment within the
ESRD QIP would likely result in a
decrease in the number and size of
payment reductions imposed and
recommended that CMS should not seek
to increase overall payment reductions
through other policy changes.
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A few commenters offered
recommendations regarding potential
grouping methodology for calculating
eligibility for a Health Equity
Adjustment. A commenter
recommended that CMS group facilities
into quartiles or quintiles to calculate
eligibility for a Health Equity
Adjustment bonus. This commenter
noted that there are a greater number of
eligible facilities in the ESRD QIP, as
compared to other CMS programs that
apply a Health Equity Adjustment. A
different commenter recommended that
CMS structure a ESRD QIP Health
Equity Adjustment by grouping facility
performance into three tiers for each
Measure Domain, and that eligibility for
Health Equity Adjustment bonus points
be calculated based on the facility’s
performance within a given domain’s
tertile.
Several commenters provided
recommendations regarding the
applicable patient population used to
determine a facility’s eligibility for
Health Equity Adjustment
consideration. A few commenters
recommended that a Health Equity
Adjustment account for both Medicare
fee-for-service patients as well as
Medicare Advantage patients to
accurately represent the proportion of
the targeted patient population. A
commenter recommended that, in
addition to DES patients, CMS include
Medicaid-only and uninsured patients
in its definition of underserved patient
population. Another commenter
recommended that CMS expand the
applicability of Health Equity
Adjustment eligibility to include lowincome subsidy recipients, noting
potential different impacts for facilities
in states that did not expand their
Medicaid programs. A different
commenter recommended that CMS
award Health Equity Adjustment bonus
points based on the percentage of DES
patients as well as low-income subsidy
patients treated at the facility, noting
that this approach would be consistent
with the ETC Model. Another
commenter recommended that CMS set
a minimum threshold of 20 percent DES
patient population for Health Equity
Adjustment eligibility, noting that such
a threshold would be consistent with
the SNF VBP scoring policy.
A few commenters expressed concern
regarding potential unintended
consequences that may result from a
Health Equity Adjustment in the ESRD
QIP. A few commenters expressed
concern that a Health Equity
Adjustment may create confusion by
inflating or otherwise impacting a
facility’s TPS. A commenter noted that
an adjustment to a facility’s TPS based
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on a Health Equity Adjustment would
create further confusion for patients
seeking to understand the significance
of a facility’s publicly available TPS. A
commenter observed that a Health
Equity Adjustment may suggest that
facilities with higher proportions of DES
patients are held to a lower standard or
that those patients are allowed to have
poorer health outcomes. Another
commenter noted that a Health Equity
Adjustment may not be valuable to all
ESRD facilities and recommended that
CMS consider the potential impact on
facilities in certain areas that may have
limited resources. A different
commenter expressed concern that a
Health Equity Adjustment may result in
unintended financial incentives and
requested that CMS ensure that any
Health Equity Adjustment policy
continues to focus on advancing health
equity. A commenter requested that
CMS clarify how it anticipates
measuring for health equity success.
A few commenters expressed concern
that a Health Equity Adjustment may
not be valuable to the ESRD QIP. A
commenter observed that a Health
Equity Adjustment may not be sufficient
or appropriate for the ESRD QIP as a
means to address health disparities.
Another commenter expressed concern
that a Health Equity Adjustment would
not be valuable because the ESRD QIP
is a penalty-only program that does not
award bonuses.
A commenter recommended that the
ESRD QIP adopt a peer grouping
methodology, similar to the
methodology used in the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program
(HRRP). This commenter expressed the
belief that stratification into quintiles
would promote competition among
facilities within the same quintile and
provide a more accurate comparison of
facility performance that takes patient
population into account.
Several commenters recommended
other approaches that the ESRD QIP
could propose to adopt to effectively
address healthcare disparities and
advance health equity. A few
commenters recommended that the
ESRD QIP adopt efforts that are more
directly aimed at addressing health
disparities. A commenter recommended
that services aimed at navigating care
coordination and HRSN-related needs
be included as part of the quality care
provided by ESRD facilities. This
commenter noted that a facility that has
staff trained in identifying and
addressing such needs may help to
mitigate the increased risk of poor
outcomes for ESRD patients tied to
unmet HRSNs. A different commenter
expressed support for the three health
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equity measures recently added to the
ESRD QIP, but expressed concern that
the measures do little to directly address
systemic health disparities and that
facilities do not have the resources
necessary to identify and facilitate
solutions to address HRSNs. This
commenter noted that, although
collecting such data is essential, health
disparities will persist in the absence of
additional funding necessary to address
these issues. Another commenter
recommended that CMS explore policy
approaches outside the ESRD QIP to
reduce health disparities in the ESRD
patient population, urging CMS to
invest in structural and systemic
capabilities that facilities require to
comprehensively support the care needs
of a complex patient population.
A commenter recommended that CMS
consider restructuring the ESRD QIP to
incorporate both negative and positive
payment adjustments to incentivize
high quality care and provide access to
additional resources and support. This
commenter expressed the belief that
financial penalties do not necessarily
facilitate improvement in quality of
care, noting that such penalties also
potentially reduce resources available to
facilities that would benefit from them
the most. Another commenter
recommended that CMS continue to
engage with the ESRD community to
explore effective approaches to address
health disparities and improve the
quality of care provided to underserved
populations.
A commenter recommended that CMS
consider whether within-facility
analysis is appropriate for addressing
health disparities in the ESRD patient
population, noting that the diversity of
patient populations among different
dialysis facilities often reflect the
diversity of the population of the area
which the facility is located. A different
commenter recommended that CMS
consider the role of patient autonomy
and agency in developing future health
equity measures, noting that individual
patients may differ in their level of
interest and engagement.
Response: We appreciate all of the
comments and interest in this topic. We
believe that this input is very valuable
in the continuing development of our
efforts to effectively address healthcare
disparities and advance health equity.
We will continue to take all concerns,
comments, and suggestions into account
for future development and expansion
of our health equity-related efforts.
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2. Request for Public Comment on
Updating the Data Validation Policy for
the ESRD QIP
One of the critical elements of the
ESRD QIP’s success is ensuring that the
data submitted to calculate measure
scores and TPSs are accurate. The ESRD
QIP includes two types of data
validation for this purpose: The EQRS
data validation (OMB Control Number
0938–1289) and the NHSN validation
(OMB Control Number 0938–1340). In
the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final rule, we
adopted the CROWNWeb (now EQRS)
data validation as a permanent feature
of the Program (83 FR 57003). In the CY
2020 ESRD PPS final rule, we adopted
the NHSN data validation as a
permanent feature of the Program (84 FR
60727). Under both data validation
policies, we validate EQRS and NHSN
data from a sample of facilities
randomly selected for validation. If a
facility is randomly selected for
validation but does not submit the
requested records, 10 points are
deducted from the facility’s TPS.
In the proposed rule, we requested
public comment on ways to update the
data validation policy to encourage
accurate, comprehensive reporting of
ESRD QIP data (89 FR 55823). We have
reviewed data validation policies in
other quality reporting programs such as
the Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting
(IQR) Program (81 FR 57180) and the
Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting
(OQR) Program (76 FR 74486). These
programs have adopted data validation
policies that require a hospital selected
for data validation to achieve a 75
percent reliability or accuracy threshold
to receive full credit for data validation
reporting.
We welcomed comments on potential
future policy proposals that would
encourage accurate, comprehensive
reporting for data validation purposes,
such as introducing a penalty for
facilities that do not meet an established
reporting or data accuracy threshold,
introducing a bonus for facilities that
perform above an established reporting
or data accuracy threshold, developing
targeted education on data validation
reporting, or requiring that a facility
selected for validation that does not
meet an established reporting or data
accuracy threshold be selected again the
next year.
We received comments in response to
this request for information and have
summarized them here.
Comment: A few commenters offered
feedback on ways to reduce
administrative burden associated with
participating in data validation. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
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focus on improving the data validation
system because they believe that the
current framework is too burdensome
for facilities. A few commenters
recommended that CMS prioritize
enhancing the functionality of EQRS
and NHSN systems to facilitate easier
data submission and correction, which
commenters believe will support more
accurate and comprehensive reporting.
A commenter suggested that CMS adopt
advanced technologies such as artificial
intelligence (AI) and machine learning
algorithms to reduce burden associated
with traditional reporting mechanisms.
A few commenters noted that the
current data validation system is
burdensome on facilities due to
compliance requirements and
timeframes, which commenters
observed may detract from the facility’s
ability to focus resources on providing
quality care. A few commenters
expressed concern that smaller facilities
faced a disproportionately greater
administrative burden to comply with
the data validation process, and
therefore recommended that CMS look
into mitigating that burden. A
commenter recommended that CMS
mitigate the burden on smaller facilities
by ensuring that the data validation
policy reflect variability across facility
types. A few commenters recommended
that CMS extend the submission
window because the 60-day compliance
timeframe is often challenging due to
staffing constraints, absences, and
competing priorities. A few commenters
recommended that, to reduce
administrative burden and encourage
comprehensive and accurate reporting,
CMS establish and distribute a schedule
outlining which facilities will be
included in the validation study and
when, to provide facilities with
adequate notice. A commenter
recommended that CMS also provide a
more predictable schedule for survey
requests. A few commenters
recommended that CMS reduce survey
frequency, noting that completing
surveys twice a year is time-consuming
and further constrains already limited
staff resources. A few commenters
observed that previous validation study
results suggest a level of stability that
reduces the need for annual remeasurement. A commenter
recommended that CMS reduce the
frequency of data validation surveys to
every five years or reasonable intervals.
A commenter noted that CMS has
reported consistently high accuracy
rates of data reporting by participating
facilities, which the commenter believes
is an indication that the current data
validation policy is generating accurate,
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89189
comprehensive reporting of QIP data. A
commenter noted that reducing the
frequency of validation studies would
provide facilities additional time to
understand data collection requirements
and ensure the accuracy of submissions.
A few commenters suggested that
CMS consider providing a bonus for
facilities that perform above an
established reporting or data accuracy
threshold, but only if the funding for
such bonus were not obtained by
reducing payments to ESRD facilities. A
commenter recommended that
participation in data validation be
voluntary and that participating
facilities receive bonus points awarded
to their TPS, rather than penalties for
non-participation.
A few commenters requested that
CMS share the results of previous data
validation studies to inform their
recommendations regarding the
establishment of a reporting or data
accuracy threshold. A commenter
expressed concern with updating the
data validation policy, noting that
insufficient data validation information
was publicly available to provide
comment on future updates to the data
validation policy at this time. A few
commenters recommended greater
transparency with regard to the results
of the data validations surveys. A few
commenters noted that such
transparency will help facilities
understand their results and support
targeted education efforts, which will
lead to more accurate ESRD QIP data
submitted for validation. Although a
commenter expressed support for
targeted education, this commenter
opposed mandatory re-selection of
facilities that do not meet an established
reporting or data accuracy threshold
because commenter believes that
selected facilities need to be chosen at
random.
A few commenters recommended that
any updates to the data validation
system include robust due process
protections that are similar to those
provided through other audit programs
operated by CMS. A commenter
expressed the belief that due process
policies will help to ensure the accuracy
of data submitted by ensuring that there
is opportunity to address potential
issues with data submission and
interpretation to ensure that facilities
are not unfairly penalized.
Response: We appreciate all of the
comments and interest in this topic. We
believe that this input is very valuable
in the continuing development of our
efforts to encourage accurate,
comprehensive reporting for data
validation purposes. We will continue
to take all concerns, comments, and
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suggestions into account for future
development and expansion of these
efforts.
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V. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment
Choices (ETC) Model
A. Background
Section 1115A of the Act authorizes
the Innovation Center to test innovative
payment and service delivery models
expected to reduce Medicare, Medicaid,
and Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP) expenditures while
preserving or enhancing the quality of
care furnished to the beneficiaries of
these programs. The purpose of the ETC
Model is to test the effectiveness of
adjusting certain Medicare payments to
ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians
to encourage greater utilization of home
dialysis and kidney transplantation,
support ESRD Beneficiary modality
choice, reduce Medicare expenditures,
and preserve or enhance the quality of
care. As described in the Specialty Care
Models final rule (85 FR 61114),
beneficiaries with ESRD are among the
most medically fragile and high-cost
populations served by the Medicare
program. ESRD Beneficiaries require
dialysis or kidney transplantation to
survive, and the majority of ESRD
Beneficiaries receiving dialysis receive
hemodialysis in an ESRD facility.
However, as described in the Specialty
Care Models final rule, alternative renal
replacement modalities to in-center
hemodialysis, including home dialysis
and kidney transplantation, are
associated with improved clinical
outcomes, better quality of life, and
lower costs than in-center hemodialysis
(85 FR 61264).
The ETC Model is a mandatory
payment model. ESRD facilities and
Managing Clinicians are selected as ETC
Participants based on their location in
Selected Geographic Areas—a set of 30
percent of Hospital Referral Regions
(HRRs) that have been randomly
selected to be included in the ETC
Model, as well as HRRs with at least 20
percent of ZIP codesTM located in
Maryland.117 CMS excludes all United
States Territories from the Selected
Geographic Areas.
Under the ETC Model, ETC
Participants are subject to two payment
adjustments. The first is the Home
Dialysis Payment Adjustment (HDPA),
which is an upward adjustment on
certain payments made to participating
ESRD facilities under the ESRD
Prospective Payment System (PPS) on
home dialysis claims, and an upward
adjustment to the Monthly Capitation
117 ZIP codeTM is a trademark of the United States
Postal Service.
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Payment (MCP) paid to participating
Managing Clinicians on home dialysisrelated claims. The HDPA applies to
claims with claim service dates
beginning January 1, 2021, and ending
December 31, 2023.
The second payment adjustment
under the ETC Model is the
Performance Payment Adjustment
(PPA). For the PPA, we assess ETC
Participants’ home dialysis rates and
transplant rates during a Measurement
Year (MY), which includes 12 months of
performance data. Each MY has a
corresponding PPA Period—a 6-month
period that begins 6 months after the
conclusion of the MY. We adjust certain
payments for ETC Participants during
the PPA Period based on the ETC
Participant’s home dialysis rate and
transplant rate, calculated as the sum of
the transplant waitlist rate and the
living donor transplant rate, during the
corresponding MY.
Based on an ETC Participant’s
achievement in relation to benchmarks
based on the home dialysis rate and
transplant rate observed in Comparison
Geographic Areas during the Benchmark
Year, and the ETC Participant’s
improvement in relation to their own
home dialysis rate and transplant rate
during the Benchmark Year, we would
make an upward or downward
adjustment to certain payments to the
ETC Participant. The magnitude of the
positive and negative PPAs for ETC
Participants increases over the course of
the Model. These PPAs apply to claims
with claim service dates beginning July
1, 2022 and ending June 30, 2027.
CMS has modified the ETC Model
several times. In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS
final rule, we finalized a number of
changes to the ETC Model. We adjusted
the calculation of the home dialysis rate
(86 FR 61951 through 61955) and the
transplant rate (86 FR 61955 through
61959) and updated the methodology
for attributing Pre-emptive LDT
Beneficiaries (86 FR 61950 through
61951). We changed the achievement
benchmarking and scoring methodology
(86 FR 61959 through 61968), as well as
the improvement benchmarking and
scoring methodology (86 FR 61968
through 61971). We specified the
method and requirements for sharing
performance data with ETC Participants
(86 FR 61971 through 61984). We also
made a number of updates and
clarifications to the kidney disease
patient education services waivers and
made certain related flexibilities
available to ETC Participants (86 FR
61984 through 61994). In the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67136) we
finalized further changes to the ETC
Model. We updated the PPA
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achievement scoring methodology
beginning in the fifth MY of the ETC
Model, which began on January 1, 2023
(87 FR 67277 through 67278). We also
clarified requirements for qualified staff
to furnish and bill kidney disease
patient education services under the
ETC Model’s Medicare program waivers
(87 FR 67278 through 67280) and
finalized our intent to publish
participant-level model performance
information to the public (87 FR 67280).
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88
FR 76344) we finalized a policy
whereby an ETC Participant may seek
administrative review of a targeted
review determination provided by CMS.
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
We proposed a modification to the
definition of ESRD Beneficiary at 42
CFR 512.310 as that definition is used
for the purposes of attributing
beneficiaries to the ETC Model. As
finalized in the Specialty Care Models
final rule and codified at § 512.360,
CMS retrospectively, that is, following a
MY, attributes ESRD Beneficiaries and
Pre-emptive Living Donor Transplant
(LDT) Beneficiaries to an ETC
Participant for each month during a MY.
An ESRD Beneficiary may be attributed
to an ETC Participant if the beneficiary
has already had a kidney transplant and
has a non-AKI dialysis or MCP claim
less than 12 months after the
beneficiary’s transplant date and has a
kidney transplant failure ICD–10
diagnosis code documented on any
Medicare claim. Based on feedback from
model participants, we became aware
that the use of the ICD–10 code T86.12
to identify transplant failures may be
incorrectly identifying beneficiaries for
attribution to the ETC Model because a
claim that is only coded with T86.12
may signify delayed graft function
rather than a true transplant failure. To
ensure that we are correctly identifying
ESRD beneficiaries for the purposes of
ETC Model ESRD Beneficiary
attribution, we proposed to modify our
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary at
§ 512.310. Our regulations currently
define an ESRD Beneficiary as a
beneficiary that meets either of the
following criteria: (1) is receiving
dialysis or other services for end-stage
renal disease, up to and including the
month in which the beneficiary receives
a kidney transplant up to and including
the month in which the beneficiary
receives a kidney transplant, or (2) has
already received a kidney transplant
and has a non-AKI dialysis or MCP
claim at least 12-months after the
beneficiary’s latest transplant date; or
less than 12-months after the
beneficiary’s latest transplant date and
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has a kidney transplant failure diagnosis
code documented on any Medicare
claim. We proposed to modify the
second criterion to specify that the
beneficiary’s latest transplant date must
be identified by at least one of the
following: (1) two or more MCP claims
in the 180 days following the date on
which the kidney transplant was
received; (2) 24 or more maintenance
dialysis treatments at any time after 180
days following the transplant date; or (3)
indication of a transplant failure after
the beneficiary’s date of transplant
based on data from the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients
(SRTR). We proposed that if a
beneficiary meets more than one of
these criteria, that CMS will consider
that beneficiary an ESRD Beneficiary for
the purposes of ETC model attribution
starting with the earliest month in
which the transplant failure was
recorded. In our analysis of the
proposed methodology for identifying
transplant failures, we found that the
use of all three criterion correctly
identified more true transplant failures
than did the use of T86.12 alone.
We considered a proposal to modify
the language at 42 CFR 512.310 that an
ESRD Beneficiary is a beneficiary that
has already received a kidney transplant
and has a non-AKI or MCP dialysis
claim less than 12 months after the
beneficiary’s latest transplant date with
kidney transplant failure diagnosis code
documented on any Medicare claim. We
considered removing the last clause; in
other words, removing the specification
that that the beneficiary must have a
kidney transplant failure diagnosis code
documented on any Medicare claim. We
did not propose this modification to the
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary
because doing so would preclude the
possibility for a beneficiary to be
attributed to the ETC Model for 12months after a transplant, regardless of
if the transplant failed. We were
concerned that this scenario would
reduce the number of attributed
beneficiary-months that would be
available for us to use to calculate the
home dialysis and transplant rate for
ETC Participants. We solicited comment
on our proposal to modify the definition
of an ESRD Beneficiary to more
accurately identify beneficiaries that
may be attributed to the ETC Model due
to receiving a kidney transplant that
fails within 12-months of its receipt.
Comment: We received four
comments on this proposed policy and
the alternative policy put forth for
consideration, all expressing collective
agreement on the methodology
modification. Two Patient Advocacy
Organizations agreed with our plan to
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modify these definitions as described
and specifically agreed that if a
beneficiary meets more than one of the
amended criteria, then they should be
considered an ESRD Beneficiary for the
purposes of ETC model attribution
starting with the earliest month in
which the transplant failure was
recorded. One commenter agreed with
our decision to forgo the alternative
policy to remove the specification that
that the beneficiary must have a kidney
transplant failure diagnosis code
documented on any Medicare claim.
One dialysis organization stated that
they commend CMS’ dedication to
correctly identifying ESRD beneficiaries
for attribution to the ETC Model. They
believe the proposed clarification will
help prevent beneficiaries with delayed
graft function who have a claim coded
with T86.12 from being incorrectly
attributed to the ETC Model. The
organization further encourages CMS to
make needed refinements for the ETC
Model’s remaining duration and utilize
its regulatory authority to mitigate
penalties to physicians and dialysis
providers.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ dedicated engagement
with the design of the ETC Model and
the methodology by which we assess
transplant beneficiary attributions.
However, we uncovered an
inconsistency in the rule text between
Paragraph 3 and Paragraph 4 of the
proposed definition of an ESRD
beneficiary. Paragraph 3 suggests that a
kidney transplant failure would be
identified from a beneficiary who has
‘‘at least’’ one of the following three
criteria, whereas Paragraph 4 in the
proposed rule states that if a beneficiary
meets ‘‘more than one’’ of the criteria
described in paragraphs (3)(i) through
(iii) that they would then be considered
an ESRD beneficiary. Given the specific
comment from one interested party that
expressed support for a beneficiary
meeting more than one of the following
criteria to be considered an ESRD
Beneficiary for the purposes of ETC
model attribution: (1) two or more MCP
claims in the 180 days following the
date on which the kidney transplant
was received; (2) 24 or more
maintenance dialysis treatments at any
time after 180 days following the
transplant date; or (3) indication of a
transplant failure after the beneficiary’s
date of transplant based on data from
the Scientific Registry of Transplant
Recipients (SRTR), we plan to update
the definition in paragraph three to
resolve the inconsistency and delete the
phrase ‘‘at least one of the following’’.
Final Decision: In consideration of the
comments received, we are finalizing
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89191
our proposed modification to the
definition of ESRD Beneficiary at 42
CFR 512.310 as that definition is used
for the purposes of attributing
beneficiaries to the ETC Model with one
modification. We will delete the phrase
‘‘at least one of the following’’ from the
definition of kidney transplant failure in
paragraph 3 so it reads, ‘‘Has a kidney
transplant failure less than 12 months
after the beneficiary’s latest transplant
date as identified by’’. Per paragraph 4
of the definition then, a beneficiary
must meet more than one of the criteria
laid out in paragraph 3 to qualify as
having a kidney transplant failure.
C. Request for Information
1. Request for Information
In the Specialty Care Models final
rule, we referenced a report from the
Public Policy/Advocacy Committee of
the North American Chapter of the
International Society for Peritoneal
Dialysis that describes barriers to
increased adoption of home dialysis
including educational barriers, the need
for home care partner support, the
monthly visit requirement for the
Monthly Capitation Payment (MCP)
under the Physician Fee Schedule,
variations in dialysis business practices
in staffing allocation, lack of home
clinic independence, and other
restrictions resulting in the inefficient
distribution of home dialysis supplies
(85 FR 61265).118 The National Kidney
Foundation (NKF) Kidney Disease
Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI)
controversies conference report,
‘‘Overcoming Barriers for Uptake and
Continued Use of Home Dialysis: An
NKF–KDOQI Conference Report,’’
describes clinical, operational, policy,
and societal barriers to increased
prescribing of and retention on home
modalities. For example, lack of clinical
confidence in prescribing home dialysis,
lack of infrastructure, financial costs to
patients associated with home
modifications, the need for space to
store home dialysis supplies, lack of
housing, lack of appropriate education,
care partner burnout, and patient fear of
self-cannulation.119
118 Golper TA, Saxena AB, Piraino B, Teitelbaum,
I, Burkart, J, Finkelstein FO, Abu-Alfa A. Systematic
Barriers to the Effective Delivery of Home Dialysis
in the United States: A Report from the Public
Policy/Advocacy Committee of the North American
Chapter of the International Society for Peritoneal
Dialysis. American Journal of Kidney Diseases.
2011; 58(6): 879–885.doi:10.1053/
j.ajkd.2011.06.028.
119 Chan, C.T., Collins, K., Ditschman, E.P.,
Koester-Wiedemann, L., Saffer, T.L., Wallace, E., &
Rocco, M.V. (2020). Overcoming barriers for uptake
and continued use of home dialysis: An NKF-Kdoqi
Conference Report. American Journal of Kidney
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Since the Specialty Care Models final
rule was published, interested parties
have spoken to us about challenges
associated with increasing access to
home dialysis, particularly among
beneficiaries with lower socioeconomic
status, who have lower rates of home
dialysis and kidney transplantation than
people with higher socioeconomic
status. The ETC Model was designed to
address these barriers; for example,
CMS applied the Home Dialysis
Payment Adjustment (HDPA) to assist
dialysis organizations with overcoming
market realities that impose substantial
barriers to opening and sustaining home
dialysis programs. The upside and
downside risk associated with the
Performance Payment Adjustment (PPA)
are designed to be strong incentives for
behavioral change towards increasing
beneficiary access to home dialysis. In
the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule, we
finalized a policy whereby we stratify
achievement benchmarks based on the
proportion of attributed beneficiaries
who are dual eligible for both Medicare
and Medicaid or who receive the LowIncome Subsidy (LIS) (86 FR 61968). We
also finalized the Health Equity
Incentive (HEI), which rewards ETC
Participant aggregation groups that
demonstrate greater than 2.5 percentage
points improvement on the home
dialysis and transplant rate among dual
eligible and LIS recipient beneficiaries
from the Benchmark Year (BY) to the
MY with a .5 increase in their
improvement score (86 FR 61971).
Performance accountability in the
ETC Model is scheduled to end on June
30, 2026. We are concerned that the end
of performance accountability may
reduce incentives for dialysis
organizations to invest in access to
home dialysis and address the
challenges of the type we describe
previously in this section. We were
interested in hearing from interested
parties regarding policies that the
Innovation Center may consider
specifically incorporating into any
successor model to the ETC Model or
that CMS may consider generally. Given
the growth in ESRD beneficiaries
choosing Medicare Advantage plans,120
we were particularly interested in
approaches CMS could take to improve
beneficiary access to home dialysis
modalities in Medicare Advantage.
Diseases, 75(6), 926–934. https://doi.org/10.1053/
j.ajkd.2019.11.007.
120 Nguyen, K.H., Oh, E.G., Meyers, D.J., Kim, D.,
Mehrotra, R., & Trivedi, A.N. (2023). Medicare
advantage enrollment among beneficiaries with
end-stage renal disease in the first year of the 21st
Century Cures Act. JAMA, 329(10), 810. https://
doi.org/10.1001/jama.2023.1426.
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We sought input on the following
topics that may improve our
understanding of other policy
interventions that may increase access
to high quality home dialysis within the
context of Innovation Center models
and across CMS.
1. How should any future Innovation
Center model that incorporates home
dialysis incorporate what the
community has learned from the ETC
Model?
2. What barriers to home dialysis
could be addressed through the ESRD
Prospective Payment System (PPS)? We
request that commenters be as specific
as possible.
3. What approaches could CMS
consider to increase beneficiary access
to home dialysis modalities in Medicare
Advantage?
4. How should nephrologist payment
from traditional, fee-for-service
Medicare and from MAOs account for
clinician-level barriers to prescribing
and retaining patients on home
modalities?
We received comments in response to
this request for information and have
summarized them here.
Comment: Inclusion of the Kidney
Disease Education (KDE) Benefit.
Several commenters expressed their
belief in the usefulness of KDE as a tool
for individuals with kidney failure to
learn about their disease state and
options for treatment. The commenters
mentioned it is also well known that
patients who receive early and accurate
modality education, such as what is
provided through KDE, are more likely
to choose a home modality should their
disease progress to ESRD. Commenters
urge CMS to maintain the ETC’s changes
to the KDE program in any future
models related to increasing home
dialysis and waiving the 20 percent
coinsurance.
Consideration of Pediatric Patients in
Future Models. A professional society
for pediatric nephrologists expressed
appreciation for the exclusion of
children under 18 from participation in
the ETC Model. The commenter
reiterated their belief of current model
goals and further highlighted that young
adults who continue to be treated by
pediatric nephrologists once they turn
18 years old are a particularly complex
group of patients. Of note, the
commenter urged CMS to consider
collaboration with representatives of the
pediatric nephrology community on
future models to incentivize home
dialysis and transplantation.
Increased Access to New and
Innovative Drugs. A non-provider
industry-associated interested party
noted that within various CMS hospital
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inpatient and outpatient models
advanced by the Innovation Center, addon payments for innovative new
technologies and therapies are
purposely excluded from episode
expenditures to ensure that Medicare
beneficiaries have consistent access to
innovations that improve their care. The
interested party encourages the
Innovation Center to apply the same
reasoning and approach under future
kidney models.
Data and Quality Metrics. A dialysis
organization encouraged CMS to
reconsider the concept of comparing
geographic areas in potential successor
models. Additionally, the commenter
and several patient advocacy
organizations encouraged the inclusion
of home dialysis measures with greater
specificity, such as a home retention
metric or optimal starts, and the
development of a home dialysis patient
satisfaction and experience measure.
Similarly, for transplant, CMS was
encouraged to consider removing
metrics that run counter to beneficiaries’
waitlisting, such as waitlist mortality,
and consider adding metrics, such as
referral to waitlist percentage and time
from referral to waitlist. A commenter
further highlighted future models with
more efficient data sharing capabilities
to access performance data would be a
strength.
Increased Efforts Towards
Transplantation. Several commenters
provided recommendations on ways to
effectively increase transplantation,
such as the creation of a patient
navigator program to improve patient
experience of care in seeking
transplants.
Social Drivers of Health. Several
commenters expressed support of future
models that test how additional
resources and/or direct patient
incentives aimed at addressing social
drivers of health would impact the
uptake of home modalities and
ultimately whether quality of life is
improved. Commenters reiterated
previous recommendations that CMS
work with HHS and the states to revise
federal, state, and local fraud and abuse
laws to support dialysis facilities and
physicians in their efforts to help
individuals with kidney failure address
socio-economic barriers to home
dialysis. A commenter also suggested
some barriers contributing to the lower
uptake of home dialysis in communities
of color and underserved communities
could be addressed by encouraging
Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to
apply the Special Supplemental
Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI).
The commenter suggested these benefits
could be used to reduce barriers to
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home dialysis, such as copay assistance
programs for necessary dialysis related
medications, stipends for utility costs
and necessary home modifications,
assistance for care partners or respite
when needed, and assistance in
installing and paying for broadband
internet.
Model Structure. Several commenters
expressed their support for future
models being voluntary and including
more flexibilities for smaller providers,
like the Comprehensive ESRD Choices
(CEC) model. Additionally, stakeholders
believe future models should have a
financial structure based on anticipated
savings to increase incentives and
should include Medicare Advantage
(MA) beneficiaries. Other commenters
recommend a model that tests the
impact of additional Medicare payments
for a package of comprehensive care
services to aid in investments in
infrastructure and care management
capabilities for dialysis providers.
Recurring Barriers Elevated by
Patients and Caregivers. Commenters
elevated recurring barriers shared by
patients and caregivers that dialysis
providers noted being limited in their
capacity to address, such as the fear of
abandonment and/or lack of real time
support in the home, inadequate space
in the home for equipment and
supplies, and the lack of available inhome support staff. A commenter
suggested the development of a
Technical Expert Panel (TEP) to
evaluate evidence from the IM–HOME1
framework for resolving the barriers that
exist for home dialysis.
Incentivizing Peritoneal Dialysis (PD)
Catheter Placement. Commenters
elevated several barriers impacting
timely PD catheter placement
previously identified by CMS: (1)
challenges scheduling operating room
time in the hospital setting for PD
catheter placement, (2) the need for
additional training on PD catheter
placement for both surgeons and
interventional nephrologists, and (3) the
lack of dedicated PD catheter insertion
teams in the hospital setting who can
immediately place catheters for patients
who ‘‘crash’’ into dialysis and would
benefit from urgent start PD.
Commenters encourage CMS to develop
a demonstration to test the impact of
policy changes for equal reimbursement
rates between PD catheter placement
procedures and vascular access
placement procedures. A patient
advocacy organization recommended a
bonus incentive payment for vascular
surgeons, hospitals, and surgical
centers, that would increase
reimbursement for PD catheter
placements and become equal with the
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reimbursements provided for
Arteriovenous (AV) Fistula
reimbursement.
Fraud and Abuse Laws. Two
commenters recommended we remove
certain barriers that they believe are
created by the physician self-referral
law, Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), and
beneficiary inducement laws. The
commenters described various
arrangements they believe may be
prohibited by such laws but would be
beneficial to care coordination,
management of patient care and disease
progression, and patient education.
Increased Data Transparency.
Commenters strongly suggested that
publicly accessible data is needed to
ensure that beneficiaries with kidney
failure who elect an MA plan maintain
access to the care they need. CMS is
encouraged to update MA data
collection and reporting efforts to match
other Medicare programs and better
align incentives across the health care
continuum.
Time and Distance Standards and
Network Adequacy. Commenters urge
CMS to reconsider requiring time and
distance standards in MA, as described
in regulations at 42 CFR 422.116, for
dialysis facilities that were removed in
2020. Interested parties across the
kidney community have noticed
unintended consequences on patientsincluding home dialysis patients-as a
result of this amended policy. Patients
and interested parties report that some
plans have such narrow networks that
patients have difficulty accessing
vascular access surgeons, nephrologists,
or even a dialysis facility near their
homes. Commenters further note other
patients have been listed as inactive on
transplant waitlists because MA plans
have removed their center from the
network.
Expanded Staff Training
Requirements. A commenter noted that
a big obstacle to home dialysis is the
current training requirements that limit
training to one patient at a time, and for
that trainer be a Registered Nurse (RN).
This leads to significant backlogs for
training and deters potential patients.
The national shortage of RNs limits the
availability of trainers, and a core
curriculum could be developed to train
other professionals who could provide
home dialysis training. CMS is further
encouraged to create incentives to
support new technologies that support
mobile dialysis such that patients living
in rural or remote parts of our country
may have access to same standard of
care as those that reside in a large urban
area.
Medicare Advantage (MA)
Benchmarks and Plan Finder Tools.
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Commenters note that CMS should
ensure that corresponding adjustments
in MA benchmarks for ESRD are made
to reflect any adjustments in FFS ESRD
payments. Additionally, commenters
stated that CMS should reinforce
statutory requirements that MA patients
maintain access to the same services as
Medicare FFS patients, including home
dialysis. Despite statutory requirements,
commenters reported that many MA
organizations (MAOs) limit beneficiary
access to in-network home dialysis, a
treatment modality to which all
Medicare beneficiaries should maintain
equitable access. Commenters further
highlight that the Medicare.gov Plan
Finder is a useful tool from CMS that
helps people find MA and Medicare
Part D plans available in their area and
should include information regarding
the availability of home dialysis
programs by MA plan. In doing so, CMS
can shift the responsibility away from
patients and onto MAOs to ensure they
are communicating clearly their plans’
offerings and whether enrollees will
have access to a home dialysis program.
Commenters also believe MA plans
would be incentivized to prioritize
home dialysis uptake if home dialysis
penetration was included as a new
quality marker, in addition to
established standards that measure their
performance against a set of quality
measures determined by CMS.
Changes to Physician Payments for
Referrals and Training. Interested
parties believe that upstream incentive
payments could serve as a benefit for
those physicians doing particular work
with patients in later CKD stages. CMS
is also urged to consider providing a
one-time incentive payment for referral
to home dialysis—either PD or Home
Hemodialysis (HHD). A complimentary
policy change to the recommendations
earlier, is the increased payment for
HCPCS codes G0420 and G0421, which
are used for individual face-to-face
education services and group face-toface education services related to CKD.
Commenters note that the codes have
not been meaningfully updated.
Commenters highlighted the payment
system is currently underfunded by
approximately 6.9 percent due to
inadequate adjustments for inflation and
may be insufficient to achieve the goal
of 20 to 25 percent of patients receiving
dialysis at home. Minor inflationary
updates have not accounted for the
increased demand for home training
nurses and staffing intensive TCU
programs. Technological advances, like
remote patient monitoring and other
digital tools could help to fill the gap.
A commenter noted that a TEP
convened in May 2020 concluded that
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facilities spent between 7.5 and 8 hours
training patients on home hemodialysis.
CMS is encouraged to conduct an
analysis to determine a more accurate
number of hours per session needed for
successful home dialysis training and
subsequently revise the home dialysis
training add-on payment amount to
capture growing costs.
Interested parties have reported
barriers to physician training in home
dialysis modalities has led to a
reluctance to prescribe these therapies
in practice. Additionally, the home
dialysis training service codes, CPT
codes 90989 (for a completed course of
home dialysis training) and 90993 (for a
single training session when the course
is not completed) have not been
updated. These are unique service codes
in that they do not have relative value
units (RVUs) assigned to them but rather
flat rates of $500 for 90989 and $20 per
session for 90993. Stakeholders believe
an adjustment of this fee to $1,500 to
$2000 would be a step in the right
direction for incentivizing the
nephrologists to offer home modality to
their patients. Additionally,
stakeholders recommend that CMS issue
a transmittal for Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs)
clarifying that home dialysis training via
CPT codes 90989 and 90993 are covered
services in the Medicare physician fee
schedule.
Response: We appreciate all the
comments on and interest in the topics.
We note that several of the suggestions
made by commenters are beyond the
scope of CMS’ rulemaking authority.
Nonetheless, we highly value this input,
as it is essential to deliberations on
future model successors and ESRD
policy development as we work to
advance administration initiatives to
expand access to home dialysis and
increase transplantation efforts.
With respect to comments on fraud
and abuse laws, thank you for the
comments related to certain
arrangements that facilitate value-based
health care delivery and payment. We
note that to the extent such
arrangements create financial
relationships for purposes of the
physician self-referral law, we see no
reason why the parties to the
arrangements described by the
commenters could not use existing
exceptions to the physician self-referral
law, including those for value-based
arrangements, and why the financial
relationships could not be structured to
satisfy the requirements of an existing
applicable exception. Also, CMS may
determine that the AKS safe harbor for
CMS-sponsored model arrangements
and CMS-sponsored model patient
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incentives (42 CFR 1001.952(ii)) is
available to protect remuneration
exchanged pursuant to certain financial
arrangements or patient incentives
permitted under future models. Such
determination, if any, would be set forth
in documentation separately issued by
CMS.
Final Decision: We intend to use
comments received in response to this
RFI to inform future policy
development. CMS would propose any
potential changes to payment policies
through a separate notice and comment
rulemaking.
2. Exemption of the RFI From the
Paperwork Reduction Act Implementing
Regulations
Please note, this is a RFI only. In
accordance with the implementing
regulations of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), specifically 5 CFR
1320.3(h)(4), this general solicitation is
exempt from the PRA. Facts or opinions
submitted in response to general
solicitations of comments from the
public, published in the Federal
Register or other publications,
regardless of the form or format thereof,
provided that no person is required to
supply specific information pertaining
to the commenter, other than that
necessary for self-identification, as a
condition of the agency’s full
consideration, are not generally
considered information collections and
therefore not subject to the PRA.
Respondents are encouraged to
provide complete but concise responses.
This RFI is issued solely for information
and planning purposes; it does not
constitute a Request for Proposal (RFP),
applications, proposal abstracts, or
quotations. This RFI does not commit
the United States Government to
contract for any supplies or services or
make a grant award. Further, we did not
seek proposals through this RFI and will
not accept unsolicited proposals.
Responders are advised that the United
States Government will not pay for any
information or administrative costs
incurred in response to this RFI; all
costs associated with responding to this
RFI will be solely at the interested
party’s expense. Not responding to this
RFI does not preclude participation in
any future procurement, if conducted. It
is the responsibility of the potential
responders to monitor this RFI
announcement for additional
information pertaining to this request.
Please note that we will not respond to
questions about the policy issues raised
in this RFI. We may or may not choose
to contact individual responders. Such
communications would only serve to
further clarify written responses.
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Contractor support personnel may be
used to review RFI responses.
Responses to this notice are not offers
and cannot be accepted by the United
States Government to form a binding
contract or issue a grant. Information
obtained as a result of this RFI may be
used by the United States Government
for program planning on a nonattribution basis. Respondents should
not include any information that might
be considered proprietary or
confidential. This RFI should not be
construed as a commitment or
authorization to incur cost for which
reimbursement would be required or
sought. All submissions become United
States Government property and will
not be returned. We may publicly post
the comments received, or a summary
thereof.
VI. Collection of Information
Requirements
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. 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.
• 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.
We solicited public comment on each
of these issues for the following sections
of this document that contain
information collection requirements
(ICRs):
A. ESRD QIP—Wage Estimates (OMB
Control Numbers 0938–1289 and 0938–
1340)
We refer readers to the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule for information regarding
wage estimates and resulting
information collection burden
calculations used in this final rule (88
FR 76484 through 76485). To derive
wage estimates in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule, we used data from
the United States Bureau of Labor
Statistics’ May 2022 National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for Medical Records
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Specialists, who are responsible for
organizing and managing health
information data, are the individuals
tasked with submitting measure data to
the ESRD Quality Reporting System
(EQRS) (formerly, CROWNWeb) and the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC’s) NHSN, as well as
compiling and submitting patient
records for the purpose of data
validation (89 FR 55825). In the
proposed rule, we noted that when this
analysis was conducted, the most
recently available median hourly wage
of a Medical Records Specialist was
$22.69 per hour.121 In this final rule, we
are updating the median hourly wage to
$23.45 per hour, which reflects the most
recently available data from the United
States Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May
2023 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates.122 We
also calculate fringe benefit and
overhead at 100 percent. We adjusted
these employee hourly wage estimates
by a factor of 100 percent to reflect
current HHS department-wide guidance
on estimating the cost of fringe benefits
and overhead. Using these assumptions,
in the proposed rule we estimated an
hourly labor cost of $45.38 as the basis
of the wage estimates for all collections
of information calculations in the ESRD
QIP (89 FR 55825). In this final rule, we
are updating our previously estimated
hourly labor cost to $46.90 as the basis
of the wage estimates for all collections
of information calculations in the ESRD
QIP.
We used this wage estimate, along
with updated facility and patient
counts, to update our estimate for the
total information collection burden in
the ESRD QIP for PY 2027. We provide
the re-estimated information collection
burden associated with the PY 2027
ESRD QIP in section VI.C of this final
rule.
B. Estimated Burden Associated With
the Data Validation Requirements for
PY 2027 (OMB Control Numbers 0938–
1289 and 0938–1340)
We refer readers to the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule for information regarding
the estimated burden associated with
data validation requirements for PY
2027 (88 FR 76485 through 76486). In
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, we
estimated that the aggregate cost of the
EQRS data validation for PY 2027
would be approximately $34,035 (750
hours × $45.38), or an annual total of
approximately $113.45 ($34,035/300
121 https://www.bls.gov/oes/2022/may/
oes292072.htm.
122 https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/
oes292072.htm.
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facilities) per facility in the sample. In
this final rule, we are updating the
aggregate cost of EQRS data validation
for PY 2027 to reflect updated wage
estimates. Using the most recently
available data, we estimate that the
aggregate cost of the EQRS data
validation for PY 2027 would be
approximately $35,175 (750 hours ×
$46.90), or an annual total of
approximately $117.25 ($35,175/300
facilities) per facility in the sample. The
burden cost increase associated with
these requirements will be submitted to
OMB in the revised information
collection request (OMB control number
0938–1289; Expiration date: November
30, 2025). In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule and re-stated in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, we estimated
that the aggregate cost of the NHSN data
validation for PY 2027 would be
approximately $68,070 (1,500 hours ×
$45.38), or a total of approximately
$226.90 ($68,070/300 facilities) per
facility in the sample (89 FR 55826). We
are updating the aggregate cost of NHSN
data validation to reflect updated wage
estimates in this final rule. Based on the
updated wage data, we estimate that the
aggregate cost of the NHSN data
validation for PY 2027 would be
approximately $70,350 (1,500 hours ×
$46.90), or a total of approximately
$234.50 ($70,350/300 facilities) per
facility in the sample. While the burden
hours estimate would not change, the
burden cost updates associated with
these requirements will be submitted to
OMB in the revised information
collection request (OMB control number
0938–1340; Expiration date: November
30, 2025).
C. Estimated EQRS Reporting
Requirements for PY 2027 (OMB Control
Number 0938–1289)
To estimate the burden associated
with the EQRS reporting requirements
(previously known as the CROWNWeb
reporting requirements), we look at the
total number of patients nationally, the
number of data elements per patientyear that the facility would be required
to submit to EQRS for each measure, the
amount of time required for data entry,
the estimated wage plus benefits
applicable to the individuals within
facilities who are most likely to be
entering data into EQRS, and the
number of facilities submitting data to
EQRS. In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule, we estimated that the burden
associated with EQRS reporting
requirements for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
was approximately $130.5 million for
approximately 2,877,743 total burden
hours (88 FR 76486).
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We are finalizing changes to the ESRD
QIP measure set in this final rule, but do
not anticipate that any of these policies
would affect the burden we have
previously estimated for EQRS reporting
requirements for PY 2027. Beginning
with PY 2027, we are finalizing our
proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive measure with
a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic. However, we are not updating
facility reporting requirements as part of
that finalized policy. Additionally,
although we are finalizing our proposal
to remove one measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set beginning with PY
2027, the measure removal would not
impact EQRS reporting requirements on
facilities. We provided the burden
estimate for PY 2027 in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55826)
and are updating the information
collection burden to reflect updated
wage estimates, along with updated
facility and patient counts, in this final
rule. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we estimated that the
amount of time required to submit
measure data to EQRS would be 2.5
minutes per element and did not use a
rounded estimate of the time needed to
complete data entry for EQRS reporting.
We are further updating these estimates
in this final rule. There are 136 data
elements for 511,957 patients across
7,695 facilities, for a total of 69,626,152
elements (136 data elements × 511,957
patients). At 2.5 minutes per element,
this would yield approximately 377.01
hours per facility. Therefore, the PY
2027 burden would be 2,901,090 hours
(377.01 hours × 7,695 facilities). Using
the updated wage estimate for a Medical
Records Specialist, we estimate that the
PY 2027 total burden cost would be
approximately $136.1 million
(2,901,090 hours × $46.90). The
information collection request under the
OMB Control Number: 0938–1289 will
be revised and sent to OMB.
D. ESRD Treatment Choices Model
Section 1115A(d)(3) of the Act
exempts Innovation Center model tests
and expansions, which include the ETC
Model, from the provisions of the PRA.
Specifically, this section provides that
the provisions of the PRA do not apply
to the testing and evaluation of
Innovation Center models or to the
expansion of such models.
VII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
1. ESRD PPS
On January 1, 2011, we implemented
the ESRD PPS, a case-mix adjusted,
bundled PPS for renal dialysis services
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furnished by ESRD facilities as required
by section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, as
added by section 153(b) of MIPPA (Pub.
L. 110–275). Section 1881(b)(14)(F) of
the Act, as added by section 153(b) of
MIPPA, and amended by section
3401(h) of the Affordable Care Act (Pub.
L. 111–148), established that beginning
CY 2012, and each subsequent year, the
Secretary shall annually increase
payment amounts by an ESRD market
basket percentage increase, reduced by
the productivity adjustment described
in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the
Act. This final rule includes updates
and policy changes to the ESRD PPS for
CY 2025. These changes include a new
wage index methodology which utilizes
BLS data and reflects revised OMB
CBSA delineations, a wage index
budget-neutrality adjustment factor, an
expansion to the ESRD PPS outlier list,
methodological changes to the outlier
calculation, updates to the TPNIES
offset amount, updates to the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amounts for Korsuva® and Jesduvroq,
changes to the LVPA payment structure,
and an increase to the calculation of the
TDAPA for phosphate binders. Failure
to publish this final rule would result in
ESRD facilities not receiving
appropriate payments in CY 2025 for
renal dialysis services furnished to
ESRD beneficiaries.
This final rule also has several policy
changes to improve payment stability
and adequacy under the ESRD PPS.
These include updates to the LVPA and
payments for ESRD outlier services. We
believe that each of these changes will
improve payment stability and
adequacy under the ESRD PPS.
2. AKI
This rule finalizes updates to the
payment rate for renal dialysis services
furnished by ESRD facilities to
individuals with AKI. Additionally, we
are extending Medicare payment for
home dialysis to beneficiaries with AKI.
As discussed in section III.C of this final
rule, we also are applying the updates
to the ESRD PPS base rate, wage index,
and training add-on payment
adjustment for home dialysis to the AKI
dialysis payment rate. Failure to publish
this final rule would result in ESRD
facilities not receiving appropriate
payments in CY 2025 for renal dialysis
services furnished to patients with AKI
in accordance with section 1834(r) of
the Act.
3. ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(1) of the Act requires
CMS to reduce the payments otherwise
made to a facility under the ESRD PPS
for a year by up to two percent if the
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facility does not satisfy the requirements
of the ESRD QIP for that year. This rule
finalizes updates for the ESRD QIP,
which would remove the NHSN Dialysis
Event reporting measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set beginning with PY
2027 and replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027.
4. ETC Model
The ETC Model is a mandatory
Medicare payment model tested under
the authority of section 1115A of the
Act, which authorizes the Innovation
Center to test innovative payment and
service delivery models expected to
reduce Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP
expenditures while preserving or
enhancing the quality of care furnished
to the beneficiaries of such programs.
This final rule finalizes a change to
the ETC Model, specifically to the
methodology CMS uses to identify
transplant failures for the purposes of
defining an ESRD beneficiary and
attributing an ESRD beneficiary to the
ETC Model. As described in detail in
section V.B of this final rule, we believe
it is necessary, for the purposes of
accuracy, to adopt this change to the
ETC Model.
B. Overall Impact Analysis
We have examined the impacts of this
final rule 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), Executive Order
14094, entitled ‘‘Modernizing
Regulatory Review’’ (April 6, 2023), the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–354),
section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–
4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
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 14094 amends
section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review). The
amended section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a rule: (1) having an annual
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effect on the economy of $200 million
or more in any 1 year, or adversely
affect in a material way the economy, a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local,
territorial, or Tribal governments or
communities; (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising legal or policy
issues for which centralized review
would meaningfully further the
President’s priorities.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for a regulatory action
that is significant under section 3(f)(1).
Based on our estimates of the combined
impact of the ESRD PPS, ESRD QIP, and
ETC provisions in this final rule, OIRA
has determined this rulemaking is
significant under section 3(f)(1) of E.O.
12866. Accordingly, we have prepared a
Regulatory Impact Analysis that
presents the costs and benefits of the
rulemaking to the best of our ability.
Pursuant to Subtitle E of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 (also known as the
Congressional Review Act), OIRA has
determined that this rule meets the
criteria set forth in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Therefore, OMB has reviewed this final
regulation, and the Department has
provided the following assessment of
their impact.
1. ESRD PPS
We estimate that the final revisions to
the ESRD PPS would result in an
increase of approximately $260 million
in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities
in CY 2025. This includes $220 million
associated with the payment rate
update, the updated post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amounts, and
continuation of the approved TDAPA as
identified in Table 19. This also
includes approximately $40 million for
the additional TDAPA payment for
operational costs in excess of 100
percent of ASP for phosphate binders,
which is derived from 6 percent of perpatient phosphate binder spending
based on utilization and cost data as
discussed in section II.B.7.c. of this final
rule. In addition, this amount includes,
but is not impacted by, the following
budget neutral changes to the ESRD
PPS: updates to the outlier list, updates
to the outlier methodology and
thresholds, updates to the wage index
methodology, updates to the OMB
CBSA delineations, and changes to the
LVPA.
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Although the incorporation of oralonly renal dialysis drugs and biological
products into the ESRD PPS in CY 2025
is provided for by existing regulations
and is not impacted by this final rule,
we estimate for reference that total
ESRD PPS spending for phosphate
binders will be approximately $870
million ($220 million in beneficiary
coinsurance payments and $650 million
in Medicare Part B spending) in CY
2025 for the original phosphate binder
TDAPA payment at 100 percent of ASP;
however we note that these drugs are
currently being paid for under Medicare
Part D, which we estimate will lead to
a decrease in spending of approximately
$690 million ($0 million in beneficiary
premium offset and $690 million in
Medicare Part D spending), for a net
payment increase of approximately $180
million.
2. AKI
We estimate that the final updates to
the AKI payment rate will result in an
increase of approximately $2 million in
Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in
CY 2025.
3. ESRD QIP
We estimate that, as a result of our
previously finalized policies and the
policies we are finalizing in this final
rule, the updated ESRD QIP will result
in $17.9 million in estimated payment
reductions across all facilities for PY
2027.
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4. ETC Model
The change we are finalizing is the
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary for
the purposes of attribution in the ETC
Model. This policy change is not
expected to change the model’s
projected economic impact.
5. Summary of Impacts
We estimate that the combined impact
of the policies finalized in this rule on
payments for CY 2025 is $260 million
based on the estimates of the updated
ESRD PPS and the AKI payment rates.
We estimate the impacts of the ESRD
QIP for PY 2027 to be $136.1 million in
information collection burden and $17.9
million in estimated payment
reductions across all facilities. Finally,
we estimate that the final methodology
change to the ETC Model will not affect
the model’s projected economic impact
described in the Specialty Care Models
final rule (85 FR 61114) and in the
CY2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR
61874).
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
In this section, we discuss the
anticipated benefits, costs, and transfers
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associated with the changes in this final
rule. Additionally, we estimate the total
regulatory review costs associated with
reading and interpreting this final rule.
1. Benefits
Under the CY 2025 ESRD PPS and
AKI payment, ESRD facilities will
continue to receive payment for renal
dialysis services furnished to Medicare
beneficiaries under a case-mix adjusted
PPS. We continue to expect that making
prospective Medicare payments to ESRD
facilities will enhance the efficiency of
the Medicare program. Additionally, we
expect that updating the Medicare ESRD
PPS base rate and rate for AKI
treatments furnished by ESRD facilities
by 2.2 percent based on the final CY
2025 ESRDB market basket percentage
increase of 2.7 percent reduced by the
final CY 2025 productivity adjustment
of 0.5 percentage point will improve or
maintain beneficiary access to high
quality care by ensuring that payment
rates reflect the best available data on
the resources involved in delivering
renal dialysis services. We estimate that
overall payments under the ESRD PPS
will increase by 2.7 percent as a result
of the finalized policies in this rule.
2. Costs
a. ESRD PPS and AKI
We do not anticipate the provisions of
this final rule regarding ESRD PPS and
AKI rates-setting will create additional
cost or burden to ESRD facilities.
b. ESRD QIP
We have made no changes to our
methodology for calculating the annual
burden associated with the information
collection requirements for EQRS data
validation (previously known as the
CROWNWeb validation study) or NHSN
data validation. Although we do not
anticipate that the policies finalized in
this final rule regarding ESRD QIP will
create additional cost or burden to ESRD
facilities for PY 2027, we are updating
the estimated costs associated with the
information collection requirements
under the ESRD QIP, with updated
estimates of the total number of ESRD
facilities, the total number of patients
nationally, wages for Medical Records
Specialists or similar staff, and a refined
estimate of the number of hours needed
to complete data entry for EQRS
reporting.
3. Transfers
We estimate that the updates to the
ESRD PPS and AKI payment rates will
result in a total increase of
approximately $220 million in Medicare
payments to ESRD facilities in CY 2025,
which includes the amount associated
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89197
with final updates to the outlier
thresholds, and final updates to the
wage index. This estimate includes an
increase of approximately $2 million in
Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in
CY 2025 due to the updates to the AKI
payment rate, of which approximately
20 percent is increased beneficiary
coinsurance payments. We estimate
approximately $180 million in transfers
from the Federal Government to ESRD
facilities due to increased Medicare
program payments and approximately
$40 million in transfers from
beneficiaries to ESRD facilities due to
increased beneficiary coinsurance
payments because of this final rule.
We also estimate that the updates to
the TDAPA payment policy for
phosphate binders will result in an
increase of approximately $40 million
in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities
in CY 2025, which includes
approximately $30 million in transfers
from the Federal Government to ESRD
facilities due to increased Medicare
program payments and approximately
$10 million in transfers from
beneficiaries to ESRD facilities due to
increased beneficiary coinsurance
payments.
4. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative
costs on private entities, such as the
time needed to read and interpret this
ESRD PPS final 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 the ESRD
PPS final rule, we assume that the total
number of unique commenters on this
year’s ESRD PPS proposed rule, which
was 191 for the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, is equal to the number of
individual reviewers of this final rule.
We acknowledge that this assumption
may understate or overstate the costs of
reviewing this final rule. It is possible
that not all commenters reviewed this
year’s proposed rule in detail, and it is
also possible that some reviewers chose
not to comment on the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule. For these reasons we
determined that the number of past
commenters would be a fair estimate of
the number of reviewers of this final
rule. We used a similar methodology for
calculating the regulatory review costs
in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule; in that proposed rule we welcomed
any comments on the approach in
estimating the number of entities which
would review that proposed rule and
did not receive any direct responses.
We also recognize that different types
of entities are in many cases affected by
mutually exclusive sections of this final
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rule, and therefore for the purposes of
our estimate we assume that each
reviewer reads approximately 50
percent of this proposal. We sought
comments on this assumption.
Using the May 2023 wage information
from the BLS for medical and health
service managers (Code 11–9111), we
estimate that the cost of reviewing this
rule is $129.28 per hour, including
overhead and fringe benefits 123 (https://
www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm).
Assuming an average reading speed of
250 words per minute, we estimate that
it will take approximately 260 minutes
(4.33 hours) for the staff to review half
of this final rule, which has a total of
approximately 130,000 words. For each
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123 Calculated by multiplying the mean wage for
medical and health service managers by 2 to
account for overhead and fringe benefits.
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entity that reviews the rule, the
estimated cost is $559.78 (4.33 hours ×
$129.28). Therefore, we estimate that
the total cost of reviewing this
regulation is $106,917.98 ($559.78 ×
191).
5. Impact Statement and Table
a. CY 2025 End-Stage Renal Disease
Prospective Payment System
(1) Effects on ESRD Facilities
To understand the impact of the
changes affecting Medicare payments to
different categories of ESRD facilities, it
is necessary to compare estimated
payments in CY 2024 to estimated
payments in CY 2025. To estimate the
impact among various types of ESRD
facilities, it is imperative that the
estimates of Medicare payments in CY
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2024 and CY 2025 contain similar
inputs. Therefore, we simulated
Medicare payments only for those ESRD
facilities for which we can calculate
both current Medicare payments and
new Medicare payments.
For this final rule, we used CY 2023
data from the Medicare Part A and Part
B Common Working Files as of August
02, 2024, as a basis for Medicare dialysis
treatments and payments under the
ESRD PPS. We updated the 2023 claims
to 2024 and 2025 using various updates.
The final updates to the ESRD PPS base
rate are described in section II.B.4 of
this final rule. Table 19 shows the
impact of the estimated CY 2025 ESRD
PPS payments compared to estimated
Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in
CY 2024.
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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89199
TABLE 19: Impacts of the Final Changes in Medicare Payments to ESRD Facilities for
CY2025
5,961
21.3
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
0.2%
2.8%
Regional chain
912
3.3
0.5%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
-0.3%
2.4%
Independent
485
1.7
0.6%
0.0%
0.1%
-0.1%
-1.9%
0.8%
Hospital-based
351
1.1
1.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.3%
0.4%
4.5%
9
0.0
0.6%
0.0%
0.1%
-0.2%
-2.2%
0.4%
3.7
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
0.0%
2.6%
603
1.7
0.3%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
2.5%
5.1%
Middle Atlantic
872
3.5
0.6%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
-1.2%
1.5%
Mountain
438
1.5
0.3%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
1.6%
4.3%
New England
199
1.0
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
1.9%
4.6%
986
4.9
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
-0.1%
-2.4%
0.2%
54
0.1
0.3%
0.0%
0.1%
-0.1%
2.6%
5.2%
1,802
5.9
0.5%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
1.1%
3.8%
West North Central
477
1.5
0.5%
0.0%
0.1%
0.1%
-0.5%
2.4%
West South Central
1,096
3.5
0.4%
0.0%
0.0%
0.0%
1.3%
4.0%
0.5
0.4%
0.8%
0.1%
0.2%
0.6%
4.3%
Large dialysis
organization
Unknown
East North Central
East South Central
Pacific3
Puerto Rico and Virgin
Islands
South Atlantic
3,000 to 3,999 treatments
474
0.7
0.4%
-0.5%
0.1%
0.0%
0.4%
2.7%
4,000 to 4,999 treatments
540
1.0
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
0.7%
3.4%
2,928
8.2
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
0.7%
3.3%
3,103
17.0
0.5%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
-0.4%
2.3%
5,000 to 9,999 treatments
10,000 or more
treatments
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Less than2%
7,621
27.2
0.4%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
0.0%
2.7%
34
0.2
0.5%
0.0%
0.1%
0.0%
1.3%
4.1%
7
0.0
0.1%
0.4%
0.1%
1.9%
0.1%
4.8%
-0.1%
0.0%
0.1%
0.6%
0.3%
Between 2% and 19%
Between 20% and 49%
3.0%
More than 50%
1This column includes the impact of the end ofTDAPA payment for Jesduvroq and the final post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for Korsuva® and the presented post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for
Jesduvroq (beginning October 1, 2025). This column does not include the TDAPA for phosphate binders.
2 This column includes the impact of the fmal updates in columns (C) through (F) in Table 19, and of the fmal
ESRDB market basket percentage increase for CY 2025 of2.7 percent, reduced by 0.5 percentage point for the
productivity adjustment as required by section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) of the Act. Note, the products of these impacts
may be different from the percentage changes shown here due to rounding effects.
3 Includes ESRD facilities located in Guam, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
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BILLING CODE 4120–01–C
Column A of the impact table
indicates the number of ESRD facilities
for each impact category and column B
indicates the number of dialysis
treatments (in millions). The overall
effect of the final routine updates to the
outlier payment policy, including final
changes to the inflation factors used for
calculating MAP and FDL amounts
described in section II.B.3 of this final
rule, is shown in column C. For CY
2025, the impact on all ESRD facilities
because of the final changes to the
outlier payment policy would be an
increase in estimated Medicare
payments of approximately 0.4 percent.
Column D shows the effect of the final
2-tiered LVPA as described in section
II.B.8 of this final rule. This adjustment
is implemented in a budget neutral
manner, so the total impact of this
change will be 0.0 percent. However,
there will be distributional impacts of
this change, primarily increasing
payments to facilities that furnish fewer
than 3,000 treatments by 0.8 percent
and lowering payments to ESRD
facilities that furnish between 3,000 and
4,000 treatments by 0.5 percent. Because
we are finalizing our proposal to use the
scaled adjustment factors, the only
impact of this policy is among ESRD
facilities that are eligible for the LVPA.
Column E shows the effect of yearover-year payment changes related to
the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts as described in
section II.B.6 of this final rule and
current TDAPA payments. The postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
will not be budget neutral, but the total
impact on payment is 0.1 percent due to
relatively low utilization of drugs for
which we will pay this adjustment in
CY 2025.
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0.0
Column F reflects the impact of the
expansion of outlier eligibility to
formerly composite rate drugs. Overall,
the changes to the outlier policy,
including those reflected in column C of
this table, are budget neutral insofar as
we estimate that we will better hit the
1 percent target for outlier payments.
These changes will increase payments
for facilities that treat a higher
proportion of exceptionally costly cases.
Column G reflects the effect of the
finalized changes to the ESRD PPS wage
index methodology, the adoption of the
new OMB CBSA delineations, the
continued application of the 5 percent
cap on wage index decreases, and the
rural transition policy as described in
section II.B.2 of this final rule. This
update will be budget neutral, so the
total impact of this policy change is 0.0
percent. However, there will be
distributional impacts of this change.
The largest increase will be to ESRD
facilities in Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands, which would receive 2.6
percent higher payments because of the
updated ESRD PPS wage index. The
largest decrease would be for ESRD
facilities in the Pacific Census region,
which will receive 2.4 percent lower
payments because of the updated ESRD
PPS wage index and methodological
changes.
Column H reflects the overall impact,
that is, the effects of the outlier policy
changes, LVPA changes, the postTDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amounts, the new wage index
methodology, the new CBSA
delineations, the rural transition policy,
and the payment rate update as
described in section II.B.4 of this final
rule. The final ESRD PPS payment rate
update for CY 2025 is 2.2 percent,
which reflects the final ESRDB market
basket percentage increase for CY 2025
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of 2.7 percent and the productivity
adjustment of 0.5 percentage point. We
expect that overall ESRD facilities will
experience a 2.7 percent increase in
estimated Medicare payments in CY
2025. The categories of types of ESRD
facilities in the impact table show
impacts ranging from a 0.2 percent
increase to a 5.2 percent increase in
their CY 2025 estimated Medicare
payments.
This table does not include the impact
of the inclusion of oral-only drugs to the
ESRD PPS as we are unable to calculate
facility level estimates at this time, nor
does it include the impacts of the
increase to the TDAPA amount for
phosphate binders as finalized in
section II.B.7.c of this final rule. We
cannot include the impact of this final
change in Table 19 because we do not
have the patient-level utilization data
required to model facility-level uptake.
As noted previously, the overall impact
of this TDAPA increase is
approximately $40 million.
Furthermore, we note that the
incorporation of oral-only renal dialysis
drugs and biological products into the
ESRD PPS beginning in CY 2025 is
provided for by existing regulations and
is not impacted by this final rule, other
than the change in the TDAPA amount
for phosphate binders. For public
awareness, we estimate an increase in
Medicare Part B spending of
approximately $870 million in CY 2025,
and a corresponding decrease in
Medicare Part D spending of
approximately $690 million in CY 2025,
associated with payment for phosphate
binders under the ESRD PPS.
(2) Effects on Other Providers
Under the ESRD PPS, Medicare pays
ESRD facilities a single bundled
payment for renal dialysis services,
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which may have been separately paid to
other providers (for example,
laboratories, durable medical equipment
suppliers, and pharmacies) by Medicare
prior to the implementation of the ESRD
PPS. Therefore, in CY 2025, we estimate
that the ESRD PPS would have zero
impact on these other providers.
furnishing renal dialysis services and
involve lower-quality data sources.
These alternatives would not have any
specific impact on small entities as
discussed in section VII.E of this final
rule.
(3) Effects on the Medicare Program
We estimate that Medicare spending
(total Medicare program payments) for
ESRD facilities in CY 2025 would be
approximately $6.2 billion. This
estimate considers a projected decrease
in fee-for-service Medicare ESRD
beneficiary enrollment of 2.1 percent in
CY 2025.
We considered only expanding outlier
eligibility to drugs and biological
products previously paid for under the
TDAPA after the end of the TDAPA
period. As discussed in section II.B.3.b
of this final rule, we have instead
decided to finalize to expand outlier
eligibility to all drugs and biological
products that were or would have been
composite rate services prior to the
inception of the ESRD PPS. We believe
that this is appropriate because formerly
composite rate drugs represent
potentially significant costs which are
not currently accounted for by the
outlier adjustment. Furthermore, most
of the commenters’ concerns with the
inclusion of composite rate drugs
revolved around concerns that should
we overestimate outliers in one year we
would reduce the ESRD PPS base rate in
future years, which is with a
misinterpretation of our outlier policy.
These alternatives would not have any
specific impact on small entities as
discussed in section VII.E of this final
rule.
(4) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Under the ESRD PPS, beneficiaries are
responsible for paying 20 percent of the
ESRD PPS payment amount. As a result
of the projected 2.7 percent overall
increase in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
payment amounts, we estimate that
there would be an increase in
beneficiary coinsurance payments of 2.7
percent in CY 2025, which translates to
approximately $40 million.
As we have previously noted, the
incorporation of oral-only renal dialysis
drugs and biological products into the
ESRD PPS in CY 2025 is provided for
by existing regulations and is not
impacted by this final rule. For public
awareness, we estimate an increase in
beneficiary coinsurance payments of
$230 million. As noted in section II.B.7
of this final rule, we anticipate that the
inclusion of oral-only drugs in the ESRD
PPS will increase access to these drugs
for beneficiaries, particularly
disadvantaged populations who
currently do not have Part D coverage.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
(5) Alternatives Considered
(a) Wage Index Changes
We considered, but did not finalize, a
one-year delay to the implementation
date for the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology. This delay would have
allowed us further time to consider
several potential methodological
suggestions, including MedPAC’s
suggestions for smoothing across and
variation within CBSAs. However, we
have decided that such a delay is not
appropriate, because we believe the new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology is
the best estimation available for the
geographic variation in wages ESRD
facilities face. We considered MedPAC’s
suggestions for the proposed rule and
decided that they would introduce
additional complexity and would
involve parameters which could be seen
as arbitrary for purposes of estimating
wages for occupations related to
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(b) Expansion of Outlier Eligibility
(c) TDAPA Amount for Phosphate
Binders
We considered, but are not finalizing,
paying the TDAPA for phosphate
binders based on 106 percent of ASP,
rather than the fixed addition to the
TDAPA amount which we have
finalized. Paying the TDAPA for
phosphate binders at 106 percent of
ASP for at least 2 years to mirror our
TDAPA payment approach for the first
2 years for calcimimetics would have
many of the same effects of the flat
TDAPA increase we finalized, as we
based the size of the flat increase off of
6 percent of TDAPA expenditures.
However, as discussed in section II.B.7.c
of this final rule, we believe that paying
106 percent of ASP could potentially
incentivize ESRD facilities to prescribe
higher-cost phosphate binders to receive
additional payment. We note that our
final policy, with respect to TDAPA
payment for phosphate binders, would
best support small entities, as discussed
in section VII.E of this final rule, as we
expect small entities would have less
bargaining power than large entities in
negotiating prices for phosphate
binders.
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89201
(d) Changes to the LVPA
We considered, but did not finalize, a
three tier LVPA which would be funded
by eliminating the rural facility
adjustment. This was a suggestion of
several commenters who recommended
the LVPA be expanded beyond the
current 4,000 treatment volume
threshold. However, our analysis found
that the elimination of the rural facility
adjustment would not provide nearly
enough funds to establish a third LVPA
tier, even if we were to lower the
treatment volume threshold to 5,000
from the 6,000 suggested by
commenters. As discussed in section
II.B.8.c of this final rule, we are
finalizing a two-tiered scaled LVPA in
part because it would not lead to any
budget neutrality reduction to the ESRD
PPS base rate. In the proposed rule, we
presented an alternative three-tiered
LVPA which could be implemented by
reducing the base rate, but commenters
were generally not supportive of the
idea. Although our proposal did not
involve the elimination of the rural
facility adjustment and the reallocation
of those funds, we did not believe that
commenters would support the
proposal. Additionally, we believe that
the rural facility adjustment is a useful
tool which protects ESRD facilities in
potentially vulnerable areas. The
continued use of the rural facility
adjustment likely benefits small entities,
as discussed in section VII.E of this final
rule, operating in rural areas. As
discussed previously, eliminating the
rural facility adjustment would not
provide enough funds to fully cover the
suggested approach, so such a policy
would require budget neutrality
reduction which would reduce payment
to small entities that receive the LVPA.
b. Continuation of Approved
Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments (TDAPA) for New Renal
Dialysis Drugs or Biological Products for
CY 2025
Two renal dialysis drugs for which
the TDAPA was paid in CY 2024 will
continue to be eligible for the TDAPA in
CY 2025.
(1) Jesduvroq (Daprodustat)
On July 27, 2023, CMS Transmittal
12157 124 implemented the 2-year
TDAPA period specified in
§ 413.234(c)(1) for Jesduvroq
(daprodustat). The TDAPA payment
period began on October 1, 2023, and
will continue through September 30,
2025. As stated previously, TDAPA
124 CMS Transmittal 12157, dated July 27, 2023,
is available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/
document/r12157cp.pdf.
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payment is based on 100 percent of
ASP. If ASP is not available, then the
TDAPA is based on 100 percent of WAC
and, when WAC is not available, the
payment is based on the drug
manufacturer’s invoice.
In the proposed rule, we based our
impact analysis on the most current 72x
claims data from November 2023, when
utilization first appeared on the claims,
through February 2024. During that
timeframe, the average monthly TDAPA
payment amount for Jesduvroq
(daprodustat) was $23,075. In applying
that average to each of the 9 remaining
months of the TDAPA payment period
in CY 2025, we estimated $207,675 in
spending ($23,075 * 9 = $207,675) of
which, approximately $41,535
($207,675 * 0.20 = $41,535) would have
been attributed to beneficiary
coinsurance amounts.
Several commenters indicated that
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Jesduvroq’s
manufacturer, is removing the drug from
the market. The FDA’s Orange Book 125
identifies Jesduvroq’s marketing status
as discontinued. GSK indicated that the
change in marketing status does not
reflect a change in availability or in
FDA’s approval of the product. GSK
could not state definitively that there
will be no TDAPA claims in CY 2025.
Because we have no way of estimating
how the change in Jesduvroq’s
marketing status will affect utilization,
we have carried the proposed rule
estimates forward unchanged. That is,
we estimate $207,675 in spending, of
which, approximately $41,535 will be
attributed to beneficiary coinsurance
amounts.
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125 FDA’s Orange Book: Approved Drug Products
with Therapeutic Equivalence Evaluations.
Accessed September 26, 2024. Available at: https://
www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/ob/results_
product.cfm?Appl_Type=N&Appl_No=216951.
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(2) DefenCath® (Taurolidine and
Heparin Sodium)
On May 9, 2024, CMS Transmittal
12628 126 implemented the 2-year
TDAPA period specified in
§ 413.234(c)(1) for DefenCath®
(taurolidine and heparin sodium). The
TDAPA payment period began on July
1, 2024, and will continue through June
30, 2026. As stated previously, TDAPA
payment is based on 100 percent of
ASP. If ASP is not available, then the
TDAPA is based on 100 percent of WAC
and, when WAC is not available, the
payment is based on the drug
manufacturer’s invoice.
As of the drafting of this final rule,
DefenCath® was in the first few months
of the TDAPA payment period.
Complete claims data, upon which we
could base CY 2025 Medicare impact
estimates, was limited to the month of
July 2024. Due to the limited timeframe
of complete and available claims data,
we believe that it would have been more
appropriate to base Medicare impacts on
cost and utilization volume estimates
furnished by the manufacturer,
recognizing that the manufacturer is
most familiar with the market
conditions affecting its products. We
requested but did not receive utilization
volume estimates from the
manufacturer. Therefore, we based our
impact analysis on the most current 72x
claims data for the month of July 2024,
when utilization first appeared on the
claims. In July 2024, the average
monthly TDAPA payment amount for
DefenCath® was $2,118,827. In applying
that average to each of the 12 months of
the TDAPA payment period in CY 2025,
we estimate $25,425,924 in spending
126 CMS Transmittal 12628, dated May 9, 2024, is
available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/
r12628CP.pdf.
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($2,118,827 * 12 = $25,425,924) of
which, approximately $5,085,184
($25,425,924 * 0.20 = $5,085,184) will
be attributed to beneficiary coinsurance
amounts.
c. Payment for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals With AKI
(1) Effects on ESRD Facilities
To understand the impact of the
finalized changes affecting Medicare
payments to different categories of
ESRD facilities for renal dialysis
services furnished to individuals with
AKI, it is necessary to compare
estimated Medicare payments in CY
2024 to estimated Medicare payments in
CY 2025. To estimate the impact among
various types of ESRD facilities for renal
dialysis services furnished to
individuals with AKI, it is imperative
that the Medicare payment estimates in
CY 2024 and CY 2025 contain similar
inputs. Therefore, we simulated
Medicare payments only for those ESRD
facilities for which we can calculate
both current Medicare payments and
new Medicare payments.
For this final rule, we used CY 2023
data from the Medicare Part A and Part
B Common Working Files as of August
02, 2024, as a basis for Medicare for
renal dialysis services furnished to
individuals with AKI. We updated the
2023 claims to 2024 and 2025 using
various updates. The updates to the AKI
payment amount are described in
section III.C of this final rule. Table 20
shows the impact of the estimated CY
2025 Medicare payments for renal
dialysis services furnished to
individuals with AKI compared to
estimated Medicare payments for renal
dialysis services furnished to
individuals with AKI in CY 2024.
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89203
TABLE 20: Impacts of the Final Changes in Medicare Payments for Renal Dialysis
Services Furnished to Individuals with AKI for CY 2025
Large dialysis
organization
4,216
233.7
0.2%
2.4%
Regional chain
568
30.4
0.0%
2.2%
Independent
189
13.6
-1.3%
0.8%
Hospital-based2
108
4.8
1.2%
3.4%
1
0.1
4.3%
6.6%
East North Central
835
44.4
0.2%
2.4%
East South Central
376
17.2
2.5%
4.8%
Middle Atlantic
575
31.9
-1.0%
1.2%
Mountain
314
20.9
0.4%
2.6%
New England
139
7.1
1.6%
3.8%
Pacific3
Puerto Rico
and Virgin Islands
647
48.4
-2.1%
0.0%
4
0.1
-1.1%
1.0%
1,197
67.6
1.5%
3.7%
Unknown
South Atlantic
West North Central
322
13.4
-0.4%
1.8%
West South Central
673
31.7
1.4%
3.7%
204
6.6
0.2%
2.4%
247
9.7
0.4%
2.6%
320
13.1
0.8%
3.0%
2,032
104.4
0.8%
3.0%
2,279
148.8
-0.4%
1.8%
Less than 3,000
treatments
3,000 to 3,999 treatments
5,000 to 9,999 treatments
10,000 or more
treatments
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5,068
282.1
0.1%
2.3%
Between 2% and 19%
12
0.5
0.8%
3.0%
Between 20% and 49%
1
0.0
0.6%
2.8%
Less than 2%
1
0.5%
2.7%
0.0
More than 50%
This column includes the impact of the updates in columns (C) as well as the impact of the wage index budgetneutrality adjustment factor in Table 20, and of the final ESRDB market basket percentage increase for CY 2025 of
2.7 percent, reduced by 0.5 percentage point for the productivity adjustment as required by section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) of the Act. Note, the products of these impacts may be different from the percentage changes
shown here due to rounding effects.
2 Includes hospital-based ESRD facilities not reported to have large dialysis organization or regional chain
ownership.
3 Includes ESRD facilities located in Guam, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
1
Column A of the impact table
indicates the number of ESRD facilities
for each impact category, and column B
indicates the number of AKI dialysis
treatments (in thousands). Column C
shows the effect of the final CY 2025
wage index changes, including the
changes to the ESRD PPS wage index
methodology, the adoption of the new
OMB CBSA delineations, the continued
application of the 5 percent cap on wage
index decreases, and the rural transition
policy as described in section II.B.2.f.(2)
of this final rule. We note the rural
adjustment does not apply to
beneficiaries with AKI, so this column
only incorporates the budget neutrality
factor associated with that policy.
Column D shows the overall impact,
that is, the effects of the final wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment
factor, wage index updates, and the
payment rate update of 2.2 percent,
which reflects the final ESRDB market
basket percentage increase for CY 2025
of 2.7 percent and the final productivity
adjustment of 0.5 percentage point, as
well as the training add-on budget
neutrality reduction of $0.00. We expect
that overall ESRD facilities will
experience a 2.3 percent increase in
estimated Medicare payments in CY
2025 for treatment of AKI beneficiaries.
This table does not include any
distributional impacts of payments to
ESRD facilities associated with the
extension of payment for AKI home
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dialysis or extension of the add-on
payment adjustment for training for
home and self-dialysis (outside of the
budget-neutrality reduction, as
discussed), as we are unable to estimate
potential uptake at a facility level at this
time. The categories of types of ESRD
facilities in the impact table show
impacts ranging from an increase of 0.0
percent to an increase of 3.8 percent in
their CY 2025 estimated Medicare
payments for renal dialysis services
provided by ESRD facilities to
individuals with AKI.
(2) Effects on Other Providers
Under section 1834(r) of the Act, as
added by section 808(b) of TPEA, we are
finalizing to update the payment rate for
renal dialysis services furnished by
ESRD facilities to beneficiaries with
AKI. The only two Medicare providers
and suppliers authorized to provide
these outpatient renal dialysis services
are hospital outpatient departments and
ESRD facilities. The patient and his or
her physician make the decision about
where the renal dialysis services are
furnished. Therefore, this change would
have zero impact on other Medicare
providers.
(3) Effects on the Medicare Program
We estimate approximately $70
million would be paid to ESRD facilities
in CY 2025 because of patients with AKI
receiving renal dialysis services in an
ESRD facility at the lower ESRD PPS
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base rate versus receiving those services
only in the hospital outpatient setting
and paid under the outpatient
prospective payment system, where
services were required to be
administered prior to the TPEA.
(4) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Currently, beneficiaries have a 20
percent coinsurance obligation when
they receive AKI dialysis in the hospital
outpatient setting. When these services
are furnished in an ESRD facility, the
patients will continue to be responsible
for a 20 percent coinsurance. Because
the AKI dialysis payment rate paid to
ESRD facilities is lower than the
outpatient hospital PPS’s payment
amount, we expect beneficiaries to pay
less coinsurance when AKI dialysis is
furnished by ESRD facilities.
(5) Alternatives Considered
As we discussed in the CY 2017 ESRD
PPS proposed rule (81 FR 42870), we
considered adjusting the AKI payment
rate by including the ESRD PPS casemix adjustments, and other adjustments
at section 1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act, as
well as not paying separately for AKI
specific drugs and laboratory tests. We
ultimately determined that treatment for
AKI is substantially different from
treatment for ESRD, and the case-mix
adjustments applied to ESRD patients
may not be applicable to AKI patients,
and as such, including those policies
and adjustments is inappropriate. We
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continue to monitor utilization and
trends of items and services furnished to
individuals with AKI for purposes of
refining the payment rate in the future.
This monitoring will assist us in
developing knowledgeable, data-driven
proposals.
As discussed in section III.B of this
final rule, we are finalizing payment for
AKI dialysis in the home setting, and as
discussed in section III.C.3 of this final
rule we will apply the home and selfdialysis training add-on payment
adjustment for such services provided to
AKI patients. We considered paying for
AKI home dialysis without the training
add-on adjustment; however, we were
concerned that access to home dialysis
for AKI beneficiaries could be
negatively impacted in the absence of an
add-on payment adjustment to support
home dialysis training. These
alternatives would not have any specific
impact on small entities as discussed in
section VII.E of this final rule.
d. ESRD QIP
(1) Effects of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP on
ESRD Facilities
The ESRD QIP is intended to promote
improvements in the quality of ESRD
dialysis facility services provided to
beneficiaries. The general methodology
that we use to calculate a facility’s TPS
is described in our regulations at
§ 413.178(e).
Any reductions in the ESRD PPS
payments as a result of a facility’s
performance under the PY 2027 ESRD
QIP will apply to the ESRD PPS
payments made to the facility for
services furnished in CY 2027,
consistent with our regulations at
§ 413.177.
For the PY 2027 ESRD QIP, we
estimate that, of the 7,695 facilities
(including those not receiving a TPS)
enrolled in Medicare, approximately
36.9 percent or 2,750 of the facilities
that have sufficient data to calculate a
89205
TPS would receive a payment reduction
for PY 2027. Among an estimated 2,750
facilities that would receive a payment
reduction, approximately 63 percent or
1,730 facilities would receive the
smallest payment reduction of 0.5
percent. We are updating the estimated
impact of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP that
we provided in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule (88 FR 76495 through 76497).
Based on the policies finalized in this
rule, the total estimated payment
reductions for all the 2,750 facilities
expected to receive a payment reduction
in PY 2027 would be approximately
$17,887,355. Facilities that do not
receive a TPS do not receive a payment
reduction.
Table 21 shows the updated overall
estimated distribution of payment
reductions resulting from the PY 2027
ESRD QIP.
TABLE 21: Updated Estimated Distribution of PY 2027 ESRD QIP Payment Reductions
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To estimate whether a facility would
receive a payment reduction for PY
2027, we scored each facility on
achievement and improvement on
several clinical measures for which
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Number of Facilities
4712
1730
760
177
83
there were available data from EQRS
and Medicare claims. Payment
reduction estimates were calculated
using the most recent data available
(specified in Table 22) in accordance
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Percent of
Facilities*
63.2%
23.2%
10.2%
2.4%
1.1%
with the policies finalized in this final
rule. Measures used for the simulation
are shown in Table 22.
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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Payment Reduction
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
*233 facilities not scored due to insufficient data
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 22: Data Used to Update the Estimated PY 2027 ESRD QIP Payment Reductions
ICH CARPS Survey
SRR
SHR
PPPW
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic
Adult HD Kt/V
Pediatric HD Kt/V
Adult PD Kt/V
Pediatric PD Kt/V
VAT
% Catheter
STrR
NHSNBSI
Clinical Depression
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For all measures except the SHR
clinical measure, the SRR clinical
measure, the STrR measure, and the ICH
CAHPS measure, measures with less
than 11 eligible patients for a facility
were not included in that facility’s TPS.
For the SHR clinical measure and the
SRR clinical measure, facilities were
required to have at least 5 patient-years
at risk and 11 index discharges,
respectively, to be included in the
facility’s TPS. For the STrR clinical
measure, facilities were required to have
at least 10 patient-years at risk to be
included in the facility’s TPS. For the
ICH CAHPS measure, facilities were
required to have at least 30 surveyeligible patients to be included in the
facility’s TPS. Each facility’s TPS was
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Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
Jan 2023-Dec 2023
compared to an estimated mTPS and an
estimated payment reduction table
consistent with the final policies
outlined in section IV.B of this final
rule. Facility reporting measure scores
were estimated using available data
from CY 2023. Facilities were required
to have at least one measure in at least
two domains to receive a TPS.
To estimate the total payment
reductions in PY 2027 for each facility
resulting from this final rule, we
multiplied the total Medicare payments
to the facility during the 1-year period
between January 2023 and December
2023 by the facility’s estimated payment
reduction percentage expected under
the ESRD QIP, yielding a total payment
reduction amount for each facility.
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Performance period
Table 23 shows the updated estimated
impact of the ESRD QIP payment
reductions to all ESRD facilities for PY
2027. The table also details the
distribution of ESRD facilities by size
(both among facilities considered to be
small entities and by number of
treatments per facility), geography (both
rural and urban and by region), and
facility type (hospital based and
freestanding facilities). Given that the
performance period used for these
calculations differs from the
performance period we are using for the
PY 2027 ESRD QIP, the actual impact of
the PY 2027 ESRD QIP may vary
significantly from the values provided
here.
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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ER12NO24.027
Measure
Period of time used to calculate
achievement thresholds, 50th
percentiles of the national performance,
benchmarks, and improvement
thresholds
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Jan 2022-Dec 2022
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
89207
Number of
Facilities
7,695
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All Facilities
Facility Type:
Freestanding
7,348
Hospital-based
347
Ownership Type:
Large Dialysis
5,942
Regional Chain
908
Independent
461
Hospital-based (non-chain)
347
Unknown
37
Facility Size:
Large Entities
6,850
Small Entities 1
808
Unknown
37
Rural Status:
1) Yes
1,245
2)No
6,450
Census Region:
1,069
Northeast
Midwest
1,663
South
3,490
1,408
West
US Territories 2
65
Census Division:
Unknown
11
East North Central
1,188
East South Central
602
Middle Atlantic
870
Mountain
438
New England
199
Pacific
970
South Atlantic
1,793
West North Central
475
West South Central
1,095
54
US Territories 2
Facility Size(# of total treatments)
Less than 4,000 treatments
1,207
4,000-9,999 treatments
3,461
Over 10,000 treatments
3,027
1Small Entities include hospital-based and satellite facilities, and non-chain facilities based on EQRS.
2Includes American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and Virgin Islands.
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Number of
Treatments
2019 (in
millions)
27.0
Number of
Facilities
with QIP
Score
7,462
Number of
Facilities
Expected to
Receive a
Payment
Reduction
2,750
26.0
1.0
7,135
327
2,601
149
-0.26%
-0.41%
21.1
3.3
1.6
1.0
0.0
5,792
881
444
327
18
1,934
343
319
149
5
-0.22%
-0.30%
-0.79%
-0.41%
-0.30%
24.4
2.6
0.0
6,673
771
18
2,277
468
5
-0.23%
-0.63%
-0.30%
3.8
23.2
1,209
6,253
373
2,377
-0.22%
-0.28%
4.4
5.1
11.1
6.3
0.2
1,033
1,620
3,374
1,371
64
393
593
1,309
414
41
-0.30%
-0.27%
-0.28%
-0.21 %
-0.41%
0.1
3.6
1.7
3.4
1.5
1.0
4.7
5.9
1.5
3.5
0.1
11
1,155
582
836
425
197
946
1,737
465
1,055
53
7
449
188
334
135
59
279
698
144
423
34
-0.50%
-0.29%
-0.22%
-0.32%
-0.22%
-0.20%
-0.21 %
-0.31%
-0.23%
-0.28%
-0.39%
1.5
9.2
16.3
1,071
3,377
3,014
362
1,083
1,305
-0.31%
-0.23%
-0.30%
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
12NOR2
Payment
Reduction
(percent
change in
total ESRD
payments)
-0.27%
ER12NO24.028
TABLE 23: Updated Estimated Impact ofESRD QIP Payment Reductions to ESRD
Facilities for PY 2027
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TABLE 24: Estimated ESRD QIP Aggregate Payment Reductions for Payment Years 2018
through 2027
Estimated Payment Reductions
$17,887,355
$15,990,524 (88 FR 76500)
$32,457,693 (87 FR 67297)
$17,104,031 (86 FR 62011)
$5,548,653 (87 FR 67297)
$0 127 (86 FR 62011)
$32,196,724 (83 FR 57062)
$31,581,441 (81 FR 77960)
$15,470,309 (80 FR 69074)
$11,576,214 (79 FR 66257)
(3) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
The ESRD QIP is applicable to ESRD
facilities. Since the Program’s inception,
there is evidence of improved
performance on ESRD QIP measures. As
we stated in the CY 2018 ESRD PPS
final rule, one objective measure we can
examine to demonstrate the improved
quality of care over time is the
improvement of performance standards
(82 FR 50795). As the ESRD QIP has
refined its measure set and as facilities
have gained experience with the
measures included in the Program,
performance standards have generally
continued to rise. We view this as
evidence that facility performance (and
therefore the quality of care provided to
Medicare beneficiaries) is objectively
improving. We continue to monitor and
evaluate trends in the quality and cost
of care for patients under the ESRD QIP,
incorporating both existing measures
and new measures as they are
implemented in the Program. We will
provide additional information about
the impact of the ESRD QIP on
beneficiaries as we learn more by
examining these impacts through the
analysis of available data from our
existing measures.
(4) Alternatives Considered
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In section IV.B.2 of this final rule, we
are finalizing the replacement of the Kt/
V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic beginning
with PY 2027. We considered not
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adopting this change. However, we
concluded that replacing this measure
was appropriate to ensure that facilities
are scored on Kt/V measure data
according to the individual facility’s
ESRD patient population and treatment
modalities.
e. ETC Model
(1) Overview
The ETC Model is a mandatory
payment model designed to test
payment adjustments to certain dialysis
and dialysis-related payments, as
discussed in the Specialty Care Models
final rule (85 FR 61114), the CY 2022
ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874), the
CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67136), and the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule (88 FR 76344) for ESRD facilities
and for Managing Clinicians for claims
with dates of service from January 1,
2021, to June 30, 2027. The
requirements for the ETC Model are set
forth in 42 CFR part 512, subpart C. For
the results of the detailed economic
analysis of the ETC Model and a
description of the methodology used to
perform the analysis, see the Specialty
Care Models final rule (85 FR 61114).
(2) Data and Methods
A stochastic simulation was created to
estimate the financial impacts of the
ETC Model relative to baseline
expenditures, where baseline
expenditures were defined as data from
CYs 2018 and 2019 without the changes
applied. The simulation relied upon
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
statistical assumptions derived from
retrospectively constructed ESRD
facilities’ and Managing Clinicians’
Medicare dialysis claims, transplant
claims, and transplant waitlist data
reported during 2018 and 2019, the
most recent years of complete data
available before the start of the ETC
Model. Both datasets and the riskadjustment methodologies for the ETC
Model were developed by the CMS
Office of the Actuary (OACT).
Table 25 summarizes the estimated
impact of the ETC Model when the
achievement benchmarks for each year
are set using the average of the home
dialysis rates for year t-1 and year t-2 for
the HRRs randomly selected for
participation in the ETC Model. We
estimate that the Medicare program
would save a net total of $43 million
from the PPA and HDPA between
January 1, 2021, and June 30, 2027, less
$15 million in increased training and
education expenditures. Therefore, the
net impact to Medicare spending is
estimated to be $28 million in savings.
This is consistent with the net impact to
Medicare spending estimated for the CY
2022 ESRD PPS final rule, in which the
net impact to Medicare spending was
also estimated to be $28 million in
savings (86 FR 62014 through 62016).
The minor methodological change to the
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary is not
expected to change this estimate.
(3) Medicare Estimate—Primary
Specification, Assume Rolling
Benchmark
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
12NOR2
ER12NO24.029
Payment Year
PY2027
PY2026
PY2025
PY2024
PY2023
PY2022
PY2021
PY2020
PY2019
PY2018
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TABLE 25: Estimates of Medicare Program Savings (Rounded $M) for ESRD Treatment
Choices (ETC) Model
Year of Model
2024
2025
2026
2023
2027
6.5 Year
Total*
Net Impact to Medicare Spending
15
9
-1
-9
-12
-19
-9
-28
Overall PPA Net & HDPA
14
7
-3
-11
-15
-22
-12
-43
-2
1
-1
0
-2
1
-1
-3
1
-2
-3
1
-2
-2
1
-1
0
-1
0
0
0
-13
6
-7
0
-20
12
-8
6
-25
15
-10
-31
18
-14
-39
19
-20
-21
10
-11
14
-9
5
-3
10
-145
79
-66
29
Total PPA Downward Adjustment
Total PPA Upward Adiustment
Total PPA Net
TotalHDPA
-22
13
-9
6
-27
16
-11
-34
19
-15
-43
21
-22
-23
11
-12
14
-9
6
-4
10
-158
84
-73
30
Kidney Disease Patient Education
Services Costs
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
HD Training Costs
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
10
Clinician PPA Downward
Adjustment
Clinician PPA Upward Adjustment
Clinician PPA Net
Clinician HDPA
Facility Downward Adjustment
Facility Upward Adjustment
Facility PPA Net
Facility HDPA
In Table 25, negative spending reflects
a reduction in Medicare spending, while
positive spending reflects an increase.
The results for this table were generated
from an average of 400 simulations
under the assumption that benchmarks
are rolled forward with a 1.5-year lag.
For a detailed description of the key
assumptions underlying the impact
estimate, see the Specialty Care Models
final rule (85 FR 61353) and the CY
2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 60214
through 60216).
(4) Effects on the Home Dialysis Rate,
the Transplant Rate, and Kidney
Transplantation
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2022
The change finalized in this rule is
not expected to impact the findings
reported for the effects of the ETC
Model on the home dialysis rate or the
transplant rate described in the
Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR
61355) and the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final
rule (86 FR 62017).
(5) Effects on Kidney Disease Patient
Education Services and HD Training
Add-Ons
The change finalized in this rule is
not expected to impact the findings
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reported for the effects of the ETC
Model on kidney disease patient
education services and HD training addons described in the Specialty Care
Models final rule (85 FR 61355) and the
CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR
62017).
(6) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Our decision to finalize changes to the
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary for
the purposes of attribution is not
expected to impact the findings reported
for the effects of ETC Model on
Medicare beneficiaries. Further details
on the impact of the ETC Model on
ESRD Beneficiaries may be found in the
Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR
61357) and the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final
rule (86 FR 61874).
(7) Alternatives Considered
Throughout this final rule, we have
identified finalized changes to our
policy and alternatives considered and
provided information as to the likely
effects of these alternatives and
rationale for our changed policy.
The Specialty Care Models final rule
(85 FR 61114), the CY 2022 ESRD PPS
final rule (86 FR 61874), the CY 2023
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67136), the
CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76344), and the finalized policy herein
address a model specific to ESRD. These
rules provide descriptions of the
requirements that we waive, identify the
performance metrics and payment
adjustments to be tested, and presents
rationales for our changes, and where
relevant, alternatives considered. For
context related to alternatives
previously considered when
establishing and modifying the ETC
Model we refer readers to section V.B.
and to the previous citations.
D. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A–4
(available at https://
www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/
circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), we have prepared
an accounting statement in Table 26
showing the classification of the impact
associated with the provisions of this
final rule.
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2021
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TABLE 26: Accounting Statement: Classification of Estimated Transfers and
Costs/Savings
ESRD PPS and AKI (CY 2025)
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities, if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. We do not
believe ESRD facilities are operated by
small government entities such as
counties or towns with populations of
50,000 or less, and therefore, they are
not enumerated or included in this
estimated RFA analysis. Individuals and
states are not included in the definition
of a small entity. Therefore, the number
of small entities estimated in this RFA
analysis includes the number of ESRD
facilities that are either considered
small businesses or nonprofit
organizations.
According to the Small Business
Administration’s (SBA) size standards,
an ESRD facility is classified as a small
business if it has total revenues of less
than $47 million in any 1 year.128 For
the purposes of this analysis, we
exclude the ESRD facilities that are
owned and operated by LDOs and
regional chains, which would have total
revenues of more than $6.5 billion in
any year when the total revenues for all
locations are combined for each
business (LDO or regional chain), and
are not, therefore, considered small
businesses. Because we lack data on
individual ESRD facilities’ receipts, we
cannot determine the number of small
proprietary ESRD facilities or the
proportion of ESRD facilities’ revenue
128 https://www.sba.gov/content/small-businesssize-standards.
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derived from Medicare FFS payments.
Therefore, we assume that all ESRD
facilities that are not owned by LDOs or
regional chains are considered small
businesses. Accordingly, we consider
the 485 ESRD facilities that are
independent and 351 ESRD facilities
that are hospital-based, as shown in the
ownership category in Table 19, to be
small businesses. These ESRD facilities
represent approximately 11 percent of
all ESRD facilities in our data set.
Additionally, we identified in our
analytic file that there are 792 ESRD
facilities that are considered nonprofit
organizations, which is approximately
10 percent of all ESRD facilities in our
data set. In total, accounting for the 369
nonprofit ESRD facilities that are also
considered small businesses, there are
1,259 ESRD facilities that are either
small businesses or nonprofit
organizations, which is approximately
16 percent of all ESRD facilities in our
data set.
As its measure of significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, HHS’s practice
in interpreting the RFA is to consider
effects economically ‘‘significant’’ on a
‘‘substantial’’ number of small entities
only if greater than 5 percent of
providers reach a threshold of 3 to 5
percent or more of total revenue or total
costs. We did not receive any public
comments on our regulatory impact
analysis for small entities. As shown in
Table 19, we estimate that the overall
revenue impact of this final rule on all
ESRD facilities is a positive increase to
Medicare FFS payments by
approximately 2.7 percent. For the
ESRD PPS updates in this final rule, a
hospital-based ESRD facility (as defined
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Frm 00128
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
by type of ownership, not by type of
ESRD facility) is estimated to receive a
4.5 percent increase in Medicare FFS
payments for CY 2025. An independent
facility (as defined by ownership type)
is likewise estimated to receive a 0.8
percent increase in Medicare FFS
payments for CY 2025. Among hospitalbased and independent ESRD facilities,
those furnishing fewer than 3,000
treatments per year are estimated to
receive a 5.3 percent increase in
Medicare FFS payments, and those
furnishing 3,000 or more treatments per
year are estimated to receive a 2.1
percent increase in Medicare FFS
payments. Among nonprofit ESRD
facilities, those furnishing fewer than
3,000 treatments per year are estimated
to receive a 6.0 percent increase in
Medicare FFS payments, and those
furnishing 3,000 or more treatments per
year are estimated to receive a 2.8
percent increase in Medicare FFS
payments.
For AKI dialysis, we are unable to
estimate whether patients would go to
ESRD facilities, however, we have
estimated there is a potential for $70
million in payment for AKI dialysis
treatments that could potentially be
furnished in ESRD facilities.
Based on the estimated Medicare
payment impacts described previously,
we believe that the change in revenue
threshold will be reached by some
categories of small entities as a result of
the policies in this final rule. This
analysis is based on the assumptions
described earlier in this section of this
final rule as well as the detailed impact
analysis discussed in section VII.C of
this final rule, which includes a
discussion of data sources, general
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
12NOR2
ER12NO24.031
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
Category
Transfers
Annualized Monetized Transfers
$210 million
Medicare ESRD Facilities
Bearers of Transfer Gain
Category
Transfers
Increased Beneficiary Co-insurance Payments
$50 million
Medicare ESRD Facilities
Bearers of Transfer Gain
ESRD QIP for PY 2027
Category
Transfers
Annualized Monetized Transfers
$17 .9 million
Federal Government
Bearers of Transfer Gain
ETC Model for July 1, 2022, through June 30, 2027
Category
Transfers
Net Monetized Transfers
$28 million
Federal Government
Bearers of Transfer Gain
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
assumptions, and alternatives
considered.
For the ESRD QIP, we estimate that of
the 2,750 ESRD facilities expected to
receive a payment reduction as a result
of their performance on the PY 2027
ESRD QIP, 468 are ESRD small entity
facilities. We present these findings in
Table 21 (‘‘Updated Estimated
Distribution of PY 2027 ESRD QIP
Payment Reductions’’) and Table 23
(‘‘Updated Estimated Impact of ESRD
QIP Payment Reductions to ESRD
Facilities for PY 2027’’). Table 21 shows
the updated overall estimated
distribution of payment reductions
resulting from the PY 2027 ESRD QIP.
Table 23 shows the updated estimated
impact of the ESRD QIP payment
reductions to all ESRD facilities for PY
2027, and also details the distribution of
ESRD facilities by size, geography, and
facility type.
For the ETC Model, we do not
anticipate any impact on ESRD facilities
from our decision to finalize a change to
the definition of an ESRD Beneficiary
for the purposes of beneficiary
attribution in the model. As previously
stated, we estimate that the Medicare
program would save a net total of $43
million from the ETC PPA and HDPA
between January 1, 2021, and June 30,
2027, less $15 million in increased
training and education expenditures.
Therefore, the net impact to Medicare
spending is estimated to be $28 million
in savings.
Therefore, the Secretary has
determined that this final rule will have
a significant economic impact, reflecting
a positive revenue increase, on a
substantial number of small entities.
This RFA section along with the RIA
constitutes our final regulatory
flexibility analysis.
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
fewer than 100 beds. We do not believe
this final rule would have a significant
impact on operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals because
most dialysis facilities are freestanding.
While there are 108 rural hospital-based
ESRD facilities, we do not know how
many of them are based at hospitals
with fewer than 100 beds. However,
overall, the 108 rural hospital-based
ESRD facilities would experience an
estimated 5.9 percent increase in
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payments. Therefore, the Secretary has
certified that this final rule will not
have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
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. In 2024, that
threshold is approximately $183
million. We do not interpret Medicare
payment rules as being unfunded
mandates but simply as conditions for
the receipt of payments from the Federal
Government for providing services that
meet Federal standards. This
interpretation applies whether the
facilities or providers are private, State,
local, or Tribal. Therefore, this final rule
does not mandate any requirements for
State, local, or Tribal governments, or
for the private sector.
G. Federalism
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
requirement costs on State and local
governments, preempts State law, or
otherwise has federalism implications.
We have reviewed this final rule under
the threshold criteria of Executive Order
13132, Federalism, and have
determined that it will not have
substantial direct effects on the rights,
roles, and responsibilities of State, local,
or Tribal government.
H. Congressional Review Act
This final regulation is subject to the
Congressional Review Act provisions of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (5
U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been
transmitted to the Congress and the
Comptroller General for review.
VIII. Files Available to the Public
The Addenda for the annual ESRD
PPS proposed and final rule will no
longer appear in the Federal Register.
Instead, the Addenda will be available
only through the internet and will be
posted on CMS’s website under the
regulation number, CMS–1805–F, at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/
ESRDpayment/End-Stage-RenalDisease-ESRD-Payment-Regulationsand-Notices. In addition to the
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89211
Addenda, limited data set files (LDS) are
available for purchase at https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Dataand-Systems/Files-for-Order/Limited
DataSets/EndStageRenalDisease
SystemFile. Readers who experience any
problems accessing the Addenda or LDS
files, should contact CMS by sending an
email to CMS at the following mailbox:
ESRDPayment@cms.hhs.gov.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on October 23,
2024.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 410
Diseases, Health facilities, Health
professions, Laboratories, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, X-rays.
42 CFR Part 413
Diseases, Health facilities, Medicare,
Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 494
Diseases, Health facilities, Medicare,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 512
Administrative practice and
procedure, Health care, Health facilities,
Health insurance, Intergovernmental
relations, Medicare, Penalties, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 410—SUPPLEMENTARY
MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI)
BENEFITS
1. The authority citation for part 410
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh,
1395rr, and 1395ddd.
2. Section 410.52 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) introductory text
to read as follows:
■
§ 410.52 Home dialysis services, supplies,
and equipment: Scope and conditions.
(a) Medicare Part B pays for the
following services, supplies, and
equipment furnished to a patient with
ESRD or an individual with Acute
Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in
§ 413.371 of this chapter in his or her
home:
*
*
*
*
*
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
PART 413—PRINCIPLES OF
REASONABLE COST
REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
SERVICES; PROSPECTIVELY
DETERMINED PAYMENT RATES FOR
SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES;
PAYMENT FOR ACUTE KIDNEY
INJURY DIALYSIS
3. The authority citation for part 413
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395d(d),
1395f(b), 1395g, 1395l(a), (i), and (n), 1395m,
1395x(v), 1395x(kkk), 1395hh, 1395rr, 1395tt,
and 1395ww.
4. Section 413.196 is amended by
revising paragraph (d)(2) to read as
follows:
■
§ 413.196 Notification of changes in ratesetting methodologies and payment rates.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(2) The wage index using the most
current wage data for occupations
related to the furnishing of renal
dialysis services from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics and occupational mix
data from the most recent full calendar
year of Medicare cost reports submitted
in accordance with § 413.198(b).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 413.231 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 413.231
Adjustment for wages.
(a) CMS adjusts the labor-related
portion of the base rate to account for
geographic differences in the area wage
levels using an appropriate wage index
(established by CMS) which reflects the
relative level of wages relevant to the
furnishing of renal dialysis services in
the geographic area in which the ESRD
facility is located.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Section 413.234 is amended by
revising paragraph (c) introductory text
and adding paragraph (c)(4) to read as
follows:
§ 413.234
Drug designation process.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment. A new renal dialysis drug
or biological product is paid for using a
transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment, which is based on 100
percent of average sales price (ASP),
except as provided in paragraph (c)(4) of
this section. If ASP is not available then
the transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment is based on 100 percent of
wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) and,
when WAC is not available, the
payment is based on the drug
manufacturer’s invoice.
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Notwithstanding the provisions in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section,
if CMS does not receive a full calendar
quarter of ASP data for a new renal
dialysis drug or biological product
within 30 days of the last day of the 3rd
calendar quarter after we begin applying
the transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment for the product, CMS will no
longer apply the transitional drug addon payment adjustment for that product
beginning no later than 2-calendar
quarters after we determine a full
calendar quarter of ASP data is not
available. If CMS stops receiving the
latest full calendar quarter of ASP data
for a new renal dialysis drug or
biological product during the applicable
time period specified in paragraph (c)(1)
or (2) of this section, CMS will no longer
apply the transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment for the product
beginning no later than 2-calendar
quarters after CMS determines that the
latest full calendar quarter of ASP data
is not available.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) For calendar years 2025 and 2026,
the transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment amount for a phosphate
binder is based on 100 percent of ASP
plus an additional amount derived from
6 percent of per-patient phosphate
binder spending based on utilization
and cost data.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Section 413.236 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b)(4) and (c) to read
as follows:
§ 413.236 Transitional add-on payment
adjustment for new and innovative
equipment and supplies.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) Has a complete Healthcare
Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) Level II code application
submitted, in accordance with the
HCPCS Level II coding procedures on
the CMS website, by the HCPCS Level
II code application deadline for
biannual Coding Cycle 2 for non-drug
and non-biological items, supplies, and
services as specified in the HCPCS Level
II coding guidance on the CMS website
prior to the particular calendar year;
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Announcement of determinations
and deadline for consideration of new
renal dialysis equipment or supply
applications. CMS will consider
whether a new renal dialysis supply or
equipment meets the eligibility criteria
specified in paragraph (b) of this section
and announce the results in the Federal
Register as part of its annual updates
and changes to the ESRD prospective
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Frm 00130
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
payment system. CMS will only
consider a complete application
received by CMS by February 1 prior to
the particular calendar year. FDA
marketing authorization for the
equipment or supply must occur by the
HCPCS Level II code application
deadline for biannual Coding Cycle 2 for
non-drug and non-biological items,
supplies, and services as specified in
the HCPCS Level II coding guidance on
the CMS website prior to the particular
calendar year.
■ 8. Section 413.237 is amended by
adding paragraph (a)(1)(vii) to read as
follows:
§ 413.237
Outliers.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) Renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that are Composite
Rate Services as defined in § 413.171.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Section 413.373 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 413.373 Other adjustments to the AKI
dialysis payment rate.
(a) CMS applies the wage-adjusted
add-on per treatment adjustment for
home and self-dialysis training as set
forth at § 413.235(c) to payments for AKI
dialysis claims that include such
training.
(b) The payment rate for AKI dialysis
may be adjusted by the Secretary (on a
budget neutral basis for payments under
section 1834(r) of the Act) by any other
adjustment factor under subparagraph
(D) of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act.
■ 10. Section 413.374 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 413.374 Renal dialysis services included
in the AKI dialysis payment rate.
(a) The AKI dialysis payment rate
applies to renal dialysis services (as
defined in subparagraph (B) of section
1881(b)(14) of the Act) furnished under
Part B by a renal dialysis facility or
provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act, including home
services, supplies, and equipment, and
self-dialysis.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 494—CONDITIONS FOR
COVERAGE FOR END-STAGE RENAL
DISEASE FACILITIES
11. The authority citation for part 494
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. l302 and l395hh.
12. Section 494.10 is amended by
revising the definitions of ‘‘Home
dialysis’’ and ‘‘Self-dialysis’’ to read as
follows:
■
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
§ 494.10
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Home dialysis means dialysis
performed at home by a patient or
caregiver who has completed an
appropriate course of training as
described in § 494.100(a).
Self-dialysis means dialysis
performed with little or no professional
assistance by a patient or caregiver who
has completed an appropriate course of
training as specified in § 494.100(a).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. Section 494.70 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (10) and
(c)(1)(i) to read as follows:
§ 494.70
Condition: Patients’ rights.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) Respect, dignity, and recognition
of his or her individuality and personal
needs, and sensitivity to his or her
psychological needs and ability to cope
with kidney failure;
*
*
*
*
*
(10) Be informed by the physician,
nurse practitioner, clinical nurse
specialist, or physician’s assistant
treating the patient for kidney failure of
his or her own medical status as
documented in the patient’s medical
record, unless the medical record
contains a documented
contraindication;
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) How plans in the individual
market will affect the patient’s access to,
and costs for the providers and
suppliers, services, and prescription
drugs that are currently within the
individual’s plan of care as well as those
likely to result from other documented
health care needs. This must include an
overview of the health-related and
financial risks and benefits of the
individual market plans available to the
patient (including plans offered through
and outside the Exchange).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Section 494.80 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with RULES2
§ 494.80
Condition: Patient assessment.
The facility’s interdisciplinary team
consists of, at a minimum, the patient or
the patient’s designee (if the patient
chooses), a registered nurse, a physician
treating the patient for kidney failure, a
social worker, and a dietitian. The
interdisciplinary team is responsible for
providing each patient with an
individualized and comprehensive
assessment of his or her needs. The
comprehensive assessment must be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:53 Nov 08, 2024
Jkt 265001
used to develop the patient’s treatment
plan and expectations for care.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. Section 494.90 is amended by
revising paragraph (b)(4) to read as
follows:
§ 494.90
Condition: Patient plan of care.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(4) The dialysis facility must ensure
that all dialysis patients are seen by a
physician, nurse practitioner, clinical
nurse specialist, or physician’s assistant
providing dialysis care at least monthly,
as evidenced by a monthly progress note
placed in the medical record, and
periodically while the hemodialysis
patient is receiving in-facility dialysis.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Section 494.100 is amended by
revising paragraph (a)(3)(i) to read as
follows:
§ 494.100
Condition: Care at home.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The nature and management of
their kidney failure.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Section 494.120 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
§ 494.120 Condition: Special purpose renal
dialysis facilities.
A special purpose renal dialysis
facility is approved to furnish dialysis
on a short-term basis at special
locations. Special purpose dialysis
facilities are divided into two categories:
vacation camps (locations that serve
patients with kidney failure while the
patients are in a temporary residence)
and facilities established to serve
patients with kidney failure under
emergency circumstances.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 18. Section 494.130 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 494.130
Condition: Laboratory services.
The dialysis facility must provide, or
make available, laboratory services
(other than tissue pathology and
histocompatibility) to meet the needs of
the patient. Any laboratory services,
including tissue pathology and
histocompatibility must be furnished by
or obtained from, a facility that meets
the requirements for laboratory services
specified in part 493 of this chapter.
■ 19. Section 494.170 is amended by
revising the introductory text to read as
follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
§ 494.170
89213
Condition: Medical records.
The dialysis facility must maintain
complete, accurate, and accessible
records on all patients, including home
patients who elect to receive dialysis
supplies and equipment from a supplier
that is not a provider of dialysis services
and all other home dialysis patients
whose care is under the supervision of
the facility.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 512—RADIATION ONCOLOGY
MODEL AND END STAGE RENAL
DISEASE TREATMENT CHOICES
MODEL
20. The authority citation for part 512
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1315a, and
1395hh.
21. Section 512.310 is amended by
revising the definition of ‘‘ESRD
Beneficiary’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 512.310
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
ESRD Beneficiary means a beneficiary
who meets any of the following:
(1) Is receiving dialysis or other
services for end-stage renal disease, up
to and including the month in which
the beneficiary receives a kidney
transplant up to and including the
month in which the beneficiary receives
a kidney transplant.
(2) Has already received a kidney
transplant and has a non-AKI dialysis or
MCP claim at least 12 months after the
beneficiary’s latest transplant date.
(3) Has a kidney transplant failure less
than 12 months after the beneficiary’s
latest transplant date as identified by:
(i) Two or more MCP claims in the180
days following the date on which the
kidney transplant was received;
(ii) 24 or more maintenance dialysis
treatments at any time after 180 days
following the transplant date; or,
(iii) Indication of a transplant failure
after the beneficiary’s date of transplant
based on data from the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients
(SRTR) database.
(4) If a beneficiary meets more than
one of criteria described in paragraphs
(3)(i) through (iii) of this definition, the
beneficiary will be considered an ESRD
beneficiary starting with the earliest
month in which transplant failure was
recorded.
*
*
*
*
*
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2024–25486 Filed 11–1–24; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
E:\FR\FM\12NOR2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 12, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 89084-89213]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-25486]
[[Page 89083]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 218
November 12, 2024
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
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42 CFR Parts 410, 413, 494, et al.
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System,
Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals With Acute
Kidney Injury, Conditions for Coverage for End-Stage Renal Disease
Facilities, End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, and End-
Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices Model; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 218 / Tuesday, November 12, 2024 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 89084]]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 410, 413, 494, and 512
[CMS-1805-F]
RIN 0938-AV27
Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment
System, Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals
With Acute Kidney Injury, Conditions for Coverage for End-Stage Renal
Disease Facilities, End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program,
and End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices Model
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: This final rule updates and revises the End-Stage Renal
Disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment System for calendar year 2025. This
rule also updates the payment rate for renal dialysis services
furnished by an ESRD facility to individuals with acute kidney injury.
In addition, this rule updates requirements for the Conditions for
Coverage for ESRD Facilities, ESRD Quality Incentive Program, and ESRD
Treatment Choices Model.
DATES: These regulations are effective on January 1, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[email protected] or Nicolas Brock at (410) 786-5148 for
issues related to the ESRD Prospective Payment System (PPS) and
coverage and payment for renal dialysis services furnished to
individuals with acute kidney injury (AKI).
[email protected], for issues related to applications
for the Transitional Drug Add-on Payment Adjustment (TDAPA) or
Transitional Add-On Payment Adjustment for New and Innovative Equipment
and Supplies (TPNIES).
[email protected], for issues related to the ESRD Quality
Incentive Program (QIP).
[email protected], for issues related to the ESRD Treatment
Choices (ETC) Model.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Plain Language Summary: In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(4), a
plain language summary of this rule may be found at https://www.regulations.gov/.
Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) Copyright Notice: Throughout
this final rule, we use CPT[supreg] codes and descriptions to refer to
a variety of services. We note that CPT[supreg] codes and descriptions
are copyright 2020 American Medical Association (AMA). All Rights
Reserved. CPT[supreg] is a registered trademark of the AMA. Applicable
Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) and Defense Federal Acquisition
Regulations (DFAR) apply.
Table of Contents
To assist readers in referencing sections contained in this
preamble, we are providing a Table of Contents.
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
C. Summary of Cost and Benefits
II. Calendar Year (CY) 2025 End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD)
Prospective Payment System (PPS)
A. Background
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule, Public Comments, and
Responses to the Comments on the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
C. Transitional Add-On Payment Adjustment for New and Innovative
Equipment and Supplies (TPNIES) Applications and Technical Changes
for CY 2025
D. Continuation of Approved Transitional Add-On Payment
Adjustments for New and Innovative Equipment and Supplies for CY
2025
E. Continuation of Approved Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments for CY 2025
III. Final CY 2025 Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With AKI
A. Background
B. Public Comments and Responses on the Proposal To Allow
Medicare Payment for Home Dialysis for Beneficiaries With AKI
C. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY 2025
D. AKI and the ESRD Facility Conditions for Coverage
IV. Updates to the End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program
(ESRD QIP)
A. Background
B. Updates to Requirements Beginning With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
C. Requests for Information (RFIs) on Topics Relevant to ESRD
QIP
V. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices (ETC) Model
A. Background
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
C. Request for Information
VI. Collection of Information Requirements
VII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
B. Overall Impact Analysis
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
D. Accounting Statement
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
G. Federalism
H. Congressional Review Act
VIII. Files Available to the Public via the Internet
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose
This rule finalizes changes related to the End-Stage Renal Disease
(ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS), payment for renal dialysis
services furnished to individuals with acute kidney injury (AKI), the
Conditions for Coverage for ESRD facilities, the ESRD Quality Incentive
Program (QIP), and the ESRD Treatment Choices (ETC) Model.
Additionally, this rule finalizes and discusses policies that reflect
our commitment to achieving equity in health care for our beneficiaries
by supporting our ability to assess whether, and to what extent, our
programs and policies perpetuate or exacerbate systemic barriers to
opportunities and benefits for underserved communities. For example, we
are finalizing the proposal to allow Medicare payment for home dialysis
for beneficiaries with acute kidney injury, which would assist this
vulnerable population with transportation and scheduling issues and
allow them to have flexibility in their dialysis treatment modality.
Additionally, we discuss the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS bundled payment beginning January 1, 2025, which will expand
access to these drugs to the 21 percent of the ESRD PPS population who
do not have Part D coverage. Our internal data show that a significant
portion of ESRD beneficiaries who lack Part D coverage are African
American/Black patients with ESRD. Our policy objectives include a
commitment to advancing health equity, which stands as the first pillar
of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Strategic
Plan,\1\ and reflect the goals of the Administration, as stated in the
President's Executive Order 13985.\2\ We define health equity as the
attainment of the highest level of health for all people, where
everyone has a fair and just opportunity to attain their optimal health
regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual orientation, gender
identity, socioeconomic status, geography, preferred language, or other
factors that affect access to care and
[[Page 89085]]
health outcomes.'' \3\ In the calendar year (CY) 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule, we noted that, when compared with all Medicare fee-for-service
(FFS) beneficiaries, Medicare FFS beneficiaries receiving dialysis are
disproportionately young, male, African American/Black, have
disabilities and low income as measured by eligibility for both
Medicare and Medicaid (dual eligible status), and reside in an urban
setting (87 FR 67183). In this final rule, we continue to address
health equity for beneficiaries with ESRD who are members of
underserved communities, including but not limited to those living in
rural communities, those who have disabilities, racial and ethnic
minorities, and American Indians and Alaska Natives. The term
`underserved communities' refers to populations sharing a particular
characteristic, including geographic communities, that have been
systematically denied a full opportunity to participate in aspects of
economic, social, and civic life.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (2022). Health
Equity. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
\2\ 86 FR 7009 (January 25, 2021). https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government.
\3\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (2022). Health
Equity. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
\4\ 86 FR 7009 (January 25, 2021). https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government.
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1. End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS)
On January 1, 2011, we implemented the ESRD PPS, a case-mix
adjusted, bundled PPS for renal dialysis services furnished by ESRD
facilities as required by section 1881(b)(14) of the Social Security
Act (the Act), as added by section 153(b) of the Medicare Improvements
for Patients and Providers Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L. 110-275).
Section 1881(b)(14)(F) of the Act, as added by section 153(b) of MIPPA,
and amended by section 3401(h) of the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (the Affordable Care Act) (Pub. L. 111-148), established that
beginning CY 2012, and each subsequent year, the Secretary of the
Department of Health and Human Services (the Secretary) shall annually
increase payment amounts by an ESRD market basket percentage increase,
reduced by the productivity adjustment described in section
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. This rule finalizes updates to the
ESRD PPS for CY 2025.
2. Coverage and Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)
On June 29, 2015, the President signed the Trade Preferences
Extension Act of 2015 (TPEA) (Pub. L. 114-27). Section 808(a) of the
TPEA amended section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act to provide coverage for
renal dialysis services furnished on or after January 1, 2017, by a
renal dialysis facility or a provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to an individual with AKI. Section 808(b) of the
TPEA amended section 1834 of the Act by adding a new subsection (r)
that provides for payment for renal dialysis services furnished by
renal dialysis facilities or providers of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to individuals with AKI at the ESRD PPS base
rate beginning January 1, 2017. This final rule updates the AKI payment
rate for CY 2025. Additionally, this rule extends payment for home
dialysis and the payment adjustment for home and self-dialysis training
to renal dialysis services provided to beneficiaries with AKI.
3. End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program (ESRD QIP)
The End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program (ESRD QIP) is
authorized by section 1881(h) of the Act. The Program establishes
incentives for facilities to achieve high quality performance on
measures with the goal of improving outcomes for ESRD beneficiaries.
This rule finalizes our proposals to replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measure
topic and to remove National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Dialysis
Event reporting measure beginning with Payment Year (PY) 2027. This
rule also discusses feedback received in response to our requests for
public comment on two topics relevant to the ESRD QIP.
4. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices (ETC) Model
The ETC Model is a mandatory Medicare payment model tested under
section 1115A of the Act. The ETC Model is operated by the Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (Innovation Center). The ETC Model
tests the use of payment adjustments to encourage greater utilization
of home dialysis and kidney transplants, to preserve or enhance the
quality of care furnished to Medicare beneficiaries while reducing
Medicare expenditures. The ETC Model was finalized as part of a final
rule published in the Federal Register on September 29, 2020, titled
``Medicare Program: Specialty Care Models to Improve Quality of Care
and Reduce Expenditures'' (85 FR 61114), referred to herein as the
``Specialty Care Models final rule.'' Subsequently, the ETC Model has
been updated three times in the annual ESRD PPS final rules for
calendar year (CY) 2022 (86 FR 61874), CY 2023 (87 FR 67136), and CY
2024 (88 FR 76344).
This final rule makes certain changes to the methodology CMS uses
to identify transplant failure for the purposes of defining an ESRD
beneficiary and attributing an ESRD beneficiary to the ETC Model. We
also solicited input from the public through a Request for Information
(RFI) on topics pertaining to increasing equitable access to home
dialysis and kidney transplantation. Feedback we receive from the
public will be used to inform CMS' thinking regarding opportunities and
barriers the Innovation Center may address in potential successor
models to the ETC Model.
B. Summary of the Major Provisions
1. ESRD PPS
Update to the ESRD PPS base rate for CY 2025: The final CY
2025 ESRD PPS base rate is $273.82, an increase from the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS base rate of $271.02. This amount reflects the application of the
wage index budget-neutrality adjustment factor (0.988600), and a
productivity-adjusted market basket percentage increase of 2.2 percent
as required by section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(I) of the Act, equaling
$273.82 (($271.02 x 0.988600) x 1.022 = $273.82).
Modification to the wage index methodology: We are
finalizing a new ESRD-specific wage index that will be used to adjust
ESRD PPS payment for geographic differences in area wages on an annual
basis. Beginning for CY 2025, we will change our methodology to use
mean hourly wage data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program and full
time equivalent (FTE) labor and treatment volume data from freestanding
ESRD facility Medicare cost reports to produce an ESRD-specific wage
index for use, instead of using the hospital wage index values for each
geographic area, which are derived from hospital cost report data.
Additionally, we are finalizing updates to the wage index to reflect
the latest core-based statistical area (CBSA) delineations determined
by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to better account for
differing wage levels in areas in which ESRD facilities are located.
Annual update to the wage index: For CY 2025, we are
finalizing updates to the wage index using the new methodology based on
the latest available data. This is consistent with
[[Page 89086]]
our past approach to updating the ESRD PPS wage index on an annual
basis but uses the new wage index methodology based on data from BLS
and freestanding ESRD facility Medicare cost reports.
Modifications to the outlier policy: We are finalizing
several proposed revisions to the outlier policy. For the outlier
payment methodology, we are finalizing the use of a drug inflation
factor based on actual spending on drugs and biological products rather
than the growth in the price proxy for drugs used in the ESRD Bundled
(ESRDB) market basket. We are also finalizing the use of the growth in
the ESRDB market basket price proxies for laboratory tests and supplies
to estimate CY 2025 outlier spending for these items. Additionally, we
are finalizing our proposal to account for the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for outlier-eligible drugs and biological
products during the post-TDAPA period. Lastly, we are finalizing the
expansion of the list of eligible ESRD outlier services to include
drugs and biological products that were or would have been included in
the composite rate prior to establishment of the ESRD PPS.
Annual update to the outlier policy: We are updating the
outlier policy based on the most current data and the final methodology
changes previously discussed. Accordingly, we are updating the Medicare
allowable payment (MAP) amounts for adult and pediatric patients for CY
2025 using the latest available CY 2023 claims data. We are updating
the ESRD outlier services fixed dollar loss (FDL) amount for pediatric
patients using the latest available CY 2023 claims data and updating
the FDL amount for adult patients using the latest available claims
data from CY 2021, CY 2022, and CY 2023. For pediatric beneficiaries,
the final FDL amount will increase from $11.32 to $234.26, and the MAP
amount will increase from $23.36 to $59.60, as compared to CY 2024
values. For adult beneficiaries, the final FDL amount will decrease
from $71.76 to $45.41, and the MAP amount will decrease from $36.28 to
$31.02. We note that the inclusion of composite rate drugs and
biological products will cause a significant increase in the final FDL
and MAP amounts for pediatric patients due to high-cost composite rate
drugs furnished to pediatric beneficiaries; this is discussed in
further detail in section II.B.3.e of this final rule. The 1.0 percent
target for outlier payments was achieved in CY 2023, as outlier
payments represented approximately 1.0 percent of total Medicare
payments.
Update to the offset amount for the transitional add-on
payment adjustment for new and innovative equipment and supplies
(TPNIES) for CY 2025: The final CY 2025 average per treatment offset
amount for the TPNIES for capital-related assets that are home dialysis
machines is $10.22. This final offset amount reflects the application
of the final productivity-adjusted ESRDB market basket update of 2.2
percent ($10.00 x 1.022 = $10.22). There are no capital-related assets
set to receive the TPNIES in CY 2025 for which this offset would apply.
Update to the Post-TDAPA Add-on Payment Adjustment
amounts: We calculate the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment in
accordance with Sec. 413.234(g). The final post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount for Korsuva[supreg] is $0.4601 per treatment, which
will be included in the calculation of the total post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment for each quarter in CY 2025. The estimated post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for Jesduvroq is $0.0096 per
treatment, which will be included in the calculation for only the
fourth quarter of CY 2025. We are finalizing our proposal to publish
the final post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for drugs and
biological products that do not have a full year of utilization data at
the time of rulemaking after the publication of the final rule through
a Change Request (CR). For CY 2025, this will be the case for
Jesduvroq.
Update to the Low-Volume Payment Adjustment (LVPA): We are
finalizing our proposal to modify the LVPA policy to create a two-
tiered LVPA whereby ESRD facilities that furnished fewer than 3,000
treatments per cost reporting year will receive a 28.9 percent upward
adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate and ESRD facilities that furnished
3,000 to 3,999 treatments will receive an 18.3 percent adjustment. We
are also finalizing that the tier determination would be based on the
median treatment count over the past 3 cost reporting years.
Inclusion of oral-only drugs in the ESRD PPS bundled
payment: Under 42 CFR 413.174(f)(6), payment to an ESRD facility for
oral-only renal dialysis service drugs and biological products is
included in the ESRD PPS bundled payment effective January 1, 2025. In
this final rule, we are providing information about how we will
operationalize the inclusion of oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS as
well as budgetary estimates of the effects of this inclusion for public
awareness. After reviewing public comments, we are finalizing a $36.41
increase to the monthly TDAPA amount for claims which utilize phosphate
binders to account for operational costs related to ESRD facilities
providing phosphate binders that were not addressed when the ESRD PPS
base rate was developed for CY 2011.
2. Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals With
AKI
Update to the payment rate for individuals with AKI: We
are finalizing an update the AKI payment rate for CY 2025. The final CY
2025 payment rate is $273.82, which reflects the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS
base rate of $273.82 reduced by the home and self-dialysis training
add-on payment budget-neutrality adjustment of $0.00 (as detailed in
section III.C.3 of this final rule).
Payment for home dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI: We
are finalizing our proposal to allow Medicare payment for beneficiaries
with AKI to dialyze at home. Payment for home dialysis treatments
furnished to beneficiaries with AKI will be made at the same payment
rate as in-center dialysis treatments. We are finalizing our proposal
to permit ESRD facilities to bill Medicare for the home and self-
dialysis training add-on payment adjustment for beneficiaries with AKI,
and to implement this adjustment in a budget neutral manner with a
$0.00 reduction to the AKI base rate. We are finalizing modifications
to the ESRD facility conditions for coverage (CfCs) to implement this
policy change.
3. ESRD QIP
Beginning with PY 2027, we are finalizing our proposal to replace
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure, on which
facility performance is scored on a single measure based on one set of
performance standards, with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measure topic,
which would be comprised of four individual Kt/V measures and scored
based on a separate set of performance standards for each of those
measures. We are also finalizing our proposal to remove the National
Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Dialysis Event reporting measure from
the ESRD QIP measure set beginning with PY 2027. We are discussing
feedback received in response to our request for public comment on a
potential health equity payment adjustment and our request for public
comment on potential future updates to the data validation policy.
4. ETC Model
Beginning for CY 2025, we are finalizing the proposed modification
to
[[Page 89087]]
the methodology used to attribute ESRD Beneficiaries to the ETC Model,
specifically, to the definition of an ESRD Beneficiary at 42 CFR
512.310. Under the ETC Model, CMS attributes ESRD beneficiaries to the
ETC Model that meet several criteria including having a kidney
transplant failure less than 12 months after the transplant date. We
are refining the methodology we use to identify ESRD Beneficiaries with
a kidney transplant failure to reduce the likelihood that CMS is
overestimating the true number of transplant failures for the purposes
of the model. We provide more detail on the finalized modification and
its rationale in section V.B of this final rule.
We also sought input from the public through a RFI on the future of
the ETC Model, potential successor Models and other approaches CMS may
consider to support beneficiary access to patient-centered modalities
for treatment of ESRD.
C. Summary of Costs and Benefits
In section VII.C.5 of this final rule, we set forth a detailed
analysis of the impacts that the final changes would have on affected
entities and beneficiaries. The impacts include the following:
1. Impacts of the Final ESRD PPS
The impact table in section VII.C.5.a of this final rule displays
the estimated change in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in CY 2025
compared to estimated Medicare payments in CY 2024. The overall impact
of the CY 2025 payment changes is projected to be a 2.7 percent
increase in Medicare payments. Hospital-based ESRD facilities will have
an estimated 4.5 percent increase in Medicare payments compared with
freestanding ESRD facilities with an estimated 2.6 percent increase. We
estimate that the aggregate ESRD PPS expenditures will increase by
approximately $220 million in CY 2025 compared to CY 2024 as a result
of the proposed payment policies in this rule. Because of the projected
2.7 percent overall payment increase, we estimate there will be an
increase in beneficiary coinsurance payments of 2.7 percent in CY 2025,
which translates to approximately $40 million.
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act provides that the ESRD PPS
may include such other payment adjustments as the Secretary determines
appropriate. Under this authority, CMS implemented Sec. 413.234 to
establish the TDAPA, a transitional drug add-on payment adjustment for
certain new renal dialysis drugs and biological products and Sec.
413.236 to establish the TPNIES, a transitional add-on payment
adjustment for certain new and innovative equipment and supplies. The
TDAPA and the TPNIES are not budget neutral.
As discussed in section II.D of this final rule, since no new items
were approved for the TPNIES for CY 2024 (88 FR 76431) there are no
continuing TPNIES payments for CY 2025. In addition, since we did not
receive any applications for the TPNIES for CY 2025, there will be no
new TPNIES payments for CY 2025. As discussed in section II.E of this
final rule, the TDAPA payment periods for Jesduvroq and
DefenCath[supreg], will continue into CY 2025. As described in section
VII.C.5.b of this final rule, we estimate that the combined total TDAPA
payment amounts for Jesduvroq and DefenCath[supreg] in CY 2025 will be
approximately $25,633,599, of which, $5,126,719 will be attributed to
beneficiary coinsurance amounts.
2. Impacts of the Final Payment Rate for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals With AKI
The impact table in section VII.C.5.c of this final rule displays
the estimated change in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities for renal
dialysis services furnished to individuals with AKI compared to
estimated Medicare payments for such services in CY 2024. The overall
impact of the CY 2025 changes is projected to be a 2.3 percent increase
in Medicare payments for individuals with AKI. Hospital-based ESRD
facilities will have an estimated 3.4 percent increase in Medicare
payments compared with freestanding ESRD facilities that will have an
estimated 2.3 percent increase. The overall impact reflects the effects
of the final Medicare payment rate update and the final CY 2025 ESRD
PPS wage index, as well as the policy to extend payment for AKI
dialysis at home, which is not expected to have any impact on payment
rates. As discussed in section III.C.3, we are finalizing our proposal
to extend the ESRD PPS home and self-dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment to AKI patients; however, that adjustment is required to be
implemented in a budget neutral manner for AKI payments, so it will not
have any impact on the overall payment amounts for AKI renal dialysis
services and therefore is not included in these estimates. We estimate
that the aggregate Medicare payments made to ESRD facilities for renal
dialysis services furnished to individuals with AKI, at the final CY
2025 ESRD PPS base rate, will increase by $1 million in CY 2025
compared to CY 2024.
3. Impacts of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
We estimate that, as a result of previously finalized policies and
changes to the ESRD QIP that we are finalizing in this final rule, the
overall economic impact of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP will be approximately
$154 million. The $154 million estimate for PY 2027 includes $136.1
million in costs associated with the collection of information
requirements and approximately $17.9 million in payment reductions
across all facilities.
4. Impacts of the Proposed Changes to the ETC Model
The final change to the definition of an ESRD Beneficiary for the
purposes of attribution in the ETC Model is not expected to have a net
effect on the model's projected economic impact.
II. Calendar Year (CY) 2025 End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Prospective
Payment System (PPS)
A. Background
1. Statutory Background
On January 1, 2011, CMS implemented the ESRD PPS, a case-mix
adjusted bundled PPS for renal dialysis services furnished by ESRD
facilities, as required by section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, as added by
section 153(b) of the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers
Act of 2008 (MIPPA) (Pub. L. 110-275). Section 1881(b)(14)(F) of the
Act, as added by section 153(b) of MIPPA and amended by section 3401(h)
of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Affordable Care Act)
(Pub. L. 111-148), established that beginning with CY 2012, and each
subsequent year, the Secretary shall annually increase payment amounts
by an ESRD market basket percentage increase reduced by the
productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of
the Act.
Section 632 of the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA)
(Pub. L. 112-240) included several provisions that apply to the ESRD
PPS. Section 632(a) of ATRA added section 1881(b)(14)(I) to the Act,
which required the Secretary, by comparing per patient utilization data
from 2007 with such data from 2012, to reduce the single payment for
renal dialysis services furnished on or after January 1, 2014, to
reflect the Secretary's estimate of the change in the utilization of
ESRD-related drugs and biologicals \5\ (excluding oral-only ESRD-
[[Page 89088]]
related drugs). Consistent with this requirement, in the CY 2014 ESRD
PPS final rule, we finalized $29.93 as the total drug utilization
reduction and finalized a policy to implement the amount over a 3- to
4-year transition period (78 FR 72161 through 72170).
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\5\ As discussed in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final rule (83 FR
56922), we began using the term ``biological products'' instead of
``biologicals'' under the ESRD PPS to be consistent with FDA
nomenclature. We use the term ``biological products'' in this final
rule except where referencing specific language in the Act or
regulations.
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Section 632(b) of ATRA prohibited the Secretary from paying for
oral-only ESRD-related drugs and biologicals under the ESRD PPS prior
to January 1, 2016. Section 632(c) of ATRA required the Secretary, by
no later than January 1, 2016, to analyze the case-mix payment
adjustments under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(i) of the Act and make
appropriate revisions to those adjustments.
On April 1, 2014, the Protecting Access to Medicare Act of 2014
(PAMA) (Pub. L. 113-93) was enacted. Section 217 of PAMA included
several provisions that apply to the ESRD PPS. Specifically, sections
217(b)(1) and (2) of PAMA amended sections 1881(b)(14)(F) and (I) of
the Act and replaced the drug utilization adjustment that was finalized
in the CY 2014 ESRD PPS final rule (78 FR 72161 through 72170) with
specific provisions that dictated the market basket update for CY 2015
(0.0 percent) and how the market basket percentage increase should be
reduced in CY 2016 through CY 2018.
Section 217(a)(1) of PAMA amended section 632(b)(1) of ATRA to
provide that the Secretary may not pay for oral-only ESRD-related drugs
under the ESRD PPS prior to January 1, 2024. Section 217(a)(2) of PAMA
further amended section 632(b)(1) of ATRA by requiring that in
establishing payment for oral-only drugs under the ESRD PPS, the
Secretary must use data from the most recent year available. Section
217(c) of PAMA provided that as part of the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
rulemaking, the Secretary shall establish a process for (1) determining
when a product is no longer an oral-only drug; and (2) including new
injectable and intravenous products into the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
Section 204 of the Stephen Beck, Jr., Achieving a Better Life
Experience Act of 2014 (ABLE) (Pub. L. 113-295) amended section
632(b)(1) of ATRA, as amended by section 217(a)(1) of PAMA, to provide
that payment for oral-only renal dialysis drugs and biological products
cannot be made under the ESRD PPS bundled payment prior to January 1,
2025.
2. System for Payment of Renal Dialysis Services
Under the ESRD PPS, a single per-treatment payment is made to an
ESRD facility for all the renal dialysis services defined in section
1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act and furnished to an individual for the
treatment of ESRD in the ESRD facility or in a patient's home. We have
codified our definition of renal dialysis services at Sec. 413.171,
which is in 42 CFR part 413, subpart H, along with other ESRD PPS
payment policies.
The ESRD PPS base rate is adjusted for characteristics of both
adult and pediatric patients and accounts for patient case-mix
variability. The adult case-mix adjusters include five categories of
age, body surface area, low body mass index, onset of dialysis, and
four comorbidity categories (that is, pericarditis, gastrointestinal
tract bleeding, hereditary hemolytic or sickle cell anemia,
myelodysplastic syndrome). A different set of case-mix adjusters are
applied for the pediatric population. Pediatric patient-level adjusters
include two age categories (under age 13, or age 13 to 17) and two
dialysis modalities (that is, peritoneal or hemodialysis) (Sec.
413.235(a) and (b)(1)).
The ESRD PPS provides for three facility-level adjustments. The
first payment adjustment accounts for ESRD facilities furnishing a low
volume of dialysis treatments (Sec. 413.232). The second payment
adjustment reflects differences in area wage levels developed from
core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) (Sec. 413.231). The third payment
adjustment accounts for ESRD facilities furnishing renal dialysis
services in a rural area (Sec. 413.233).
There are six additional payment adjustments under the ESRD PPS.
The ESRD PPS provides adjustments, when applicable, for: (1) a training
add-on for home and self-dialysis modalities (Sec. 413.235(c)); (2) an
additional payment for high cost outliers due to unusual variations in
the type or amount of medically necessary care (Sec. 413.237); (3) a
TDAPA for certain new renal dialysis drugs and biological products
(Sec. 413.234(c)); (4) a TPNIES for certain new and innovative renal
dialysis equipment and supplies (Sec. 413.236(d)); (5) a transitional
pediatric ESRD add-on payment adjustment (TPEAPA) of 30 percent of the
per-treatment payment amount for renal dialysis services furnished to
pediatric ESRD patients (Sec. 413.235(b)(2)); and (6) a post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment for certain new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products after the end of the TDAPA period (Sec.
413.234(g)).
3. Updates to the ESRD PPS
Policy changes to the ESRD PPS are proposed and finalized annually
in the Federal Register. The CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule appeared in
the August 12, 2010, issue of the Federal Register (75 FR 49030 through
49214). That rule implemented the ESRD PPS beginning on January 1,
2011, in accordance with section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, as added by
section 153(b) of MIPPA, over a 4-year transition period. Since the
implementation of the ESRD PPS, we have published annual rules to make
routine updates, policy changes, and clarifications.
Most recently, we published a final rule, which appeared in the
November 6, 2023, issue of the Federal Register, titled ``Medicare
Program; End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System, Payment
for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals with Acute Kidney
Injury, and End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program, and End-
Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices Model,'' referred to herein as
the ``CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule.'' In that rule, we updated the ESRD
PPS base rate, wage index, and outlier policy for CY 2024. We also
finalized a post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment; a TPEAPA for
pediatric ESRD patients for CYs 2024, 2025, and 2026; administrative
changes to the LVPA eligibility requirements to allow additional
flexibilities for ESRD facilities impacted by a disaster or other
emergency; clarifications on TPNIES eligibility requirements; and,
effective January 1, 2025, requirements for ESRD facilities to report
time on machine for in-center hemodialysis treatments, and to report
discarded amounts of renal dialysis drugs and biological products from
single-dose containers or single-use packages. For further detailed
information regarding these updates and policy changes, see 88 FR
76344.
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule, Public Comments, and Response to
the Comments on the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
The proposed rule, titled ``Medicare Program; End-Stage Renal
Disease Prospective Payment System, Payment for Renal Dialysis Services
Furnished to Individuals with Acute Kidney Injury, End-Stage Renal
Disease Quality Incentive Program, and End-Stage Renal Disease
Treatment Choices Model'' (89 FR 55760-55843), referred to as the ``CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule,'' appeared in the July 5, 2024 issue of
the Federal Register, with a comment period that ended on August 26,
2024. In that proposed rule, we proposed to make a number of updates
and policy
[[Page 89089]]
changes for CY 2025, including annual updates to the ESRD PPS base
rate, a new ESRD PPS wage index methodology, changes to the list of
eligible ESRD outlier services, several methodological changes to the
outlier policy, changes to the LVPA structure, updates to the post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts, and updates to the offset
amount for the TPNIES.
We received 212 public comments on our proposals, including
comments from kidney and dialysis organizations, such as large and
small dialysis organizations, for-profit and non-profit ESRD
facilities, ESRD networks, and dialysis coalitions. We also received
comments from patients; healthcare providers for adult and pediatric
ESRD beneficiaries; home dialysis services and advocacy organizations;
provider and legal advocacy organizations; administrators and insurance
groups; a non-profit dialysis association; a professional association;
alliances for kidney care and home dialysis stakeholders; drug and
device manufacturers; health care systems; a health solutions company;
and the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC). Of these 212
public comments, approximately 70 were unique and approximately 130
were either duplicative submissions or were solely a form letter. We
received approximately 110 comments from unique submitters, which
reflected a form letter expressing support for a piece of ESRD-related
draft legislation which would delay the inclusion of oral-only drugs
into the ESRD PPS. We note that we do not comment on draft legislation
in this rule will not be directly responding to the support for this
draft legislation in this rule, but we are interpreting these letters
as expressing support for a delay to the inclusion of phosphate binders
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment and have responded to comments which
express this sentiment in section II.B.7 of this final rule.
Additionally, we note that many of the form letters we received appear
to be duplicative submissions based on many names and contact
information repeating, so we wish to encourage organizers of these and
future campaigns in the future to avoid such duplication as it creates
additional operational considerations when reviewing comments.
We received numerous comments on policies for which we did not make
any proposals, including mandatory charity care requirements in
dialysis clinics, care for undocumented patients, staff assistance for
home dialysis, addressing disparities in the kidney transplant process,
elevating and integrating patient and caregiver perspectives through a
needs navigation model, dialysis commercials for ESRD and AKI, the
continuation of TPEAPA, removing the budget neutrality requirement for
TPEAPA, both replacing and preventing the replacement of nephrology
nurses with other health professionals for prolonged care, including
physician assistants or physician associates within the minimum
requirement for a dialysis facility's interdisciplinary team,
addressing the need for emergency planning for dialysis services in the
event of power outages or extreme weather conditions, removing the
prospective payment system for home dialysis patients, increasing
Medicare Advantage (MA) program payments to beneficiaries in certain
geographic areas, restructuring the functional categories for renal
dialysis drugs and biological products, aligning CMMI voluntary model
benchmarks with the ESRD PPS and its respective add-on payment
adjustments, recognizing the mandatory network fee in cost-reports for
independent dialysis facilities, removing or mitigating outdated
barriers to the use of digital health technology solutions in the ESRD
PPS, changing how ESRD patients pay copays, eliminating copays for home
dialysis, adding codes for dialysis training onto the telehealth list,
and the general need for statutory and regulatory refinements to the
ESRD PPS bundled payment. While we are not providing detailed responses
to these comments in this final rule because they are out of scope of
the proposed rule, we thank the commenters for their input and will
potentially consider the recommendations for future rulemaking.
We received several comments related to the requirement at Sec.
413.198(b)(5)(i) to report ``time on machine'' data effective January
1, 2025. These comments generally requested that CMS amend or eliminate
the requirement. Some commenters reiterated their concern that this
requirement would be burdensome and potentially hazardous. Commenters
also requested that CMS identify a consensus definition for time on
machine, define time on machine based on ``clock time,'' exclude home
dialysis claims from reporting requirements, and designate a claims-
based code for an inability to report time on machine data. We did not
include any proposals in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule to modify
the time on machine reporting requirement, and therefore we are not
addressing these comments in this rule. We refer commenters to the CY
2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76344 through 76507), and the
additional guidance CMS posted on November 22, 2023.\6\ However, we
will consider these comments for potential future refinements to the
requirement for reporting of ``time on machine'' data.
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\6\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/mm13445-esrd-acute-kidney-injury-dialysis-cy-2024-updates.pdf.
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We received several comments not related to policies we proposed
regarding the TDAPA, TPNIES, TPNIES for capital-related assets that are
home dialysis machines, the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, or
other potential areas where commenters thought similar policies could
be beneficial. Several commenters expressed concern that the ESRD PPS
does not sufficiently incentivize innovation in dialysis care or
reimburse for innovative technologies. Commenters' suggestions included
extending the TDAPA and TPNIES payment periods from 2 years to 3 years,
extending the duration of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment to
make it permanent, refining base rate-setting exercises based on TDAPA
utilization and price data, and adjusting the base rate at the end of
the TPNIES payment period. Commenters also suggested revisions to
existing TPNIES policies such as expanding the TPNIES for capital
related assets beyond home dialysis machines to include in-center
dialysis machines or other equipment and supplies that are capital
related assets. Commenters suggested that CMS further clarify the
TPNIES substantial clinical improvement criteria, clarify whether
software can be eligible for the TPNIES, and urged CMS to incentivize
more manufacturers to apply for TPNIES. Several commenters suggested
that CMS create a pathway for new clinical laboratory tests related to
the treatment of ESRD either through an expansion of TPNIES or adoption
of a parallel Transitional Laboratory Add-on Payment Adjustment, which
the commenters called TLAPA. Commenters suggested changes to the ESRD
facility cost reports and billing procedures that would allow for line-
item reporting of TDAPA, post-TDAPA, and TPNIES related costs. We
received several comments stating that the MA and ESRD PPS regulatory
processes should be coordinated to ensure that beneficiaries with ESRD
that are enrolled in MA can access items approved for the TDAPA and the
TPNIES under the ESRD PPS. Finally, we received several comments on
Medicare coverage for certain Humanitarian Use Devices.
[[Page 89090]]
We are not providing detailed responses to these comments in this final
rule because they are not related to the policy proposals of the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule. We thank the commenters for their input
and will potentially consider the recommendations for future
rulemaking.
Lastly, a commenter suggested that CMS had not allowed for a 60-day
comment period for the proposed rule because the beginning of the
comment period was calculated from the date the proposed rule was made
available for public inspection on the Federal Register website rather
than the date that it appeared in a print issue of the Federal
Register. The commenter stated that the public comment deadline should
have been September 4, 2024. We disagree with the commenter's assertion
that we did not allow for the appropriate comment period for this rule.
Section 1871(b) of the Act requires that we provide for notice of the
proposed regulation in the Federal Register and a period of not less
than 60 days for public comment thereon. The proposed rule was
available for public inspection on federalregister.gov (the website for
the Office of Federal Register) on June 27, 2024. We believe that
beginning the comment period for the proposed rule on the date it
became available for public inspection at the Office of the Federal
Register fully complied with the statute and provided the required
notice to the public and a meaningful opportunity for interested
parties to provide input on the provisions of the proposed rule.
1. CY 2025 ESRD Bundled (ESRDB) Market Basket Percentage Increase;
Productivity Adjustment; and Labor-Related Share
a. Background
In accordance with section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, as added
by section 153(b) of MIPPA and amended by section 3401(h) of the
Affordable Care Act, beginning in 2012, the ESRD PPS payment amounts
are required to be annually increased by an ESRD market basket
percentage increase and reduced by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. The application
of the productivity adjustment may result in the increase factor being
less than 0.0 for a year and may result in payment rates for a year
being less than the payment rates for the preceding year. Section
1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act also provides that the market basket
increase factor should reflect the changes over time in the prices of
an appropriate mix of goods and services included in renal dialysis
services.
As required under section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, CMS
developed an all-inclusive ESRDB input price index using CY 2008 as the
base year (75 FR 49151 through 49162). We subsequently revised and
rebased the ESRDB input price index to a base year of CY 2012 in the CY
2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66129 through 66136). In the CY 2019
ESRD PPS final rule (83 FR 56951 through 56964), we finalized a rebased
ESRDB input price index to reflect a CY 2016 base year. In the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141 through 67154), we finalized a revised
and rebased ESRDB input price index to reflect a CY 2020 base year.
Although ``market basket'' technically describes the mix of goods
and services used for ESRD treatment, this term is also commonly used
to denote the input price index (that is, cost categories, their
respective weights, and price proxies combined) derived from a market
basket. Accordingly, the term ``ESRDB market basket,'' as used in this
document, refers to the ESRDB input price index.
The ESRDB market basket is a fixed-weight, Laspeyres-type price
index. A Laspeyres-type price index measures the change in price, over
time, of the same mix of goods and services purchased in the base
period. Any changes in the quantity or mix of goods and services (that
is, intensity) purchased over time are not measured.
b. CY 2025 ESRD Market Basket Update
We proposed to use the 2020-based ESRDB market basket as finalized
in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141 through 67154) to
compute the CY 2025 ESRDB market basket percentage increase based on
the best available data. Consistent with historical practice, we
proposed to estimate the ESRDB market basket percentage increase based
on IHS Global Inc.'s (IGI) forecast using the most recently available
data at the time of rulemaking. IGI is a nationally recognized economic
and financial forecasting firm with which CMS contracts to forecast the
components of the market baskets. As discussed in section II.B.1.b.(3)
of this final rule, we are calculating the final market basket update
for CY 2025 based on the final market basket percentage increase and
the final productivity adjustment, following our longstanding
methodology.
(1) CY 2025 Market Basket Percentage Increase
Based on IGI's first quarter 2024 forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB
market basket, the proposed CY 2025 market basket percentage increase
was 2.3 percent. We also proposed that if more recent data became
available after the publication of the proposed rule and before the
publication of this final rule (for example, a more recent estimate of
the market basket percentage increase), we would use such data, if
appropriate, to determine the CY 2025 market basket percentage increase
in the final rule. Accordingly, based on IGI's third quarter 2024
forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB market basket, the final CY 2025 ESRDB
market basket percentage increase is 2.7 percent.
(2) Productivity Adjustment
Under section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, as amended by section
3401(h) of the Affordable Care Act, for CY 2012 and each subsequent
year, the ESRDB market basket percentage increase shall be reduced by
the productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II)
of the Act. The statute 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 (FY), year, cost reporting period, or other annual period)
(the ``productivity adjustment'').
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes the official
measures of productivity for the United States economy. As we noted in
the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67155), the productivity measure
referenced in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act previously was
published by BLS as private nonfarm business MFP. Beginning with the
November 18, 2021, release of productivity data, BLS replaced the term
``multifactor productivity'' with ``total factor productivity'' (TFP).
BLS noted that this is a change in terminology only and would not
affect the data or methodology.\7\ As a result of the BLS name change,
the productivity measure referenced in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of
the Act is now published by BLS as private nonfarm business TFP;
however, as mentioned previously, the data and methods are unchanged.
We refer readers to https://www.bls.gov/productivity/ for the BLS
[[Page 89091]]
historical published TFP data. A complete description of IGI's TFP
projection methodology is available on CMS's website at https://www.cms.gov/data-research/statistics-trends-and-reports/medicare-program-rates-statistics/market-basket-research-and-information. In
addition, in the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61879), we noted
that effective for CY 2022 and future years, we would be changing the
name of this adjustment to refer to it as the productivity adjustment
rather than the MFP adjustment. We stated this was not a change in
policy, as we would continue to use the same methodology for deriving
the adjustment and rely on the same underlying data.
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\7\ Total Factor Productivity in Major Industries--2020.
Available at: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/prod5.nr0.htm.
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Based on IGI's first quarter 2024 forecast, the proposed
productivity adjustment for CY 2025 (the 10-year moving average of TFP
for the period ending CY 2025) was 0.5 percentage point. Furthermore,
we proposed that if more recent data became available after the
publication of the proposed rule and before the publication of this
final rule (for example, a more recent estimate of the productivity
adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate, to determine the
CY 2025 productivity adjustment in the final rule. Accordingly, based
on IGI's third quarter 2024 forecast, the CY 2025 final productivity
adjustment remains unchanged at 0.5 percentage point.
(3) CY 2025 Market Basket Update
In accordance with section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act, we
proposed to base the CY 2025 market basket percentage increase on IGI's
first quarter 2024 forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB market basket. We
proposed to then reduce the market basket percentage increase by the
estimated productivity adjustment for CY 2025 based on IGI's first
quarter 2024 forecast. Therefore, the proposed CY 2025 ESRDB market
basket update was equal to 1.8 percent (2.3 percent market basket
percentage increase reduced by a 0.5 percentage point productivity
adjustment). Furthermore, as noted previously, we proposed that if more
recent data became available after the publication of the proposed rule
and before the publication of this final rule (for example, a more
recent estimate of the market basket percentage increase or
productivity adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2025 market basket percentage increase and
productivity adjustment in the final rule. Accordingly, the final CY
2025 ESRDB market basket update is calculated using the final CY 2025
ESRDB market basket percentage increase, based on IGI's third quarter
2024 forecast of the 2020-based ESRDB market basket, and the final
productivity adjustment, based on IGI's third quarter 2024 forecast.
Therefore, the final CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update is equal to 2.2
percent (2.7 percent market basket percentage increase reduced by a 0.5
percentage point productivity adjustment).
(4) Labor-Related Share
We define the labor-related share as those expenses that are labor-
intensive and vary with, or are influenced by, the local labor market.
The labor-related share of a market basket is determined by identifying
the national average proportion of operating costs that are related to,
influenced by, or vary with the local labor market. For the CY 2025
ESRD PPS payment update, we proposed, and are finalizing, to continue
using a labor-related share of 55.2 percent, which was finalized in the
CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67153 through 67154).
(5) Public Comments on the ESRDB Market Basket Increase Factor,
Productivity Adjustment, Annual Update and Labor-Related Share
We invited public comment on our proposals related to the ESRDB
market basket update and labor-related share. Approximately 25 unique
commenters including large dialysis organizations (LDOs); small
dialysis organizations (SDOs), patient advocacy organizations;
nonprofit dialysis associations; two coalitions of dialysis
organizations; professional organizations; and MedPAC commented on the
proposed update. The following is a summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Commenters generally supported increasing the ESRD PPS
base rate and the utilization of the most recent data available (for
example, a more recent estimate of the market basket or productivity
adjustment) to determine the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS update. MedPAC
recommended that the ESRD PPS base rate increase for CY 2025 should be
updated by the amount determined under current law, and commented that
analysis reported in the March 2024 Report to the Congress: Medicare
Payment Policy concluded that this increase is warranted based on its
analysis of payment adequacy (which includes an assessment of
beneficiary access, supply and capacity of facilities, facilities'
access to capital, quality, and financial indicators for the sector).
Most other commenters, however, expressed concerns regarding the
proposed productivity-adjusted ESRDB market basket update, the proposed
ESRD PPS base rate and payment adequacy under the ESRD PPS.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support for an increase to the
ESRD PPS base rate and MedPAC's support of the proposed update amount.
We acknowledge that many commenters expressed numerous concerns related
to the proposed payment rates and payment adequacy within the ESRD PPS.
We agree with MedPAC that increasing the payment rate according to the
established ESRD PPS methodology is the most appropriate course of
action. We have summarized and addressed commenters' specific concerns
regarding the payment rate and payment adequacy below.
Comment: Numerous commenters expressed concerns regarding payment
rates within the ESRD PPS and the CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update.
The general opinion of commenters was that the current ESRD PPS payment
rate was not adequate. Many of these comments specifically indicated a
belief that the proposed CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update was not a
sufficient increase given inflation, specifically pointing to rising
costs including labor costs. Many of these concerns were presented in
concert with a request for a ``forecast error adjustment,'' which we
discuss later in this section of the preamble. Some commenters included
comparisons between the ESRD PPS payment rates or ESRDB market basket
increases, and other figures not directly related to the furnishing of
renal dialysis services such as other Medicare payment systems, overall
healthcare costs and overall inflation. Most of these comments
requested that CMS take some action to alleviate the perceived concern
regarding payment rates. Commenters often cited certain costs which
have contributed to the rising costs faced by ESRD facilities including
costs related to labor and wages, costs related to training nurses and
technicians, supply costs often resulting from limited competition for
supplies or limited purchasing power for supplies, supply costs
associated with receiving goods in geographically isolated areas, and
costs of home dialysis supplies and equipment. Some commenters detailed
the potential implications of inadequate ESRD PPS payments including
worsened health outcomes, health equity concerns, access to care issues
often resulting from ESRD facility closures or reduction of shifts, and
inability for ESRD facilities to recruit and retain high quality staff.
Several comments quoted MedPAC's estimated 2024 Medicare margins for
ESRD facilities which were 0.0 percent as
[[Page 89092]]
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Response: We thank commenters for their insight into the payment
adequacy of the ESRD PPS and the costs faced by ESRD facilities. We
recognize that the input prices that ESRD facilities face have
increased in recent years at a rate higher than the ESRDB market basket
forecasts have predicted. We address commenters' related requests for a
``forecast error adjustment'' later in this section of the preamble.
Payment rates under the ESRD PPS are established based on a methodology
dictated by statute, which means the CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate
reflects the CY 2011 ESRD PPS base rate updated by each year's ESRDB
market basket update. The ESRD PPS base rate has also been routinely
adjusted by certain budget-neutrality factors, for example, budget
neutrality adjustment factors related to the annual update to the wage
index or related to various payment adjustments like the case mix
adjustments or the LVPA. However, we note that the construction of
these budget-neutrality factors is calculated to offset the effect of
certain other updates and adjustments on total spending under the ESRD
PPS and thereby maintain the level of overall payments, so we do not
believe that the budget-neutrality factors have had a negative impact
on the total payments under the ESRD PPS. Since CY 2011, the only time
the ESRD PPS base rate was increased other than as part of a routine
update or adjustment was in the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule, when we
first incorporated calcimimetics into the bundled payment and increased
the base rate by $9.93 (85 FR 71410). In summary, the ESRD PPS base
rate is based on a longstanding, data driven method provided for by
statute. We did not propose, and are not finalizing, any changes to the
ESRD PPS payment update methodology.
We agree with commenters that payment adequacy is important as it
has a wide variety of impacts both on ESRD facilities and ESRD
patients, many of which have been described by commenters. We intend to
continue monitoring the performance of the ESRD PPS, and any changes to
the ESRD PPS payment rate or ESRDB market basket would be made through
notice and comment rulemaking.
We recognize that MedPAC has found that the Medicare FFS margins
for ESRD facilities are projected to be 0.0 percent for 2024. We wish
to add that MedPAC found that Medicare marginal profit for ESRD
facilities was approximately 18 percent for 2022.\9\ We understand that
the Medicare FFS margin is lower than many interested parties may
believe would be appropriate; however, we believe that payments are
sufficiently high relative to marginal costs to support the profitable
operation of ESRD facilities generally. While we believe MedPAC margin
estimates are generally a reasonable metric, we note that the ESRD PPS
payment rate is based on the change in prices of a fixed bundle of
goods and services, not based on continuously re-aligning payment with
costs directly.
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Comment: Several commenters discussed the current difficulties of
recruiting and retaining healthcare workers. Commenters often
characterized this as a healthcare labor shortage and stated that the
accompanying increase in wage inflation was a major source of increased
costs for ESRD facilities. Many commenters indicated a belief that the
proposed CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update or the proposed CY 2025
ESRD PPS base rate were insufficient given this increase in labor
costs. One analysis cited by commenters found that labor costs for ESRD
facilities rose by 23.7 percent between 2017 and 2023 whereas the ESRD
PPS base rate rose by only 14.7 percent during that same period.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' evaluation of labor costs
for ESRD facilities. We acknowledge that many ESRD facilities are
having increased difficulty in hiring due to overall trends present in
the healthcare industry. We note that the ESRDB market basket includes
several price proxies for the various cost categories of the ESRDB
market basket, including labor. We agree with commenters that labor
costs are a significant driver of overall rising costs for ESRD
facilities; however, they are not the only costs faced by ESRD
facilities and, therefore, are not the only component of the ESRDB
market basket. As labor is a substantial driver of the overall input
price increase, generally the other input prices faced by ESRD
facilities are increasing less than labor prices, so the overall ESRDB
market basket increase for a given year is less than the amount by
which labor prices have increased. Our analysis of the ESRDB market
basket increases from 2017 to 2023 has found that the ESRDB market
basket forecasted compensation prices increased by a cumulative 20.9
percent over this time period. The actual ESRDB market basket
compensation price growth (based on historical data) over this time
period is 23.7 percent. This suggests the ESRDB market basket price
proxies are projecting the increased price of labor faced by ESRD
facilities with reasonable accuracy, and we believe that the data
presented by the commenters supports this belief.
Comment: Several commenters, representing numerous industry
interests, stated they believe that the ESRDB market basket is
systemically flawed, because the market basket fails to accurately
capture the changes over time in the prices in the goods and services
included in renal dialysis services. The commenters believed the flaws
are due to problems with the weights and price proxies used to assess
the changes in costs year-over-year.
The commenters cited analysis from a contractor that suggests
possible flaws in the market basket cost weights and price proxies.
First, the commenters noted that the cost weights for capital costs are
significantly higher in the ESRDB market basket compared to other CMS
market baskets. They suggested that while 31 percent of the overall
capital costs are determined to be labor-related, the price proxy for
capital costs does not use a labor-related price proxy. The commenters
suggested that the price proxy for capital costs should be a blended
proxy that also includes a price proxy for labor. Another area of
concern was that the weight for the ``All Other Goods and Services''
cost category is much larger than in other CMS market baskets--a weight
of 11.1 percent is assigned to this category in the ESRDB market
basket--and that similar categories under the inpatient prospective
payment system (IPPS) and skilled nursing facility (SNF) PPS have
weights of 1.2 percent and 0.3 percent, respectively. The commenters
stated that further refining the category's definition under the ESRD
PPS could reduce the weight and result in a more accurate update factor
reflective of ESRD-specific costs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestions for areas that
could benefit from technical improvements in the design and methodology
for the ESRDB market basket cost weights and price proxies. We did not
propose to rebase or revise the ESRDB market basket in the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule and further note that we finalized the 2020-based
ESRDB market basket in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141).
At the time of the CY 2023 rulemaking cycle, the 2020 Medicare cost
report data was the most recent, fully complete
[[Page 89093]]
cost data available and reflected cost data as submitted by
freestanding ESRD facilities.
The share of capital costs referenced by the commenter are related
to the allocation of a portion of the capital cost weight to the labor-
related share since fixed capital costs (for example, construction or
improvements to a building) would include costs associated with labor
to perform the construction in the initial price, and that price is
financed over time or incorporated with the lease contract. This
methodology of allocating a portion of the market basket capital cost
weight to the labor-related share is consistent across the other CMS
PPSs such as those for SNFs, inpatient rehabilitation facilities
(IRFs), inpatient psychiatric facilities (IPFs), and long-term care
hospitals. For the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67141 through
67154), we finalized the continued use of the Producer Price Index
(PPI) Industry for Lessors of Nonresidential Buildings (BLS series code
#PCU531120531120), to measure the price growth of the Capital-Related
Building and Fixtures cost category. This PPI reflects the prices of
leases for nonresidential buildings (including professional and office
buildings). The North American Industrial Classification System (NAICS)
definition for this industry comprises establishments primarily engaged
in acting as lessors of buildings (except mini-warehouses and self-
storage units) that are not used as residences or dwellings. Included
in this industry are: (1) owner-lessors of nonresidential buildings;
(2) establishments renting real estate and then acting as lessors in
subleasing it to others; and (3) establishments providing full service
office space, whether on a lease or service contract basis. The
establishments in this industry may manage the property themselves or
have another establishment manage it for them. We continue to believe
that this is an appropriate price proxy, as it reflects the lease or
replacement value of nonresidential buildings that would be influenced
by both labor prices, such as those associated with construction costs,
as well as other nonlabor factors, such as building supplies and
interest rates.
In response to the concerns related to the ESRDB market basket cost
weight for All Other Goods and Services, as stated in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67145), the All Other Goods and Services cost
weight was derived by disaggregating the Administrative and General
cost weight (calculated using the freestanding ESRD Medicare Cost
Report data) using the 2012 Service Annual Survey data, which was the
most recent year of detailed expense data (inflated to 2020 levels)
published by the Census Bureau for NAICS Code 621492: Kidney Dialysis
Centers. Though the resulting weight for this category may differ from
the weight calculated for other indices, it appropriately reflects the
cost distributions associated with providing ESRD services, as
prescribed by law.
We note that changing the composition of the ESRDB market basket or
changing the price proxies used for the ESRDB market basket would
likely not have had a significant impact on the past forecast errors of
the ESRDB market basket, since those forecast errors were calculated by
comparing the forecasted ESRDB market basket update available at the
time of rulemaking to the ``actual'' ESRDB market basket update based
on that same index. Any change to the weights or price proxies in the
ESRDB market basket would not by itself mitigate a forecast error. The
forecast error would only be different or mitigated if the forecasts of
alternative price proxies were more accurate than those for the current
price proxies used in the ESRDB market basket.
CMS is open to hearing from the commenters and discussing any data
or analysis the industry may provide regarding ways to ensure the
Medicare payments are appropriate and that the market basket price
proxies and weights are accurate. We welcome any publicly available and
representative input cost data that reflects total and category-
specific costs for the ESRD industry the commenters could provide. We
will consider the commenters' suggestions when we propose to rebase and
revise the ESRDB market basket in the future and note that any such
proposal would occur through notice and comment rulemaking. We rebase
and revise the CMS market baskets approximately every 4 to 5 years so
that the cost weights reflect recent changes in the mix of goods and
services that ESRD facilities purchase to furnish renal dialysis
services between base periods. We last rebased in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule (87 FR 67141 through 67153).
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that the ESRDB market
basket updates are disproportionately lower than for all other Medicare
providers reimbursed under a PPS. The commenters stated they understand
that different cost structures influence this outcome; however, they
noted it is important to note these discrepancies given that all these
healthcare sectors draw from the same labor pools, and lower ESRD PPS
updates erode ESRD facilities' ability to attract caregivers in the
current labor market. One commenter noted that the price proxy for
buildings utilized by IPPS and SNF is the ``BEA--Chained Price Index
for Private Fixed Investment in Structures, Nonresidential, Hospitals
and Special Care--vintage weighted 27 years'' which the commenter
stated is growing at a faster rate than the price proxy ``PPI Industry
for Lessors of Nonresidential Buildings'' which is used by the ESRD
PPS.
Response: The 2020-based ESRDB market basket percentage increase is
equal to the weighted price change of the individual price proxies
based on their respective cost weights. The cost weights are primarily
derived using data from the freestanding ESRD facility Medicare cost
reports and reflect relative shares of input costs needed to provide
renal dialysis services to ESRD beneficiaries. Similarly, the other CMS
PPS market baskets, such as the 2022-based SNF market basket and 2018-
based IPPS market basket, reflect the relative share of input costs
needed to provide skilled nursing and hospital care to Medicare
beneficiaries based on the data reported on the respective provider
cost reports.
While we understand that commenters may compare the annual updates
in the ESRDB market basket to other Medicare payment system market
baskets, the ESRDB market basket is developed in accordance with
section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act requiring that the index reflect
the composition of costs associated with providing renal dialysis
services. These costs (and the subsequent cost distributions) are
reported by ESRD facilities on the Medicare cost reports and may differ
(appropriately) from the relative distribution of costs of other
medical care providers, such as inpatient hospitals or skilled nursing
facilities. Additionally, the price proxies used in the ESRDB market
basket are intended to reflect the price pressures faced by ESRD
facilities. While some price proxies may be similar to those used
across other CMS market baskets, in most cases they are appropriately
different because they reflect the price pressures faced by ESRD
facilities. For example, the rate of increase in the ESRDB market
basket compensation category reflects the weighted average of the price
increase for occupations employed by ESRD facilities.
At the time of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, based on the
IGI's first quarter 2024 forecast with historical data through the
fourth quarter of 2023,
[[Page 89094]]
the 2020-based ESRDB market basket increase was forecasted to be 2.3
percent for CY 2025, reflecting forecasted compensation price growth of
3.6 percent. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we proposed that if
more recent data became available, we would use such data, if
appropriate, to derive the final CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update for
the final rule. For this final rule, we now have an updated forecast of
the price proxies underlying the market basket that incorporates more
recent historical data and reflects a revised outlook regarding the
U.S. economy and expected price inflation for CY 2025. Based on IGI's
third quarter 2024 forecast with historical data through the second
quarter of 2024, we are projecting a CY 2025 ESRDB market basket
increase of 2.7 percent (reflecting forecasted compensation price
growth of 3.8 percent). Therefore, for CY 2025 a final ESRDB
productivity-adjusted market basket update of 2.2 percent (2.7 percent
less 0.5 percentage point for the productivity adjustment) will be
applicable, compared to the 1.8 percent productivity-adjusted market
basket update that was proposed.
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns about the labor-related
share of the ESRD PPS. These commenters suggested that adjusting the
labor-related share could better recognize changes in labor costs and
result in a higher overall market basket update for the ESRD PPS. Some
commenters noted that the ESRD PPS labor-related share for CY 2025 is
55.2 percent while the labor-related share for SNF PPS is 70.1 percent
and 67.6 or 62 percent for IPPS.
Response: The purpose of the labor-related share is to reflect the
proportion of the national ESRD PPS base payment rate that is adjusted
by the wage index. CMS adjusts the labor-related portion of the base
rate to account for geographic differences in the area wage levels
using an appropriate wage index, which reflects the relative level of
wages and wage-related costs in the geographic area in which the ESRD
facility is located. The purpose of the labor-related share is to
allocate ESRD payment between a labor-related portion and non-labor-
related portion for purposes of geographic adjustment and the labor-
related share does not directly impact the market basket update.
We define the labor-related share as those expenses that are labor
intensive and vary with, or are influenced by, the local labor market.
The labor-related share of a market basket is determined by identifying
the national average proportion of costs that are related to,
influenced by, or vary with the local labor market. In the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67153 through 67154), we detailed the use of the
2020-based ESRDB market basket cost weights to determine the labor-
related share for ESRD facilities. Specifically, effective for CY 2023,
a labor-related share of 55.2 percent was determined based on the sum
of Wages and Salaries, Benefits, Housekeeping, Operations &
Maintenance, 87 percent of the weight for Professional Fees, and 46
percent of the weight for Capital-related Building and Fixtures
expenses, which, with the exception of the Professional Fees (0.7
percent) cost weight, were derived from the ESRD Medicare cost reports
(CMS Form 265-11, OMB NO. 0938-0236).
While the conceptual definition of the labor-related share used for
the ESRD PPS is similar to that used for SNF PPS and IPPS, the cost
structures for the various providers differ substantially. Thus, we
believe the ESRD labor-related share of 55.2 percent is appropriate,
and we are finalizing our proposal to continue to use this labor-
related share for CY 2025 ESRD PPS payments.
We note that the labor-related share, as previously discussed, is
used to determine the portion of the ESRD PPS base rate which is
related to labor for the purposes of applying the ESRD PPS wage index.
We believe some of the commenters who requested a higher labor-related
share may have believed that increasing the labor-related share would
change the proportion of the ESRDB market basket to which price proxies
related to labor are applied. As discussed in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule, the ESRDB market basket cost weights are derived from cost
report data and, therefore, are the most appropriate measures of the
proportion of the ESRDB to which we apply each pricy proxy. It would
not be appropriate to apply one of the labor price proxies to other
non-labor cost weights in the ESRDB market basket.
Comment: One commenter stated that while they understand CMS does
not have authority to waive the application of the productivity
adjustment, they were concerned that applying a one-size-fits-all
approach in an effort to incentivize efficiencies fails to recognize
the unique challenges facing ESRD facilities.
Response: Section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act requires the
application of the productivity adjustment described in section
1886(b)(3)(xi)(II) of the Act. As required by statute, the CY 2025
productivity adjustment is derived based on the 10-year moving average
growth in economy-wide productivity for the period ending CY 2025. We
recognize the concerns of the commenters regarding the appropriateness
of the productivity adjustment; however, we are required pursuant to
section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act to apply the specific productivity
adjustment described here and do not believe it can be removed from the
calculation of the market basket update. As such, we are not finalizing
any changes to the use of the productivity adjustment in the CY 2025
ESRDB market basket update.
As stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55765), the
United States Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
publishes the official measures of annual economy-wide, private nonfarm
business total factor productivity (previously referred to as annual
economy-wide, private nonfarm business multifactor productivity). IGI
forecasts total factor productivity consistent with BLS methodology by
forecasting the detailed components of TFP. A complete description of
IGI's TFP projection methodology is available on the CMS website at
https://www.cms.gov/data-research/statistics-trends-and-reports/medicare-program-rates-statistics/market-basket-research-and-information. We believe our methodology for the productivity adjustment
is consistent with sections 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) and
1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act, the latter of which states the
productivity adjustment is equal to the 10-year moving average of
changes in annual economy-wide private nonfarm business multi-factor
productivity (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 CY 2025 proposed productivity adjustment of 0.5 percent was
based on IGI's forecast of the 10-year moving average of annual
economy-wide private nonfarm business TFP, reflecting historical data
through 2022 as published by BLS and forecasted TFP for 2023 through
2025. The final productivity adjustment for CY 2025 is also 0.5
percentage point for this final rule and is slightly higher than the
productivity adjustment for CY 2024 (0.3 percent). This higher
productivity adjustment is primarily a result of incorporating BLS
revised historical data through 2022, the preliminary historical growth
rate in TFP for 2023, and an updated forecast for TFP growth for 2024
reflecting higher expected growth in economic output.
Comment: Commenters reported that the IGI forecast continues to
significantly underestimate the increasing costs ESRD facilities incur
when providing services to Medicare
[[Page 89095]]
beneficiaries and that the market basket increases provided by CMS have
not kept up with the rising costs of doing business, particularly labor
costs. Commenters stated that while they recognize that updates to the
ESRDB market basket are set prospectively, and some degree of forecast
error is thus inevitable, they also believe that ESRD facilities should
not be financially disadvantaged as a result of CMS market basket
forecasting errors. Many commenters urged CMS to reconsider its
decision not to adopt a forecast error policy. They stated that a
forecast error adjustment for the ESRD PPS would be needed to ensure
the funding that the Congress intended ESRD facilities to receive would
be available to support patient care and help address health
inequities.
The commenters stated that the CMS contractor that determines
forecasted price growth for the bundled ESRD PPS market basket has
failed to provide an accurate update for the last 4 years resulting in
an approximately negative 7 percent forecast error since 2019. They
further stated that they believe that the existing methodology will
produce an inaccurate annual payment update for CY 2025. Furthermore,
they stated that the forecast errors in the ESRD PPS are
disproportionately worse than the forecast errors in the other Medicare
payment systems and continue to urge CMS to address what they describe
as the past underfunding of the payment system.
A few commenters stated that the failure to correct the known
forecast errors over the last several years is contrary to the
statutory requirement at section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act to update
the ESRD PPS payment rate based on the change in prices of the ESRDB.
The commenters stated that the CMS response in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule was that its market basket update forecast ``misses'' for CY
2021 and CY 2022 were largely due to unanticipated inflationary and
labor market pressures as the economy emerged from the COVID-19 Public
Health Emergency (PHE) and that an analysis of the forecast error of
the ESRDB market basket over a longer period shows the forecast error
has been both positive and negative. The commenters highlighted our
past statement that the difference between the projected and actual
market basket increases can be both positive and negative. The
commenters claimed that this is not the reality of the current
situation, and that it would be unlikely that the forecast errors would
``miss'' to the same extent in the future. The commenters also noted
that it appears that the under-forecast of the ESRDB market basket
updates have continued into 2023, and they stated that preliminary
evidence shows even into 2024.
The commenters requested that CMS reconsider its decision not to
adopt a forecast error adjustment for the ESRD PPS to account for the
underestimates from CMS' forecasted market basket updates in prior
calendar years, and to eliminate the risk of further substantial
forecast errors going forward by adopting a forecast error adjustment
policy for future years modeled after the forecast error adjustment
policy in the SNF PPS. Some commenters supported CMS finalizing a
forecast error adjustment in this final rule effective for CY 2025,
whereas other commenters supported CMS proposing a forecast error
adjustment effective for CY 2026. The commenters further stated that
addressing these forecast errors is essential to fulfill CMS's
statutory obligation to ensure that the ESRD PPS market basket update
reflects actual changes over time in the prices of an appropriate mix
of goods and services included in renal dialysis services.
Several commenters noted that when CMS first introduced the
forecast error adjustment for SNFs, the agency explicitly determined
that this type of adjustment would not be providing a source of new
industry funding. Instead, the commenters noted that CMS stated that we
were correcting an under-forecast of pricing levels that resulted in
lower payments than we would otherwise have made if actual, instead of
forecast, data were used. One commenter further stated that on the
contrary in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, CMS justified not
implementing stakeholder calls for a forecast error adjustment for the
ESRD PPS by explaining that the cumulative under-forecast of the SNF
market basket increases was not due to a PHE, which was the case for
the ESRD PPS's under-forecast in recent years. However, the same
commenter noted that CMS finalized a forecast error adjustment for the
SNF payment system due to the rapid increase in the price of labor and
because CMS concluded that a forecast error adjustment was appropriate
for payment accuracy for SNFs. The commenter further rationalized that
while the forces driving the under-forecast of the ESRDB market basket
today may differ from those impacting the SNF market basket in 2003,
the outcomes for providers are presenting in the same manner.
Commenters stated that they believe implementation of a retroactive
cumulative forecast error adjustment and continued forecast error
adjustment in the future is within CMS's existing statutory authority
under section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i) of the Act. Commenters referenced
perceived similarities between this statutory language for the ESRD PPS
and the statutory language for the SNF PPS annual update at section
1395rr(b)(F)(i)(I) of the Act, which CMS utilized when finalizing the
SNF PPS forecast error adjustment.
Based on what the commenters characterized as the same statutory
obligation and an even larger and longer record of forecast errors, the
commenters requested CMS adopt the same retrospective forecast error
adjustment and future forecast error adjustment process for the ESRD
PPS. They provided further context for this request by referencing the
justification of the forecast error adjustment policy in the SNF PPS as
precedent.
Some commenters urged CMS to implement a one-time retrospective
adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate in the amount of the current
cumulative forecast error calculated from the beginning of the ESRD
PPS, while others requested such an adjustment for the period of 2019
or 2020 through 2023. Additionally, most commenters also supported the
implementation of a forecast error correction policy for future years
that would be triggered when the absolute (positive or negative) error
is equal to or exceeds a 0.5 percentage point threshold. One commenter
also requested that CMS acknowledge that the current forecast
methodology has failed to produce accurate updates for 4 years and work
with IGI to minimize forecast misses in the future. One commenter
requested more transparency regarding the methodology for developing
the price forecasts that are used in the CMS market baskets.
Response: The ESRDB market basket updates are set prospectively,
which means that the update relies on a mix of both historical data for
part of the period for which the update is calculated and forecasted
data for the remainder. For instance, the CY 2025 market basket update
in this final rule reflects historical data through the second quarter
of CY 2024 and forecasted data through the fourth quarter of CY 2025.
While there is no precedent to adjust for market basket forecast error
in the ESRD PPS payment update, a forecast error can be calculated by
comparing the actual market basket increase for a given year to the
forecasted market basket increase. Due to the uncertainty regarding
future price trends, forecast errors can be both positive and negative,
as has occurred
[[Page 89096]]
since the implementation of the ESRD PPS in CY 2011. Over most of this
history the forecast errors were small in magnitude, with the largest
error (in absolute terms) prior to 2021 being an over-forecast (the
actual market basket increase was less than the forecasted market
basket increase) of 0.8 percentage point in 2017. More recently the
ESRDB market basket has been under-forecast, as noted by the
commenters, with larger errors occurring for 2021 through 2023. The
cumulative forecast error since ESRD PPS inception (CY 2012 to CY 2023)
is an under-forecast of 4.3 percent.\10\ These recent forecast errors
were largely a function of uncertainty in the overall economy and the
health sector specifically due to the nature of the COVID-19 PHE and
the unforeseen inflationary environment.
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\10\ This figure does not include a forecast error for CY 2015,
as section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(III) of the Act required a 0.0 percent
update for that year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We thank the commenters for their continued feedback on the ESRDB
market basket. In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule we explained why
we did not believe a forecast error adjustment was appropriate at that
time. We did not propose a forecast error adjustment in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule for these same reasons and are not finalizing a
forecast error adjustment at this time. Specifically, predictability in
Medicare payments is important to enable ESRD facilities to budget and
plan their operations, and forecast error calculations are
unpredictable (88 FR 76356 through 76358). Historically, the positive
differences between the actual and forecasted market basket increase
have offset negative differences over time. Although we acknowledge
that this has not been the case in recent years, we note that it may
take a longer period of time for forecast errors to balance out. For
example, in CY 2016 the cumulative forecast error for the ESRDB market
basket since CY 2012 was 0.4 percent, and in each year from CY 2012 to
CY 2016, the cumulative forecast error was positive, ranging from 0.2
percent to 0.5 percent. Then, beginning in CY 2017, the cumulative
forecast error was negative, which continued through CY 2020, ranging
from -0.4 percent to -0.6 percent. These examples illustrate that over
time positive and negative differences between the actual and
forecasted market basket increase have tended to balance out.
Therefore, in accordance with our longstanding ESRD PPS payment update
methodology, we are finalizing to update the CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate
without the application of a forecast error adjustment to the ESRDB
market basket.
Given the concerns raised by the commenters, we intend to continue
to monitor the pattern of the ESRDB market basket forecast errors to
observe if the historical experience (where errors have balanced out)
continues. Any changes to the ESRD PPS payment update methodology,
including any forecast error adjustment policy, would be proposed
through notice and comment rulemaking. We acknowledge the commenter's
request for more transparency regarding the ESRDB market basket
forecast methodology and have shared details in prior and this year's
rules on these methods; however, we are limited in the amount of
information we can provide regarding the forecast methodology, which is
proprietary to IGI.
Comment: Some commenters expressed concern about whether CMS was
adhering to Social Security Act and the Administrative Procedure Act
requirements in declining to adopt a forecast error adjustment. One
commenter stated that, given the past forecast errors, they did not
believe our methodology fulfilled the requirement to update the payment
system based on the change in prices of the ESRDB market basket. This
commenter further stated a belief that because CMS had determined that
a forecast error adjustment was appropriate for the SNF PPS in 2004, we
would be in violation of the ESRD PPS's similarly worded statute unless
we were to implement a forecast error adjustment for the ESRD PPS, due
to the similarities between the circumstances of SNF PPS in 2004 and
the ESRD PPS presently.
Response: We strongly disagree with the commenter's assertion that
CMS's position regarding an ESRD PPS forecast error payment adjustment
conflicts with any of the statutory requirements for the ESRD PPS. As
we have discussed previously, we believe that the ESRDB market basket
forecast reflects the change in prices of an appropriate mix of goods
and services included in renal dialysis services, as required by
statute. We note that the circumstances of the ESRD PPS in the present
are not identical to the circumstances of the SNF PPS when we finalized
a forecast error adjustment. The cumulative under-forecast of the SNF
market basket increases in 2004 was based on a rapid increase in the
price of labor, not due to a PHE that rapidly increased the price of
most of the goods and services in the ESRDB market basket.
Additionally, the increase in the price of labor uniquely impacted the
SNF PPS at that time as the SNF PPS had only existed for a few years
and had numerous under-forecasts in that short timeframe. This is
unlike the current ESRD PPS environment, where the ESRD PPS had a
decade of reasonably accurate forecasts, followed by a PHE resulting in
multiple Medicare payment systems facing similar forecast errors. We
continue to believe these differences in circumstances are relevant in
evaluating the forecast errors in the ESRD PPS in recent years and
their implications for the future performance of the payment system. We
note that when CMS finalized a forecast error adjustment for the SNF
payment system, we concluded that a forecast error adjustment was
appropriate for payment accuracy for SNFs; not that it was required
under the statute (68 FR 46057). For these reasons, we disagree with
the commenter's stated belief that a forecast error adjustment would be
required to fulfill the ESRD PPS statutory requirements, and, at this
time, for the reasons discussed previously, we do not believe that a
forecast error payment adjustment would be appropriate for the ESRD
PPS. We also disagree with the commenter's assertion that by not
implementing a forecast error adjustment we are in violation of the
Administrative Procedure Act; as discussed previously, our established
ESRDB market basket methodology has been set and revised through notice
and comment rulemaking (75 FR 49151 through 49162, 79 FR 66129 through
66136, 83 FR 56951 through 56964, 87 FR 67141 through 67154). For the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we provided a 60-day comment period, and
we have considered and responded to all relevant comments in this final
rule explaining our reasoning for the policies we are finalizing.
Comment: One coalition of dialysis organizations disagreed with
CMS's evaluation that a forecast error adjustment would make ESRD PPS
payments less predictable. The commenter stated that under the current
payment system providers are uncertain whether the ESRDB market basket
forecast would be accurate for a given year.
Response: We appreciate this commenter's perspective on
predictability within the ESRD PPS as we work to improve the payment
system. Our current view on predictability is that it is important for
ESRD facilities to be able to plan for future years with the most
complete information possible, which we believe would likely not be the
case if the ESRD PPS base rate would be lowered in a given year due to
an over-forecast in the prior year. We will take this input into
consideration for future rulemaking.
[[Page 89097]]
Final Rule Action: We did not propose and are not finalizing any
changes to the ESRDB market basket methodology for CY 2025. Thus, the
final ESRDB market basket update for CY 2025 is 2.2 percent,
representing a ESRDB market basket percentage increase of 2.7 percent
reduced by a 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment.
2. CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Indices
a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act provides that the ESRD
PPS may include a geographic wage index payment adjustment, such as the
index referred to in section 1881(b)(12)(D) of the Act, as the
Secretary determines to be appropriate. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final
rule (75 FR 49200), we finalized an adjustment for wages at Sec.
413.231. Specifically, we established a policy to adjust the labor-
related portion of the ESRD PPS base rate to account for geographic
differences in the area wage levels using an appropriate wage index,
which reflects the relative level of hospital wages and wage-related
costs in the geographic area in which the ESRD facility is located.
Under current policy, we use the Office of Management and Budget's
(OMB's) CBSA-based geographic area designations to define urban and
rural areas and their corresponding wage index values (75 FR 49117).
OMB publishes bulletins regarding CBSA changes, including changes to
CBSA numbers and titles. The bulletins are available online at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/information-for-agencies/bulletins/.
We have also adopted methodologies for calculating wage index
values for ESRD facilities that are located in urban and rural areas
where there are no hospital data. For a full discussion, see the CY
2011 and CY 2012 ESRD PPS final rules at 75 FR 49116 through 49117 and
76 FR 70239 through 70241, respectively. For urban areas with no
hospital data, we have computed the average wage index value of all
hospitals in urban areas within the State to serve as a reasonable
proxy for the wage index of that urban CBSA. For rural areas with no
hospital data, we have computed the wage index using the average
hospital wage index values from all contiguous CBSAs to represent a
reasonable proxy for that rural area. We applied the statewide urban
average based on the average of all urban areas within the State to
Hinesville Fort Stewart, Georgia (78 FR 72173), and we applied the wage
index for Guam to American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands (78
FR 72172).
Under Sec. 413.231(d), a wage index floor value of 0.6000 is
applied under the ESRD PPS as a substitute wage index for areas with
very low wage index values, as finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule (87 FR 67161). Currently, all areas with wage index values that
fall below the floor are located in Puerto Rico and the US Virgin
Islands. However, the wage index floor value is applicable for any area
that may fall below the floor. A further description of the history of
the wage index floor under the ESRD PPS can be found in the CY 2019
ESRD PPS final rule (83 FR 56964 through 56967) and the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67161).
An ESRD facility's wage index is applied to the labor-related share
of the ESRD PPS base rate. In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67153), we finalized the use of a labor-related share of 55.2 percent.
In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85 FR 71436), we updated the OMB
delineations as described in the September 14, 2018, OMB Bulletin No.
18-04, beginning with the CY 2021 ESRD PPS wage index. In that same
rule, we finalized the application of a 5 percent cap on any decrease
in an ESRD facility's wage index from the ESRD facility's wage index
from the prior CY. We finalized that the transition would be phased in
over 2 years, such that the reduction in an ESRD facility's wage index
would be capped at 5 percent in CY 2021, and no cap would be applied to
the reduction in the wage index for the second year, CY 2022. In the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161), we finalized a permanent policy
under Sec. 413.231(c) to apply a 5 percent cap on any decrease in an
ESRD facility's wage index from the ESRD facility's wage index from the
prior CY. For CY 2025, as discussed in section II.B.1.b.(4) of this
final rule, the final labor-related share to which the wage index would
be applied is 55.2 percent.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49116) and the CY 2011
final rule on Payment Policies Under the Physician Fee Schedule (PFS)
and Other Revisions to Part B (75 FR 73486) we established an ESRD PPS
wage index methodology to use the most recent pre-floor, pre-
reclassified hospital wage data collected annually under the hospital
inpatient prospective payment system (IPPS). The ESRD PPS wage index
values have historically been calculated without regard to geographic
reclassifications authorized for acute care hospitals under sections
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act and utilize pre-floor hospital data
that are unadjusted for occupational mix.
b. Methodology Changes for the CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Index
CMS has received feedback on our longstanding ESRD PPS wage index
methodology from interested parties through comments on routine wage
index updates in the annual ESRD PPS proposed rules. Commenters often
suggested specific improvements for the ESRD PPS wage index. In the CY
2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76359 through 76361), we discussed the
comments on the routine wage index proposals from the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (88 FR 42436); commenters, including MedPAC, suggested
that we establish an ESRD PPS wage index for all ESRD facilities using
wage data that represents all employers and industry-specific
occupational weights, rather than the hospital wage data currently
used. MedPAC specifically suggested that CMS implement the
recommendations discussed in its June 2023 Report to Congress,\11\
which recommended moving away from the current IPPS wage index
methodology in favor of a methodology based on all employer wage data
for all Medicare PPSs with industry specific occupational weights.
Additionally, MedPAC suggested that the new methodology reflect local
area level differences in wages between and within metropolitan
statistical areas and statewide rural areas and smooth wage index
differences across adjacent local areas. MedPAC stated that, compared
to the current IPPS wage index methodology, a methodology based on all
employer wage data with industry-specific occupational weights would
improve the accuracy and equity of payments for provider types other
than inpatient acute care hospitals, such as ESRD facilities.
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\11\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Jun23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_SEC.pdf.
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In past years some interested parties have contended that the
methodology used to construct the current ESRD PPS wage index does not
accurately reflect the ESRD facility labor market. These interested
parties have noted that the ESRD PPS wage index has been based on the
IPPS wage index, which uses hospital data, which commenters have stated
may not be applicable for ESRD facilities. More specifically,
commenters have suggested that the types of labor used in ESRD
facilities differ significantly from the types of labor used by
hospitals, which may result in the use of relative wage values across
the United States that do not accurately match the actual relative
wages paid by ESRD facilities. For example, if ESRD
[[Page 89098]]
facilities have a different proportion of registered nurses (RNs),
technicians and administrative staff compared to hospitals, and if
wages for each of those labor categories vary differentially across the
country, it is possible that relative wages for ESRD facilities, given
their occupational mix, would vary differently from relative wages for
hospitals across CBSAs. Because of this, some commenters have
specifically requested that CMS develop an ESRD PPS wage index based
only on data from ESRD facilities. Additionally, some commenters have
criticized the time lag associated with using the IPPS wage index,
which is generally based on data from four FYs prior to the rulemaking
year (see, for example, 88 FR 58961).
(1) December 2019 Technical Expert Panel (TEP)
In response to feedback from interested parties on the ESRD PPS
wage index, CMS's data contractor hosted a Technical Expert Panel (TEP)
in December of 2019.\12\ During this TEP, the contractor presented a
potential alternative approach to the wage index, which utilized BLS
data to address the concerns of commenters, to initiate a discussion on
the ramifications of a potential new ESRD PPS wage index that would
combine two sources of existing data to more closely reflect the
occupational mix in ESRD facilities. The methodology presented at this
TEP utilized publicly available wage data for selected occupations from
the BLS OEWS survey and occupational and fulltime equivalency (FTE)
data from freestanding ESRD facility cost reports (Form CMS 265-11, OMB
No. 0938-0236). Specifically, this approach used the freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports to determine the national average occupational
mix and relative weights for ESRD facilities. Next, the contractor
applied the estimated county-level wages based on BLS OEWS \13\ to
obtain occupation-specific wages in each county. The BLS OEWS data is
updated annually using sample data collected in six semiannual survey
panels over the prior 3-year period, which allows for the inclusion of
more recent data than the hospital cost report data that is utilized by
the IPPS wage index. Therefore, as noted during the TEP, this new
methodology would allow CMS to adjust wage index values to reflect
relative changes in wage conditions in a timelier fashion compared to
the current ESRD PPS wage index methodology. Additionally, as noted
during the TEP, by utilizing FTE data reported on the freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports, this methodology is likely more reflective of
the occupational mix employed by ESRD facilities than the hospital wage
index.
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\12\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-technical-expert-panel-summary-report-may-2020.pdf.
\13\ The OEWS program produces estimates of employment and wages
by occupation based on a survey of business establishments. OEWS
data are released annually with a May reference date. Each set of
OEWS estimates is based on data from six semiannual survey panels
collected over a 3-year period. For example, the May 2022 OEWS wage
estimates are based on six semiannual survey panels from November
2019 through May 2022. We note that we use a crosswalk between
counties and MSAs, non-MSAs and NECTAs to get county level wage
estimates.
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Panelists at this TEP generally indicated their preference for the
presented alternative wage index methodology, because it utilized more
recent wage data from the BLS OEWS program. Panelists also favored how
the alternative methodology was more targeted to ESRD facilities by
utilizing FTE data from ESRD facility cost reports in determining the
occupational mix. Some panelists voiced concerns about using publicly
available BLS geographic area data, as the data do not disaggregate
wages by health care sector, and therefore wages from acute care
hospitals are not differentiated from outpatient care centers and other
non-hospital health care settings. Some panelists noted that this would
result in a wage index based on the publicly available BLS OEWS data
having some of the same limitations for which the use of the IPPS wage
index has been criticized--mainly that it includes wage data from
hospitals.
(2) Proposed New Methodology for Using BLS Data To Calculate the ESRD
PPS Wage Index
Based on feedback we received in response to past ESRD PPS proposed
rules and from the December 2019 TEP, we developed a new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology that we believe better reflects the ESRD facility
labor market, which we proposed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
(89 FR 55766 through 55782). Similar to the methodology presented in
the December 2019 TEP, this new methodology utilizes two data sources:
one for occupational mix and one for geographic wages. First, we
determine a national ESRD facility occupational mix (NEFOM) based on
cost report data from freestanding ESRD facilities. Second, we extract
and use data from the publicly available BLS OEWS survey on the average
wages in each CBSA for each labor category present in the NEFOM. We
note that because the publicly available BLS data are available at the
Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), non-MSA and New England City and
Town Area (NECTA) levels, and the wage index is designated at the CBSA
level (which uses MSAs and other area designations that differ from
non-MSAs and NECTAs), we use the area definition dataset \14\ that
accompanies the BLS data to assign wages at the county level, and map
counties to CBSAs using a crosswalk. This crosswalk is included in
Addendum B, available on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRD-Payment-Regulations-and-Notices.
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\14\ For more information on MSAs and non-MSAs please see:
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/msa_def.htm. For more information on
the most recent CBSA delineations (as discussed later in this
section) please see: https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
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(a) Description of Data Sources Utilized in the Proposed Methodology
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we discussed the data sources
which we utilized for the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index methodology.
We described the data sources in detail alongside explanations of the
ways in which we proposed to use the data, potential benefits and
weaknesses compared to the IPPS wage index data, and the lag associated
with the data.
(i) Data From the BLS OEWS Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Area
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates
The BLS OEWS program publishes annual estimates of employment and
wages by occupation. Each set of OEWS estimates is based on data from
six semiannual survey panels collected over a 3-year period. For
example, the May 2022 OEWS wage estimates, published in April 2023, are
based on six semiannual survey panels from November 2019 to May 2022.
We proposed to use publicly available mean hourly wage data at the MSA
level,\15\ which is available online at https://www.bls.gov/oes/. OEWS
wage data collected in earlier survey panels are ``aged'' or updated to
the reference date of the estimates based on adjustment factors derived
from the OEWS survey data using a regression model. The BLS OEWS mean
hourly wage data that was presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule and was utilized for the proposed new wage index methodology
described in detail later in this section of this final rule reflect
these wage aging adjustments. Table 1 shows the
[[Page 89099]]
occupation codes based on the Standard Occupational Classification
(SOC) and the corresponding occupational title for each SOC, alongside
the common name that we use to refer to workers in specific occupations
throughout this final rule. The ESRD PPS common names match the FTE
categories captured on Worksheet S-1, lines 23 through 30 of the
freestanding ESRD facility cost report form. The SOC System is a United
States government system for classifying occupations. It is used by
Federal Government agencies collecting occupational data, enabling
comparison of occupations across data sets. When we considered the use
of BLS data we had to determine which occupation code was appropriate
for each occupation in the NEFOM. For many of these occupations, the
corresponding BLS code was straightforward. For example, BLS code 29-
1141 is for ``Registered Nurses'' which matches the category on the
cost reports from which the NEFOM is derived exactly. For the
occupations that were not necessarily specific to the healthcare field,
for example administrative staff, we used BLS codes that were specific
for healthcare, such as code 43-6013 for ``Medical Secretaries and
Administrative Assistants.'' In the proposed rule, we explained that we
believe that these are the most appropriate codes, as a more general
code may not capture the specifics of the healthcare labor market.
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\15\ We use the territory-level data for Guam and Virgin
Islands, since the MSA and non-MSA level data is not available.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.000
The BLS OEWS data used for the analysis presented in the proposed
rule included mean wages by occupation for all industries combined
located in a MSA (or non-MSA area or NECTA), including the hospital
industry. While interested parties have criticized the current ESRD PPS
wage index methodology's sole reliance on hospital data, we stated that
inpatient hospital data is appropriate to include in this analysis for
several reasons. Principally, as explained later in this section, the
wage data is being weighted based on an occupational mix that is
specific to ESRD facilities, which makes this methodology more accurate
to the wage environment of ESRD facilities regardless of the source of
the wage data. Additionally, ESRD facility data is included in the BLS
data, while ESRD facilities generally are not included in the hospital
cost report data used in the IPPS wage index (with the exception of
hospital-based ESRD facilities). Lastly, hospitals are a major
contributor to labor markets, and it is reasonable to believe that ESRD
facilities compete with hospitals (as well as other healthcare
facilities) when it comes to hiring labor; as such, the inclusion of
hospital data would provide additional insight into the labor markets
of these areas.
In the proposed rule, we discussed that a limitation of the
publicly available BLS OEWS data is that the survey only includes
information on the wages that employers paid to their employees.
Therefore, the OEWS does not include self-employed contract labor wages
or benefits paid to employees, which are reflected in the IPPS wage
index. Nevertheless, we believed, and we continue to believe, that this
data source would be an improvement over the use of the IPPS wage index
for the ESRD PPS, as its purpose is to identify geographic differences
in wages. In the proposed rule, we noted that assuming wages spent on
self-employed contract labor wages and employee benefits vary similarly
to employee wages, we would not expect any significant difference
arising from this limitation of the BLS data. We anticipated that most
traveling nurses and technicians would be employed by a staffing
agency, and therefore would be included in the OEWS estimates; however,
as worksite location reporting is optional,\16\ we note it is possible
that some of the wages for these traveling nurses and technicians could
be included in the MSA in which their employing agency is located,
rather than the MSA in which they worked. However, we noted that we
would not anticipate that this would have an appreciable impact on the
OEWS estimates used for this methodology. Additionally, we noted that
the OEWS would only include the wages paid by the contract agency to
these contract workers, so the OEWS estimates would likely not include
the full cost of the contract labor paid by the ESRD facilities to the
contracting agency. We could not separately estimate the prevalence of
self-employed contract labor at ESRD facilities from the rest of
contract labor, which we believe would still provide some insight into
the potential limitation of the exclusion of self-employed contract
labor wages from the BLS OEWS. We noted that all contract labor costs
represent approximately 5 percent of compensation costs in the 2020-
based ESRDB market basket (87 FR 67143). As discussed in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, our analysis of freestanding ESRD facility cost
report FTE data indicated that approximately 1.3 percent of RN hours
and 1.1 percent
[[Page 89100]]
of technician hours were contract labor in 2022. Additionally, our data
showed that the share of contract labor hours has been relatively
stable over time but has increased slightly over the past few years.
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\16\ https://www.bls.gov/respondents/oes/instructions.htm#online.
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In the proposed rule, we discussed that one potential concern about
use of the BLS OEWS data is that in some cases, the BLS OEWS may not
have usable data for a county for an occupation, which is used in the
construction of the new ESRD PPS wage index according to the
methodology presented later in this section. This occurs when BLS is
unable to publish a wage estimate for a specific occupation and area
because the estimate does not meet BLS quality or confidentiality
standards.\17\ For reference, among the 25,808 unique county-occupation
combinations in the May 2022 BLS OEWS data used in the analysis in the
proposed rule, the wage information missing rate was 5.2 percent. To
impute the missing data for the methodology presented in the proposed
rule, we performed a regression using the most similar (by mean hourly
wage) occupation (of the occupations we proposed to include in the wage
index methodology, presented in Table 1) for which there was no missing
data. For dietitians we used RNs, for technicians we used LPNs and for
nurses' aides we used administrative staff. The regression included
controls for whether the county is rural, the census region in which
the county is located, and the natural logarithm of the treatment count
of the county. For the wage index presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we only had to impute missing county-level data for
dietitians, technicians, and nurses' aides; however, for future years,
we noted that we may have to impute data for other occupations and will
be sure to note any imputations through notice and comment rulemaking.
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\17\ https://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_ques.htm.
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In the proposed rule, we presented an analysis on historical BLS
OEWS data for the occupations presented in Table 1.\18\ We found that
mean hourly wages for these categories are increasing over time,
consistent with what we would expect given the ESRD PPS market basket
increases. Given this analysis, we stated that the BLS OEWS data are
reasonably stable and appropriately reflect general wage inflation
trends that ESRD facilities face.
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\18\ We note that the BLS OEWS wage data is not intended to be
used as a time-series analysis, but rather as cross-sectional
estimate of wages in a geographic area (https://www.bls.gov/oes/oes_ques.htm#other). We reviewed and presented this data primarily
to demonstrate the stability of the methodology by evaluating the
robustness of the input data source.
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(ii) Data From Freestanding ESRD Facility Cost Reports
Under Sec. 413.198(b)(1), all ESRD facilities must submit the
appropriate CMS-approved cost report in accordance with Sec. Sec.
413.20 and 413.24, which provide rules on financial data and reports,
and adequate cost data and cost finding, respectively. Generally, these
cost reports have a time range of January 1 to December 31 of a given
year, but they can represent any 12-month period. Included in these
cost reports is information on the number of full-time equivalent (FTE)
positions employed by the ESRD facility. FTEs are stratified by
occupation type, such as RNs, LPNs, technicians, and administrative
staff. For the purpose of these cost reports, an FTE represents a 40-
hour work week averaged across the year. Specifically, the cost reports
define FTEs as the sum of all hours for which employees were paid
during the year divided by 2080 hours. The cost reports also state
personnel involved in more than one activity must have their time
prorated among those activities. For example, an RN who provided
professional services and administrative services is counted in both
the RN line and the administrative line according to the number of
hours spent in each activity.
For the methodology presented in the proposed rule, we proposed to
use FTEs to calculate the occupational mix for all freestanding ESRD
facilities. For the purposes of this proposal, we used the term
``freestanding ESRD facilities'' to mean ESRD facilities that complete
the independent renal dialysis facility cost report (Form CMS 265-11,
OMB No. 0938-0050). We noted that these ESRD facilities are a subset of
``independent'' facilities as defined at Sec. 413.174(b), as cost-
reporting is only one of 5 criteria used in the determination of
whether an ESRD facility is independent or hospital-based as listed at
Sec. 413.174(c). For the purposes of this proposal, we referred to
ESRD facilities that complete the hospital cost report (Form CMS 2552-
10, OMB No. 0938-0050) as ``ESRD facilities that are financially
integrated with a hospital,'' per the criteria at Sec. 413.174(c)(5).
The occupational mix data presented in the proposed rule represented
the average proportion of hours spent on the duties of that occupation
at all freestanding ESRD facilities nationally for CY 2022. This
national mix includes FTE data on both staff and contract labor from
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports for each occupational category.
Table 2 presents the NEFOM calculated from the freestanding ESRD
facility cost report data from cost reporting periods beginning on or
after January 1, 2022, and before December 31, 2022 (2022 cost report
data), with four decimal places of precision. For the purposes of
comparison, Table 2 includes both the occupational mix we presented in
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, as well as an updated version of
this occupational mix with more complete CY 2022 cost report data. In
the proposed rule, we noted that CY 2022 would be the most recent
complete year of cost reporting data for both the proposed rule and for
this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule, as the latest 2022 cost reports could
have begun in December 2022 and ended in December 2023, although some
2022 cost reports were not yet available at the time of the analysis
for the proposed rule. For the approximately 1.7 percent of
freestanding ESRD facilities without 2022 cost report data available at
the time of rulemaking for the proposed rule, 2021 cost report data was
used. At the time of proposed rulemaking, we anticipated that we would
have complete CY 2022 cost report data; however, this has proved not to
be the case. For this final rule, some CY 2022 cost report data was
still not available, so 2021 cost report data was used for 126 ESRD
facilities. The occupational mix weights used in the proposed new wage
index methodology are presented in terms of the number of FTEs per 1000
treatments, although we note that the specific denominator does not
impact the calculation, as these are relative weights. Table 2 also
includes percentages that represent the percent of FTEs for each
occupation in the NEFOM. For example, RNs represent approximately 30
percent of the NEFOM, which means that across the nation, 30 percent of
all hours worked by employees at freestanding ESRD facilities are
worked by RNs. We note that we did not include FTEs that were reported
as ``other'' occupations in the cost reports in this occupational mix,
because we could not determine what occupation(s) this represented and,
therefore, could not get appropriate wage estimates. ``Other''
occupations would have accounted for 3.8 percent of the NEFOM if
included.
[[Page 89101]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.001
We note that the NEFOM is calculated as a part of the proposed wage
index methodology described in detail later in this section of this
final rule, from freestanding ESRD facilities cost reports, and that
the NEFOM is not an input in the wage index calculation. However, we
presented the NEFOM in the proposed rule to inform the calculation
process for any interested parties which wish to replicate the
calculation.
For this methodology, we proposed to only utilize data from
freestanding ESRD facilities, which comprise the vast majority of ESRD
facilities. ESRD facilities that are financially integrated with a
hospital represent approximately 4.5 percent of ESRD facilities. It was
necessary to make this distinction, as ESRD facilities that are
financially integrated with a hospital complete a different cost report
form (Form CMS 2552-10, OMB No. 0938-0050), which does not include all
the occupational categories included on the freestanding facility cost
report (Form CMS 265-11, OMB No. 0938-0050). Specifically, ESRD
facilities that are financially integrated with a hospital do not
include administrative and management staff hours in their cost
reports. FTE data for administrative and management staff are necessary
for this analysis, so we proposed to exclude hospital-integrated cost
reports. We stated that we believe that the occupational mix for
freestanding ESRD facilities is likely similar to the mix for ESRD
facilities that are financially integrated with a hospital (which, as
noted earlier, make up a small proportion of all ESRD facilities), such
that we would not expect significantly different results if we were
able to include ESRD facilities that are financially integrated with a
hospital in this analysis.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we conducted additional analyses
to ensure that this occupational mix data would be appropriate for the
construction of an ESRD facility wage index. First, we reviewed the
occupational mix for ESRD facilities on a regional level to determine
if the use of a single national occupational mix was appropriate. While
we found some variation across regions, the variation was relatively
small between regions, with the weight values for each occupation being
within a few percentage points. The main exceptions to this were in the
United States Territories, which had higher variation in occupational
mix, likely due in large part to the relatively few ESRD facilities in
those regions. Additionally, we found that lower volume ESRD facilities
tended to have slightly different occupational mixes, requiring
relatively more administrative and management staff FTEs, likely due to
the lack of economies of scale for these occupations at lower treatment
volume levels. Second, we conducted an analysis on the change in the
national occupational mix over the past 5 years and found little
variation over this time period. Both of these analyses indicate that
the use of a single national occupational mix is appropriate for
constructing an ESRD facility wage index as the occupational mix is
reasonably similar to most region's occupational mixes and relatively
stable over time.
Additionally, we proposed to use treatment volume data from
freestanding ESRD facilities as reported on freestanding ESRD facility
cost reports. This treatment volume data is used in the proposed wage
index methodology as a weight on the county level wages when
calculating the wages for a CBSA. The calculation is described in
further detail in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b) of this final rule.
In the proposed rule, we emphasized the importance of accurate cost
report data for this proposed policy as well as other current and
potential policies under the ESRD PPS, such as facility-level or case-
mix adjustment refinement. We strongly urged ESRD facilities to
carefully review cost report data to ensure continued accuracy so that
future refinements to the ESRD PPS are based on the best data possible.
(iii) IPPS Hospital Wage Index
As discussed in the proposed rule, the proposed new wage index
methodology used the established ESRD PPS wage index methodology, which
is based on the IPPS hospital wage index, for the purposes of
standardizing the new wage index (step 6 in the methodology described
in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b)). Consistent with our established ESRD PPS
methodology, we use the most recent pre-floor, pre-reclassified
hospital wage data collected annually under the IPPS. For the purposes
of the proposed new wage index methodology, we referred to this older
wage index methodology as the ``ESRD PPS legacy wage index.'' The ESRD
PPS wage index values under the legacy methodology are calculated
without regard to geographic reclassifications authorized for acute
care hospitals under sections
[[Page 89102]]
1886(d)(8) and (d)(10) of the Act and utilize pre-floor hospital data
that are unadjusted for occupational mix. For CY 2025, the updated wage
data are generally for hospital cost reporting periods beginning on or
after October 1, 2020, and before October 1, 2021 (FY 2021 cost report
data). Under Sec. 413.231(d), a wage index floor value of 0.6000 is
applied under the ESRD PPS as a substitute wage index for areas with
very low wage index values, as finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule (87 FR 67161). Consistent with our established policy of updating
wage indices in the final rule, we stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule that we intend to use the most recent IPPS wage index for
the construction of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS legacy wage index for the
final rule (89 FR 55771). We noted that the purpose of calculating the
ESRD PPS legacy wage index is solely for standardizing the new ESRD PPS
wage index, ensuring that the treatment weighted average of the new
ESRD PPS wage index is the same as it would have been under the
established methodology. This would ensure that the changes associated
with the proposed new wage index methodology are contained to the wage
index, whereas changes associated with shifts in utilization would be
reflected in the wage index budget neutrality factor. For example, if
the new methodology resulted in a significant increase in the number of
high-wage index facilities, the standardization factor would decrease
wage index values across the board to keep the treatment-weighted
average of the legacy and new wage index methodologies the same; in
contrast, if utilization trends resulted in a significant increase in
the number of treatments furnished by ESRD facilities in high-wage
index areas, the treatment weighted average of both the legacy and new
wage index methodologies would increase, which would need to be
accounted for by the wage index budget neutrality adjustment factor.
This is described in more detail in step 6 of the proposed new wage
index methodology described in section II.B.2.b.(2)(b) of this final
rule.
(iv) Time Lag Associated With New Data Sources
One concern expressed by interested parties about the current ESRD
PPS wage index methodology is that the IPPS wage index, used as its
basis, uses data from approximately 4 fiscal years prior. Interested
parties have opined that this delay makes the ESRD PPS wage index less
responsive to certain changes in wages, such as inflation.\19\ In the
proposed rule, we noted that the purpose of the wage index is to
reflect geographic difference in the area wage levels, and that
national trends in wages, including wage inflation, are accounted for
by the ESRDB market basket percentage increase. We noted that the IPPS
wage index is generally responsive to geographic variation in wages,
including variation stemming from local or regional inflation. However,
as interested parties have raised concerns about the time lag
associated with our use of the IPPS wage data, we discussed the
difference between the time lag associated with our use of the IPPS
wage index for the ESRD PPS and the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology.
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\19\ In accordance with section 1886(d)(14)(E)(1) of the Act,
the IPPS wage index is required to employ data based on ``a survey
conducted by the Secretary (and updated as appropriate) of the wages
and wage-related costs of subsection (d) hospitals in the United
States.'' The IPPS is based on the most current audited hospital
wage data from Worksheet S-3, Parts II, III and IV of the Medicare
cost report, CMS Form 2552-10 (OMB Control Number 0938-0050 with an
expiration date of September 30, 2025) (see, for example, 88 FR
58961).
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As previously discussed in this section, the new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology that we proposed would use data from BLS OEWS and
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports. BLS publishes OEWS data
annually with a May reference date, with estimates typically released
in late March or early April of the following year. Each set of OEWS
estimates is based on six semi-annual survey samples spanning the prior
3 years. Wages collected in earlier survey panels are updated to the
reference date of the estimates based on wage adjustment factors
derived from the OEWS survey data using a regression model. The
freestanding ESRD facility cost report data that can be analyzed at the
time of rulemaking are generally from 2 CYs prior. Specifically, for
the proposed wage index presented in Addendum A of the ESRD PPS
proposed rule, the BLS OEWS data represent wages as of May 2022 (based
on survey panels collected from November 2019 through May 2022), and
the cost report data generally covered cost reporting periods beginning
on or after January 1, 2022, and before December 31, 2022.\20\ The
publicly available BLS OEWS data is an average using data collected
over a 3-year period due to the large sample involved in the survey.
This pooled sampling improves stability and predictability of the OEWS
estimates over time. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR
55772), we noted that, should the proposed methodology be finalized, we
would use the most recent update of BLS OEWS data for the ESRD PPS
final rule. Under this new proposed methodology, BLS OEWS estimates for
May 2023 would be utilized for the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ In cases where 2022 freestanding cost report data were not
available at the time of the proposed rule, 2021 data was used. This
was the case for 131 ESRD facilities, approximately 1.7 percent of
the ESRD facilities in this analysis. In calculating the wage
indices for this final rule there were 126 ESRD facilities for which
2021 cost report data was used.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both the ESRD facility cost report data and the BLS OEWS data are
more recent than the data used for the IPPS wage index. Additionally,
the purpose of using the freestanding ESRD facility cost report data in
this proposed methodology would be to establish a national occupational
mix for ESRD facilities, which we are calling the NEFOM. In the
proposed rule, we stated that we intend to present the NEFOM annually
to reflect the latest complete year of cost report data at the time of
rulemaking to inform the public of the relative weights assigned to
each occupation. Given that freestanding facility cost reports are
submitted on a rolling basis, the most recent data would generally be
obtained from cost reports beginning in the CY three years prior to the
CY for which we are setting rates (that is, for the CY 2025 proposed
rule, the latest complete year of cost report data are from cost
reports beginning in CY 2022). Based on our analysis of prior years'
cost report data, we did not anticipate that the national occupational
mix would change much from year-to-year. Additionally, we noted that
the use of a single national occupational mix for all ESRD facilities
would limit the impact of changes in employment patterns on the wage
index, as all ESRD facilities would be similarly impacted by a change
in the NEFOM. As the wage index is a relative value, the main way that
a change in the NEFOM would impact an ESRD facility's wage index would
be if the CBSA in which that ESRD facility is located has relatively
high or low wages for an occupation that experiences growth or
shrinkage in the NEFOM. Thus, the main driver in changes from year-to-
year under the proposed new wage index methodology likely would be the
BLS OEWS data, which, for the final rule, would be based on estimates
with a reference date of the May prior to the rulemaking year.
We noted that, at the time of the analysis conducted for the
proposed rule, the May 2023 BLS OEWS estimates were not yet available;
however, they were available at the time of the analysis conducted for
this final rule. As previously discussed, some ESRD
[[Page 89103]]
facilities' CY 2022 cost reports were not available for the proposed
rule but are available now for the final rule; however, we still do not
have complete CY 2022 data, so we must utilize some CY 2021 cost
reports for this final rule. In the proposed rule, we stated that
should the proposed new wage index methodology be finalized, we would
update the wage index values based on the most recent BLS OEWS data
available. We also proposed to use most recent cost report data
available for cost reporting periods beginning in CY 2022 and update
the NEFOM in Table 2 accordingly in the final rule (89 FR 55772). Using
the most recent 2022 data available for the calculation of the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology in the final rule would be consistent with
our established ESRD PPS wage index methodology of updating ESRD
facility wage indices between the proposed and final rules.
In the proposed rule, we noted that our proposed new wage index
methodology does use the IPPS wage index to create the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index, which is used to standardize the results of the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology. We recognized the concerns we have heard
regarding the data lag associated with our use of the IPPS wage index
for the ESRD PPS. However, as the ESRD PPS legacy wage index would only
be used to calculate a treatment-weighted average of the legacy wage
index to standardize the wage index values derived under the proposed
new methodology, the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index would continue to
reflect the relative differences in area wages based on the more recent
BLS OEWS data. Therefore, any effect of any data lag of the ESRD PPS
legacy wage index on the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index would be
minimal.
(v) Comparison Between Proposed New Wage Index Methodology Data Sources
and Hospital Wage Index Data
The other main concern that interested parties have raised about
our current ESRD PPS wage index methodology is that the IPPS wage index
is based on hospital cost report data. As previously discussed,
interested parties have stated that hospital cost report data is not
necessarily the most appropriate source for estimating geographic
differences in wages paid by ESRD facilities. These interested parties
predominantly point to the different occupational mix employed by ESRD
facilities as the main differentiator between inpatient hospitals and
ESRD facilities; however, there may also be differences in wages paid
for the same occupational labor category in the two settings.
Differences in wages within the same occupation could arise from any
number of factors, including differences in duties, hours, required
experience, or desirability of the position.
In the proposed rule we presented Table 3 in the context of the
proposed new wage index methodology. Table 3 compares the national
average occupational mix and corresponding wages for occupations
employed by freestanding ESRD facilities to that of hospitals from IPPS
data. The source of average wages used here for ESRD facilities is the
BLS OEWS mean hourly wage data, which is then weighted by ESRD PPS
treatment count in the geographical area. Average IPPS wages are
derived from the IPPS occupational survey (Form CMS-10079) as presented
in the fiscal year (FY) 2024 IPPS Public Use File (PUF),\21\
representing data from 2019. The mean hourly wage data from BLS is from
the May 2022 OEWS estimates, which are based on six panels of survey
data from November 2019 through May 2022.
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\21\ Files related to the FY 2024 IPPS final rule are available
online at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/acute-inpatient-pps/fy-2024-ipps-final-rule-home-page.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.002
In discussing this data in the proposed rule, we noted that the
hospital wage data (column F) in Table 3 presents the wages paid by
hospitals to employees, as derived from the IPPS occupational survey
data, for the purposes of comparing to the BLS data. This data is used
to adjust the hospital average hourly wage, calculated using hospital
cost report data, based on the provider-specific occupational mix. This
differs from the hospital cost report
[[Page 89104]]
data used for the IPPS wage index, as that does not break down all
wages and related costs by occupation.
Compared to hospitals, ESRD facilities generally use slightly
higher proportions of RNs and LPNs and significantly fewer nurse aides
and medical aides (column B). Additionally, the freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports include additional occupational categories to
reflect the labor mix employed by ESRD facilities.
(b) Construction of the New ESRD PPS Wage Index
In the proposed rule, we presented these general steps, which we
stated we would use when constructing a wage index based on the
proposed new ESRD PPS wage index methodology; for a more detailed look
at the specific computational steps we execute in the code to calculate
the wage index according to the proposed methodology, including steps
related to data collection and cleaning, we provided the supplementary
document Addendum C of the proposed rule.
1. We calculate the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage for
each occupation for each CBSA by multiplying the mean hourly wage data
from the BLS OEWS by the treatment count for each county within that
CBSA and dividing by the total treatment count of all counties within
the CBSA. We weight mean hourly wage by treatment count to ensure that
the mean hourly wage for the CBSA is proportional with the actual wages
paid by ESRD facilities in the CBSA. This avoids a situation where a
particularly high or low wage county within a CBSA has no ESRD
facilities but still has a large impact on the wage index for that
CBSA. This reasoning extends to each instance in which we weight values
by treatment counts. We use a crosswalk that relates counties to MSAs,
non-MSAs and NECTAs.
2. We calculate the ESRD facility mean hourly wage in each CBSA by
multiplying the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage (from step 1)
for each occupation for a given CBSA with the corresponding weight of
the NEFOM for each occupation and then sum each category's amount to
get the total.
3. We calculate the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage for
each occupation at the national level by multiplying the mean hourly
wage for the occupation in each CBSA by the treatment count of that
CBSA and dividing by the aggregated treatment count nationally.
4. We calculate the national ESRD facility mean hourly wage by
multiplying the national mean hourly wage (from step 3) for each
occupation by the corresponding weight of the NEFOM for each occupation
and then sum each category's amount to get the total.
5. We divide the ESRD facility mean hourly wage for each CBSA by
the national ESRD facility mean hourly wage to create a raw wage index
level (that is, a wage index that has not been normalized as described
in step 6).
6. We multiply the raw wage index level for each CBSA by a
treatment weighted average of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS legacy wage index
constructed using the established ESRD PPS methodology based on IPPS
Medicare cost report data and divide the product by the treatment
weighted average of raw wage indices, which equals 1 by
construction.\22\ This is to ensure that the treatment-weighted average
of new BLS-based wage indices is the same as the weighted average of
the current wage indices. By ensuring the weighted average of the new
wage index is the same as the weighted average of the pre-floor pre-
reclassification IPPS wage index we have normalized the new wage index
such that it is more comparable to the former ESRD PPS wage index
methodology. This prevents the possibility that the treatment-weighted
average of the new wage index is significantly different than the
treatment-weighted average of the established methodology. We include
this step because our goal in establishing the proposed new wage index
methodology is not to alter the significance of the wage index in
determining each ESRD facility's payment, but rather to ensure that the
wage index values better reflect relative labor costs that affect ESRD
facilities specifically. We note that because we apply a wage index
budget neutrality adjuster (discussed in section II.B.4.b), the new
wage index methodology would not increase total payments to ESRD
facilities even absent this step.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Treatment weighted averages of wage indices are calculated
by multiplying the wage index value for each CBSA by the treatment
count in the CBSA and dividing by the aggregate national treatment
count.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. We apply the 0.6000 floor to the wage index by replacing any
wage index values that fall below 0.6000 with a value of 0.6000, which
is the wage index floor for the ESRD PPS as established in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67166).
After following these steps, we would obtain the wage index values
for each CBSA (based on the new OMB delineations as discussed later in
this section of the preamble) according to the proposed ESRD PPS wage
index methodology described previously. In the proposed rule, we noted
that the 5 percent cap in year-over-year decreases in wage index values
would be applied for each ESRD facility after the new wage index is
calculated based on the proposed methodology for the CBSA in which the
ESRD facility is located and, therefore, is not reflected in the
proposed wage index value for a CBSA in Addendum A of the proposed
rule, available on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRD-Payment-Regulations-and-Notices under the page for CMS-1805-P.
This was necessary as this cap protects ESRD facilities in the rare
circumstances when changes in policy related to the wage index
methodology or CBSA delineations cause an ESRD facility to be in a
significantly lower wage index area in a given year when compared to
the previous year (87 FR 67161). As discussed later in this section,
for CY 2025 we proposed to adopt new OMB delineations of CBSAs relative
to those used in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS wage index. As this 5 percent cap
applies to an ESRD facility, and not to a CBSA, it would protect any
ESRD facility that is delineated into a much lower wage-index CBSA for
CY 2025.
(c) Methodological Alternatives Considered
While developing the proposed new wage index methodology, we
considered several different alternatives regarding both data sources
used for the new wage index methodology and construction of the wage
index itself. We considered the feasibility of requesting the use of
confidential BLS OEWS data. This was one suggestion from the December
2019 TEP. Confidential data would have some benefits over public data,
primarily that it would provide greater disaggregation of wages by
employer type, such as wages paid by ESRD facilities. Additionally,
confidential BLS data could have a timeframe other than the 3-year
pooled sample used in the public data, for example, using only the most
recent year's data. However, we noted that the OEWS survey sample is
designed to be statistically representative only when all 3 years of
the sample are combined, so the use of an alternative or shorter
timeframe may not be appropriate. We determined that the publicly
available BLS data would be the most appropriate for our wage index, as
it still provides precise estimates of wages and would allow for far
better transparency. Additionally, we
[[Page 89105]]
stated that we believed that the inclusion of data from other employers
(meaning employers that are not ESRD facilities) would improve the
robustness of the methodology, as ESRD facilities compete for labor
against these other employers.
When considering the use of BLS data we had to determine which
occupation code was appropriate for each occupation in the NEFOM. As
discussed previously, for many of these occupations, the corresponding
BLS code was straightforward as many of the occupations present in the
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports matched a single BLS code.
However, for technicians employed by ESRD facilities we gave further
consideration to two different BLS codes. As presented in Table 1, we
proposed to use code 29-2099 for ``Health Technologists and
Technicians, All Other'' for the construction of the methodology to
account for the labor costs of technicians. This is the most
appropriate category, as ``technicians'' in the freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports generally refers to dialysis technicians, which
do not fall into any of the other BLS codes for health technologists
and technicians. Additionally, we noted that the SOC uses ``dialysis
technician'' as an illustrative example for code 29-2099.\23\ However,
we had some concerns about using this category, as it does not
specifically represent dialysis technicians, but rather all health
technicians that do not fit in the other categories. Because the
category is non-specific, also known as a ``residual'' category, we
were concerned with the impact of the inclusion of other, non-dialysis
technicians in this category. To avoid any issues arising from the use
of a residual category, we considered using code 29-2010 for ``Clinical
Laboratory Technologists and Technicians.'' Although this category does
not fit dialysis technicians as well, it had the benefit of not being a
residual category, and it had fewer counties with missing data.
However, we determined that it was most appropriate to use the most
similar category for dialysis technicians, being the category in which
data for dialysis technicians would be included, which is code 29-2099
``Health Technologists and Technicians, All Others.''
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\23\ https://www.bls.gov/soc/2018/major_groups.htm.
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As an alternative to using a single national occupational mix for
ESRD facilities we considered using regional or state-level
occupational mixes. The considered alternative would use a similar
methodology to the construction of the NEFOM, but with a different
occupational mix for each census region or state and would apply the
occupational mix in the same way in the construction of the wage index.
That is, the BLS data for a CBSA would be weighted by the occupational
mix for the region or state in which that CBSA is located. This
alternative was considered, in part, because of a suggestion from a
panelist at the December 2019 TEP who pointed out that different states
have different laws regarding staffing requirements for ESRD
facilities, which was not reflected in the methodology presented at the
TEP. We conducted an analysis comparing a state-level occupational mix
wage index to the national occupational mix wage index methodology
presented previously. This analysis found some notable differences,
including higher wage index values for ESRD facilities in the Pacific
census region, but many regions experienced little change. We decided
against the use of state-level or regional occupational mixes for three
main reasons. The first is that the use of different occupational mixes
for different ESRD facilities made the methodology significantly more
complicated and difficult to understand. The second is that this
methodology made it so that one ESRD facility could be in an area with
higher wages for all occupations compared to another ESRD facility but
receive a lower wage index value due to having an occupational mix
which favored lower-paying occupations. In the proposed rule, we noted
that this could be perceived as being inconsistent with the intent of
the wage index to recognize differences in ESRD facility resource use
for wages specific to the geographic area in which facilities are
located (83 FR 56967). Lastly, we were concerned about the possibility
that, should we use anything other than a national occupational mix,
the state-level or regional occupational mix could be manipulated. This
would be especially relevant for states or regions with few ESRD
facilities and, therefore, individual ESRD facilities would have an
outsized impact on the occupational mix for that state or region.
Accordingly, we did not propose this alternative because we believed
that the use of a single national occupational mix is the most
appropriate for this new ESRD facility wage index methodology.
We considered proposing a ``phase-in'' policy for this wage index
methodology change, which could be implemented in addition to the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases. One potential example of a phase-
in policy could be a 50/50 blended methodology, where an ESRD facility
would receive the average of their wage indices from the proposed new
and legacy methodologies for the first year of implementation. However,
we decided that such a phase-in policy was unnecessary in light of the
5 percent cap on year-to-year wage index decreases for ESRD facilities.
We believed that an additional, or alternative, phase-in policy would
further complicate this change. Additionally, a phase-in policy could
hurt ESRD facilities that would receive a higher wage-index under the
new methodology, which we do not believe would be appropriate, as we
believe the new methodology based on BLS data is the best approximation
of the labor costs those ESRD facilities face.
We considered setting the NEFOM through rulemaking separately from
the routine wage index update. Under this alternative, we would
periodically update the NEFOM, for example every 2 years, with
potentially more years of freestanding ESRD facility cost report data.
This would mean that the NEFOM would be a rounded input in the wage
index methodology, rather than a figure precisely calculated as an
intermediary step in the methodology. This would slightly simplify the
calculation steps and would allow for complete transparency on the
NEFOM. However, we have decided to instead derive the FTEs per 1,000
treatments for each occupation as the weights as a part of the wage
index calculation as that would increase the precision of this
calculation. Additionally, given the transparency of the FTE data
derived from publicly available cost reports, we noted that we could
still publish the NEFOM for the coming year in rulemaking alongside the
updated wage index; however, we note that the NEFOM we publish would
have a lower precision so replications using the published NEFOM as an
input may be slightly off. Furthermore, compared to setting the NEFOM
through rulemaking less frequently than annually, the proposed
methodology to calculate the NEFOM as a part of the wage index
methodology annually would be more responsive to national trends in
occupational mix for ESRD facilities.
Finally, we considered whether it was most appropriate to use
something other than the mean hourly wage for the BLS OEWS data for the
construction of the wage index. We noted that there were always
concerns when using the mean of a data set that the figure could be
unduly influenced by outliers. One potential alternative would be to
use the
[[Page 89106]]
median hourly wage data instead. The median hourly wage is available by
occupation in publicly available BLS data, and the median is not as
influenced by outliers as the mean. We also considered using the
geometric mean, instead of arithmetic mean, as that is also less
influenced by outliers; however, the geometric mean is not provided in
publicly available BLS data. Ultimately, we determined that the mean
hourly wage is the most appropriate for this new wage index
methodology, as any outliers are relevant data points insofar as some
ESRD facilities may pay wages significantly higher than the average.
c. Example Calculation Using the Proposed New Wage Index Methodology
Table 4 is an example of a calculation of the wage index for a
hypothetical ESRD facility in a hypothetical CBSA under the proposed
new methodology which was presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule. This CBSA contains three counties, each with a different mean
hourly wage and treatment count. Table 4 presents the mean hourly wage
and treatment count used in the calculation.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.003
Step 1. Calculate the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage for
each occupation for each CBSA by multiplying the mean hourly wage data
from the BLS OEWS by the treatment count for each county within that
CBSA and dividing by the total treatment count of all counties within
the CBSA.
RN wage = [(200 * $45) + (300 * $40) + (500 * $50)]/1000 = $46.0
LPN wage = [(200 * $30) + (300 * $30) + (500 * $35)]/1000 = $32.5
Nurse aide wage = [(200 * $15) + (300 * $20) + (500 * $10)]/1000 =
$14.0
Technicians wage = [(200 * $30) + (300 * $35) + (500 * $25)]/1000 =
$29.0
Social worker wage = [(200 * $30) + (300 * $25) + (500 * $35)]/1000 =
$31.0
Administration wage = [(200 * $20) + (300 * $25) + (500 * $20)]/1000 =
$21.5
Dietitian wage = [(200 * $35) + (300 * $30) + (500 * $30)]/1000 = $31.0
Management wage = [(200 * $60) + (300 * $65) + (500 * $50)]/1000 =
$56.5
Step 2. Calculate the ESRD facility mean hourly wage in the CBSA by
multiplying the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage (from step 1)
for each occupation for the CBSA with the corresponding weight of the
NEFOM for each occupation and sum each category's amount to get the
total. The NEFOM for CY 2025 that we presented in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule is presented again in Table 5. For the purposes of
ensuring the calculation in this section is as easy to understand as
possible we are using the percentage values from the NEFOM rounded to
the nearest tenth of a percent. This makes the wage values calculated
in this step and step 4 more intuitive as they would represent a
weighted average of the wages in the CBSA. We note that in the actual
calculation of the wage index, as described in Addendum C, we calculate
the number of FTEs per 1000 treatments for each occupation and use
those as the weights, so that the weights have a higher level of
precision.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.004
[[Page 89107]]
ESRD facility mean hourly wage for this CBSA = (0.300 * $46.0) + (0.040
* $32.5) + (0.024 * $14.0) + (0.381* $29.0) + (0.047 * $31.0) + (0.107
* $21.5) + (0.045 * $31.0) + (0.055 * $56.5) = $34.75
Step 3. Calculate the treatment count-weighted mean hourly wage for
each occupation at the national level by multiplying the mean hourly
wage for the occupation in each CBSA by the treatment count of that
CBSA and dividing by the aggregated treatment count nationally.
To simplify this calculation, assume there are 3 CBSAs as presented
in Table 6:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.005
Step 4. Calculate the national ESRD facility mean hourly wage by
multiplying the national mean hourly wage (from step 3) for each
occupation by the corresponding weight of the NEFOM for each occupation
and sum each category's amount to get the total. Similarly to step 2,
we are using the percentages from the NEFOM as weights for the purposes
of this example calculation.
National average ESRD facility wage = (0.300 * $46.90) + (0.040 *
$32.58) + (0.024 * $18.67) + (0.381 * $32.28) + (0.047 * $32.61) +
(0.107 * $19.52) + (0.045 * $31.49) + (0.055 * $56.64) = $36.27
Step 5. Divide the ESRD facility mean hourly wage for each CBSA by
the national ESRD facility mean hourly wage to create a raw wage index
level.
Raw wage index value = $34.75/$36.27 = 0.95809
Step 6. Multiply the raw wage index for each CBSA by a treatment
weighted average of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS legacy wage index constructed
using the established ESRD PPS methodology based on IPPS data and
divide the product by the treatment weighted average of raw wage
indices (which equals 1 by construction). This is to ensure that the
treatment-weighted average of new BLS-based wage indices is the same as
the weighted average of the current wage indices (for the purpose of
this hypothetical calculation we have used a value of 1.00679).
Pre-floor wage index value = 0.95809 * 1.00679/1 = 0.9646
Step 7. Apply the 0.6000 floor to the wage index by replacing any
wage index values which fall below 0.6000 with 0.6000.
Final wage index value = 0.9646
d. Estimated Impacts of Change to Wage Index Methodology
In the proposed rule, included a discussion on the estimated
impacts of the new wage index methodology (89 FR 55778 through 55780).
We discussed that this methodological change would be associated with
significant changes in wage index values, and therefore payment
amounts, for ESRD facilities. Full impacts for the final CY 2025 ESRD
PPS wage index, alongside the updated CBSA delineations and rural
transition policy discussed in section II.B.2.f of this final rule, are
presented in Table 19 in section VII.C.5.a of this final rule,
including application of the 5 percent cap on year-to-year wage index
decreases. In the proposed rule we presented a table which included the
impacts of this change with and without the 5 percent cap on wage index
decreases. This table demonstrated how the application of the 5 percent
cap mitigates negative changes for CY 2025 associated with the new wage
index methodology.
We noted that the 5 percent cap on wage index decreases would apply
to ESRD facilities that are located in a CBSA (based on CY 2025 CBSA
delineations) with a wage index value 5 percent lower than the CY 2024
wage index value for their CBSA (based on CY 2024 CBSA delineations).
The table in the proposed rule was presented for the sole purpose of
illustrating the potential long-term ramifications of the proposed new
wage index methodology once sufficient time has passed such that the 5
percent cap on year-over-year decreases would no longer constrain the
overall effect of this new methodology on wage index values.
In the proposed rule, we discussed our analysis comparing the
hypothetical results of applying this new wage index methodology in
past years to the actual ESRD PPS wage index methodology based on the
IPPS wage index for those years. We found that the application of the
new wage index methodology consistently yields mean and median wage
index values slightly higher than the actual mean and median wage index
values used for those years, implying that the wage index resulting
from this new methodology is relatively stable. Additionally, we found
that the payment impacts based on facility type did not change much
when using data from claim years 2019 through 2022, with most facility
types that are projected to receive a payment increase for CY 2025
associated with the new wage index methodology seeing a payment
increase in past years. Similarly, most facility types that are
projected to receive a payment decrease in CY 2025 associated with the
proposed new wage index methodology were found to have received payment
decreases in our hypothetical analysis of past years. Therefore, we
determined that this new wage index methodology is relatively stable
when analyzing the differences between the new proposed wage index and
the ESRD PPS legacy wage index.
[[Page 89108]]
e. CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Index
For CY 2025, we are updating the wage indices to account for
updated wage levels in areas in which ESRD facilities are located. We
proposed to use the new wage index methodology described previously, in
subpart b of this section, according to the most recent available data.
We believe that the use of this new wage index methodology is
appropriate and responds to the feedback we have received from
interested parties regarding the limitations of the current wage index.
Specifically, the use of BLS OEWS data would allow for this new wage
index methodology to be more responsive to differences in ESRD facility
wage levels across the country. Additionally, by using occupational mix
data from the freestanding ESRD facility cost reports, this new wage
index methodology would better reflect the actual wage costs incurred
by ESRD facilities and be most appropriate to use for the ESRD PPS due
to several reasons specific to ESRD facilities. First, freestanding
ESRD facility cost reports contain detailed occupational FTE data,
which allows CMS to create a wage index that is tailored to the wage
costs faced by ESRD facilities based on their unique staffing needs.
Dissimilarities between hospital occupation mix and ESRD facility
occupational mix make the use of the IPPS data less appropriate for
ESRD facilities. In addition, the ESRD PPS has a lower labor-related
share than most other Medicare payment systems.\24\ This new ESRD PPS
wage index methodology addresses these specific circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ For example, under section 1886(d)(3)(E) of the Act, the
IPPS applies a labor-related share of 62 percent for each hospital
unless this would result in lower payments to the hospital than
would otherwise be made.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we recognized that there were several
methodological limitations to using a wage index based on publicly
available BLS OEWS data. Specifically, the BLS OEWS data source lacks
information on employee benefits and the full cost of contract labor
and includes information from hospitals and other healthcare providers.
However, we stated that we believed that the benefits of using this new
wage index methodology would outweigh these limitations, as the use of
BLS OEWS wage data weighted by an occupational mix derived from
freestanding ESRD facility cost report data would allow for a wage
index that is more representative of the geographic variation in wages
faced by ESRD facilities.
For CY 2025, we also proposed to use OMB's most recent CBSA
delineations as published in OMB Bulletin No. 23-01, which are based on
the data from the 2020 decennial census, for the purposes of the CY
2025 ESRD PPS wage index and rural facility adjustment. This was
consistent with our historical practice of updating the CBSA
delineations periodically according to the most recent OMB
delineations, most recently in the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85 FR
71430 through 71434). We discuss this policy in greater detail in
section II.B.2.f of this final rule. For more information on the OMB
delineations, we refer readers to the OMB Bulletin No. 23-01: https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf.
To implement the proposed change in wage index methodology, we
proposed to amend the regulations at 42 CFR 413.196(d)(2) and
413.231(a). Effective January 1, 2025, the amended Sec. 413.196(d)(2)
would state that CMS updates on an annual basis ``[t]he wage index
using the most current wage data for occupations related to the
furnishing of renal dialysis services from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics and occupational mix data from the most recent complete
calendar year of Medicare cost reports submitted in accordance with
Sec. 413.198(b).'' The amended Sec. 413.231(a) would state that ``CMS
adjusts the labor-related portion of the base rate to account for
geographic differences in the area wage levels using an appropriate
wage index (established by CMS) which reflects the relative level of
wages relevant to the furnishing of renal dialysis services in the
geographic area in which the ESRD facility is located.''
For CY 2025, we proposed to update the ESRD PPS wage index to use
the most recent BLS OEWS wage data and the most recent CY 2022
freestanding ESRD facility cost report occupational mix and treatment
volume data available. At the time the analysis was conducted for the
proposed rule, the most recent BLS OEWS wage data available represented
May 2022. We proposed that if more recent data become available after
the development of this ESRD PPS rule and before the publication of the
ESRD PPS final rule (for example, the April 2024 release of May 2023
OEWS data, which was published after the analysis performed for the
proposed rule), we would use such data, if appropriate, to determine
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index in the ESRD PPS final rule.
(1) Alternative CY 2025 ESRD PPS Wage Index Using Established
Methodology
In the proposed rule, we presented a version of the current ESRD
PPS wage index constructed using our established methodology with the
most recent available data, which we referred to as the ESRD PPS legacy
wage index methodology. The purpose of presenting the legacy
methodology with modifications was to illustrate an alternative to the
new methodology described previously for consideration by interested
parties to facilitate comments on the proposed rule. The inclusion of a
CY 2025 version of the ESRD PPS legacy wage index methodology allowed
for interested parties to compare wage index values under the current
methodology and proposed new methodology. For the reasons previously
discussed, we believed and continue to believe that the proposed new
wage index methodology based on BLS OEWS data and ESRD Medicare cost
report data is the most appropriate for ESRD facilities; however, we
considered commenters' input on this proposal and the alternative wage
index based on the established methodology (updated with the most
recent data) when making a determination about the best approach in
this final rule.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we presented the ESRD PPS
legacy wage index, which is based on the most recent pre-floor, pre-
reclassified hospital wage data collected annually under the IPPS, as
an alternative wage index. Please see the proposed rule (89 FR 55781)
for a detailed description of this alternative wage index, which
followed our legacy methodology.
(2) Request for Comments on This Proposal
In the proposed rule, we explained our belief that our new ESRD PPS
wage index methodology more accurately estimates the geographic
variation in wages paid by ESRD facilities when compared to the current
ESRD PPS wage index based on the IPPS wage index. We acknowledged that
this new methodology would represent a significant change to the
established ESRD PPS wage index methodology, both by changing the data
sources and the calculations for the wage index. We requested comments
on all aspects of the new methodology, including the use of BLS OEWS
data for CBSA-level wage estimates, the use of mean hourly wage (rather
than median hourly wage), the use of freestanding ESRD facility cost
reports for deriving occupational mix weights based on FTEs for each
occupation per 1000 treatments as presented in the NEFOM, the use of
the ESRD PPS legacy wage index for standardization, and the
computational steps used to calculate the wage index.
[[Page 89109]]
We welcomed any insights into potential methodological improvements,
particularly related to some of the limitations of the new data sources
discussed previously, including the absence of the cost of employee
benefits and the full cost of contract labor in the BLS data, and the
inability of this methodology to capture differences in ESRD facility
occupational mix across different geographic areas. In the proposed
rule we stated that we would consider modifying the methodological
steps used to calculate the wage index in the final rule, depending on
the comments we received. Additionally, we requested comments on the
proposed use of the new wage index methodology compared to the
established wage index methodology based on the IPPS wage index which
was used to create the alternative ESRD PPS legacy wage index. We also
requested comments on the distributional implications of this wage
index proposal, with specific consideration to rural areas and remote
or isolated areas such as the United States Territories in the Pacific.
Lastly, we requested comments on our proposal to begin using our new
wage index methodology beginning on January 1, 2025.
We invited public comment on our proposal for our new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology and its use for CY 2025. Approximately 20 commenters
including LDOs, SDOs, provider advocacy organizations, coalitions of
dialysis organizations, a professional organization, several ESRD
facilities, and MedPAC commented on the proposed new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology. The following is a summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Most commenters who expressed an opinion on the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, including a coalition of kidney
organizations, several LDOs and MedPAC, stated that the use of the IPPS
wage index within the ESRD PPS was flawed. Some commenters specified
reasons why the IPPS methodology was not appropriate for the ESRD PPS
including data lag and the fact that it is based on hospital cost
report data. The majority of these commenters indicated that they
believed the new wage index methodology would be an improvement over
the IPPS wage index for the ESRD PPS. Many commenters supported the
wage index proposal and requested that CMS finalize the proposal for CY
2025.
Response: We thank commenters for their opinions on the proposed
new wage index methodology as well as their opinions on the ESRD PPS's
current use of the IPPS wage index. We agree that the ESRD PPS wage
index proposed for CY 2025 has advantages over use of the IPPS wage
index when applied to the ESRD PPS. We appreciate the support for the
new ESRD PPS wage index methodology, which we are finalizing in this
rule.
Comment: Many commenters expressed concerns over some of the
impacts of the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index methodology. Among
these comments, the most frequently mentioned impact was the wage index
budget neutrality adjustment factor. Multiple commenters requested that
we implement this new wage index methodology in a non-budget neutral
manner. Several commenters noted that there was no statutory
requirement for budget neutrality for the ESRD PPS wage index. Some
commenters expressed concerns about payment adequacy within the ESRD
PPS and stated a belief that the corresponding decrease to the ESRD PPS
base rate would lead to inadequate payments. One commenter attributed
the budget neutrality reduction to the occupational mix used in
calculating the new wage index methodology.
Response: We appreciate the thoughtful comments on the impacts of
the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index methodology. We acknowledge that
the new wage index methodology, implemented budget neutrally, would
decrease the ESRD PPS base rate for CY 2025 relative to use of the
legacy wage index methodology for CY 2025. However, as discussed in the
proposed rule, we note that this decrease to the CY 2025 ESRD PPS base
rate is predominantly due to the application of the 5 percent cap on
year-over-year wage index decreases under Sec. 413.231(c), which
raises the average ESRD PPS wage index. Although the ESRD PPS base rate
would be decreased for CY 2025, as this cap becomes less impactful
(that is, in future years, as fewer facilities would quality for the
application of the 5 percent cap as a result of the change in wage
index methodology), the ESRD PPS base rate would increase over time,
eventually attaining the level at which it would have been otherwise.
The occupational mix has minimal impact on the budget neutrality
adjustment factor, as the NEFOM serves as weights for the wage index,
which are applied equally to the individual CBSA wages and national
wages in the wage index calculation and, therefore, are essentially
cancel out concerns on their impact on the average wage index value.
Although there is no explicit statutory requirement to implement
the ESRD PPS wage index in a budget neutral manner, our longstanding
philosophy within the ESRD PPS is that when we adjust for relative
resource use and the costs for which we are adjusting are already
included in the ESRD PPS base rate, those adjustments should be
implemented budget neutrally. Under section 1881(b)(14)(A) of the Act
our payment system is based on total costs from ESRD facility cost
reports from 2007 and is increased annually based on the ESRDB market
basket reflecting the changes over time in the prices of an appropriate
mix of goods and services included in renal dialysis services. Labor-
related costs, including wages and benefits, were included in the cost
reports used in the initial analysis (75 FR 49071 through 49083);
therefore, we generally believe it is appropriate to implement any
adjustment factors which are based on the allocation of those costs in
a budget neutral manner.
We have received many comments regarding concerns about payment
adequacy in response to our proposed rule, many of which were combined
with calls to implement the new ESRD PPS wage index in a non-budget
neutral manner. While we acknowledge commenters' concerns about payment
adequacy and address them in section II.B.1.b and below in section
II.B.4 of this final rule, we note that the purpose of the ESRD PPS
wage index is to estimate geographic variation in wages. It would not
be appropriate to make changes to the ESRD PPS wage index methodology
to attempt to increase total payments to address the commenters'
perceived inadequacies. We note that the construction of the wage index
budget neutrality factor ensures that the change in the CY 2024 and CY
2025 wage indices does not result in an increase or decrease of
estimated aggregate payments. Although for CY 2025 the wage index
budget neutrality factor is lower than it has been in the past years,
resulting in a larger decrease to the ESRD PPS base rate, this does not
change the fact that aggregate payments are estimated to be unchanged
implementing the wage index methodology for CY 2025. As noted
previously, the main driver of the lower-than-typical budget neutrality
factor is the application of the 5 percent cap in wage index decreases,
which raises the average wage index value for CY 2025. Although each
year's wage index budget neutrality factors are independent, they are
derived using the prior year's wage index. The higher-than-typical
average wage index value of CY 2025 results in
[[Page 89110]]
a smaller budget-neutrality factor. The smaller budget-neutrality
factor results in a larger decrease to the ESRD PPS base rate.
Consequently, this would likely lead to a higher budget-neutrality
factor in future years where the average wage index value would be
lower than in CY 2025, as ESRD facilities that received the 5 percent
cap in CY 2025 would receive lower wage index values in CY 2026. This
will likely result in an increase to the ESRD PPS base rate in CY 2026
related to the wage index budget neutrality factor.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated support for their wage index
methodology, which was described in the June 2023 Report to Congress,
as discussed earlier.\25\ MedPAC noted that their recommended
methodology would include two features which our proposed new wage
index methodology lacked: a methodology to smooth wage index values
across adjacent CBSAs and a methodology to allow for variation in wage
index values within a single CBSA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Jun23_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_SEC.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: We thank MedPAC for their recommendations. We did not
propose a smoothing methodology across CBSAs because we do not believe
it would serve the purpose of the ESRD PPS wage index, which is to
estimate geographic differences in area wages. Furthermore, a smoothing
methodology would increase the complexity of the methodology and likely
involve parameter choices that could be seen as arbitrary. The fact
that ESRD facilities which are near each other but located in different
CBSAs would have different wage index values is unavoidable and
persists within the ESRD PPS legacy wage index. Under the stated
rationalization for a smoothing methodology, ESRD facilities in
different CBSAs which are geographically near each other would compete
for labor. We agree with this evaluation of local labor markets, but we
note that should these ESRD facilities and other healthcare employers
in the area be competing for labor, their wages would likely reflect
that, which would in turn be reflected in the BLS OEWS data and used in
the new wage index methodology. As for the recommendation to allow
variation within a single CBSA, we acknowledge that such a fine level
of detail would have certain advantages if the precision of the wage
index could be maintained. However, we do not believe that there is any
way to allow such variation without using data sources which would be
lower quality, when applied to the ESRD PPS, than the BLS OEWS. In
addition, MedPAC recommends the use of American Community Survey (ACS)
data, which could allow for some information on average wages, but that
information would not be specific to the types of labor used in ESRD
facilities. We proposed this new wage index methodology to create a
wage index that is specific to ESRD facilities, so the use of such
nonspecific data, like the ACS data, would not align with our goals of
creating an ESRD-specific PPS wage index. Additionally, similar to the
smoothing methodology, utilizing ACS data to allow for further
variation of wage index values would increase the complexity of an
already complex methodology. We believe that our new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology as proposed, without either of these methodological
steps (that is, not incorporating either smoothing across CBSAs or
variation within CBSAs), strikes a balance between simplicity and
accuracy by estimating geographic wages at the CBSA level using the
highest quality, publicly-available data, without arbitrary model
parameters. We did not propose and, for the reasons stated previously,
we are not finalizing in this rule either of the commenter's
suggestions of smoothing across CBSAs or accounting for variation
within CBSAs.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the use of the
IPPS wage index for the ESRD PPS. Some commenters highlighted the lack
of hospital-based ESRD facility data used in constructing the NEFOM and
stated a belief that due to this lack of data the IPPS wage index would
be more appropriate for hospital-based ESRD facilities. One commenter
stated that this omission would unfairly penalize hospital-based ESRD
facilities, particularly pediatric hospital-based ESRD facilities. One
commenter requested we make changes to the methodology to utilize
hospital-based ESRD facilities' cost report data in the occupational
mix, as hospital-based ESRD facilities have hiring practices and
occupational mixes more similar to hospitals. One commenter stated that
the omission of hospital-based ESRD facility data would have
distributional implications due to varying ranges of hospital-based
ESRD facilities in different geographical areas.
Response: We appreciate commenters' insight into the extent to
which the ESRD PPS legacy wage index based on IPPS data is appropriate
for ESRD facilities. We note that we generally agree that the use of
the IPPS wage index for the ESRD PPS has historically been reasonably
appropriate for estimating geographic variation in wages for many of
the reasons the commenters stated, however, this does not change our
belief that the new ESRD PPS wage index is more appropriate for the
ESRD PPS moving forward compared to the legacy methodology based on the
IPPS wage index. Many of the objections these commenters raised to the
new methodology revolved around the fact that the NEFOM was based
solely on freestanding ESRD facility cost reports and, therefore, did
not include data from hospital-based ESRD facilities. While we agree
that including data from hospital-based ESRD facilities into the NEFOM
would be an improvement, we could not incorporate data from hospital-
based ESRD facility cost reports into the NEFOM in an appropriate way.
As we explained in the proposed rule (89 FR 55770), hospital-based ESRD
facilities lacked certain occupational categories which are present in
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports, and therefore, in the NEFOM.
The omission of these categories not only means that we do not have
data on those occupations for hospital-based ESRD facilities, but it
also makes it impossible to appropriately incorporate any data on
occupations present in the hospital-based ESRD facility cost reports,
since it would not be an appropriate comparison. We would have absolute
numbers on the clinical staff of the hospital-based ESRD facility,
which would be useful for other analyses, but without knowing the
proportion of labor costs spent on the omitted hospital cost report
categories, any attempt to incorporate the present data would rely on
an assumption that the data reported for the categories not present in
the cost report is comparable to that reported for those categories in
freestanding ESRD facility cost reports. We did not believe that such
an assumption was necessary as hospital-based ESRD facilities are a
significant minority of the total population of ESRD facilities (about
5 percent), meaning their inclusion in the NEFOM would not have a
substantial impact; furthermore, we believe freestanding ESRD
facilities are a good proxy for the average national occupational mix
for hospital-based ESRD facilities. Since the NEFOM only serves as
weights for the mean wages for the occupations, we believe that the
lack of hospital-based data would not unfairly disadvantage hospital-
based ESRD facilities, or hospital-based pediatric ESRD facilities,
since they would receive the same wage index as freestanding ESRD
facilities in the same
[[Page 89111]]
area. Furthermore, any shift to the NEFOM associated with the
hypothetical inclusion of hospital-based ESRD facility cost report
data, should it be possible, would not have any specific impact on
hospital-based ESRD facilities compared to other ESRD facilities, as
the NEFOM would be applied in the wage index calculation for all ESRD
facilities in the same way. Additionally, we note that our analysis
shows that hospital-based ESRD facilities would, on average, receive
increased payments under this proposed new methodology.
We disagree with the claim that the IPPS wage index would be more
appropriate for hospital-based ESRD facilities. Although hospital-based
ESRD facilities' cost report data could not be incorporated into the
NEFOM, we still believe that the freestanding ESRD facility cost report
data is a reasonable proxy for hospital-based ESRD facilities.
Furthermore, the new wage index methodology uses mean wage data from
the BLS OEWS for occupations related to the furnishing of renal
dialysis services, which we believe makes the new wage index
methodology more appropriate for hospital-based ESRD facilities when
compared to the IPPS wage index. While it is true that hospital-based
ESRD facility data would be included in the IPPS wage index there are
many other departments (including but not limited to the adults and
pediatric unit, intensive care unit and surgical intensive care unit)
included in the hospital cost reports which we would anticipate would
be less similar to hospital-based ESRD facilities than freestanding
ESRD facilities are. As we do not have comprehensive occupational mix
data from hospital-based ESRD facilities, we cannot directly evaluate
the claim about hospital-based ESRD facilities having more similar
occupational mixes to hospitals overall than freestanding ESRD
facilities, but we would not anticipate that this would be the case
because of the unique types of labor required in furnishing renal
dialysis services compared to other hospital services. Lastly, we would
not anticipate the omission of hospital-based ESRD facilities from the
NEFOM as having any geographic distributional implications, because the
NEFOM only serves as a set of weights in the new wage index
methodology, so any change to the NEFOM that could potentially arise
from including hospital-based cost reports (if that were operationally
feasible) would change the weights in the same way for all ESRD
facilities.
Comment: One commenter suggested allowing pediatric hospital-based
ESRD facilities to continue using the IPPS-based legacy wage index.
Response: We do not believe it would be appropriate for hospital-
based pediatric ESRD facilities to be allowed to receive a different
wage index value, as we believe that this new wage index methodology is
the most appropriate for all ESRD facilities, including pediatric and
hospital-based ESRD facilities, for the reasons discussed previously.
We do not believe that the IPPS wage index is more applicable for
hospital-based pediatric ESRD facilities. We believe these ESRD
facilities are likely more similar to freestanding ESRD facilities than
other divisions of hospitals because the provision of renal dialysis
services likely dictates the occupational mix more than the location of
the ESRD facility. That is, pediatric hospital-based ESRD facilities
utilize the occupations for which we have utilized BLS OEWS data, as
those are the occupations relevant in furnishing renal dialysis
services. Furthermore, as the ESRD PPS wage index is intended to
reflect the wages in the geographic area in which an ESRD facility is
located, it generally would not be appropriate for two ESRD facilities
in the same geographic areas to have different methodologies determine
their wage index values, as they would generally draw from the same
geographic labor market.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concerns with the BLS OEWS
data used in the construction of the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology. An LDO and a coalition of dialysis organizations expressed
concerns with the BLS OEWS data centered around the lack of data on
employee benefits and limitations on traveling contract labor data.
These comments emphasized both the importance of benefits in attracting
staff and the necessity of using contract labor, which would include
labor contracted across CBSAs. Another coalition of dialysis
organizations suggested that we study these costs to ensure they are
accounted for in this policy. One commenter noted that the BLS OEWS
data was not based solely on ESRD facility wage costs and that BLS
geographic area estimates do not stratify data by healthcare sector.
One commenter noted that evidence shows that wages and benefits vary
across labor markets. One commenter expressed a preference for a wage
index derived only from ESRD facility wage data from ESRD facility cost
reports.
Response: We appreciate these detailed evaluations of the potential
limitations of the data sources used in the proposed methodology. In
the proposed rule we acknowledged that a lack of information on
employee benefits was a limitation of using the BLS OEWS data source.
However, we note that the omission of benefits would only have a
significant impact on the resulting wage index if the geographic
variation in benefit costs is different from the geographic variation
in wages. We note that this condition is different from the
consideration one commenter raised that wages and benefits both vary
geographically. While we cannot say for certain whether the geographic
variation in wages is exactly the same as the geographic variation in
benefits, we believe that ESRD facility wages are likely a fair proxy
for the way ESRD facility benefits vary geographically, particularly
when compared to the IPPS wage index, which is based on many factors
unrelated to the furnishing of renal dialysis services. Our analysis of
cost report data indicates that the percentage of labor costs
associated with benefits does not vary substantially by geographic
region, with all census regions' shares being between 22 and 24
percent. This is what we would expect to see if wages and benefits vary
similarly across geographic regions. We agree with the commenter that
benefits are an important tool in recruiting and retaining staff, but
we note that wages are also an important tool, so we believe that
generally ESRD facilities which need to expend additional money to
attract more staff would likely use both increased wages and increased
non-wage benefits. We note that employee benefits represent 9.5 percent
of the cost weights in the 2020-based ESRDB (87 FR 67146) and, on
average, represent approximately 23 percent of all compensation costs.
We note that contract labor is directly included in this policy in
two ways, both as a part of the NEFOM and in the BLS OEWS data,
although we note that self-employed contract workers are not captured
by the OEWS. However, we understand the concern that the commenters
raised regarding traveling contract laborers that may be included in
the data for a different CBSA from where the ESRD facility is located.
We anticipate that many contract laborers would be included in the BLS
OEWS survey data for the CBSA in which the ESRD facility where they
work is located. We note that the BLS OEWS data allows for the
reporting of a worker's site of work; however, we wish to clarify that
worksite reporting does not change the CBSA for which an employee would
be counted. That is, a contract worker employed by an agency that is
physically located in one CBSA but works in a different CBSA would be
included in the wage estimates for the
[[Page 89112]]
CBSA in which their employing agency is located. We wish to reiterate
that, as the wage index is relative, this would only have a significant
impact on the wage index methodology if the way in which traveling
contract labor is utilized varies geographically from other wages. We
intend to continue to monitor and evaluate the performance of the new
wage index methodology, including the extent to which contract labor is
utilized and would consider making changes to the methodology in future
rulemaking, if warranted. We believe the BLS OEWS wage data would
better approximate the labor costs of ESRD facilities even if the
omitted traveling contract labor differed greatly compared to the
included wages, because contract labor hours are generally a small
portion of total hours for ESRD facilities. Our data suggest that
contract labor hours accounted for 1.3 percent and 1.1 percent of RN
and Technician hours in 2022, respectively.
We recognize that the BLS OEWS data used in this methodology is not
based solely on ESRD facility wage data; however, we note that this is
also true for the IPPS wage index. We have decided on several
occupations related to furnishing renal dialysis services for which to
utilize BLS OEWS data. We believe it is appropriate to include data
from other healthcare employers, as it is likely that ESRD facilities
compete with other employers for labor. It is technically correct to
say that BLS OEWS does not stratify their geographic area data by
healthcare sector; however, we do not believe this is a flaw in the
methodology, as the occupations we have chosen to utilize are,
generally, healthcare specific. Table 1 in this final rule describes
the full occupation titles for all of the occupations included in this
wage index methodology. Many of these are inherently healthcare
specific, such as nurses or health technologists and technicians.
However, for those categories that may not be healthcare specific, such
as administrative staff, we are using BLS data from the category that
is healthcare specific (that is, Medical Secretaries and Administrative
Assistants (SOC code 43-6013)). We believe that these categories are
the most appropriate for the types of labor employed by ESRD
facilities. Insofar as these categories do not separate data by type of
healthcare facility, we believe this is appropriate, as different
healthcare employers likely compete with each other for labor.
Similarly, we do not believe a wage index based only on ESRD facility
cost report data would be appropriate, because ESRD facilities compete
against other healthcare employers and, furthermore, in certain CBSAs
the number of ESRD facilities could be very small, leading to the ESRD
facilities present having a very large impact on the cost report data
and, therefore, the wage data for that CBSA.
Comment: Some commenters expressed an opinion that the data sources
used in the proposed methodology were appropriate despite some of the
limitations we discussed in the proposed rule. Several commenters
stated that the omission of hospital-based ESRD facility cost report
data from the NEFOM was reasonable and did not jeopardize the
methodology as a whole. Other commenters stated that the OEWS data
provided a better estimation of geographic wages even if it did not
include benefit data and certain contract labor wages. Some commenters
supported the occupations we have chosen and stated they were
appropriate for the ESRD PPS. Some commenters, including MedPAC,
suggested that we continue to monitor the validity of data sources and
the resulting wage indices.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and agree that the
data sources used in the new wage index methodology are generally
appropriate for such a methodology. We intend to continue to monitor
both the data sources and the ESRD PPS wage index to ensure they remain
appropriate for use in the ESRD PPS.
Comment: Several commenters, including MedPAC and a coalition of
dialysis organizations noted that several adjustments used in the ESRD
PPS, such as the case-mix adjustments, are derived from a model which
might be influenced by a change in the ESRD PPS wage index. MedPAC and
one LDO requested that we conduct analysis in future years to determine
whether some of the adjustment factors should be changed.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' thoughts on the
interconnected relationship between the ESRD PPS wage index and the
other adjustments used within the ESRD PPS. We note that we have not
routinely updated the case-mix or facility-level adjustment factors
when we have made updates to the ESRD PPS wage index in the past.
However, we acknowledge that the new wage index methodology would
result in more significant facility-level changes than past routine
updates to the ESRD PPS wage index. We did not propose any changes to
the ESRD PPS case-mix adjustments or facility-level adjustments for CY
2025. One reason for this was because the proposed new wage index
methodology would represent a substantial change to the ESRD PPS, and
we believe it is appropriate to avoid making multiple significant
methodological changes to the wage index and other adjustment factors
concurrently as payments to ESRD facilities could change substantially
in multiple different ways. We generally believe it is most appropriate
to update all of the case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors
concurrently because of the interconnected nature of the factors. By
this we mean that the case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors
are originally derived from a cost-regression from the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
final rule, and updated in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule, which
includes all such adjustments. By including multiple variables in the
regression as adjustment factors we can derive the appropriate
adjustment factor for each of the facility-level and case-mix
adjustment, as the regression isolates the marginal impact of that
facility-level or case-mix characteristic on the cost variable. This
does not mean that it is inappropriate to update only one of these
adjustment factors, but when we do so we generally intend to be
cautious as not to change the adjustment factor in a way that would
lead to duplicative payment from other adjustment factors, which could
theoretically happen if there were two independent variables which are
highly correlated. This is part of the reason why we proposed to update
the LVPA adjustment factors in a manner which was budget neutral within
the LVPA, rather than reduce the ESRD PPS base rate. We are considering
how to update the case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors in a
way which would best align relative payments with resource use and
cost. We did not propose to update the case-mix and facility-level
adjustment factors in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule because we did
not believe we had the proper data to make the most appropriate updates
to the case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors at that time. As
we explained in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, additional data would
serve to provide moredata to better inform CMS's pursuit of equitable
payment policies in the future by helping us evaluate and monitor the
accuracy of our patient-level adjustment factors (88 FR 76397).
Specifically, we do not yet have the data from either the updated
reporting requirement effective January 1, 2025, for time on machine or
the updates to the cost reports to better capture data on the costs for
pediatric patients. We believe it is most appropriate to wait until we
have these additional data sources and update the
[[Page 89113]]
case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors at that time as these
additional data sources may allow us to better allocate resource use.
Although sometimes substantial changes are unavoidable, they can create
challenges for ESRD facilities when planning for future payment years,
so we believe it is most prudent to make such a substantial change when
we have the most appropriate data. We are not finalizing any changes to
the case-mix or facility-level adjustment factors related to the new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology, but we intend to consider whether such
changes would be appropriate in future years.
Comment: Some commenters expressed concerns with the use of a
single national occupational mix for all ESRD facilities. Several
interested parties expressed concerns with the application of a wage
index based on a national occupational mix to the U.S. Territories in
the Pacific, stating that they believed a regional occupational mix
would be more appropriate. One commenter suggested CMS allow some ESRD
facilities to continue to receive the legacy wage index based on the
IPPS wage index.
Response: The NEFOM's purpose in the wage index methodology is to
weight the BLS OEWS mean wage data so that the resulting wage index
would be more representative of the actual wage costs faced by ESRD
facilities. We believe that a single national occupational mix achieves
this goal in the most straightforward way. The new wage index
methodology is the most appropriate estimation of wages for ESRD
facilities. Although some types of ESRD facilities, such as ESRD
facilities located in U.S. Territories, may have some other costs that
are higher due to their location, if these costs are not directly
related to wages it would not be appropriate for them to be reflected
in the wage index methodology. As discussed earlier, we do not believe
it would be appropriate for different ESRD facilities in a given CBSA
to receive different wage index values, so we are not finalizing any
exceptions to the new wage index methodology that would allow certain
ESRD facilities or facility types to receive the legacy wage index.
Comment: One commenter stated that it would not be appropriate to
apply a different wage index value to hospital-based ESRD facilities
compared to other units of the hospital as they would have the same
hiring practices.
Response: We recognize that hospital-based ESRD facilities likely
share some practices with the hospital in which they are located.
However, we do not agree with this assertion. We believe it is
reasonable for a hospital-based ESRD facility to receive a different
wage index from other units in the hospital, as the labor employed by
ESRD facilities is different from the labor employed by other parts of
a hospital. We note that under the current payment systems, hospitals
functionally receive different payment rates for labor for different
units, as the payment rates are based on more than the wage index,
including the labor-related share and the base payment rate.
Furthermore, we do not believe it would be appropriate for hospital-
based ESRD facilities to receive different payment rates from similar
ESRD facilities in the same CBSA, as we would generally expect ESRD
facilities in the same CBSA to face similar labor costs both in mean
hourly wage and in the types of labor employed.
Comment: One commenter stated a concern that the NEFOM had a large
portion of dialysis technicians which, according to the commenter,
would hurt independent ESRD facilities.
Response: We believe the commenter is saying that independent ESRD
facilities utilize dialysis technicians at a lower rate than LDOs, and
therefore would likely utilize more nurse labor. Our analysis of
occupational mix data does not indicate that this statement is true.
Our analysis showed that independent ESRD facilities had a slightly
lower ratio of nurses to technicians compared to LDOs. The largest
difference we found between independent ESRD facilities and LDOs was
that independent ESRD facilities had higher rates of administrative
staff and management, likely due to economies of scale for these
occupations leading to larger organizations requiring relatively fewer
of these staff compared to direct patient care staff. We would note
that our analysis did find that regional dialysis organizations
utilized significantly fewer technicians compared to both LDOs and
independent facilities, instead hiring significantly more nurse aides
(which are more similar in wages to technicians than RNs). Separate
from this analysis, we acknowledge the commenter's stated belief that
some ESRD facilities would have an occupational mix that differs from
the NEFOM, but we disagree with the statement that this would ``hurt''
those ESRD facilities. The purpose of the ESRD PPS wage index is to
best estimate the geographic variation in wages and, to that point,
this new wage index better estimates how wages faced by ESRD facilities
vary across different geographic areas. In this methodology, the NEFOM
serves to weight the BLS OEWS wage data in a way that is generally
appropriate for ESRD facilities. While some ESRD facilities would
certainly have occupational mixes that differ from the NEFOM, we do not
believe it would be more appropriate to pay according to each ESRD
facility's occupational mix. ESRD facilities make hiring decisions
based on their local labor market and other relevant factors, which may
result in occupational mixes that differ from the NEFOM. This is
consistent with the philosophy behind a PPS where we provide payment to
ESRD facilities, which they can allocate to costs in the most efficient
and appropriate manner for them.
Comment: One commenter stated that CMS did not adequately
demonstrate that the proposed new wage index methodology would more
accurately reflect ESRD facilities' labor markets. This commenter
believed that implementing the new wage index methodology would be
detrimental for some ESRD facilities.
Response: We understand the commenter's apprehension regarding such
a significant methodological change. We believe that we have adequately
explained why the proposed new ESRD PPS wage index methodology better
estimates the realities of the labor markets for ESRD facilities. With
respect to the commenter's desire for CMS to ``demonstrate'' the
accuracy of the wage index methodology, we note that by its nature the
wage index reflects an estimate of the general economic conditions in a
labor market, and there is no more objective measure of those
conditions against which its accuracy could be measured. We conducted
an analysis of the cost versus payment ratio under the proposed new
ESRD PPS wage index methodology and the legacy wage index methodology
which found that, on average, ESRD facilities had a cost versus payment
ratio of 0.997 under the proposed new methodology (without the
application of the 5 percent cap) and 0.991 under the legacy
methodology. Using this metric, the proposed new wage index methodology
better aligns payment with resource use compared to the legacy
methodology.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the 5 percent cap
on wage index decreases. Some of these commenters stated that they
believed the 5 percent cap would help smooth the transition between the
legacy and proposed new methodologies. One LDO stated that they did not
believe any other sort of transition would be necessary given the 5
percent cap. MedPAC reiterated support for a symmetrical cap on wage
index increases. Another LDO suggested that a
[[Page 89114]]
symmetric cap on wage index increases could ameliorate some of the
impact of this new wage index methodology on the ESRD PPS base rate
resulting from budget neutrality.
Response: We appreciate the continued support for the cap on year-
over-year wage index decreases. We agree that this 5 percent cap would
help mitigate the negative impacts of this policy on certain ESRD
facilities in certain years, allowing for a transition period for these
ESRD facilities to adjust their business planning. We did not propose
any changes to the 5 percent cap policy for CY 2025 and are not
finalizing any changes. When we finalized the 5 percent cap in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161), we explained why we did not
believe a symmetrical cap on increases would be appropriate. We still
believe that capping increases in wage index values would be
inappropriate, as the new wage index value is the most appropriate for
these ESRD facilities. The purpose of the cap is to increase the
predictability of ESRD PPS payment for ESRD facilities and mitigate
instability and significant negative impacts to ESRD facilities
resulting from significant changes to the wage index. In the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule we explained that the transition policies are not
intended to curtail the positive impacts of certain wage index changes,
so it would not be appropriate to also apply the 5 percent cap to wage
index increases (87 FR 67159). Although, we appreciate the suggestion
for ameliorating the other commenters' budget neutrality concerns, as
discussed, we do not believe that a cap on increases to wage index
values would be appropriate, and we are not finalizing a cap on
increases to wage index values.
Comment: One commenter raised concerns that the ESRD PPS wage index
methodology did not include overtime wages. Specifically, the commenter
emphasized that some geographic areas have laws which dictate rates for
overtime, for example time-and-a-half, which would lead to higher
relative costs compared to ESRD facilities in areas which did not have
such legislation.
Response: We acknowledge that the BLS OEWS mean hourly wage data is
not intended to capture overtime by its definition of wages. However,
we do not believe that this is an issue with the methodology. Our goal
in designing the new ESRD PPS wage index methodology was to better
estimate geographic variation in wages, which this new methodology
does. We interpret the commenter's main concern to be that because some
geographic areas have legislation which dictates certain overtime
rates, overtime costs would likely vary differently from non-overtime
wages. Although the commenter is accurate in noting that regulations
regarding overtime differ across the country, since overtime rates are
generally based on non-overtime hourly wages, we believe it's
reasonable to assume that on average places with higher non-overtime
wages would generally have higher overtime wages. While non-overtime
wages paid by ESRD facilities may not be a perfect proxy for overtime
wages paid by ESRD facilities, we believe that they are a fairly good
proxy and that use of the BLS OEWS data is nonetheless superior to
using the IPPS wage index. In other words, we believe that most
variation between geographic areas is captured by the variation in base
wages utilized by the proposed new wage index methodology.
We appreciate the commenter raising this concern, and we have
considered how we could incorporate overtime labor costs into this
methodology. There are some technical limitations to the inclusion of
overtime labor costs into this methodology, as overtime is not included
in the BLS OEWS data source, and the source of the increased cost
resulting from overtime could derive from either different overtime
payment rates or different overtime utilization amounts. We did not
propose to include overtime in the mean wage data used in the proposed
new wage index methodology, and we are not finalizing any such changes
in this final rule. We will consider proposing changes to account for
overtime wages, if appropriate and feasible, in future rulemaking
years.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that we did not present
the uncapped wage index value for each ESRD facility.
Response: The uncapped wage index value for each ESRD facility was
available in Addendum A to the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, as the
uncapped wage index value for an ESRD facility is simply the wage index
value for the CBSA in which the ESRD facility is located. We did not
include that value in Addendum B, as that could have caused confusion,
since the wage index after the application of the 5 percent cap would
apply for CY 2025.
Comment: One commenter expressed support for the 0.6000 wage index
floor. Several commenters requested CMS perform further analysis on the
wage index floor and expressed a belief that such analysis would
support an increase in the wage index floor. Commenters specifically
suggested that a wage index floor of 0.7000 would be appropriate. These
commenters specifically highlighted Puerto Rico and enumerated certain
labor costs which they stated contributed to the cost of care in Puerto
Rico.
Response: We thank commenters for the continued support of the wage
index floor. We did not propose to change the wage index floor for CY
2025 and are not finalizing any changes in this final rule. We will
continue to monitor the appropriateness of the current wage index
floor, as well as the extent to which ESRD facilities in U.S.
Territories may face certain higher costs and will consider any further
changes through notice-and-comment rulemaking in future years.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated concerns that a wage index floor is not
appropriate, as it distorts area wage indices.
Response: We appreciate the continued evaluation of the impact of
the wage index floor. We did not propose, and are not finalizing, any
changes to the wage index floor. We will take these concerns into
consideration when determining whether further changes to the wage
index floor are needed in future rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters, including one letter from several
interested parties concerning the U.S. Pacific Territories, expressed
concerns over the impact of the proposed wage index methodology on the
U.S. Pacific Territories. This letter from the interested parties
stated that they believed that this new wage index methodology was a
``one-size fit all'' approach that would have negative impacts on
marginalized communities. This letter expressed some support for the
alternative state-level occupational mix which we discussed in the
proposed rule, which would result in higher payments to for ESRD
facilities in the Pacific Census region and expressed criticism for our
choice to propose the simpler methodology using a national occupation
mix. One ESRD facility located in the Northern Marianas Island noted
that ESRD facilities in these regions face higher costs due to the
nature of the isolated regions requiring importation of goods,
including medication. This commenter requested that we develop a new
methodology that would better account for actual wages rather than
state-level wages.
Response: We thank the commenters for their insight on the impact
of the proposed wage index policy on ESRD facilities in the U.S.
Pacific Territories. We note that the purpose of the wage
[[Page 89115]]
index is to reflect the geographic variation in wages faced by ESRD
facilities. We believe that this new wage index methodology achieves
this goal, especially when compared to the legacy methodology based on
the IPPS wage index. We recognize that this new policy will lead to a
decrease in payment to ESRD facilities in the U.S. Pacific Territories.
However, we note that the BLS OEWS data indicates that this is
appropriate, as the new ESRD PPS wage index methodology represents the
most recently available BLS OEWS mean wage estimates for the U.S.
Pacific Territories. We do not agree with the characterization of this
policy as a ``one size fits all'' approach, as this methodology uses
BLS OEWS data which is CBSA specific.
We considered as an alternative state-level or regional
occupational mixes rather than the proposed NEFOM reflecting the
national occupational mix. Our concern with the state-level
occupational mix policy was that it was a significantly more
complicated alternative to a policy that already represented a
significant increase in complexity to the legacy methodology. In
addition, the use of a state-level occupational mix for weighting the
mean hourly wage data would allow it to be possible that an area could
have lower average hourly wages for all occupations but receive a
higher wage index when compared to another area. It is accurate that
the state-level occupational mix alternative would lead to higher
payments to ESRD facilities in the U.S. Pacific Territories compared to
the proposed methodology, but we wish to clarify that payments to these
ESRD facilities would decrease under either methodology, because the
main driver of the decrease in wage index values is the OEWS mean
hourly wage data. The difference between payments for ESRD facilities
in the U.S. Pacific Territories using state-level occupational mix data
and the proposed national occupational mix was less than one percent.
We acknowledge that for the U.S. Pacific Territories the CBSA-level
OEWS data serves functionally as a territory-level wage measure due to
each of these territories containing exactly one CBSA; however we
believe that this is appropriate. We note that the current IPPS wage
index is also determined at the CBSA level and, therefore, combines the
wages for the entire territory for each of Guam, American Samoa and the
Northern Marianas Islands. Lastly, we appreciate the insight into
additional costs paid by ESRD facilities in the U.S. Pacific
Territories. We note that many of the additional costs listed were non-
labor costs, and that the wage index serves to estimate the geographic
difference in wages. We acknowledge that there is some evidence that
non-labor costs may be relatively higher in regions which require
importation of most goods, including the U.S. Pacific Territories;
however, it would not be appropriate to address these higher costs
through the wage index. We intend to carefully evaluate both the labor
and non-labor costs for the U.S. Pacific Territories and other outlying
regions of the United States and will consider whether any additional
policies are warranted in future rulemaking.
Comment: One association commented that they commissioned an
analysis of the impacts of the proposed new wage index methodology,
which found that independent and small ESRD facilities would be worse
off within industry segments under the new wage index methodology.
Response: Our analysis does not concur exactly with the conclusion
the commenter drew about the new wage index methodology. As we
presented in Table 6 of the proposed rule, our analysis showed that
small ESRD facilities would receive higher payments under the new wage
index methodology. Our analysis does show that independent ESRD
facilities would receive lower payments. However, since the new wage
index methodology is derived from the best available wage data, we
believe this is appropriate, as the underlying BLS OEWS mean wage data
indicates that the areas in which these independent ESRD facilities are
located have lower relative mean wages compared to the legacy wage
index.
Comment: One commenter expressed concerns that hospital cost report
data was excluded from the calculation of the wage index budget
neutrality factor.
Response: We wish to clarify that hospital cost reports were not
included in the analysis for the NEFOM because of differences in the
labor categories between the hospital-based and freestanding ESRD
facility cost reports. Hospital-based ESRD facilities were included in
the claims data that were used for determining the budget neutrality
adjustment factor for the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index. We agree with
the commenter that it is important to include hospital-based ESRD
facilities in any impacts analysis, including the analysis used to
determine average payments under the final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index,
which was used to determine the wage index budget-neutrality factor.
Omitting these hospital-based ESRD facilities would reduce the accuracy
of the analysis without any good reason.
Comment: A few commenters recommended CMS allow ESRD facilities to
reclassify their CBSA for the wage index, similar to the IPPS, which
allows hospitals to reclassify.
Response: We appreciate this suggestion, and we recognize that many
ESRD facilities stated that they would be better suited for an adjacent
CBSA. However, our belief is that allowing reclassifications would not
be appropriate for the ESRD PPS, as we believe the most appropriate
wage index for an ESRD facility is for the CBSA in which it is located.
We believe our new wage index methodology better estimates the actual
wages paid by ESRD facilities in a given CBSA by utilizing data from
the BLS OEWS. We did not propose to allow reclassifications under the
proposed new wage index methodology, similar to how we did not allow
reclassifications under the legacy methodology, and we are not
finalizing any such changes in this final rule. We discuss our
reasoning for not allowing reclassifications for the wage index for the
ESRD PPS in further detail in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76360 through 76361).
Comment: One commenter, while discussing the proposed wage index
budget-neutrality adjustment factor, stated an expectation that we
would adjust the base rate down in future years according to this
policy.
Response: We want to clarify that we do not anticipate significant
repeated downward adjustments to the ESRD PPS base rate as a result of
this proposal. The lower-than-typical wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment factor is primarily a result of the application of the 5
percent cap on year-over-year wage index decreases, which is
particularly impactful in CY 2025 due to the significant proposed
change to the wage index methodology. We note that although this 5
percent cap could apply for multiple years in a row as a result of the
adoption of the new wage index methodology, each year it is applied,
the affected ESRD facilities' wage index values would become closer to
the wage index values for their CBSAs, until their wage index values
would be equal their CBSA's wage index value. In future years we
anticipate the 5 percent cap would cause fewer ESRD facilities to
receive wage index values higher than that of their CBSA, so the wage
index budget-neutrality factor for CY 2026 would be higher than the
wage index budget-neutrality factor for CY 2025. We note that the wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment factor is multiplicative, so a
``higher'' value would lead to either a smaller decrease in the ESRD
PPS base rate, should the
[[Page 89116]]
value still remain below 1, or to an increase to the ESRD PPS base
rate, should the value rise above 1.
Comment: One commenter generally supported the idea of the proposal
but noted the complexity of the proposal and requested additional time
to review the new wage index methodology and impacts. One LDO suggested
further analysis and potentially another TEP to continue to refine and
test the methodology.
Response: We believe the 60-day timeframe provided a sufficient
opportunity for interested parties to review the proposed rule and
provide comments. To help interested parties understand the
complexities and impacts of this proposal we included 3 addenda to the
proposed rule. Addendum B included facility level impacts for all of
our proposed policies, including the proposed change in the wage index
methodology, as well as a side-by-side comparison of wage index values
under the proposed new wage index and the legacy wage index based on
IPPS data. Addendum C included a detailed methodological breakdown for
this proposed new wage index methodology. We believe that this provided
the public with ample information to thoroughly review the policy in
the time available. In the proposed rule, we explained that we believe
it would be beneficial to implement this proposed new wage index
methodology alongside the more-routine updates to the CBSA delineations
according to OMB 23-01. Additionally, we believe that this new wage
index methodology is more appropriate for ESRD facilities and,
therefore, should be implemented as soon as feasible. Similarly, we
believe that we have sufficient information to determine that this
policy is an improvement to the use of the IPPS wage index for the ESRD
PPS and that holding another TEP would be an unnecessary delay for this
policy. We are not finalizing any delay to the implementation date for
this new wage index methodology, but we intend to carefully monitor the
new ESRD PPS wage index, maintain a dialogue with interested parties,
and consider further modifications to the methodology in future
rulemaking.
Final Rule Action: After considering the comments received on this
proposal, we are finalizing the use of the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology for CY 2025 without modification. Consistent with prior
years, we are updating the CY 2025 proposed ESRD PPS wage index with
the most recent available data. Most notably, this includes the release
of the May 2023 BLS OEWS data as well as updated CY 2022 cost report
data. We note that, contrary to our expectation, some CY 2022 cost
report data was still not available at the time of the analysis
conducted for this final rule, so we are finalizing to use CY 2021 cost
report data where necessary. We believe that omitting these ESRD
facilities without CY 2022 cost report data would be inappropriate, and
CY 2021 cost report data is the most reasonable proxy for this missing
data. Additionally, we are finalizing the proposed updates to 42 CFR
413.196(d)(2) and 413.231(a) to codify the new ESRD PPS wage index
methodology with one change. To avoid confusion in connection with the
use of the phrase ``most recent complete year of Medicare cost
reports,'' as some CY 2022 freestanding ESRD facility cost reports are
not available, we are finalizing to instead revise 413.196(d)(2) to
read ``most recent full year of Medicare cost reports.'' This change
clarifies our original intention to use the most recent completed cost-
reporting CY, which is CY 2022 because CY 2023 cost reports beginning
in November of 2023 (and ending November of 2024) would not be finished
at the time of this final rule's publishing. This avoids confusion
insofar as the word ``complete'' could refer either to the year (as
intended) or the dataset of cost reports (which is not complete, as
some CY 2022 cost reports were still not available at the time of this
final rulemaking).
The final CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index is set forth in Addendum A to
this final rule and is available on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRD-Payment-Regulations-and-Notices. Addendum A
provides a crosswalk between the CY 2024 wage index and the proposed CY
2025 wage index. Addendum B to this final rule provides an ESRD
facility level impact analysis. Addendum B is available on the CMS
website at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRD-Payment-Regulations-and-Notices.
f. Implementation of New OMB Labor Market Delineations
(1) Background
As previously discussed in this final rule, the wage index used for
the ESRD PPS was historically calculated using the most recent pre-
floor, pre-reclassified hospital wage data collected annually under the
IPPS and is assigned to an ESRD facility based on the labor market area
in which the ESRD facility is geographically located. In the CY 2025
ESRD PPS proposed rule, we proposed a new wage index methodology that
would similarly be based on the labor market in which an ESRD facility
is located. ESRD facility labor market areas are delineated based on
the CBSAs established by OMB. In accordance with our established
methodology, we have historically adopted through rulemaking CBSA
changes that are published in the latest OMB bulletin. Generally, OMB
issues major revisions to statistical areas every 10 years, based on
the results of the decennial census. However, OMB occasionally issues
minor updates and revisions to statistical areas in the years between
the decennial censuses.
In the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66137 through 66142), we
finalized changes to the ESRD PPS wage index based on the newest OMB
delineations, as described in OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 \26\ issued on
February 28, 2013. We implemented these changes with a 2-year
transition period (79 FR 66142). OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 established
revised delineations for United States Metropolitan Statistical Areas,
Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas based on
the 2010 Census. OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 also provided guidance on the
use of the delineations of these statistical areas using standards
published on June 28, 2010, in the Federal Register (75 FR 37246
through 37252).
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\26\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/bulletins/2013/b13-01.pdf.
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On July 15, 2015, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 15-01,\27\ which
updated and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 13-01 issued on February 28,
2013. These updates were based on the application of the 2010 Standards
for Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas to the
United States Census Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2012, and
July 1, 2013.
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\27\ https://www.bls.gov/bls/omb-bulletin-15-01-revised-delineations-of-metropolitan-statistical-areas.pdf.
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On August 15, 2017, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 17-01,\28\ which
updated and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 15-01 issued on July 15, 2015.
These updates were based on the application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas to the
United States Census Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2014, and
July 1,
[[Page 89117]]
2015. In OMB Bulletin No. 17-01, OMB announced a new urban CBSA, Twin
Falls, Idaho (CBSA 46300).
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\28\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/bulletins/2017/b-17-01.pdf.
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On April 10, 2018, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 18-03 \29\ which
updated and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 17-01 issued on August 15,
2017. On September 14, 2018, OMB issued OMB Bulletin No. 18-04,\30\
which updated and superseded OMB Bulletin No. 18-03 issued on April 10,
2018. OMB Bulletin Numbers 18-03 and 18-04 established revised
delineations for Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Micropolitan
Statistical Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas, and provided
guidance on the use of the delineations of these statistical areas.
These updates were based on the application of the 2010 Standards for
Delineating Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas to the
United States Census Bureau population estimates for July 1, 2015, and
July 1, 2016. In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85 FR 71430 through
71434), we finalized changes to the ESRD PPS wage index based on the
most recent OMB delineations from OMB Bulletin No 18-04. This was the
most recent time we have updated the labor market delineations used for
the ESRD PPS and, therefore, reflects the labor market delineations we
used for CY 2024 (88 FR 76360).
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\29\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/OMB-BULLETIN-NO.-18-03-Final.pdf.
\30\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Bulletin-18-04.pdf.
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In the July 16, 2021, Federal Register (86 FR 37777), OMB finalized
a schedule for future updates based on results of the decennial Census
updates to commuting patterns from the American Community Survey, an
ongoing survey conducted by the Census Bureau. In accordance with that
schedule, on July 21, 2023, OMB released Bulletin No. 23-01. A copy of
OMB Bulletin No. 23-01 may be obtained at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/OMB-Bulletin-23-01.pdf. According to OMB,
the delineations reflect the 2020 Standards for Delineating Core Based
Statistical Areas (``the 2020 Standards''), which appeared in the
Federal Register on July 16, 2021 (86 FR 37770 through 37778), and the
application of those standards to Census Bureau population and journey-
to-work data (that is, 2020 Decennial Census, American Community
Survey, and Census Population Estimates Program data).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we explained that we believe
it is important for the ESRD PPS to use, as soon as reasonably
possible, the latest available labor market area delineations to
maintain a more accurate and up-to-date payment system that reflects
the reality of population shifts and labor market conditions. We
believe that using the most current OMB delineations would increase the
integrity of the ESRD PPS wage index system by creating a more accurate
representation of geographic variations in wage levels, especially
given the proposed new wage index methodology discussed previously. We
carefully analyzed the impacts of adopting the new OMB delineations and
found no compelling reason to delay implementation. Therefore, we
proposed to adopt the updates to the OMB delineations announced in OMB
Bulletin No. 23-01 effective for CY 2025 under the ESRD PPS for use in
determining both the wage index and the rural adjustment for ESRD
facilities. We proposed that this would be implemented along with the
new ESRD PPS wage index methodology, if finalized, or along with the
alternative ESRD PPS legacy wage index based on IPPS data, should the
proposed new wage index methodology not be finalized.
As previously discussed, we finalized a 5 percent cap on any
decrease to a provider's wage index from its wage index in the prior
year in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67161). We did not
propose any additional transition policy for the CY 2025 wage index as
we believe the 5 percent cap effectively mitigates the negative impact
of large wage index decreases for an ESRD facility in a single year. In
addition, we proposed to phase out the rural adjustment for ESRD
facilities that are transitioning from rural to urban based on these
CBSA revisions, as discussed in section II.B.2.f.(2) of this final
rule. For a further discussion of changes to OMB's CBSA delineations,
including a list of changes to specific CBSAs, see the FY 2025 IPPS
proposed rule (89 FR 36139).
We invited public comment on our proposal to use the updated CBSA
delineations. We received four comments regarding our proposal to use
the updated CBSA delineations. The following is a summary of the public
comments received on this proposal and our responses.
Comment: One commenter expressed specific support for our use of
the updated CBSA delineations according to the most recent OMB
delineations set forth in OMB Bulletin No. 23-01. Several other
comments referenced our proposal to update the CBSA delineations;
however, no other comment expressed a strong opinion on this policy.
These comments that referenced the proposal generally included it
alongside other proposals that appeared to be the focus of the comment,
such as the new wage index methodology.
Response: We appreciate the commenters for reviewing the proposal
to update CBSA delineations and appreciate the commenter for expressing
support for the updated delineations.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the comments received, we are
finalizing our use of the most recent CBSA delineations from OMB
Bulletin 23-01 for ESRD PPS wage index and rural adjustment for CY 2025
and beyond, consistent with prior updates to CBSA delineations.
(2) Proposal To Phase Out the Rural Facility Adjustment for Facilities
Affected by Changes to CBSAs
In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69001), we established a
policy to provide a 0.8 percent payment adjustment to the base rate for
ESRD facilities located in a rural area. This adjustment was based on a
regression analysis, which indicated that the per diem cost of
providing renal dialysis services for rural facilities was 0.8 percent
higher than that of urban facilities after accounting for the influence
of the other variables included in the regression. This 0.8 percent
adjustment has been part of the ESRD PPS each year since it was
finalized beginning for CY 2016, and its inclusion in the ESRD PPS is
codified at Sec. 413.233.
As previously discussed in this final rule, we proposed a change to
the ESRD PPS wage index methodology as well as changes to the CBSA
delineations. In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized a policy
to cap year-to-year decreases in the wage index for any ESRD facility
at 5 percent (87 FR 67161). The primary purpose of this change was to
mitigate the negative effect associated with an ESRD facility being
reclassified into a lower wage index CBSA as a result of changes in
OMB's most recent CBSA delineations. We anticipated that the proposed
change to the CBSA delineations and the changes to the wage index
methodology, if finalized, would lead to numerous ESRD facilities
having a significant decrease in wage index value in CY 2025 compared
to CY 2024.
As previously discussed, we are finalizing the adoption of OMB
Bulletin No. 23-01, which will determine whether an ESRD facility is
classified as urban or rural for purposes of the rural facility
adjustment in the ESRD PPS.
[[Page 89118]]
Although the rural facility adjustment is not directly related to the
wage index, the application of both is determined by the CBSA in which
an ESRD facility is located and, therefore, is potentially subject to
significant changes associated with the new CBSA delineations. It is
reasonable to conclude that these proposed shifts in the CBSA
delineations, in combination with the wage index methodological changes
finalized in this final rule, could lead to a year-over-year decrease
in payment greater than what a 5 percent decrease to the wage index
would cause even if the decrease in the wage index value alone would be
less than 5 percent. To mitigate the scope of changes that would impact
ESRD facilities in any single year, we proposed to implement a 3-year
phase out of the rural facility adjustment for ESRD facilities that are
located in a CBSA that was categorized as rural in CY 2024 and is
recategorized as urban in CY 2025, as a result of the updates to the
CBSA delineations associated with the proposed adoption of OMB Bulletin
No. 23-01.
We stated that overall, we believe implementing updated OMB
delineations would result in the rural facility adjustment being
applied where it is appropriate to adjust for higher costs incurred by
ESRD facilities in rural locations. However, in the proposed rule we
recognized that implementing these changes would have different effects
among ESRD facilities and that the loss of the rural facility
adjustment could lead to some hardship for ESRD facilities that had
anticipated receiving the rural facility adjustment in CY 2025.
Therefore, we stated it would be appropriate to consider whether a
transition period should be used to implement these changes. For ESRD
facilities located in a county that transitioned from rural to urban in
OMB Bulletin 23-01, we considered whether it would be appropriate to
phase out the rural facility adjustment for affected ESRD facilities.
Adoption of the updated CBSAs in OMB Bulletin 23-01, which we are
finalizing as proposed, will change the status of 44 ESRD facilities
currently designated as ``rural'' to ``urban'' for CY 2025 and
subsequent CYs. As such, these 44 newly urban ESRD facilities would no
longer receive the 0.8 percent rural facility adjustment. Consistent
with the rural transition policy proposed for IPFs and IRFs for FY 2025
(89 FR 23188, 89 FR 22267 through 22268) we proposed a 3-year, budget
neutral phase-out of the rural facility adjustment for ESRD facilities
located in the 54 rural counties that would become urban under the new
OMB delineations, given the potentially significant payment impacts for
these ESRD facilities. We believed that a phase-out of the rural
facility adjustment transition period for these 44 ESRD facilities
would be appropriate, because we expected these ESRD facilities would
experience a steeper and more abrupt reduction in their payments
compared to other ESRD facilities. We proposed to adopt these new CBSA
delineations in a year in which we also proposed substantial
methodological changes to our wage index. We noted that, while these
proposed changes, would increase payment accuracy across the ESRD PPS,
we also recognize that some ESRD facilities could lose the rural
facility adjustment and receive a significantly lower wage index value
in the same year. We stated that it would be appropriate for this
transition policy to be budget-neutral compared to ending the rural
adjustment for these facilities in CY 2025 because it is an extension
of the rural facility adjustment, which was implemented budget-
neutrally, and a result of the change in CBSA delineations, which was
proposed to be implemented budget-neutrally alongside the wage index
changes. The reasoning behind this proposal is similar to the reasoning
behind the 5 percent cap on year-to-year decreases in wage index
values, which was finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR
67161), as it would ameliorate unexpected negative impacts to certain
ESRD facilities. This rural phase-out in combination with the 5 percent
cap policy would best reduce the negative effects on any single ESRD
facility resulting from changes to the CBSA delineations. Therefore, we
proposed to phase out the rural facility adjustment for these
facilities to reduce the impact of the loss of the CY 2024 rural
facility adjustment of 0.8 percent over CYs 2025, 2026, and 2027,
consistent with the similar IPF and IRF proposals previously discussed.
This policy would allow ESRD facilities that are classified as rural in
CY 2024 and would be classified as urban in CY 2025 to receive two-
thirds of the rural facility adjustment for CY 2025, or a 0.53 percent
adjustment. For CY 2026, these ESRD facilities would receive one-third
of the rural facility adjustment, or a 0.27 percent adjustment. For CY
2027, these ESRD facilities would not receive a rural facility
adjustment. We believed, and continue to believe, that a 3-year budget-
neutral phase-out of the rural facility adjustment for ESRD facilities
that transition from rural to urban status under the new CBSA
delineations would best accomplish the goals of mitigating the loss of
the rural facility adjustment for existing CY 2024 rural ESRD
facilities. The purpose of the gradual phase-out of the rural facility
adjustment for these ESRD facilities is to mitigate payment reductions
and promote stability and predictability in payments for existing rural
ESRD facilities that may need time to adjust to the loss of their CY
2024 rural payment adjustment or that experience a reduction in
payments solely because of this re-designation. This policy would be
specifically for the 44 ESRD facilities that are rural in CY 2024 that
become urban in CY 2025. We did not propose a transition policy for
urban ESRD facilities that become rural in CY 2025 because these ESRD
facilities will receive the full rural facility adjustment of 0.8
percent beginning January 1, 2025, so they would not experience the
same adverse effects as an ESRD facility that unexpectedly loses the
rural facility payment adjustment. We noted that we understand that
compared to rural payment adjustments in other Medicare payment
systems, the ESRD PPS rural facility adjustment is not large in
magnitude (for example, the rural adjustments for IPFs and IRFs are 17
percent and 14.9 percent, respectively), but we stated that it is
important for ESRD facilities to be able to reasonably predict what
their payments from the ESRD PPS would be in the next year.
We invited public comment on our proposal for a rural transition
policy. One interested party commented on this proposal. The following
is a summary of the public comment received on this proposal and our
response.
Comment: One commenter expressed support for the rural transition
policy and stated that this policy would avoid disruption of patient
care.
Response: We thank the commenter and agree that this policy would
help to stabilize payments for ESRD facilities in CBSAs which are
losing their rural status for CY 2025.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the comments on this proposal,
we are finalizing the rural transition phase-out policy as proposed.
For ESRD facilities that were in CBSAs designated as rural for CY 2024,
but that would be designated as urban for CY 2025, claims for renal
dialysis services provided to all adult ESRD patients would receive 2/
3rds of the rural adjustment, or a 0.53 percent adjustment factor, for
CY 2025 and 1/3rd of the rural adjustment, or a 0.27 percent adjustment
factor, for CY 2026. Similarly, this transition would be applied for
the current rural facility adjustment factor of 0.978 used for the
[[Page 89119]]
MAP calculation to determine the outlier payment made under Sec.
413.237 for any eligible adult ESRD patient. This 0.978 adjustment
factor represents a 2.2 percent reduction to the predicted MAP amount,
so we will apply 2/3rds of the adjustment factor for CY 2025 and 1/3rd
of the adjustment factor for CY 2026. For CY 2025 the rural transition
adjustment factor applied to the outlier MAP calculation will be 0.9853
and for CY 2026 the rural facility transition adjustment factor applied
to the outlier MAP calculation will be 0.9927.
3. CY 2025 Update to the Outlier Policy
a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act requires that the ESRD PPS
include a payment adjustment for high-cost outliers due to unusual
variations in the type or amount of medically necessary care, including
variability in the amount of erythropoiesis stimulating agents (ESAs)
necessary for anemia management. Some examples of the patient
conditions that may be reflective of higher facility costs when
furnishing dialysis care are frailty and obesity. A patient's specific
medical condition, such as secondary hyperparathyroidism, may result in
higher per treatment costs. The ESRD PPS recognizes that some patients
require high-cost care, and we have codified the outlier policy and our
methodology for calculating outlier payments at Sec. 413.237.
Section 413.237(a)(1) enumerates the following items and services
that are eligible for outlier payments as ESRD outlier services: (i)
Renal dialysis drugs and biological products that were or would have
been, prior to January 1, 2011, separately billable under Medicare Part
B; (ii) Renal dialysis laboratory tests that were or would have been,
prior to January 1, 2011, separately billable under Medicare Part B;
(iii) Renal dialysis medical/surgical supplies, including syringes,
used to administer renal dialysis drugs and biological products that
were or would have been, prior to January 1, 2011, separately billable
under Medicare Part B; (iv) Renal dialysis drugs and biological
products that were or would have been, prior to January 1, 2011,
covered under Medicare Part D, including renal dialysis oral-only drugs
effective January 1, 2025; and (v) Renal dialysis equipment and
supplies, except for capital-related assets that are home dialysis
machines (as defined in Sec. 413.236(a)(2)), that receive the
transitional add-on payment adjustment as specified in Sec. 413.236
after the payment period has ended.\31\
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\31\ Under Sec. 413.237(a)(1)(vi), as of January 1, 2012, the
laboratory tests that comprise the Automated Multi-Channel Chemistry
panel are excluded from the definition of outlier services.
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In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49142), CMS stated that
for purposes of determining whether an ESRD facility would be eligible
for an outlier payment, it would be necessary for the ESRD facility to
identify the actual ESRD outlier services furnished to the patient by
line item (that is, date of service) on the monthly claim. Renal
dialysis drugs, laboratory tests, and medical/surgical supplies that
are recognized as ESRD outlier services were specified in Transmittal
2134, dated January 14, 2011.\32\ We use administrative issuances and
guidance to continually update the renal dialysis service items
available for outlier payment via our quarterly update CMS Change
Requests, when applicable. For example, we use these issuances to
identify renal dialysis oral drugs that were or would have been covered
under Part D prior to 2011 to provide unit prices for determining the
imputed MAP amounts. In addition, we use these issuances to update the
list of ESRD outlier services by adding or removing items and services
that we determined, based our monitoring efforts, are either
incorrectly included or missing from the list.
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\32\ Transmittal 2033 issued August 20, 2010, was rescinded and
replaced by Transmittal 2094, dated November 17, 2010. Transmittal
2094 identified additional drugs and laboratory tests that may also
be eligible for ESRD outlier payment. Transmittal 2094 was rescinded
and replaced by Transmittal 2134, dated January 14, 2011, which
included one technical correction. https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/downloads/R2134CP.pdf.
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Under Sec. 413.237, an ESRD facility is eligible for an outlier
payment if its imputed (that is, calculated) MAP amount per treatment
for ESRD outlier services exceeds a threshold. In past years, the MAP
amount has reflected the average estimated expenditure per treatment
for services that were or would have been considered separately
billable services prior to January 1, 2011. The threshold is equal to
the ESRD facility's predicted MAP per treatment plus the fixed dollar
loss (FDL) amount. As described in the following paragraphs, the ESRD
facility's predicted MAP amount is the national adjusted average ESRD
outlier services MAP amount per treatment, further adjusted for case-
mix and facility characteristics applicable to the claim. We use the
term ``national adjusted average'' in this section of this final rule
to more clearly distinguish the calculation of the average ESRD outlier
services MAP amount per treatment from the calculation of the predicted
MAP amount for a claim. The average ESRD outlier services MAP amount
per treatment is based on utilization from all ESRD facilities, whereas
the calculation of the predicted MAP amount for a claim is based on the
individual ESRD facility and patient characteristics of the monthly
claim. In accordance with Sec. 413.237(c), ESRD facilities are paid 80
percent of the per treatment amount by which the imputed MAP amount for
outlier services (that is, the actual incurred amount) exceeds this
threshold. ESRD facilities are eligible to receive outlier payments for
treating both adult and pediatric dialysis patients.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule and codified in Sec.
413.220(b)(4), using 2007 data, we established the outlier percentage--
which is used to reduce the per treatment ESRD PPS base rate to account
for the proportion of the estimated total Medicare payments under the
ESRD PPS that are outlier payments--at 1.0 percent of total payments
(75 FR 49142 through 49143). We also established the FDL amounts that
are added to the predicted outlier services MAP amounts. The outlier
services MAP amounts and FDL amounts are different for adult and
pediatric patients due to differences in the utilization of separately
billable services among adult and pediatric patients (75 FR 49140). As
we explained in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49138 through
49139), the predicted outlier services MAP amounts for a patient are
determined by multiplying the adjusted average outlier services MAP
amount by the product of the patient-specific case-mix adjusters
applicable using the outlier services payment multipliers developed
from the regression analysis used to compute the payment adjustments.
Lastly, in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized an update
to the outlier methodology to better target 1.0 percent of total
Medicare payments (87 FR 67170 through 67177). We explained that for
several years, outlier payments had consistently landed below the
target of 1.0 percent of total ESRD PPS payments (87 FR 67169).
Commenters raised concerns that the methodology we used to calculate
the outlier payment adjustment since CY 2011 results in underpayment to
ESRD facilities, as the base rate has been reduced by 1.0 percent since
the establishment of the ESRD PPS to balance the outlier payment (85 FR
71409, 71438 through 71439; 84 FR 60705 through 60706; 83 FR 56969). In
response to these
[[Page 89120]]
concerns, beginning with CY 2023, we began calculating the adult FDL
amounts based on the historical trend in FDL amounts that would have
achieved the 1.0 percent outlier target in the 3 most recent available
data years. We stated in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule that we would
continue to calculate the adult and pediatric MAP amounts for CY 2023
and subsequent years following our established methodology. In that
same CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we provided a detailed discussion of
the methodology we use to calculate the MAP amounts and FDL amounts (87
FR 67167 through 67169).
For CY 2025, we proposed several methodological and policy changes
to the ESRD PPS outlier policy to address a number of concerns that
interested parties have raised in recent years. We noted that although
the 1.0 percent outlier target was achieved in CY 2023, it was not
achieved in the majority of the years since the establishment of the
ESRD PPS in 2011. We stated that we expect each of these proposed
changes would support the ability of the ESRD PPS to continue targeting
outlier payments at 1.0 percent in CY 2025 and subsequent years. We
discuss each of these proposed changes in detail in the following
sections.
b. Expansion of ESRD Outlier Services
(1) Background and Current Issues
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule we finalized a policy that only
renal dialysis services that were or would have been separately
billable prior to the inception of the ESRD PPS would be eligible for
the outlier payment. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS proposed rule we explained
that we believed that any unusual variation in the cost of the renal
dialysis services comprising the base rate under the ESRD PPS would
likely to be due to variation in the items and services that were, at
that time, separately billable under Part B or renal dialysis service
drugs and biological products that were then covered under Part D (74
FR 49988). We received some comments at that time that requested CMS
consider alternative ways to determine outlier eligibility, including
expanding eligibility to all renal dialysis services. However, we noted
that we did not have adequate data at that time to include all
Composite Rate Services (that is, renal dialysis services included in
the composite payment system established under section 1881(b)(7) of
the Act and the basic case-mix adjusted composite payment system
established under section 1881(b)(12) of the Act, as defined in
regulation at Sec. 413.171) in the outlier calculation (74 FR 49989,
75 FR 49135).
In the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed rule we issued a comment
solicitation on the potential expansion of outlier payments to
composite rate supplies, drugs, and biological products (83 FR 34332).
In this RFI, we detailed that such a change could promote appropriate
payment for composite rate drugs once the TDAPA period has ended.
Commenters' responses to this comment solicitation were mixed (83 FR
56969 through 56970). One commenter expressed that such a change would
promote and incentivize the development of innovative new therapies and
devices to treat the highly vulnerable ESRD adult and pediatric patient
populations. Some commenters responded specifically regarding the TDAPA
that extending availability of outlier payments would be particularly
important when no additional money is being added to the base rate for
the drug, as is the case with most drugs and biological products
receiving the TDAPA. However, some commenters, including MedPAC, did
not agree that such an expansion of the outlier eligible services would
improve care, generally indicating that expanding the list of ESRD
outlier services would hamper the outlier payment's functionality. One
commenter stated that the purpose of the outlier adjustment was to pay
for unusually costly patients, not new drugs and biological products,
which the commenter noted the outlier payment was unable to do
adequately. MedPAC commented that an outlier policy should act as a
stop-loss insurance for medically necessary care, and outlier payments
are needed when the ESRD PPS' payment adjustments do not capture all of
the factors affecting providers' costs of delivering care. To that end,
MedPAC stated that to develop an effective outlier policy, CMS must
first develop accurate patient-level and facility-level payment
adjustments. MedPAC further cautioned that should CMS expand the list
of eligible ESRD outlier services, we should be clear as to what would
qualify for the outlier payment.
In subsequent years, we took steps to expand the outlier policy to
include certain potentially costly renal dialysis services that would
have been included in the composite rate prior to the ESRD PPS. In the
CY 2020 ESRD PPS final rule we finalized that any new and innovative
renal dialysis equipment or supply would be eligible for the outlier
adjustment after the end of the TPNIES period, regardless of whether it
would have been separately billable prior to 2011 (84 FR 60697). In
that rule, we explained that we believed allowing these items to be
outlier eligible after the end of the TPNIES period would allow for
these new and innovative supplies to be competitive with the other
equipment and supplies also accounted for in the ESRD PPS base rate by
establishing a level playing field where products could gain market
share by offering the best practicable combination of price and quality
(84 FR 60693). In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized that
capital-related assets that are home dialysis machines will not become
ESRD outlier services at the end of the TPNIES payment period (85 FR
71399). We explained that as assets, capital-related home dialysis
machines are distinct from operating expenses such as the disposable
supplies and leased equipment with no conveyed ownership rights. Unlike
assets, these latter items are generally accounted for on a per patient
basis and therefore, when used in excess of the average, constitute
outlier use, which makes them eligible for outlier payments (85 FR
71424).
The definition of ESRD outlier services is codified at Sec.
413.237(1)(a). Currently, drugs and biological products that were or
would have been paid under the composite rate are not considered ESRD
outlier services, and costs for these drugs are not included in the
calculation for outlier payments on ESRD PPS claims. Current
regulations at Sec. 413.171 define Composite Rate Services as: ``Items
and services used in the provision of outpatient maintenance dialysis
for the treatment of ESRD and included in the composite payment system
established under section 1881(b)(7) and the basic case-mix adjusted
composite payment system established under section 1881(b)(12) of the
Act.'' Under our longstanding policy, drugs and biological products
that are substitutes for composite rate drugs and biological products
are considered to be included in the composite rate portion of the ESRD
PPS. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49048), we cited
existing guidance in the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual, Pub. 100-02,
chapter 11, section 30.4.1, which explicitly stated, ``drugs used in
the dialysis procedure are covered under the facility's composite rate
and may not be billed separately. Drugs that are used as a substitute
for any of these items, or are used to accomplish the same effect, are
also covered under the composite rate.'' This guidance remains in
effect and was subsequently re-designated to section 20.3.F of the same
chapter.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76391), we finalized a
policy to
[[Page 89121]]
pay, beginning for CY 2024, a post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment for
any new renal dialysis drug or biological product that is considered
included in the ESRD PPS base rate that has previously been paid for
using the TDAPA under Sec. 413.234(c)(1). This post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment generally will be applied for a period of 3 years
following the end of the TDAPA period for those products. We finalized
that the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount will be calculated
based on the most recent available 12 months of claims data and the
latest available full calendar quarter of average sales price (ASP)
data (88 FR 76396). We explained that we divide the total expenditure
of the new renal dialysis drug or biological product by the total
number of ESRD PPS treatments furnished during the same 12-month
period. In addition, we finalized that we adjust the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount paid on claims by the patient-level case-mix
adjustment factors; accordingly, we apply a reduction factor to the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount to account for the
application of the patient-level case-mix adjustment factors. We
codified these policies by revising Sec. 413.234(c)(1)(i) and adding
regulations at Sec. 413.234(b)(1)(iii), (c)(1)(ii), (c)(3), and (g)
that describe the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment and the
calculation we use to determine the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount. In addition, we amended Sec. 413.230 by adding
reference to the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment in the
calculation of the ESRD PPS per treatment payment amount.
In the same CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, we summarized comments
regarding the outlier policy as it pertains to the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment (88 FR 76396). One commenter pointed out that the CY
2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule did not indicate whether the ESRD PPS
outlier adjustment would apply to products for which a post-TDAPA add-
on payment adjustment is calculated. In response, CMS stated that under
current policy, after the end of the TDAPA period, a drug or biological
product is considered an eligible outlier service only if it meets the
requirements of Sec. 413.237(a)(1). We clarified that any renal
dialysis drug or biological product included in the calculation of the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment would be considered an eligible
ESRD outlier service only if it meets the requirements of Sec.
413.237(a)(1). However, we further clarified that under current policy,
Korsuva[supreg], the only renal dialysis drug with a TDAPA period
ending in CY 2024, would not be considered an eligible ESRD outlier
service after the end of its TDAPA period, because it is a substitute
for diphenhydramine hydrochloride, which was included in the composite
rate prior to 2011, and therefore does not meet the requirements of
Sec. 413.237(a)(1) (that is, it would not have been, prior to January
1, 2011, separately billable under Medicare Part B).
Most recently, we have heard concerns from interested parties that
excluding drugs and biological products that are substitutes for--or
are used to achieve the same effect as--composite rate drugs and
biological products from the definition of ESRD outlier services could
limit the ability of the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to appropriately
recognize the drivers of cost for renal dialysis services. We
considered these concerns, as well as the comments we received in
response to prior rulemaking, to develop proposed changes to the
definition of ESRD outlier services.
(2) Definition of ESRD Outlier Services
Effective for CY 2025, we proposed to change the definition of ESRD
outlier services at Sec. 413.237(a)(1) to include drugs and biological
products that were or would have been included in the composite rate
prior to the establishment of the ESRD PPS. We noted that this proposal
would expand outlier eligibility to longstanding drugs and biological
products that were historically included in the composite rate, as well
as newer drugs and biological products that are currently included in
the calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment. As
discussed in section II.B.3.c of this final rule, we proposed and are
finalizing technical changes to the calculation of outlier payments
that will appropriately account for the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment for ESRD outlier services that are drugs and biological
products.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we stated that we considered
the original intent behind the policy to limit outlier payments to
drugs that were or would have been separately billable prior to 2011,
which was that these drugs were likely the main drivers of the
variation in the costs of treatment (74 FR 49988). We explained that we
continue to believe an important aspect of the outlier adjustment
should be its ability to target ESRD cases that are unusually costly.
We noted that if the outlier adjustment methodology failed to recognize
the main drivers of variation in the costs of ESRD treatment, then it
could result in cases that are not unusually costly qualifying for the
outlier adjustment, which would mean the impact of the outlier
adjustment would be diluted. We also noted that many of the responses
to the comment solicitation in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed rule
expressed concerns that expanding the scope of ESRD outlier services
would potentially dilute the impact of the outlier adjustment. We
explained that for CY 2025 we considered the potential impact of
expanding the definition of ESRD outlier services to include additional
drugs and biological products not currently included. We stated that we
agree with the commenters who noted that the purpose of the outlier
payment is not to pay for new drugs and biological products (83 FR
56969). We further stated that in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75
FR 49134), CMS established the current outlier policy, including the
1.0 percent outlier target, because it struck an appropriate balance
between our objective of paying an adequate amount for the costliest,
most resource-intensive patients while providing an appropriate level
of payment for those patients who do not qualify for outlier payments.
We noted that under our current policy, new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that are paid for using the TDAPA are not
considered ESRD outlier services. As we explained in the CY 2016 ESRD
PPS final rule (80 FR 69023), this is because during the TDAPA period
we make a payment adjustment for the specific drug in addition to the
base rate, whereas outlier services have been incorporated into the
base rate. In contrast, we noted that the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment is paid on all claims, and drugs that are included in the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount are considered included in
the ESRD PPS base rate. We explained that as a result, the amount paid
under the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment does not correspond to
the amount of a drug or biological product used on a claim, which would
not be accounted for in any existing payment adjustment other than the
outlier adjustment. For example, we stated that our analysis shows that
patients using Korsuva[supreg] have costs of approximately $150 per
treatment; however, because this drug is not recognized as an ESRD
outlier service, these costs are not accounted for in determining the
payment amount for the claim. Beginning April 1, 2024, the CY 2024
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment for Korsuva[supreg]
[[Page 89122]]
increases the payment amount per treatment by approximately $0.25,
which is adjusted by the patient-level case-mix adjusters applicable to
the claim. In aggregate, the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
accounts for 65 percent of the cost of furnishing Korsuva[supreg];
however, this payment is spread across all ESRD PPS treatments.
In the proposed rule, we explained that we did not propose to
expand outlier eligibility to drugs and biological products that are
paid for using the TDAPA during the TDAPA period, as the TDAPA amount
is based on the full price (100 percent of ASP) for the amount of such
drugs that is utilized and billed on the claim.
We further explained that we considered only expanding the
definition of ESRD outlier services to include drugs and biological
products that were previously paid for using the TDAPA. We noted the
suggestion of past commenters that new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products are likely to be drivers of cost, because these
drugs are typically more expensive. We explained that we recognized the
importance of supporting access to new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products under the ESRD PPS through the establishment of the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment beginning in CY 2024 (88 FR
76391). We further noted that in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule we
agreed with commenters who expressed concerns that the ESRD PPS'
current mechanisms may not fully account for the costs of these new
drugs (88 FR 76388). We noted that several commenters stated that the
outlier adjustment and the ESRDB market basket updates cannot
adequately account for these costs, and several organizations noted
that if additional renal dialysis drugs and biological products with
significant costs were incorporated into the outlier payment
calculation, the threshold to qualify for outlier payments would
increase dramatically, thus adversely affecting access to products
traditionally eligible for the outlier payment adjustment. We described
comments which expressed that this increase in the outlier threshold
may also raise health equity concerns because, as we noted in the CY
2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67170 through 67171), the outlier
adjustment protects access for beneficiaries whose care is unusually
costly. We recognized that if the outlier threshold were to increase
significantly due to significant use of a new renal dialysis drug or
biological product after the end of the TDAPA period, then ESRD
facilities might be incentivized to avoid treating costlier
beneficiaries.
We stated that we believe it would be appropriate for the
definition of ESRD outlier services to include all drugs and biological
products that previously were paid for using the TDAPA. We explained
that the inclusion of these drugs and biological products would help
ensure appropriate payment when a patient's treatment is exceptionally
expensive due to an ESRD facility furnishing such drugs or biological
products to the patient whose treatment requires them. In the CY 2011
ESRD PPS proposed rule, we explained that significant variations in
formerly separately billable items and services could impair access to
appropriate care, as an ESRD facility may have a disincentive to
provide adequate treatment to those ESRD patients likely to have
significantly higher than average costs (74 FR 49988). We stated in the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule that we believe ESRD facilities may face
similar disincentives for furnishing drugs and biological products that
previously received payment under the TDAPA. We further stated that we
believe this change would also align with the statutory authority for
the outlier adjustment under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act by
protecting patients' access to medically necessary care through a
payment adjustment that more fully recognizes unusual variations in the
type or amount of such care. Specifically, we explained that we believe
this change would encourage ESRD facilities to take on ESRD patients
who would potentially require expensive new drugs and biological
products, promoting health equity for these patients who require
costlier care. Additionally, we noted that the technical changes we
proposed, and which we are finalizing in section II.B.3.c of this final
rule, would limit the impact of such drugs and biological products on
the outlier threshold calculation, thereby enabling the ESRD PPS
outlier adjustment to continue to protect access for beneficiaries
whose care is unusually costly.
We stated that in light of the past comments that we described in
the proposed rule, we further considered whether expanding eligibility
to all renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are Composite
Rate Services, as defined at Sec. 413.171, would be appropriate. We
reiterated that the purpose of the outlier adjustment is to protect
access for beneficiaries whose care is unusually costly. We stated that
although we continue to expect that the main drivers of cost would be
drugs and biological products that were previously separately billable
under Part B or Part D, or were previously paid for using the TDAPA, we
nevertheless recognize that some patients could require higher
utilization of composite rate drugs and biological products, which may
result in the overall cost of their renal dialysis care being unusually
high. For example, as we noted in section II.B.3.e of the proposed
rule, our analysis identified that certain composite rate drugs are
significant drivers of cost for pediatric patients, and therefore the
proposed inclusion of those drugs as ESRD outlier services would
improve the ability of the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to target
payment for pediatric patients whose care is exceptionally costly. We
stated that including composite rate drugs and biological products in
the calculation of the outlier adjustment could appropriately support
care for such ESRD patients, because payments under the outlier
adjustment would better align with resource use.
We explained that we also considered the comments from MedPAC in
response to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed rule. Specifically, MedPAC
stated that to develop an effective outlier policy, CMS must first
develop accurate patient-level and facility-level payment adjustments.
As we stated in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, interested parties
have encouraged CMS to develop a patient cost model that is based on a
single patient-level cost variable that accounts for all composite rate
and formerly separately billable services (88 FR 76399). We noted that
we finalized the collection of time on machine data, beginning for CY
2025, which we stated would allow for a higher proportion of composite
rate costs to be allocated to patients with longer renal dialysis
treatment times, and ultimately inform CMS refinements to existing
patient-level adjusters, including age and comorbidities (88 FR 76400).
We stated that we believe expanding the definition of ESRD outlier
services could further support our understanding of the costs of
Composite Rate Services, because it would encourage more comprehensive
reporting of renal dialysis drugs and biological products that were
formerly included in the composite rate for the purposes of calculating
outlier payments. We further stated that this increased reporting would
in turn support future revisions to patient-level adjustment factors
that consider more complete information about costs at the patient
level.
We stated that we do not agree that the proposed inclusion of
composite rate drugs and biological products would dilute the impact of
the outlier
[[Page 89123]]
adjustment, as some commenters in response to the CY 2019 ESRD PPS
proposed rule suggested. Rather, we explained that our analysis
indicates the inclusion of these drugs and biological products would
appropriately recognize the situations when the provision of these
services is unusually costly, which we estimate would increase the
amount of outlier payment per outlier-eligible claim, thereby more
effectively protecting access for beneficiaries whose care is
exceptionally costly. We stated that if we made no changes to our
outlier methodology or the definition of ESRD outlier services for CY
2025, the average outlier payment for outlier-eligible cases among
pediatric patients would be $25.02, and the average outlier payment for
adult patients would be $53.45. We noted that under the proposed
changes to outlier eligibility, the average outlier payment for
pediatric and adult patients would increase to $73.24 and $57.16,
respectively. Furthermore, we explained that the inclusion of composite
rate drugs and biological products would increase the pediatric MAP
amount by a large amount, reflecting the utilization of certain high-
cost composite rate drugs. We explained that although the proposed CY
2025 adult MAP amount was lower than the final CY 2024 adult MAP
amount, the proposed adult MAP amount for CY 2025 was approximately
$0.79 higher than it would have been absent the proposed policy changes
in this rule, which we stated demonstrates that the inclusion of
composite rate drugs and biological products would result in a higher
MAP amount for adults.
In summary, we stated that the inclusion of composite rate drugs
and biological products as ESRD outlier services would include more
costs in the calculation of the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment for each
case. We explained that as a result, fewer claims would qualify for
outlier payments, but the amount of outlier payment per claim would be
higher. Therefore, we stated that rather than diluting the impact of
the outlier adjustment, these proposed changes would increase the
impact of the outlier adjustment.
We proposed to amend the language at 42 CFR 413.237 by adding a new
paragraph (a)(1)(vii), which would add to the list of renal dialysis
services defined as ESRD outlier services the following: ``Renal
dialysis drugs and biological products that are Composite Rate Services
as defined in Sec. 413.171.''
We invited public comment on our proposal to include renal dialysis
drugs and biological products that are composite rate services in the
definition of ESRD outlier services. Approximately 13 commenters
commented on this proposal. These commenters included LDOs, drug
manufacturers, a nonprofit dialysis organization, a nonprofit kidney
care alliance, a professional organization of nephrologists, a
coalition of dialysis organizations, and MedPAC. The following is a
summary of the public comments received on this proposal and our
responses.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services. One LDO stated its belief that new
drugs regardless of their status as a former composite rate service
should be eligible for outlier payment. Similarly, a professional
organization of nephrologists stated that if the proposed definition of
ESRD outlier services is finalized, it would educate its members about
this change and the importance of pediatric dialysis units
appropriately billing for use of alteplase and other qualifying drugs
to collect the outlier payment when appropriate. This commenter
requested that CMS highlight any specific requirements for billing.
MedPAC likewise expressed support for expanding ESRD outlier
services to include drugs and biological products that were or would
have been included in the composite rate prior to the ESRD PPS. MedPAC
reiterated its position that CMS should develop an outlier policy that
addresses variation in the total cost of providing the entire ESRD PPS
payment bundle, thereby avoiding the potential for misidentifying
outliers (for example, a patient with very high costs for outlier-
eligible services may have offsetting, lower costs for outlier-
ineligible services). MedPAC further explained that considering the
cost of the full ESRD PPS payment bundle would be more patient-centric
and would align the ESRD PPS outlier policy with the policies that
Medicare uses for other PPSs. One commenter expressed that CMS's
continued reliance upon a distinction between ``composite rate'' and
other products continues to confound the goals of moving the ESRD PPS
toward a modern standard of care.
Response: We appreciate the comments in support of the proposed
change to the definition of ESRD outlier services. We agree with
commenters that the proposed definition would more broadly recognize
ESRD PPS patients whose care is costlier. Regarding the commenter's
statement that the distinction between renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were formerly separately billable and those
that were or would have been historically paid under the composite rate
does not best serve the goals of the ESRD PPS, we note that this
distinction derives from the statutory definition of renal dialysis
services in section 1881(b)(14)(B)(iii) of the Act. However, we
recognize that providing payment under the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment
for former composite rate and non-composite rate services would better
serve CMS's goals, specifically CMS's longstanding efforts to develop a
comprehensive patient cost model for the purposes of considering future
refinements to the ESRD PPS adjustment factors.
In response to the request for specific billing guidance, we direct
readers to the Medicare Claims Processing Manual (CPM), Chapter 8. ESRD
facilities are instructed to report all renal dialysis drugs and
biological products on the claim. Specific information about revenue
codes and other billing requirements are found in section 50.2 of
Chapter 8 of the CPM.
Comment: Several commenters, including LDOs, drug manufacturers, a
nonprofit dialysis organization, a coalition of dialysis organizations,
and a professional organization of nephrologists expressed that the
proposed change to the definition of ESRD outlier services does not
address what commenters stated is an underlying lack of payment
adequacy for new drugs that are renal dialysis services. One LDO
acknowledged that access to outlier funds is a small step in the right
direction but stated that CMS policy for incorporating such drugs into
the PPS is insufficient to adequately compensate dialysis providers.
This commenter further stated that new drugs that represent a
substantial clinical improvement should be incorporated into the
bundled payment with new money regardless of their placement in a
functional category. As an example of how the commenter believes the
current policy is flawed, this commenter noted that lack of adequate
payment has artificially depressed access to Korsuva[supreg] treatment
and that nephrologists are reluctant to prescribe a therapy that does
not have adequate long-term funding. Several commenters stated that
approximately 16 percent of the ESRD patient population has severe
pruritus for which Korsuva[supreg] is indicated. These commenters noted
that if all of these patients were to receive Korsuva[supreg], the
total outlier payment for that one drug would be $350 million for CY
2025, more than three times the current outlier pool. Another commenter
stated that changes still need to be made to fix the base rate and
support innovation in
[[Page 89124]]
new drugs, biological products, and devices for pediatric kidney
patients.
Several commenters stated that CMS should not finalize the proposed
definition of ESRD outlier services but should instead advance funding
mechanisms that would appropriately safeguard patient access to new
drugs and biological products after the two-year TDAPA period expires.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns regarding payment
for new renal dialysis drugs and biological products under the ESRD
PPS. As the commenters pointed out, and as we have previously stated,
the purpose of the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment is not to pay for new
drugs and biological products. Rather, the purpose of the ESRD PPS
outlier adjustment is to protect access to care for beneficiaries whose
care is exceptionally costly. In the proposed rule, we stated that
including new renal dialysis drugs that previously received payment
using the TDAPA would help ensure appropriate payment when a patient's
treatment is exceptionally expensive due to an ESRD facility furnishing
such drugs or biological products to the patient whose treatment
requires them.
We disagree with commenters who stated that lack of adequate
payment has artificially depressed access to Korsuva[supreg] treatment
and that nephrologists are reluctant to prescribe a therapy that the
commenters stated does not have adequate long-term funding.
Nephrologists and ESRD patients make decisions about which drugs and
biological products best serve the patients' needs, and these decisions
depend on a number of factors including but not limited to
considerations about the efficacy for the individual patient, side
effects and interactions with other drugs and biological products the
patient may be taking, and considerations related to affordability for
the patient. As we explained in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final rule, the
purpose of providing the TDAPA for drugs that fall into an existing
functional category is to help ESRD facilities to incorporate new drugs
and make appropriate changes in their businesses to adopt such drugs;
provide additional payment for such associated costs, as well as
promote competition among drugs and biological products within the ESRD
PPS functional categories (83 FR 56935). A new renal dialysis drug or
biological product must demonstrate to patients and nephrologists that
it presents value relative to existing treatment options, and the TDAPA
further allows new products to become competitive by providing payment
at 100 percent of ASP for the new drug or biological product. We expect
that nephrologists and patients would consider all relevant factors and
all available treatment options, and make the most appropriate decision
for each patient. We do not believe we can infer that utilization of
Korsuva[supreg] was depressed due to lack of adequate payment during
the TDAPA period, because payment under the TDAPA for Korsuva[supreg]
was based on 100 percent of ASP. Furthermore, in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule, we finalized a policy to pay a post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment for a period of 3 years following the payment of TDAPA. We
stated that one goal of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment is to
support continued access to new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products and to support ESRD facilities' long-term planning and
budgeting for such drugs after the TDAPA period (88 FR 76393).
Therefore, we believe that ESRD PPS policy provides appropriate and
adequate payment in the short term during the 2-year TDAPA period, in
the medium term during the 3 years of payment under the post-TDAPA add-
on payment adjustment following the payment of TDAPA, and during the
long term when such new renal dialysis drugs and biological products
are paid for under the ESRD PPS base rate with no adjustment and are
expected to compete with other drugs and biological products in the
ESRD PPS.
We also cannot assume that utilization of Korsuva[supreg] should be
higher than it was during the TDAPA period or that it would increase in
response to the proposed outlier policy changes. We note that
utilization of Korsuva[supreg] during the TDAPA period was
significantly lower than the 16 percent figure cited by the commenters.
We anticipate that the utilization of Korsuva[supreg] in CY 2025 would
align with the levels of utilization observed during the TDAPA period,
as these levels best reflect the actual prescribing patterns of
nephrologists for that drug. Nevertheless, if utilization for
Korsuva[supreg] were to increase significantly in CY 2025, then under
our longstanding outlier methodology we would take such changes in
utilization into consideration when establishing the FDL and MAP
amounts prospectively in future years. As we have stated, we establish
the outlier FDL and MAP amounts each year at a level that our analysis
indicates would effectively protect access for the costliest
beneficiaries while maintaining an appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for
all other beneficiaries.
Lastly, we do not believe that the current definition of ESRD
outlier services better supports payment for new renal dialysis drugs
and biological products than the proposed definition, because it
excludes new renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are
substitutes for drugs and biological products that were included in the
composite rate. That is, the current definition of ESRD outlier
services excludes certain new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products that may be significant drivers of cost, and therefore we do
not believe it would be more appropriate to maintain the existing
definition of ESRD outlier services. We believe our proposed definition
of ESRD outlier services would be more appropriate, because it would
recognize all renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are
significant drivers of cost for ESRD patients. Therefore, as discussed
later in this final rule, we are finalizing our proposed revision to
the definition of ESRD outlier services. We refer readers to section
II.B.4 of this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule for a discussion about
payment for innovation and the ESRD PPS base rate.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated its prior concerns from the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS proposed rule about how CMS estimates the ESRD PPS's case-mix
adjustments, including patient-level adjustments, and the accuracy of
the adjustments' coefficients. MedPAC stated that these coefficients
are used to calculate the Medicare allowable payment amount, which when
combined with the fixed dollar loss amount, determines which treatments
will receive an outlier payment. Therefore, MedPAC stated that to
ensure the ability of the outlier policy to account for beneficiaries
with high costs, the agency must improve the accuracy of the ESRD PPS's
patient- and facility-level payment adjustments.
Response: We agree with MedPAC's assessment of the importance of
accurate ESRD PPS case-mix adjustments for the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment. As we noted in the proposed rule, we believe expanding the
definition of ESRD outlier services could further support our
understanding of the costs of Composite Rate Services, because it would
encourage more comprehensive reporting of renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that were formerly included in the composite rate
for the purposes of calculating outlier payments. In addition, we
anticipate that this increased reporting would support future revisions
to patient-level adjustment factors that consider more
[[Page 89125]]
complete information about the cost of furnishing renal dialysis
services to a patient.
Comment: One commenter stated that a smaller outlier percentage on
the order of 0.5 percent would be preferable to maintaining the
existing 1.0 percent outlier percentage. This commenter encouraged CMS
to consider exercising its discretion to set a lower outlier
percentage.
Response: While we agree that section 1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) of the Act
provides the Secretary with discretion to set an appropriate outlier
percentage under the ESRD PPS, we note that we continue to believe the
1.0 percent target is more appropriate than a lower outlier percentage.
As discussed in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49134), we
established the 1.0 percent outlier percentage because it struck an
appropriate balance between our objective of paying an adequate amount
for the costliest, most resource-intensive patients while providing an
appropriate level of payment for those patients who do not qualify for
outlier payments. We continue to believe the 1.0 percent target strikes
the appropriate balance, and as we further noted in the CY 2023 ESRD
PPS final rule (87 FR 67171), a reduced outlier percentage may not
provide the appropriate level of payment for outlier cases and may not
protect access for beneficiaries whose care is unusually costly. This
is because if we were to decrease the target outlier percentage, we
would need to significantly increase the FDL amounts, which would make
it more difficult for ESRD facilities to receive outlier payment based
on their claims. We did not propose to reduce the outlier percentage
for CY 2025, and we are not finalizing any such reduction in this rule.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about the burden of
reporting renal dialysis drugs and biological products that were or
would have been paid under the composite rate before the establishment
of the ESRD PPS, and about the reliability of such reported data. One
commenter stated that these drugs would not make any difference in a
facility getting an outlier payment because of the relatively
inexpensive cost of such drugs compared to new high-cost drugs on the
market now or in the future. Other commenters acknowledged that the
reporting of information on composite rate drugs is not as
comprehensive as other data elements but stated that this is because
ESRD facilities have never been required to report information about
composite rate drugs and biological products because such information
does not serve any ESRD PPS-related purpose. Several commenters stated
that the observed disparity in alteplase utilization described in the
CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule is a difference in reporting and not a
meaningful clinical or operational difference. An LDO and a coalition
of dialysis organizations expressed concerns about CMS's ability to
calculate MAP and FDL amounts for CY 2025 given the lack of complete
information about utilization of composite rate drugs and biological
products.
Response: We appreciate the concerns that commenters raised about
the completeness of data on the utilization of composite rate drugs and
the perceived burden associated with reporting these drugs on ESRD PPS
claims. We disagree with the commenters who stated that composite rate
drugs and biological products would not make any difference in a
facility receiving payment under the outlier adjustment. As we
explained in the proposed rule, we found that certain composite rate
drugs such as alteplase were significant drivers of cost for pediatric
patients. Although we acknowledge that some composite rate drugs and
biological products are relatively low-cost, our analysis has found
that this is not generally true of all composite rate drugs. We believe
it would be most appropriate to make payment under the outlier
adjustment for any renal dialysis drugs and biological products that do
cause a patient's ESRD treatment to be exceptionally costly.
We further disagree with the commenters who stated that the
proposed definition of ESRD outlier services would expand reporting
burden for ESRD facilities. Section 60.2 of Chapter 8 of the CPM states
that effective January 1, 2011, section 153b of the MIPPA requires that
all drugs and biologicals used in the treatment of ESRD are included in
the ESRD PPS payment amount and must be billed by the ESRD facility.
Although we acknowledge that many ESRD facilities have not historically
included composite rate drugs and biological products on ESRD PPS
claims, we remind readers that ESRD facilities have long been
encouraged to report all renal dialysis drugs and biological products
on ESRD PPS claims, including composite rate drugs. In the CY 2016 ESRD
PPS final rule (80 FR 69033), we clarified that ESRD facilities should
begin reporting on their monthly claims those composite rate drugs that
are on the consolidated billing list. Therefore, the proposal to change
the definition of ESRD outlier services would not change the
requirements for ESRD facilities to report composite rate drugs on ESRD
PPS claims. In fact, we observe in our analysis of ESRD PPS claims data
that hospital-based ESRD facilities are already more consistently
reporting composite rate items and services, which in part explains the
outsized impact of composite rate drugs and biological products on the
FDL and MAP amounts for pediatric patients, who more frequently receive
renal dialysis services from hospital-based ESRD facilities. In
addition to reporting differences, we believe the differential rates of
alteplase utilization between pediatric patients and adult patients
could be related to higher rates of catheter use among pediatric
patients.
Lastly, we do not agree with the concerns that commenters
articulated about CMS's ability to calculate MAP and FDL amounts for CY
2025 given the lack of complete information about utilization of
composite rate drugs and biological products. Our longstanding
methodology for prospectively setting the MAP and FDL amounts uses the
best available year of ESRD PPS claims, which is generally the most
recent available year, to simulate claims for the upcoming CY.
Additionally, we use the three most recent years to calculate the FDL
amount which would have achieved the 1 percent outlier target. In any
given year, changes in utilization of ESRD outlier services from the
historical claims data to the upcoming CY can result in over- or under-
estimates of the outlier percentage. CMS relies on the information
reported by ESRD facilities for accurate modeling of ESRD PPS outlier
payments. To the extent that the proposed change to the definition of
ESRD outlier services further encourages ESRD facilities to report when
composite rate drugs and biological products are used, we believe this
would result in future claims data that is more complete and better fit
for not only estimating future outlier payments, but also for analyzing
comprehensive patient-level cost information to potentially inform
future revisions to ESRD PPS adjustment factors.
Comment: Several commenters, including LDOs, drug manufacturers, a
nonprofit dialysis organization, and a coalition of dialysis
organizations, expressed concern that the proposed change to the
definition of ESRD outlier services could result in outlier payments
that exceed the 1.0 percent outlier percentage. Some commenters stated
that since the 1.0 percent outlier percentage was achieved in CY 2023,
CMS should use caution before making
[[Page 89126]]
further changes to the outlier policy. One commenter suggested that CMS
might be required to reduce the ESRD PPS base rate if the 1.0 percent
outlier percentage is exceeded in future years.
Response: We are reiterating that our longstanding methodology
establishes FDL and MAP amounts prospectively. That is, we establish
the outlier FDL and MAP amounts each year at a level that our analysis
indicates will effectively protect access for the costliest
beneficiaries while maintaining an appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for
all other beneficiaries. If our analysis indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier payments that are below 1.0 percent, we
would reduce the FDL and MAP amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. Alternatively, if our analysis indicates that the FDL and MAP
amounts would result in outlier payments that are above 1.0 percent, we
would increase the FDL and MAP amounts accordingly in the subsequent
year. In this methodology, we do not make modifications to the base
rate in response to either exceeding or falling short of the 1.0
percent outlier percentage target.
Final Rule Action: After consideration of the comments, we are
finalizing our proposal to amend the language at 42 CFR 413.237 by
adding a new paragraph (a)(1)(vii), which adds the following to the
list of renal dialysis services defined as ESRD outlier services:
``Renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are Composite Rate
Services as defined in Sec. 413.171.'' The final CY 2025 FDL and MAP
amounts are discussed in section II.B.3.e of this final rule.
c. Changes to Predicted MAP Calculation for Outlier Eligibility
As we discussed in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67169), a
claim is eligible for outlier payment when its imputed MAP amount
exceeds the sum of the predicted MAP amount and the fixed dollar loss
threshold. The predicted MAP amount for a claim is based on the
national average MAP amount, adjusted by the case-mix adjustment
factors that apply for that claim's patient-level and facility-level
characteristics. As a result, when a claim's adjustment factors
increase the payment amount per treatment, the claim's predicted MAP is
also increased. This is because we expect that more complex patients
would require a higher amount of spending for outlier services.
However, this higher expected cost is recognized through a higher per
treatment payment amount. In other words, a more complex patient must
have even higher costs than are already accounted for in the adjustment
factors compared to a less complex patient to be considered unusually
costly. By increasing the predicted MAP based on the case-mix
adjustment factors, the ESRD PPS outlier policy ensures that only cases
that are unusually costly are considered for outlier payment.
As previously discussed in this final rule, we finalized a post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule. The
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment for certain new renal dialysis
drugs and biological products is generally applied for 3 years after
the end of the TDAPA period (88 FR 76388 through 76397). The amount of
this post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment that is applied to an ESRD
PPS claim is adjusted by any applicable patient-level case-mix
adjustments under Sec. 413.235, and this adjusted amount is added to
the payment amount for each ESRD PPS treatment billed. We explained in
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule that during this 3-year post-TDAPA add-
on payment period, a drug or biological product would be eligible for
the outlier add-on payment if it met all of the other criteria for the
outlier payment (88 FR 76396). The only drug or biological product
which was set to end its TDAPA period in CY 2024 (and therefore would
receive the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment that year) was
Korsuva[supreg], which is a substitute for a composite rate drug and,
therefore, not outlier eligible under existing Sec. 413.237(a)(1) (88
FR 76396). Accordingly, we did not propose any changes to the ESRD PPS
outlier methodology to account for the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule as that would not have
affected payments for CY 2024.
As discussed in section II.B.3.b of this final rule, we are
finalizing our proposal to expand outlier eligibility to include renal
dialysis drugs and biological products that are Composite Rate Services
as defined in Sec. 413.171. This means that new drugs and biological
products that are included in the calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount will become outlier eligible after the end of
the TDAPA period, regardless of whether they are substitutes for
composite rate drugs or biological products.
Accordingly, in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we also
proposed changes to the ESRD PPS outlier methodology to account for any
future drugs and biological products which are outlier eligible during
the post-TDAPA period. We proposed to add the case-mix adjusted post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount to the predicted MAP for a
patient. We stated that this is appropriate because the post-TDAPA add-
on payment adjustment amount represents average utilization of a drug
or biological product, and is added to the payment amount, adjusted by
the case-mix adjusters for the patient. We stated that this proposal
would prevent duplicate payment for these drugs and biological products
by accounting for the portion of the cost for these drugs or biological
products which is included in the ESRD PPS bundled payment. We noted
that this change would not affect the calculation of the imputed MAP
for a claim, because a claim's imputed MAP would include the actual
utilization of the drug or biological product that is included in the
calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, if that drug
or biological product is billed on the claim.
We explained that we considered modifying the average MAP amount to
account for outlier eligible drugs and biological products that are
already included in the calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount, rather than proposing to modify the predicted MAP
amount for each claim. However, we noted two main limitations with
taking such an approach. First, the average MAP is set annually for an
entire year and does not change from quarter to quarter; in contrast,
the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount can change from quarter
to quarter depending on when a drug or biological product's TDAPA
period ends, and depending on the number of drugs and biological
products included in the calculation. Second, our longstanding
methodology for calculating the predicted MAP for outlier payments
applies the outlier services multipliers to the average MAP. However,
when we calculate the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for a
claim, we apply the ESRD PPS case-mix adjusters, which are different
from the outlier services multipliers. We stated that we believe it
would be most appropriate to continue to apply the ESRD PPS case-mix
adjusters to the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for the
purposes of outlier calculation, so that the estimate of a claim's
expected spending would align with the calculation used for the post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment. For these reasons, we stated that we
believe that it is more appropriate and more operationally feasible to
apply the case-mix adjusted post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount
to the predicted MAP for claims during the
[[Page 89127]]
quarters in which the drug or biological product is receiving the post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, rather than publishing different
average MAPs for different quarters of a single year.
For CY 2025, we explained that the impact of this technical
modification would be a small increase to the pediatric and adult FDL
amounts, due to the small post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount
calculated for each quarter of CY 2025, which is discussed in section
II.B.6 of this final rule. We noted that without this proposed
methodological change, the pediatric FDL amount would increase by
$0.68. Likewise, we noted that the adult FDL amount would increase by
$0.89. We stated that this proposed methodological change would avoid
those increases, resulting in the proposed CY 2025 adult and pediatric
MAP and FDL amounts shown in Table 7 of the proposed rule. We noted
that although the effect would be small for CY 2025, the increase would
be larger in potential future situations when utilization of a drug or
biological product during the post-TDAPA period could be higher.
We invited public comment on our proposal to apply the case-mix
adjusted post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount to the predicted
MAP for claims during the quarters in which the drug or biological
product is receiving the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment. Two
commenters commented on this proposal. The following is a summary of
the public comments received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: MedPAC reiterated its concerns about how CMS estimates the
ESRD PPS case-mix adjustments and recommended that CMS must improve the
accuracy of the patient- and facility-level adjustments.
Response: We appreciate the recommendation, and as discussed
earlier in this final rule, we believe that the proposed change to the
definition of ESRD outlier services, combined with the collection of
time on machine data beginning January 1, 2025, will contribute to
CMS's ability to develop a patient cost model for the purposes of
considering future refinements to the patient- and facility-level
adjustments. We believe the application of the case-mix adjusted post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment to the predicted MAP is the most
technically appropriate methodology for calculating the predicted MAP
in CY 2025 and future years. We would incorporate any relevant
revisions to the patient-level case-mix adjustments into this
calculation in future years, as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter stated that CMS should not include TDAPA or
TPNIES values in outlier calculation for any future drugs or equipment
and supplies that may be eligible for these adjustments as they are
clearly not eligible for outlier services during the TDAPA or TPNIES
period.
Response: We agree that under our longstanding policy, which CMS
established in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69023), it would
not be appropriate to include the payment amount for a new drug or
biological product in the outlier calculation during the TDAPA period.
Accordingly, we have excluded drugs that are receiving the TDAPA from
the outlier calculation, and our calculations of the FDL and MAP
amounts do not include TDAPA utilization as outlier-eligible
utilization for drugs and biological products that will be paid under
the TDAPA in the upcoming CY. However, we note that under Sec.
413.220(b)(4), we established the outlier percentage is 1.0 percent of
total payments (75 FR 49142 through 49143). By definition, total ESRD
PPS expenditures for the non-outlier components include the base rate,
TDAPA, TPNIES, post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, and other
applicable adjustments. Additionally, since the TPNIES and TDAPA are
components of the non-outlier portion of the total ESRD PPS spending,
to remove them would shrink the base for which the total outlier target
payment amount is calculated, and therefore increase the FDL and
outlier threshold. In addition, as we finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS
final rule, we rely on historical TDAPA and TPNIES spending amounts to
calculate the ``alternative'' retrospective FDL calculations for ESRD
outlier services, which allows our projection of the FDL to
appropriately account for increased utilization of ESRD outlier
services in years when a new renal dialysis drug or biological product
becomes an ESRD outlier service after the end if its TDAPA period (87
FR 67172 through 67175).
We are clarifying that we did not propose to include TDAPA or
TPNIES values in the outlier calculation for CY 2025. Rather, the
proposed incorporation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment to
the predicted MAP would apply only for ESRD outlier services if the
TDAPA period for such drugs or biological products has already ended,
as they are excluded from the outlier calculation during the TDAPA
period based on our longstanding policy, as discussed in the prior
paragraph.
Final Rule Action: After consideration of the comments received, we
are finalizing our proposal to apply the case-mix adjusted post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount to the predicted MAP for claims during
the quarters in which the drug or biological product is receiving the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment.
d. Technical Modifications to the Inflation Factors Used for the
Outlier Calculations
(1) Background
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule we finalized our ESRD PPS
outlier methodology, which included our methodology for updating data
from past years to the CY for which CMS is establishing payment rates
(75 FR 49134). In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized an
update to the outlier methodology to better target 1.0 percent of total
Medicare payments (87 FR 67170 through 67177) by prospectively
calculating the adult FDL amounts based on the historical trend in FDL
amounts that would have achieved the 1.0 percent outlier target in the
3 most recent available data years. In that final rule we also
clarified our longstanding methodology for updating data from prior
years for the purposes of the outlier calculations (87 FR 67167). For
drugs and biological products, we use a blended 4-quarter moving
average of the ESRDB market basket price proxies for pharmaceuticals to
inflate drug prices to the CY for which CMS is establishing payment
rates. For laboratory tests, we inflate prices to the CY for which CMS
is establishing payment rates using a CPI forecast to estimate changes
for years in which a new data reporting period will take place for the
purpose of setting Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule (CLFS) rates.\33\
For supplies, we apply a 0 percent inflation factor, because these
prices are based on predetermined fees or prices established by the
Medicare contractor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Since 2018, there has been no updated reporting for most
clinical diagnostic laboratory tests; therefore, the forecast
estimate used since CY 2018 for the ESRD PPS outlier methodology has
been 0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67173), we noted that
MedPAC supported the proposed revisions to the FDL methodology, but
also urged CMS to refine its approach for applying the pricing data
that the agency uses to project future spending for outlier services,
particularly for drugs. Specifically, MedPAC suggested CMS use a drug
price inflation factor based on ASP values and noted that the ASP data
that CMS uses to determine
[[Page 89128]]
facilities' actual outlier payments might be a more accurate data
source on drug prices than the ESRDB market basket pharmaceutical price
proxies that are currently used.
For CY 2025, we stated that we have undertaken analysis of prices
for ESRD outlier services and proposed several technical changes to the
inflation factors, which are discussed in the following sections.
(2) Changes to the Inflation Factor for Outlier Eligible Drugs and
Biological Products
As described earlier, we use a blended 4-quarter moving average of
the ESRDB market basket price proxy for Pharmaceuticals to inflate drug
prices to the upcoming CY for the purpose of estimating spending for
outlier drugs and biological products in that CY. In the proposed rule,
we explained that historically, this 4-quarter moving average is a
positive factor, meaning that our longstanding methodology for modeling
outlier spending amounts assumes that prices for ESRD outlier drugs and
biological product will increase. For example, we noted that the
projection of the CY 2025 price growth for ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products, based on the ESRDB market basket price proxy for
Pharmaceuticals for the CY 2025, was 1.9 percent, based on the IGI 1st
quarter 2024 forecast with historical data through the 4th quarter of
2023.
We explained that to compare the actual changes in prices for ESRD
outlier drugs and biological products against the assumed rate of
change derived from the ESRDB market basket price proxies, we
constructed an index of prices for ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products. As we discussed in section II.B.3.b of the proposed rule, we
proposed to expand the definition of ESRD outlier services to include
renal dialysis drugs and biological products that were or would have
been included in the composite rate prior to the establishment of the
ESRD PPS. Accordingly, our constructed drug price index included these
drugs and biological products as well as drugs and biological products
that have historically been included in the definition of ESRD outlier
services.
We stated that because the list of ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products changes over time, we proposed to derive a chained
Laspeyres price index of the drugs and biological products included in
the definition of the ESRD outlier services. We explained that a
chained Laspeyres price index does not require a fixed basket of drugs
and biological products during the observation window. We explained
that we constructed and then trended forward the year-over-year change
in price index levels for this outlier drug index to calculate a
projected inflation factor for ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products for CY 2025, using the following steps:
Step 1: We obtained the annual list of ESRD outlier service drugs
and biological products that appear in ESRD PPS claims during the CYs
2017 through 2023. These include both composite rate and formerly
separately billable drugs and biological products.
Step 2: We obtained quarterly ASP for each drug and biological
product during the same period 2017 through 2023, substituting annual
ASP when quarterly information was not available.
Step 3: We obtained quarterly utilization data for each drug and
biological product for the period 2017 through 2023.
Step 4: For each quarter, we established the base period as the
prior quarter and held utilization fixed at the base period. We then
constructed a Laspeyres price index based on all drugs and biological
products that had price information in that quarter and the prior
quarter.
Step 5: We chained together the quarterly indices starting from the
1st quarter 2017 through the 4th quarter 2023 to express price changes
in the 4th quarter 2017 relative to the 1st quarter 2017. This step was
repeated for all prior quarters, keeping the starting period fixed at
the 1st quarter 2017.
Step 6: We calculated the percentage change between the current and
prior 4th quarter chained price index for each year for CY 2021, 2022,
and 2023, which we used as the annual drug price inflation factor for
each year.
Step 7: Using the chained price indexes for the three most recent
CYs (2021, 2022, and 2023), we used a linear regression to project
forward these three historical inflation factors to determine the CY
2025 inflation factor.
Using this methodology, we calculated a projected inflation factor
of -0.7 percent, meaning that prices for ESRD outlier drugs and
biological products were projected to be 0.7 percent lower in CY 2025
relative to the prices of the ESRD outlier drugs and biological
products in than in CY 2024. We noted that our analysis of year-over
year changes in prices for ESRD outlier drugs and biological products
shows a consistent, downward trend in prices, which stands in contrast
to the positive inflation factors we have historically used to model
outlier payments. As a result, we stated that our modeling of outlier
spending in prior years has assumed that outlier prices will increase,
when the ASP data shows that, overall, the prices have decreased.
Based on the results of our analysis, we stated that we believe
applying an inflation factor based on the actual change in prices for
ESRD outlier drugs and biological products would enable the ESRD PPS
outlier adjustment to better target 1.0 percent of outlier payments in
CY 2025, because such an inflation factor would better reflect the
observed historical trend in spending and utilization for such drugs
and biological products. We noted that although we have historically
used the ESRDB market basket price proxy for Pharmaceuticals as the
basis of our inflation assumptions for outlier modeling, and we believe
that market basket price proxies would continue to be a reasonable and
technically appropriate source for such assumptions, the market basket
price proxies serve a distinctly different purpose than the inflation
factors used in the outlier modeling. As we explained in the CY 2023
ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67147), we select the most appropriate wage
and price proxies currently available to represent the rate of price
change for each cost category in the ESRDB market basket. In contrast,
we explained that the purpose of the inflation factors used in our
outlier modeling is to represent the expected rate of change in price
and utilization, so that we can prospectively set accurate FDL and MAP
amounts that will result in outlier payments that equal 1.0 percent of
total ESRD PPS payments. We stated that decreasing our estimates of
future outlier spending, as we proposed to do, would result in lower
FDL and MAP amounts, thereby increasing the number of claims that could
be eligible for the outlier payment adjustment and the amount of
outlier payments that would be paid on each claim. We stated that
revising our assumptions about future spending for ESRD outlier drugs
and biological products would improve the ability of the ESRD outlier
adjustment to pay for the costliest ESRD PPS claims. Therefore, we
proposed to use the projected inflation factor for ESRD outlier
services that are drugs and biological products derived from the
historical trend in prices and utilization for ESRD outlier drugs, as
described in the previous paragraph.
(3) Changes to the Inflation Factors for Outlier Eligible Laboratory
Tests and Supplies
In the proposed rule, we explained that CMS uses different
methodologies for the inflation factors for laboratory
[[Page 89129]]
tests and supplies. We explained that we inflate laboratory test prices
to the upcoming CY using a CPI forecast to estimate changes for years
in which a new data reporting period will take place for the purpose of
setting CLFS rates; however, the forecast estimate used since CY 2018
for the ESRD PPS outlier methodology has been 0, because there has been
no updated reporting for most clinical diagnostic laboratory tests
since the CY 2018 CLFS. We further explained that for supplies, we
apply a 0 percent inflation factor, because these prices are based on
predetermined fees or prices established by the Medicare contractor. In
the CY 2011 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we explained that we chose to use
these factors so that the MAP would be based on pricing mechanisms
currently in place for these services (74 FR 49991).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we noted that the ESRDB
market basket uses price proxies for goods and services included in
furnishing renal dialysis services to determine the ESRDB market basket
update. For example, we stated that the market basket price proxy for
laboratory services is the PPI Industry for Medical and Diagnostic
Laboratories (BLS series code #PCU621511621511) representing the change
in the price of laboratory services conducted by medical and diagnostic
laboratories reported on the ESRD facility cost reports. Similarly, we
stated that the market basket price proxy for supplies is the PPI
Commodity for Surgical and Medical Instruments (BLS series code
#WPU1562) representing the change in the price of medical supplies
reported on the ESRD facility cost reports.
We stated that we considered whether these longstanding assumptions
about price changes for laboratory tests and supplies would be
appropriate for modeling changes in spending for outlier-eligible
laboratory tests and supplies. Unlike with drugs and biological
products, we explained that we do not have detailed historical pricing
data for ESRD outlier laboratory tests and supplies to permit us to
perform a similar analysis for these services as we did for drugs and
biological products. However, we stated that we can compare the
historical inflation factors we have used to the growth in the market
basket price proxies for these categories of renal dialysis services.
For supplies, we noted that we would typically assume a 0 percent
update; however, we noted that the average 10-year historical growth in
the PPI Commodity for Surgical and Medical Instruments is 0.9 percent.
Likewise, we stated that in years when there is a CLFS data reporting
period, we would typically use an inflation factor for laboratory tests
based on a CPI projection, reduced by the productivity adjustment,
through June of the year prior to the update year; however, we noted
that the average 10-year historical annual growth for the PPI Industry
for Medical and Diagnostic Laboratories was -0.4 percent.
Beginning for CY 2025, we proposed to use the ESRDB market basket
price proxies for laboratory tests and supplies for the purpose of
calculating the growth in estimated spending for these outlier services
in the upcoming CY. We stated that these would replace the current
inflation factors which are used for laboratory tests and supplies.
Compared to the current inflation factors we use, we stated that we
anticipate the market basket price proxies for laboratory tests and
supplies would more appropriately reflect the change in prices of the
laboratory tests and supply costs that are used by ESRD facilities. We
stated that we believe using the market basket price proxies would
better allow the ESRD PPS to estimate the changes in the prices of
laboratory tests and supplies, which would improve the ability for CMS
to target outlier payments at 1.0 percent of total ESRD PPS payments.
We noted that decreasing our estimates of future outlier spending would
result in lower FDL and MAP amounts, thereby increasing the number of
claims that could be eligible for the outlier payment adjustment and
the amount of outlier payment that would be paid on each claim. We
further stated that revising our assumptions about future spending for
ESRD outlier drugs and biological products would improve the ability of
the ESRD PPS outlier adjustment to pay for the costliest ESRD PPS
claims.
We invited public comments on our proposed changes to the inflation
factors for outlier eligible drugs and biological products, laboratory
tests, and supplies. Approximately 4 commenters including MedPAC, a
non-profit kidney organization, a coalition of dialysis organizations,
and one LDO commented on these proposed technical changes. The
following is a summary of the public comments received on these
proposals and our responses.
Comment: MedPAC expressed support for CMS's proposal to modify its
method for calculating the increase in future spending for outlier
drugs and biological products. MedPAC stated that this proposal is
consistent with the Commission's comment letter on the CY 2024 proposed
rule, in which the Commission urged CMS to use a drug price inflation
factor based on ASP values to project future spending for outlier
services. MedPAC further noted that the ASP data used by CMS to
determine facilities' actual outlier payments might be a more accurate
data source for drug prices than the ESRDB market basket pharmaceutical
price proxies that are currently used.
Response: We appreciate the support for the proposed technical
changes to the inflation factors.
Comment: Some commenters stated that since the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage was achieved in CY 2023, CMS should not finalize the
proposed changes to the inflation factors. In particular, commenters
expressed concern that the proposed inflation factor for drugs and
biological products is negative as compared to the ESRDB price proxy
that CMS has historically used. Commenters suggested that CMS might be
required to reduce the ESRD PPS base rate if the 1.0 percent outlier
percentage is exceeded in future years.
Response: We appreciate the concerns of commenters about these
proposed technical modifications. CMS's analysis of year-over-year
price changes for ESRD outlier drugs and biological products reveals a
consistent downward trend. However, should prices for outlier drugs and
biological products begin to increase as reflected in the ASP prices,
such changes would be reflected in future updates to the chained
Laspeyres drug price index.
We are reiterating that our longstanding methodology establishes
FDL and MAP amounts prospectively. That is, we establish the outlier
FDL and MAP amounts each year at a level that our analysis indicates
will effectively protect access for the costliest beneficiaries while
maintaining an appropriate ESRD PPS base rate for all other
beneficiaries. If our analysis indicates that the FDL and MAP amounts
would result in outlier payments that are below 1.0 percent, we would
reduce the FDL and MAP amounts accordingly in the subsequent year.
Alternatively, if our analysis indicates that the FDL and MAP amounts
would result in outlier payments that are above 1.0 percent, we would
increase the FDL and MAP amounts accordingly in the subsequent year. In
this methodology, we do not make modifications to the base rate in
response to either exceeding or falling short of the 1.0 percent
outlier percentage.
Final Rule Action: After consideration of the comments, we are
finalizing our proposed changes to the inflation factors for outlier
eligible drugs and biological products, laboratory tests, and supplies.
For ESRD outlier drugs and biological
[[Page 89130]]
products, we will use the projected inflation factor for ESRD outlier
services that are drugs and biological products derived from the
historical trend in ASP prices and utilization for ESRD outlier drugs.
For ESRD outlier laboratory tests and supplies, we will use the growth
in the PPI Industry for Medical and Diagnostic Laboratories and the PPI
Commodity for Surgical and Medical Instruments, respectively. In
section II.B.3.e of this final rule, we present the final CY 2025 MAP
and FDL amounts calculated using these inflation factors.
e. CY 2025 Update to the Outlier Services MAP Amounts and FDL Amounts
For CY 2025, we proposed to update the MAP amounts for adult and
pediatric patients using the latest available CY 2023 claims data. We
proposed to update the ESRD outlier services FDL amount for pediatric
patients using the latest available CY 2023 claims data, and to update
the ESRD outlier services FDL amount for adult patients using the
latest available claims data from CY 2021, CY 2022, and CY 2023, in
accordance with the methodology finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule (87 FR 67170 through 67174). We stated that the latest available
CY 2023 claims data showed outlier payments represented approximately
1.0 percent of total Medicare payments. We did not receive any comments
on this proposal, and we are finalizing the CY 2025 FDL and MAP amounts
based on the latest available data.
We are updating the ESRD outlier services FDL amount for pediatric
patients using the latest available CY 2023 claims data and updating
the ESRD outlier services FDL amount for adult patients using the
latest available claims data from CY 2021, CY 2022, and CY 2023, in
accordance with the methodology finalized in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final
rule (87 FR 67170 through 67174). The latest available CY 2023 claims
data shows that outlier payments represented approximately 1.0 percent
of total Medicare payments.
The impact of this final update is shown in Table 7, which compares
the outlier services MAP amounts and FDL amounts used for the outlier
policy in CY 2024 with the updated estimates for this final rule for CY
2025. The estimates for the final CY 2025 MAP amounts, which are
included in column II of Table 7, are inflation adjusted to reflect
projected 2025 prices for ESRD outlier services, in accordance with the
final changes to the inflation factors discussed in section II.B.3.d of
this final rule.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.006
As demonstrated in Table 7, the estimated FDL per treatment that
determines the CY 2025 outlier threshold amount for adults (column II;
$45.41) is lower than that used for the CY 2024 outlier policy (column
I; $71.76). The lower threshold is accompanied by a decrease in the
adjusted average MAP for outlier services from $36.28 to $31.02. For
pediatric patients, there is an increase in the FDL amount from $11.32
to $234.26. There is a corresponding increase in the adjusted average
MAP for outlier services among pediatric patients, from $23.36 to
$59.60. We note that this substantial increase in the outlier threshold
for pediatric patients reflects the inclusion of certain composite rate
drugs for outlier consideration, notably Healthcare Common Procedure
Coding System (HCPCS) code J2997 (Injection, alteplase recombinant, 1
mg). As a result, we estimate that a smaller proportion of pediatric
patients will receive outlier payments, but the
[[Page 89131]]
average outlier payment amounts will be significantly higher.
We estimate that the percentage of patient months qualifying for
outlier payments in CY 2025 will be 7.05 percent for adult patients and
6.09 percent for pediatric patients, based on the 2023 claims data and
methodology changes in sections II.B.3.c and II.B.3.d of this final
rule.
f. Outlier Percentage
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49081) and under Sec.
413.220(b)(4), we reduced the per treatment base rate by 1.0 percent to
account for the proportion of the estimated total payments under the
ESRD PPS that are outlier payments as described in Sec. 413.237. In
the 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized a change to the outlier
methodology to better achieve this 1.0 percent target (87 FR 67170
through 67174). Based on the CY 2023 claims, outlier payments
represented approximately 1.0 percent of total payments, which has been
our policy goal since the establishment of the ESRD PPS outlier
adjustment. We believe the methodological changes to the outlier
calculation and the change to the definition of ESRD outlier services,
which we are finalizing for CY 2025, will continue to effectively set
the outlier MAP and FDL amounts for CY 2025 and future years, enabling
the ESRD PPS to continue targeting outlier payments at 1.0 percent of
total payments. We also note that the recalibration of the FDL amounts
will result in no change in payments to ESRD facilities for
beneficiaries with renal dialysis items and services that are not
eligible for outlier payments.
4. Final Impacts to the CY 2025 ESRD PPS Base Rate
a. ESRD PPS Base Rate
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49071 through 49083), CMS
established the methodology for calculating the ESRD PPS per-treatment
base rate, that is, the ESRD PPS base rate, and calculating the per-
treatment payment amount, which are codified at Sec. Sec. 413.220 and
413.230. The CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule also provides a detailed
discussion of the methodology used to calculate the ESRD PPS base rate
and the computation of factors used to adjust the ESRD PPS base rate
for projected outlier payments and budget neutrality in accordance with
sections 1881(b)(14)(D)(ii) and 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act,
respectively. Specifically, the ESRD PPS base rate was developed from
CY 2007 claims (that is, the lowest per patient utilization year as
required by section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act), updated to CY 2011,
and represented the average per treatment MAP for composite rate and
separately billable services. In accordance with section 1881(b)(14)(D)
of the Act and our regulation at Sec. 413.230, the per-treatment
payment amount is the sum of the ESRD PPS base rate, adjusted for the
patient specific case-mix adjustments, applicable facility adjustments,
geographic differences in area wage levels using an area wage index,
and any applicable outlier payment, training adjustment add-on, the
TDAPA, the TPNIES, the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, and the
TPEAPA for CYs 2024, 2025 and 2026.
b. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY 2025
We are finalizing an ESRD PPS base rate for CY 2025 of $273.82.
This will be a 1.0 percent increase from the CY 2024 ESRD PPS base rate
of $271.02. This final update reflects several factors, described in
more detail as follows:
Wage Index Budget-Neutrality Adjustment Factor: We compute a wage
index budget-neutrality adjustment factor that is applied to the ESRD
PPS base rate. For CY 2025, we did not propose any changes to the
methodology used to calculate this factor, which is described in detail
in the CY 2014 ESRD PPS final rule (78 FR 72174). We computed the CY
2025 wage index budget-neutrality adjustment factor using treatment
counts from the 2023 claims and facility-specific CY 2024 payment rates
to estimate the total dollar amount that each ESRD facility would have
received in CY 2024. The total of these payments became the target
amount of expenditures for all ESRD facilities for CY 2025. Next, we
computed the estimated dollar amount that would have been paid for the
same ESRD facilities using the proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index and
proposed labor related share for CY 2025. As discussed in section
II.B.2 of this final rule, the ESRD PPS wage index for CY 2025 includes
the new wage index methodology based on BLS data, and the use of the
most recent OMB delineations based on 2020-census data.\34\ The total
of these payments becomes the new CY 2025 amount of wage adjusted
expenditures for all ESRD facilities. The wage index -budget-neutrality
factor is calculated as the target amount divided by the new CY 2025
amount. When we multiplied the wage index budget-neutrality factor by
the applicable CY 2025 estimated payments, aggregate Medicare payments
to ESRD facilities would remain budget neutral when compared to the
target amount of expenditures. That is, the wage index budget-
neutrality adjustment factor ensures that the wage index updates and
revisions do not increase or decrease aggregate Medicare payments. The
final CY 2025 wage index budget-neutrality adjustment factor is
0.988600. This final CY 2025 wage index budget-neutrality adjustment
factor reflects the impact of all final wage index policy changes,
including the CY 2025 ESRD PPS wage index using the new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology based on BLS data, the 5 percent cap on year-to-year
decreases in wage index values, the updated CBSA delineations, the 3
year rural phase-out for ESRD facilities in currently-rural CBSAs that
will become urban under the new delineations, and the labor-related
share (which we did not propose to change from CY 2024). We note that
the application of the 5 percent cap on wage index decreases has a
sizable impact on the budget-neutrality factor this year due to the new
wage index methodology. That is, because a substantial number of ESRD
facilities would have experienced a greater than 5 percent decrease in
their wage index value as a result of the new wage index methodology,
the budget-neutrality adjustment factor needed to offset the effect of
limiting those decreases to 5 percent is larger than we expect it would
be in a typical year. We note that the final CY 2025 wage index budget-
neutrality factor does not include any impacts associated with the
TPEAPA, as was the case with last year's combined wage index-TPEAPA
budget-neutrality factor. This is consistent with how we have
historically applied budget neutrality for case-mix adjusters,
including pediatric case-mix adjusters. We do not routinely apply a
budget-neutrality factor to account for changes in overall payment
associated with changes in patient case-mix in years in which we do not
propose any changes to the case-mix adjustment amount. Although the
TPEAPA was established under the authority in section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, which does not require budget
neutrality, we stated in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule that we were
implementing the TPEAPA in a budget neutral manner because it was
similar to the pediatric case-mix adjusters, and it accounts for costs
which would have been included in the cost reports used in the analysis
conducted when we created the ESRD PPS bundled payment in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule (88
[[Page 89132]]
FR 76378). Because the adjustment to maintain budget neutrality
associated with the TPEAPA was accounted for in the CY 2024 combined
wage index and TPEAPA budget neutrality factor, it would not be
appropriate to apply a budget-neutrality factor for the TPEAPA for CY
2025.
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Market Basket Update: Section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(I) of the Act
provides that, beginning in 2012, the ESRD PPS payment amounts are
required to be annually increased by an ESRD market basket percentage
increase. As discussed in section II.B.1.b.(1) of this final rule, the
latest CY 2025 projection of the ESRDB market basket percentage
increase is 2.7 percent. In CY 2025, this amount must be reduced by the
productivity adjustment described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of
the Act, as required by section 1881(b)(14)(F)(i)(II) of the Act. As
previously discussed in section II.B.1.b.(2) of this final rule, the
latest CY 2025 projection of the productivity adjustment is 0.5
percentage point, thus yielding a final CY 2025 productivity-adjusted
ESRDB market basket update of 2.2 percent for CY 2025. Therefore, the
final CY 2025 ESRD PPS base rate is $273.82 (($271.02 x 0.988600) x
1.022 = $273.82). In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55766),
the productivity-adjusted ESRDB market basket update was 1.8 percent
(reflecting a 2.3 percent market basket percentage increase reduced by
a 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment). We proposed that if
more recent data became available after the publication of the proposed
rule and before the publication of the final rule (for example, a more
recent estimate of the market basket percentage increase or
productivity adjustment), we would use such data, if appropriate, to
determine the CY 2025 ESRDB market basket update in the final rule.
We invited public comment on our proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS base
rate. Approximately 25 unique commenters including LDOs; SDOs, patient
advocacy organizations; nonprofit dialysis associations; two coalitions
of dialysis organizations; professional organizations; and MedPAC
commented on the proposed payment rate. Many of these comments
primarily focused on the proposed CY 2025 productivity-adjusted ESRDB
market basket update, which we discuss and respond to in section
II.B.1.b.(5) of this final rule. The following is a summary of the
other public comments received on the proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS base
rate and our responses.
Comment: All commenters supported increasing the ESRD PPS base
rate. Most commenters indicated a belief that the proposed CY 2025 ESRD
PPS payment rates were too low. Commenters generally stated that the
cause of these lower-than-appropriate payment rates was a combination
of the proposed CY 2025 ESRDB market basket percentage increase and
prior ESRDB market basket percentage increases being lower-than-
appropriate. Only MedPAC stated a belief that the proposed CY 2025 ESRD
PPS payment rate was appropriate.
Response: We appreciate the support for increasing payments under
the ESRD PPS. We agree with MedPAC that payment rates under the ESRD
PPS are generally appropriate. We concur with the commenters' general
consensus that perceived inadequacies in the proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS
base rate are related to the perceived inadequacies of the ESRDB market
basket. We have primarily addressed commenters' concerns related to the
ESRDB market basket update in section II.B.1.b.(5) of this final rule.
We wish to reiterate that the ESRD PPS base rate is calculated annually
using the ESRDB market basket update and applying any applicable
budget-neutrality factors, so the ESRD PPS base rate for a given year
is constructed using several factors which are each derived from the
best available data, as described in section II.B.1 and in section
II.B.4. While we understand the concerns of commenters regarding the
payment rates, we strongly believe that any change to this methodology
should be data driven. We will take commenters' concerns into
consideration for future rulemaking years to determine if any changes
to the ESRD PPS base rate calculation or ESRDB market basket
methodology are appropriate. Any changes to the ESRD market basket
methodology or ESRD PPS base rate calculation would be made through
notice and comment rulemaking.
Comment: Several commenters stated a belief that increasing the
ESRD PPS base rate by 0.8 percent was not sufficient.
Response: We note that the proposed ESRDB productivity-adjusted
market basket increase for CY 2025 was 1.8 percent (reflecting a
proposed ESRDB market basket increase of 2.3 percent reduced by the
statutorily-mandated proposed productivity adjustment estimated to be
0.5 percentage point). The proposed 0.8 percent increase to the ESRD
PPS base rate was lower than the market basket increase as it also
reflected the application of the proposed wage index budget-neutrality
adjustment factor of 0.990228. Since the wage index budget neutrality
factor is calculated to ensure that the changes between the CY 2024 and
CY 2025 wage indices do not result in an increase or decrease of
estimated aggregate payments, the application to the ESRD PPS base rate
does not result in a decrease to total ESRD PPS payments.
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed CY 2025 ESRD PPS
base rate of $273.20 is only $43.57 more than the CY 2011 ESRD PPS base
rate of $229.63. This commenter stated a belief that this has
contributed to the ongoing net closures of ESRD facilities in recent
years.
Response: We acknowledge that the ESRD PPS base rate has not
increased as much as costs have for ESRD facilities; however, we note
that the ESRD PPS base rate is not meant to be interpreted as an
average or typical payment rate for renal dialysis services furnished
to ESRD patients, because the ESRD PPS base rate is adjusted by several
factors including the wage index and several case-mix and facility-
level adjusters. Generally, these adjusters are implemented in a
budget-neutral manner, which usually decreases the ESRD PPS base rate
to account for the usually positive adjustment factor. For example,
when we updated the case-mix adjustment factors in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule, we applied a refinement budget-neutrality adjustment factor
of 0.960319, which decreased the ESRD PPS base rate by approximately
nine and a half dollars without reducing total estimated payments for
CY 2016 (80 FR 69013). Thus, we do not believe it is appropriate to
judge the payment adequacy of the ESRD PPS based on the base rate alone
without accounting for the other adjustment factors, which heavily
influence the actual payment amount received by ESRD facilities. The
actual payment rate is generally higher than the unadjusted ESRD PPS
base rate. The ESRD PPS base rate incorporates offsetting adjustments
to maintain budget neutrality which, as discussed, have generally
reduced the ESRD PPS base rate, so it should not be evaluated in
isolation. As these adjustment factors have generally increased since
the inception of the ESRD PPS in CY 2011, we believe that this increase
in the ESRD PPS base rate from CY 2011 to CY 2025 is appropriate.
Comment: Many commenters who opined that the current payments under
the ESRD PPS were too low included potential implications of a lower-
than-appropriate payment rate. These implications included concerns
related to quality of care, ability for ESRD facilities to remain open,
ability for ESRD facilities to remain staffed, reduction of the hours
of operation at ESRD facilities, and access concerns.
[[Page 89133]]
One commenter highlighted potential health equity concerns related to
what they characterized as lower-than-appropriate payments. This
commenter stated that dialysis patients are disproportionately African
American/Black, live in medically underserved areas and are low income,
so lower-than-appropriate payments would risk perpetuating health
disparities.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concerns regarding the wide
range of potential implications of the proposed payment rate update. We
note that we are statutorily required to increase the ESRD PPS base
rate by a ESRDB market basket increase factor that reflects the
forecasted change in prices of an appropriate mix of goods and services
included in renal dialysis services. The final CY 2025 market basket
update is 2.2 percent according to the latest available projection of
the ESRDB market basket and productivity adjustment, which we note is
0.4 percentage point higher than the proposed ESRDB market basket
update. We recognize that many commenters are concerned about payment
adequacy, and we agree that it is important to ensure payments to ESRD
facilities are adequate. We note that MedPAC's 2024 Report to Congress
\35\ projected a 2024 aggregate FFS Medicare margin for ESRD facilities
of 0.0 percent. While we understand why interested parties may perceive
these margins as being too low, we note that they indicate that in
general ESRD facilities are being paid a reasonable amount given their
costs.
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We appreciate the thoughtful comments on the health equity
implications of the ESRD PPS payment rate. We agree with the commenters
that appropriate payments for renal dialysis services are important due
to the potential vulnerability of many ESRD beneficiaries and the
health disparities they may experience. We did not propose any changes
to the ESRD PPS payment update methodology to further account for
health equity, and we are statutorily required to update ESRD PPS
payments based on the change in prices as measured by the ESRDB market
basket. We intend to continue to consider a wide range of potential
options for how we can address health equity concerns, for example,
through refined case-mix and facility-level adjustment factors, in
future rulemaking.
Comment: We received some comments which specifically discussed
ESRD facilities in Puerto Rico and the appropriateness of the current
ESRD PPS base rate there. One comment stated that relative rates
between MA and FFS Medicare were larger than in the mainland United
States. This commenter also mentioned several cost factors that were
unique to Puerto Rico, including energy issues, laboratory costs, costs
related to the importations of goods to areas outside the mainland
United States, local legislation on administrative staff at ESRD
facilities, and high property insurance rates.
Response: We appreciate the insight into the specific costs related
to operating ESRD facilities in Puerto Rico. We believe that the ESRDB
market basket appropriately accounts for all of the costs which the
commenters described; however, we acknowledge that there could be
geographic variation in these costs which would not be captured by the
ESRDB market basket update. We understand that MA payment is critical
for many ESRD facilities; however, MA payment rates are not the subject
of this ESRD PPS rulemaking, and we are not substantively responding to
any comments regarding MA payment rates in this final rule. We may
consider how we could address the unique costs associated with the
geographic isolation of U.S. Territories in the ESRD PPS in future
policymaking.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the ESRD PPS does not
adequately support innovation. These commenters generally expressed
that payments under the ESRD PPS are not enough to incentivize new
products, drugs, biological products, or other efficiencies to be
developed for treatment of ESRD. Many of these comments were combined
with more specific concerns regarding outlier payments for renal
dialysis drugs that received the TDAPA after the end of the TDAPA
period and the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts, which we
address in sections II.B.3 and II.B.6 respectively.
Response: Under section 1881(b)(14)(A)(ii) of the Act, the ESRD PPS
is based on a fixed bundle of goods and services using data from 2007,
2008 or 2009, whichever had the lower per-patient utilization.
Therefore, in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we derived the ESRD PPS
base rate from 2007 cost report data (75 FR 49152) which has been, and
continues to be, annually updated based on the ESRDB market basket,
reflecting the changes over time in the prices of an appropriate mix of
the goods and services involved in furnishing renal dialysis services.
Per this statutory scheme, the ESRD PPS is not designed to provide
additional payment for new and innovative good or services through the
ESRD PPS base rate. To promote innovation and achieve other objectives,
we have finalized several policies using the statutory authority at
section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act to provide temporarily increased
payment to ESRD facilities that use certain new and innovative renal
dialysis services. These include the TDAPA for certain new renal
dialysis drugs and biological products (80 FR 69023), the TPNIES for
certain new and innovative renal dialysis equipment and supplies (84 FR
60684), the TPNIES for certain capital related assets that are home
dialysis machines when used in the home for a single patient (85 FR
71416) and, most recently, the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment for
certain new drugs and biological products after the TDAPA period ends
(88 FR 76388 through 76397). All of these add-on payment adjustments
serve to provide increased payment compared to the ESRD PPS base rate,
which we believe appropriately recognizes innovation through increased
payment. As the statute specifically requires that the ESRD PPS be
based on a fixed bundle of goods and services, we do not believe it
would be appropriate to directly increase the ESRD PPS base rate for
new goods and services which are broadly similar to goods and services
within the ESRDB market basket, such as drugs and biological products
in existing ESRD PPS functional categories.
Final Rule Action: We are not finalizing any changes to our
methodology for calculating the ESRD PPS base rate. The final CY 2025
ESRD PPS base rate is $273.82, as described previously in this final
rule.
5. Update to the Average per Treatment Offset Amount for Home Dialysis
Machines
In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85 FR 71427), we expanded
eligibility for the TPNIES under Sec. 413.236 to include certain
capital-related assets that are home dialysis machines when used in the
home for a single patient. To establish the TPNIES basis of payment for
these items, we finalized the additional steps that the Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs) must follow to calculate a pre-
adjusted per treatment amount, using the prices they establish under
Sec. 413.236(e) for a capital-related asset that is a home dialysis
machine, as well as the methodology that CMS uses to calculate the
average per treatment offset amount for home dialysis machines that is
used in the MACs' calculation, to account for the cost of the home
dialysis machine that is already in the ESRD PPS base
[[Page 89134]]
rate. For purposes of this final rule, we refer to this as the ``TPNIES
offset amount.''
The methodology for calculating the TPNIES offset amount is set
forth in Sec. 413.236(f)(3). Section 413.236(f)(3)(v) states that
effective January 1, 2022, CMS annually updates the amount determined
in Sec. 413.236(f)(3)(iv) by the ESRD bundled market basket percentage
increase factor minus the productivity adjustment factor. The TPNIES
for capital-related assets that are home dialysis machines is based on
65 percent of the MAC-determined pre-adjusted per treatment amount,
reduced by the TPNIES offset amount, and is paid for 2 CYs.
There are currently no capital-related assets that are home
dialysis machines set to receive TPNIES for CY 2025, as the TPNIES
payment period for the Tablo[supreg] System ended on December 31, 2023,
and there are no TPNIES applications for CY 2025. However, as required
by Sec. 413.236(f)(3)(v), we proposed to update the TPNIES offset
amount annually according to the methodology described previously.
We are finalizing a CY 2025 TPNIES offset amount for capital-
related assets that are home dialysis machines of $10.22, based on the
final CY 2025 ESRDB productivity-adjusted market basket update of 2.2
percent (final 2.7 percent market basket percentage increase reduced by
the final 0.5 percentage point productivity adjustment). Applying the
final update factor of 1.022 to the CY 2024 offset amount resulted in
the CY 2025 offset amount of $10.22 ($10.00 x 1.022 = $10.22). This is
slightly higher than the proposed CY 2025 TPNIES offset amount for
capital related assets that are home dialysis machines of $10.18. We
did not receive any comments on our proposal to update the TPNIES
offset for capital-related assets for CY 2025.
6. Post-TDAPA Add-On Payment Adjustment Updates
a. Updates to the Post-TDAPA Add-On Payment Adjustment Amounts for CY
2025
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule we finalized an add-on payment
adjustment for certain new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products, which would be applied for 3 years after the end of the TDAPA
period (88 FR 76388 through 76397). This adjustment, known as the post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment, is adjusted by the patient-level case-
mix adjuster and is applied to every ESRD PPS claim. In that final rule
we also clarified that for each year of the post-TDAPA period we would
update the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts based on
utilization and ASP of the drug or biological product. For CY 2024
there is one drug, Korsuva[supreg] (difelikefalin), included in the
calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment. In the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76397), we finalized that the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment amount for Korsuva[supreg] would be $0.2493
and would begin on April 1, 2024.
For CY 2025, we will have two drugs included in the calculation of
the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment. The post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment period for one of these drugs, Korsuva[supreg], began on
April 1, 2024, so, conditional upon the continued receipt of the latest
full calendar quarter of ASP data as described in Sec. 413.234(c)(3),
Korsuva[supreg] will be included in the calculation for the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment for the entirety of CY 2025. The other drug,
Jesduvroq (daprodustat), began its 2-year TDAPA period on October 1,
2023, so its post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment period will begin on
October 1, 2025, conditional upon the continued receipt of the latest
full calendar quarter of ASP data.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we presented the proposed
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts for Korsuva[supreg] and
Jesduvroq based on the most recently available utilization data at the
time. Consistent with the methodology finalized in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule (88 FR 76388 through 76389), we proposed to update these
calculations with the most recent available data in the final rule.
Based on the most recent utilization data, and following the
calculation explained in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76388
through 76389) and Sec. 413.234(g), the final post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount for Korsuva[supreg] is $0.4601 for all 4
quarters of CY 2025, an increase from the proposed post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount of $0.4047. Under that same methodology, the
current estimate of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for
Jesduvroq is $0.0096 for only the last quarter of CY 2025, an increase
from the proposed post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount of
$0.0019. We note that utilization data available for Jesduvroq
available at the time the analysis was conducted for this final rule
includes only data from October 2023 through June 2024. Table 8 shows
the final post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts for each quarter
of CY 2025.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.007
[[Page 89135]]
We invited public comment on our proposed CY 2025 post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amounts. Approximately 8 commenters including
coalitions of dialysis organizations and several drug manufacturers
commented on the proposed post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts.
The following is a summary of the public comments received on these
proposals and our responses.
Comment: We received several comments that reiterated concerns
about the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment calculation that we
addressed in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule, in which we finalized the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment (88 FR 76388 through 76397).
Commenters requested CMS calculate the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount based only on TDAPA claims that included the drug or
biological product and then only apply the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment to claims with that drug or biological product. Commenters
generally stated that this methodology would better support innovation
and expressed access concerns for expensive drugs and biological
products with low utilization after the TDAPA period. Some commenters
included figures that they believed would be more appropriate amounts
for the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for
Korsuva[supreg], generally calculated using the suggested
methodological changes.
Response: We did not propose a new methodology for the calculation
of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment for the same reasons we did
not finalize the requested methodology in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule (88 FR 76395). Specifically, calculating the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount by dividing the total payment for the drug or
biological product across only those patients who utilize it would
directly incentivize utilization of a particular drug or biological
product, which can result in overutilization. We note that in future
rulemaking we may propose changes to the case-mix adjustment factors,
which could result in higher payments for treatments provided to some
patients who utilize drugs or biological products that previously
received the TDAPA, should the analysis show that treating these
patients is more costly.
Final Rule Action: After reviewing the comments, we are finalizing
a post-TDAPA addon payment adjustment amount of $0.4601 for
Korsuva[supreg] that would be included in the calculation of the post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for all four quarters of CY
2025. Additionally, we are presenting an estimated post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount of $0.0096 for Jesduvroq, which would be
included in the calculation of the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount for the fourth quarter of CY 2025. As discussed later in this
section of the final rule, this presented post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount for Jesduvroq will be updated in a CR once we have a
full year's worth of utilization data available for the analysis.
a. Proposal To Publish Post-TDAPA Add-On Payment Adjustment Amounts
After the Final Rule in Certain Circumstances
As discussed in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76393) and
codified at 42 CFR 413.234(g), we have finalized a post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment, which is based on the most recent year of
utilization data and is calculated annually in each rulemaking cycle.
Under Sec. 413.234(g)(1), CMS bases the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment calculation on the most recent 12-month period of
utilization for the new renal dialysis drug or biological product and
the most recent available full calendar quarter of ASP data. However,
when a drug or biological product begins its TDAPA period in the fourth
quarter of a CY, and, therefore, would be included in the post-TDAPA
add-on payment adjustment calculation beginning in the fourth quarter 2
CYs later, there would likely not be a full year's worth of utilization
data available at the time of proposed or final rulemaking for that CY
due to the time-lag associated with collecting and processing
utilization data for the final rule. For example, at the time of
rulemaking for last year's ESRD PPS final rule, we had data available
through June 2023 when calculating the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount for Korsuva[supreg] (88 FR 73697). However, for a
drug or biological product that began its TDAPA period in October of
the prior year, data from October through June would only represent 9
months of data. We believe it is important to have a full year's
utilization data when determining the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount so that the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
appropriately captures the utilization of the drug or biological
product as required by Sec. 413.234(g)(1).
We proposed that when there is insufficient data at the time of
rulemaking, we will publish the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount via CR once we have a full 12 months of data. Specifically, we
will publish the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount in a CR
under the following circumstances: (1) a drug or biological product is
ending its TDAPA period during the CY, and therefore under Sec.
413.234(c)(1) will begin being included in the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount calculation during that CY; and (2) that drug
or biological product does not have at least 12 full months of
utilization data at the time the final rule is developed. Under this
proposal, we would still include an estimated post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount in the proposed rule and update that estimated amount
in the final rule, but we would note that the estimated amount
presented in the final rule is subject to change. We note that the
final post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount published after the
final rule could be higher or lower than the estimated amount presented
in the final rule. We do not anticipate having less than a full year's
utilization data at the time of rulemaking for drugs and biological
products that begin receiving TDAPA payments in quarters other than the
fourth quarter of the year; however, should such an instance arise, we
would similarly publish the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount
in a CR once 12 months of utilization data are available. We would
indicate the quarterly release CR in which we intend to publish the
final post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount.
For CY 2025, there is one TDAPA drug, Jesduvroq, which is ending
its TDAPA period in CY 2025 and for which, at the time of proposed
rulemaking, we did not anticipate having a full 12 months' worth of
utilization data at the time of final rulemaking. As such, we stated
that under this proposal we would indicate in the final rule that we
intend to publish the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount for
CY 2025 for Jesduvroq once we have a full year of utilization data. We
generally intend to publish this updated post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount two calendar quarters prior to the end of the TDAPA
period, as this would allow for sufficient time to gather and analyze a
year's worth of utilization data. We stated that for this drug, and for
any drug or biological product that begins its TDAPA period in the
fourth quarter of a CY, we would generally publish the post-TDAPA add-
on payment adjustment amount at the beginning of the second quarter of
the last CY of that drug or biological product's TDAPA period (that is,
two
[[Page 89136]]
calendar quarters before the drug is included in the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount). However, should circumstances arise that
prevent us from calculating a post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
amount at that time, we would publish the final post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount at a later time.
We noted that this approach to publishing the post-TDAPA add-on
payment adjustment amount calculation would not impact any drug or
biological product that has at least one full year's worth of
utilization data at the time when the analysis for the final rule is
developed, nor would it impact any drug or biological product that is
already included in the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment
calculation for a given CY. We do not intend to routinely update post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts quarterly, as we believe this
will make it more difficult for ESRD facilities to estimate payments.
However, for drugs or biological products that lack a full year's worth
of utilization data at the time when the analysis for the final rule is
developed, we believe it is appropriate to take this additional step to
ensure that their post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment is based on 12
months of utilization data as required by Sec. 413.234(g)(1).
We invited public comment on our proposal to update post-TDAPA add-
on payment adjustment amounts after the final rule is published in
situations where 12 months of utilization data is not available at the
time of the analysis calculated for the ESRD PPS final rule. We did not
receive any comments on this proposal.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing our proposal to publish the
post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amount after the final rule in
certain circumstances, as we believe it is most consistent with Sec.
413.234(g)(1), which requires that the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amount be calculated using 12 months of utilization data.
7. Inclusion of Oral-Only Drugs Into the ESRD PPS Bundled Payment
a. Background
Section 1881(b)(14)(A)(i) of the Act requires the Secretary to
implement a payment system under which a single payment is made to a
provider of services or a renal dialysis facility for renal dialysis
services in lieu of any other payment. Section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the
Act defines renal dialysis services, and subclause (iii) of that
section states that these services include other drugs and biologicals
\36\ that are furnished to individuals for the treatment of ESRD and
for which payment was made separately under this title, and any oral
equivalent form of such drug or biological.
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\36\ As discussed in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final rule (83 FR
56922), we began using the term ``biological products'' instead of
``biologicals'' under the ESRD PPS to be consistent with FDA
nomenclature. We use the term ``biological products'' in this final
rule except where referencing specific language in the Act or
regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When we implemented the ESRD PPS in 2011 (75 FR 49030), we
interpreted this provision as including not only injectable drugs and
biological products used for the treatment of ESRD (other than ESAs and
any oral form of ESAs, which are included under clause (ii) of section
1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act), but also all oral drugs and biological
products used for the treatment of ESRD and furnished under title XVIII
of the Act. We also concluded that, to the extent oral-only drugs or
biological products used for the treatment of ESRD do not fall within
clause (iii) of section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act, such drugs or
biological products would fall under clause (iv) of that section, and
constitute other items and services used for the treatment of ESRD that
are not described in clause (i) of section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act.
We finalized and issued payment policies for oral-only renal
dialysis service drugs or biological products in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
final rule (75 FR 49038 through 49053). In that rule, we defined renal
dialysis services at Sec. 413.171 as including drugs and biological
products with only an oral form. We also finalized a policy to delay
payment for oral-only drugs under the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2014.
Accordingly, we codified the delay in payment for oral-only renal
dialysis service drugs and biological products at Sec. 413.174(f)(6),
and provided that payment to an ESRD facility for renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products with only an oral form would be
incorporated into the ESRD PPS payment rates effective January 1, 2014,
once we had collected and analyzed adequate pricing and utilization
data. Since oral-only drugs are generally not a covered service under
Medicare Part B, this delay of payment under the ESRD PPS also allowed
coverage to continue under Medicare Part D for those beneficiaries with
such coverage.
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS proposed rule (74 FR 49929), we noted that
the only oral-only drugs that we identified were phosphate binders and
calcimimetics, specifically, cinacalcet hydrochloride, lanthanum
carbonate, calcium acetate, sevelamer hydrochloride, and sevelamer
carbonate. All of these drugs fall into the ESRD PPS functional
category for bone and mineral metabolism.
Since then, the Congress has acted three times to further delay the
inclusion of oral-only renal dialysis service drugs and biological
products in the ESRD PPS. Specifically, as discussed in section II.A.1
of this final rule, ATRA in 2013, as amended by PAMA in 2014, and
amended by ABLE in 2014, ultimately delayed the inclusion of oral-only
drugs into the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2025.
Section 217(c)(1) of PAMA also required us to adopt a process for
determining when oral-only drugs are no longer oral-only and to
incorporate them into the ESRD PPS bundled payment. Section 217(a)(2)
of PAMA further amended section 632(b)(1) of ATRA by requiring that, in
establishing payment for oral-only drugs under the ESRD PPS, the
Secretary must use data from the most recent year available. In the CY
2016 ESRD PPS proposed rule (80 FR 37839), we noted that when the
existing oral-only drugs (which were, at that time, only phosphate
binders and calcimimetics) were determined no longer to be oral-only
drugs, we would pay for them using the TDAPA. We stated that this would
allow us to collect data reflecting current utilization of both the
oral and injectable or intravenous forms of the drugs, as well as
payment patterns and beneficiary co-pays, before we add these drugs to
the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
In 2017, when an injectable calcimimetic became available, CMS
issued a Change Request \37\ to add all calcimimetics, including oral
and injectable forms, to the ESRD PPS bundled payment beginning in CY
2018. CMS paid the TDAPA for calcimimetics for a period of 3 years (CY
2018 through CY 2020). When the TDAPA period ended, we went through
rulemaking (85 FR 71410) to increase the ESRD PPS base rate beginning
in CY 2021 to incorporate the cost of calcimimetics.
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\37\ https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/mm10065.pdf and
https://www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/transmittals/2018downloads/r1999otn.pdf.
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Most recently, in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67185
through 67186), we finalized a revision to the regulatory definition of
an oral-only drug, effective January 1, 2025, to clarify our
longstanding policy by specifying that an oral-only drug has no
injectable functional equivalent. The effective date of this revised
definition will coincide
[[Page 89137]]
with the January 1, 2025, incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS under Sec. 413.174(f)(6). The revised definition of oral-only
drugs reflects that drugs with similar end-action effects are treated
as equivalent under the ESRD PPS, consistent with our approach to
designating drugs into ESRD PPS functional categories.
b. Current Policy for Oral-Only Drugs in CY 2025
Existing regulations at Sec. 413.174(f)(6) state that effective
January 1, 2025, oral-only drugs will be paid for under the ESRD PPS.
Although oral-only drugs are excluded from the ESRD PPS bundled payment
until January 1, 2025, they are currently recognized as renal dialysis
services as defined in regulation at Sec. 413.171. Accordingly, CMS is
planning to incorporate oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS bundled
payment beginning January 1, 2025, using the TDAPA, as described in the
CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69027) and subsequent rules.
As we stated in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67180), if
an injectable equivalent or other form of administration of phosphate
binders were to be approved by FDA prior to January 1, 2025, the
phosphate binders would no longer be considered oral-only drugs and
would no longer be paid for outside the ESRD PPS. We stated that we
would pay for the oral and any non-oral version of the drug using the
TDAPA under the ESRD PPS for at least 2 years, during which time we
would collect and analyze utilization data. We stated that if no other
injectable equivalent (or other form of administration) of phosphate
binders is approved by the FDA prior to January 1, 2025, we would pay
for these drugs using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS for at least 2 years
beginning January 1, 2025. CMS will use the same process that it used
for calcimimetics to incorporate phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS
beginning January 1, 2025. CMS discussed its process for incorporating
calcimimetics in CMS Transmittal 1999, dated January 10, 2018, and in
MLN Matters Number: MM10065.38 39 We stated that pricing for
phosphate binders under the TDAPA would be based on pricing
methodologies available under section 1847A of the Act. A new renal
dialysis drug or biological product is paid for using the TDAPA, which
is based on 100 percent of ASP. If ASP is not available then the
transitional drug add-on payment adjustment is based on 100 percent of
wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) and, when WAC is not available, the
payment is based on the drug manufacturer's invoice. In such cases, CMS
will undertake rulemaking to modify the ESRD PPS base rate, if
appropriate, to account for the cost and utilization of phosphate
binders in the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
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\38\ https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/
Transmittals/2018Downloads/R1999OTN.pdf.
\39\ https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-
Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM10065.pdf.
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We note that on October 17, 2023, a new oral phosphate lowering
agent received FDA marketing approval. According to the FDA-approved
labeling for this drug, XPHOZAH[supreg] (tenapanor) is indicated to
reduce serum phosphorus in adults with chronic kidney disease who are
on dialysis as add-on therapy in patients who have an inadequate
response to phosphate binders or who are intolerant of any dose of
phosphate binder therapy. CMS has identified XPHOZAH[supreg] to be a
renal dialysis service because it is used to treat or manage a
condition associated with ESRD, per its approved indication.
XPHOZAH[supreg] tablets are taken orally, usually twice a day with
meals. CMS has also determined that XPHOZAH[supreg] meets the current
regulatory definition of an oral-only drug as defined at Sec.
413.234(a), and therefore, in accordance with Sec. 413.174(f)(6), is
not paid for under the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2025. Consistent with
policies adopted in the CY 2016 and CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rules (see
80 FR 69025 and 87 FR 67183), XPHOZAH[supreg] will be included in the
ESRD PPS effective January 1, 2025, using the drug designation process
under Sec. 413.234.
As set forth in Sec. 413.174(f)(6), effective January 1, 2025,
payment to an ESRD facility for renal dialysis service drugs and
biological products with only an oral form furnished to ESRD patients
will be incorporated within the prospective payment system rates
established by CMS in Sec. 413.230, and separate payment will no
longer be provided. As noted earlier in this section, we have recently
published operational guidance, including information about the TDAPA
amount, HCPCS codes, and ASP reporting requirements and timelines for
phosphate binders at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf. We note that we will use the
same process that we used for calcimimetics to incorporate phosphate
binders into the ESRD PPS beginning January 1, 2025, and that we will
not be following this process for any other oral drugs or biological
products. Manufacturers would need to apply for a HCPCS code and the
TDAPA for any other oral drugs or biological products to be eligible
for the TDAPA.
Finally, we note that the TDAPA amount is not applied to claims for
renal dialysis services provided to beneficiaries with acute kidney
injury.\40\ When ESRD facilities were paid the TDAPA for calcimimetics
and the latter were incorporated into the ESRD PPS bundled payment for
patients with ESRD, the TDAPA was not paid for claims for renal
dialysis services provided to beneficiaries with acute kidney injury.
Similarly, ESRD facilities will not be paid the TDAPA for phosphate
binders for renal dialysis services provided to beneficiaries with
acute kidney injury. This is discussed below in section III.E of this
final rule.
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\40\ https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/mm102811.pdf and https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/2017Downloads/R1941OTN.pdf.
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We note that for any other oral-only drugs, such as
XPHOZAH[supreg], we will apply our drug designation process as we do
for all new renal dialysis drugs and biological products, consistent
with Sec. 413.234 and the policy finalized in CY 2016 ESRD PPS final
rule (80 FR 69027) and reiterated in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule
(87 FR 67180).
c. Operational Considerations Related to the Incorporation of Oral-Only
Drugs
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49043), we explained that
there were certain advantages to delaying the implementation of payment
for oral-only drugs and biological products under the ESRD PPS. These
advantages included allowing ESRD facilities additional time to make
operational changes and logistical arrangements to furnish oral-only
renal dialysis service drugs and biological products to their patients.
In November 2023, in accordance with section 632(d) of ATRA, the
Government Accountability Office (GAO) published a Report to
Congressional Committees titled, ``End-Stage Renal Disease: CMS Plans
for including Phosphate Binders in the Bundled Payment.'' (GAO-24-
106288).\41\ The report summarized the current status of payment for
the phosphate binders as well as identifying areas of operational
concerns. These include challenges related to hiring the staff needed
for ESRD facilities to provide phosphate binders to patients,
complexities relating to system updates needed to accommodate the
volume and broad array of phosphate binders, and costs related to
dispensing, storage, and
[[Page 89138]]
transportation. The considerations identified in the GAO report
generally align with the comments we have received on past ESRD PPS
proposed rules. The GAO also interviewed dialysis organization
representatives who stated that they are preparing to make the
anticipated adjustments needed to dispense the phosphate binders.
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\41\ https://www.gao.gov/assets/d24106288.pdf.
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With respect to considerations related to staffing, we note that
the ESRD PPS includes payment for staffing related to the provision of
renal dialysis services. We believe there are several strategies that
ESRD facilities could employ to efficiently use available staff time to
provide phosphate binders. There are parallels between the
administration of phosphate binders and the administration of oral
calcimimetics, which are also typically taken every day. First, we
expect that patients with ESRD generally receive treatment for at least
3 hours per session, typically three times per week. We believe that
during this treatment window there is generally staff availability to
provide the patient with pre-packaged medication, which we note could
include medication for multiple days. Second, ESRD facilities could
maximize the efficiency of staff time by mailing the prescriptions, to
the extent that doing so is consistent with state pharmacy laws. For
example, the GAO report identified that one large dialysis organization
only mails oral prescriptions to patients' homes, while others mail the
medication to either the ESRD facility or the patient's home. Third,
the GAO report identified that some ESRD facilities contract with
outside pharmacies rather than operating their own pharmacy. By
contracting with outside pharmacies, ESRD facilities could reduce or
avoid the need to hire additional pharmacists and pharmacy staff to
manage the volume of prescriptions.
Another challenge identified by the dialysis organizations was the
complexity of dispensing phosphate binders because of the broad array
of phosphate binders and the high volume of pills.\42\ We acknowledge
there are six common types of phosphate binders as compared to only one
type of calcimimetics. The GAO report also noted that unlike
calcimimetics, phosphate binders are typically taken with every meal
and snack. We note that although Medicare will begin paying for
phosphate binders under the ESRD PPS beginning January 1, 2025, we are
not establishing any requirements regarding how or where patients take
these medications. These decisions are made and will continue to be
made by the patient, nephrologist, and care team.
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\42\ Ibid.
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We recognize that updates may be required to ESRD facilities'
systems, including electronic medical records, billing systems, and
inventory management systems to accommodate new procedures for
dispensing phosphate binders. As we previously noted, we initially
delayed the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS in 2011,
in part to allow ESRD facilities to make such operational changes and
logistical arrangements. In addition, we have provided operational
guidance on the CMS website at https://www.cms.gov/files/document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf that addresses
HCPCS coding, billing, and price information. We expect that ESRD
facilities will be able to make these system changes in advance of
January 1, 2025.
As discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, dialysis
organizations have expressed concerns surrounding CMS using ASP to
determine the TDAPA amount added to the ESRD PPS base rate for
phosphate binders, which they believe does not adequately provide for
dispensing cost.\43\ Under current TDAPA policy, CMS intended to pay
the TDAPA based on 100 percent of ASP for phosphate binders for at
least 2 years. However, as noted in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
(89 FR 55797), CMS recognized that updates may be required to ESRD
facilities' systems, including electronic medical records, billing
systems, and inventory management systems to accommodate new procedures
for dispensing phosphate binders. In addition, we recognized the high
percentage of ESRD beneficiaries that have at least one phosphate
binder prescription and the large volume of phosphate binder
prescriptions and stated that we were considering whether it may be
appropriate to make additional payment to account for incremental
operational costs in excess of 100 percent of ASP, such as dispensing
fees, when paying the TDAPA for phosphate binders. Unlike drugs and
biological products for which payment is already included in the ESRD
PPS base rate, including all other drugs and biological products in
existing functional categories, dispensing fees and other costs are not
currently included in the ESRD PPS base rate for phosphate binders.
Therefore, in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we also stated that
we were considering whether a potential change in TDAPA amount policy
for phosphate binders to account for such costs would be consistent
with the TDAPA policy as finalized in the CY 2019 and CY 2020 ESRD PPS
final rules (83 FR 56948 and 84 FR 60673 through 60676). In the
proposed rule, we noted one potential example we could consider would
be paying 106 percent of ASP for 2 years as we did for calcimimetics.
As discussed in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, the amounts added to
the ESRD PPS base rate for oral drugs at that time were based on data
from Part D, which included dispensing fees (75 FR 49043). We solicited
comments on the extent to which 100 percent of ASP is an appropriate
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders and whether there are any costs
associated with the inclusion of phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment that may not be accounted for by 100 percent of ASP. In
the proposed rule we noted that CMS may finalize a change in the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders after considering comments on this topic.
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\43\ Ibid.
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As noted earlier, we have issued guidance \44\ about the process we
will use for paying the TDAPA for the phosphate binders and for their
incorporation into the ESRD PPS bundled payment. This guidance
addresses several key topics including billing information, information
about the discarded drug policy, and information for manufacturers
about reporting timelines for ASP data.
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\44\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renal-disease-esrd and https://www.cms.gov/files/document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf.
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We invited public comment on the TDAPA payment methodology for the
January 1, 2025, incorporation of oral-only drugs in the ESRD PPS.
Approximately 162 commenters including LDOs; provider advocacy
organizations; nonprofit dialysis associations; coalitions of dialysis
organizations; a network of dialysis organizations; professional
organizations; long-term care pharmacy association; ESRD facilities;
ESRD beneficiaries, a trade association and pharmaceutical
manufacturers, along with MedPAC, commented on the TDAPA payment
methodology for the January 1, 2025, incorporation of oral-only drugs
in the ESRD PPS. Of the 162 comments on oral-only drugs, we received 22
responses directly pertinent to the TDAPA methodology for the January
1, 2025, incorporation of oral-only drugs in the ESRD PPS. The
remaining comments were out-of-scope, including 133 form letters, of
which approximately 110 were from a unique
[[Page 89139]]
submitter. The following is a summary of the public comments received
on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Multiple commenters expressed appreciation that CMS
recognized the operational concerns and associated costs that were
raised by ESRD facilities in the 2023 GAO report.\45\ However, they
expressed concern that CMS does not fully understand the costs and
burdens associated specifically with staff time and dispensing of these
drugs. Numerous commenters expressed concerns regarding the incremental
operational costs and burden of incorporating phosphate binders into
the ESRD PPS bundled payment. The commenters' concerns included, but
were not limited to, distribution fees, mailing fees, storage fees, and
increases in labor costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ ``End-Stage renal Disease: CMS Plans for Including
Phosphate Binders in the Bundled Payment.'' (GAO-24-106288, Nov.
2023).
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Response: CMS thanks the commenters for their appreciation and for
sharing concerns regarding the costs and burden of incorporating
phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS bundled payment. CMS has addressed
these specific concerns in the responses to comments that follow in
this rule. CMS recognizes that the introduction of oral-only
medications into the ESRD PPS bundle can present some new logistic
challenges. CMS is recognizing these costs through the modification to
the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders in this final rule. In
accordance with section 1881(b)(14)(B) of the Act, Sec. 413.171
defines renal dialysis services to include oral-only renal dialysis
services drug and biologicals. Oral-only renal dialysis service drugs
and biological products were included in the definition of renal
dialysis services in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49044). At
that time CMS finalized a policy to delay payment for these drugs under
the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2014, to allow ESRD facilities to plan
for the logistic challenges like those interested parties note in their
comments. Legislation further delayed this date to January 1, 2025, and
CMS ultimately updated the regulations at 42 CFR 413.174(f)(6) to
finalize the date of the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the ESRD
PPS bundled payment as January 1, 2025. CMS believes that the passage
of over a decade since implementation of the ESRD PPS has provided
sufficient time for interested parties to make the operational changes
and logistical arrangements needed to furnish oral-only renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products to their patients.
Comment: Numerous commenters stated that CMS should finalize the
payment of a dispensing fee to account for such incremental operational
costs when phosphate binders are added to the ESRD PPS bundled payment.
They stated that the dispensing of oral medications to be taken daily
will result in incremental operational costs and that these costs and
dispensing fees are not included in the ESRD PPS base rate. An LDO and
a coalition of dialysis organizations noted that every dialysis
provider likely will implement a process that is most cost effective
and efficient based on their footprint, organizational structure,
patient population and other specific circumstances. Commenters stated
that while the processes and procedures may vary by ESRD facility,
every ESRD facility will incur distribution, storage, and staff
expenses that are not accounted for in the ASP data, and this is an
important distinction from the current processes related to
calcimimetics. These other costs are discussed in the comments and
responses that follow.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, CMS recognized the
high percentage of ESRD beneficiaries that have at least one phosphate
binder prescription and the large volume of phosphate binder
prescriptions and noted that we were considering whether it may be
appropriate to make additional payment to account for incremental
operational costs in excess of 100 percent of ASP, such as dispensing
fees, when paying the TDAPA for phosphate binders. We stated that
unlike drugs and biological products for which payment is already
included in the ESRD PPS base rate, including all other drugs and
biological products in existing ESRD PPS functional categories,
dispensing fees and other costs are not currently included in the ESRD
PPS base rate for phosphate binders (89 FR 55797). CMS believes that
payment for the incremental operational costs, such as distribution
fees, mailing fees, storage fees, and increases in labor costs incurred
by the ESRD facilities for the provision of phosphate binders should
align with resource use; that is, ESRD facilities' outlay to provide
the phosphate binders to the Medicare beneficiaries. In lieu of a
dispensing fee, as discussed later in this section, we are finalizing a
flat rate increase to the proposed 100 percent of ASP TDAPA amount for
phosphate binders.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis organizations commented that
distribution costs, both dispensing fees and mailing fees, are not
included in 100 percent of ASP. An LDO stated that CMS suggested that
ESRD facilities can implement efficiencies by having phosphate binder
prescriptions mailed to the patient's home to the extent possible under
state pharmacy laws. They noted, however, that this still represents a
new cost to ESRD facilities that is not accounted for in a drug's ASP.
One commenter who is a pharmacy solutions company stated that the range
of dispensing fees tends to be $5 to $30 for any given dispense, and
incremental operational costs might include costs associated with call
centers and pharmacists to receive prescriptions from ESRD facilities,
as well as the internal processing costs associated with converting
that into fillable medications. The commenter also stated that there is
labor associated with the actual fulfillment of oral medications, which
includes both quality control such as operational checks, and despite
automation there is additional regulatory burden and oversight that is
applied to mail order pharmacies. They stated that all these activities
will result in incremental operational costs. The commenter stated that
it is reasonable to expect that ESRD facilities, depending on their
size and scale, might pay more than what would be incurred in mailing
fees to dispense oral medications through a pharmacy. Commenters noted
that these types of distribution costs exist regardless of whether the
oral-only drugs are dispensed from a retail or mail or central
pharmacy.
Multiple commenters stated that the ESRD facilities will be paying
pharmacy charges to obtain the drugs through them. Commenters expressed
concern that ESRD facilities will incur additional costs that should
not be theirs to shoulder. A non-profit dialysis association noted that
increased payment for these incremental operational costs is important,
particularly now when according to the commenter ESRD facilities are at
a financial breaking point. The commenter noted that the logistics
involved with getting the phosphate binders to a patient can be more
expensive than the drugs themselves. They stated that these costs are
even greater when beneficiaries are based in rural communities, putting
their ESRD facilities at an even greater disadvantage.
An organization of pediatric nephrologists supported the TDAPA
amount based on 100 percent of ASP for oral phosphate binders. While
the organization appreciated that adding
[[Page 89140]]
oral-only drugs to the bundled payment will improve patient access,
they are concerned that these drugs are expensive, and pediatric
centers will not be able to afford them. The organization stated that
pediatric patients with kidney disease are mainly dialyzed in pediatric
hospitals, which are not able to get bulk pricing deals for these
drugs. By adding oral-only drugs to the ESRD PPS bundled payment
without an appropriate increase in payment, the organization stated
that there will be a huge cost to the pediatric hospitals that they
cannot absorb. The commenter identified additional concerns about
access, as these are not first-line drugs for pediatrics and there is
often significant prior authorization involved in procuring these drugs
for pediatric patients. They stated that the provision of phosphate
binders for the pediatric ESRD population would include compounding
charges and dispensary costs.
Several commenters noted that there will be mailing fees either in
terms of obtaining drugs from pharmacies or sending the drugs directly
to the patient's home, which is where they are taken. The pharmacy
solutions company stated that the home delivery of medications is
preferred by beneficiaries. The commenter predicted that most dialysis
providers will rely on mail order or shipping from a central pharmacy
to their clinics for distribution; others may rely on local retail
pharmacies. The commenter stated that for home delivery, each
prescription must be shipped to a patient's home through a carrier like
the United States Postal Service, FedEx, UPS, etc. Thus, each dispense
incurs an additional expense of $3 to $25 depending on weight and
shipping method. The commenter also noted that given the number of
types of phosphate binders used per patient, and the sheer volume of
pills needed, there will be increased shipping costs previously
unaccounted for in the ESRD PPS base rate for oral phosphate binders. A
coalition of dialysis providers stated that shipping costs alone are
expected to be significant, as pills must be packaged to ensure the
medication is not damaged during transit, and shipping costs are likely
to escalate year over year, as will the contract costs with mail-order
pharmacies.
Drug manufacturers encouraged CMS to finalize a change in the TDAPA
amount to 106 percent of ASP for phosphate binders. They stated that
100 percent of ASP does not consider the substantial cost for
dispensing oral-only drugs particularly for the high volume of pills
associated with phosphate binders, which a large majority of Medicare
ESRD beneficiaries utilize. An LDO and a coalition of dialysis
organizations commented on the distribution of phosphate binders to a
subpopulation of patients with housing instability, for whom mailing
medications to a home is not an option. Based on an assessment of the
LDO's patient population, as well as internal and external assets and
capabilities in efficiently ordering and distributing a large volume of
oral drugs, they assessed that mailing medications to patient homes,
arguably the least burdensome process for facility staff, is viable for
only a subset of their population. Because many patients have unstable
housing situations, the LDO stated that they cannot rely on mail order
for every patient.
Multiple commenters noted that all these distribution options will
incur new costs previously unaccounted for in the original underlying
bundled payment and that are not covered by 100 percent of ASP,
including additional staff time and facility infrastructure costs.
Unlike the current process used for calcimimetics, staff will be
required to accept and store individual prescriptions for each patient.
An LDO stated phosphate binders currently flow through retail and mail
order pharmacies, and that they will continue to flow through those
channels when the payment changes from Part D to Part B. The LDO
suggested that it would be appropriate for CMS to adjust the TDAPA
payment amount to recognize Part B pharmacy supply fees paid for oral
drugs paid as part of a physician's service, or in this case as part of
the renal dialysis service.
Response: CMS thanks the commenters for sharing the challenges
accompanying the complexity of dispensing phosphate binders because of
the broad array of phosphate binders and the high volume of pills. We
acknowledge there are six common types of phosphate binders as compared
to only one calcimimetic. CMS also acknowledges the range of dispensing
fees for the high volume of phosphate binders required to manage ESRD
patients, along with the impact of potentially higher pharmacy supply
fees on the rural community. We understand the concerns expressed by
the commenters about ASP, and that small ESRD facilities may be unable
to negotiate the lower drug prices attributed to volume, and
inaccessibility to supply chain discounts. These unique challenges of
the high volume of phosphate binders that ESRD facilities must provide
to beneficiaries would be magnified by a higher cost-to-payment ratio
for the smaller ESRD facilities. We recognize that unstable housing
situations with some ESRD beneficiaries would affect the distribution
of phosphate binders through mail order, which may be a preferred way
for ESRD facilities to manage this process. In consideration of the
incremental operational costs that will be incurred by the ESRD
facilities, as noted later in this section, CMS has decided to finalize
an increase to the current 100 percent of ASP calculation of the TDAPA
amount paid to ESRD facilities for the inclusion of phosphate binders.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations noted that ESRD
facilities will need to update information technology systems to
facilitate these changes. Changes are required to update electronic
medical records, billing systems, and inventory management. The
commenter also stated that e-prescribing is also a complex process that
involves interactions with state regulatory authorities and that ESRD
facilities will need to stand-up or expand their internal ability to
engage with e-prescribing systems and contract with e-prescribing
platforms to facilitate this policy change for phosphate binders. The
coalition stated that all these changes represent both significant up-
front costs and investments as well as ongoing administrative
requirements to ensure operational connectivity and seamless delivery
to the beneficiary. The commenter stated that ASP does not cover any of
information technology costs for ESRD facilities to distribute
phosphate binders to beneficiaries.
Response: CMS acknowledges that there will be changes needed in the
IT systems for ESRD facilities to accommodate the updates and
methodological changes accompanying the inclusion of the phosphate
binders in the ESRD PPS. These changes and updates affect electronic
medical records, billing systems, and inventory management systems.
However, since publication of the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule, our
existing regulations at Sec. 413.174(f)(6) have stated that effective
January 1, 2025, oral-only drugs, which includes phosphate binders,
will be paid for under the ESRD PPS. As previously discussed, we
initially delayed the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the ESRD
PPS in 2011, in part to allow ESRD facilities to make such operational
changes and logistical arrangements. In addition, we have provided
detailed operational guidance on the implementation of the TDAPA policy
as it pertains to phosphate binders to ensure that facilities have
clear instructions on compliance and payment processes to facilitate a
smooth
[[Page 89141]]
transition,\46\ which addresses HCPCS coding, billing, and price
information for phosphate binders. We expect that ESRD facilities will
be able to make these system changes in advance of January 1, 2025. CMS
will continue to issue operational guidance as necessary for the smooth
implementation of the incorporation of phosphate binders into the ESRD
PPS bundled payment. As discussed later in this section, CMS is
finalizing an increase in the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders, which
may help to offset the costs associated with the logistic steps that
the commenter described.
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\46\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf.
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Comment: Coalitions of dialysis organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists, a drug manufacturer and a health care
system noted that supporting the provision of a significant volume of
pills to patients along with the storage costs associated with
maintaining the drugs at the ESRD facility if the decision is to
distribute the drugs to patients during their dialysis treatment
sessions is an additional cost to the ESRD facility. An LDO stated that
the storage and distribution of oral calcimimetic medications are
different from what they would be with phosphate binders. Commenters
noted that because there is one oral calcimimetic medication, and half
of their patient population on calcimimetic treatment (approximately 25
percent) receives this drug three times per week chairside, the storage
and distribution processes are much simpler. They stated that ESRD
facilities can maintain a supply of calcimimetics with relatively low
burden compared to phosphate binders. The commenters stated that with
more than 80 percent of ESRD patients being prescribed phosphate
binders, and with more than six different types of oral phosphate
binders and various dosages of each, phosphate binders represent a 225
percent relative increase over, and addition to, the percent of
patients to whom the ESRD facilities are currently delivering
calcimimetics. The coalition stated that the scale of operational
requirements needed to deliver calcimimetics simply pales in comparison
to what will be required to deliver phosphate binders to beneficiaries
through the ESRD PPS.
The commenters also noted that because of the size of the pills and
the quantity required for each prescription, most ESRD facilities are
not equipped to store and dispense this volume of oral medication. They
stated that phosphate binders represent an exponential increase in the
volume of pills dialysis providers will need to acquire, distribute,
store, and manage for their patients each month and year. The relative
difference between managing 360 pills per year per patient for
cinacalcet as compared with 3,240 pills per year per patient for
calcium carbonate is 800 percent.
An LDO stated that the ESRD PPS bundled payment might have included
storage administration fees for drugs that were previously separately
billable (largely intravenous agents) when CMS established the bundled
payment. However, they noted that the claims data CMS analyzed at that
time omitted these oral medications. The LDO commented that it is
incorrect to assume that the storage costs and dispensing fees for
intravenous agents, which represent the vast majority of dialysis-
provided drugs accounted for when the bundled payment was created, are
equivalent to the administration and mailing costs associated with
oral-only medications. A coalition of dialysis organizations stated
that while their member ESRD facilities have increased their
familiarity with dispensing oral drugs since the inception of the ESRD
PPS, the difference between distributing several hundred pills to 25
percent of their patients each year and distributing thousands of large
pills to 80 percent of the ESRD facilities' patients each year requires
a significant expansion of their pharmaceutical distribution operations
on a massive scale. The commenter stated that the ESRD facilities
cannot simply repurpose existing systems to meet this goal--they must
build, rebuild, and significantly expand the scale of their operations
to accommodate a vastly larger number of patients taking exponentially
more pills than they have ever provided before. The development,
maintenance, and ongoing clinical management of these processes
represent significant costs to ESRD facilities, which are not covered
by setting the TDAPA for phosphate binders at 100 percent of ASP.
The LDO commented that intravenous agents and oral-only drugs
differ in several respects. Most notably, intravenous agents are
usually administered to patients while on dialysis. Thus, there is
centralized shipping and administration of those products. In contrast,
the commenter stated, under state and other pharmacy laws, a
significant number of the oral-only drugs will be shipped and dispensed
directly to the patient's home. This delivery model incurs fixed costs,
such as shipping and administration fees, which differ from those
associated with the previously separately billable intravenous drugs.
A coalition of dialysis organizations stated that ESRD facilities
would also have to construct or install on-site storage with
appropriate temperature controls and security measures compliant with
state pharmacy laws and requirements. If the patient misses or changes
their appointment, or if the delivery of their prescription is delayed
by the shipping carrier, this process breaks down. The coalition stated
that CMS's suggestion regarding labor allocation for in-center
distribution of phosphate binders does not address the needs of
patients using home dialysis, is not simple, and is not without costs.
The commenter stated that having an ESRD facility staff member hand a
patient their pre-packaged medication is the final step in a long,
complex, and costly process. They stated that none of those costs will
be supported if CMS sets the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders at 100
percent of ASP.
A non-profit treatment and research center stated that given the
difficulties associated with dispensing these medications in the ESRD
facility, these facilities may have to restrict the formulary of
available medications, which may mean that some patients have
difficulty accessing the optimal medication for them. A health care
system stated that because of significant cost considerations, they are
concerned that ESRD facilities may limit patient choice by offering
fewer phosphate binders based on the cost to facilities.
In their comment, MedPAC refers to their comment in the CY 2019
proposed rule that stated that the ASP + 6 percent policy that is
applied to many Part B drugs was developed to reimburse physicians for
the cost of drugs that they purchase directly and commonly administer
in their offices. MedPAC also stated that while the ASP payment policy
never stated what cost the ``+6 percent'' was intended to cover, they
noted that reimbursing dialysis facilities is considerably different
from reimbursing physicians. First, the variation in physicians'
purchasing power, whether they practice solo, as part of a group, or in
a health system, is likely to result in considerably more variation in
the acquisition price for a drug compared to the acquisition prices for
dialysis facilities. If the intent of the ``+6 percent'' was to address
acquisition price variation, MedPAC stated that they believe that
rationale is diminished for dialysis facilities. MedPAC also stated
that the TDAPA amount is in addition to the ESRD PPS base rate, which
already includes payment for the cost of storage and administration of
[[Page 89142]]
ESRD-related drugs. Therefore, if the intent of the ``+6 percent'' was
to address storage and administration costs, MedPAC believes these
costs are already addressed through the ESRD PPS bundled payment and do
not contribute to the rationale for paying 106 percent of ASP for the
TDAPA.
Response: We agree with MedPAC that the 106 percent of ASP percent
policy was developed to pay physicians for the cost of drugs and that
the TDAPA is an add-on payment adjustment to the ESRD PPS base rate,
which already accounts for the cost of storage and administration of
renal dialysis drugs. However, CMS recognizes the unique costs
associated with the provision of phosphate binder drugs and believes it
is appropriate to consider a potential change in the TDAPA payment
policy for these drugs. CMS believes it is appropriate to make an
incremental addition to the TDAPA amount to specifically account for
incremental operational costs in excess of 100 percent of ASP for
furnishing phosphate binders, such as distribution fees, mailing fees,
excess storage fees, and increases in labor costs. Unlike other drugs
and biological products for which payment is already included in the
ESRD PPS base rate, including all other drugs and biological products
in existing ESRD PPS functional categories, these incremental
operational costs, such as security of medications in storage, are not
currently included in the ESRD PPS base rate for phosphate binders. We
noted this in the analysis conducted to establish the base rate in the
CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, and we did not include phosphate binders
in that analysis due to a lack of data (75 FR 49043). CMS is making a
provision for a fixed additional amount for each monthly claim that
includes phosphate binders, which will increase the TDAPA amount to
account for these unaddressed incremental operational costs in CY 2025
and CY 2026.
Regarding the concern about the difficulties associated with
dispensing phosphate binders in the ESRD facility, and the risk that
these facilities may have to restrict the formulary of available
medications, which may mean that some patients have difficulty
accessing the optimal medication for them, we believe that physicians
and their patients should make the decision together on the appropriate
form of the drug for treatment. It is not our intent to interfere with
that decision making process. As the number of drugs within each ESRD
PPS functional category increases and market share competition from the
manufacturers is a factor, we anticipate easier access, more choices in
care, and lower prices. We acknowledge that payment policies may have
unintended consequences as identified by the commenters. However, it is
our expectation that ESRD facilities will follow the physician's plan
of care for the patient. Under the ESRD facility CfCs (for example,
Sec. Sec. 494.70(a)(12) and 494.90(a)(3)), if a physician determines
that a particular phosphate binder is clinically best for a particular
patient, the ESRD facility is obligated to make that drug available to
the patient. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we specifically stated
that we expect ESRD facilities to provide the appropriate medications,
at the appropriate dosage, based upon individual patient needs. We
expect the patient's nephrologist and the interdisciplinary team to
identify medication needs in accordance with the individual patient's
plan of care (75 FR 49038). CMS will be closely monitoring drug
utilization at the beneficiary and facility level for these types of
issues.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists and drug manufacturers commented that
complying with state pharmacy laws for the distribution of phosphate
binders is an additional cost. For example, these commenters noted that
some states, like Alabama and Arkansas, do not allow ESRD facilities to
distribute oral drugs directly to the patients, so there are additional
contracting costs incurred. An LDO commented that ESRD facilities are
limited by state rules in their ability to maintain a stock of
medications that are dispensed to patients for consumption at home.
They stated that CMS's recommendation that ESRD facilities could
provide the patient with prepackaged medication when they are at the
facility is not aligned with the reality of how ESRD facilities
operate. They also stated that since they are not licensed to package
medications, they will need to pay pharmacies to provide the medication
so it can be distributed by registered nurses in their ESRD facilities
to their patients. This fee is not included in the ASP, and the
commenter stated that they will incur additional costs.
Another coalition of dialysis organizations commented that ESRD
facilities are working diligently to stand up contracting and
procurement agreements with manufacturers, distributors, mail-order
pharmacies, and other entities to facilitate these changes to the
payment system. The coalition notes that each provider must ensure
compliance with federal rules as well as state pharmacy laws, which can
vary significantly and prevent providers from having uniform policies
and protocols across the country, creating inefficiencies that cannot
be mitigated. Whether standing-up or significantly expanding these
operations from their current, limited state to manage the phosphate
binders, the coalition noted that ESRD facilities will need to invest
in significant legal, administrative, and compliance staff resources to
initiate and continuously maintain these operations going forward. The
coalition also stated that some of their members noted that they will
also need to help beneficiaries understand the limitations based on
state pharmacy laws of what they can and cannot address with them about
their prescription in the facility, as many state pharmacy laws require
questions about prescriptions to be answered only by the pharmacist or
prescribing clinician.
An organization of pediatric nephrologists stated that pediatric
hospitals providing pediatric dialysis often do not have a license to
dispense for Medicare.
A trade association stated that the dispensing flexibilities of
pre-packaged mailed medications that extend to community-dwelling
beneficiaries or contracting with external pharmacies to furnish the
medications not dispensed during an in-center dialysis session, may not
apply to those beneficiaries in long-term care facilities (LTCs), due
to Federal or State nursing home regulations. In addition, this trade
association stated that furnishing the oral-only phosphate binder
medications to beneficiaries receiving home dialysis in a nursing
facility will create excessive burdens on facility staff to establish
``work-around'' processes to intake, store, and dispense these oral-
only dialysis medications in a manner different than their standard
operating procedures for all other residents. The trade association
wrote that such ``work-arounds'' increase the risk for missed
medication administration and increase LTC provider operating costs,
which may disincentivize providers from offering in-center dialysis
room, akin to a ``den'' in a private home, or home dialysis services
within the LTC facility, thereby limiting beneficiary care options.
A coalition of dialysis organizations stated that CMS should ensure
that other providers, such as SNFs, are notified of forthcoming changes
to the ESRD PPS regarding the provision of phosphate binders and work
with those providers to ensure a smooth transition. Coalitions of
dialysis organizations and a nephrology nurses association requested
additional guidance from CMS regarding the complexity of
[[Page 89143]]
phosphate binder management for ESRD patients in the SNF setting. A
trade association also requested that CMS address how ESRD and LTC
facilities should address the unique operational considerations related
to the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS when the
beneficiary's current home is a LTC facility. The association requested
CMS to explain how the oral-only phosphate binder medications for
Medicare dialysis patients should be made available to the LTC provider
in a manner that complies with the Federal and State LTC provider
regulations, whether it be from the ESRD facility, mail delivery or
through an LTC pharmacy. The same commenters wanted to know if
assurances will be provided that the costs of these medications
directly related to the ESRD benefit and services will not be passed on
to the SNF. Finally, the commenter questioned what, if any, are the
documentation needs and requirements to be exchanged between the SNF
and the ESRD facility.
Response: CMS expects that facilities should be prepared
logistically for the inclusion of phosphate binders in the ESRD PPS
bundled payment, given that the regulation establishing the current
effective date was codified in 2016. This would include the logistics
and contractual agreements for distributing the phosphate binders,
whether in-center or for those patients receiving home dialysis, any
need for increased storage due to the number of pills, and efficient
use of ESRD facility labor. CMS is planning to hold at least two open
door forums to inform interested parties about ESRD PPS policy and
answer questions related to implementation of the incorporation of
phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS bundled payment. In addition, CMS
has a payment mailbox for incoming questions regarding the ESRD PPS
payment policies. That mailbox address is: [email protected].
Regarding the commenter's concerns about pediatric hospitals'
licensure to dispense phosphate binders, we believe the commenter is
referring to regulations that prevent certain hospital pharmacies from
providing drugs to patients to take home. We note that we expect ESRD
facilities would contract with a pharmacy as necessary, and this would
be the case for hospital-based ESRD facilities as well. Some hospitals
may not have outpatient pharmacies, as would most freestanding ESRD
facilities, but would be able to contract with a pharmacy to make
phosphate binders available to patients. We note that the additional
$36.41 increase to the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders would be
intended cover incremental operational costs associated with such a
contract.
CMS expects that LTC facilities will ensure that the current
procedures they are using to supply oral drugs, such as calcimimetics,
comply with the Federal and State LTC facility regulations.
Accordingly, the same process should be followed for phosphate binders.
In accordance with the statutory definition of renal dialysis services
at section 1881(b)(14)(B)(iii) of the Act, Sec. 413.171 defines
phosphate binders as a renal dialysis service. Renal dialysis services
have always been included within the scope of the Part A extended care
benefit under section 1861(h)(7) of the Act that provides for coverage
of those services (not specified elsewhere in section 1861(h)) that are
generally furnished by, or under arrangements made by, SNFs. However,
dialysis services described under section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act may
be unbundled when furnished by an outside dialysis supplier. Given
this, the SNF rarely bills separately for renal dialysis services.
Rather, such services are billed for separately under the Medicare Part
B dialysis benefit by the outside supplier. The incorporation of oral
only drugs did not change the existing ESRD facility CfCs or associated
guidance for providing home dialysis services in a LTC facility.
Currently, CMS does not plan to update the QSO 18-24 guidance. As
explained in QSO 18-24, collaborative care planning and delineated
division of responsibilities is critical to the successful
implementation of a patient's dialysis plan of care.\47\ Listed below
are the clinical areas that should be addressed in an agreement between
an ESRD facility and LTC facility when home dialysis services are
provided to residents of a LTC facility. This is not an exhaustive
list, nor does it represent mandatory elements of a written agreement.
This guidance is a resource for dialysis facilities to refer to prior
to furnishing home dialysis care to nursing home residents. Guidance on
clinical areas that should be addressed in an agreement include:
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\47\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/qso-18-24-esrd-revised.pdf.
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Methods for enabling timely communication and
collaboration between the ESRD facility and nursing home care team;
Ensuring a safe and sanitary environment where the
dialysis treatments occur;
Ensuring active participation of the nursing home care
team in the development and implementation of an individualized care
plan;
Delineation of patient monitoring responsibilities before,
during, and after each treatment, ensuring any state scope-of-practice
laws and limitations are adhered to when delineating responsibilities;
Processes that ensure a review of the qualifications,
training, competency verification, and monitoring of all personnel,
patients, and caregivers (family members or friends) who administer
dialysis treatments in the nursing home;
Procedures for preparing nursing home staff to
appropriately address and respond to dialysis-related complications and
provide emergency interventions, as needed; and
Procedures to make sure that all equipment necessary for
the resident's dialysis treatment is available and maintained in
working condition.
Comment: A trade association questioned if CMS intends to update
the QSO-18-24-ESRD guidance prior to implementation to assure that both
the ESRD facility and the LTC provider clearly understand what may need
to be updated in their agreements, policies and procedures, and
training needs resulting from the revised payment methodologies and the
potential shift in how these oral-only phosphate binder medications are
made available to the LTC provider.
Response: The incorporation of oral-only drugs under the ESRD PPS
will not change the existing ESRD facility CfCs or associated guidance
for providing home dialysis services in a LTC facility. Currently, CMS
does not plan to update the QSO 18-24 guidance. As explained in QSO 18-
24, collaborative care planning and delineated division of
responsibilities is critical to the successful implementation of a
patient's dialysis plan of care.
Comment: A non-profit treatment and research center stated that
there will be difficulty managing these medications for patients
residing in nursing homes whether for short-term rehabilitation or as
long-term residents. They stated that nursing homes have existing
processes for obtaining medication for their patients which does not
include obtaining it from ESRD facilities. The ESRD facilities will
need to collaborate with any nursing facility in which their patients
reside to arrange for the delivery of the medication. Further, the
commenter stated that the nursing homes will ask for payment for the
time their staff spend in providing the medication to the patient. They
will need to have a pharmacist deliver the medication to the nurse
caring for a
[[Page 89144]]
patient and then the nurse will have to provide the medication to the
patient as prescribed.
Response: As noted previously, renal dialysis services have always
been included within the scope of the Part A extended care benefit
under section 1861(h)(7) of the Act that provides for coverage of those
services (not specified elsewhere in section 1861(h)) that are
generally furnished by, or under arrangements made by, SNFs. However,
dialysis services described under section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act may
be unbundled when furnished by an outside dialysis supplier. Therefore,
LTCs can provide renal dialysis services, including provision of
phosphate binders, to their residents in an ``under arrangement''
agreement with an ESRD facility.\48\ Any payment arrangements, such as
payment for the LTC staff time, with the ESRD facilities would involve
contractual arrangements with the ESRD facility and the LTC facility.
Alternatively, if the LTC is a Medicare-certified dialysis facility, it
can provide renal dialysis services.
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\48\ https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Contracting/ContractorLearningResources/Downloads/ja0435.pdf.
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Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists, a drug manufacturer, and a health care
system all stated that adjusting drug supplies when a physician changes
a patient's prescription to another product (which often occurs) is a
cost not covered by 100 percent of ASP. In a comment from an LDO, they
stated that their data suggests that relative to calcimimetics,
phosphate binder prescriptions change frequently. They noted that
approximately 23 percent of patients on a phosphate binder have a
change in their prescription each month. The commenters stated that
assuming mail delivery is used for appropriate patients, ESRD
facilities will incur the cost of delivery, which in some cases may be
more than once per month depending on the rate of prescription changes.
Response: CMS recognizes that there may be changes in the patient's
prescription for phosphate binders to address the patient's side-
effects from a current phosphate binder or to adjust following the
results of laboratory testing. As a cost control measure, ESRD
facilities could adjust the prescribed amounts to avoid additional
mailing fees or could negotiate deeper discounted pricing from mail
service pharmacies for long term, chronic therapies such as phosphate
binder prescriptions. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69033),
we discussed our existing policy since the inception of the ESRD PPS
that all renal dialysis service drugs and biological products
prescribed for ESRD patients, including the oral forms of renal
dialysis injectable drugs, must be reported by ESRD facilities, and the
units reported on the monthly claim must reflect the amount expected to
be taken during that month. We stated that ESRD facilities should use
the best information they have in determining the amount expected to be
taken in a given month, including fill information from the pharmacy
and the patient's plan of care. CMS notes that Medicare does not pay
for drugs that are not in single-use packaging that have been dispensed
and discarded. As noted in an October 2022 review article about mineral
bone disorders in kidney disease patients, decisions about the use and
dose of specific phosphate binders should be based on progressive or
persistent hyperphosphatemia.\49\ Additionally, changes in phosphate
binder prescriptions most often occur in patients with ESRD who are new
to dialysis \50\ and may have higher costs. CMS provides an onset
adjustment of 32.7 percent, which is a Medicare payment adjustment for
patients with ESRD who are eligible for Medicare during their first 120
days of chronic renal dialysis. As noted in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (74 FR 49952) the higher costs of the new patients may be
due to stabilization of the patient's condition, along with
administrative and labor costs associated with the patients being new
to dialysis.
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\49\ Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23(20), 12223; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232012223, Mineral Bone Disorders in Kidney Disease
Patients: The Ever Current Topic.
\50\ Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, 2022, 21(7); https://doi.org/10.1080/14740338.2022.2044472. An update on phosphate
binders for the treatment of hyperphosphatemia in chronic kidney
disease patients on dialysis: a review of safety profiles.
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Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations and a health care
system disagreed with the language in the proposed rule that suggested
there would be no additional labor cost incurred when phosphate binders
are added to the ESRD PPS bundled payment. The commenters stated that
they anticipate that adding new duties associated with the distribution
of phosphate binders will take significant time away from existing
patient care activities. As a result, many ESRD facilities may find
themselves having to hire additional health care professionals and
other staff to maintain the same level of care provided today. The
coalition and health care facility also stated that ESRD facilities
continue to face significant labor costs and, while the tight labor
market has abated somewhat, hiring additional staff remains a
significant expense. An LDO noted that CMS suggested that ESRD
facilities can efficiently use staff time by providing patients with
pre-packaged medication that would include medications for multiple
days. However, the LDO, along with a coalition of ESRD facilities
commented that this represents a new cost to ESRD facilities that is
not accounted for in a drug's ASP. They commented that what CMS
presents as a simple solution is the end-result of a complex system
that will require a significant up-front and ongoing investments of
resources and staff time. To execute CMS's suggestion, the commenters
noted that ESRD facilities need to contract with a pharmacy to
dispense, fill, and ``pre-package'' the medication and arrange for
delivery to the facility in advance of each patient's scheduled
appointment. Facility staff would need to receive, inventory, store,
and manage medication for all their patients on-site and then ensure
that all pharmacy processes are coordinated with scheduled patient
appointments. The LDO stated that under Part B, phosphate binders will
continue to be distributed through pharmacies whether those
prescriptions are mailed to the patient or to the facility. Regardless
of where the patient receives the prescription (facility or home), the
burden of managing oral phosphate binders through the facility affects
every member of the staff. The LDO stated that the ESRD facility staff
will need to manage medication orders, call in new prescriptions,
conduct medication management, maintain delivery logs when
prescriptions are delivered to the facility, review and maintain refill
requests, educate patients on usage, and manage disposal of unused oral
medications. Because many patients will lose the low-income subsidy and
other beneficiary protections in Part D, the LDO noted, some facility
staff time will now be dedicated to assisting patients who have trouble
affording their medications.
A non-profit treatment and research center stated that not only are
there costs incurred when their registered nurses dispense the
medications to the patients, provide counseling about the medications
and answer any questions patients may have, but the nurses will be
taken away from their current patient care responsibilities to perform
these functions, which the commenters noted will negatively impact the
patients under their care. A health care system
[[Page 89145]]
also stated that increasing the number of pharmacies will increase the
administrative cost of providing services and the complexity of
tracking the drugs for the ESRD facility.
The LDO stated that while approximately 25 percent of their patient
population is on calcimimetic therapy, whereas approximately 70 to 80
percent of their population is on phosphate binder therapy, CMS cannot
assume that because ESRD facilities are managing calcimimetics, the
infrastructure is in place to manage phosphate binders. They stated
that there will be a significant amount of staff time devoted to
managing phosphate binders through the ESRD facility, which will almost
certainly be required to hire additional staff to reduce the burden on
clinical staff. The LDO stated that these areas represent the ongoing
costs to providers and do not include startup costs of building storage
capacity and upgrading IT systems to accommodate changed workflow and
new business functions.
A coalition of dialysis organizations expressed the importance of
medication management with ESRD patients, as they may have multiple co-
morbidities and polypharmacy, and there is a potential for medication-
related errors. This makes continuity of care and medication management
systems important. They stated that CMS does not cover ESRD facilities'
ongoing expenses to provide medication management for the phosphate
binders.
Response: CMS has carefully considered the operational
considerations and costs raised in the comments. With respect to
considerations for ESRD facility staffing, CMS notes that the ESRD PPS
includes payment for staffing related to the provision of most renal
dialysis services. However, we acknowledge that there are some areas
such as IT synchronization and the advancements in the delivery systems
that had not been considered, when establishing both the ESRD PPS base
rate and the current policy for TDAPA payments at 100 percent of ASP.
These costs were considered in formulating the increased TDAPA payment
which is intended to account for incremental operational costs
associated with furnishing phosphate binders. CMS does believe there
are several strategies that ESRD facilities could employ to efficiently
use available staff time to provide phosphate binders. There are
parallels between the administration of phosphate binders and the
administration of oral calcimimetics, which are also typically taken
every day. First, we expect that patients with ESRD generally receive
treatment for at least 3 hours per session, typically three times per
week. We believe that during this treatment window there is generally
staff availability to provide the patient with pre-packaged multiple-
day doses of their medication (should state law allow). Second, ESRD
facilities could maximize the efficiency of staff time by mailing the
prescriptions, to the extent that doing so is consistent with state
pharmacy laws. For example, the GAO report identified that one large
dialysis organization only mails oral prescriptions to patients' homes,
while others mail the medication to either the ESRD facility or the
patient's home. Third, the GAO report identified that some ESRD
facilities outsource labor by contracting with outside pharmacies
rather than operating their own pharmacy. By contracting with outside
pharmacies, ESRD facilities could reduce or avoid the need to hire
additional pharmacists and pharmacy staff to manage the volume of
prescriptions. CMS acknowledges that these suggestions may not be fully
applicable for LTC or SNF facilities. CMS will continue to engage and
communicate with these facilities to ensure continuity of care and will
continue to monitor patient outcomes under this policy change.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations stated that while
ESRD facilities and clinical teams, such as dietitians, are involved in
the current management of bone and mineral metabolism and
hyperphosphatemia, the process is currently managed under the auspices
of the prescribing physician working within the formulary confines of
the beneficiary's Part D plan or other source of drug coverage, which
is managed largely outside of the ESRD facility. Migration of phosphate
binders from Part D to Part B imposes new clinical administrative
responsibility on ESRD facilities to develop clinical protocols and
formularies, educate their clinician partners and clinical staff, and
manage ongoing clinical evaluation and monitoring to ensure they are
meeting the needs of our patients on an ongoing basis to manage a class
of drugs for which they were previously not responsible. The coalition
stated that the development, maintenance, and ongoing clinical
management of these processes represent significant costs to ESRD
facilities to hire and continuously employ clinical leaders across ESRD
facilities and educate and train clinical staff on evolving educational
protocols and educate beneficiaries on complex clinical issues. They
noted that although ESRD facilities certainly already employ many
clinicians, the expansion of the bundled payment to include phosphate
binders represents an expansion of the duties their clinical teams need
to undertake, which will result in an expansion of their clinical
teams. They stated that ASP would not cover any of these clinical
operations expenses required for ESRD facilities to take on the
responsibility of managing the phosphate binders for ESRD patients.
Response: As discussed in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR
69010), we issued sub-regulatory guidance that instructs ESRD
facilities to include all composite rate drugs and biological products
furnished to the beneficiary on the monthly claim form (Change Request
8978, issued December 2, 2014). In CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR
66149 through 66150), we discussed the drug categories that we consider
to be used for the treatment of ESRD with the expectation that all of
those drugs and biological products would be reported on the claim.
Along with capturing cost to align payment with resource use, we
expected that ESRD facilities would be aware of all renal dialysis
service drugs and biological products being taken by their dialysis
patients in the event of a medical adverse event during dialysis. In
addition, the ESRD QIP includes measures for coordination of care in
the Care Coordination domain, which accounts for 30 percent of an ESRD
facility's Total Performance Score. The QIP also includes a reporting
measure for dialysis events. We have heard from interested parties that
they are aware of and manage, with the patient's physician, the drugs
and biological products taken by their ESRD patients. Therefore, CMS
does not believe that the management of phosphate binders done in
conjunction with the ESRD patient's physician, represents a new
clinical administrative responsibility.
CMS will continue monitoring beneficiary utilization of phosphate
binders, as well as beneficiary health outcomes that might be related
to phosphate binder treatment, as it includes these drugs in the
bundled payment. In addition, CMS is monitoring these metrics across
beneficiary characteristics, including race or ethnicity and dual
eligibility status, to ensure that vulnerable populations are not
harmed by this change.
Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations commented on the
ESRD facilities' responsibility to educate ESRD beneficiaries on an
ongoing basis. They stated that the migration of Medicare payment for
phosphate binders from Part D to Part B would be a significant change
for beneficiaries.
[[Page 89146]]
For some, this change would start with ensuring they understand that
their phosphate binders will now be managed by their ESRD facility
rather than through their local pharmacy. However, the commenter noted
that some beneficiaries may experience a change in their recommended
prescription related to the change from their prior drug coverage and
will need clinical, dietary, and social work education in support of
that change.
Response: Under the CfCs for ESRD facilities (73 FR 20480), the
standard for patient education located at Sec. 494.90(d) mandates that
the plan of care include education and training for patients and family
members or caregivers or both, in aspects of the dialysis experience
and dialysis management, which includes medications they are taking.
The plan of care would include a change in a patient's recommended
prescription and would include the need for clinical, dietary, and
social work education in support of that change. ESRD beneficiary
education is a longstanding CfC requirement.
Comment: An LDO expressed appreciation of CMS's interest in
exploring options for paying providers for costs in addition to the
drug acquisition costs and acknowledgement that drug dispensing fees
were included in the original bundling of oral drugs in 2011. An
interested party requested that CMS consider the incremental
operational costs involved when adding phosphate binders to the ESRD
bundled payment, noting that the current proposal does not account for
these costs, which could lead to increased financial strain on ESRD
facilities. The commenter stated that a fair dispensing fee or a
similar mechanism should be implemented to cover these additional
expenses.
An LDO and a health care system requested CMS to consider that
payment at 100 percent of ASP is inconsistent with Part B drug payment
generally, where providers are typically paid at 106 percent of ASP
percent or receive additional dispensing fees for certain drugs.
Numerous commenters agreed that CMS should finalize the TDAPA payment
for phosphate binders at 106 percent of ASP, rather than 100 percent of
ASP, to account for additional facility incremental operational costs.
One LDO stated that they strongly believe the savings CMS will obtain
from including these drugs in the ESRD PPS bundled payment will cover
the additional costs associated with appropriately recognizing
dispensing and other incremental operational costs. The non-profit
dialysis organization also recommended that beginning January 1, 2025,
CMS should begin collecting and analyzing data to inform a mid-year
correction to the TDAPA amount if data suggest that 106 percent of ASP
is insufficient.
MedPAC commented that CMS should maintain its existing TDAPA policy
to incorporate oral-only phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS. The
commission wrote that in their comment in the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, they stated that the 106 percent of ASP policy that is applied to
many Part B drugs was developed to reimburse physicians for the cost of
drugs that they purchase directly and commonly administer in their
offices.\51\ MedPAC stated that while the ASP payment policy never
stated what cost the ``+6 percent'' was intended to cover, they noted
that payment to ESRD facilities is considerably different from payment
to physicians. MedPAC stated that the variation in physicians'
purchasing power, whether they practice solo, as part of a group, or in
a health system, is likely to result in considerably more variation in
the acquisition price for a drug compared to the acquisition prices for
ESRD facilities. If the intent of the ``+6 percent'' was to address
acquisition price variation, MedPAC believed that rationale was
diminished for ESRD facilities. In their comment letter, MedPAC
referenced their comment on the CY 2019 ESRD PPS proposed rule, that
setting the TDAPA at 100 percent of ASP appears to be a well-founded
policy. Further, they stated that as CMS explained when the agency
reduced the TDAPA amount for calcimimetics in CY 2020 from 106 percent
of ASP to 100 percent of ASP, setting the payment level with the
average sales price of the drug limits the financial burden on
beneficiaries and taxpayers.
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\51\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.2018. MedPAC comment
on CMS's proposed rule on the end-stage renal disease payment system
for CY 2019. https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-letters/08312018_esrd_cy2019_dme_medpac_comment_v2_sec.pdf.
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Response: As discussed previously, CMS agrees with MedPAC that the
106 percent of ASP policy was developed to reimburse physicians for the
cost of drugs and that the TDAPA is an add-on payment adjustment to the
ESRD PPS base rate, which already accounts for the cost of storage and
administration of renal dialysis drugs and biological products.
However, we also recognize that there are incremental operational costs
with inclusion of phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS, that were not
factored into the original payment policy. As described later in this
section, CMS is making a provision for an increase in the calculation
of the amount for the TDAPA for phosphate binders through a flat rate
addition for two years to account for these unforeseen incremental
operational costs.
Comment: A hospital association requested that CMS pay ESRD
facilities for the costs associated not only with drug acquisition, but
also with storing, managing and distributing oral drugs that are not
consumed with the treatment. An LDO noted that in the proposed rule,
CMS suggests that payment for phosphate binders at 106 percent of ASP
may be appropriate for the 2-year TDAPA period. The LDO and a drug
manufacturer agreed that this approach would be consistent with CMS
policy for calcimimetics and would also be consistent with Part B drug
payment policies generally. However, a non-profit treatment and
research center stated that for some phosphate binder medications like
sevelamer and calcium acetate, the 6 percent above ASP likely will not
cover the costs they will have to pay to the pharmacy, much less the
costs incurred when their registered nurses dispense the medications to
the patients, provide counseling about the medications and answer any
questions patients may have.
To maintain consistency with the treatment of calcimimetics during
their first 2 years of TDAPA, to align with the way Medicare pays for
drugs and biological products under the Hospital Outpatient PPS's pass-
through payment policy, and to minimize administrative burden on CMS
and ESRD facilities, multiple commenters recommend that CMS adopt the
methodology outlined in section 1847A of the Act, which sets payment at
the 106 percent of ASP; if ASP is not available, the payment is based
on the Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC). Alternatively, an LDO urged
CMS to use the flat rate part B supply fee for oral drugs under the
Physician Fee Schedule as a precedent to provide the same payment
adjustment for oral Part B renal dialysis drugs.
MedPAC opposed the TDAPA amount based on 106 percent of ASP for
phosphate binders in their comment and noted that when CMS reduced the
TDAPA amount for calcimimetics in CY 2020 from 106 percent of ASP to
100 percent of ASP, MedPAC stated that CMS explained that setting the
payment amount at 100 percent of ASP of the drug limits the financial
burden on beneficiaries and taxpayers.
Response: Consistent with our discussion in the CY 2020 ESRD PPS
final rule (84 FR 60675), we continue to
[[Page 89147]]
believe that 100 percent of ASP is a reasonable basis for payment for
the TDAPA for new renal dialysis drugs and biological products that
fall within an existing functional category, because there are already
dollars in the per treatment base rate for the new drug's respective
functional category. We further believe 100 percent of ASP is a
reasonable basis for the TDAPA amount for new renal dialysis drugs and
biological products that do not fall within an existing functional
category because the ESRD PPS base rate has dollars built in for
administrative complexities and overhead costs for drugs and biological
products. However, we note that the original analysis in the CY 2011
ESRD PPS final rule excluded phosphate binders, which are a
longstanding renal dialysis service, and their associated costs, so a
higher payment amount to capture these additional costs would be
warranted. In addition, we believe the 106 percent of ASP payment could
induce ESRD facilities to choose the higher priced phosphate binders
for the higher payment rate. As detailed below, CMS is increasing the
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders for two years in an amount similar
to 106 percent of ASP to pay for the additional incremental operational
costs of phosphate binder inclusion in the ESRD PPS while striking a
balance between accessibility and efficiency and economy for the
Medicare program.
Comment: Numerous commenters stated that CMS should adopt a
dispensing fee using a rate of 106 percent of ASP for phosphate binders
to align the ESRD PPS policies with those applied to other Medicare
providers. They stated that both the Medicare Part D and Medicaid
programs provide for dispensing fees. Under Part D, they noted that the
dispensing fees are set through negotiations between the plan and
pharmacy. Medicaid amounts are significantly higher and in the range of
$9 to $12 per prescription, which the commenter noted would translate
into a $0.69 to $0.92 per treatment amount in the context of the ESRD
PPS, according to an analysis cited by the commenter. The commenters
also noted that in accordance with section 1861(s) of the Act, Medicare
Part B includes a $24 dispensing fee, which would be approximately
$1.85 per treatment in the ESRD PPS context. Additionally, the
commenters stated that according to the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual, Chapter 17, Sec. 90.4, CMS also provides a dispensing fee to
hospital outpatient departments (HOPD) and ambulatory surgical centers
(ASC), but relies upon 106 percent of ASP rather than a flat rate. The
commenters stated that CMS decided to maintain the 106 percent of ASP
policy in the HOPD and ASC settings after conducting a multi-year
analysis of hospital cost reports. This analysis sought to determine
the average overhead costs associated with providing drugs to patients,
and CMS decided to adopt 106 percent of ASP as the payment amount. The
commenters indicated that even though in the context of some HOPD/ASC
products the add-on may result is higher payment amounts, CMS adopted
this approach because of its administrative simplicity. Similarly, in
these settings, the commenters stated that CMS also has adopted 106
percent of ASP as the basis for paying for separately payable non-pass-
through drugs. One criterion a drug must meet to receive this separate
payment is that the cost exceeds $135 per day.
The commenters stated that adopting a 106 percent of ASP policy as
the basis of a dispensing fee rate would also align with the treatment
of drugs in these other payment systems. They indicated that one
analysis of phosphate binders demonstrates that the increase in per
treatment payment for a 30-day supply of a phosphate binder could range
from $1.46 to $8.03. The commenters stated that these amounts are not
significantly different than those CMS finds acceptable in the HOPD/ASC
setting or the other dispensing fee programs.\52\
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\52\ MedPAC. Report to the Congress: Outpatient Dialysis
Services (Mar. 2024).
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The commenters requested that CMS adopt the 106 percent of ASP
policy that it relies upon in other parts of the Medicare program,
which the commenters described as straightforward and transparent.
Response: As CMS stated in the CY 2020 ESRD PPS final rule (84 FR
60676), we believe moving from pricing methodologies available under
section 1847A of the Act, (106 percent of ASP) to 100 percent of ASP
for all new renal dialysis drugs and biological products regardless of
whether they fall within an ESRD PPS functional category strikes a
balance between the increase to Medicare expenditures (subsequently
increasing beneficiary co-insurance) and addressing stakeholder
concerns discussed in section II.B.1.e of the CY 2019 ESRD PPS final
rule (83 FR 56932). As an example of how the flat addition to the TDAPA
amount would impact beneficiary copayment when compared to 106 percent
of ASP, if a beneficiary's monthly utilization for a given phosphate
binder totaled $1,000 (100 percent of ASP) + $36.41= $1,036.41, the
beneficiary co-pay would be $207.28. However, if the same phosphate
binder were to be paid a TDAPA amount derived from 106 percent of ASP
($1,000 * 1.06 = $1,060), then the beneficiary's copay would be $212
($1,060 * 0.20 = $212). During the CY 2024 ESRD PPS rulemaking cycle,
CMS indicated that it preferred to adopt policies that are less complex
and more transparent. As noted later in this section of the preamble,
we are finalizing the incorporation of a flat-rate add-on amount to the
TDAPA, as allowed by section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, for
phosphate binders, which we believe reflects a similarly transparent
and straightforward approach. We believe this fixed addition to the
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders is relatively simple while being
more predictable and more transparent than the requested 106 percent of
ASP methodology, because ESRD facilities would not have their
additional payment based on the ASP of the drug prescribed.
Additionally, this fixed increase methodology would achieve many of the
benefits described by commenters without incentivizing use of higher-
cost phosphate binders.
Comment: Commenters generally agreed that payment of 100 percent of
ASP would be insufficient to cover the incremental operational costs of
including phosphate binders in the ESRD PPS bundled payment. In their
comments letters, both MedPAC (citing their 2023 Report to Congress)
\53\ and LDOs have recognized the inherent incentives that a
percentage-based payment policy creates in encouraging use of higher
cost drugs when less expensive therapeutic alternatives are available.
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\53\ Medicare Payment Advisory Commission.2023. Report to the
Congress: Medicare and the health care delivery system. Washington,
DC:MedPAC.
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A coalition for dialysis organizations recognized that utilizing
106 percent of ASP ties the value of the dispensing fee to ASP, which
may present issues where ESRD facility incremental operational costs
exceed 6 percent of ASP. They stated that they understand why some
other payment systems have instead provided fixed dispensing fees that
are intended to reimburse for incremental operational costs independent
of ASP and arrive at the fixed dispensing fee through different
mechanisms, including some that are set in statute.
Although MedPAC did not support setting the TDAPA amount at 106
percent of ASP to account for dispensing fees, which are intended to
cover reasonable costs that are directly
[[Page 89148]]
related to providing the drug,\54\ MedPAC did state in the comment that
there is no consensus on the original intent of the percentage add-on
to ASP. MedPAC stated that if CMS elects to include a dispensing fee in
the TDAPA for phosphate binders, the agency should examine the
dispensing fees for phosphate binders paid under Part D to assess if
such data are appropriate to use under the ESRD PPS, noting that, in
2021, the median Part D dispensing fee was $0.50 per claim for the six
common types of phosphate binders furnished to beneficiaries on
dialysis. In their comment letter, the Commission indicated that it has
also found that under Part D, dispensing fees for generic drugs are
typically a fixed dollar amount (that is, not always related to the
price of the product), and that similar to dispensing fees paid in the
commercial sector, Part D plans typically pay dispensing fees of $1 per
claim or less.\55\ As an alternative to 106 percent of ASP, the LDOs,
coalitions of dialysis organizations and the professional association
of nephrologists would also support, and there is precedent for, a flat
rate addition to the ASP. One LDO recommended a flat fee instead of a
percentage of the cost of the medication. The LDO stated that
dispensing expenses do not fluctuate based on the cost of the
medication. The commenter estimated that dispensing fees would be
roughly $11 and shipping fees would be approximately $15 per
prescription. Other commenters stated that for certain conditions,
Medicare Part B covers outpatient prescription drugs and biological
products when they are part of a physician's service or used with
covered durable medical equipment. For those drugs, Medicare Part B
pays pharmacies a supply fee for each prescription. The commenters
referred to 42 CFR 414.1001 and stated that pharmacies are paid $24 for
the first 30-day period, and $16 for each subsequent 30-day period. On
a per treatment basis, this would equate to approximately $1.23 to
$1.85 when a patient receives 13 treatments in a month. Commenters
suggested that CMS should recognize that under Part B, ESRD facilities
will be required to pay for these pharmacy services.
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\54\ Under 42 CFR 423.100, dispensing fees are costs incurred at
the point of sale in excess of the ingredient cost of a covered Part
D drug. Dispensing fees include pharmacy costs such as checking
insurance status, performing quality assurance, physical delivery,
special packaging, and salaries of pharmacists and other pharmacy
workers as well as the costs associated with maintaining the
pharmacy facility and acquiring and maintaining technology and
equipment.
\55\ The Commission's calculation is based on Part D
prescription drug event data from CMS. According to our stakeholder
interviews, this amount is in line with most commercial insurance.
https://www.medpac.gov/wpcontent/uploads/2023/10/Generic-prices-Part-D-April-2024-SEC.pdf.
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Response: CMS has reviewed all of the comments regarding
implementation of the inclusion of phosphate binders in the ESRD PPS
bundled payment. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule, we stated that for
at least 2 years we will pay for the existing oral-only drugs--
phosphate binders and calcimimetics--using the TDAPA, which will be
calculated based on the payment methodologies under section 1847A of
the Act (80 FR 69027), which can include 106 percent of ASP. Following
finalization of the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule, the regulation at
Sec. 413.234(c)(2) stated the TDAPA is paid until sufficient claims
data for rate setting analysis for the new injectable or intravenous
product is available, but not for less than two years. In the CY 2019
ESRD PPS final rule CMS stated that to balance the price controls
inherent in any PPS we believe that we needed to take numerous issues
into consideration to revise the basis for TDAPA payment. These issues
included the use of the best available data, the avoidance of use of
the highest price drugs for higher payment, and cost-sharing for
beneficiaries. We noted that we are, and will continue to be, conscious
of ESRD facility resource use and recognize the financial barriers that
may be preventing uptake of innovative new drugs and biological
products.
Therefore, we proposed to revise Sec. 413.234(c) under the
authority of section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, to reflect that we
would base the TDAPA payments on 100 percent of ASP instead of the
pricing methodologies available under section 1847A of the Act (which
includes 106 percent of ASP)(83 FR 56943-56944).
As we discussed previously, we believe that a flat increase to the
TDAPA amount for phosphate binders would be most appropriate. We
believe an increase in the payment adjustment amount that approximates
6 percent of ASP would provide the appropriate payment for incremental
operational costs associated with ESRD facilities furnishing phosphate
binders. We considered the differences in the availability of data for
calculating the appropriate TDAPA amount for calcimimetics and
phosphate binders. Prior to the TDAPA payment for calcimimetics in CY
2018, only those ESRD beneficiaries with Part D had access to the oral
calcimimetic, Sensipar, but there was no utilization data for the
injectable calcimimetic, Parsabiv, which would serve as a substitute
for the oral calcimimetic. However, CMS was able to obtain data on
phosphate binder utilization among ESRD PPS beneficiaries who had Part
D coverage for phosphate binders to estimate expenditures, and there is
no injectable phosphate binder for which we do not have utilization
data. Therefore, with the knowledge of utilization of phosphate binders
in Part D, coupled with the percentage of ESRD PPS beneficiaries who do
not have Part D coverage, we believe we have adequate data to be able
to calculate an appropriate amount to pay the TDAPA for phosphate
binders for at least two years. Taking into account the estimates that
were put forth by the commenters for the incremental operational costs
to the ESRD facilities for supplying the phosphate binders to the ESRD
facilities, along with our use of the Part D data, we have determined
that a fixed amount derived from 6 percent of ASP of a monthly weighted
average of the six most common phosphate binders based on past Part D
utilization data best aligns payment with resource use and mitigates
the incentive to use of the most expensive phosphate binders to obtain
higher TDAPA payment and ultimately a higher dollar addition to the
ESRD PPS base rate at the end of the TDAPA period. This aligns with the
commenters' suggestions of using a flat rate adjustment instead of 106
percent of ASP. We are finalizing a flat rate increase to the TDAPA
amount for phosphate binders, derived from 6 percent of the weighted
average of Medicare expenditures for phosphate binders per month under
Part D, for the first two years of TDAPA payment to ESRD facilities.
The CY 2025 flat rate increase to the TDAPA amount will be $36.41. This
payment adjustment is included for every monthly ESRD PPS claim that
includes phosphate binders. We will consider changes to this amount
through future rulemaking if appropriate; for example, this amount
could be recalculated derived from the best available updated data for
the second year of TDAPA payment for phosphate binders, potentially
utilizing data from Part B.
Additionally, we are finalizing regulatory language at
413.234(c)(4), which states that we would pay an increased amount
through the TDAPA for phosphate binders for two years. The increase to
the TDAPA amount would be the equivalent of the monthly weighted
average of 6 percent of ASP, calculated for each of the first two years
of TDAPA payment for the phosphate binders.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis organizations, a professional
organization of nephrologists and a non-profit treatment and research
center
[[Page 89149]]
stated that, due to the 2 percent reduction in Medicare FFS payments
under sequestration, 100 percent of ASP equates to roughly ASP minus
1.6 percent, which the commenters stated does not cover the cost of
acquiring phosphate binders. They commented that many medium and small
ESRD facilities do not have the economies of scale and must purchase
drugs at a significant percentage above the ASP. As a result, 100
percent of ASP is actually less than the acquisition cost of these
drugs and will have a negative financial impact on these ESRD
facilities. A non-profit treatment and research center noted that since
the ASP is reduced by 1.6 percent because of the sequestration cuts,
the gap between resource use and payment is even greater. A
professional organization of dialysis providers and an LDO stated that
Medicare only pays 80 percent of costs. For patients who are dual
eligible receiving Medicaid, this remaining 20 percent goes
unreimbursed, which, following sequestration, equates to 78.4 percent.
Similar results would occur for patients without a secondary insurance
if they are unable to pay the remaining 20 percent cost-sharing amount.
An LDO asserted that for patients without secondary insurance, only 60
percent of the nonpayment is covered by bad debt.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns about payment
adequacy; however, we noted that these concerns generally fall outside
the scope of ESRD PPS policy. Sequestration is a mandatory spending
reduction that affects Medicare Part B payments broadly, including
payments under the ESRD PPS.\56\ Reductions in Medicare payments due to
sequestration fall outside the scope of the ESRD PPS policy and are
required under the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L. 112-25). In
addition, the 20 percent beneficiary copayment amount is required by
statute, and we did not propose any changes to this amount. Section
1833 of the Act governs payments of benefits for Part B services and
the cost sharing amounts for services that are considered medical and
other health services. In general, many Part B services are subject to
a payment structure that requires beneficiaries to be responsible for a
20 percent coinsurance after the deductible (and Medicare pays 80
percent). With respect to renal dialysis services furnished by ESRD
facilities to individuals with ESRD, under section 1881(b)(2)(A) of the
Act, Medicare pays 80 percent of the total amount per treatment and the
individual pays 20 percent (74 FR 50005). Some dual eligible
beneficiaries could have their coinsurance reimbursed via Medicaid in
some circumstances.\57\
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\56\ A general description of Medicare sequestration from the
Congressional Research Service is available at https://sgp.fas.org/crs/misc/R45106.pdf.
\57\ https://www.cms.gov/outreach-and-education/medicare-learning-network-mln/mlnproducts/downloads/medicare_beneficiaries_dual_eligibles_at_a_glance.pdf.
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Similarly, we did not propose any changes to the ESRD PPS bad debt
policy, which is also dictated by statute. For instance, we have long
interpreted Title I, section 153(b)(4) of MIPPA as providing that bad
debt payments are available only for covered services under the
composite rate.\58\ In addition, section 1861(v)(1) of the Act,
implemented at Sec. Sec. 413.89 & 413.215(b), imposes certain
reductions in the amount of bad debts otherwise treated as allowable
costs which are attributable to deductibles and coinsurance amounts.
Currently, general requirements and policies for payment of bad debts
attributable to unpaid Medicare deductibles and co-insurance are found
in chapter 3 of the Provider Reimbursement Manual, Part 1 (PRM) (CMS
Pub. 15-1) and cost reporting worksheets and instructions in the PRM
Part 2 (CMS Pub. 15-2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ See the November 17, 2004 Decision of the Administrator
(https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Review-Boards/OfficeAttorneyAdvisor/Downloads-3/2004-D43.pdf) and Medicare Benefit
Policy Manual, Chapter 11, Sec. 80 (https://www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/manuals/downloads/bp102c11.pdf).
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We acknowledge that some ESRD facilities may pay more or less than
ASP for renal dialysis drugs and biological products that they
purchase, since ASP represents an average, but we note that payment of
the TDAPA based on ASP is consistent with the principles of prospective
payment underlying the ESRD PPS more broadly. As stated earlier in this
final rule, we are finalizing an increase to the TDAPA amount for
phosphate binders to account for certain administrative costs not
included in the ESRD PPS base rate, but this increase is not intended
to account for sequestration costs, beneficiary copayment amounts, or
bad debts.
Comment: Coalitions of dialysis organizations requested that CMS
address what they consider to be a gap in the current Medicare guidance
to support including phosphate binders into the ESRD PPS bundled
payment. Specifically, regarding the reporting of oral drugs, the
coalition notes that the current Medicare Benefit Policy Manual states
that for oral or other forms of renal dialysis drugs that are filled at
the pharmacy for home use, ESRD facilities should report one line item
per prescription, but only for the quantity of the drug expected to be
taken during the claim billing period.\59\ A non-profit treatment and
research center stated that patients will be given all of their
medications at one time, presumably a few days before the start of a
new month. They noted that if a patient misplaces the medication, they
will need to obtain a new supply from the ESRD facility. Since the ESRD
facility is not paid for the lost medication, the lost medication will
cost the ESRD facility significant money. The commenter also stated
that the doses prescribed for these medications depend on blood tests
which are performed monthly, typically during the mid-week dialysis
treatment of the first week of the month. The results become available
a few days later and are then reviewed by nephrologists who may
prescribe dose changes in phosphate lowering medication or may
prescribe a different phosphate lowering medication. In that case, the
ESRD facility would have to provide the patient an additional supply of
medication and would have to pay additional fees to the pharmacy. In
the event the medication is changed, the facility would again not be
paid for the unused medication. A professional organization of
nephrologists stated that ESRD facilities absorb the costs of unused
medications when patients are hospitalized, transfer to other
facilities, die, or receive a kidney transplant. A coalition of
dialysis providers provided additional illustrative examples of when
the current payment policy does not work financially for ESRD
facilities, including patient hospitalization or when the patient is on
vacation over 30 days, patient death and changes in ESRD facility. To
align the reporting and payment with similar provisions for hospitals
and skilled nursing facilities (SNFs), coalitions of dialysis
organizations referred to the Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
Chapter 17, Sec. 90.4 and requested that CMS require reporting on
claims of one of the following:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\59\ Medicare Benefit Policy Manual Chapter 11--End Stage Renal
Disease Sec. 20.3.C.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Both the quantity of the drug expected to be taken during
the claim billing period and any unused quantity of drug that was
prescribed under a prescription that was later revised.
The total amount of the drug provided during the claim
billing period.
The coalition of dialysis providers claimed that these changes
would alleviate the financial losses to ESRD
[[Page 89150]]
facilities. The commenter stated that these changes do not need to be
included in the CY 2025 final rule but can be done through guidance
prior to the end of CY 2024 to apply to the forthcoming inclusion of
phosphate binders in the ESRD PPS bundled payment to limit unnecessary
losses for an already strained payment system. The commenter also
stated that making these changes to the billing rules is also necessary
for CMS to have accurate utilization data of the phosphate binders
during the TDAPA period for the purpose of future rate setting
exercises. The commenter believes that without these changes, not only
will ESRD facilities experience real-time losses due to circumstances
outside their control, but those losses will be baked into depressed
utilization data used to update the base rate after the end of the
TDAPA period for the phosphate binders, locking those losses into the
ESRD PPS in perpetuity. In addition, the commenter noted that other
providers, including hospitals, pharmacies and skilled nursing
facilities, are all permitted by Medicare to submit claims for the full
prescription dispensed in good faith to the beneficiary. They requested
that CMS align the ESRD PPS billing policies with that of other health
care providers rather than imposing what they characterized as unique
and unnecessary burdens on a fragile payment system serving the most
vulnerable patients.
Response: CMS thanks the commenters for their recommendations. Per
the regulation at Sec. 413.198(b)(5), each ESRD facility must submit
data and information of the types and in the formats established by CMS
for the purpose of estimating patient-level and facility-level
variation in resource use involved in furnishing renal dialysis
services. At Sec. 413.198(b)(5)(ii), this includes information
reported on ESRD PPS claims about the total number of billing units (or
the expected number of billing units), for renal dialysis drugs and
biological products provided to beneficiaries for use while receiving
home dialysis services as defined in Sec. 413.217(b), which includes
home dialysis services, support, and equipment as identified in Sec.
410.52, to be included in the ESRD PPS effective January 1, 2011.
As we noted previously in this section, in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule (80 FR 69033), we discussed our existing policy since the
inception of the ESRD PPS that all renal dialysis service drugs and
biological products prescribed for ESRD patients, including the oral
forms of renal dialysis injectable drugs, must be reported by ESRD
facilities, and the units reported on the monthly claim must reflect
the amount expected to be taken during that month. We did not propose a
change to the reporting requirements regarding the drugs expected to be
taken during the claim billing period and any unused quantity of that
drug that was prescribed under a prescription that was later revised,
along with the total amount prescribed during the billing period.
However, we thank the commenter for their suggestions and will take the
commenter's suggestions into consideration in future rulemaking.
Discarded drugs or biological products that are not in single use
containers or single dose packaging are not billable under the ESRD
PPS.\60\ Similarly, we believe it would be most appropriate to make a
future modification to the ESRD PPS base rate, if warranted, based on
actual phosphate binder utilization and not discarded amounts. We
expect that ESRD facilities will employ strategies to reduce discarded
amounts of phosphate binders, which best serves the interest of
efficient resource use and is consistent with the goals of the ESRD
PPS.
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\60\ In the CY 24 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized a new policy
to require the use of the JW or JZ modifier on claims to track
discarded amounts of single-dose container and single-use package
renal dialysis drugs and biological products paid for under the ESRD
PPS, effective January 1, 2025 (88 FR 76346, 76383-76386).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: A coalition of dialysis organizations recommended that CMS
should amend the cost reports and update billing and payment policies
in advance of the TDAPA period for phosphate binders. The current ESRD
Facility Cost Report revision includes one line item for the TDAPA and
one line item for the TPNIES. At the time this was implemented, there
was only one drug receiving the TDAPA and one supply item receiving the
TPNIES. At present and in the coming years, the commenter expects there
will be multiple drugs and devices receiving the TDAPA and the TPNIES
in the same year. The commenter stated that CMS and other policymakers
would find it important and useful to be able to track costs associated
with individual products receiving the TDAPA and TPNIES rather than
have them reported in the aggregate. The commenter recommended that CMS
add several line items for each of the TDAPA and TPNIES reporting
sections and provide instructions that each product receiving the TDAPA
or the TPNIES are to be reported separately on their distinct line-
items. The commenter stated that CMS should also ensure that ESRD
facilities have clear instructions for reporting the TDAPA for
phosphate binders during the TDAPA period and that facilities have
clear instructions for reporting the phosphate binders after they are
bundled into the base rate after the end of the TDAPA period. The
commenter stated that it is imperative that CMS amend the cost report
and instructions in advance of the launch of the TDAPA period and end
of the TDAPA period to ensure the integrity of dialysis facility cost
reporting.
Further, the coalition requested CMS to make changes to billing
procedures to make it easier for ESRD facilities to identify the
correct TDAPA and TPNIES payments to report on the cost report. At
present, they state that when CMS pays a claim that includes the TDAPA
or TPINIES, ESRD facilities simply receive one payment for the adjusted
base rate plus the TDAPA or TPNIES amount. The TDAPA or TPNIES is not
indicated on a separate line item by CMS. The coalition stated that
while the ESRD PPS is a bundled payment system with a standardized base
rate, most claims are adjusted based on a dozen patient and facility
characteristics. As a result, the commenter stated that to accurately
report TDAPA and TPNIES payments on the Cost Report, ESRD facilities
need to crosswalk each reimbursement to relevant patient claims or
medical records to identify those for whom TDAPA or TPNIES payment was
requested, then determine if and at what amount the TDAPA or TPNIES was
paid, noting that the TDAPA and TPNIES payment amount fluctuates over
the course of the year, and then report those figures on the cost
report on an ESRD facility basis. For some ESRD facilities this is a
manual, and not an automated exercise. The commenter requested that CMS
amend billing and payment procedures to flag TDAPA and TPNIES payments
separately on an itemized report so that ESRD facilities can more
effectively and efficiently identify and flag these items for accurate
reporting onto the Cost Report.
Response: CMS thanks the commenters for their suggestions regarding
the cost reports. We are currently evaluating changes to the ESRD PPS
cost reports and will take these suggestions into consideration for
future cost report modifications.
Comment: A drug manufacturer questioned why the phosphate-lowering
agent XPHOZAH[supreg] is receiving disparate treatment from phosphate
binders with respect to the TDAPA. The drug manufacturer stated that
they view CMS as treating XPHOZAH[supreg] similar to a phosphate binder
for the purposes of inclusion in the ESRD PPS bundled payment, but
different from a phosphate
[[Page 89151]]
binder for the purposes of a potential increase to the ESRD PPS base
rate after the end of the TDAPA period.
Response: Existing Medicare regulations state that effective
January 1, 2025, oral-only drugs will be paid for under the ESRD
Prospective Payment System (PPS). Although oral-only drugs are not
included in the ESRD PPS bundled payment until January 1, 2025, they
are currently recognized as renal dialysis services as defined in
regulation. Accordingly, CMS is planning to incorporate oral-only drugs
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment beginning January 1, 2025, using the
TDAPA, as described in the calendar year (CY) 2016 ESRD PPS final rule
(80 FR 69027) and subsequent rules. In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule
(87 FR 67179) we stated that we finalized and issued the payment
policies for oral-only renal dialysis service drugs or biological
products in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49038 through
49053). In that rule we defined renal dialysis services at Sec.
413.171 as including other drugs and biologicals that are furnished to
individuals for the treatment of ESRD and for which payment was made
separately prior to January 1, 2011, under Title XVIII of the Act,
including drugs and biologicals with only an oral form. Although we
included oral-only renal dialysis service drugs and biologicals in the
definition of renal dialysis services in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final
rule (75 FR 49044), we also finalized a policy to delay payment for
these drugs under the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2014. In the CY 2011
ESRD PPS proposed rule (74 FR 49929), we noted that the only oral-only
drugs that we identified were phosphate binders and calcimimetics,
specifically, cinacalcet hydrochloride, lanthanum carbonate, calcium
acetate, sevelamer hydrochloride, and sevelamer carbonate. All of these
drugs fall into the ESRD PPS functional category for bone and mineral
metabolism. In the manufacturer's press release on October 17, 2023,
they noted that XPHOZAH[supreg] is a phosphate-lowering therapy, and it
is not a phosphate binder.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\61\ https://ir.ardelyx.com/news-releases/news-release-details/fda-approves-xphozahr-tenapanor-first-class-phosphate-absorption.
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As for the commenter's concern regarding CMS's treatment of
XPHOZAH[supreg] with respect to a potential increase in the ESRD PPS
base rate after the end of the TDAPA period, we note that we have been
consistent in treating XPHOZAH[supreg] as an oral-only drug that is
considered included in the ESRD PPS base rate because it falls within
the bone and mineral metabolism ESRD PPS functional category.
XPHOZAH[supreg] is a renal dialysis service under the definition at
Sec. 413.171 and is to be included in the ESRD PPS bundled payment
effective January 1, 2025, according to Sec. 413.174(f)(6). Any other
oral renal dialysis drug or biological product without an injectable
equivalent or other form of administration would also be included in
the ESRD PPS bundled payment effective January 1, 2025. We note that
XPHOZAH[supreg], should it apply for the TDAPA, would receive the same
consideration and treatment as other renal dialysis drugs and
biological products in existing ESRD PPS functional categories which
are considered included in the ESRD PPS base rate. In the CY 2016 ESRD
PPS final rule we explained that we would modify the ESRD PPS base rate
after the end of the TDAPA period only for calcimimetics and phosphate
binders, but that we would not follow this process for any other
potential future oral-only drugs in the bone and mineral functional
category or any other functional category, as calcimimetics and
phosphate binders were the only two drugs for which 2007 utilization
data was available at the time the ESRD PPS base rate was first
developed for which payment was delayed (80 FR 69025). In particular,
the intention behind CMS's policy is that funds would be added to the
base rate to account for phosphate binders because the costs associated
with phosphate binders would have been included in the initial
calculation of the base rate in CY 2011 if not for CMS's (and
subsequently congress') decision to temporarily delay their inclusion.
However, the delay was always with the intention that the costs would
eventually be included in the ESRD PPS base rate. This is not true of
other drugs or biological products that were not in use in the
timeframe analyzed for the initial development of the ESRD PPS base
rate, but that are considered included in the base rate because they
fall within an existing functional category.
From a policy perspective, the ESRD PPS bundled rate is intended to
encourage efficient resource use, and CMS therefore only would add
funds, if appropriate, to the base rate for drugs that have a new
function not accounted for when the initial base rate was developed or,
in the case of calcimimetics and phosphate binders, that were intended
to be included at the time the base rate was first developed but were
temporarily excluded. As discussed previously, XPHOZAH[supreg] is not a
phosphate binder (nor is it a calcimimetic), so under our established
methodology it would be treated in the same way as all other new drugs
(80 FR 69027). We note that any specific considerations regarding
modification of the ESRD PPS base rate to account for phosphate
binders, such as whether to incorporate data from drugs or biological
products with a similar end-action effect that may be a substitute for
phosphate binders, will be made through notice and comment rulemaking
in the future. We will consider the commenter's suggestions related to
how the ESRD PPS treats new renal dialysis drugs and biological
products in existing functional categories which are considered
included in the base rate for potential future rulemaking related to
TDAPA and other payment policies under the ESRD PPS.
Comment: Some commenters expressed support for a delay for the
inclusion of either oral-only drugs and biological products or
phosphate binders, in the ESRD PPS bundled payment. We received 110
form letters from unique submitters that did not relate to policies
proposed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, but rather expressed
support for -draft legislation that would delay the inclusion of
certain oral-only drugs and biological products into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment. One drug manufacturer requested CMS refrain from
incorporating phosphate-lowering therapies into the ESRD PPS in January
2025. The drug manufacturer suggested that CMS should respond to
stakeholder concerns regarding access issues and public health data on
harms to patients.
Response: We did not propose any changes to Sec. 413.174(f)(6) to
modify the date of the incorporation of the oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS. We note that in the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule we stated
that the delay in incorporating oral-only drugs into the ESRD PPS
bundled payment would allow additional time to address several issues
including the following: the determination of oral-only drug pricing
and utilization; adequate beneficiary education; assessment of
potential problems which may arise in connection with the provision of
oral drugs prior to the system's expansion to include oral-only drugs;
analysis regarding the ability of ESRD facilities to provide oral-only
ESRD drugs; and, evaluation of indicators applicable to the monitoring
of certain patient conditions treated with oral-only drugs, such as
bone loss and mineral metabolism associated with the provision of
calcimimetics and
[[Page 89152]]
phosphate binders, which could assist in determining the impact of the
fully bundled ESRD PPS, and any unintentional consequences that might
ensue, on quality of care (75 FR 49043 through 49044). CMS has actively
been engaged in addressing the aforementioned issues since that rule
was finalized 13 years ago in preparation for inclusion of the oral-
only drugs into the ESRD PPS. Our data analysis has shown that because
not all ESRD PPS beneficiaries have had Part D coverage some have
lacked equal access to either calcimimetics or phosphate binders.
Inclusion in the ESRD PPS bundled payment provides patients access to
all the drugs and biological products in all the ESRD PPS functional
categories, including those included in the bone and mineral metabolism
functional category, averting potential harm to those Medicare
beneficiaries currently lacking access to some of those drugs and
biological products.
Comment: A coalition for dialysis organizations recommended that
CMS should align MA and ESRD PPS policies in advance of the TDAPA
period for phosphate binders and future inclusion of phosphate binders
in the ESRD PPS base rate to ensure MA beneficiaries will receive
necessary medication.
Response: With respect to MA, per section 1852(a)(1) of the Act and
its implementation regulations (42 CFR 422.100 and 422.101(a)),
Medicare Advantage organizations (MAOs) must cover items and services,
including drugs, for which benefits are available under Parts A and B
in the Traditional Medicare program, subject to limited exclusions. We
note that phosphate binders are not subject to the limited exclusions
at section 1852(a)(1) of the Act and, therefore, must be covered by
MAOs. Specifically, in accordance with section 1852(a)(1) if the Act
and 42 CFR 422.100 and 422.101(a), and as noted in \62\ section 10.4 of
chapter 4 of the Medicare Managed Care Manual,\63\ MAOs must provide
coverage of, by furnishing, arranging for, or making payment for,
generally all services that are covered by Part A and Part B of
Medicare and that are available to beneficiaries residing in the plan's
service area. Services may be provided outside of the service area of
the plan if the services are accessible and available to enrollees. In
addition, with respect to coverage of Traditional Medicare benefits
such as Part B drugs, MAOs must comply with applicable Medicare
statutes, regulations, national coverage determinations (NCDs) and
local coverage determinations (LCDs) of Medicare contractors with
jurisdiction for claims in the geographic area in which services are
covered under the MA plan (42 CFR 422.101(b)). In general, an MA plan
that offers Part D benefits (MA-PD) must determine whether payment for
the drug is allocated under Parts B or D, consistent with Traditional
Medicare and Part D program drug coverage policies (see Appendix C,
Attachment II, Question 5 of Chapter 6 \64\ Medicare Prescription Drug
Benefit Manual for additional detail). Concerning how Part D sponsors
will determine whether a drug is covered under Part B, it is important
to keep in mind that in most cases Part B drug coverage should not
impact payment decisions by Part D sponsors since Part B coverage is
generally in a provider setting or physician's office rather than for
drugs dispensed at a pharmacy. A Part D sponsor cannot deny payment for
a particular drug on the basis that it is covered under Part B in some
instances and Part D in others unless there is Part B coverage as the
drug is prescribed and dispensed or administered in that particular
instance. The fact that a claim is received for a drug that is
sometimes covered by Part B is not a basis for denial since the Part D
sponsor would have to determine whether the drug is being prescribed
and dispensed or administered on the basis under which Part B coverage
is available. This will generally involve interaction between the Part
D sponsor and the Medicare Part B contractor with jurisdiction in that
geographic area for that drug. Regarding new drugs, as decisions are
made nationally or by individual A/B MAC contractors, this information
will be available on the CMS and contractor websites. MA-PD coordinated
care plans must coordinate all benefits administered by the plan with
respect to drugs for which payment as so prescribed and dispensed or
administered to an individual may be available under Part A or Part B,
or under Part D (42 CFR 422.112(b)(7)). As a result of the rules and
regulations described here, MAOs must cover oral-only ESRD drugs under
their plans, as these are drugs under Part B and are not subject to the
limited exclusions under section 1852(a)(1) of the Act.
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\63\ https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/chapter4-final-may2012_0.pdf
\64\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/prescription-drug-coverage/prescriptiondrugcovcontra/downloads/part-d-benefits-manual-chapter-6.pdf.
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Final Rule Action: After consideration of all the comments
received, we agree with commenters that there are additional costs
associated with ESRD facilities furnishing phosphate binders that are
not currently included in the ESRD PPS base rate and that were not
addressed when the ESRD PPS base rate was developed in CY 2011. This
differentiates phosphate binders from other drugs and biological
products in existing ESRD PPS functional categories, which justifies a
change to the TDAPA policy, as phosphate binders were excluded from the
analysis performed for the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule due to a lack of
data available at the time of rulemaking. Consistent with past
policies, we consider drugs and biological products in existing ESRD
PPS functional categories to be included in the ESRD PPS base rate. The
ESRD PPS base rate includes money for the costs, such as dispensing
fees, associated with furnishing other drugs (in existing functional
categories) paid for using the TDAPA. We are finalizing to pay the
TDAPA for phosphate binders at 100 percent of ASP, increased by a fixed
amount calculated at an amount that we believe most appropriately
approximates 6 percent of ASP. For CY 2025, as utilization data and ASP
reporting are currently unavailable, we are finalizing to use the
weighted average of Medicare expenditures for phosphate binders per
month under Part D for all phosphate binders used in a month, based on
estimates for CY 2025 phosphate binder utilization using utilization
patterns in CY 2023 among Part D eligible beneficiaries. For CY 2025,
this amount is $36.41, which will be added to any monthly claim for
which there is a TDAPA payment for phosphate binders. For CY 2025 and
2026, the TDAPA amount for a phosphate binder is based on 100 percent
of ASP plus an additional amount based on 6 percent of per-patient
phosphate binder spending derived from utilization and cost data.
We are finalizing two changes to Sec. 413.234(c) to codify this
change in TDAPA policy for phosphate binders. First, we are amending
paragraph (c) to note that we would not pay the TDAPA at 100 percent of
ASP in this circumstance by adding in language which reads ``except as
provided in paragraph (c)(4) of this section.'' Second, we are adding
paragraph (c)(4) which reads: ``For calendar years 2025 and 2026, the
transitional drug add-on payment adjustment amount for a phosphate
binder is based on 100 percent of ASP plus an additional amount based
on 6 percent of per-patient phosphate binder spending derived from
utilization and cost data.'' As discussed previously, for calendar year
2025, the additional amount is estimated based on the weighted
[[Page 89153]]
average of Medicare expenditures for phosphate binders per month under
Part D for all phosphate binders used in a month, derived from
estimates for CY 2025 phosphate binder utilization using utilization
patterns in CY 2023 among Part D eligible beneficiaries. . We intend to
reevaluate this amount in rulemaking next year; for example, for
calendar year 2026, we may consider updating the additional amount
quarterly derived from the actual phosphate binder utilization and ASP
reported under Medicare Part B in the most recently available quarter,
if appropriate.
d. Expected Impact of Incorporation of Oral-Only Drugs
We anticipate that the incorporation of oral-only drugs into the
ESRD PPS will increase access to these drugs for beneficiaries. We
estimate that there will be an increase in Medicare spending as a
result of this increase in access. Specifically, CMS has been
monitoring and analyzing data regarding beneficiary access to Medicare
Part D drugs; increases in expenditures for renal dialysis drugs paid
under Medicare Part D; health equity implications of varying access to
Medicare Part D drugs among patients with ESRD; and ESRD facility
behavior regarding drug utilization. We have seen that incorporating
Medicare Part D drugs into the ESRD PPS has had a significant positive
effect of expanding access to such drugs for beneficiaries who do not
have Medicare Part D coverage, with significant positive health equity
impacts. For example, based on the results of our ESRD PPS monitoring
analyses, in December 2017, prior to incorporation of calcimimetics
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment, utilization was at 28.97 percent for
African American/Black beneficiaries but went up to 35.31 percent in
January 2018 and eventually to 39.04 percent in at the end of the TDAPA
period for calcimimetics in December 2021. This 10.07 percentage point
increase in utilization reflects the significant access improvement for
African American/Black beneficiaries of incorporating formerly oral-
only drugs into the ESRD PPS.
Lastly, as part of the preparation for the inclusion of phosphate
binders into the ESRD PPS, CMS has monitored Part D utilization of, and
spending for, phosphate binders. We have developed budgetary estimates
of the changes in Medicare Part B and Part D spending, which are
discussed in section VII.C.1 of this final rule.
8. Changes to the Low-Volume Payment Adjustment (LVPA)
a. Background on the LVPA
Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act provides that the ESRD PPS
shall include a payment adjustment that reflects the extent to which
costs incurred by low-volume facilities (as defined by the Secretary)
in furnishing renal dialysis services exceed the costs incurred by
other facilities in furnishing such services, and for payment for renal
dialysis services furnished on or after January 1, 2011, and before
January 1, 2014, such payment adjustment shall not be less than 10
percent. Therefore, the ESRD PPS provides a facility-level payment
adjustment to ESRD facilities that meet the definition of a low-volume
facility.
Under Sec. 413.232(b), a low-volume facility is an ESRD facility
that, based on the submitted documentation: (1) furnished less than
4,000 treatments in each of the 3 cost reporting years (based on as-
filed or final settled 12-consecutive month costs reports, whichever is
most recent, except as specified in paragraphs (g)(4) and (5))
preceding the payment year; and (2) has not opened, closed, or received
a new provider number due to a change in ownership (except where the
change in ownership results in a change in facility type or as
specified in paragraph (g)(6)) in the 3 cost reporting years (based on
as-filed or final settled 12-consecutive month cost reports, whichever
is most recent) preceding the payment year.
In addition, under Sec. 413.232(c), for purposes of determining
eligibility for the LVPA, the number of treatments considered furnished
by the ESRD facility equals the aggregate number of treatments
furnished by the ESRD facility and the number of treatments furnished
by other ESRD facilities that are both under common ownership with, and
5 road miles or less from, the ESRD facility in question. To receive
the LVPA, an ESRD facility must submit a written attestation statement
to its Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) confirming that it
meets the requirements as specified in Sec. 413.232 and qualifies as a
low-volume ESRD facility. For purposes of determining eligibility for
the LVPA, ``treatments'' mean total hemodialysis equivalent treatments
(Medicare and non-Medicare). For peritoneal dialysis patients, one week
of peritoneal dialysis is considered equivalent to three hemodialysis
treatments (80 FR 68994). Section 413.232(e) generally imposes a yearly
November 1 deadline for attestation submissions unless extraordinary
circumstances justify an exception and specifies exceptions for certain
years where the deadline is in December or January. The November 1
attestation timeframe provides 60 days for a MAC to verify that an ESRD
facility meets the LVPA eligibility criteria (76 FR 70236). The ESRD
facility would then receive the LVPA for all the Medicare-eligible
treatments in the payment year. Once an ESRD facility is determined to
be eligible for the LVPA, a 23.9 percent increase is applied to the
ESRD PPS base rate for all treatments furnished by the ESRD facility
(80 FR 69001).
In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49118 through 49125), we
finalized the methodology used to target the appropriate population of
ESRD facilities that were low-volume facilities based on a treatment
threshold. After consideration of public comments, we originally
established an 18.9 percent adjustment for ESRD facilities that furnish
less than 4,000 treatments annually and indicated that this increase to
the base rate would encourage small ESRD facilities to continue
providing access to care.
In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS proposed rule (80 FR 37819), we analyzed
ESRD facilities that met the definition of a low-volume facility under
Sec. 413.232(b) as part of the updated regression analysis and found
that these ESRD facilities still had higher costs compared to other
ESRD facilities. A regression analysis of low-volume facility claims
from CYs 2012 and 2013 and cost report data indicated a multiplier of
1.239; therefore, we proposed an updated LVPA adjustment factor of 23.9
percent in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS proposed rule (80 FR 37819) and
finalized this policy in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 69001).
This update was implemented budget neutrally alongside numerous other
changes to the case-mix and facility-level adjusters. In CY 2022, 352
ESRD facilities received the LVPA. Using the most recent available data
for CY 2023, the number of ESRD facilities receiving the LVPA was 330.
In the CY 2021 ESRD PPS final rule (85 FR 71443), we finalized a
policy to allow ESRD facilities flexibility for LVPA eligibility due to
the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE). Under Sec. 413.232(g)(4),
for purposes of determining ESRD facilities' eligibility for payment
years 2021, 2022, and 2023, we only considered total dialysis
treatments for any 6 months of their cost-reporting period ending in
2020. In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76344), we finalized
changes to the LVPA regulation at Sec. 413.232 that allow ESRD
facilities affected by disasters and other emergencies to qualify for
[[Page 89154]]
exceptions to certain eligibility requirements for the LVPA. Facilities
may close and reopen if they experience an emergency, or they may
temporarily exceed the 4,000-treatment threshold if they take on
additional patients displaced by an emergency and still qualify for the
LVPA.
(1) Current Issues and Concerns
As discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, interested
parties, including MedPAC and the GAO,\65\ have recommended that we
make refinements to the LVPA to better target ESRD facilities that are
critical to beneficiary access to dialysis care in remote or isolated
areas.\66\ These groups and other interested parties have also
expressed concern that the strict treatment count used to determine
eligibility introduces a ``cliff-effect'' that may incentivize ESRD
facilities to restrict their patient caseload to remain below the 4,000
treatments per year for the LVPA threshold.\67\
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\65\ https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/import_data/scrape_files/docs/default-source/reports/jun20_ch7_reporttocongress_sec.pdf.
\66\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-technical-expert-panel-summary-report-april-2021.pdf.
\67\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-technical-expert-panel-summary-report-april-2021.pdf.
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We considered several changes to the LVPA eligibility criteria to
address the concerns that interested parties, including the GAO and
MedPAC, raised about targeting LVPA payments to ESRD facilities that
are necessary to protect access to care and are not located near other
ESRD facilities. Specifically, these interested parties requested that
we take into consideration the geographic isolation of an ESRD facility
within the LVPA methodology. Section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act
requires that the LVPA must reflect the extent to which costs incurred
by low-volume facilities (as defined by the Secretary) in furnishing
renal dialysis services exceed the costs incurred by other facilities
in furnishing such services. Our analysis found that isolated low-
volume facilities do not face higher costs than other low-volume
facilities. Therefore, we stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule
that we do not believe that this requested change reconciles with the
central statutory requirements and limitations for the LVPA, and we
stated that we are considering alternative approaches, including
potentially addressing this issue through a new payment adjustment
separate from the LVPA based on section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act.
We noted in the proposed rule that we are analyzing claims and cost
data regarding dialysis treatment levels and cost to inform options for
potentially tailoring our methodology to meet the requirements of the
statute, while simultaneously collecting additional data on geographic
isolation of ESRD facilities. The ESRD PPS has separate facility-level
payment adjustments for low-volume facilities, as set forth in 42 CFR
413.232, and facilities in rural areas, as set forth in Sec. 413.233.
To avoid overlap with these existing facility-level adjustments, we
stated that we are analyzing the impact of potentially creating a new
payment adjustment and considering innovative methodological options,
such as the local dialysis need methodology on which we requested
information in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule (88 FR 42441 through
42445).
In addition, interested parties expressed that the eligibility
criteria for the LVPA are very explicit and leave little room for
flexibility in certain circumstances (85 FR 71442). Some also viewed
the attestation process as burdensome to ESRD facilities and believed
it may discourage participation by small ESRD facilities with limited
resources that would otherwise qualify for the LVPA.\68\ Given these
concerns, we considered alternative approaches to the LVPA that would
reduce burden, remove negative incentives that may result in gaming,
and better target ESRD facilities that are critical for beneficiary
access.
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\68\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/end-stage-renal-disease-prospective-payment-system-technical-expert-panel-summary-report-april-2021.pdf.
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CMS's contractor has held three Technical Expert Panels (TEPs) to
discuss potential refinements to the ESRD PPS.\69\ During the 2018,
2019, and 2020 TEPs, panelists, including representatives from ESRD
facilities, independent researchers, patient advocates, and
representatives from professional associations and industry groups (86
FR 36397), discussed limitations of the current LVPA methodology and
potential alternatives. In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we
included a RFI to inform LVPA payment reform (86 FR 36398 through
36399). All fourteen responses to the CY 2022 ESRD PPS RFI for LVPA
wrote in support of either eliminating or revising the current LVPA or
rural facility adjustment.\70\ One small dialysis organization within a
large non-profit health system responded that it is reliant upon the
LVPA and the rural facility adjustment and supports both adjustments,
albeit with modifications. MedPAC renewed its support for a new Low-
Volume and Isolated (LVI) adjustment with a recommendation for a three-
tiered approach for treatment thresholds, which would incorporate
geographic isolation into its methodology and may disincentivize
gaming. MedPAC called upon CMS to provide clear and timely criteria for
ESRD facility eligibility and ensure the LVPA methodology is
transparent. In concurrence with MedPAC, a coalition of dialysis
organizations, three large dialysis organizations (LDOs), a non-profit
kidney organization, and a provider advocacy coalition commented that
the rural facility adjustment should be eliminated and a LVI
methodology should be adopted, as they considered a methodology based
upon census tracts to be both complicated and lacking transparency.
Numerous commenters wrote in support of a tiered adjustment to mitigate
the cliff effect and gaming. Commenters raised concerns regarding the
reliance of the census tract methodology used by the rural facility
adjustment upon `driving time' as a data measure, noting this presents
legitimate equity issues. ESRD facilities that have relied upon both
the LVPA and rural payment adjustments to remain operational expressed
opposition to elimination of either adjustment.\71\
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\69\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/esrdpayment/educational_resources.
\70\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cy-2022-esrd-pps-rfi-summary-comments.pdf.
\71\ The materials from the TEPs and summary reports can be
found at https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/esrdpayment/educational_resources.
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In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS proposed rule LVPA RFI, we sought input on
alternative approaches to the LVPA methodology (86 FR 36398 through
36399).\72\ Specifically, we requested input on--(1) whether a
distinction other than census tract information should be considered;
and (2) what criteria should be used to determine the threshold(s) of
adjusted latent demand (in treatment counts) which determine LVPA
eligibility. Additionally, we explored the LVI adjustment that MedPAC
recommended in its June 2020 Report to Congress. Under the LVI
methodology, a determination that a facility is low volume and isolated
would be based on that facility's distance from the nearest facility
and its total treatment volume. Regarding the LVI methodology, we
requested input on the concerns for facilities that would lose the LVPA
under the LVI methodology and the potential for gaming within the LVI
methodology. In
[[Page 89155]]
addition, we requested input regarding the extent that the LVI
methodology captures more isolated (and most often rural) facilities,
and whether a separate rural facility adjustment should be maintained.
As previously discussed, our most recent analysis of cost report data
does not support the claim that isolated low-volume ESRD facilities
face higher costs than non-isolated ESRD facilities; therefore, the LVI
methodology would not adhere to the statutory requirement for the LVPA
set forth at section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act.
(2) CY 2024 RFI on Potential Changes to the LVPA
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule (88 FR 42430 through 42544),
we issued a RFI regarding several possible modifications to the current
LVPA methodology.\73\ We provided commenters the option of maintaining
a single LVPA threshold, establishing LVPA tiers, or utilizing a
continuous function. We received 23 comments in response to the RFI,
all of which had differing opinions. A coalition of dialysis
organizations recommended a two-tiered approach, while MedPAC
reiterated their support for a LVI adjustment. A common theme among a
handful of comments was concern about administrative burden and
transparency regarding the methodology that is chosen. Most commenters
believed that the issue of payment cliffs is substantial, but many did
not believe any of the options presented in the RFI could successfully
eliminate gaming completely. CMS will continue to consider these
comments to potentially inform future rulemaking.
(3) CY 2024 RFI on the Rural Facility Adjustment
We have considered several changes to the LVPA eligibility criteria
to address the concerns that the GAO and MedPAC raised about targeting
LVPA payments to ESRD facilities that are necessary to protect access
to care and are not located near other ESRD facilities. As previously
discussed, we do not believe the suggestion to consider facilities'
geographic isolation reconciles with the central statutory requirements
and limitations for the LVPA, and we are considering alternative
approaches, including potentially addressing this issue through a new
payment adjustment separate from the LVPA based on section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act.
The LVPA and rural adjusters currently result in increased payments
to some geographically isolated ESRD facilities, but these adjusters do
not specifically target geographically isolated ESRD facilities.
Interested parties, including MedPAC and the GAO, have recommended that
CMS make refinements to the LVPA and rural adjusters to better target
ESRD facilities that are critical to beneficiary access to dialysis
care in remote or isolated areas. The GAO and MedPAC, among others,
have also raised concerns about targeting LVPA payments to ESRD
facilities that are not located near other ESRD facilities to protect
access to care.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule's LVPA RFI (88 FR 42441
through 42445), we solicited comments on a potential new payment
adjustment that accounts for isolation, rurality, and other
geographical factors, including local dialysis need (LDN). The LDN
methodology, as described in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule (88 FR
42430 through 42544), would consider LDN instead of basing payment
strictly upon a rural designation, as provided for by Sec. Sec.
413.233 and 413.231(b)(2). In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule's LVPA
RFI, we suggested the utilization of census tracts to identify
geographic areas with low demand, then calculating latent demand by
multiplying the number of beneficiaries near (``near'' was defined by
driving time to ESRD facilities) an ESRD facility by the average number
of treatments for ESRD beneficiaries. The threshold to qualify for the
LVPA could then be applied by determining the amount of adjusted latent
demand. The ESRD facilities that fall below the threshold would be
eligible. The statutory requirements for the LVPA under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act generally would not allow for CMS to
account for geographic isolation outside of the extent to which low-
volume facilities face higher costs in furnishing renal dialysis
services than other facilities, and preliminary analysis found that, in
general, low-volume facilities that are rural, isolated, or located in
low-demand areas did not have higher costs than low-volume ESRD
facilities overall. Because of this, the LDN methodology would be
implemented under the authority in section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the
Act, which states that the ESRD PPS may include such other payment
adjustments as the Secretary determines appropriate.
We received 23 comments in response to the LVPA RFI, all of which
had differing opinions.\74\ Some commenters supported eliminating the
rural adjuster and reallocating its funds to either the LVPA or to a
new adjustment that considers LDN. Others stated the rural facility
adjustment should be removed, and those dollars be incorporated into
one of the tiered LVPA methodologies. Many commenters noted that a
LVPA, a rural facility adjustment, and a possible LDN-based adjustment
would be redundant. A coalition of dialysis organizations stated that
CMS's reliance on zip codes to identify rural facilities is no longer
an adequate proxy for facilities in need, and cited data that many
rural facilities enjoy a large patient count and positive profit
margins. Other commenters supported the rural facility adjustment,
explaining that it was especially appropriate in conjunction with a
modified LVPA methodology, since under the options presented by CMS in
the RFI, many facilities would experience significant decreases in
payment. They claimed that the additional funds provided by the rural
facility adjustment would protect against the closure of rural
facilities. Several commenters expressed concern about administrative
burden and transparency in a general sense, no matter the methodology
chosen.
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\74\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/cy-2024-esrd-pps-lvpa-rfi-summary-comments.pdf.
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Generally, commenters were opposed to a payment adjustment based on
the LDN methodology, reiterating many of the concerns raised during the
2020 TEP. A coalition of dialysis organizations voiced the concern that
the LDN methodology would take away providers' ability to make
financial decisions about their operations, since they would not be
able to predict their eligibility for the LDN payment adjustment nor
the amount they would receive. They maintained that the LDN may not
target the appropriate facilities and could provide opportunities for
gaming. The coalition also claimed that the central issue faced by
these facilities is low patient count, which they stated that the LDN
methodology would not recognize, and thus the adjustment could be
provided to facilities that are isolated, but have high patient counts,
and are not in need of an additional payment adjustment. A coalition of
dialysis organizations and a non-profit dialysis association both
stated that the current LVPA provision to aggregate the treatments of
facilities under common ownership that are not at least 5 miles apart
is an important feature that discourages gaming, one that is not
included in the LDN methodology. Furthermore, the coalition noted that
the LDN methodology would lack stability, given that patient location
varies over time. MedPAC suggested that if the LDN were adopted, CMS
should ensure that the methodology is transparent; for example, making
the
[[Page 89156]]
specifications and results for the regression equation available on
CMS's website and in the Federal Register. In addition, MedPAC stated
that CMS should note how often the model would be updated, discuss how
census tract populations changing over time would affect the stability
of the adjustment, and how the approach would address MedPAC's
anticipated increase in home dialysis use.
In addition to the questions outlined in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
proposed rule LVPA RFI, as discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule, CMS has also considered incorporating isolation criteria into the
rural facility adjustment, where payment of the adjustment could be
limited to ESRD facilities that are isolated from other ESRD
facilities, or a higher adjustment could be applied for isolated rural
facilities than for non-isolated rural facilities. Alternatively, the
current rural facility adjustment could be replaced by an adjustment
based solely on isolation. We noted that recent analysis has confirmed
that, in general, low-volume facilities that are rural, isolated, or
located in low-demand areas did not have higher costs than low-volume
ESRD facilities overall. This analysis aligns with suggestions from
various commenters, including MedPAC, to refine or remove the rural
facility adjustment to better target ESRD facilities that are critical
to beneficiary access and are likely not being adequately targeted
under the current methodology. However, we noted that many ESRD
facilities which receive the rural facility adjustment are critical to
patient access and that these ESRD facilities may be relying on the
additional payment from the rural facility adjustment for the coming
years. As discussed in section II.B.2.f.(2) of this final rule, we
proposed to implement a phase-out policy for ESRD facilities that lose
the rural facility adjustment as a result of being redesignated from a
rural area to an urban area in the most recent CBSA delineations. We
are not finalizing any other changes to the rural facility adjustment
in this final rule.
b. Tiered LVPA Methodology
The goals of the ESRD PPS (including the LVPA) are to align
resource use with payment, advance health equity, and protect access to
renal dialysis services for vulnerable beneficiaries in underserved
communities, including rural and isolated communities, by increasing
payments to certain ESRD facilities in these areas to align with their
higher costs. As noted in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 68967
through 69077), we aim to target the benefit of the LVPA to facilities
that serve the access needs of patients in remote locations. In the CY
2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874 through 62026), we detailed our
commitment to achieving equity in health care outcomes for our
beneficiaries using the definition of equity set forth in Executive
Order 13985,\75\ which places emphasis on individuals who belong to
underserved communities. In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS proposed rule RFI (87
FR 38464 through 38586), we reiterated our commitment to achieving
equity in health care and noted that we aim to align ESRD facility
resource use with payment. Recent feedback from interested parties
indicates that the current LVPA payment structure may lead some ESRD
facilities to treat fewer patients to avoid a payment cliff. Proposing
a revised methodology that would reduce the incentive for gaming, as
the GAO described, would help advance health equity by removing the
incentive for some ESRD facilities to limit access to renal dialysis
services. We would expand access through payments that incrementally
align resource use with payment to ESRD facilities that furnish
different volumes of treatment.
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\75\ 86 FR 7009 (January 25, 2021). https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government.
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In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we proposed to refine the
LVPA methodology to include two tiers based on treatment volume with
different payment adjustments for each tier. This methodology would be
similar to the methodology described in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed
rule RFI (88 FR 42430 through 42544), but with methodological changes
to improve consistency in an ESRD facility's tier assignment from year
to year.
We analyzed cost report data from ESRD facilities to develop the
tiered thresholds and adjustment amounts for the proposed LVPA. This
analysis used a logarithmic regression model that controls for various
geographical and facility level characteristics, including facility
type and region, to estimate cost differences based on treatment
volume. We also simulated attestation patterns by excluding a
stratified random sample of ESRD facilities who are eligible for LVPA
payment but do not submit LVPA attestations. This step allowed us to
account for the fact that a portion of ESRD facilities that were within
the treatment volume threshold routinely did not attest to meeting the
LVPA requirements for other reasons. We analyzed numerous different
potential tiered payment structures based on this analysis, where the
estimated cost for the tier uses the upper bound of the treatment count
for that tier. Based on the results of this analysis, we proposed a
two-tiered approach; we believe the two-tiered approach is appropriate
because it strikes a balance between simplicity for ESRD facilities,
sufficiently large tiers to allow for treatment volume variation from
one year to the next, and payment adequacy for current low-volume
facilities, particularly those with the lowest volume.
Table 9 presents our proposed two-tiered LVPA methodology, which is
based on data from ESRD facility cost reports such that the reporting
periods include some part of the period between January 1, 2020, to
December 31, 2022 (that is, beginning or ending during these 3 CYs). We
noted that we have required budget neutrality for any change to the
LVPA methodology, so any proposed changes to the LVPA cannot increase
or decrease total estimated ESRD PPS payments; therefore, the two sets
of potential adjustment factors in Table 9 would be implemented budget-
neutrally. The second column presents the unscaled adjusters, which if
implemented, would cause the ESRD PPS base rate to be reduced by a
factor of 0.999262, or approximately $0.20, to achieve budget
neutrality. The third column presents the adjusters scaled down by a
factor of 0.815 to maintain the LVPA payment amount under the existing
methodology of $26.7 million based on the expected CY 2025 LVPA
payments. Using the scaled adjusters would maintain budget neutrality
without lowering the ESRD PPS base rate.
[[Page 89157]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.008
The adjustment factors in the second column are derived from the
regression explained previously. These results indicate that facilities
which furnish less than 3,000 treatments have costs that are 34.9
percent higher than non-low-volume facilities, and facilities that
furnish between 3,000 and 3,999 treatments have costs that are 22.2
percent higher. The adjustment factors in the third column, which are
scaled down, reflect the same relationship between the two tiers of
low-volume facilities and non-low-volume facilities.
We explained that we believe a two-tier scaled approach is
appropriate because it would increase payments to facilities with the
lowest volume while keeping payment changes contained within the LVPA.
In CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 68972 through 69004) when we last
updated the LVPA adjustment factor, we also updated most of the
facility-level and case-mix adjusters. At that time, it was appropriate
to apply a budget-neutrality factor that represented all of the changes
to the facility-level and case-mix adjusters. However, we only proposed
changes to the LVPA in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760
through 55843) and believed it would be most appropriate to contain the
changes within the current LVPA by applying a scaling factor to the
LVPA adjusters.
We also analyzed a three-tiered option that would include a tier
for ESRD facilities furnishing between 4,000 and 5,000 treatments,
which is presented in Table 10. As noted previously, we considered both
scaled and unscaled adjustment factors, with both maintaining budget
neutrality. Our analysis showed that the scaled, three-tiered option
would reduce payments for facilities furnishing less than 3,000
treatments as compared to both the current LVPA methodology and the
proposed two-tiered scaled methodology. Because payments for facilities
furnishing between 4,000 and 5,000 treatments would increase, payments
for the lowest-volume facilities would need to decrease to maintain
budget neutrality, which we did not believe would align with the goals
of the LVPA outlined previously. We explained that if we were to
propose a three-tiered option, we believe budget neutralizing the base
rate rather than scaling the adjustment factors would better align with
these goals. Our analysis shows that an unscaled three-tiered
adjustment would result in a $0.99 reduction to the base rate. We
sought comment on our proposed scaled, two-tier proposal and on the
alternative three-tier LVPA structure. We noted that, should this
alternative be finalized, we would make changes to Sec. 413.232(b)(1)
to reflect the increased LVPA threshold of 5,000. As discussed further
in the next subsection, we also proposed to determine an ESRD
facility's LVPA tier based on the median treatment count volume of the
last three cost-reporting years, rather than using a single year
treatment count. Therefore, expanding LVPA eligibility to ESRD
facilities that furnished fewer than 5,000 treatments in each of the
past three cost-reporting years would also increase the number of ESRD
facilities that would qualify for tier 1 and tier 2, since ESRD
facilities which furnished between 4,000 and 4,999 treatments in one of
the past 3 years and fewer than 4,000 (or 3,000 for tier 1) in the
other 2 years could qualify in these tiers.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.009
[[Page 89158]]
c. Final Changes to the LVPA for CY 2025
We proposed a two-tiered LVPA using the scaled adjusters presented
in the second column of Table 9. ESRD facilities that fall into the
first tier (those that furnish fewer than 3,000 treatments) would
receive a payment adjustment of 28.4 percent. Those that fall in the
second tier (those that furnish 3,000 or more treatments but fewer than
4,000 treatments) would receive a payment adjustment of 18.1 percent.
Outside of the change to the LVPA amount, this change would not impact
how the LVPA is applied to ESRD PPS payments.
We stated that one potential complication with a tiered approach to
the LVPA is that there would still be payment cliffs present between
the tiers. This may discourage ESRD facilities from increasing their
treatment volume in a given year, especially if it is uncertain whether
the ESRD facility's treatment volume in future years will stay at the
increased level. To address this, we proposed to determine an ESRD
facility's LVPA tier based on the median treatment count volume of the
last three cost-reporting years, rather than using a single year
treatment count. This methodology would smooth payments over years,
increasing stability and predictability in payments to low-volume
facilities. We also proposed that, should a facility receive an
exception under Sec. 413.232(g)(5) in one or more of the past three
cost-reporting years, the median treatment count of the unaffected
cost-reporting years would be used to make the facility's tier
determination. We note that the median of two numbers is the average of
those numbers, and the median of one number is that number. In the case
that a facility does not have cost-reporting data from the last 3 years
that are unaffected by a disaster or other emergency, we would assign
the facility to a tier based on their last full year of unaffected
treatment volume, assuming all LVPA eligibility criteria are met.
We stated that we believe that the proposed median treatment
approach would promote stability, especially for facilities whose
treatment counts are on the margins of a tier. We also believe that the
proposed smoothing methodology for determining the treatment volume
tier for which an ESRD facility qualifies is better than the
alternative of using the highest tier (in terms of treatment volume)
for which an ESRD facility has qualified in each of the past years. For
example, if we used the highest tier of the last 3 years and a facility
furnishes 3,500 treatments in one of the past 3 years, it would be
categorized as tier 2 even if it furnished fewer than 3,000 treatments
in the other 2 years. We believe that the proposed smoothing would
mitigate the introduction of a cliff-effect within the tiers.
By contrast, under the proposed smoothing methodology, if the cost-
reporting data indicated that the facility furnished 2,500, 2,999, and
3,500 treatments in the 3 years preceding the payment year, the median
tier would be identified (tier 1 in this case), and the facility would
(in the proposed two-tier system with scaling) receive a 28.4 percent
payment adjustment for all of the treatments furnished during the
payment year. We expect that any higher or lower payments from year to
year under this policy would balance out over time without putting
additional burden on the MACs. The structure of the proposed scaled,
two-tier LVPA methodology is presented in Table 9, and the structure of
the alternative three-tier unscaled LVPA methodology is presented in
Table 10. For the purposes of comparison, we have included the scaled
and unscaled version of both of the potential LVPA structures.
We noted that we did not propose any changes to the methodology for
determining eligibility for the LVPA under Sec. 413.232(b)(1), as the
purpose of this change is to better allocate payments within the LVPA,
not to expand the LVPA to facilities that have furnished more than
4,000 treatments in one of the past three cost-reporting years. We
would continue to determine eligibility for the LVPA based on a
facility's treatment count in each of the three cost-reporting years
preceding the payment year as set forth in Sec. 413.232(b)(1) and
would not consider the median treatment count over that period for
purposes of determining eligibility. Likewise, we did not propose any
changes to Sec. 413.232(g)(5), which allows for an exception to the
requirement at Sec. 413.232(b)(1) in the case of a disaster or other
emergency. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule (75 FR 49030 through
49214), we stated that we believe a 3-year waiting period serves as a
safeguard against facilities that have the opportunity to take a
financial loss in establishing facilities that are purposefully small.
In response to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule RFI (88 FR 42430
through 42544), several interested parties commented that they believe
CMS should maintain the 3-year attestation to determine eligibility for
the LVPA, as it is an important safeguard against gaming. In addition,
if we were to use the median tier methodology to determine LVPA
eligibility, we estimate that the adjustment factors would decrease,
because the scaling factor used to maintain budget neutrality within
the LVPA would be smaller to account for a larger amount of ESRD
facilities qualifying for the LVPA.
We stated that, if finalized, the proposed median treatment count
methodology for determining an eligible ESRD facility's LVPA tier would
improve the stability and predictability of the LVPA by basing tier
determination on the median treatment count of the last 3 years as
opposed to the treatment count for each of the last 3 years, where
facilities could be disqualified from a higher adjustment based on
marginal changes. The proposed tiered smoothing methodology would also
better align payment with resource use by minimizing the impact of the
payment cliff between the LVPA tiers in a transparent and reproducible
fashion. We solicited comments on each aspect of our proposal: (1) the
tiered structure of the LVPA; (2) using the median treatment count
volume to determine the LVPA payment tier for ESRD facilities that are
eligible for the adjustment; and (3) the scaling of the adjusters to
maintain LVPA payments at the same level. As previously discussed, we
also considered an alternative three-tiered structure, which would have
the effect of reducing the base rate by $0.99. We solicited comments on
whether this alternative methodology could be more appropriate than the
proposed methodology.
We invited public comment on our proposal to change the LVPA
methodology to include two tiers, use the median treatment count volume
to determine the LVPA payment tier for eligible facilities, and to
scale the adjusters to maintain budget neutrality without lowering the
ESRD PPS base rate. Approximately 12 commenters including a non-profit
dialysis organization, a non-profit kidney organization, multiple large
dialysis organizations, a provider advocacy organization, a non-profit
organization of ESRD networks, a non-profit kidney care alliance, a
coalition of dialysis organizations, a small dialysis organization
within a large non-profit health system, and MedPAC commented on the
proposed changes to the LVPA methodology. The following is a summary of
the public comments received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters supported CMS's proposed changes to the
LVPA methodology, agreeing that introducing two tiers would help reduce
[[Page 89159]]
the burden of payment cliffs. Some of these commenters encouraged CMS
to continue refining the LVPA as more data becomes available, and to
continue evaluating the impact of creating additional tiers. Nearly all
commenters expressed support for our proposal to use the median
treatment count volume to determine the LVPA payment tier for eligible
facilities.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and dedication to
advancing health equity and protecting access to renal dialysis
services for vulnerable beneficiaries. CMS will continue to monitor the
ESRD PPS LVPA methodology to ensure that payments are appropriately
aligned with resource use and adequately target low-volume facilities
and make refinements, if appropriate, through rulemaking.
Comment: Some commenters cited analysis suggesting that CMS may
have underestimated the number of facilities projected to furnish more
than 3,000 treatments during CY 2025 in the CY 2025 impact file \76\
and expressed concern that the adjuster amounts CMS calculated for both
tier structures described in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule may be
inaccurate. Many of these commenters were also concerned that the two-
and three-tiered structures presented in the proposed rule had the same
adjusters despite a greater number of ESRD facilities qualifying for
the LVPA under the three-tiered structure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ The CY 2025 impact file can be found in Addendum B of the
proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: The dialysis treatment counts reported in the impact
tables in Addendum B represent Fee-For-Service (FFS) treatments
furnished by each facility during 2023. LVPA tier assignment is based
on facility size, which encompasses all treatments (Medicare FFS, MA,
or non-Medicare) furnished during CYs 2020, 2021, and 2022, including
treatments by ESRD facilities under common ownership and located within
a 5-driving mile radius. The CY 2023 facility size information was
considered separately from the FFS treatment during our analysis.
The two- and three-tier LVPA structures in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule appear identical as both represent estimates of expected
cost differentials derived from a common model that measures
association between facility size and cost. The adjusters from the
common model are stable because they are based on the overall
relationship between cost and volume, not on the number of tiers into
which facilities are divided. These estimates appear in the second
columns of Tables 9 and 10 in this final rule. However, once facilities
are assigned to a category and payment budget neutrality is applied,
the adjusters for the two- and three-tier proposals diverge, as shown
by the third columns in each respective table where the adjustment
factors are scaled to maintain total LVPA payments at the same level.
Comment: Several interested parties expressed concern that the
facilities in the second tier under the proposed two-tier LVPA
methodology (furnishing between 3,000 and 3,999 treatments per year)
would receive a lower adjustment compared to the current LVPA policy.
Response: We maintain our belief that a two-tier scaled approach is
appropriate, as it replaces a one-size-fits all approach with one where
payments more closely align with cost while keeping payment changes
contained within the population of LVPA facilities. Maintaining budget
neutrality in this manner when transitioning to a tiered structure
necessitates payment adjustments that differ from the current adjuster
at each tier. Therefore, it is unavoidable that the tier 2 LVPA
facilities receive a lower LVPA adjustment factor under the tiered
system while holding total LVPA payments at the same level.
We also maintain our belief that it is appropriate to implement a
scaled approach as opposed to a budget neutrality factor applied to all
ESRD PPS payments. We reiterate that when we last updated the LVPA
adjustment factor in the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (80 FR 68972
through 69004), we also updated most of the facility-level and case-mix
adjusters and applied a budget neutrality factor that represented all
of those changes. Since we only proposed changes to the LVPA in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through 55843), we noted that
it would be most appropriate to contain the changes within the current
LVPA by applying a scaling factor to the LVPA adjusters.
Comment: MedPAC supported the proposal for a two-tier LVPA for
existing ESRD facilities as well as maintaining budget neutrality with
respect to the current LVPA policy but expressed multiple concerns
about extending the LVPA to new ESRD facilities. MedPAC suggested that
the two-tier proposal is an improvement over the current policy, but
that they ultimately support a statutory change that would replace both
the LVPA and the rural facility adjustment with a single payment
adjustment that considers distance to the next nearest facility and
treatment volume. MedPAC stated that such an adjustment would eliminate
extra payments to low-volume facilities in close proximity to another
facility and high-volume rural facilities.
Response: CMS appreciates the support expressed by MedPAC for the
proposed changes to the LVPA methodology and its input on future
refinements that could preserve access to renal dialysis services. CMS
also shares MedPAC's concerns about extending the LVPA to new ESRD
facilities, as this could result in decreased payment to the lowest-
volume ESRD facilities. As we discussed in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through 55843), CMS aims to align resource
use with payment, advance health equity and protect access to renal
dialysis services for vulnerable beneficiaries in underserved
communities, including rural and isolated communities, by increasing
payments to certain ESRD facilities in these areas to align with their
higher costs. We acknowledge MedPAC's continued support for an LVPA
that incorporates geographic isolation but reiterate that such an
adjustment would not be consistent with the statutory requirements for
the LVPA unless geographic isolation is found to influence the extent
to which low-volume ESRD facilities face higher costs, and we agree
that such an adjustment would require a statutory change.
Comment: Multiple commenters once again called for the elimination
of the rural facility adjustment and for its funds to be allocated to
support a more robust LVPA, either within the current bounds of
eligibility or to include ESRD facilities that furnish up to 6,000
treatments per year. Many of these commenters reiterated their support
for MedPAC's LVI methodology and noted several concerns regarding the
three-tier model presented by CMS in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed
rule. Some commenters stated that the three-tier model presented by CMS
would cause substantial overlap between facilities receiving the LVPA
and the rural facility adjustment, and that a large number of rural
facilities are high-volume to an extent that may not warrant additional
payment.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760
through 55843), CMS noted that recent analysis has confirmed, in
general, that low-volume facilities that are rural, isolated, or
located in low-demand areas did not have higher costs than low-volume
ESRD facilities overall. This analysis broadly aligns with suggestions
from various commenters, including MedPAC, to refine or remove the
rural
[[Page 89160]]
facility adjustment to better target ESRD facilities that are critical
to beneficiary access and are likely not being adequately targeted
under the current methodology. However, CMS found that, on treatment
weighted basis, over 65 percent of rural providers have no other
providers in a 5-driving mile distance, and that this fraction
increases to 83 percent for providers eligible for both the rural
facility adjustment and the LVPA. These findings indicate that the
overlapping payments for both the LVPA and rural facility adjustments
are primarily going to small and isolated providers and align with our
belief that many ESRD facilities which receive the rural facility
adjustment are critical to patient access and may be relying on the
additional payment from the rural facility adjustment for the coming
years. We are not finalizing any changes to the rural facility
adjustment at this time, but we are open to considering potential
refinements to the definition of a rural ESRD facility in the future by
considering alternate rural designations. Any future changes would
consider the impact on rural ESRD facilities. Additionally, we note
that the rural facility adjustment for the ESRD PPS is relatively small
compared to other payment systems, at 0.8 percent, and that the
suggested elimination of this adjustment would only account for about
one third of the budget neutrality adjustment required for our
alternative 3-tiered adjustment, which would expand the LVPA to ESRD
facilities that furnish up to 5,000 treatments per year. Therefore, the
funds currently associated with the rural facility adjustment would not
be able to ``pay for'' expanding the LVPA to the commenter's suggested
6,000 treatment volume threshold without a significant budget
neutrality reduction to the ESRD PPS base rate.
CMS also reiterates that because payments for facilities furnishing
between 4,000 and 5,000 treatments would increase under the three-tier
methodology presented in the proposed rule, payments for the lowest-
volume facilities would need to decrease to maintain budget neutrality,
and we do not believe this would align with the goals of the LVPA. We
thank the commenters who presented analysis demonstrating why the
three-tier methodology we presented may yield decreased payment to the
lowest-volume facilities and how alternative methodologies, including
MedPAC's LVI methodology, could potentially yield more equitable
payment distribution to LVPA-eligible facilities. CMS intends to
consider the provided analyses to inform future notice and comment
rulemaking pertaining to the LVPA methodology.
Comment: A small dialysis organization within a large non-profit
health system commented asking for additional clarification regarding
the median tier calculation in the instance where a facility receives
an exception for taking on additional patients due to a disaster or
emergency.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760
through 55843), we proposed that, should a facility receive an
exception under Sec. 413.232(g)(5) in one or more of the past three
cost-reporting years, the median treatment count of the unaffected
cost-reporting years would be used to make the facility's tier
determination. We noted that the median of two numbers is the average
of those numbers, and the median of one number is that number. In the
case that a facility does not have cost-reporting data from the last 3
years that are unaffected by a disaster or other emergency, we would
assign the facility to a tier based on their last full year of
unaffected treatment volume, assuming all LVPA eligibility criteria are
met. For example, if cost-reporting data indicated that an ESRD
facility furnished 2,500, 2,999, and 4,500 treatments in the 3 years
preceding the payment year, but received an exception under Sec.
413.232(g)(5) during the year it furnished 4,500 treatments, the median
treatment count from the two prior years (2,500 and 2,999) would be
used determine the facility's LVPA tier, which would place the facility
in tier 1 under the proposed two-tier methodology. The facility would
then receive a 28.4 percent payment adjustment for all of the
treatments furnished during the payment year.
Comment: Some interested parties commented that it is necessary to
conduct analysis of the Pacific territories separately from the general
Pacific census region to consider the unique costs that are exclusive
to small island economies. The commenters cited air freight shipping
costs, operational costs for utilities, limited availability of local
healthcare professionals, and a lack of economies of scale as factors
that may be raising the per-treatment costs across the Pacific
territories. The interested parties acknowledged that CMS is barred
from accounting for geographic isolation outside of the extent to which
low-volume facilities face higher costs in furnishing renal dialysis
services than other facilities, but claimed that CMS may have concluded
that low-volume facilities that are rural, isolated, or located in low-
demand areas generally did not have higher costs than low-volume ESRD
facilities overall without adequately considering the unique situation
of the Pacific territories. The commenters urged CMS to refine the LVPA
to better target isolated ESRD facilities such as those in the Pacific
islands and requested the Secretary to consider exercising the
authority provided under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) to establish other
payment adjustments for the Pacific territories in the case that CMS is
unable to better target these facilities due to statutory constraints.
Response: In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule's LVPA RFI (88 FR
42441 through 42445), we solicited comments on a potential new payment
adjustment that accounts for isolation, rurality, and other
geographical factors, including local dialysis need (LDN). CMS stated
that the statutory requirements for the LVPA under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iii) of the Act generally would not allow for CMS to
account for geographic isolation outside of the extent to which low-
volume facilities face higher costs in furnishing renal dialysis
services than other facilities, and preliminary analysis found that, in
general, low-volume facilities that are rural, isolated, or located in
low-demand areas did not have higher costs than low-volume ESRD
facilities overall. Because of this, we clarified that the LDN
methodology could only be implemented under the authority in section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, which states that the ESRD PPS may
include such other payment adjustments as the Secretary determines
appropriate. Commenters were generally opposed to the LDN methodology
for a variety of factors, and many supported MedPAC's LVI methodology
in place of the existing LVPA and rural facility adjustments. The
statute generally would not permit MedPAC's approach recommending
payment directed at isolated facilities under the LVPA, and our
preliminary analysis shows that the funds from the rural adjuster alone
cannot support a third LVPA tier while maintaining budget neutrality
and without decreasing payment to the lowest volume facilities. CMS is
committed to achieving equity in healthcare outcomes for our
beneficiaries, and we reiterate that the statutory requirement for the
LVPA requires it reflect the extent to which low-volume ESRD facilities
face higher costs. We intend to continue to evaluate whether geographic
isolation is associated with higher costs for low-volume ESRD
facilities and, should we find such evidence, we would be able to
[[Page 89161]]
consider alternative methodologies to the LVPA similar to MedPAC's LVI
in potential future rulemaking. Should our future analysis show that
isolated, low-volume ESRD facilities incur greater costs than other
low-volume ESRD facilities, we would consider, if appropriate, making
further refinements to the LVPA methodology through rulemaking. We
recognize that the U.S. Pacific Territories are uniquely isolated
compared to mainland ESRD facilities, so a different set of isolation
criteria may apply distinctly to these ESRD facilities and, should they
have higher costs than other LVPA facilities, support incorporating
such isolation criteria into the LVPA under the current statute.
However, we do not believe it would be appropriate to define isolation
criteria based on predetermined ESRD facilities that we believe should
be considered isolated. Additionally, as there are relatively few ESRD
facilities in the U.S. Pacific Territories, any isolation criteria
which would only identify these ESRD facilities would likely be very
restrictive and not appropriate to be applied to the ESRD PPS overall.
Therefore, we do not believe it would be most appropriate to address
the higher costs that the commenter described through the LVPA. We
intend to further consider the unique challenges and costs which are
faced by ESRD facilities in the U.S Pacific Territories, and other
similarly isolated places, and address these challenges and costs, if
warranted, through an appropriate payment mechanism, such as an
adjustment under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv), in potential future
rulemaking.
CMS appreciates the unique challenges that ESRD facilities in the
U.S. Pacific Territories face and the higher costs that might accompany
them. However, we note that the LVPA is generally not constructed to
account for factors outside of the costs that ESRD facilities incur as
a result of furnishing a small number of treatments. CMS has also noted
that there are ESRD facilities that may be eligible for the LVPA but
have not submitted attestations to their MACs. CMS encourages these
facilities to attest for purposes of the LVPA as we continue to
consider appropriate ways to support Pacific Territory facilities that
are critical to beneficiary access to renal dialysis services.
Final Rule Action: After considering the comments, we are
finalizing as proposed the scaled two-tier LVPA methodology, where ESRD
facilities that fall into the first tier will receive a payment
adjustment of 28.9 percent and those that fall in the second tier will
receive a payment adjustment of 18.3 percent. The structure of this
methodology can be found in Table 11. We are also finalizing as
proposed the tiered smoothing methodology, where an ESRD facility's
LVPA tier will be determined based on the median treatment count volume
of the last three cost-reporting years, rather than using a single year
treatment count.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.010
We note that the final LVPA adjusters under the two-tier
methodology are marginally different from those presented in the CY
2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule. The final LVPA adjusters presented in
Table 11 reflect the use of more recent claims data in our analysis for
this final rule, which results in changes to the scaling factor used to
maintain total estimated LVPA payments at the same amount.
CMS reiterates that we did not propose and are not finalizing any
changes to the methodology for determining eligibility for the LVPA
under Sec. 413.232(b)(1), as the purpose of the finalized changes is
to better allocate payments within the LVPA, not to expand the LVPA to
facilities that have furnished more than 4,000 treatments in one of the
past three cost-reporting years. We will continue to determine
eligibility for the LVPA based on a facility's treatment count in each
of the three cost-reporting years preceding the payment year as set
forth in Sec. 413.232(b)(1) and would not consider the median
treatment count over that period for purposes of determining
eligibility. Likewise, we did not propose and are not finalizing any
changes to Sec. 413.232(g)(5), which allows for an exception to the
requirement at Sec. 413.232(b)(1) in the case of a disaster or other
emergency.
d. Summary of RFI on Improving the LVPA for New ESRD Facilities
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR 55760 through 55843),
we sought comment on several approaches to modifying the LVPA
methodology to ensure that payments are accurately aligned with
resource use, adequately target low-volume facilities, and strive for
healthcare equity for ESRD beneficiaries. We issued an RFI to seek
feedback from the public on potential changes to the LVPA eligibility
criteria, including the potential modification of the 3-year cost-
reporting data requirement, and what commenters believe would be the
best way for a new low-volume ESRD facility to demonstrate or attest
that it expects to be low-volume. We also sought information regarding
the potential implementation of a reconciliation process for ESRD
facilities that fail to furnish a low enough treatment volume to
qualify for the LVPA or their predicted tier. We also questioned
commenters about the cost differences for providers of low-volume home
dialysis and providers of low-volume in-center dialysis, and whether
the
[[Page 89162]]
LVPA be an appropriate pathway to support the provision of home
dialysis through increased payment. In particular, we sought input and
responses to the following considerations, requests, and questions:
Whether the LVPA or another adjustment, such as the LDN
methodology discussed earlier, would be the most appropriate payment
pathway to support access to renal dialysis services in areas that do
not currently have sufficient capacity to furnish these services to all
Medicare beneficiaries.
What would be the most appropriate way or ways for a new
ESRD facility to demonstrate or attest that it expects to be low-
volume?
The potential for future reconciliation process as an
appropriate accommodation for new ESRD facilities.
Whether a reconciliation process would be an effective
tool for making appropriate payments to existing ESRD facilities that
have three or more years of cost reporting data.
Would a reconciliation process be operationally
straightforward and understandable for an ESRD facility that has opened
in the past 3 years?
Would a reconciliation process make it more difficult for
ESRD facilities to plan and budget for future payment years? Is this
outweighed by the potential benefit of earlier access to the LVPA for
these new facilities?
Would it be useful or feasible to implement a
reconciliation process for ESRD facilities that have not opened in the
past 3 years but, for whatever reason, may have furnished a low enough
treatment volume to qualify for the LVPA?
Could the LVPA be changed in any way to better support
ESRD facilities opening in underserved areas? Are there any costs
specific to low-volume facilities for which the current LVPA does not
account?
How are the costs for providers of low-volume home
dialysis different from the costs for providers of low-volume in-center
dialysis? Could the LVPA be an appropriate pathway to support the
provision of home dialysis through increased payment?
We did not receive any new feedback in response to our RFI
regarding LVPA eligibility or the attestation process for new ESRD
facilities. A handful of commenters reiterated their stance from the CY
2024 ESRD PPS RFI on the LVPA. Some commenters thanked CMS for our
consideration of public comments as we continue to refine the LVPA
methodology. We received one comment from an LDO in response to our RFI
regarding the cost differences for low-volume home dialysis versus in-
center dialysis providers. The comment explained that staffing dynamics
make the 4,000-treatment LVPA threshold inapplicable for home dialysis
programs but cautioned that a home dialysis-specific LVPA threshold may
not address the challenges faced by low-volume home programs as the
treatment aggregation mechanism within the LVPA disqualifies many of
these programs due to their proximity to commonly owned in-center
programs.
We thank the commenters for their detailed and thoughtful comments,
including those who responded to the RFI. While we are not responding
to these comments in this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule, we intend to
take them into consideration for future rulemaking and future policy
development.
C. Transitional Add-On Payment Adjustment for New and Innovative
Equipment and Supplies (TPNIES) Applications and Technical Changes for
CY 2025
1. Background
In the CY 2020 ESRD PPS final rule (84 FR 60681 through 60698), we
established the transitional add-on payment adjustment for new and
innovative equipment and supplies (TPNIES) under the ESRD PPS, under
the authority of section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, to support ESRD
facility use and beneficiary access to these new technologies. For
additional background on the TPNIES we refer readers to the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76410 through 76412).
As indicated in Sec. 413.236(c) CMS includes the summary of each
TPNIES application and our analysis of the eligibility criteria for
each application in the annual ESRD PPS proposed rule and announces the
results in the annual ESRD PPS final rule. Because we did not receive
any applications for the TPNIES for CY 2025, no TPNIES application
summaries, CMS analyses, or results have been included in this final
rule.
2. Technical Changes to Sec. 413.236(b)(4) and Sec. 413.236(c)
As part of the TPNIES eligibility requirements in Sec.
413.236(b)(4), a covered equipment or supply must have a complete HCPCS
Level II code application submitted, in accordance with the HCPCS Level
II coding procedures on the CMS website, by the HCPCS Level II code
application deadline for biannual Coding Cycle 2 for durable medical
equipment, orthotics, prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS) items and
services as specified in the HCPCS Level II coding guidance on the CMS
website prior to the particular CY. We have identified a minor error in
Sec. 413.236(b)(4). Specifically, we inadvertently transposed the
words orthotics and prosthetics within the DMEPOS acronym. The acronym
was intended to read durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics,
and supplies (DMEPOS) instead of durable medical equipment, orthotics,
prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS).
As described in the HCPCS Level II Coding Procedures, HCPCS Level
II is a standardized coding system that is used primarily to identify
drugs, biologicals and non-drug and non-biological items, supplies, and
services not included in the CPT[supreg] code set jurisdiction, such as
ambulance services and durable medical equipment, prosthetics,
orthotics, and supplies (DMEPOS) when used outside a physician's
office.
While the HCPCS level II Coding Procedures include DMEPOS as an
example of items for which HCPCS Level II codes are established, we
believe that the phrase non-drug and non-biological items more broadly
reflects all items, supplies, and services for which HCPCS Level II
codes are established and aligns with the HCPCS Level II coding
procedures on the CMS website. Therefore, we proposed a technical
change at Sec. 413.236(b)(4) to remove the reference to the phrase
durable medical equipment, orthotics, prosthetics and supplies (DMEPOS)
and replace it with the phrase non-drug and non-biological items. We
are also adding the word supplies. These technical changes would better
reflect the broader category of non-drug and non-biological item coding
in the HCPCS Level II Coding Procedures available on the CMS
website.\77\
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\77\ Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Level II
Coding Procedures. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/coding/medhcpcsgeninfo/downloads/2018-11-30-hcpcs-level2-coding-procedure.pdf. Accessed on January 16, 2024.
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We did not receive any comments on our proposed technical changes
to Sec. 413.236(b)(4). We are finalizing the technical changes as
proposed at Sec. 413.236(b)(4) and also finalizing the corresponding
edit at Sec. 413.236(c) for the same reasons that we identified for
the proposed edit.
D. Continuation of Approved Transitional Add-On Payment Adjustments for
New and Innovative Equipment and Supplies for CY 2025
In this section of the final rule, we identify any items previously
approved for the TPNIES and for which payment
[[Page 89163]]
is continuing for CY 2025. As described in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final
rule, no new items were approved for the TPNIES for CY 2024 (88 FR
76431). As such there are no items previously approved for the TPNIES
for which payment is continuing in CY 2025.
E. Continuation of Approved Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments for CY 2025
Under Sec. 413.234(c)(1), a new renal dialysis drug or biological
product that is considered included in the ESRD PPS base rate is paid
the TDAPA for 2 years. In July 2023, CMS approved Jesduvroq
(daprodustat) for the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS, effective October 1,
2023. Implementation instructions are specified in CMS Transmittal
12157, dated July 27, 2023, and available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r12157cp.pdf.
In April 2024, CMS approved DefenCath[supreg] (taurolidine and
heparin sodium) for the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS, effective July 1,
2024. Implementation instructions are specified in CMS Transmittal
12628, dated May 9, 2024, and available at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r12628CP.pdf.
Table 12 identifies the two new renal dialysis drugs for which the
TDAPA payment period as specified in Sec. 413.234(c)(1) will continue
in CY 2025: Jesduvroq (daprodustat) that was approved for the TDAPA
effective in CY 2023 and DefenCath[supreg] (taurolidine and heparin
sodium) that was approved for the TDAPA effective in CY 2024. Table 12
also identifies the products' HCPCS coding information as well as the
payment adjustment effective dates and end dates.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.011
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS monitor anemia outcomes
with hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase inhibitor (HIF-PHI)
versus erythropoiesis stimulating agent (ESA) therapy.
Response: We thank the commenter for the recommendation and note
that Jesduvroq (daprodustat) is a HIF-PHI.\78\ CMS engages in ongoing
monitoring and analysis of the ESRD PPS to identify trends in
beneficiary health outcomes. An overview of the ESRD PPS claims-based
monitoring program is provided on the CMS website.\79\ CMS will
continue the claims-based monitoring in CY 2025, inclusive of all drugs
approved for the TDAPA. CMS intends to monitor anemia and
cardiovascular outcomes among beneficiaries using Jesduvroq
(daprodustat) and ESAs.
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\78\ Jesduvroq Prescribing Information. Accessed October 10,
2024. Available at: https://gskpro.com/content/dam/global/hcpportal/en_US/Prescribing_Information/Jesdvroq/pdf/JESDUVROQ-PI-MG.PDF.
\79\ ESRD Prospective Payment System (ESRD PPS) Claims-Based
Monitoring Program-Overview of 2010-2022 Claims-Based Monitoring
Program. Accessed September 13, 2024. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/medicare/medicare-fee-for-service-payment/esrdpayment/esrd-claims-based-monitoring.
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III. Final CY 2025 Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to
Individuals With AKI
A. Background
The Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015 (TPEA) (Pub. L. 114-27)
was enacted on June 29, 2015, and amended the Act to provide coverage
and payment for dialysis furnished by an ESRD facility to an individual
with AKI. Specifically, section 808(a) of the TPEA amended section
1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act to provide coverage for renal dialysis
services furnished on or after January 1, 2017, by a renal dialysis
facility or a provider of services paid under section 1881(b)(14) of
the Act to an individual with AKI. Section 808(b) of the TPEA amended
section 1834 of the Act by adding a subsection (r) to provide payment,
beginning January 1, 2017, for renal dialysis services furnished by
renal dialysis facilities or providers of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to individuals with AKI at the ESRD PPS base
rate, as adjusted by any applicable geographic adjustment applied under
section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act and adjusted (on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section 1834(r) of the Act) by any
other adjustment factor under section 1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act that
the Secretary elects.
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized several coverage
and payment policies to implement subsection (r) of section 1834 of the
Act and the amendments to section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act, including
the payment rate for AKI dialysis (81 FR 77866 through 77872 and
77965). We interpret section 1834(r)(1) of the Act as requiring the
amount of payment for AKI dialysis services to be the base rate for
renal dialysis services determined for a year under the ESRD PPS base
rate as set forth in Sec. 413.220, updated by the ESRD bundled market
basket percentage increase factor minus a productivity adjustment as
set forth in Sec. 413.196(d)(1), adjusted for wages as set forth in
Sec. 413.231, and adjusted by any other amounts deemed appropriate by
the Secretary under Sec. 413.373. We codified this policy in Sec.
413.372 (81 FR 77965).
B. Public Comments and Responses on the Proposal To Allow Medicare
Payment for Home Dialysis for Beneficiaries With AKI
1. Background
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule, we indicated that we did not
expect beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze at
[[Page 89164]]
home; therefore, the home dialysis benefit was not extended to
beneficiaries with AKI (81 FR 77870). There were commenters who
advocated for beneficiaries to have the option to dialyze in a home
setting, particularly those beneficiaries who started peritoneal
dialysis (PD) in the hospital and desired to continue PD after
discharge. However, other commenters indicated that beneficiaries with
AKI needed close supervision during dialysis. Additionally, some
commenters indicated that dialysis for AKI is a short-term treatment,
and beneficiaries would not have time to learn to administer a home
therapy. Therefore, we finalized the AKI payment policy in the CY 2017
ESRD PPS final rule as proposed without extending the AKI benefit to
home dialysis beneficiaries. We indicated that we would gather data on
the AKI beneficiary population and the extent of home training
necessary to safely self-administer dialysis in the home, and that we
would consider the use of home dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI in
the future as we find that it may be beneficial for subsets of
beneficiaries.
In past years we have received comments regarding the site of renal
dialysis services for Medicare beneficiaries with AKI, with the most
recent comments received in response to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed
rule to update to the AKI dialysis payment rate (88 FR 76433). We have
monitored data for beneficiaries with AKI and researched data in
journal articles discussing the potential to expand dialysis for
beneficiaries with AKI to a home setting, as noted in the CY 2017 ESRD
PPS final rule (81 FR 77871).
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule, we clarified that the ESRD
Facility CfCs apply to ESRD facilities, not to ESRD beneficiaries, and
noted that the ESRD facility CfCs would be the appropriate regulatory
location for standards addressing care provided to beneficiaries with
AKI in ESRD facilities. We finalized a policy that our CfCs would not
need to be revised to address the provision of dialysis treatment to
beneficiaries with AKI (81 FR 77871 through 77872).
In December 2020, CMS's data contractor held a TEP that considered
data related to utilization review and cost of AKI treatments since
2017. The TEP solicited input regarding how reported costs align with
realized costs of treatment for beneficiaries with AKI. During the TEP,
participants suggested that we extend Medicare payment for
beneficiaries with AKI to allow them to dialyze in a home setting.
Additionally, the TEP indicated that beneficiaries with AKI could
benefit from different treatment regimens. The TEP noted that more
frequent, gentler dialysis with a lower ultrafiltration rate would be a
viable option for some beneficiaries. Members of the panel commented on
the similar treatment frequencies observed for beneficiaries with AKI
and ESRD, stating that the payment system is currently constructed to
facilitate the standard treatment plan for beneficiaries with AKI.
Panelists recommended that the ESRD PPS should be flexible in terms of
number of treatments for beneficiaries with AKI, so that those who need
more frequent treatments are not impeded from receiving them. Panelists
related instances of hospitals starting a patient on PD, which can be
done frequently in the home setting, only to convert the patient to a
more standard treatment regimen such as three in-center hemodialysis
treatments per week before discharging the patient to a dialysis
facility. Panelists also advocated that we provide Medicare payment for
beneficiaries with AKI to be treated at home.
We solicited comments regarding potentially modifying the site of
renal dialysis services for beneficiaries with AKI and payment for AKI
in the home setting as a RFI in the CY 2022 ESRD PPS proposed rule (86
FR 36322, 36408). We received 16 comments from LDOs, patient advocacy
groups, professional organizations, small dialysis organization within
a large non-profit health system, and non-profit organizations. Most of
the comments favored providing a payment option for beneficiaries with
AKI to dialyze in a home setting; however, some commenters expressed
concerns about doing so. A small dialysis organization within a large
non-profit health system indicated that beneficiaries with AKI may have
chronic kidney disease at a lesser stage, such as, Stage 3 or Stage 4
chronic kidney disease (CKD) rather than ESRD; however, the AKI makes
dialysis necessary. This commenter noted that if the AKI were to cause
the beneficiary's underlying Stage 3 or Stage 4 CKD to progress to ESRD
in the future, training them to use a home modality during the AKI
episode could prepare the patient for a home modality if they are
diagnosed as having ESRD. One LDO indicated there is evidence that PD,
which is typically used in the home setting, is associated with better
preservation of residual kidney function compared to hemodialysis. A
national organization of beneficiaries and kidney health care
professionals advocated that PD may be learned quickly, reduces rapid
hemodynamic changes that may potentiate kidney injury and impede
recovery, and does not require a high-risk central venous catheter to
provide treatment. We note that these comments are specific to PD as a
treatment modality; however, when considering such a policy we would
include payment for both PD and hemodialysis (HD) in the home setting
for beneficiaries with AKI, consistent with our payment policy for home
dialysis for patients with ESRD.
Most recently, as noted in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR
76433), we received 10 public comments on our proposal to update the
payment rate for renal dialysis services furnished to individuals with
AKI. Commenters included a coalition of dialysis organizations, a non-
profit dialysis organization, a trade association, a renal product
development company, and multiple large dialysis organizations. Most of
the commenters requested that we allow payment for beneficiaries with
AKI to select home dialysis modalities by changing the current policy,
even though it was not proposed in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS proposed rule.
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we acknowledged there have
been concerns in the past regarding the safety of beneficiaries with
AKI dialyzing at home (89 FR 55806). However, we explained that we
carefully reviewed the totality of the information and evidence
presented to the agency and now recognize that current information
regarding beneficiaries with AKI dialyzing in a home setting supports
more frequent dialysis at a lower ultrafiltration rate. We stated that
the ability to dialyze at a lower ultrafiltration rate supports a
decrease in hemodynamic fluctuation and the complications associated
with it, which in turn support recovery of kidney function.
2. Technical Analysis
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we noted that although there
is only limited research regarding the use of home dialysis for the
treatment of AKI, several studies support the use of home dialysis to
generally improve access to dialysis and provide care that better meets
patient needs (89 FR 55806 through 55807). We noted that many of the
studies related to home dialysis in the AKI patient population use PD
as the treatment modality, which we explained is consistent with
comments received during the December 2020 TEP and comments received
during rulemaking as noted previously. Additionally, we stated that
data from the United States Renal Data System (USRDS) Annual Data
Report (ADR),
[[Page 89165]]
indicated the percentage of incident dialysis patients performing home
HD was only 0.4 percent in 2021, and a significant majority of dialysis
patients performing home dialysis chose PD.\80\ We stated that we
believe the choice of a home modality would be comparable in the
beneficiary population for those with AKI as those initiating chronic
maintenance dialysis for ESRD. However, we affirmed that payment would
be provided for either modality of home dialysis. For example, PD was
used frequently for patients during the COVID-19 PHE due to challenging
situations such as supply shortages, staffing shortages, and limited
surgical availability for the placement of a venous access. In the
proposed rule, we noted that a multicenter, retrospective,
observational study of 94 patients who received acute PD in New York
City in the spring of 2020 indicated that rapid deployment of acute PD
was feasible. We stated that the rates of death and renal recovery were
like those of patients with AKI requiring kidney replacement therapy
(KRT) in other cohorts. Of those who were discharged on dialysis, four
were discharged on PD, and one was discharged on HD.\81\
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\80\ Annual Data Report [verbar] USRDS (nih.gov), https://usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/end-stage-renal-disease/2-home-dialysis.
\81\ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0085253821004567.
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We further noted that the International Society for Peritoneal
Dialysis (ISPD) reiterated in the 2020 guidelines, updated from the
2014 guidelines for PD in AKI, that PD should be considered a suitable
modality for treatment of AKI in all settings. This was a strong
recommendation from the ISPD based on evidence rated at the second
highest level used by ISPD.\82\ Researchers found little to no
difference between PD and hemodialysis in all-cause mortality, recovery
of kidney function, or infection as a complication.\83\ We noted that
this finding was augmented by an article that reviewed the resurgence
of PD for the treatment of AKI since the COVID-19 PHE. The article
listed cost effectiveness, low infrastructure requirements, ease of
staff training, and more rapid recovery of renal function as benefits
to the use of PD to treat AKI. We identified a survey of nephrologists
from three international conferences which reported that 50.8 percent
and 36.4 percent of respondents stated that PD was suitable for
treating AKI in the wards and ICU, respectively. We found that PD is
the predominant therapy used to treat pediatric patients with AKI, and
until the mid to late 1990s was the predominant therapy to treat adults
with AKI, but the use of this therapy has waned since the advent of
pump driven continuous kidney replacement therapy.\84\
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\82\ https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0896860820970834.
\83\ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29199769/.
\84\ https://academic.oup.com/ckj/article/16/2/210/6696026.
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We noted that most studies regarding recovery of kidney function in
patients with AKI were based around hospitalized patients. We further
noted that there were very limited studies suggesting that self-care
dialysis can yield faster recovery of kidney function; however, the
results were not conclusive.\85\ We identified that one study of
hospitalized patients with AKI indicated that a median of 10 patients
recovered kidney function more quickly utilizing PD.\86\ We noticed
another study of hospitalized patients with AKI that indicated that
while the recovery of kidney function was similar in PD and HD (28 and
26 percent) there was a significantly shorter time to the recovery of
kidney function for patients with AKI that utilized PD.\87\
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\85\ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4594060/.
\86\ https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1111/1744-9987.12660.
\87\ https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0085253815528664.
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We identified additional information from CMS AKI monitoring data,
in which we found that current provision of AKI dialysis is very
similar to the provision of ESRD dialysis. Data noted in the 2021
Quarter 4 public use file (PUF) \88\ for AKI showed that hemoglobin for
beneficiaries with ESRD averaged 10.6 gm/dL while the average
hemoglobin for beneficiaries with AKI averaged 9 gm/dL. Although the
data further suggested that beneficiaries with AKI were less likely to
be prescribed an ESA than patients with ESRD, we identified research
that indicated that patients using PD have a lower rate of anemia that
those using HD. Additionally, patients receiving PD require lower doses
of ESAs and iron than patients receiving HD.\89\ We observed that this
might indicate that dialyzing in a home environment could be effective
to manage anemia in beneficiaries with AKI more appropriately, as the
USRDS ADR indicated incident patients with ESRD typically choose PD as
a home modality over home HD.\90\ We stated that we believed that
beneficiaries with AKI would make similar choices. Furthermore, the AKI
PUF data showed that approximately 8 percent of beneficiaries with ESRD
experienced incidences of fluid overload, while beneficiaries with AKI
experienced episodes for which congestive heart failure was reported
within 30, 60, and 90 days (which can be related to fluid overload) at
rates of around 42 percent, 50 percent, and 53 percent,
respectively.\91\ This data was concerning because fluid overload in
beneficiaries with AKI can be detrimental to recovering kidney
function. Additionally, this data supported conclusions drawn from an
article involving the review of 1754 patients with AKI requiring
dialysis. The article indicated that treatment protocols for patients
with AKI were like those of incident ESRD patients despite the
underlying differences in treatment goals. The article further
indicated that most patients with AKI who recovered had discontinued
dialysis without ever having been weaned from their initial dialysis
prescription, suggesting there may be substantial opportunity to wean
dialysis sooner.\92\ We continue to support the significant need to
individualize the treatment of every kidney patient, but particularly
beneficiaries with AKI, as this omission could result in a missed
opportunity to recover kidney function.
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\88\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renal-disease-esrd/esrd-prospective-payment-system-esrd-pps-overview-claims-based-monitoring-program.
\89\ https://academic.oup.com/ckj/article/16/12/2493/7210548.
\90\ Annual Data Report [verbar] USRDS (nih.gov), https://usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/end-stage-renal-disease/2-home-dialysis.
\91\ https://www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/prospective-payment-systems/end-stage-renal-disease-esrd/esrd-prospective-payment-system-esrd-pps-overview-claims-based-monitoring-program.
\92\ https://journals.lww.com/jasn/abstract/2023/12000/initial_management_and_potential_opportunities_to.9.aspx.
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We stated that we believed the proposal to provide payment for
beneficiaries with AKI to dialyze in a home setting aligns closely with
the CMS Strategic Pillars \93\ of expanding access, engaging the ESRD
community by being responsive to TEPs and RFIs, and driving innovation
to promote patient centered care. We did not have utilization data for
beneficiaries with AKI using a home modality available, but we used the
USRDS ADR, which indicated that disparities currently exist for self-
care dialysis in the home setting for the ESRD beneficiary population,
with fewer African American/Black and Hispanic beneficiaries choosing a
home dialysis modality. Additionally, fewer Medicare and Medicaid dual
eligible
[[Page 89166]]
beneficiaries choose a home dialysis modality.\94\ We noted that the
ability for beneficiaries with AKI to choose self-care dialysis in a
home setting would offer a pathway to reduce these current disparities
(insofar as the AKI population mirrors the ESRD beneficiary population)
by promoting access to treatment, as well as removing a disparity in
care between AKI beneficiaries and ESRD beneficiaries. We continue to
believe it is crucial that the policy revisions to payment for AKI
renal dialysis consider health equity and the effects on underserved
populations. We identified that the rate of AKI was about 81 percent
higher among African American/Black beneficiaries than among White
beneficiaries.\95\ We noted that we had reviewed comments and concerns
from interested parties and agreed that home dialysis could benefit
beneficiaries with AKI. We noted that issues with fluid management
could be managed with more frequent, gentler modalities, such as PD. We
stated that we trusted that providing an avenue to expand treatment
modalities would encourage individualized and patient-centered
treatment plans for beneficiaries with AKI, for example, addressing
anemia and ESA management. We will continue to monitor outcomes for
beneficiaries with AKI with the expectation that AKI PUF are being
reviewed in quality improvement efforts by ESRD facilities that provide
services to beneficiaries with AKI.
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\93\ https://www.cms.gov/about-cms/what-we-do/cms-strategic-plan.
\94\ https://usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/end-stage-renal-disease/2-home-dialysis.
\95\ Annual Data Report [verbar] USRDS (nih.gov), https://usrds-adr.niddk.nih.gov/2023/chronic-kidney-disease/4-acute-kidney-injury.
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3. Home Dialysis Benefit for Beneficiaries With AKI
As we explained in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR
55806), we did not extend the home dialysis benefit to beneficiaries
with AKI when we initially implemented the benefit (81 FR 77870).
However, as discussed in the proposed rule (89 FR 55806 and 55807), we
reviewed AKI monitoring data that showed the outcomes for anemia, ESA
use, and fluid management are not necessarily reflective of the
specific, individualized care, and close supervision by qualified staff
currently required during the in-center dialysis process. We further
noted that research demonstrated the use of PD correlated with positive
outcomes for fluid management and a lower rate of anemia with less
utilization of ESAs and iron. In the proposed rule we indicated that
research related to home dialysis in the AKI patient population has
primarily discussed results using PD as the modality; however, we would
provide payment for either PD or HD as a home modality. We noted our
goal was for beneficiaries with AKI to receive the necessary care to
improve their condition, recover kidney function, and be weaned from
dialysis treatment. We also noted that the literature exhibits a high
correlation between the use of PD treatment for beneficiaries with AKI
and positive outcomes for fluid management, infection rates, mortality,
and recovery of kidney function.\96\ Additionally, we reviewed research
that demonstrated that the use of PD to manage the care of
beneficiaries with AKI as a result of COVID-19 was successful and that
beneficiaries who had successfully begun a treatment regime that could
transition from the hospital to a home modality should not have to
change treatment to an in-center treatment modality.
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\96\ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29199769/.
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We proposed, based on the current research we cited (89 FR 55806
through 55807), to extend the home dialysis benefit as defined at 42
CFR 410.52 to beneficiaries with AKI for either PD or HD. As discussed
in section III.C.1 of this final rule, we proposed that the payment
amount for home dialysis for AKI beneficiaries would be the same as the
payment amount for in-center dialysis for AKI beneficiaries, consistent
with payment parity within the ESRD PPS. This payment amount would be
the ESRD PPS base rate, adjusted for geographic area, as described in
section III.C.2 of this final rule. Additionally, as discussed in
section III.C.3 of this final rule, we proposed to extend the training
add-on payment adjustment for home and self-dialysis training in the
same amount as for patients with ESRD, on a budget neutral basis. We
proposed to revise Sec. 413.373, which currently states ``The payment
rate for AKI dialysis may be adjusted by the Secretary (on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section 1834(r)) by any other
adjustment factor under subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act,'' by adding paragraph (a) before ``The payment rate'' that reads
``CMS applies the wage-adjusted add-on per treatment adjustment for
home and self-dialysis training as set forth at Sec. 413.235(c) to
payments for AKI dialysis claims that include such training.'' We
proposed to move the current language to paragraph (b) with a technical
revision to add ``of the Act'' after ``section 1834(r)''. Furthermore,
as discussed in section III.D of this final rule, we proposed changes
to the ESRD facility CfCs that would accommodate the provision of home
dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI and help ensure safe and high-
quality care for Medicare beneficiaries in this setting.
We proposed to amend Sec. 410.52 to provide Medicare payment for
the treatment of patients with AKI in the home setting. We proposed to
revise Sec. 410.52 to read ``Medicare Part B pays for the following
services, supplies, and equipment furnished to a patient with ESRD or
an individual with Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in Sec.
413.371 of this chapter in his or her home:'' by striking the words
``an ESRD patient'' after ``to'' and adding the words ``a patient with
ESRD or an individual with Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in
Sec. 413.371 of this chapter'' after ``to''. We also proposed to
revise Sec. 413.374(a) to read: ``The AKI dialysis payment rate
applies to renal dialysis services (as defined in subparagraph (B) of
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act) furnished under Part B by a renal
dialysis facility or provider of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act, including home services, supplies, and
equipment, and self-dialysis.''
We invited public comment on our proposal for extending the home
dialysis benefit to beneficiaries with AKI. Approximately 27 commenters
including LDOs; regional health systems; a home dialysis services
provider; a coalition of dialysis organizations; a provider advocacy
organization; a non-profit dialysis association; an advocacy group for
people living with a serious illness; a non-profit organization of ESRD
networks; a non-profit organization for environmental health and
justice; a professional organization of pediatric nephrologists; a
professional organization of nephrologists; a home dialysis stakeholder
alliance; a national organization of patients and kidney health care
professionals; a hospital association; a non-profit kidney care
alliance; a non-profit kidney organization; device manufacturers; a
patient-led dialysis organization; and ESRD patients commented on the
proposed regulation. The following is a summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Many commenters were overwhelmingly in favor of the
proposal to extend the home dialysis benefit to beneficiaries with AKI.
The commenters agreed that while evidence is limited, experience from
the COVID-19 PHE supports modifying payment policy to ensure home
modalities would be available for appropriate patients with AKI. A
patient with ESRD spoke to the
[[Page 89167]]
importance the proposal would have in empowering beneficiaries, in
reducing their travel burden, and in enhancing their general quality-
of-life. A LDO expressed they were ``excited,'' and a home dialysis
services provider expressed their ``enthusiastic support'' for the
proposed policy change. Some commenters indicated that the proposal is
an important step forward in mitigating health disparities.
Additionally, some commenters expressed that providing patients with
AKI access to home modalities, particularly PD, could support recovery
of kidney function because of positive clinical outcomes. A few
commenters spoke about the quality-of-life benefits and the positive
move toward patient-centered care the proposal could generate. One
commenter agreed that there are safety concerns surrounding home
dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI, but that these can be mitigated
with appropriate training. Finally, some commenters indicated that
training beneficiaries with AKI for a home dialysis modality could be
beneficial if the beneficiary did not recover kidney function and
progressed to having ESRD.
Response: CMS appreciates the support from commenters for the
proposal to extend the home dialysis benefit with appropriate training
to beneficiaries with AKI. We agree with commenters that extending the
home dialysis benefit with appropriate training to beneficiaries with
AKI could advance positive outcomes for beneficiaries who choose a home
dialysis modality.
Comment: A hospital association expressed confusion about the
frequency of care received by chronic maintenance home dialysis
patients and by extension the frequency of care a patient with AKI
could receive in the home setting. Additionally, the same commenter
indicated concern that the proposed rule does not include treatment of
transplant patients with late graft recovery in the AKI definition.
Response: A beneficiary with AKI and their health care provider
would still determine the best frequency of care. CMS would provide
payment for home dialysis treatments furnished to AKI beneficiaries at
the ESRD PPS base rate determined for the year under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act, as statutorily required at section 1834(r)(1)
of the Act. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule CMS explained that home
dialysis treatments are paid the same rate as in-center treatments (75
FR 49058). Additionally, CY 2011 ESRD final rule provided an
explanation that a week of home dialysis is converted into three
equivalent in-center HD treatments. In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule
we stated that there is no weekly limit on the number of dialysis
treatments that will be paid for beneficiaries with AKI (81 FR 77867).
AKI is defined statutorily at section 1834(r)(2) of the Act. CMS cannot
change the definition of AKI to include beneficiaries who have had a
kidney transplant that experience late graft recovery. Beneficiaries
that have had a transplant are still covered under the ESRD benefit for
three years post-transplant. Therefore, the beneficiary that had a
transplant could dialyze in an outpatient ESRD facility under the ESRD
benefit.
Comment: One commenter questioned how to use CPT codes such as
90945 (Dialysis procedure other than hemodialysis) and 90947 (Dialysis
procedure other than hemodialysis requiring repeated evaluations by a
physician or other qualified health care professional, with or without
substantial revisions of dialysis prescription) when billing for home
dialysis rather than in-center.
Response: We refer the commenter to the Medicare Claims Processing
Manual Chapter 8 Sec. 170, which indicates that codes 90935, 90937,
90945, or 90947 are only used if the place of service on the claim is
an inpatient hospital. This is because all physicians' outpatient
renal-related services are included in payment made under the monthly
capitation payment.\97\
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Final Rule Action: After consideration of the comments received, we
are finalizing our proposal to extend the home dialysis benefit to
beneficiaries with AKI, as proposed. Accordingly, we are finalizing our
proposal to revise Sec. 410.52 to read: ``Medicare Part B pays for the
following services, supplies, and equipment furnished to a patient with
ESRD or an individual with Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in
Sec. 413.371 of this chapter in his or her home.'' We are also
finalizing our proposal to revise Sec. 413.374(a) to read: ``The AKI
dialysis payment rate applies to renal dialysis services (as defined in
subparagraph (B) of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act) furnished under
Part B by a renal dialysis facility or provider of services paid under
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, including home services, supplies, and
equipment, and self-dialysis.''
C. Annual Payment Rate Update for CY 2025
1. CY 2025 AKI Dialysis Payment Rate
The payment rate for AKI dialysis is the ESRD PPS base rate
determined for a year under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, which is
the finalized ESRD PPS base rate, including the applicable annual
market basket update, geographic wage adjustments, and any other
discretionary adjustments, for such year. We note that ESRD facilities
could bill Medicare for non-renal dialysis items and services and
receive separate payment in addition to the payment rate for AKI
dialysis. As discussed in section II.B.4 of this final rule, the final
ESRD PPS base rate is $273.82, which reflects the application of the CY
2025 wage index budget-neutrality adjustment factor of 0.988600 and the
CY 2025 ESRDB market basket percentage increase of 2.7 percent reduced
by the productivity adjustment of 0.5 percentage point, that is, 2.2
percent. Accordingly, we are finalizing a CY 2025 per treatment payment
rate of $273.82 (($271.02 x 0. 988600) x 1.022 = $273.82) for renal
dialysis services furnished by ESRD facilities to individuals with AKI.
Additionally, we have applied a $0.00 budget neutrality adjustment to
the AKI per treatment base rate as discussed in section III.C.3 of this
final rule to address the training add-on payment adjustment for home
dialysis modalities in the AKI beneficiary population. We did not
receive specific comments related to the CY 2025 AKI dialysis payment
rate. We discuss general comments on the ESRD PPS base rate in section
II.B.4 of this final rule, and we discuss comments related to the
budget neutrality reduction to the AKI payment rate to account for the
training add-on payment adjustment in section III.C.3 of this final
rule.
2. Geographic Adjustment Factor
Under section 1834(r)(1) of the Act and regulations at Sec.
413.372, the amount of payment for AKI dialysis services is the base
rate for renal dialysis services determined for a year under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act (updated by the ESRDB market basket percentage
increase and reduced by the productivity adjustment), as adjusted by
any applicable geographic adjustment factor applied under section
1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act. Accordingly, we apply the same wage
index under Sec. 413.231 that is used under the ESRD PPS. As discussed
in section II.B.2.b of this final rule, we are finalizing a new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, which utilizes BLS OEWS
[[Page 89168]]
data and freestanding ESRD facility cost report data. We proposed to
use this same methodology when adjusting AKI dialysis payments to ESRD
facilities, consistent with our historical practice of using the ESRD
PPS wage index for AKI dialysis payments. The AKI dialysis payment rate
is adjusted by the wage index for a particular ESRD facility in the
same way that the ESRD PPS base rate is adjusted by the wage index for
that ESRD facility (81 FR 77868). Specifically, we apply the wage index
to the labor-related share of the ESRD PPS base rate that we utilize
for AKI dialysis to compute the wage adjusted per-treatment AKI
dialysis payment rate. We also apply the wage index policies regarding
the 0.600 wage index floor (87 FR 67161 through 67166) and the 5
percent cap on wage index decreases (87 FR 67159 through 67161) to AKI
dialysis payments to ESRD facilities. ESRD facilities would utilize the
same staff to provide renal dialysis services to and educate
beneficiaries with AKI as those beneficiaries with ESRD. Therefore,
utilizing the same wage index methodology would be appropriate in
accordance with Sec. 413.372, which addresses the payment rate for AKI
dialysis and refers to Sec. 413.231 for the wage adjustment. As stated
previously, we are finalizing a CY 2025 AKI dialysis payment rate of
$273.82, adjusted by the ESRD facility's wage index. We did not receive
specific comments related to the CY 2025 AKI geographic adjustment
factor. We discuss general comments related to the new ESRD PPS wage
index methodology in section II.B.2 of this final rule.
3. Other Adjustments to the AKI Payment Rate
Section 1834(r)(1) of the Act also provides that the payment rate
for AKI dialysis may be adjusted by the Secretary (on a budget neutral
basis for payments under section 1834(r)) by any other adjustment
factor under subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act. As
discussed in the previous section of this final rule, we proposed to
extend AKI dialysis payment to home dialysis.
As we explained in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR
55807), we considered our existing payment policies for home dialysis
for beneficiaries with ESRD in implementing payment for home dialysis
in the AKI patient population. In the CY 2011 ESRD PPS final rule, we
explained that although we included payments for providing training to
beneficiaries in computing the ESRD PPS base rate, we agreed with
commenters that we should pay for home dialysis training as a training
add-on payment adjustment under the ESRD PPS to account for the cost of
providing training to beneficiaries on the use of home dialysis
modalities. Thus, we finalized the home dialysis training add-on
payment adjustment of $33.44 per treatment as an additional payment
made under the ESRD PPS when one-on-one home dialysis training is
furnished by a nurse for either hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis
training and retraining (75 FR 49063). We clarified our policy on
payment for home dialysis training again in the CY 2013 ESRD PPS final
rule, in which we stated that training costs are included in the ESRD
PPS base rate; however, we also provide a training add-on payment
adjustment for each home and self-dialysis training treatment furnished
by a Medicare-certified home dialysis training facility (77 FR 67468).
We explained in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule that it is not the
intent of the training add-on payment adjustment to reimburse a
facility for all of the training costs furnished during training
treatments. Rather, the single ESRD PPS base rate, all applicable case-
mix and facility-level adjustments, as well as the add-on payment
should be considered the Medicare payment for each training treatment
and not the training add-on payment alone (81 FR 77854).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule we considered making payment
for home dialysis for beneficiaries with AKI under the ESRD PPS base
rate without a training add-on payment adjustment for home modality
training (89 FR 55807). As we noted in section III.A. of the final
rule, the ESRD PPS base rate upon which the AKI dialysis payment rate
is established contains monies for training related costs. However, we
stated in the proposed rule (89 FR 55809) that we are concerned that
not providing a home and self-dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment for AKI dialysis may limit access to home dialysis care for
the AKI beneficiary population. As previously noted, incorporation of
an adjustment factor under subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14) of
the Act into AKI dialysis payments must be done on a budget neutral
basis for payments under section 1834(r) of the Act. Therefore, we
stated that establishing a training add-on payment adjustment for
training for home and self-care dialysis could have an impact on the
AKI base rate.
As discussed in the proposed rule, we reviewed options for applying
budget neutrality to a home and self-dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment for beneficiaries with AKI. We considered applying a budget
neutrality adjustment factor by reducing the AKI dialysis payment rate
amount (which is based on the ESRD PPS base rate and is then adjusted
for wages according to Sec. 413.372) for renal dialysis services
provided to patients with AKI to account for the training add-on
payment adjustment. We provided an example for a potential calculation
based on ESRD PPS data in the proposed rule (89 FR 55809).
Additionally, we noted our concern that a decrease in the AKI dialysis
payment rate to account for the home dialysis training add-on payment
adjustment might create a disincentive for ESRD facilities to treat
beneficiaries with AKI. We welcomed comments regarding budget
neutralizing the home dialysis training add-on payment adjustment and
solicited comments on other venues where beneficiaries might receive
training for a home dialysis modality (89 FR 55809).
We proposed, in accordance with section 1834(r)(1) of the Act and
Sec. 413.373, to extend the home and self-dialysis training add-on
payment adjustment under Sec. 413.235(c) to payments for renal
dialysis services provided to beneficiaries with AKI using a home
modality. We proposed to make payment for a home and self-dialysis
training add-on payment adjustment at the same amount currently
applicable under the ESRD PPS of $95.60 with a limit of 15 training
treatments for PD and a limit of 25 training treatments for HD per
patient excluding retraining sessions (75 FR 49063). Additional
information regarding the maximum number of training treatments for
which CMS provides payment under the ESRD PPS is located in the
Medicare Claims Processing Manual.\98\ We requested data, either actual
or estimated, regarding the number of training sessions provided to
beneficiaries with AKI and the number of beneficiaries with AKI using a
home modality (89 FR 55809) to use this information to make a
determination on a training add-on payment adjustment in the CY 2025
ESRD PPS final rule or in future rulemaking for subsequent years.
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We invited public comment on our proposal for a payment adjustment
for training of beneficiaries with AKI that elect to dialyze in a home
setting. Approximately 27 commenters including LDOs; a coalition of
dialysis organizations; a regional health system; a provider advocacy
organization; a non-profit dialysis association; and a
[[Page 89169]]
home dialysis stakeholder alliance commented on the proposed payment
adjustment for training of beneficiaries with AKI that elect to dialyze
in a home setting. The following is a summary of the public comments
received on these proposals and our responses.
Comment: Several commenters stated concerns regarding budget
neutrality. The commenters indicated that they believe the home
dialysis training add-on payment adjustment was previously budget
neutralized in the ESRD PPS CY 2017 final rule. Additionally, they
stated that they believe ESRD facilities that have provided services to
beneficiaries with AKI have been underpaid since the budget
neutralization in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule. A few of the
commenters indicated that beneficiaries with AKI that progressed to
ESRD would already have received training for home dialysis and would
not need to receive training as a beneficiary with ESRD. They believed
this satisfied the budget neutrality requirement. Additionally, some
commenters urged that CMS delay implementation of budget neutrality for
these training add-on payment adjustments for AKI beneficiaries until
sufficient data was collected on home utilization in the AKI
beneficiary population.
Response: We appreciate the concerns of commenters that believe the
training add-on payment adjustment was previously budget neutralized
and therefore budget neutrality should not be a factor in this rule. We
find that interpretation to be inconsistent with the statute because it
would result in increased total AKI payments for CY 2025 relative to
what they would be if CMS did not incorporate the training add-on
payment adjustment. CMS rejected this premise in the ESRD PPS CY 2017
final rule where we indicated we interpret the payment rate for AKI to
be the finalized base payment rate for ESRD, as the statute was clear
that the payment rate for AKI dialysis must be the ESRD PPS base rate
determined for a year under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act (81 FR
77867). CMS is compelled by section 1834(r)(1) of the Act to apply
budget neutrality to the AKI payment to maintain total payments under
section 1834(r) of the Act when incorporating an adjustment factor
under subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act.
CMS appreciates the commenters that expressed that training
beneficiaries with AKI for home dialysis would offset the training for
the beneficiaries who progress to ESRD. However, the beneficiaries who
progress to ESRD would be eligible for the onset add-on payment
adjustment, since both the training add-on payment adjustment and onset
add-on payment adjustment cannot be applied at the same time (75 FR
49063). Furthermore, we would not rule out that some beneficiaries with
AKI might require retraining after their disease progresses to ESRD. We
do not believe that training beneficiaries to perform self-dialysis
would create budget neutrality if their disease should progress to
ESRD. Additionally, we appreciate the commenter who suggested that
budget neutrality be delayed until sufficient data was collected.
However, this would not be consistent with our general interpretation
of statutes requiring budget neutrality, such as section 1834(r)(1) of
the Act, as payments would increase for CY 2025. Generally, when we
implement policies within the ESRD PPS budget neutrally, we do so based
on estimates for the rulemaking year rather than retrospectively, and
we do not adjust such adjustment post-hoc. For example, when we
implemented the LVPA in CY 2011 we applied a budget-neutrality
adjustment factor to the CY 2011 ESRD PPS base rate which accounted for
all budget-neutral payment adjustments, including the LVPA, by holding
total estimated payments for CY 2011 constant (75 FR 49194). Because
this downward adjustment to the CY 2011 ESRD PPS base rate carried
forward into future years (in which the base rate is only increased by
the applicable annual market basket increase), it continues to offset
the spending associated with those budget-neutral payment adjustments
in future years as well.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that CMS had over-
estimated the utilization of home modalities in the AKI beneficiary
population. These commenters believe that providers and patients would
need time to receive education about beneficiaries with AKI receiving
dialysis in a home setting and that growth would be slow. These
commenters believe that because of the over-estimation of utilization
there is the potential to disincentivize ESRD facilities from providing
services to beneficiaries with AKI. Additionally, some of the
commenters indicated that CMS had over-estimated the number of training
sessions that would be required for beneficiaries with AKI to
successfully manage a home modality. These commenters indicated that
initial training for a home dialysis modality may be provided while the
beneficiary is hospitalized. They indicated that beneficiaries with AKI
would likely only require 5 to 6 training sessions to successfully
manage a home dialysis modality.
Response: We appreciate the commenters that provided information
regarding CMS's estimation of utilization in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55809). We agree with commenters that the majority
of beneficiaries with AKI who choose a home dialysis modality likely
will be those that transition from the hospital utilizing PD as their
home treatment modality. Additionally, we agree that utilization of
home modalities for beneficiaries with AKI will be dependent on
education to providers and patients. We have reviewed the available
data considering these comments and have made revisions to the
calculation for budget neutrality. After considering the comments on
the use of PD for AKI, we have determined that it would be more
reasonable to estimate utilization for home AKI based on in-center PD
utilization. We found that from 2017 through 2023, there were 10
beneficiaries with AKI that received PD in-center. For the calculation
of budget neutrality, this is approximately 2 beneficiaries with AKI
per year receiving PD. As we agree with commenters that beneficiaries
with AKI likely will receive partial training in the hospital to manage
the home dialysis modality, we will estimate 6 training treatments for
beneficiaries with AKI transitioning to a home modality. Lastly, as the
training add-on payment adjustment would be adjusted by the wage index
for the ESRD facility furnishing the training, we will multiply the
training add-on payment adjustment amount of $95.60 by the average wage
index for AKI, which is 1.0204. Using this data, we could estimate a
cost of training to be $1170.60 (2 x 6 x $95.60 x 1.0204) or $0.0042.
($1170.60/279,000) per AKI treatment. Since the per treatment budget
neutrality estimate would round to $0.00, we believe that applying this
amount of reduction to the AKI base payment will be negligible. While
budget neutrality was applied to the AKI base rate for home training
for beneficiaries with AKI, we note that the actual amount of the
reduction to the AKI payment per treatment rounds to $0.00, and
therefore the AKI CY 2025 base rate would be $273.82 ($273.82 - $0.00)
using this estimate. We plan to monitor data related to AKI including
the uptake of home dialysis. We may revisit the calculation for budget
neutrality as appropriate in the future.
Comment: One commenter suggested that training within a nursing
facility should be paid only if the patient was
[[Page 89170]]
transitioning to home dialysis outside of the nursing facility.
Response: We note the commenter addressed concerns regarding
training of beneficiaries with AKI in nursing facilities. CMS addressed
this in the ESRD PPS CY 2011 final rule. Nursing caregivers at nursing
facilities are not paid through the ESRD PPS (75 FR 49057). Therefore,
training provided by nursing caregivers at nursing facilities would not
be paid through the ESRD PPS. A nursing home resident that is
independently performing home dialysis treatments would be eligible for
a training add-on adjustment if there is the expectation the
beneficiary can successfully complete the training and perform self-
dialysis.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing our proposal to extend a
payment adjustment for training of beneficiaries with AKI that elect to
dialyze in a home setting, beginning January 1, 2025. Specifically, we
are finalizing our proposal to provide a payment for home dialysis
training and home dialysis modalities for beneficiaries with AKI, with
certain changes to the proposed methodology for calculating budget
neutrality. As discussed previously, we are finalizing the requirement
for a per-treatment budget neutrality reduction of $0.00 ($1146.84/
279,000) which would be applied to the AKI base payment rate. We are
codifying this requirement in regulation at Sec. 413.373. As discussed
in section III.C.3. of this final rule, we are finalizing the addition
of a wage-adjusted training add-on payment adjustment per treatment for
home and self-dialysis training as set forth at Sec. 413.235(c) to
payments for AKI dialysis claims. Furthermore, we are codifying in
regulation at Sec. 410.52, as discussed in section III.C.3. of this
final rule, to provide Medicare payment for the treatment of patients
with AKI in the home setting.
D. AKI and the ESRD Facility Conditions for Coverage
1. Statutory and Regulatory Background
ESRD is a kidney impairment that is irreversible and permanent.
Dialysis is a process for cleaning the blood and removing excess fluid
artificially with special equipment when the kidneys have failed.
People with ESRD require either a regular course of dialysis or kidney
transplantation to live. Given the high costs and absolute necessity of
transplantation or dialysis for people with failed kidneys, Medicare
provides health care coverage to qualifying individuals diagnosed with
ESRD, regardless of age, including coverage for kidney transplantation,
maintenance dialysis, and other health care needs. Acute kidney injury
(AKI) is different than ESRD; it is an acute decrease in kidney
function due to kidney damage or kidney failure that may require
dialysis. Unlike people with ESRD, most individuals with AKI who
require dialysis are expected to regain kidney function within three
months. People with either ESRD or AKI can receive outpatient dialysis
services from Medicare-certified ESRD facilities, also called dialysis
facilities.
The Medicare ESRD program became effective July 1, 1973, and
initially operated under interim regulations published in the Federal
Register on June 29, 1973 (38 FR 17210). In the July 1, 1975, Federal
Register (40 FR 27782), we published a proposed rule that proposed to
revise sections of the ESRD requirements. On June 3, 1976, the final
rule was published in the Federal Register (41 FR 22501). Subsequently,
the ESRD Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-292), amended title XVIII of
the Social Security Act (the Act) by adding section 1881. Sections
1881(b)(1) and 1881(f)(7) of the Act further authorize the Secretary to
prescribe health and safety requirements (known as conditions for
coverage or CfCs) that a facility providing dialysis and
transplantation services to dialysis patients must meet to qualify for
Medicare payment. In addition, section 1881(c) of the Act establishes
ESRD Network areas and Network organizations to assure that dialysis
patients are provided appropriate care. The ESRD facility CfCs were
first adopted in 1976 and comprehensively revised in 2008 (73 FR
20369). The Trade Preferences Extension Act of 2015 (TPEA) (Pub. L.
114-27) was enacted on June 29, 2015, and amended the Act to provide
coverage and payment for dialysis furnished by an ESRD facility to an
individual with AKI. Specifically, section 808(a) of the TPEA amended
section 1861(s)(2)(F) of the Act to provide coverage for renal dialysis
services furnished on or after January 1, 2017, by a renal dialysis
facility or a provider of services paid under section 1881(b)(14) of
the Act to an individual with AKI. Section 808(b) of the TPEA amended
section 1834 of the Act by adding a subsection (r) to provide payment,
beginning January 1, 2017, for renal dialysis services furnished by
renal dialysis facilities or providers of services paid under section
1881(b)(14) of the Act to individuals with AKI at the ESRD PPS base
rate, as adjusted by any applicable geographic adjustment applied under
section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv)(II) of the Act and adjusted (on a budget
neutral basis for payments under section 1834(r) of the Act) by any
other adjustment factor under section 1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act that
the Secretary elects.
Medicare pays for routine maintenance dialysis provided by
Medicare-certified ESRD facilities, also known as dialysis facilities.
To gain certification, the State survey agency or CMS-approved
accrediting organization performs an on-site survey of the facility to
determine if it meets the ESRD facility CfCs at 42 CFR part 494. If a
survey indicates that a facility is in compliance with the conditions,
and all other Federal requirements are met, CMS then certifies the
facility as qualifying for Medicare payment. Medicare payment for
outpatient maintenance dialysis is limited to facilities meeting these
conditions. As of March 2024, there are approximately 7,700 Medicare-
certified dialysis facilities in the United States,\99\ providing
dialysis services and specialized care to people with ESRD; 3,700 of
which provide home dialysis services, including training and
support.\100\
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The ESRD facility CfCs found at 42 CFR part 494, consist of the
health and safety standards that all Medicare participating dialysis
facilities must meet. These standards set baseline requirements for
patient safety, infection control, care planning, staff qualifications,
record keeping, and other matters to ensure that all patients with
kidney failure receive safe and appropriate care. In addition, the CfCs
require patients to be informed about all treatment modalities
(hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) and settings (home dialysis
modalities or in-facility hemodialysis) (Sec. 494.70(a)(7)). A
dialysis facility that is certified to provide services to home
patients must ensure that home dialysis services are at least
equivalent to those provided to in-facility patients and meet all
applicable conditions of Sec. 494.100. The patient's interdisciplinary
team must oversee training of the home dialysis patient, the designated
caregiver, or self-dialysis patient before the initiation of home
dialysis or self-dialysis (as defined in Sec. 494.10). Dialysis
facilities monitor home dialysis by documenting adequate comprehension
of the training; retrieving and reviewing complete self-monitoring data
and other information at least every two months; and
[[Page 89171]]
maintaining this information in the patient's medical record.
In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule (81 FR 77834), we clarified that
ESRD facility CfCs apply to ESRD facilities, not to people with ESRD,
and noted that the ESRD facility CfCs would be the appropriate
regulatory location for standards addressing care provided to
beneficiaries with AKI in ESRD facilities. While the language of the
ESRD facility CfCs does not directly address treatment of beneficiaries
with AKI, we believe that the current ESRD facility requirements are
sufficient to ensure that such patients are dialyzed safely. For
example, infection control protocols are the same for any individual
receiving hemodialysis, regardless of the cause or likely trajectory of
their kidney disfunction. For the areas in which care and care planning
may differ, such as frequency of certain patient assessments, we note
that the CfCs set baseline standards and do not limit additional or
more frequent services that may be necessary for beneficiaries with AKI
receiving temporary dialysis as they recover kidney function.
During the development of the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule, we did
not anticipate that beneficiaries with AKI would be candidates for home
dialysis due to the likely short-term duration of treatment and the
unique needs of AKI. Therefore, we did not propose to extend the home
dialysis benefit to beneficiaries with AKI at that time (81 FR 77870).
The initial concerns about the appropriateness of dialysis at home for
individuals with AKI have been allayed by the existing scientific
evidence of the effectiveness of that modality in this population. By
revising the CfCs to facilitate beneficiaries with AKI utilizing home
dialysis, we would increase patient options for renal replacement
treatment beyond in-center hemodialysis and better empower these
patients to make decisions about their care. We encourage readers to
refer to the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule for this detailed
discussion (CMS-1805-P).
2. Provisions of the Proposed Regulations and Analysis and Response to
Public Comments
In response to the proposed rule, we received 22 comments
pertaining to the expansion of home dialysis for AKI patients, with 6
comments specifically mentioning the conforming changes to the CfCs.
Commenters included patient care organizations, dialysis facilities,
and individual patients. To support treatment location choices for
individuals with AKI requiring dialysis and to align with the coverage
changes, we proposed conforming changes throughout the ESRD facility
CfCs at 42 CFR part 494. We noted that the phrase ``ESRD patients'' is
exclusive of beneficiaries with AKI, while phrase ``kidney failure'' is
inclusive of people whose kidney function is inadequate such that
dialysis is necessary to maintain or prolong life. This can be a
temporary (AKI) or permanent (ESRD) condition. Accordingly, we proposed
to amend the definitions of home dialysis and self-dialysis at
Sec. Sec. 494.10, 494.70(c)(1)(i), and 494.130 introductory text by
removing the descriptor ``ESRD.'' In addition, we proposed to amend the
following requirements: Sec. Sec. 494.70(a)(1) and (10) and 494.80
introductory texts by revising the phrase ``ESRD'' to say ``kidney
failure;'' Sec. 494.90(b)(4) by revising the phrase ``ESRD care'' to
say ``dialysis care;'' Sec. 494.100(a)(3)(i) by revising the phrase
``management of ESRD'' to say ``management of their kidney failure;''
Sec. 494.120 introductory text by revising the phrase ``serve ESRD
patients'' to say ``serve patients with kidney failure;'' and lastly
Sec. 494.170 introductory text by revising the phrase ``provider of
ESRD services'' to say ``provider of dialysis services.''
Comment: All the comments expressed support for the expansion of
coverage for home dialysis to beneficiaries with AKI, with a couple
specifically agreeing with the conforming changes in the CFCs.
Commenters cited many benefits including choosing hours that work best
for the patient, reducing travel burden (especially for patients in
rural areas), and saving on healthcare costs. In addition to increasing
access to home dialysis for all AKI patients, commenters indicated that
they believe this policy supports our goal to expand home dialysis
services for those AKI patients that proceed to ESRD. Commenters stated
that the provision would reduce health disparities associated with home
dialysis services. Commenters agreed that ``patient'' and ``kidney
failure'' are the appropriate terminology for the CfCs to encompass
both ESRD & AKI patients.
One commenter shared concerns about the safety of getting dialysis
at home for what will generally be a short or limited period. Another
commenter requested clarification on application of this policy to
residents of long-term care facilities.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and taking the time
to respond. We believe that patients with AKI are medically complex,
and the clinical decision regarding the next stage of treatment should
be evaluated by a physician or other licensed advanced practitioner and
agreed upon mutually among the patient, care partners, and physician.
Importantly, the entire armamentarium of treatment options must be
available to provide the most patient-centered care and allow for the
best outcomes. This policy aligns with the broader goals of patient-
centered care and individualized treatment plans. We believe the
current CfCs for home dialysis services provide sufficient training,
education, and safety standards for AKI patients to safely dialyze at
home, regardless of the duration of the services. We view home
therapies as supervised care that is of at least similar quality and
intensity to in-center hemodialysis and highlight our commitment to
ensuring the success of all patients with AKI, regardless of whether
they are receiving dialysis in the home or in a hemodialysis facility.
Additionally, the home dialysis CfCs are applicable to home dialysis
suppliers who provide such services in long-term care settings, since
these locations are considered to be a patient's home. The Quality,
Safety and Oversight Group (QSOG) has published sub-regulatory guidance
(QSO-18-24-ESRD) that addresses patients receiving home dialysis
services in nursing homes. This guidance is applicable to AKI patients
receiving home dialysis services in LTC facilities.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing our proposal to amend the ESRD
facility CfCs to be inclusive of patients with AKI, without
modification. For the reasons discussed in section III.B. of this final
rule, we are extending coverage of home dialysis services to
beneficiaries with AKI, allowing them flexibility in choosing their
preferred treatment modality (hemodialysis vs. peritoneal dialysis) and
location (in-center vs. home). Since the ESRD facility CfCs apply to
ESRD facilities as a whole, not to solely to their patients with ESRD,
we are providing clarifying revisions to the CfCs to align with the
final coverage changes.
3. Expected Impact
Beneficiaries with AKI requiring dialysis represent a small subset
of individuals treated in outpatient dialysis facilities. Specifically,
around 12,000 patients will be eligible for this optional service.\101\
Expanding coverage to include beneficiaries with AKI will not present
any changes in burden on ESRD facilities or establish new information
collections subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
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[[Page 89172]]
E. Clarification About Medicare Payment for Phosphate Binders for
Beneficiaries With AKI
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we did not propose any
policies related to payment for phosphate binders for beneficiaries
with AKI during the period beginning January 1, 2025, when these drugs
will be incorporated into the ESRD PPS and paid for using the TDAPA.
While we did not receive any public comments on this topic, we are
taking the opportunity in this final rule to provide clarity on this
issue.
Under our longstanding policy, we have not applied any ESRD PPS
adjustments to the AKI payment amount, other than the wage index
adjustment. When we established the AKI benefit in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
final rule, we adopted regulations at Sec. 413.372, which specify that
only the adjustment for wages as set forth in Sec. 413.231 shall apply
to the amount of payment for AKI dialysis services. We also finalized
regulations at Sec. 413.373, which state that any other adjustment
factor under subparagraph (D) of section 1881(b)(14) of the Act that
may be applied to the payment for AKI dialysis services is applied on a
budget neutral basis for payments under section 1834(r). We stated in
the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule that we were not adjusting the payment
amount by any other factors at that time but indicated that we would
potentially do so in future years (81 FR 77868). In that same final
rule, we further explained that we finalized a policy to pay separately
for all items and services that are not part of the ESRD PPS base rate.
We explained that once we have substantial data related to the AKI
population and its associated utilization, we would determine the
appropriate steps toward further developing the AKI payment rate (81 FR
77868).
In the CY 2018 ESRD PPS final rule, a commenter requested that we
clarify whether the TDAPA applies to AKI renal dialysis services. In
response, we stated that we would issue additional program guidance
that would address the application of the TDAPA to AKI services and
other billing guidance. We stated that if we determine that it is
appropriate for the TDAPA to apply to AKI services, we would consider
that to be a substantive payment policy, which would be established
through notice and comment rulemaking (82 FR 50756). CMS subsequently
issued guidance 102 103 which clarified that ESRD facilities
would not be responsible for furnishing calcimimetics to individuals
with AKI while calcimimetics were being paid for under the TDAPA. We
further explained that Sensipar (HCPCS code J0604) remained payable
under Medicare Part D for AKI beneficiaries until the costs were rolled
into the ESRD PPS bundled payment, at which point it would transition
to the bundled payment amount. With regard to Parsabiv (HCPCS code
J0606), we stated that this drug was not indicated for AKI and
therefore no bills should be submitted for Parsabiv in the AKI
population.
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\102\ https://www.cms.gov/regulations-and-guidance/guidance/
transmittals/2017downloads/r1941otn.pdf.
\103\ https://www.hhs.gov/guidance/sites/default/files/hhs-guidance-documents/mm102811.pdf.
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We believe that with respect to Medicare payment for phosphate
binders for beneficiaries with AKI, it is appropriate to maintain the
same policy which applied for calcimimetics during the period in which
they were paid for using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS. Section 1834(r)
of the Act requires that any adjustments made to the AKI payment amount
under 1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act, other than the applicable geographical
adjustment factor applied under subparagraph (D)(iv)(II) of the Act,
must be applied on a budget neutral basis for payments under section
1834(r) of the Act. Because the TDAPA is a non-budget neutral add-on
payment adjustment under section 1881(b)(14)(D)(iv) of the Act, we do
not believe that it is appropriate to apply the TDAPA to claims for AKI
dialysis under section 1834(r) of the Act. More specifically, if we
were to apply the TDAPA to AKI payments, we believe that section
1834(r) of the Act would require us to apply a budget neutrality
adjustment factor, which would reduce the AKI dialysis payment rate and
be contrary to the policy objective of the TDAPA to provide additional
payment for certain new renal dialysis drugs and biological products.
We also believe that consistent with our policy for calcimimetics
during CY 2018 through CY 2020, allowing phosphate binders to remain
separately payable under Part D for beneficiaries with AKI that have a
Part D medically-accepted indication meets the requirements under
section 1834(r) of the Act and the requirements under Sec. 413.374(a)
to make payment under the AKI dialysis payment rate for renal dialysis
services (as defined in subparagraph (B) of section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act) furnished under Part B by a renal dialysis facility or provider of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act. We have not
interpreted these statutory and regulatory requirements to apply to
renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are not considered
included in the ESRD PPS base rate. Specifically, we note that oral-
only drugs are renal dialysis services under subparagraph (B) of
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act; however, we have not paid for these
drugs as part of the AKI dialysis payment rate, because they were not
included in the ESRD PPS base rate. If we had interpreted section
1834(r) of the Act and Sec. 413.374(a) to require payment under the
AKI dialysis payment rate for oral-only renal dialysis drugs and
biological products, then we would have been required to include
payment for these drugs in the AKI dialysis payment rate before payment
was included under the ESRD PPS, which we believe would have conflicted
with the statutory requirements of ATRA, as amended by PAMA, and
amended by ABLE, which ultimately delayed the inclusion of oral-only
drugs into the ESRD PPS until January 1, 2025. Rather, we have
interpreted the requirements of section 1834(r) of the Act and Sec.
413.374(a) to provide a single payment for those renal dialysis
services that are considered included in the ESRD PPS base rate.
Consistent with that interpretation, as discussed earlier in this final
rule, we explained in sub-regulatory guidance that oral calcimimetics
remained separately payable under part D for AKI beneficiaries until
they were incorporated into the ESRD PPS base rate.
For this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule, we are clarifying that we are
maintaining the same policy for phosphate binders provided to
beneficiaries with AKI that we applied to calcimimetics. That is, we
are clarifying that ESRD facilities will not be responsible for
furnishing phosphate binders to individuals with AKI while phosphate
binders are being paid for using the TDAPA under the ESRD PPS. As
discussed in section II.B.7 of this final rule, CMS published guidance
containing information about the HCPCS codes for phosphate binders at
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/including-oral-only-drugs-esrd-pps-bundled-payment.pdf. None of the drugs described by these HCPCS codes
is indicated for patients with AKI, and therefore we do not expect
these drugs will be provided for the treatment of AKI and billed for on
AKI claims. To the extent that phosphate binders are provided to AKI
beneficiaries other than for the treatment of their AKI, such as for
preexisting chronic kidney disease, they will remain separately payable
[[Page 89173]]
under Part D for beneficiaries with AKI that have a Part D medically-
accepted indication until they are incorporated into the ESRD PPS base
rate. We believe this policy will provide appropriate payment for
phosphate binders furnished to beneficiaries with AKI.
IV. Updates to the End-Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program
(ESRD QIP)
A. Background
For a detailed discussion of the ESRD QIP's background and history,
including a description of the Program's authorizing statute and the
policies that we have adopted in previous final rules, we refer readers
to the citations provided at IV.A of the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule
(88 FR 76433). We have also codified many of our policies for the ESRD
QIP at 42 CFR 413.177 and 413.178.
B. Updates to Requirements Beginning With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
1. PY 2027 ESRD QIP Measure Set
In the proposed rule, we proposed to replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure, a comprehensive measure on
which facilities are scored for each payment year using one set of
performance standards, with a Kt/V measure topic comprised of four
individual Kt/V measures, beginning with PY 2027 (89 FR 55814 through
55815). We also proposed to remove the National Healthcare Safety
Network (NHSN) Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set beginning with PY 2027 (89 FR 55815 through 55816). Table
12 of the proposed rule summarized the previously finalized and
proposed updated measures that we would include in the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
measure set (89 FR 55813). As discussed in IV.B.2 and IV.B.3 of this
final rule, we are finalizing our updates to the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
measure set as proposed. We describe the finalized PY 2027 ESRD QIP
measure set in Table 13, which includes the previously finalized
measures and the measures we are finalizing in this final rule. In the
proposed rule, we stated that the technical specifications for current
measures that would remain in the measure set for PY 2027 can be found
in the CMS ESRD Measures Manual for the 2024 Performance Period (89 FR
55812).\104\ We also noted that the proposed technical specifications
for the measures in the proposed Kt/V measure topic can be viewed at
https://www.cms.gov/medicare/quality/end-stage-renal-disease-esrd-quality-incentive-program/technical-specifications-esrd-qip-measures.
Finally, we stated that if the Kt/V measure topic is finalized, these
specifications will be included in the CMS ESRD Measures Manual for the
2025 Performance Period.
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\104\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/esrd-measures-manual-v91.pdf.
\105\ In previous years, we referred to the consensus-based
entity by corporate name. We have updated this language to refer to
the consensus-based entity more generally.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.012
[[Page 89174]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.013
2. Replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive Clinical
Measure With a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic Beginning With the
PY 2027 ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(2)(A)(i) states that the ESRD QIP must evaluate
facilities based on measures of dialysis adequacy. Beginning with the
PY 2027 ESRD QIP, we proposed to replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure, a single comprehensive measure on which
facility performance is calculated using one set of performance
standards for each payment year, with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic, a measure topic comprising four individual Kt/V measures on
which facility performance is calculated using performance standards
for each individual Kt/V measure (89 FR 55814 through 55815).\106\ In
the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we proposed to remove the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure under Sec.
413.178(c)(5)(i)(E), which is Measure Removal Factor 5 (a measure that
is more strongly associated with desired patient outcomes for the
particular topic becomes available), and proposed to replace it with
the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic, which consists of
four individual Kt/V measures. Under this proposed update, we stated
that the individual Kt/V measures would be adult hemodialysis (HD) Kt/
V, adult peritoneal dialysis (PD) Kt/V, pediatric HD Kt/V, and
pediatric PD Kt/V (89 FR 55814).
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\106\ For further information related to the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure, we refer readers to 77 FR
67487 through 67490, 79 FR 66197 through 66198, and 80 FR 69053
through 69057.
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By replacing the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with four separate measures, we noted that we would be
able to assess Kt/V performance more accurately based on whether the
patient is an adult or child and what type of dialysis modality the
patient is receiving. We also proposed to score the four measures as a
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic and to limit the total weight of
that topic to 11 percent of the total performance score (TPS), which we
stated is the weight of the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure. We noted that these proposals would
continue to maintain Kt/V measurement as an important part of the
quality of care assessed by the ESRD QIP (89 FR 55814). Facilities are
eligible to receive an individual Kt/V measure score if they treat at
least 11 eligible patients using the modality addressed by that
particular measure. For example, a facility treating at least 11
eligible pediatric HD patients during the applicable performance period
would be scored on the Kt/V Pediatric HD measure. In the proposed rule,
we stated that we would calculate a facility's measure topic score by
first calculating the facility's performance on each of the Adult HD
Kt/V, Adult PD Kt/V, Pediatric HD Kt/V, and Pediatric PD Kt/V measures,
as applicable, using the applicable achievement threshold, benchmark,
and improvement threshold for the payment year (89 FR 55814). Second,
we would calculate the total number of eligible patients for weighting
each of these measure scores to calculate a single measure topic score.
We would calculate this total number by summing all eligible patients
included in the denominator for each individual measure. Third, we
would calculate the weighted score for each
[[Page 89175]]
measure within the measure topic by dividing the number of patients
included in the denominator for each individual measure by the total
number of eligible patients for all of the measures within the measure
topic and multiplying by the respective measure score. Finally, we
would add the weighted measure scores together and round them to the
nearest integer. An example of how we would calculate the measure topic
score for a facility that treats the minimum number of patients to be
eligible for scoring on all four of the measures is provided below.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.014
We noted in the proposed rule that a facility would not need to be
eligible for scoring on all four individual measures to receive a
measure topic score (89 FR 55814). For example, a facility that
exclusively treats adult HD patients and, for that reason, is eligible
to be scored on only the Kt/V Adult HD measure would receive a topic
score that is the same score as its individual Kt/V measure score. We
stated that the proposed measure topic scoring considers both a
facility's individual ESRD patient population and the treatment
modalities it offers, and then weights its performance on the topic
proportionately to its overall ESRD patient population. As a result, we
believe that a facility's measure topic score will be more reflective
of its actual performance among its patient population and offered
modalities than its current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure score, which is a composite assessment that blends the
Kt/V measure data of all patients treated at that facility.
We noted that we previously adopted a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic that included three of the four measures that we were now
proposing to include in the topic (adult HD Kt/V, adult PD Kt/V, and
pediatric HD Kt/V) in the CY 2013 ESRD PPS final rule (77 FR 67487
through 67490). In the CY 2015 ESRD PPS final rule (79 FR 66197 through
66198), we updated the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic to include
the pediatric PD Kt/V measure as well. In the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final
rule (80 FR 69053 through 69057), we replaced the Kt/V Dialysis Measure
Topic with the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure, which assesses the percentage of all patient-months for both
adult and pediatric patients whose average delivered dose of dialysis
(either hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis) met the specified
threshold during the performance period. This change allowed more
facilities to be eligible for measure scoring, which in turn allowed us
to evaluate the care provided to a greater proportion of ESRD patients.
At the time we finalized the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure, three facilities were eligible for scoring on the
pediatric HD Kt/V measure, six facilities were eligible for scoring on
the pediatric PD Kt/V measure, 1,402 facilities were eligible for
scoring on the adult PD Kt/V measure, and 6,117 facilities were
eligible for scoring on the adult HD Kt/V measure. Given the relatively
low numbers of facilities eligible for scoring on the pediatric HD Kt/
V, pediatric PD KT/V, and adult PD Kt/V measures at that time, we
adopted the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure to
help ensure that data reflecting those patient populations contributed
to facilities' total performance scores. Since the CY 2016 ESRD PPS
final rule, however, we noted that Kt/V measure data (using the PY
2024/CY 2022 ESRD QIP eligible facility list, CY 2022 EQRS data, and CY
2022 claims data) indicates that more facilities are treating greater
numbers of pediatric HD patients and pediatric PD patients, as well as
greater numbers of adult PD patients, and therefore would be eligible
to be scored on the individual measures based on an 11-patient case
minimum (89 FR 55815). For example, there are now 21 pediatric HD
facilities and 28 pediatric PD facilities with at least 11 qualifying
patients. We stated that this shows a 600 percent increase in
facilities eligible to be scored on the pediatric HD Kt/V measure, and
a 366 percent increase in facilities eligible to be scored on the
pediatric PD Kt/V measure, since the CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule (89 FR
55815). Additionally, there are now 2,538 facilities eligible for
scoring on the adult PD Kt/V measure, an 81 percent increase since the
CY 2016 ESRD PPS final rule. By contrast, we noted that the number of
facilities eligible for scoring on the adult HD Kt/V measure has
increased by 14 percent during that same period of time.
In light of the increase in the proportions of pediatric HD
patients, pediatric PD patients, and adult PD patients being treated at
ESRD facilities since the time we adopted the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure, we have determined that it is
appropriate and more reflective of facility performance to reintroduce
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic in the ESRD QIP. In addition,
we stated in the proposed rule that the proposed measure topic scoring
methodology will more accurately capture facility performance with
respect to dialysis adequacy because it assesses those facilities based
on performance standards tailored according to Kt/V measurements that
reflect ESRD patient age and treatment modality (89 FR 55815).
We noted that the proposed replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic would also not affect a facility's measure data reporting
requirements. A facility would continue to report the same Kt/V measure
data into EQRS and Medicare claims as it would for the current Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure. However, under the
proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic, the measure data would
be used to score the facility on four individual Kt/V measures, as
applicable based on their
[[Page 89176]]
ESRD patient population and treatment modalities.
In the proposed rule, we stated that the proposed replacement of
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic would also advance the CMS National
Quality Strategy Goals by scoring facilities on measure data that more
accurately reflects the quality of care provided to different kinds of
ESRD patients on different treatment modalities (89 FR 55815). We noted
that the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic would allow us
to evaluate dialysis adequacy in adult HD patients, adult PD patients,
pediatric HD patients, and pediatric PD patients by scoring facilities
in a way that accounts for differences in patient populations and
treatment modalities. Therefore, this proposed update would ensure that
a facility's performance on the measure topic more accurately reflects
the quality of care provided by the facility.
We welcomed public comment on this proposal to replace the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure, an adult
PD Kt/V measure, a pediatric HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD Kt/V
measure, for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP and subsequent years. The comments we
received, and our responses are set forth below.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the proposal to
remove the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure and replace it with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
noting that the measure topic will more accurately reflect a facility's
performance based on different patient populations and treatment
modalities. Several commenters expressed the belief that the proposed
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic will provide a more nuanced
assessment of dialysis adequacy which will enhance the accuracy and
relevance of quality assessments within the program. A few commenters
also expressed support for the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic, noting that the current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure lacks transparency in terms of performance regarding
patient population or dialysis modality, and also masks underlying
social disparities in dialysis adequacy. A commenter expressed support
for the proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic, noting
that it does not change the current Kt/V data reporting requirements so
there is minimal administrative burden associated with the proposed
change.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for the proposal to
replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with
the four individual Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measures. A commenter
expressed appreciation that the proposed update would align with other
publicly reported data programs.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: A commenter expressed support for the inclusion of the
pediatric HD Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measure and the pediatric PD Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy measure, noting that including these measures in the
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic will help account for meaningful
differences between pediatric and adult patient populations.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS adopt the original
reporting requirements that assessed performance at the individual
measure level, noting that reporting facility performance on the
individual Kt/V measures would provide greater transparency to
patients, caregivers, and health care providers. These commenters
believed that such reporting requirements would be consistent with the
legislative intent underlying the statutory authority of the ESRD QIP.
A different commenter expressed concern that the measure data is not
sufficiently transparent and that patients would not be able to assess
a facility's performance relative to their specific treatment modality.
Response: We believe that the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic,
consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure, an adult PD Kt/V measure, a
pediatric HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD Kt/V measure, strikes a
balance between scoring a facility on its overall quality of care
related to Kt/V dialysis adequacy while also reflecting its performance
on Kt/V dialysis adequacy specific to different patient populations and
treatment modalities. We note that information regarding a facility's
performance on the individual measures, as well as the resulting
measure topic score, is provided during the preview period and in final
reports shared with the facility. We believe that this approach to
measuring dialysis adequacy will further incentivize improvement on
dialysis adequacy performance standards, consistent with section
1881(h) of the Act. We also note that data regarding facility
performance on individual Kt/V dialysis adequacy measures is available
through Dialysis Facility Compare, which reports the Kt/V dialysis
adequacy measures individually on Care Compare. We will continue to
monitor the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic as it is implemented
to ensure that it is sufficiently transparent in a way that is
meaningful to patients, caregivers, and health care providers.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS ensure that the new
individual measures do not impose new administrative or reporting
burdens on care providers that may divert resources away from patient
care.
Response: As we stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, the
replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic would not affect a
facility's measure data reporting requirements, and therefore would not
impose new administrative or reporting burdens on care providers (89 FR
55815). A facility would continue to report the same Kt/V measure data
into EQRS and Medicare claims as it does for the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure.
Comment: A commenter recommended including a measurement of
residual kidney function (RKF) when appropriate in the determination of
the HD Kt/V measure, noting the importance of taking RKF into account
when assessing dialysis adequacy and the potential benefit to patient
outcomes. Another commenter recommended that CMS adopt an alternate
measure of dialysis adequacy for HD patients by looking at the percent
of patients leaving dialysis at +/- 2 kg above/below their estimated
dry weight.
Response: We thank the commenters for these recommendations and
will take them into consideration for future updates. We consider the
current HD Kt/V measure specifications to be sufficient for purposes of
assessing dialysis adequacy among HD patients because these
specifications reflect current clinical practices in dialysis adequacy
measurement and assess measurable data that may incentivize improvement
in quality of care provided to HD patients. However, we will continue
to monitor the HD Kt/V dialysis adequacy measures and will also
continue to monitor scientific advances in the field of ESRD care to
assess appropriate alternative measures of dialysis adequacy for
consideration in future rulemaking.
[[Page 89177]]
Comment: A commenter expressed concern regarding the use of Kt/V as
a measure of dialysis adequacy for PD patients, noting that it may not
be the most appropriate metric for patients who are new to dialysis or
who have residual kidney function. This commenter recommended that CMS
explore alternative measures of assessing dialysis adequacy for PD
patients in future rulemaking.
Response: We thank the commenters for these recommendations and
will take them into consideration for future updates. The current PD
Kt/V measure considers residual kidney function as part of the measure
calculation, and excludes patients who have been on ESRD treatment for
less than 91 days as of the first day of the reporting month, which
makes it an appropriate metric for all PD patients who have residual
kidney function and have been on ESRD treatment long enough to be
eligible for inclusion in the measure's calculations.\107\ We consider
the current PD Kt/V measure specifications to be sufficient for
purposes of assessing dialysis adequacy among PD patients because these
specifications reflect current clinical practices in dialysis adequacy
measurement and assess measurable data that may incentivize improvement
in quality of care provided to PD patients. However, we will continue
to monitor the PD Kt/V dialysis adequacy measures for potential
unintended consequences and will also continue to monitor scientific
advances in the field of ESRD care to assess appropriate alternative
measures of dialysis adequacy for PD patients for consideration in
future rulemaking.
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\107\ https://www.cms.gov/files/document/esrd-measures-manual-v100.pdf.
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Comment: A few commenters expressed concern regarding the potential
impact of the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic on home
dialysis patients. A commenter expressed concern that the PD Kt/V
measures could have unintentional consequences such as incentivizing
in-center dialysis over home dialysis, which the commenter believed
would result in diminished patient experience. A different commenter
expressed concern that the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic will not sufficiently capture dialysis adequacy for home dialysis
patients and recommended that CMS continue to explore ways to measure
quality of care for home dialysis patients.
Response: For facilities offering both in-center dialysis and home
dialysis treatment options, the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic
will more accurately reflect a facility's dialysis adequacy performance
by differentiating between the Kt/V measure data of all patients
treated at that facility and assessing facilities based on the Kt/V
measurements according to ESRD patient age and treatment modality.
Because of this differentiation, we expect that the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic will better reflect the quality of care provided
to patients on home dialysis, without incentivizing in-center
hemodialysis over home dialysis. We expect that care providers will
assess whether in-center hemodialysis or home dialysis would be more
appropriate for a patient based on the patient's specific case and
treatment plan. However, we will continue to monitor the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Measure Topic as it is implemented to assess the impact on the
home dialysis patient population.
Comment: A few commenters did not support the proposal to replace
the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic. A commenter expressed concern that the
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure is topped out.
This commenter stated that replacing the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic comprised of individual Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy measures will not
be effective because the commenter believed that those individual
measures are also topped out, and therefore recommended changing the
current Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure to a
reporting measure instead. Another commenter recommended that, instead
of the proposed update to measure Kt/V data by different modalities and
patient ages, CMS should measure dialysis adequacy based on patient
differences.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's assertion that the
individual Kt/V measures are topped out and therefore would make the
Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic ineffective as a measure of a
facility's dialysis adequacy performance. Quality measures that have
been in use for several years may reach a stage where meaningful
differences and improvement in performance are no longer achievable.
These measures are referred to as ``topped-out'' and considered for
removal from CMS quality improvement or value-based purchasing programs
such as the ESRD QIP. When developing proposals for the CY 2025 ESRD
PPS proposed rule, we assessed the ESRD QIP measure set to identify any
measures that may be appropriate for removal due to their topped-out
status. Based on our analysis, the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure was the only measure that achieved topped-out status.
Furthermore, a facility's score on the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic, consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure, an adult PD Kt/V
measure, a pediatric HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD Kt/V measure,
would be unique to each facility based on its own patient populations
and their specific treatment modalities. This approach takes patient
differences into account when measuring dialysis adequacy.
Final Rule Action: After considering public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic consisting of an adult HD Kt/V measure, an adult PD Kt/V measure,
a pediatric HD Kt/V measure, and a pediatric PD Kt/V measure, for the
PY 2027 ESRD QIP and subsequent years.
3. Removal of the NHSN Dialysis Event Reporting Measure From the ESRD
QIP Measure Set Beginning With PY 2027
To ensure continued impact and effectiveness of our measure set on
facility performance, we proposed to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure beginning with PY 2027 (89 FR 55815). When we first
adopted the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure in the CY 2012 ESRD
PPS final rule (76 FR 70268 through 70269), we stated that reporting
dialysis events to the NHSN by all facilities supports national goals
for patient safety, including the reduction of Hospital Acquired
Infections (HAIs). In the CY 2014 ESRD PPS final rule, we replaced the
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure with the NHSN Bloodstream
Infection (BSI) clinical measure (78 FR 72204 through 72207). We
introduced the clinical version of the measure to hold facilities
accountable for monitoring and preventing infections in the ESRD
population, and to hold facilities accountable for their actual
clinical performance on the measure. In the CY 2017 ESRD PPS final rule
(81 FR 77879 through 77882), we reintroduced the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure to complement the NHSN BSI clinical measure as a way
to incentivize facilities to report complete and accurate monthly
dialysis event data in compliance with the NHSN Dialysis Event
protocol.\108\ In reintroducing the
[[Page 89178]]
measure, we noted our concerns that facilities were not consistently
reporting monthly dialysis event data, given the incentive to achieve
high clinical performance scores on the NHSN BSI clinical measure. We
stated that this may have been an unintended consequence of replacing
the previous NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure with the NHSN BSI
clinical measure (81 FR 77879). Therefore, in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS
final rule, we reintroduced the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
to be included in the ESRD QIP measure set along with the NHSN BSI
Clinical Measure.
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\108\ For further information related to the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure, we refer readers to 76 FR 70268 through 70269 and
78 FR 72204 through 72207.
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In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we stated that, based on our
analyses, facilities are consistently reporting monthly dialysis event
data, and have been doing so for several years (89 FR 55815). In an
assessment of ESRD QIP measure rate performance trends during PY 2020
through PY 2022, performance in the 5th percentile through the 100th
percentile was 100 percent on the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure
for all three performance years, meaning that most eligible facilities
reported data on the measure for each of those years.\109\ If most
eligible facilities are reporting NHSN Dialysis Event measure data each
year and measure performance levels at the 5th percentile and the 100th
percentile are the same each year, then NHSN dialysis event data are
now reported consistently and the measure is not likely to drive
improvements in care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ Partnership for Quality Measurement. 2023 Measure Set
Review (MSR): End Stage Renal Disease Quality Incentive Program
(ESRD-QIP). September 2023. Available at: https://p4qm.org/sites/default/files/2023-09/MSR-Report-ESRD-QIP-20230911.pdf.
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We stated that our proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure is consistent with evolving the program to focus on a
measure set of high-value, impactful measures that have been developed
to drive care improvements for a broader set of ESRD patients (89 FR
55816). As such, we proposed to remove this measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set under Sec. 413.178(c)(5)(i)(A), which is Measure Removal
Factor 1 (measure performance among the majority of ESRD facilities is
so high and unvarying that meaningful distinctions in improvements or
performance can no longer be made). Although we believe that removing
this measure would enable facilities to focus on the remaining measures
in the ESRD QIP measure set, we noted that facilities would still be
required to fully comply with the NHSN Dialysis Event protocol and
report all dialysis event data, including BSI, for the NHSN BSI
Clinical Measure.
We welcomed public comment on our proposal to remove the NHSN
Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD QIP measure set,
beginning with PY 2027. The comments we received, and our responses are
set forth below.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the proposal to
remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set, beginning with PY 2027. A few commenters expressed support
for the proposed removal because the measure is unlikely to drive
improvements in care due to consistent reporting and high compliance. A
few commenters expressed the belief that removing the measure from the
ESRD QIP measure set will allow dialysis centers to focus on impactful
measures and meaningful improvements in care. A few commenters
recommended that CMS continue to reduce the number of measures in the
ESRD QIP and focus on incentivizing improvements in critical and
meaningful quality measures. A commenter expressed support for the
proposed removal of the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure because
facilities will still be required to comply with NHSN dialysis event
protocol for the NHSN BSI clinical measure. A different commenter
expressed support for the proposed removal because it would align the
ESRD QIP with other publicly reported data programs. Another commenter
expressed support for the proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure because the commenter believed the measure created
incentives to decrease reported events that would potentially
negatively impact patient care.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters did not support the proposal to remove
the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD QIP measure
set, beginning with PY 2027. A commenter recommended that CMS retain
the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure, noting that facilities would
still need to report the data to comply with Dialysis Event protocol as
part of the NHSN BSI clinical measure and therefore removing the
measure from the ESRD QIP would not alleviate facility burden. A
different commenter expressed concern with the proposal to remove the
NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure, believing that the removal will
lead to facilities underreporting adverse events and recommended
retaining the measure to encourage and incentivize accurate reporting
to NHSN.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback. Although we
endeavor to minimize facility burden to the extent feasible, we
proposed to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure from the
ESRD QIP measure set because measure performance among the majority of
ESRD facilities is so high and unvarying that meaningful distinctions
in improvements or performance can no longer be made. Additionally,
removing the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure would enable
facilities to focus on the remaining measures in the ESRD QIP measure
set. We do not anticipate that removing the NHSN Dialysis Event
reporting measure from the ESRD QIP measure set will lead to
underreporting, as facilities would still be required to fully comply
with the NHSN Dialysis Event protocol and report all dialysis event
data (that is, BSI, IV antimicrobial starts, and pus, redness, and
swelling) for the NHSN BSI Clinical Measure.
Final Rule Action: After considering public comments, we are
finalizing our proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure from the ESRD QIP measure set, beginning with PY 2027.
4. Revisions to the Clinical Care and Reporting Measure Domains
Beginning With the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76481 through 76482), we
finalized revisions to the ESRD QIP measure domains beginning with PY
2027. The measure domains and weights we finalized in the CY 2024 ESRD
PPS final rule were depicted in Table 13a of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55816) and are depicted in this final rule in
Table 14a.
[[Page 89179]]
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In the proposed rule, we proposed to revise the Clinical Care
Domain beginning with PY 2027 to reflect our proposal to replace the
Kt/V Comprehensive Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure
with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic, and to revise the measure
weights in the Reporting Measure Domain to reflect our proposal to
remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD QIP
measure set (89 FR 55816). Under our proposal, we stated that the
weight of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Topic would continue to be the
same as the current weight of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive
Measure, but that weight would be applied to a facility's measure topic
score, instead of being applied, as it is now, to a facility's score on
the single Kt/V Comprehensive Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure.
Given our proposal to remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting
measure from the ESRD QIP beginning with PY 2027, we also proposed to
update the individual measure weights in the Reporting Domain to
accommodate the proposed new number of measures (89 FR 55816).
Consistent with our approach in the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule, we
proposed to assign individual measure weights to reflect the proposed
updated number of measures in the Reporting Measure Domain so that each
measure is weighted equally (87 FR 67251 through 67253). Although we
proposed to change the number of measures and the weights of the
individual measures in the Reporting Measure Domain, we did not propose
to change the weight of any of the five domains. The measures that
would be included in each domain, along with the proposed new measure
weights, for PY 2027 were depicted in Table 13b of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55817). These measure domains and weights, which
we are finalizing as proposed, are depicted in this final rule in Table
14b.
[[Page 89180]]
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We welcomed public comment on these proposals to update the
Clinical Care Measure Domain and Reporting Measure Domain. The comments
we received, and our responses are set forth below.
Comment: A few commenters expressed support for the proposal to
weight the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic at 11 percent. A few
commenters expressed appreciation that the weight appropriately
reflects the statutorily required nature of the measure, while also
allowing flexibility to assign more weight to other measures for which
there is greater room for improvement. Another commenter expressed
support for the proposed weight for the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic because it is the same weight as the current Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern with the proposal to
weight the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic at 11 percent,
believing that the proposed measure weight will disproportionately
impact certain types of facilities. A commenter expressed concern that
the proposed measure weight for the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure
Topic disproportionately impacts home dialysis-only facilities, noting
that they are not eligible for scoring on certain other measures.
Another commenter recommended that CMS not limit the measure weight to
11 percent, and to only score pediatric facilities on pediatric-
specific or cohort-neutral measures to ensure that the QIP is relevant
to pediatric programs. This commenter expressed the belief that such
steps are necessary to prevent unfair or inaccurate penalties based on
ESRD QIP measures that are not relevant to the pediatric patient
population.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and appreciate
their concerns. The Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic will more
accurately reflect a facility's dialysis adequacy performance by
differentiating between the Kt/V measure data of all patients treated
at that facility and assessing facilities based on the Kt/V
measurements according to ESRD patient age and treatment modality.
Although facilities are only scored on measures they are eligible for
based on their reported data, we acknowledge that home dialysis
facilities and pediatric facilities may be
[[Page 89181]]
disproportionately impacted because they are not eligible to be scored
on certain ESRD QIP measures due to their specific patient population.
However, we have concluded that the importance of accurately measuring
dialysis adequacy for home dialysis ESRD patients and pediatric ESRD
patients to incentivize improvements in the quality of care provided to
those patient populations outweighs possible concerns regarding
potential disproportionate impacts. Because facilities are not scored
on measures for which they are not eligible based on their reported
data, their score reflects the quality of care provided to patients
based on the measures for which they are eligible. We will continue to
assess potential policies aimed at expanding measure eligibility for
these facilities in future rulemaking.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS limit the total weight of
Kt/V measures to 11 percent because the commenter believed that the
measure is topped out in many cases.
Response: In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we proposed that
the weight of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Topic would be 11 percent, the
same weight as the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive Measure (89 FR
55816). Under our proposal, the total weight of the Kt/V measures would
be 11 percent under the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that the weights of
individual measures in the Reporting Measure Domain do not adequately
reflect the burden associated with each measure's criteria and
reporting requirements. A commenter recommended that the Reporting
Measure Domain carry a higher weight to reflect the significance of the
individual reporting measures, as well as the substantial burden
associated with compliance.
Response: We take numerous factors into account when determining
appropriate domain and measure weights, including clinical evidence,
opportunity for improvement, clinical significance, and patient and
provider burden (83 FR 56995 through 56996). We also consider (1) the
number of measures and measure topics in a domain; (2) how much
experience facilities have had with the measures and measure topics in
a domain; and (3) how well the measures align with CMS's highest
priorities for quality improvement for patients with ESRD (79 FR
66214). We assign weights to the measure domains based on the clinical
value and meaningfulness of the measures to patients, and the burden of
complying with individual measure requirements. We believe that the
Reporting Measure Domain weights are appropriate to incentivize the
provision of high-quality health care for all ESRD QIP measures.
Comment: A few commenters expressed the belief that the ESRD QIP's
focus on meaningful measures should be reflected in the weights
assigned to measure domains and individual measures. To ensure that the
ESRD QIP takes a clinically driven approach to incentivizing
improvement, a few commenters recommended that CMS work with
organizations and care providers in the ESRD community to identify
potential modifications to the individual measure weights. A few
commenters expressed concern regarding the weighting distribution of
individual measures relative to the growing number of measures in the
ESRD QIP measure set. These commenters expressed the belief that there
are too many individual measures within the ESRD QIP measure set, and
that scoring facilities based on nearly 20 individual measures means
that a facility's performance on each individual measure has little
impact on the facility's overall score. A few commenters recommended
that CMS reduce the ESRD QIP measure set by moving certain measures to
Dialysis Facility Compare or by removing certain measures altogether
where appropriate.
Response: We agree with commenters that the weights should reflect
clinical value and meaningfulness to patients, which we took into
account in developing our measure domains and individual measure
weights. We expect that the measure domains and weights provide
facilities with meaningful incentives to improve performance on
measures that align with clinical value and importance to patients. We
note that we have developed the ESRD QIP measure set specifically to
ensure that facilities focus on the most relevant clinical topics that
will lead to improved quality of care and better outcomes for patients.
Although we aim to minimize facility burden as much as feasible, we
disagree that reducing the number of measures in the ESRD QIP should be
a goal, absent justification under our measure removal factors codified
at Sec. 413.178(c)(5)(i).
Final Rule Action: After considering public comments, we are
finalizing our proposals to update the Clinical Care Measure Domain and
Reporting Measure Domain, beginning with PY 2027 as proposed, and
therefore, are finalizing the ESRD QIP measure domains and measure
weights provided in Table 14b in this section of the final rule.
5. Performance Standards for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(4)(A) of the Act requires the Secretary to
establish performance standards with respect to the measures selected
for the ESRD QIP for a performance period with respect to a year. The
performance standards must include levels of achievement and
improvement, as determined appropriate by the Secretary, and must be
established prior to the beginning of the performance period for the
year involved, as required by sections 1881(h)(4)(B) and (C) of the
Act. We refer readers to the CY 2013 ESRD PPS final rule (76 FR 70277),
as well as Sec. 413.178(a)(1), (3), (7), and (12), for further
information related to performance standards.
In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76480 through 76481), we
set the performance period for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP as CY 2025 and the
baseline period as CY 2023. In the proposed rule, we estimated the
performance standards for the PY 2027 clinical measures in Table 14
using data from CY 2022, which was the most recent data available (89
FR 55818). We are updating these performance standards for all
measures, using CY 2023 data, in this final rule, in Table 15.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 89182]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.017
In addition, we summarize in Table 16 our requirements for
successful reporting on our previously finalized reporting measures for
the PY 2027 ESRD QIP.
[[Page 89183]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.018
6. Eligibility Requirements for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
In the proposed rule, we proposed to update eligibility
requirements as part of our proposal to replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027 (89 FR 55819). Our previously
finalized and proposed new minimum eligibility requirements are
described in Table 16 of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89 FR
55820) and provided in Table 17 of this final rule.
[[Page 89184]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.019
[[Page 89185]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.020
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
We welcomed public comment on these proposals to update the minimum
eligibility requirements to reflect the proposed Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic. We did not receive any comments on our proposals to
update the minimum eligibility requirements to reflect the Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic.
Final Rule Action: We are finalizing our proposals to update the
minimum eligibility requirements to reflect the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic, beginning with PY 2027 as proposed, and therefore, are
finalizing the ESRD QIP eligibility requirements provided in Table 17
in this section of the final rule.
7. Payment Reduction Scale for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP
Under our current policy, a facility does not receive a payment
reduction for a payment year in connection with its performance under
the ESRD QIP if it achieves a TPS that is at or above the minimum TPS
(mTPS) that we establish for the payment year. We have defined the mTPS
in our regulations at Sec. 413.178(a)(8).
Under Sec. 413.177(a), we implement the payment reductions on a
sliding scale using ranges that reflect payment reduction differentials
of 0.5 percent for each 10 points that the facility's TPS falls below
the mTPS, up to a maximum reduction of 2 percent. In the proposed rule,
we stated that for PY 2027, we estimated using available data that a
facility must meet or exceed an mTPS of 51 to avoid a payment reduction
(89 FR 55821). We noted that the mTPS estimated in the proposed rule
was based on data from CY 2022 instead of the PY 2027 baseline period
(CY 2023) because CY 2023 data were not yet available. We presented the
estimated payment reduction scale in Table 17 of the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule (89 FR 55821). We stated our intention to update and
finalize the mTPS and associated payment reduction ranges for PY 2027,
using CY 2023 data, in this CY 2025 ESRD PPS final rule. We have now
finalized the payment reductions that will apply to the PY 2027 ESRD
QIP using updated CY 2023 data. The mTPS for PY 2027 will be 51, and
the finalized payment reduction scale is shown in Table 18.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.021
C. Requests for Information (RFIs) on Topics Relevant to ESRD QIP
As discussed in the following sections, in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule we requested information on two topics to inform future
revisions to the ESRD QIP. First, we requested information regarding
potential future modifications to the existing ESRD QIP scoring
methodology to reward facilities based on their performance and the
proportion of their patients who are dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid (89 FR 55822). Second, we requested information regarding
potential updates to the data validation policy to encourage accurate,
comprehensive reporting of ESRD QIP data (89 FR 55822 through 55823).
In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we noted that each of these
sections in the proposed rule is a RFI only (89 FR 55821). In
accordance with the implementing regulations of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), specifically 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(4), these general
solicitations are exempt from the PRA. Facts or opinions submitted in
response to general solicitations of comments from the public,
published in the Federal Register or other publications, regardless of
the form or format thereof, provided that no person is required to
supply specific information pertaining to the commenter, other than
that necessary for self-identification, as a condition of the agency's
full consideration, are not generally considered information
collections and therefore not subject to the PRA.
[[Page 89186]]
We stated that respondents are encouraged to provide complete but
concise responses (89 FR 55821). These RFIs are issued solely for
information and planning purposes; they do not constitute a Request for
Proposal (RFP), applications, proposal abstracts, or quotations. These
RFIs do not commit the United States Government to contract for any
supplies or services or make a grant award. Further, we noted that we
were not seeking proposals through these RFIs and will not accept
unsolicited proposals. Responders were advised that the United States
Government will not pay for any information or administrative costs
incurred in response to these RFIs; all costs associated with
responding to these RFIs will be solely at the interested party's
expense. Not responding to these RFIs does not preclude participation
in any future procurement, if conducted. It is the responsibility of
the potential responders to monitor these RFI announcements for
additional information pertaining to this request. We noted that we
will not respond to questions about the policy issues raised in these
RFIs. CMS may or may not choose to contact individual responders. Such
communications would only serve to further clarify written responses.
Contractor support personnel may be used to review RFI responses.
Responses to this notice are not offers and cannot be accepted by the
United States Government to form a binding contract or issue a grant.
We stated that information obtained as a result of these RFIs may be
used by the United States Government for program planning on a non-
attribution basis (89 FR 55822). Respondents should not include any
information that might be considered proprietary or confidential. These
RFIs should not be construed as a commitment or authorization to incur
cost for which reimbursement would be required or sought. All
submissions become United States Government property and will not be
returned. Finally, we noted that CMS may publicly post the comments
received, or a summary thereof.
1. Request for Public Comment on Future Change to the Scoring
Methodology To Add a New Adjustment That Rewards Facilities Based on
Their Performance and the Proportion of Their Patients Who Are Dually
Eligible for Medicare and Medicaid
Achieving health equity, addressing health disparities, and closing
the performance gap in the quality of care provided to disadvantaged,
marginalized, or underserved populations continue to be priorities for
CMS as outlined in the CMS National Quality Strategy.\110\ CMS defines
``health equity'' as the attainment of the highest level of health for
all people, where everyone has a fair and just opportunity to attain
their optimal health regardless of race, ethnicity, disability, sexual
orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic status, geography,
preferred language, or other factors that affect access to care and
health outcomes.\111\ We are working to advance health equity by
designing, implementing, and operationalizing policies and programs
that reduce avoidable differences in health outcomes.
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\110\ Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. (2022) CMS
National Quality Strategy. Available at: https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/Value-Based-Programs/CMS-Quality-Strategy.
\111\ Health Equity Strategic Pillar. Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services. https://www.cms.gov/pillar/health-equity.
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The ESRD QIP adopted three new health-equity focused quality
measures in the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76437 through 76446;
76466 through 76480). Although commenters were generally supportive of
the new measures, a few commenters recommended that the ESRD QIP take
additional action to support facilities that treat patient populations
with higher proportions of health-related social needs (HRSNs) (88 FR
76473). In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we stated that we are
considering updating our scoring methodology in future rulemaking to
add Health Equity Adjustment bonus points to a facility's TPS that
would be calculated using a methodology that incorporates a facility's
performance across all five domains for the payment year and its
proportion of patients with dual eligibility status (DES), meaning
those who are eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid coverage (89 FR
55822).
In the 2016 Report to Congress on Social Risk Factors and
Performance Under Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Programs, the
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE)
reported that beneficiaries with social risk factors had worse outcomes
and were more likely to receive a lower quality of care.\112\ Patients
with DES experience significant disparities are also likely to be more
medically complex and remain one of the most vulnerable
populations.\113\ \114\ \115\ DES remains the strongest predictor of
negative health outcomes.\116\
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\112\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. First Report
to Congress on Social Risk Factors and Performance in Medicare's
Value-Based Purchasing Program. 2016. Available at: https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/migrated_legacy_files/171041/ASPESESRTCfull.pdf.
\113\ Johnston, K.J., & Joynt Maddox, K.E. (2019). The Role of
Social, Cognitive, And Functional Risk Factors In Medicare Spending
For Dual And Nondual Enrollees. Health Affairs (Project Hope),
38(4), 569-576. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2018.05032.
\114\ Johnston, K.J., & Joynt Maddox, K.E. (2019). The Role of
Social, Cognitive, and Functional Risk Factors in Medicare Spending
for Dual and Nondual Enrollees. Health Affairs (Project Hope),
38(4), 569-576. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2018.05032.
\115\ Wadhera, R.K., Wang, Y., Figueroa, J.F., Dominici, F.,
Yeh, R.W., & Joynt Maddox, K.E. (2020). Mortality and
Hospitalizations for Dually Enrolled and Nondually Enrolled Medicare
Beneficiaries Aged 65 Years or Older, 2004 to 2017. JAMA, 323(10),
961-969. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2020.1021.
\116\ Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and
Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. Second
Report to Congress on Social Risk Factors and Performance in
Medicare's Value-Based Purchasing Program. 2020. Available at:
https://aspe.hhs.gov/reports/second-report-congress-social-risk-medicares-value-based-purchasing-programs.
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We recently finalized a Health Equity Adjustment scoring policy for
the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program (88 FR 59092 through
59106) and the Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) VBP Program (88 FR 53304
through 53316). These policies provide Health Equity Adjustment bonus
points to top tier performing hospitals and SNFs with a high proportion
of patients with DES, and each program's policy is tailored to meet the
needs of the specific program. For example, in the Hospital VBP
Program, the Health Equity Adjustment bonus is calculated based on a
hospital's performance on each of the four measure domains and its
proportion of patients with DES (88 FR 59095 through 59096). In the SNF
VBP Program, the Health Equity Adjustment bonus is calculated based on
a facility's performance on each measure and its proportion of patients
with DES (88 FR 53309 through 53311).
Our policy for scoring performance on the ESRD QIP is codified at
Sec. 413.178(e). In the proposed rule, we requested public comment on
potential future modifications to the existing scoring methodology to
reward excellent care to underserved populations (89 FR 55822). We also
noted that any Health Equity Adjustment bonus for the ESRD QIP would
need to align with the Program's statutory requirements under section
1881(h) of the Act. We welcomed public comment on the following:
Would a Health Equity Adjustment be valuable to the ESRD
QIP?
++ If a Health Equity Adjustment would be valuable to the ESRD QIP,
how should it be structured?
[[Page 89187]]
++ If a Health Equity Adjustment would not be valuable to the ESRD
QIP, why not?
Are there other approaches that the ESRD QIP could propose
to adopt to effectively address healthcare disparities and advance
health equity?
We received comments in response to this request for information
and have summarized them here.
Comment: Many commenters provided feedback on a Health Equity
Adjustment. Several commenters expressed support for a Health Equity
Adjustment, believing that it would be valuable to the ESRD QIP.
Several commenters noted that ESRD is more prevalent among patient
populations with higher social risk factors or from lower socioeconomic
status or communities of color and observed that a Health Equity
Adjustment could help promote more equitable care by rewarding
excellent performance to underserved populations. Several commenters
expressed support for a Health Equity Adjustment specific to the ESRD
QIP, believing that it will help to reduce disparities among facilities
that treat a greater proportion of DES patients. A few of these
commenters observed that a Health Equity Adjustment may help to
mitigate the impact of payment reductions that may disproportionately
impact facilities that care for a greater proportion of low-income
patients. A few other commenters noted that many facilities require
more resources and specific care expertise to meet the care needs
relevant to this patient population, and that a Health Equity
Adjustment may further incentivize parity among care providers by
providing them with resources necessary to provide high quality care to
a complex patient population. A commenter expressed support for
adopting a bonus scoring methodology for a Health Equity Adjustment in
the ESRD QIP, noting that such a framework would align with current
Health Equity Adjustments implemented in IPPS, SNF VBP, and ETC Model.
A few commenters agreed that a Health Equity Adjustment would be
valuable to the care providers and patients. These commenters
recommended that CMS engage with organizations and care providers in
the ESRD community to discuss potential Health Equity Adjustment
options and related policies for inclusion in future rulemaking, which
commenters believed would be helpful to ensure that a future Health
Equity Adjustment is developed and implemented in a meaningful way.
Several commenters expressed support for structuring the Health
Equity Adjustment as a bonus that is applied to a facility's TPS. A few
commenters recommended adding a Health Equity Adjustment bonus to a
facility's TPS based on its performance in each of the five measure
domains included in the TPS, adjusted for the facility's proportion of
socioeconomically disadvantaged patients. A few commenters recommended
that a Health Equity Adjustment be calculated based on a facility's
performance across select measure domains, rather than all 5 measure
domains. A commenter noted that fewer dialysis facilities are eligible
for scoring on ICH CAHPS due to measure eligibility requirements, and
therefore recommended that CMS exclude the Patient & Family Engagement
domain from the measure performance calculation for purposes of
calculating the Health Equity Adjustment. Another commenter recommended
that a facility's performance within each measure domain should be
assessed independently, such that a facility may be eligible for Health
Equity Adjustment bonus points based on its performance in each domain.
This commenter recommended that facility performance is grouped into
three tiers for each domain, and that eligibility for HEA points be
calculated based on the facility's performance within a given domain's
tertile. A different commenter recommended that CMS calculate potential
Health Equity Adjustment bonus points based on a facility's performance
in Coordination, Clinical Care, and Safety measure domains relative to
the quintile of that domain score.
Several commenters offered recommendations regarding Health Equity
Adjustment bonus application. A commenter recommended that a future
Health Equity Adjustment policy be designed to award bonus points to
facilities that serve greater proportions of underserved patient
populations and have higher quality performance. A commenter
recommended that CMS consider structuring the Health Equity Adjustment
as a positive payment adjustment tied to improved health outcomes for
DES patients, citing the health equity incentives in the ETC and IOTA
models. Another commenter suggested that Health Equity Adjustment bonus
points be awarded based on the percentage of patients from underserved
populations treated at the facility. This commenter believed that this
approach would help to ensure that facilities caring for patients in
underserved communities have adequate resources, observing that such
facilities are more likely to be impacted by payment penalties which
may result in decreased ability to provide care to such patient
populations.
A few commenters recommended that CMS apply a Health Equity
Adjustment bonus to a facility's TPS in a way that would allow
facilities to move to a lesser payment reduction tier or a zero-payment
reduction tier, believing that such a methodology would support
facilities serving greater proportions of DES patients. A commenter
recommended that Health Equity Adjustment bonus points should be
limited to a maximum of 10 points to appropriately reward facilities
for delivering excellent performance to underserved populations while
also not skewing the TPS or creating unintended incentives.
A commenter requested that any Health Equity Adjustment policy not
require changes to the current process for calculating a facility's TPS
or to the payment reduction scales. This commenter suggested the
potential equity points be combined as a weighted average that uses the
same weights as the TPS. The commenter recommended a methodology that
included: (1) multiplying the measure performance scalar by a logistic
exchange function representing the facility in the percent of DES
patient-months, which would provide the pre-scaled Health Equity
Adjustment bonus; (2) multiplying the pre-scaled Health Equity
Adjustment bonus by 10 to scale the Health Equity Adjustment bonus for
incorporation into the TPS; and (3) adding the Health Equity Adjustment
points to the existing TPS for a maximum value of 100 points. Pursuant
to this commenter's recommended framework, although facilities would be
assessed against a modified TPS, the payment reduction scale would be
set based on unmodified TPS ranges.
A few commenters recommended that a Health Equity Adjustment should
be structured so that it is not budget neutral, and therefore would not
negatively impact facilities that don't qualify for the Health Equity
Adjustment bonus. A few commenters observed that potential unintended
consequences may result from a Health Equity Adjustment in the ESRD
QIP, due to the unique nature of the program. These few commenters
observed that a Health Equity Adjustment within the ESRD QIP would
likely result in a decrease in the number and size of payment
reductions imposed and recommended that CMS should not seek to increase
overall payment reductions through other policy changes.
[[Page 89188]]
A few commenters offered recommendations regarding potential
grouping methodology for calculating eligibility for a Health Equity
Adjustment. A commenter recommended that CMS group facilities into
quartiles or quintiles to calculate eligibility for a Health Equity
Adjustment bonus. This commenter noted that there are a greater number
of eligible facilities in the ESRD QIP, as compared to other CMS
programs that apply a Health Equity Adjustment. A different commenter
recommended that CMS structure a ESRD QIP Health Equity Adjustment by
grouping facility performance into three tiers for each Measure Domain,
and that eligibility for Health Equity Adjustment bonus points be
calculated based on the facility's performance within a given domain's
tertile.
Several commenters provided recommendations regarding the
applicable patient population used to determine a facility's
eligibility for Health Equity Adjustment consideration. A few
commenters recommended that a Health Equity Adjustment account for both
Medicare fee-for-service patients as well as Medicare Advantage
patients to accurately represent the proportion of the targeted patient
population. A commenter recommended that, in addition to DES patients,
CMS include Medicaid-only and uninsured patients in its definition of
underserved patient population. Another commenter recommended that CMS
expand the applicability of Health Equity Adjustment eligibility to
include low-income subsidy recipients, noting potential different
impacts for facilities in states that did not expand their Medicaid
programs. A different commenter recommended that CMS award Health
Equity Adjustment bonus points based on the percentage of DES patients
as well as low-income subsidy patients treated at the facility, noting
that this approach would be consistent with the ETC Model. Another
commenter recommended that CMS set a minimum threshold of 20 percent
DES patient population for Health Equity Adjustment eligibility, noting
that such a threshold would be consistent with the SNF VBP scoring
policy.
A few commenters expressed concern regarding potential unintended
consequences that may result from a Health Equity Adjustment in the
ESRD QIP. A few commenters expressed concern that a Health Equity
Adjustment may create confusion by inflating or otherwise impacting a
facility's TPS. A commenter noted that an adjustment to a facility's
TPS based on a Health Equity Adjustment would create further confusion
for patients seeking to understand the significance of a facility's
publicly available TPS. A commenter observed that a Health Equity
Adjustment may suggest that facilities with higher proportions of DES
patients are held to a lower standard or that those patients are
allowed to have poorer health outcomes. Another commenter noted that a
Health Equity Adjustment may not be valuable to all ESRD facilities and
recommended that CMS consider the potential impact on facilities in
certain areas that may have limited resources. A different commenter
expressed concern that a Health Equity Adjustment may result in
unintended financial incentives and requested that CMS ensure that any
Health Equity Adjustment policy continues to focus on advancing health
equity. A commenter requested that CMS clarify how it anticipates
measuring for health equity success.
A few commenters expressed concern that a Health Equity Adjustment
may not be valuable to the ESRD QIP. A commenter observed that a Health
Equity Adjustment may not be sufficient or appropriate for the ESRD QIP
as a means to address health disparities. Another commenter expressed
concern that a Health Equity Adjustment would not be valuable because
the ESRD QIP is a penalty-only program that does not award bonuses.
A commenter recommended that the ESRD QIP adopt a peer grouping
methodology, similar to the methodology used in the Hospital
Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP). This commenter expressed the
belief that stratification into quintiles would promote competition
among facilities within the same quintile and provide a more accurate
comparison of facility performance that takes patient population into
account.
Several commenters recommended other approaches that the ESRD QIP
could propose to adopt to effectively address healthcare disparities
and advance health equity. A few commenters recommended that the ESRD
QIP adopt efforts that are more directly aimed at addressing health
disparities. A commenter recommended that services aimed at navigating
care coordination and HRSN-related needs be included as part of the
quality care provided by ESRD facilities. This commenter noted that a
facility that has staff trained in identifying and addressing such
needs may help to mitigate the increased risk of poor outcomes for ESRD
patients tied to unmet HRSNs. A different commenter expressed support
for the three health equity measures recently added to the ESRD QIP,
but expressed concern that the measures do little to directly address
systemic health disparities and that facilities do not have the
resources necessary to identify and facilitate solutions to address
HRSNs. This commenter noted that, although collecting such data is
essential, health disparities will persist in the absence of additional
funding necessary to address these issues. Another commenter
recommended that CMS explore policy approaches outside the ESRD QIP to
reduce health disparities in the ESRD patient population, urging CMS to
invest in structural and systemic capabilities that facilities require
to comprehensively support the care needs of a complex patient
population.
A commenter recommended that CMS consider restructuring the ESRD
QIP to incorporate both negative and positive payment adjustments to
incentivize high quality care and provide access to additional
resources and support. This commenter expressed the belief that
financial penalties do not necessarily facilitate improvement in
quality of care, noting that such penalties also potentially reduce
resources available to facilities that would benefit from them the
most. Another commenter recommended that CMS continue to engage with
the ESRD community to explore effective approaches to address health
disparities and improve the quality of care provided to underserved
populations.
A commenter recommended that CMS consider whether within-facility
analysis is appropriate for addressing health disparities in the ESRD
patient population, noting that the diversity of patient populations
among different dialysis facilities often reflect the diversity of the
population of the area which the facility is located. A different
commenter recommended that CMS consider the role of patient autonomy
and agency in developing future health equity measures, noting that
individual patients may differ in their level of interest and
engagement.
Response: We appreciate all of the comments and interest in this
topic. We believe that this input is very valuable in the continuing
development of our efforts to effectively address healthcare
disparities and advance health equity. We will continue to take all
concerns, comments, and suggestions into account for future development
and expansion of our health equity-related efforts.
[[Page 89189]]
2. Request for Public Comment on Updating the Data Validation Policy
for the ESRD QIP
One of the critical elements of the ESRD QIP's success is ensuring
that the data submitted to calculate measure scores and TPSs are
accurate. The ESRD QIP includes two types of data validation for this
purpose: The EQRS data validation (OMB Control Number 0938-1289) and
the NHSN validation (OMB Control Number 0938-1340). In the CY 2019 ESRD
PPS final rule, we adopted the CROWNWeb (now EQRS) data validation as a
permanent feature of the Program (83 FR 57003). In the CY 2020 ESRD PPS
final rule, we adopted the NHSN data validation as a permanent feature
of the Program (84 FR 60727). Under both data validation policies, we
validate EQRS and NHSN data from a sample of facilities randomly
selected for validation. If a facility is randomly selected for
validation but does not submit the requested records, 10 points are
deducted from the facility's TPS.
In the proposed rule, we requested public comment on ways to update
the data validation policy to encourage accurate, comprehensive
reporting of ESRD QIP data (89 FR 55823). We have reviewed data
validation policies in other quality reporting programs such as the
Hospital Inpatient Quality Reporting (IQR) Program (81 FR 57180) and
the Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting (OQR) Program (76 FR 74486).
These programs have adopted data validation policies that require a
hospital selected for data validation to achieve a 75 percent
reliability or accuracy threshold to receive full credit for data
validation reporting.
We welcomed comments on potential future policy proposals that
would encourage accurate, comprehensive reporting for data validation
purposes, such as introducing a penalty for facilities that do not meet
an established reporting or data accuracy threshold, introducing a
bonus for facilities that perform above an established reporting or
data accuracy threshold, developing targeted education on data
validation reporting, or requiring that a facility selected for
validation that does not meet an established reporting or data accuracy
threshold be selected again the next year.
We received comments in response to this request for information
and have summarized them here.
Comment: A few commenters offered feedback on ways to reduce
administrative burden associated with participating in data validation.
A few commenters recommended that CMS focus on improving the data
validation system because they believe that the current framework is
too burdensome for facilities. A few commenters recommended that CMS
prioritize enhancing the functionality of EQRS and NHSN systems to
facilitate easier data submission and correction, which commenters
believe will support more accurate and comprehensive reporting. A
commenter suggested that CMS adopt advanced technologies such as
artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning algorithms to reduce
burden associated with traditional reporting mechanisms. A few
commenters noted that the current data validation system is burdensome
on facilities due to compliance requirements and timeframes, which
commenters observed may detract from the facility's ability to focus
resources on providing quality care. A few commenters expressed concern
that smaller facilities faced a disproportionately greater
administrative burden to comply with the data validation process, and
therefore recommended that CMS look into mitigating that burden. A
commenter recommended that CMS mitigate the burden on smaller
facilities by ensuring that the data validation policy reflect
variability across facility types. A few commenters recommended that
CMS extend the submission window because the 60-day compliance
timeframe is often challenging due to staffing constraints, absences,
and competing priorities. A few commenters recommended that, to reduce
administrative burden and encourage comprehensive and accurate
reporting, CMS establish and distribute a schedule outlining which
facilities will be included in the validation study and when, to
provide facilities with adequate notice. A commenter recommended that
CMS also provide a more predictable schedule for survey requests. A few
commenters recommended that CMS reduce survey frequency, noting that
completing surveys twice a year is time-consuming and further
constrains already limited staff resources. A few commenters observed
that previous validation study results suggest a level of stability
that reduces the need for annual re-measurement. A commenter
recommended that CMS reduce the frequency of data validation surveys to
every five years or reasonable intervals. A commenter noted that CMS
has reported consistently high accuracy rates of data reporting by
participating facilities, which the commenter believes is an indication
that the current data validation policy is generating accurate,
comprehensive reporting of QIP data. A commenter noted that reducing
the frequency of validation studies would provide facilities additional
time to understand data collection requirements and ensure the accuracy
of submissions.
A few commenters suggested that CMS consider providing a bonus for
facilities that perform above an established reporting or data accuracy
threshold, but only if the funding for such bonus were not obtained by
reducing payments to ESRD facilities. A commenter recommended that
participation in data validation be voluntary and that participating
facilities receive bonus points awarded to their TPS, rather than
penalties for non-participation.
A few commenters requested that CMS share the results of previous
data validation studies to inform their recommendations regarding the
establishment of a reporting or data accuracy threshold. A commenter
expressed concern with updating the data validation policy, noting that
insufficient data validation information was publicly available to
provide comment on future updates to the data validation policy at this
time. A few commenters recommended greater transparency with regard to
the results of the data validations surveys. A few commenters noted
that such transparency will help facilities understand their results
and support targeted education efforts, which will lead to more
accurate ESRD QIP data submitted for validation. Although a commenter
expressed support for targeted education, this commenter opposed
mandatory re-selection of facilities that do not meet an established
reporting or data accuracy threshold because commenter believes that
selected facilities need to be chosen at random.
A few commenters recommended that any updates to the data
validation system include robust due process protections that are
similar to those provided through other audit programs operated by CMS.
A commenter expressed the belief that due process policies will help to
ensure the accuracy of data submitted by ensuring that there is
opportunity to address potential issues with data submission and
interpretation to ensure that facilities are not unfairly penalized.
Response: We appreciate all of the comments and interest in this
topic. We believe that this input is very valuable in the continuing
development of our efforts to encourage accurate, comprehensive
reporting for data validation purposes. We will continue to take all
concerns, comments, and
[[Page 89190]]
suggestions into account for future development and expansion of these
efforts.
V. End-Stage Renal Disease Treatment Choices (ETC) Model
A. Background
Section 1115A of the Act authorizes the Innovation Center to test
innovative payment and service delivery models expected to reduce
Medicare, Medicaid, and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
expenditures while preserving or enhancing the quality of care
furnished to the beneficiaries of these programs. The purpose of the
ETC Model is to test the effectiveness of adjusting certain Medicare
payments to ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians to encourage
greater utilization of home dialysis and kidney transplantation,
support ESRD Beneficiary modality choice, reduce Medicare expenditures,
and preserve or enhance the quality of care. As described in the
Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61114), beneficiaries with ESRD
are among the most medically fragile and high-cost populations served
by the Medicare program. ESRD Beneficiaries require dialysis or kidney
transplantation to survive, and the majority of ESRD Beneficiaries
receiving dialysis receive hemodialysis in an ESRD facility. However,
as described in the Specialty Care Models final rule, alternative renal
replacement modalities to in-center hemodialysis, including home
dialysis and kidney transplantation, are associated with improved
clinical outcomes, better quality of life, and lower costs than in-
center hemodialysis (85 FR 61264).
The ETC Model is a mandatory payment model. ESRD facilities and
Managing Clinicians are selected as ETC Participants based on their
location in Selected Geographic Areas--a set of 30 percent of Hospital
Referral Regions (HRRs) that have been randomly selected to be included
in the ETC Model, as well as HRRs with at least 20 percent of ZIP
codes\TM\ located in Maryland.\117\ CMS excludes all United States
Territories from the Selected Geographic Areas.
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\117\ ZIP code\TM\ is a trademark of the United States Postal
Service.
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Under the ETC Model, ETC Participants are subject to two payment
adjustments. The first is the Home Dialysis Payment Adjustment (HDPA),
which is an upward adjustment on certain payments made to participating
ESRD facilities under the ESRD Prospective Payment System (PPS) on home
dialysis claims, and an upward adjustment to the Monthly Capitation
Payment (MCP) paid to participating Managing Clinicians on home
dialysis-related claims. The HDPA applies to claims with claim service
dates beginning January 1, 2021, and ending December 31, 2023.
The second payment adjustment under the ETC Model is the
Performance Payment Adjustment (PPA). For the PPA, we assess ETC
Participants' home dialysis rates and transplant rates during a
Measurement Year (MY), which includes 12 months of performance data.
Each MY has a corresponding PPA Period--a 6-month period that begins 6
months after the conclusion of the MY. We adjust certain payments for
ETC Participants during the PPA Period based on the ETC Participant's
home dialysis rate and transplant rate, calculated as the sum of the
transplant waitlist rate and the living donor transplant rate, during
the corresponding MY.
Based on an ETC Participant's achievement in relation to benchmarks
based on the home dialysis rate and transplant rate observed in
Comparison Geographic Areas during the Benchmark Year, and the ETC
Participant's improvement in relation to their own home dialysis rate
and transplant rate during the Benchmark Year, we would make an upward
or downward adjustment to certain payments to the ETC Participant. The
magnitude of the positive and negative PPAs for ETC Participants
increases over the course of the Model. These PPAs apply to claims with
claim service dates beginning July 1, 2022 and ending June 30, 2027.
CMS has modified the ETC Model several times. In the CY 2022 ESRD
PPS final rule, we finalized a number of changes to the ETC Model. We
adjusted the calculation of the home dialysis rate (86 FR 61951 through
61955) and the transplant rate (86 FR 61955 through 61959) and updated
the methodology for attributing Pre-emptive LDT Beneficiaries (86 FR
61950 through 61951). We changed the achievement benchmarking and
scoring methodology (86 FR 61959 through 61968), as well as the
improvement benchmarking and scoring methodology (86 FR 61968 through
61971). We specified the method and requirements for sharing
performance data with ETC Participants (86 FR 61971 through 61984). We
also made a number of updates and clarifications to the kidney disease
patient education services waivers and made certain related
flexibilities available to ETC Participants (86 FR 61984 through
61994). In the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87 FR 67136) we finalized
further changes to the ETC Model. We updated the PPA achievement
scoring methodology beginning in the fifth MY of the ETC Model, which
began on January 1, 2023 (87 FR 67277 through 67278). We also clarified
requirements for qualified staff to furnish and bill kidney disease
patient education services under the ETC Model's Medicare program
waivers (87 FR 67278 through 67280) and finalized our intent to publish
participant-level model performance information to the public (87 FR
67280). In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76344) we finalized a
policy whereby an ETC Participant may seek administrative review of a
targeted review determination provided by CMS.
B. Provisions of the Proposed Rule
We proposed a modification to the definition of ESRD Beneficiary at
42 CFR 512.310 as that definition is used for the purposes of
attributing beneficiaries to the ETC Model. As finalized in the
Specialty Care Models final rule and codified at Sec. 512.360, CMS
retrospectively, that is, following a MY, attributes ESRD Beneficiaries
and Pre-emptive Living Donor Transplant (LDT) Beneficiaries to an ETC
Participant for each month during a MY. An ESRD Beneficiary may be
attributed to an ETC Participant if the beneficiary has already had a
kidney transplant and has a non-AKI dialysis or MCP claim less than 12
months after the beneficiary's transplant date and has a kidney
transplant failure ICD-10 diagnosis code documented on any Medicare
claim. Based on feedback from model participants, we became aware that
the use of the ICD-10 code T86.12 to identify transplant failures may
be incorrectly identifying beneficiaries for attribution to the ETC
Model because a claim that is only coded with T86.12 may signify
delayed graft function rather than a true transplant failure. To ensure
that we are correctly identifying ESRD beneficiaries for the purposes
of ETC Model ESRD Beneficiary attribution, we proposed to modify our
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary at Sec. 512.310. Our regulations
currently define an ESRD Beneficiary as a beneficiary that meets either
of the following criteria: (1) is receiving dialysis or other services
for end-stage renal disease, up to and including the month in which the
beneficiary receives a kidney transplant up to and including the month
in which the beneficiary receives a kidney transplant, or (2) has
already received a kidney transplant and has a non-AKI dialysis or MCP
claim at least 12-months after the beneficiary's latest transplant
date; or less than 12-months after the beneficiary's latest transplant
date and
[[Page 89191]]
has a kidney transplant failure diagnosis code documented on any
Medicare claim. We proposed to modify the second criterion to specify
that the beneficiary's latest transplant date must be identified by at
least one of the following: (1) two or more MCP claims in the 180 days
following the date on which the kidney transplant was received; (2) 24
or more maintenance dialysis treatments at any time after 180 days
following the transplant date; or (3) indication of a transplant
failure after the beneficiary's date of transplant based on data from
the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR). We proposed
that if a beneficiary meets more than one of these criteria, that CMS
will consider that beneficiary an ESRD Beneficiary for the purposes of
ETC model attribution starting with the earliest month in which the
transplant failure was recorded. In our analysis of the proposed
methodology for identifying transplant failures, we found that the use
of all three criterion correctly identified more true transplant
failures than did the use of T86.12 alone.
We considered a proposal to modify the language at 42 CFR 512.310
that an ESRD Beneficiary is a beneficiary that has already received a
kidney transplant and has a non-AKI or MCP dialysis claim less than 12
months after the beneficiary's latest transplant date with kidney
transplant failure diagnosis code documented on any Medicare claim. We
considered removing the last clause; in other words, removing the
specification that that the beneficiary must have a kidney transplant
failure diagnosis code documented on any Medicare claim. We did not
propose this modification to the definition of an ESRD Beneficiary
because doing so would preclude the possibility for a beneficiary to be
attributed to the ETC Model for 12-months after a transplant,
regardless of if the transplant failed. We were concerned that this
scenario would reduce the number of attributed beneficiary-months that
would be available for us to use to calculate the home dialysis and
transplant rate for ETC Participants. We solicited comment on our
proposal to modify the definition of an ESRD Beneficiary to more
accurately identify beneficiaries that may be attributed to the ETC
Model due to receiving a kidney transplant that fails within 12-months
of its receipt.
Comment: We received four comments on this proposed policy and the
alternative policy put forth for consideration, all expressing
collective agreement on the methodology modification. Two Patient
Advocacy Organizations agreed with our plan to modify these definitions
as described and specifically agreed that if a beneficiary meets more
than one of the amended criteria, then they should be considered an
ESRD Beneficiary for the purposes of ETC model attribution starting
with the earliest month in which the transplant failure was recorded.
One commenter agreed with our decision to forgo the alternative policy
to remove the specification that that the beneficiary must have a
kidney transplant failure diagnosis code documented on any Medicare
claim. One dialysis organization stated that they commend CMS'
dedication to correctly identifying ESRD beneficiaries for attribution
to the ETC Model. They believe the proposed clarification will help
prevent beneficiaries with delayed graft function who have a claim
coded with T86.12 from being incorrectly attributed to the ETC Model.
The organization further encourages CMS to make needed refinements for
the ETC Model's remaining duration and utilize its regulatory authority
to mitigate penalties to physicians and dialysis providers.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' dedicated engagement with
the design of the ETC Model and the methodology by which we assess
transplant beneficiary attributions. However, we uncovered an
inconsistency in the rule text between Paragraph 3 and Paragraph 4 of
the proposed definition of an ESRD beneficiary. Paragraph 3 suggests
that a kidney transplant failure would be identified from a beneficiary
who has ``at least'' one of the following three criteria, whereas
Paragraph 4 in the proposed rule states that if a beneficiary meets
``more than one'' of the criteria described in paragraphs (3)(i)
through (iii) that they would then be considered an ESRD beneficiary.
Given the specific comment from one interested party that expressed
support for a beneficiary meeting more than one of the following
criteria to be considered an ESRD Beneficiary for the purposes of ETC
model attribution: (1) two or more MCP claims in the 180 days following
the date on which the kidney transplant was received; (2) 24 or more
maintenance dialysis treatments at any time after 180 days following
the transplant date; or (3) indication of a transplant failure after
the beneficiary's date of transplant based on data from the Scientific
Registry of Transplant Recipients (SRTR), we plan to update the
definition in paragraph three to resolve the inconsistency and delete
the phrase ``at least one of the following''.
Final Decision: In consideration of the comments received, we are
finalizing our proposed modification to the definition of ESRD
Beneficiary at 42 CFR 512.310 as that definition is used for the
purposes of attributing beneficiaries to the ETC Model with one
modification. We will delete the phrase ``at least one of the
following'' from the definition of kidney transplant failure in
paragraph 3 so it reads, ``Has a kidney transplant failure less than 12
months after the beneficiary's latest transplant date as identified
by''. Per paragraph 4 of the definition then, a beneficiary must meet
more than one of the criteria laid out in paragraph 3 to qualify as
having a kidney transplant failure.
C. Request for Information
1. Request for Information
In the Specialty Care Models final rule, we referenced a report
from the Public Policy/Advocacy Committee of the North American Chapter
of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis that describes
barriers to increased adoption of home dialysis including educational
barriers, the need for home care partner support, the monthly visit
requirement for the Monthly Capitation Payment (MCP) under the
Physician Fee Schedule, variations in dialysis business practices in
staffing allocation, lack of home clinic independence, and other
restrictions resulting in the inefficient distribution of home dialysis
supplies (85 FR 61265).\118\ The National Kidney Foundation (NKF)
Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI) controversies
conference report, ``Overcoming Barriers for Uptake and Continued Use
of Home Dialysis: An NKF-KDOQI Conference Report,'' describes clinical,
operational, policy, and societal barriers to increased prescribing of
and retention on home modalities. For example, lack of clinical
confidence in prescribing home dialysis, lack of infrastructure,
financial costs to patients associated with home modifications, the
need for space to store home dialysis supplies, lack of housing, lack
of appropriate education, care partner burnout, and patient fear of
self-cannulation.\119\
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\118\ Golper TA, Saxena AB, Piraino B, Teitelbaum, I, Burkart,
J, Finkelstein FO, Abu-Alfa A. Systematic Barriers to the Effective
Delivery of Home Dialysis in the United States: A Report from the
Public Policy/Advocacy Committee of the North American Chapter of
the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis. American Journal
of Kidney Diseases. 2011; 58(6): 879-885.doi:10.1053/
j.ajkd.2011.06.028.
\119\ Chan, C.T., Collins, K., Ditschman, E.P., Koester-
Wiedemann, L., Saffer, T.L., Wallace, E., & Rocco, M.V. (2020).
Overcoming barriers for uptake and continued use of home dialysis:
An NKF-Kdoqi Conference Report. American Journal of Kidney Diseases,
75(6), 926-934. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.ajkd.2019.11.007.
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[[Page 89192]]
Since the Specialty Care Models final rule was published,
interested parties have spoken to us about challenges associated with
increasing access to home dialysis, particularly among beneficiaries
with lower socioeconomic status, who have lower rates of home dialysis
and kidney transplantation than people with higher socioeconomic
status. The ETC Model was designed to address these barriers; for
example, CMS applied the Home Dialysis Payment Adjustment (HDPA) to
assist dialysis organizations with overcoming market realities that
impose substantial barriers to opening and sustaining home dialysis
programs. The upside and downside risk associated with the Performance
Payment Adjustment (PPA) are designed to be strong incentives for
behavioral change towards increasing beneficiary access to home
dialysis. In the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule, we finalized a policy
whereby we stratify achievement benchmarks based on the proportion of
attributed beneficiaries who are dual eligible for both Medicare and
Medicaid or who receive the Low-Income Subsidy (LIS) (86 FR 61968). We
also finalized the Health Equity Incentive (HEI), which rewards ETC
Participant aggregation groups that demonstrate greater than 2.5
percentage points improvement on the home dialysis and transplant rate
among dual eligible and LIS recipient beneficiaries from the Benchmark
Year (BY) to the MY with a .5 increase in their improvement score (86
FR 61971).
Performance accountability in the ETC Model is scheduled to end on
June 30, 2026. We are concerned that the end of performance
accountability may reduce incentives for dialysis organizations to
invest in access to home dialysis and address the challenges of the
type we describe previously in this section. We were interested in
hearing from interested parties regarding policies that the Innovation
Center may consider specifically incorporating into any successor model
to the ETC Model or that CMS may consider generally. Given the growth
in ESRD beneficiaries choosing Medicare Advantage plans,\120\ we were
particularly interested in approaches CMS could take to improve
beneficiary access to home dialysis modalities in Medicare Advantage.
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\120\ Nguyen, K.H., Oh, E.G., Meyers, D.J., Kim, D., Mehrotra,
R., & Trivedi, A.N. (2023). Medicare advantage enrollment among
beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease in the first year of the
21st Century Cures Act. JAMA, 329(10), 810. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2023.1426.
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We sought input on the following topics that may improve our
understanding of other policy interventions that may increase access to
high quality home dialysis within the context of Innovation Center
models and across CMS.
1. How should any future Innovation Center model that incorporates
home dialysis incorporate what the community has learned from the ETC
Model?
2. What barriers to home dialysis could be addressed through the
ESRD Prospective Payment System (PPS)? We request that commenters be as
specific as possible.
3. What approaches could CMS consider to increase beneficiary
access to home dialysis modalities in Medicare Advantage?
4. How should nephrologist payment from traditional, fee-for-
service Medicare and from MAOs account for clinician-level barriers to
prescribing and retaining patients on home modalities?
We received comments in response to this request for information
and have summarized them here.
Comment: Inclusion of the Kidney Disease Education (KDE) Benefit.
Several commenters expressed their belief in the usefulness of KDE as a
tool for individuals with kidney failure to learn about their disease
state and options for treatment. The commenters mentioned it is also
well known that patients who receive early and accurate modality
education, such as what is provided through KDE, are more likely to
choose a home modality should their disease progress to ESRD.
Commenters urge CMS to maintain the ETC's changes to the KDE program in
any future models related to increasing home dialysis and waiving the
20 percent coinsurance.
Consideration of Pediatric Patients in Future Models. A
professional society for pediatric nephrologists expressed appreciation
for the exclusion of children under 18 from participation in the ETC
Model. The commenter reiterated their belief of current model goals and
further highlighted that young adults who continue to be treated by
pediatric nephrologists once they turn 18 years old are a particularly
complex group of patients. Of note, the commenter urged CMS to consider
collaboration with representatives of the pediatric nephrology
community on future models to incentivize home dialysis and
transplantation.
Increased Access to New and Innovative Drugs. A non-provider
industry-associated interested party noted that within various CMS
hospital inpatient and outpatient models advanced by the Innovation
Center, add-on payments for innovative new technologies and therapies
are purposely excluded from episode expenditures to ensure that
Medicare beneficiaries have consistent access to innovations that
improve their care. The interested party encourages the Innovation
Center to apply the same reasoning and approach under future kidney
models.
Data and Quality Metrics. A dialysis organization encouraged CMS to
reconsider the concept of comparing geographic areas in potential
successor models. Additionally, the commenter and several patient
advocacy organizations encouraged the inclusion of home dialysis
measures with greater specificity, such as a home retention metric or
optimal starts, and the development of a home dialysis patient
satisfaction and experience measure. Similarly, for transplant, CMS was
encouraged to consider removing metrics that run counter to
beneficiaries' waitlisting, such as waitlist mortality, and consider
adding metrics, such as referral to waitlist percentage and time from
referral to waitlist. A commenter further highlighted future models
with more efficient data sharing capabilities to access performance
data would be a strength.
Increased Efforts Towards Transplantation. Several commenters
provided recommendations on ways to effectively increase
transplantation, such as the creation of a patient navigator program to
improve patient experience of care in seeking transplants.
Social Drivers of Health. Several commenters expressed support of
future models that test how additional resources and/or direct patient
incentives aimed at addressing social drivers of health would impact
the uptake of home modalities and ultimately whether quality of life is
improved. Commenters reiterated previous recommendations that CMS work
with HHS and the states to revise federal, state, and local fraud and
abuse laws to support dialysis facilities and physicians in their
efforts to help individuals with kidney failure address socio-economic
barriers to home dialysis. A commenter also suggested some barriers
contributing to the lower uptake of home dialysis in communities of
color and underserved communities could be addressed by encouraging
Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to apply the Special Supplemental
Benefits for the Chronically Ill (SSBCI). The commenter suggested these
benefits could be used to reduce barriers to
[[Page 89193]]
home dialysis, such as copay assistance programs for necessary dialysis
related medications, stipends for utility costs and necessary home
modifications, assistance for care partners or respite when needed, and
assistance in installing and paying for broadband internet.
Model Structure. Several commenters expressed their support for
future models being voluntary and including more flexibilities for
smaller providers, like the Comprehensive ESRD Choices (CEC) model.
Additionally, stakeholders believe future models should have a
financial structure based on anticipated savings to increase incentives
and should include Medicare Advantage (MA) beneficiaries. Other
commenters recommend a model that tests the impact of additional
Medicare payments for a package of comprehensive care services to aid
in investments in infrastructure and care management capabilities for
dialysis providers.
Recurring Barriers Elevated by Patients and Caregivers. Commenters
elevated recurring barriers shared by patients and caregivers that
dialysis providers noted being limited in their capacity to address,
such as the fear of abandonment and/or lack of real time support in the
home, inadequate space in the home for equipment and supplies, and the
lack of available in-home support staff. A commenter suggested the
development of a Technical Expert Panel (TEP) to evaluate evidence from
the IM-HOME1 framework for resolving the barriers that exist for home
dialysis.
Incentivizing Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) Catheter Placement.
Commenters elevated several barriers impacting timely PD catheter
placement previously identified by CMS: (1) challenges scheduling
operating room time in the hospital setting for PD catheter placement,
(2) the need for additional training on PD catheter placement for both
surgeons and interventional nephrologists, and (3) the lack of
dedicated PD catheter insertion teams in the hospital setting who can
immediately place catheters for patients who ``crash'' into dialysis
and would benefit from urgent start PD. Commenters encourage CMS to
develop a demonstration to test the impact of policy changes for equal
reimbursement rates between PD catheter placement procedures and
vascular access placement procedures. A patient advocacy organization
recommended a bonus incentive payment for vascular surgeons, hospitals,
and surgical centers, that would increase reimbursement for PD catheter
placements and become equal with the reimbursements provided for
Arteriovenous (AV) Fistula reimbursement.
Fraud and Abuse Laws. Two commenters recommended we remove certain
barriers that they believe are created by the physician self-referral
law, Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS), and beneficiary inducement laws. The
commenters described various arrangements they believe may be
prohibited by such laws but would be beneficial to care coordination,
management of patient care and disease progression, and patient
education.
Increased Data Transparency. Commenters strongly suggested that
publicly accessible data is needed to ensure that beneficiaries with
kidney failure who elect an MA plan maintain access to the care they
need. CMS is encouraged to update MA data collection and reporting
efforts to match other Medicare programs and better align incentives
across the health care continuum.
Time and Distance Standards and Network Adequacy. Commenters urge
CMS to reconsider requiring time and distance standards in MA, as
described in regulations at 42 CFR 422.116, for dialysis facilities
that were removed in 2020. Interested parties across the kidney
community have noticed unintended consequences on patients-including
home dialysis patients-as a result of this amended policy. Patients and
interested parties report that some plans have such narrow networks
that patients have difficulty accessing vascular access surgeons,
nephrologists, or even a dialysis facility near their homes. Commenters
further note other patients have been listed as inactive on transplant
waitlists because MA plans have removed their center from the network.
Expanded Staff Training Requirements. A commenter noted that a big
obstacle to home dialysis is the current training requirements that
limit training to one patient at a time, and for that trainer be a
Registered Nurse (RN). This leads to significant backlogs for training
and deters potential patients. The national shortage of RNs limits the
availability of trainers, and a core curriculum could be developed to
train other professionals who could provide home dialysis training. CMS
is further encouraged to create incentives to support new technologies
that support mobile dialysis such that patients living in rural or
remote parts of our country may have access to same standard of care as
those that reside in a large urban area.
Medicare Advantage (MA) Benchmarks and Plan Finder Tools.
Commenters note that CMS should ensure that corresponding adjustments
in MA benchmarks for ESRD are made to reflect any adjustments in FFS
ESRD payments. Additionally, commenters stated that CMS should
reinforce statutory requirements that MA patients maintain access to
the same services as Medicare FFS patients, including home dialysis.
Despite statutory requirements, commenters reported that many MA
organizations (MAOs) limit beneficiary access to in-network home
dialysis, a treatment modality to which all Medicare beneficiaries
should maintain equitable access. Commenters further highlight that the
Medicare.gov Plan Finder is a useful tool from CMS that helps people
find MA and Medicare Part D plans available in their area and should
include information regarding the availability of home dialysis
programs by MA plan. In doing so, CMS can shift the responsibility away
from patients and onto MAOs to ensure they are communicating clearly
their plans' offerings and whether enrollees will have access to a home
dialysis program. Commenters also believe MA plans would be
incentivized to prioritize home dialysis uptake if home dialysis
penetration was included as a new quality marker, in addition to
established standards that measure their performance against a set of
quality measures determined by CMS.
Changes to Physician Payments for Referrals and Training.
Interested parties believe that upstream incentive payments could serve
as a benefit for those physicians doing particular work with patients
in later CKD stages. CMS is also urged to consider providing a one-time
incentive payment for referral to home dialysis--either PD or Home
Hemodialysis (HHD). A complimentary policy change to the
recommendations earlier, is the increased payment for HCPCS codes G0420
and G0421, which are used for individual face-to-face education
services and group face-to-face education services related to CKD.
Commenters note that the codes have not been meaningfully updated.
Commenters highlighted the payment system is currently underfunded
by approximately 6.9 percent due to inadequate adjustments for
inflation and may be insufficient to achieve the goal of 20 to 25
percent of patients receiving dialysis at home. Minor inflationary
updates have not accounted for the increased demand for home training
nurses and staffing intensive TCU programs. Technological advances,
like remote patient monitoring and other digital tools could help to
fill the gap. A commenter noted that a TEP convened in May 2020
concluded that
[[Page 89194]]
facilities spent between 7.5 and 8 hours training patients on home
hemodialysis. CMS is encouraged to conduct an analysis to determine a
more accurate number of hours per session needed for successful home
dialysis training and subsequently revise the home dialysis training
add-on payment amount to capture growing costs.
Interested parties have reported barriers to physician training in
home dialysis modalities has led to a reluctance to prescribe these
therapies in practice. Additionally, the home dialysis training service
codes, CPT codes 90989 (for a completed course of home dialysis
training) and 90993 (for a single training session when the course is
not completed) have not been updated. These are unique service codes in
that they do not have relative value units (RVUs) assigned to them but
rather flat rates of $500 for 90989 and $20 per session for 90993.
Stakeholders believe an adjustment of this fee to $1,500 to $2000 would
be a step in the right direction for incentivizing the nephrologists to
offer home modality to their patients. Additionally, stakeholders
recommend that CMS issue a transmittal for Medicare Administrative
Contractors (MACs) clarifying that home dialysis training via CPT codes
90989 and 90993 are covered services in the Medicare physician fee
schedule.
Response: We appreciate all the comments on and interest in the
topics. We note that several of the suggestions made by commenters are
beyond the scope of CMS' rulemaking authority. Nonetheless, we highly
value this input, as it is essential to deliberations on future model
successors and ESRD policy development as we work to advance
administration initiatives to expand access to home dialysis and
increase transplantation efforts.
With respect to comments on fraud and abuse laws, thank you for the
comments related to certain arrangements that facilitate value-based
health care delivery and payment. We note that to the extent such
arrangements create financial relationships for purposes of the
physician self-referral law, we see no reason why the parties to the
arrangements described by the commenters could not use existing
exceptions to the physician self-referral law, including those for
value-based arrangements, and why the financial relationships could not
be structured to satisfy the requirements of an existing applicable
exception. Also, CMS may determine that the AKS safe harbor for CMS-
sponsored model arrangements and CMS-sponsored model patient incentives
(42 CFR 1001.952(ii)) is available to protect remuneration exchanged
pursuant to certain financial arrangements or patient incentives
permitted under future models. Such determination, if any, would be set
forth in documentation separately issued by CMS.
Final Decision: We intend to use comments received in response to
this RFI to inform future policy development. CMS would propose any
potential changes to payment policies through a separate notice and
comment rulemaking.
2. Exemption of the RFI From the Paperwork Reduction Act Implementing
Regulations
Please note, this is a RFI only. In accordance with the
implementing regulations of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
specifically 5 CFR 1320.3(h)(4), this general solicitation is exempt
from the PRA. Facts or opinions submitted in response to general
solicitations of comments from the public, published in the Federal
Register or other publications, regardless of the form or format
thereof, provided that no person is required to supply specific
information pertaining to the commenter, other than that necessary for
self-identification, as a condition of the agency's full consideration,
are not generally considered information collections and therefore not
subject to the PRA.
Respondents are encouraged to provide complete but concise
responses. This RFI is issued solely for information and planning
purposes; it does not constitute a Request for Proposal (RFP),
applications, proposal abstracts, or quotations. This RFI does not
commit the United States Government to contract for any supplies or
services or make a grant award. Further, we did not seek proposals
through this RFI and will not accept unsolicited proposals. Responders
are advised that the United States Government will not pay for any
information or administrative costs incurred in response to this RFI;
all costs associated with responding to this RFI will be solely at the
interested party's expense. Not responding to this RFI does not
preclude participation in any future procurement, if conducted. It is
the responsibility of the potential responders to monitor this RFI
announcement for additional information pertaining to this request.
Please note that we will not respond to questions about the policy
issues raised in this RFI. We may or may not choose to contact
individual responders. Such communications would only serve to further
clarify written responses. Contractor support personnel may be used to
review RFI responses. Responses to this notice are not offers and
cannot be accepted by the United States Government to form a binding
contract or issue a grant. Information obtained as a result of this RFI
may be used by the United States Government for program planning on a
non-attribution basis. Respondents should not include any information
that might be considered proprietary or confidential. This RFI should
not be construed as a commitment or authorization to incur cost for
which reimbursement would be required or sought. All submissions become
United States Government property and will not be returned. We may
publicly post the comments received, or a summary thereof.
VI. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, we are required to
provide 60-day 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. 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.
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.
We solicited public comment on each of these issues for the
following sections of this document that contain information collection
requirements (ICRs):
A. ESRD QIP--Wage Estimates (OMB Control Numbers 0938-1289 and 0938-
1340)
We refer readers to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule for information
regarding wage estimates and resulting information collection burden
calculations used in this final rule (88 FR 76484 through 76485). To
derive wage estimates in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we used
data from the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics' May 2022
National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for Medical Records
[[Page 89195]]
Specialists, who are responsible for organizing and managing health
information data, are the individuals tasked with submitting measure
data to the ESRD Quality Reporting System (EQRS) (formerly, CROWNWeb)
and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) NHSN, as
well as compiling and submitting patient records for the purpose of
data validation (89 FR 55825). In the proposed rule, we noted that when
this analysis was conducted, the most recently available median hourly
wage of a Medical Records Specialist was $22.69 per hour.\121\ In this
final rule, we are updating the median hourly wage to $23.45 per hour,
which reflects the most recently available data from the United States
Bureau of Labor Statistics' May 2023 National Occupational Employment
and Wage Estimates.\122\ We also calculate fringe benefit and overhead
at 100 percent. We adjusted these employee hourly wage estimates by a
factor of 100 percent to reflect current HHS department-wide guidance
on estimating the cost of fringe benefits and overhead. Using these
assumptions, in the proposed rule we estimated an hourly labor cost of
$45.38 as the basis of the wage estimates for all collections of
information calculations in the ESRD QIP (89 FR 55825). In this final
rule, we are updating our previously estimated hourly labor cost to
$46.90 as the basis of the wage estimates for all collections of
information calculations in the ESRD QIP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\121\ https://www.bls.gov/oes/2022/may/oes292072.htm.
\122\ https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes292072.htm.
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We used this wage estimate, along with updated facility and patient
counts, to update our estimate for the total information collection
burden in the ESRD QIP for PY 2027. We provide the re-estimated
information collection burden associated with the PY 2027 ESRD QIP in
section VI.C of this final rule.
B. Estimated Burden Associated With the Data Validation Requirements
for PY 2027 (OMB Control Numbers 0938-1289 and 0938-1340)
We refer readers to the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule for information
regarding the estimated burden associated with data validation
requirements for PY 2027 (88 FR 76485 through 76486). In the CY 2024
ESRD PPS final rule, we estimated that the aggregate cost of the EQRS
data validation for PY 2027 would be approximately $34,035 (750 hours x
$45.38), or an annual total of approximately $113.45 ($34,035/300
facilities) per facility in the sample. In this final rule, we are
updating the aggregate cost of EQRS data validation for PY 2027 to
reflect updated wage estimates. Using the most recently available data,
we estimate that the aggregate cost of the EQRS data validation for PY
2027 would be approximately $35,175 (750 hours x $46.90), or an annual
total of approximately $117.25 ($35,175/300 facilities) per facility in
the sample. The burden cost increase associated with these requirements
will be submitted to OMB in the revised information collection request
(OMB control number 0938-1289; Expiration date: November 30, 2025). In
the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule and re-stated in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS
proposed rule, we estimated that the aggregate cost of the NHSN data
validation for PY 2027 would be approximately $68,070 (1,500 hours x
$45.38), or a total of approximately $226.90 ($68,070/300 facilities)
per facility in the sample (89 FR 55826). We are updating the aggregate
cost of NHSN data validation to reflect updated wage estimates in this
final rule. Based on the updated wage data, we estimate that the
aggregate cost of the NHSN data validation for PY 2027 would be
approximately $70,350 (1,500 hours x $46.90), or a total of
approximately $234.50 ($70,350/300 facilities) per facility in the
sample. While the burden hours estimate would not change, the burden
cost updates associated with these requirements will be submitted to
OMB in the revised information collection request (OMB control number
0938-1340; Expiration date: November 30, 2025).
C. Estimated EQRS Reporting Requirements for PY 2027 (OMB Control
Number 0938-1289)
To estimate the burden associated with the EQRS reporting
requirements (previously known as the CROWNWeb reporting requirements),
we look at the total number of patients nationally, the number of data
elements per patient-year that the facility would be required to submit
to EQRS for each measure, the amount of time required for data entry,
the estimated wage plus benefits applicable to the individuals within
facilities who are most likely to be entering data into EQRS, and the
number of facilities submitting data to EQRS. In the CY 2024 ESRD PPS
final rule, we estimated that the burden associated with EQRS reporting
requirements for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP was approximately $130.5 million
for approximately 2,877,743 total burden hours (88 FR 76486).
We are finalizing changes to the ESRD QIP measure set in this final
rule, but do not anticipate that any of these policies would affect the
burden we have previously estimated for EQRS reporting requirements for
PY 2027. Beginning with PY 2027, we are finalizing our proposal to
replace the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive measure with a Kt/V
Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic. However, we are not updating facility
reporting requirements as part of that finalized policy. Additionally,
although we are finalizing our proposal to remove one measure from the
ESRD QIP measure set beginning with PY 2027, the measure removal would
not impact EQRS reporting requirements on facilities. We provided the
burden estimate for PY 2027 in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule (89
FR 55826) and are updating the information collection burden to reflect
updated wage estimates, along with updated facility and patient counts,
in this final rule. In the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, we estimated
that the amount of time required to submit measure data to EQRS would
be 2.5 minutes per element and did not use a rounded estimate of the
time needed to complete data entry for EQRS reporting. We are further
updating these estimates in this final rule. There are 136 data
elements for 511,957 patients across 7,695 facilities, for a total of
69,626,152 elements (136 data elements x 511,957 patients). At 2.5
minutes per element, this would yield approximately 377.01 hours per
facility. Therefore, the PY 2027 burden would be 2,901,090 hours
(377.01 hours x 7,695 facilities). Using the updated wage estimate for
a Medical Records Specialist, we estimate that the PY 2027 total burden
cost would be approximately $136.1 million (2,901,090 hours x $46.90).
The information collection request under the OMB Control Number: 0938-
1289 will be revised and sent to OMB.
D. ESRD Treatment Choices Model
Section 1115A(d)(3) of the Act exempts Innovation Center model
tests and expansions, which include the ETC Model, from the provisions
of the PRA. Specifically, this section provides that the provisions of
the PRA do not apply to the testing and evaluation of Innovation Center
models or to the expansion of such models.
VII. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
1. ESRD PPS
On January 1, 2011, we implemented the ESRD PPS, a case-mix
adjusted, bundled PPS for renal dialysis services
[[Page 89196]]
furnished by ESRD facilities as required by section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act, as added by section 153(b) of MIPPA (Pub. L. 110-275). Section
1881(b)(14)(F) of the Act, as added by section 153(b) of MIPPA, and
amended by section 3401(h) of the Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-
148), established that beginning CY 2012, and each subsequent year, the
Secretary shall annually increase payment amounts by an ESRD market
basket percentage increase, reduced by the productivity adjustment
described in section 1886(b)(3)(B)(xi)(II) of the Act. This final rule
includes updates and policy changes to the ESRD PPS for CY 2025. These
changes include a new wage index methodology which utilizes BLS data
and reflects revised OMB CBSA delineations, a wage index budget-
neutrality adjustment factor, an expansion to the ESRD PPS outlier
list, methodological changes to the outlier calculation, updates to the
TPNIES offset amount, updates to the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts for Korsuva[supreg] and Jesduvroq, changes to the
LVPA payment structure, and an increase to the calculation of the TDAPA
for phosphate binders. Failure to publish this final rule would result
in ESRD facilities not receiving appropriate payments in CY 2025 for
renal dialysis services furnished to ESRD beneficiaries.
This final rule also has several policy changes to improve payment
stability and adequacy under the ESRD PPS. These include updates to the
LVPA and payments for ESRD outlier services. We believe that each of
these changes will improve payment stability and adequacy under the
ESRD PPS.
2. AKI
This rule finalizes updates to the payment rate for renal dialysis
services furnished by ESRD facilities to individuals with AKI.
Additionally, we are extending Medicare payment for home dialysis to
beneficiaries with AKI. As discussed in section III.C of this final
rule, we also are applying the updates to the ESRD PPS base rate, wage
index, and training add-on payment adjustment for home dialysis to the
AKI dialysis payment rate. Failure to publish this final rule would
result in ESRD facilities not receiving appropriate payments in CY 2025
for renal dialysis services furnished to patients with AKI in
accordance with section 1834(r) of the Act.
3. ESRD QIP
Section 1881(h)(1) of the Act requires CMS to reduce the payments
otherwise made to a facility under the ESRD PPS for a year by up to two
percent if the facility does not satisfy the requirements of the ESRD
QIP for that year. This rule finalizes updates for the ESRD QIP, which
would remove the NHSN Dialysis Event reporting measure from the ESRD
QIP measure set beginning with PY 2027 and replace the Kt/V Dialysis
Adequacy Comprehensive clinical measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy
Measure Topic beginning with PY 2027.
4. ETC Model
The ETC Model is a mandatory Medicare payment model tested under
the authority of section 1115A of the Act, which authorizes the
Innovation Center to test innovative payment and service delivery
models expected to reduce Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP expenditures
while preserving or enhancing the quality of care furnished to the
beneficiaries of such programs.
This final rule finalizes a change to the ETC Model, specifically
to the methodology CMS uses to identify transplant failures for the
purposes of defining an ESRD beneficiary and attributing an ESRD
beneficiary to the ETC Model. As described in detail in section V.B of
this final rule, we believe it is necessary, for the purposes of
accuracy, to adopt this change to the ETC Model.
B. Overall Impact Analysis
We have examined the impacts of this final rule 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), Executive Order 14094, entitled
``Modernizing Regulatory Review'' (April 6, 2023), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section
1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999), and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
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 14094 amends section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory
Planning and Review). The amended section 3(f) of Executive Order 12866
defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is likely
to result in a rule: (1) having an annual effect on the economy of $200
million or more in any 1 year, or adversely affect in a material way
the economy, a sector of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs,
the environment, public health or safety, or State, local, territorial,
or Tribal governments or communities; (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising legal or policy
issues for which centralized review would meaningfully further the
President's priorities.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for a
regulatory action that is significant under section 3(f)(1). Based on
our estimates of the combined impact of the ESRD PPS, ESRD QIP, and ETC
provisions in this final rule, OIRA has determined this rulemaking is
significant under section 3(f)(1) of E.O. 12866. Accordingly, we have
prepared a Regulatory Impact Analysis that presents the costs and
benefits of the rulemaking to the best of our ability. Pursuant to
Subtitle E of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (also known as the Congressional Review Act), OIRA has determined
that this rule meets the criteria set forth in 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Therefore, OMB has reviewed this final regulation, and the Department
has provided the following assessment of their impact.
1. ESRD PPS
We estimate that the final revisions to the ESRD PPS would result
in an increase of approximately $260 million in Medicare payments to
ESRD facilities in CY 2025. This includes $220 million associated with
the payment rate update, the updated post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts, and continuation of the approved TDAPA as
identified in Table 19. This also includes approximately $40 million
for the additional TDAPA payment for operational costs in excess of 100
percent of ASP for phosphate binders, which is derived from 6 percent
of per-patient phosphate binder spending based on utilization and cost
data as discussed in section II.B.7.c. of this final rule. In addition,
this amount includes, but is not impacted by, the following budget
neutral changes to the ESRD PPS: updates to the outlier list, updates
to the outlier methodology and thresholds, updates to the wage index
methodology, updates to the OMB CBSA delineations, and changes to the
LVPA.
[[Page 89197]]
Although the incorporation of oral-only renal dialysis drugs and
biological products into the ESRD PPS in CY 2025 is provided for by
existing regulations and is not impacted by this final rule, we
estimate for reference that total ESRD PPS spending for phosphate
binders will be approximately $870 million ($220 million in beneficiary
coinsurance payments and $650 million in Medicare Part B spending) in
CY 2025 for the original phosphate binder TDAPA payment at 100 percent
of ASP; however we note that these drugs are currently being paid for
under Medicare Part D, which we estimate will lead to a decrease in
spending of approximately $690 million ($0 million in beneficiary
premium offset and $690 million in Medicare Part D spending), for a net
payment increase of approximately $180 million.
2. AKI
We estimate that the final updates to the AKI payment rate will
result in an increase of approximately $2 million in Medicare payments
to ESRD facilities in CY 2025.
3. ESRD QIP
We estimate that, as a result of our previously finalized policies
and the policies we are finalizing in this final rule, the updated ESRD
QIP will result in $17.9 million in estimated payment reductions across
all facilities for PY 2027.
4. ETC Model
The change we are finalizing is the definition of an ESRD
Beneficiary for the purposes of attribution in the ETC Model. This
policy change is not expected to change the model's projected economic
impact.
5. Summary of Impacts
We estimate that the combined impact of the policies finalized in
this rule on payments for CY 2025 is $260 million based on the
estimates of the updated ESRD PPS and the AKI payment rates. We
estimate the impacts of the ESRD QIP for PY 2027 to be $136.1 million
in information collection burden and $17.9 million in estimated payment
reductions across all facilities. Finally, we estimate that the final
methodology change to the ETC Model will not affect the model's
projected economic impact described in the Specialty Care Models final
rule (85 FR 61114) and in the CY2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874).
C. Detailed Economic Analysis
In this section, we discuss the anticipated benefits, costs, and
transfers associated with the changes in this final rule. Additionally,
we estimate the total regulatory review costs associated with reading
and interpreting this final rule.
1. Benefits
Under the CY 2025 ESRD PPS and AKI payment, ESRD facilities will
continue to receive payment for renal dialysis services furnished to
Medicare beneficiaries under a case-mix adjusted PPS. We continue to
expect that making prospective Medicare payments to ESRD facilities
will enhance the efficiency of the Medicare program. Additionally, we
expect that updating the Medicare ESRD PPS base rate and rate for AKI
treatments furnished by ESRD facilities by 2.2 percent based on the
final CY 2025 ESRDB market basket percentage increase of 2.7 percent
reduced by the final CY 2025 productivity adjustment of 0.5 percentage
point will improve or maintain beneficiary access to high quality care
by ensuring that payment rates reflect the best available data on the
resources involved in delivering renal dialysis services. We estimate
that overall payments under the ESRD PPS will increase by 2.7 percent
as a result of the finalized policies in this rule.
2. Costs
a. ESRD PPS and AKI
We do not anticipate the provisions of this final rule regarding
ESRD PPS and AKI rates-setting will create additional cost or burden to
ESRD facilities.
b. ESRD QIP
We have made no changes to our methodology for calculating the
annual burden associated with the information collection requirements
for EQRS data validation (previously known as the CROWNWeb validation
study) or NHSN data validation. Although we do not anticipate that the
policies finalized in this final rule regarding ESRD QIP will create
additional cost or burden to ESRD facilities for PY 2027, we are
updating the estimated costs associated with the information collection
requirements under the ESRD QIP, with updated estimates of the total
number of ESRD facilities, the total number of patients nationally,
wages for Medical Records Specialists or similar staff, and a refined
estimate of the number of hours needed to complete data entry for EQRS
reporting.
3. Transfers
We estimate that the updates to the ESRD PPS and AKI payment rates
will result in a total increase of approximately $220 million in
Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in CY 2025, which includes the
amount associated with final updates to the outlier thresholds, and
final updates to the wage index. This estimate includes an increase of
approximately $2 million in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in CY
2025 due to the updates to the AKI payment rate, of which approximately
20 percent is increased beneficiary coinsurance payments. We estimate
approximately $180 million in transfers from the Federal Government to
ESRD facilities due to increased Medicare program payments and
approximately $40 million in transfers from beneficiaries to ESRD
facilities due to increased beneficiary coinsurance payments because of
this final rule.
We also estimate that the updates to the TDAPA payment policy for
phosphate binders will result in an increase of approximately $40
million in Medicare payments to ESRD facilities in CY 2025, which
includes approximately $30 million in transfers from the Federal
Government to ESRD facilities due to increased Medicare program
payments and approximately $10 million in transfers from beneficiaries
to ESRD facilities due to increased beneficiary coinsurance payments.
4. Regulatory Review Cost Estimation
If regulations impose administrative costs on private entities,
such as the time needed to read and interpret this ESRD PPS final 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 the ESRD PPS final rule, we assume that the
total number of unique commenters on this year's ESRD PPS proposed
rule, which was 191 for the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule, is equal to
the number of individual reviewers of this final rule. We acknowledge
that this assumption may understate or overstate the costs of reviewing
this final rule. It is possible that not all commenters reviewed this
year's proposed rule in detail, and it is also possible that some
reviewers chose not to comment on the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule.
For these reasons we determined that the number of past commenters
would be a fair estimate of the number of reviewers of this final rule.
We used a similar methodology for calculating the regulatory review
costs in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS proposed rule; in that proposed rule we
welcomed any comments on the approach in estimating the number of
entities which would review that proposed rule and did not receive any
direct responses.
We also recognize that different types of entities are in many
cases affected by mutually exclusive sections of this final
[[Page 89198]]
rule, and therefore for the purposes of our estimate we assume that
each reviewer reads approximately 50 percent of this proposal. We
sought comments on this assumption.
Using the May 2023 wage information from the BLS for medical and
health service managers (Code 11-9111), we estimate that the cost of
reviewing this rule is $129.28 per hour, including overhead and fringe
benefits \123\ (https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm). Assuming
an average reading speed of 250 words per minute, we estimate that it
will take approximately 260 minutes (4.33 hours) for the staff to
review half of this final rule, which has a total of approximately
130,000 words. For each entity that reviews the rule, the estimated
cost is $559.78 (4.33 hours x $129.28). Therefore, we estimate that the
total cost of reviewing this regulation is $106,917.98 ($559.78 x 191).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ Calculated by multiplying the mean wage for medical and
health service managers by 2 to account for overhead and fringe
benefits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Impact Statement and Table
a. CY 2025 End-Stage Renal Disease Prospective Payment System
(1) Effects on ESRD Facilities
To understand the impact of the changes affecting Medicare payments
to different categories of ESRD facilities, it is necessary to compare
estimated payments in CY 2024 to estimated payments in CY 2025. To
estimate the impact among various types of ESRD facilities, it is
imperative that the estimates of Medicare payments in CY 2024 and CY
2025 contain similar inputs. Therefore, we simulated Medicare payments
only for those ESRD facilities for which we can calculate both current
Medicare payments and new Medicare payments.
For this final rule, we used CY 2023 data from the Medicare Part A
and Part B Common Working Files as of August 02, 2024, as a basis for
Medicare dialysis treatments and payments under the ESRD PPS. We
updated the 2023 claims to 2024 and 2025 using various updates. The
final updates to the ESRD PPS base rate are described in section II.B.4
of this final rule. Table 19 shows the impact of the estimated CY 2025
ESRD PPS payments compared to estimated Medicare payments to ESRD
facilities in CY 2024.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 89199]]
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[[Page 89200]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.023
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
Column A of the impact table indicates the number of ESRD
facilities for each impact category and column B indicates the number
of dialysis treatments (in millions). The overall effect of the final
routine updates to the outlier payment policy, including final changes
to the inflation factors used for calculating MAP and FDL amounts
described in section II.B.3 of this final rule, is shown in column C.
For CY 2025, the impact on all ESRD facilities because of the final
changes to the outlier payment policy would be an increase in estimated
Medicare payments of approximately 0.4 percent.
Column D shows the effect of the final 2-tiered LVPA as described
in section II.B.8 of this final rule. This adjustment is implemented in
a budget neutral manner, so the total impact of this change will be 0.0
percent. However, there will be distributional impacts of this change,
primarily increasing payments to facilities that furnish fewer than
3,000 treatments by 0.8 percent and lowering payments to ESRD
facilities that furnish between 3,000 and 4,000 treatments by 0.5
percent. Because we are finalizing our proposal to use the scaled
adjustment factors, the only impact of this policy is among ESRD
facilities that are eligible for the LVPA.
Column E shows the effect of year-over-year payment changes related
to the post-TDAPA add-on payment adjustment amounts as described in
section II.B.6 of this final rule and current TDAPA payments. The post-
TDAPA add-on payment adjustment will not be budget neutral, but the
total impact on payment is 0.1 percent due to relatively low
utilization of drugs for which we will pay this adjustment in CY 2025.
Column F reflects the impact of the expansion of outlier
eligibility to formerly composite rate drugs. Overall, the changes to
the outlier policy, including those reflected in column C of this
table, are budget neutral insofar as we estimate that we will better
hit the 1 percent target for outlier payments. These changes will
increase payments for facilities that treat a higher proportion of
exceptionally costly cases.
Column G reflects the effect of the finalized changes to the ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, the adoption of the new OMB CBSA
delineations, the continued application of the 5 percent cap on wage
index decreases, and the rural transition policy as described in
section II.B.2 of this final rule. This update will be budget neutral,
so the total impact of this policy change is 0.0 percent. However,
there will be distributional impacts of this change. The largest
increase will be to ESRD facilities in Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands, which would receive 2.6 percent higher payments because of the
updated ESRD PPS wage index. The largest decrease would be for ESRD
facilities in the Pacific Census region, which will receive 2.4 percent
lower payments because of the updated ESRD PPS wage index and
methodological changes.
Column H reflects the overall impact, that is, the effects of the
outlier policy changes, LVPA changes, the post-TDAPA add-on payment
adjustment amounts, the new wage index methodology, the new CBSA
delineations, the rural transition policy, and the payment rate update
as described in section II.B.4 of this final rule. The final ESRD PPS
payment rate update for CY 2025 is 2.2 percent, which reflects the
final ESRDB market basket percentage increase for CY 2025 of 2.7
percent and the productivity adjustment of 0.5 percentage point. We
expect that overall ESRD facilities will experience a 2.7 percent
increase in estimated Medicare payments in CY 2025. The categories of
types of ESRD facilities in the impact table show impacts ranging from
a 0.2 percent increase to a 5.2 percent increase in their CY 2025
estimated Medicare payments.
This table does not include the impact of the inclusion of oral-
only drugs to the ESRD PPS as we are unable to calculate facility level
estimates at this time, nor does it include the impacts of the increase
to the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders as finalized in section
II.B.7.c of this final rule. We cannot include the impact of this final
change in Table 19 because we do not have the patient-level utilization
data required to model facility-level uptake. As noted previously, the
overall impact of this TDAPA increase is approximately $40 million.
Furthermore, we note that the incorporation of oral-only renal dialysis
drugs and biological products into the ESRD PPS beginning in CY 2025 is
provided for by existing regulations and is not impacted by this final
rule, other than the change in the TDAPA amount for phosphate binders.
For public awareness, we estimate an increase in Medicare Part B
spending of approximately $870 million in CY 2025, and a corresponding
decrease in Medicare Part D spending of approximately $690 million in
CY 2025, associated with payment for phosphate binders under the ESRD
PPS.
(2) Effects on Other Providers
Under the ESRD PPS, Medicare pays ESRD facilities a single bundled
payment for renal dialysis services,
[[Page 89201]]
which may have been separately paid to other providers (for example,
laboratories, durable medical equipment suppliers, and pharmacies) by
Medicare prior to the implementation of the ESRD PPS. Therefore, in CY
2025, we estimate that the ESRD PPS would have zero impact on these
other providers.
(3) Effects on the Medicare Program
We estimate that Medicare spending (total Medicare program
payments) for ESRD facilities in CY 2025 would be approximately $6.2
billion. This estimate considers a projected decrease in fee-for-
service Medicare ESRD beneficiary enrollment of 2.1 percent in CY 2025.
(4) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Under the ESRD PPS, beneficiaries are responsible for paying 20
percent of the ESRD PPS payment amount. As a result of the projected
2.7 percent overall increase in the CY 2025 ESRD PPS payment amounts,
we estimate that there would be an increase in beneficiary coinsurance
payments of 2.7 percent in CY 2025, which translates to approximately
$40 million.
As we have previously noted, the incorporation of oral-only renal
dialysis drugs and biological products into the ESRD PPS in CY 2025 is
provided for by existing regulations and is not impacted by this final
rule. For public awareness, we estimate an increase in beneficiary
coinsurance payments of $230 million. As noted in section II.B.7 of
this final rule, we anticipate that the inclusion of oral-only drugs in
the ESRD PPS will increase access to these drugs for beneficiaries,
particularly disadvantaged populations who currently do not have Part D
coverage.
(5) Alternatives Considered
(a) Wage Index Changes
We considered, but did not finalize, a one-year delay to the
implementation date for the new ESRD PPS wage index methodology. This
delay would have allowed us further time to consider several potential
methodological suggestions, including MedPAC's suggestions for
smoothing across and variation within CBSAs. However, we have decided
that such a delay is not appropriate, because we believe the new ESRD
PPS wage index methodology is the best estimation available for the
geographic variation in wages ESRD facilities face. We considered
MedPAC's suggestions for the proposed rule and decided that they would
introduce additional complexity and would involve parameters which
could be seen as arbitrary for purposes of estimating wages for
occupations related to furnishing renal dialysis services and involve
lower-quality data sources. These alternatives would not have any
specific impact on small entities as discussed in section VII.E of this
final rule.
(b) Expansion of Outlier Eligibility
We considered only expanding outlier eligibility to drugs and
biological products previously paid for under the TDAPA after the end
of the TDAPA period. As discussed in section II.B.3.b of this final
rule, we have instead decided to finalize to expand outlier eligibility
to all drugs and biological products that were or would have been
composite rate services prior to the inception of the ESRD PPS. We
believe that this is appropriate because formerly composite rate drugs
represent potentially significant costs which are not currently
accounted for by the outlier adjustment. Furthermore, most of the
commenters' concerns with the inclusion of composite rate drugs
revolved around concerns that should we overestimate outliers in one
year we would reduce the ESRD PPS base rate in future years, which is
with a misinterpretation of our outlier policy. These alternatives
would not have any specific impact on small entities as discussed in
section VII.E of this final rule.
(c) TDAPA Amount for Phosphate Binders
We considered, but are not finalizing, paying the TDAPA for
phosphate binders based on 106 percent of ASP, rather than the fixed
addition to the TDAPA amount which we have finalized. Paying the TDAPA
for phosphate binders at 106 percent of ASP for at least 2 years to
mirror our TDAPA payment approach for the first 2 years for
calcimimetics would have many of the same effects of the flat TDAPA
increase we finalized, as we based the size of the flat increase off of
6 percent of TDAPA expenditures. However, as discussed in section
II.B.7.c of this final rule, we believe that paying 106 percent of ASP
could potentially incentivize ESRD facilities to prescribe higher-cost
phosphate binders to receive additional payment. We note that our final
policy, with respect to TDAPA payment for phosphate binders, would best
support small entities, as discussed in section VII.E of this final
rule, as we expect small entities would have less bargaining power than
large entities in negotiating prices for phosphate binders.
(d) Changes to the LVPA
We considered, but did not finalize, a three tier LVPA which would
be funded by eliminating the rural facility adjustment. This was a
suggestion of several commenters who recommended the LVPA be expanded
beyond the current 4,000 treatment volume threshold. However, our
analysis found that the elimination of the rural facility adjustment
would not provide nearly enough funds to establish a third LVPA tier,
even if we were to lower the treatment volume threshold to 5,000 from
the 6,000 suggested by commenters. As discussed in section II.B.8.c of
this final rule, we are finalizing a two-tiered scaled LVPA in part
because it would not lead to any budget neutrality reduction to the
ESRD PPS base rate. In the proposed rule, we presented an alternative
three-tiered LVPA which could be implemented by reducing the base rate,
but commenters were generally not supportive of the idea. Although our
proposal did not involve the elimination of the rural facility
adjustment and the reallocation of those funds, we did not believe that
commenters would support the proposal. Additionally, we believe that
the rural facility adjustment is a useful tool which protects ESRD
facilities in potentially vulnerable areas. The continued use of the
rural facility adjustment likely benefits small entities, as discussed
in section VII.E of this final rule, operating in rural areas. As
discussed previously, eliminating the rural facility adjustment would
not provide enough funds to fully cover the suggested approach, so such
a policy would require budget neutrality reduction which would reduce
payment to small entities that receive the LVPA.
b. Continuation of Approved Transitional Drug Add-On Payment
Adjustments (TDAPA) for New Renal Dialysis Drugs or Biological Products
for CY 2025
Two renal dialysis drugs for which the TDAPA was paid in CY 2024
will continue to be eligible for the TDAPA in CY 2025.
(1) Jesduvroq (Daprodustat)
On July 27, 2023, CMS Transmittal 12157 \124\ implemented the 2-
year TDAPA period specified in Sec. 413.234(c)(1) for Jesduvroq
(daprodustat). The TDAPA payment period began on October 1, 2023, and
will continue through September 30, 2025. As stated previously, TDAPA
[[Page 89202]]
payment is based on 100 percent of ASP. If ASP is not available, then
the TDAPA is based on 100 percent of WAC and, when WAC is not
available, the payment is based on the drug manufacturer's invoice.
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\124\ CMS Transmittal 12157, dated July 27, 2023, is available
at: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r12157cp.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we based our impact analysis on the most
current 72x claims data from November 2023, when utilization first
appeared on the claims, through February 2024. During that timeframe,
the average monthly TDAPA payment amount for Jesduvroq (daprodustat)
was $23,075. In applying that average to each of the 9 remaining months
of the TDAPA payment period in CY 2025, we estimated $207,675 in
spending ($23,075 * 9 = $207,675) of which, approximately $41,535
($207,675 * 0.20 = $41,535) would have been attributed to beneficiary
coinsurance amounts.
Several commenters indicated that GlaxoSmithKline (GSK),
Jesduvroq's manufacturer, is removing the drug from the market. The
FDA's Orange Book \125\ identifies Jesduvroq's marketing status as
discontinued. GSK indicated that the change in marketing status does
not reflect a change in availability or in FDA's approval of the
product. GSK could not state definitively that there will be no TDAPA
claims in CY 2025. Because we have no way of estimating how the change
in Jesduvroq's marketing status will affect utilization, we have
carried the proposed rule estimates forward unchanged. That is, we
estimate $207,675 in spending, of which, approximately $41,535 will be
attributed to beneficiary coinsurance amounts.
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\125\ FDA's Orange Book: Approved Drug Products with Therapeutic
Equivalence Evaluations. Accessed September 26, 2024. Available at:
https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cder/ob/results_product.cfm?Appl_Type=N&Appl_No=216951.
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(2) DefenCath[supreg] (Taurolidine and Heparin Sodium)
On May 9, 2024, CMS Transmittal 12628 \126\ implemented the 2-year
TDAPA period specified in Sec. 413.234(c)(1) for DefenCath[supreg]
(taurolidine and heparin sodium). The TDAPA payment period began on
July 1, 2024, and will continue through June 30, 2026. As stated
previously, TDAPA payment is based on 100 percent of ASP. If ASP is not
available, then the TDAPA is based on 100 percent of WAC and, when WAC
is not available, the payment is based on the drug manufacturer's
invoice.
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\126\ CMS Transmittal 12628, dated May 9, 2024, is available at:
https://www.cms.gov/files/document/r12628CP.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As of the drafting of this final rule, DefenCath[supreg] was in the
first few months of the TDAPA payment period. Complete claims data,
upon which we could base CY 2025 Medicare impact estimates, was limited
to the month of July 2024. Due to the limited timeframe of complete and
available claims data, we believe that it would have been more
appropriate to base Medicare impacts on cost and utilization volume
estimates furnished by the manufacturer, recognizing that the
manufacturer is most familiar with the market conditions affecting its
products. We requested but did not receive utilization volume estimates
from the manufacturer. Therefore, we based our impact analysis on the
most current 72x claims data for the month of July 2024, when
utilization first appeared on the claims. In July 2024, the average
monthly TDAPA payment amount for DefenCath[supreg] was $2,118,827. In
applying that average to each of the 12 months of the TDAPA payment
period in CY 2025, we estimate $25,425,924 in spending ($2,118,827 * 12
= $25,425,924) of which, approximately $5,085,184 ($25,425,924 * 0.20 =
$5,085,184) will be attributed to beneficiary coinsurance amounts.
c. Payment for Renal Dialysis Services Furnished to Individuals With
AKI
(1) Effects on ESRD Facilities
To understand the impact of the finalized changes affecting
Medicare payments to different categories of ESRD facilities for renal
dialysis services furnished to individuals with AKI, it is necessary to
compare estimated Medicare payments in CY 2024 to estimated Medicare
payments in CY 2025. To estimate the impact among various types of ESRD
facilities for renal dialysis services furnished to individuals with
AKI, it is imperative that the Medicare payment estimates in CY 2024
and CY 2025 contain similar inputs. Therefore, we simulated Medicare
payments only for those ESRD facilities for which we can calculate both
current Medicare payments and new Medicare payments.
For this final rule, we used CY 2023 data from the Medicare Part A
and Part B Common Working Files as of August 02, 2024, as a basis for
Medicare for renal dialysis services furnished to individuals with AKI.
We updated the 2023 claims to 2024 and 2025 using various updates. The
updates to the AKI payment amount are described in section III.C of
this final rule. Table 20 shows the impact of the estimated CY 2025
Medicare payments for renal dialysis services furnished to individuals
with AKI compared to estimated Medicare payments for renal dialysis
services furnished to individuals with AKI in CY 2024.
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P
[[Page 89203]]
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[[Page 89204]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.025
BILLING CODE 4120-01-C
Column A of the impact table indicates the number of ESRD
facilities for each impact category, and column B indicates the number
of AKI dialysis treatments (in thousands). Column C shows the effect of
the final CY 2025 wage index changes, including the changes to the ESRD
PPS wage index methodology, the adoption of the new OMB CBSA
delineations, the continued application of the 5 percent cap on wage
index decreases, and the rural transition policy as described in
section II.B.2.f.(2) of this final rule. We note the rural adjustment
does not apply to beneficiaries with AKI, so this column only
incorporates the budget neutrality factor associated with that policy.
Column D shows the overall impact, that is, the effects of the
final wage index budget-neutrality adjustment factor, wage index
updates, and the payment rate update of 2.2 percent, which reflects the
final ESRDB market basket percentage increase for CY 2025 of 2.7
percent and the final productivity adjustment of 0.5 percentage point,
as well as the training add-on budget neutrality reduction of $0.00. We
expect that overall ESRD facilities will experience a 2.3 percent
increase in estimated Medicare payments in CY 2025 for treatment of AKI
beneficiaries. This table does not include any distributional impacts
of payments to ESRD facilities associated with the extension of payment
for AKI home dialysis or extension of the add-on payment adjustment for
training for home and self-dialysis (outside of the budget-neutrality
reduction, as discussed), as we are unable to estimate potential uptake
at a facility level at this time. The categories of types of ESRD
facilities in the impact table show impacts ranging from an increase of
0.0 percent to an increase of 3.8 percent in their CY 2025 estimated
Medicare payments for renal dialysis services provided by ESRD
facilities to individuals with AKI.
(2) Effects on Other Providers
Under section 1834(r) of the Act, as added by section 808(b) of
TPEA, we are finalizing to update the payment rate for renal dialysis
services furnished by ESRD facilities to beneficiaries with AKI. The
only two Medicare providers and suppliers authorized to provide these
outpatient renal dialysis services are hospital outpatient departments
and ESRD facilities. The patient and his or her physician make the
decision about where the renal dialysis services are furnished.
Therefore, this change would have zero impact on other Medicare
providers.
(3) Effects on the Medicare Program
We estimate approximately $70 million would be paid to ESRD
facilities in CY 2025 because of patients with AKI receiving renal
dialysis services in an ESRD facility at the lower ESRD PPS base rate
versus receiving those services only in the hospital outpatient setting
and paid under the outpatient prospective payment system, where
services were required to be administered prior to the TPEA.
(4) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Currently, beneficiaries have a 20 percent coinsurance obligation
when they receive AKI dialysis in the hospital outpatient setting. When
these services are furnished in an ESRD facility, the patients will
continue to be responsible for a 20 percent coinsurance. Because the
AKI dialysis payment rate paid to ESRD facilities is lower than the
outpatient hospital PPS's payment amount, we expect beneficiaries to
pay less coinsurance when AKI dialysis is furnished by ESRD facilities.
(5) Alternatives Considered
As we discussed in the CY 2017 ESRD PPS proposed rule (81 FR
42870), we considered adjusting the AKI payment rate by including the
ESRD PPS case-mix adjustments, and other adjustments at section
1881(b)(14)(D) of the Act, as well as not paying separately for AKI
specific drugs and laboratory tests. We ultimately determined that
treatment for AKI is substantially different from treatment for ESRD,
and the case-mix adjustments applied to ESRD patients may not be
applicable to AKI patients, and as such, including those policies and
adjustments is inappropriate. We
[[Page 89205]]
continue to monitor utilization and trends of items and services
furnished to individuals with AKI for purposes of refining the payment
rate in the future. This monitoring will assist us in developing
knowledgeable, data-driven proposals.
As discussed in section III.B of this final rule, we are finalizing
payment for AKI dialysis in the home setting, and as discussed in
section III.C.3 of this final rule we will apply the home and self-
dialysis training add-on payment adjustment for such services provided
to AKI patients. We considered paying for AKI home dialysis without the
training add-on adjustment; however, we were concerned that access to
home dialysis for AKI beneficiaries could be negatively impacted in the
absence of an add-on payment adjustment to support home dialysis
training. These alternatives would not have any specific impact on
small entities as discussed in section VII.E of this final rule.
d. ESRD QIP
(1) Effects of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP on ESRD Facilities
The ESRD QIP is intended to promote improvements in the quality of
ESRD dialysis facility services provided to beneficiaries. The general
methodology that we use to calculate a facility's TPS is described in
our regulations at Sec. 413.178(e).
Any reductions in the ESRD PPS payments as a result of a facility's
performance under the PY 2027 ESRD QIP will apply to the ESRD PPS
payments made to the facility for services furnished in CY 2027,
consistent with our regulations at Sec. 413.177.
For the PY 2027 ESRD QIP, we estimate that, of the 7,695 facilities
(including those not receiving a TPS) enrolled in Medicare,
approximately 36.9 percent or 2,750 of the facilities that have
sufficient data to calculate a TPS would receive a payment reduction
for PY 2027. Among an estimated 2,750 facilities that would receive a
payment reduction, approximately 63 percent or 1,730 facilities would
receive the smallest payment reduction of 0.5 percent. We are updating
the estimated impact of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP that we provided in the CY
2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76495 through 76497). Based on the
policies finalized in this rule, the total estimated payment reductions
for all the 2,750 facilities expected to receive a payment reduction in
PY 2027 would be approximately $17,887,355. Facilities that do not
receive a TPS do not receive a payment reduction.
Table 21 shows the updated overall estimated distribution of
payment reductions resulting from the PY 2027 ESRD QIP.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.026
To estimate whether a facility would receive a payment reduction
for PY 2027, we scored each facility on achievement and improvement on
several clinical measures for which there were available data from EQRS
and Medicare claims. Payment reduction estimates were calculated using
the most recent data available (specified in Table 22) in accordance
with the policies finalized in this final rule. Measures used for the
simulation are shown in Table 22.
[[Page 89206]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.027
For all measures except the SHR clinical measure, the SRR clinical
measure, the STrR measure, and the ICH CAHPS measure, measures with
less than 11 eligible patients for a facility were not included in that
facility's TPS. For the SHR clinical measure and the SRR clinical
measure, facilities were required to have at least 5 patient-years at
risk and 11 index discharges, respectively, to be included in the
facility's TPS. For the STrR clinical measure, facilities were required
to have at least 10 patient-years at risk to be included in the
facility's TPS. For the ICH CAHPS measure, facilities were required to
have at least 30 survey-eligible patients to be included in the
facility's TPS. Each facility's TPS was compared to an estimated mTPS
and an estimated payment reduction table consistent with the final
policies outlined in section IV.B of this final rule. Facility
reporting measure scores were estimated using available data from CY
2023. Facilities were required to have at least one measure in at least
two domains to receive a TPS.
To estimate the total payment reductions in PY 2027 for each
facility resulting from this final rule, we multiplied the total
Medicare payments to the facility during the 1-year period between
January 2023 and December 2023 by the facility's estimated payment
reduction percentage expected under the ESRD QIP, yielding a total
payment reduction amount for each facility.
Table 23 shows the updated estimated impact of the ESRD QIP payment
reductions to all ESRD facilities for PY 2027. The table also details
the distribution of ESRD facilities by size (both among facilities
considered to be small entities and by number of treatments per
facility), geography (both rural and urban and by region), and facility
type (hospital based and freestanding facilities). Given that the
performance period used for these calculations differs from the
performance period we are using for the PY 2027 ESRD QIP, the actual
impact of the PY 2027 ESRD QIP may vary significantly from the values
provided here.
[[Page 89207]]
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[[Page 89208]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.029
(3) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
The ESRD QIP is applicable to ESRD facilities. Since the Program's
inception, there is evidence of improved performance on ESRD QIP
measures. As we stated in the CY 2018 ESRD PPS final rule, one
objective measure we can examine to demonstrate the improved quality of
care over time is the improvement of performance standards (82 FR
50795). As the ESRD QIP has refined its measure set and as facilities
have gained experience with the measures included in the Program,
performance standards have generally continued to rise. We view this as
evidence that facility performance (and therefore the quality of care
provided to Medicare beneficiaries) is objectively improving. We
continue to monitor and evaluate trends in the quality and cost of care
for patients under the ESRD QIP, incorporating both existing measures
and new measures as they are implemented in the Program. We will
provide additional information about the impact of the ESRD QIP on
beneficiaries as we learn more by examining these impacts through the
analysis of available data from our existing measures.
(4) Alternatives Considered
In section IV.B.2 of this final rule, we are finalizing the
replacement of the Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Comprehensive clinical
measure with a Kt/V Dialysis Adequacy Measure Topic beginning with PY
2027. We considered not adopting this change. However, we concluded
that replacing this measure was appropriate to ensure that facilities
are scored on Kt/V measure data according to the individual facility's
ESRD patient population and treatment modalities.
e. ETC Model
(1) Overview
The ETC Model is a mandatory payment model designed to test payment
adjustments to certain dialysis and dialysis-related payments, as
discussed in the Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61114), the CY
2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874), the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule
(87 FR 67136), and the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76344) for
ESRD facilities and for Managing Clinicians for claims with dates of
service from January 1, 2021, to June 30, 2027. The requirements for
the ETC Model are set forth in 42 CFR part 512, subpart C. For the
results of the detailed economic analysis of the ETC Model and a
description of the methodology used to perform the analysis, see the
Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61114).
(2) Data and Methods
A stochastic simulation was created to estimate the financial
impacts of the ETC Model relative to baseline expenditures, where
baseline expenditures were defined as data from CYs 2018 and 2019
without the changes applied. The simulation relied upon statistical
assumptions derived from retrospectively constructed ESRD facilities'
and Managing Clinicians' Medicare dialysis claims, transplant claims,
and transplant waitlist data reported during 2018 and 2019, the most
recent years of complete data available before the start of the ETC
Model. Both datasets and the risk-adjustment methodologies for the ETC
Model were developed by the CMS Office of the Actuary (OACT).
Table 25 summarizes the estimated impact of the ETC Model when the
achievement benchmarks for each year are set using the average of the
home dialysis rates for year t-1 and year t-2 for the HRRs randomly
selected for participation in the ETC Model. We estimate that the
Medicare program would save a net total of $43 million from the PPA and
HDPA between January 1, 2021, and June 30, 2027, less $15 million in
increased training and education expenditures. Therefore, the net
impact to Medicare spending is estimated to be $28 million in savings.
This is consistent with the net impact to Medicare spending estimated
for the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule, in which the net impact to
Medicare spending was also estimated to be $28 million in savings (86
FR 62014 through 62016). The minor methodological change to the
definition of an ESRD Beneficiary is not expected to change this
estimate.
(3) Medicare Estimate--Primary Specification, Assume Rolling Benchmark
[[Page 89209]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.030
In Table 25, negative spending reflects a reduction in Medicare
spending, while positive spending reflects an increase. The results for
this table were generated from an average of 400 simulations under the
assumption that benchmarks are rolled forward with a 1.5-year lag. For
a detailed description of the key assumptions underlying the impact
estimate, see the Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61353) and
the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 60214 through 60216).
(4) Effects on the Home Dialysis Rate, the Transplant Rate, and Kidney
Transplantation
The change finalized in this rule is not expected to impact the
findings reported for the effects of the ETC Model on the home dialysis
rate or the transplant rate described in the Specialty Care Models
final rule (85 FR 61355) and the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR
62017).
(5) Effects on Kidney Disease Patient Education Services and HD
Training Add-Ons
The change finalized in this rule is not expected to impact the
findings reported for the effects of the ETC Model on kidney disease
patient education services and HD training add-ons described in the
Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61355) and the CY 2022 ESRD PPS
final rule (86 FR 62017).
(6) Effects on Medicare Beneficiaries
Our decision to finalize changes to the definition of an ESRD
Beneficiary for the purposes of attribution is not expected to impact
the findings reported for the effects of ETC Model on Medicare
beneficiaries. Further details on the impact of the ETC Model on ESRD
Beneficiaries may be found in the Specialty Care Models final rule (85
FR 61357) and the CY 2022 ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874).
(7) Alternatives Considered
Throughout this final rule, we have identified finalized changes to
our policy and alternatives considered and provided information as to
the likely effects of these alternatives and rationale for our changed
policy.
The Specialty Care Models final rule (85 FR 61114), the CY 2022
ESRD PPS final rule (86 FR 61874), the CY 2023 ESRD PPS final rule (87
FR 67136), the CY 2024 ESRD PPS final rule (88 FR 76344), and the
finalized policy herein address a model specific to ESRD. These rules
provide descriptions of the requirements that we waive, identify the
performance metrics and payment adjustments to be tested, and presents
rationales for our changes, and where relevant, alternatives
considered. For context related to alternatives previously considered
when establishing and modifying the ETC Model we refer readers to
section V.B. and to the previous citations.
D. Accounting Statement
As required by OMB Circular A-4 (available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/legacy_drupal_files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf), we have prepared an accounting statement in
Table 26 showing the classification of the impact associated with the
provisions of this final rule.
[[Page 89210]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR12NO24.031
E. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities, if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, small entities
include small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. We do not believe ESRD facilities are
operated by small government entities such as counties or towns with
populations of 50,000 or less, and therefore, they are not enumerated
or included in this estimated RFA analysis. Individuals and states are
not included in the definition of a small entity. Therefore, the number
of small entities estimated in this RFA analysis includes the number of
ESRD facilities that are either considered small businesses or
nonprofit organizations.
According to the Small Business Administration's (SBA) size
standards, an ESRD facility is classified as a small business if it has
total revenues of less than $47 million in any 1 year.\128\ For the
purposes of this analysis, we exclude the ESRD facilities that are
owned and operated by LDOs and regional chains, which would have total
revenues of more than $6.5 billion in any year when the total revenues
for all locations are combined for each business (LDO or regional
chain), and are not, therefore, considered small businesses. Because we
lack data on individual ESRD facilities' receipts, we cannot determine
the number of small proprietary ESRD facilities or the proportion of
ESRD facilities' revenue derived from Medicare FFS payments. Therefore,
we assume that all ESRD facilities that are not owned by LDOs or
regional chains are considered small businesses. Accordingly, we
consider the 485 ESRD facilities that are independent and 351 ESRD
facilities that are hospital-based, as shown in the ownership category
in Table 19, to be small businesses. These ESRD facilities represent
approximately 11 percent of all ESRD facilities in our data set.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\128\ https://www.sba.gov/content/small-business-size-standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, we identified in our analytic file that there are 792
ESRD facilities that are considered nonprofit organizations, which is
approximately 10 percent of all ESRD facilities in our data set. In
total, accounting for the 369 nonprofit ESRD facilities that are also
considered small businesses, there are 1,259 ESRD facilities that are
either small businesses or nonprofit organizations, which is
approximately 16 percent of all ESRD facilities in our data set.
As its measure of significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, HHS's practice in interpreting the RFA is to
consider effects economically ``significant'' on a ``substantial''
number of small entities only if greater than 5 percent of providers
reach a threshold of 3 to 5 percent or more of total revenue or total
costs. We did not receive any public comments on our regulatory impact
analysis for small entities. As shown in Table 19, we estimate that the
overall revenue impact of this final rule on all ESRD facilities is a
positive increase to Medicare FFS payments by approximately 2.7
percent. For the ESRD PPS updates in this final rule, a hospital-based
ESRD facility (as defined by type of ownership, not by type of ESRD
facility) is estimated to receive a 4.5 percent increase in Medicare
FFS payments for CY 2025. An independent facility (as defined by
ownership type) is likewise estimated to receive a 0.8 percent increase
in Medicare FFS payments for CY 2025. Among hospital-based and
independent ESRD facilities, those furnishing fewer than 3,000
treatments per year are estimated to receive a 5.3 percent increase in
Medicare FFS payments, and those furnishing 3,000 or more treatments
per year are estimated to receive a 2.1 percent increase in Medicare
FFS payments. Among nonprofit ESRD facilities, those furnishing fewer
than 3,000 treatments per year are estimated to receive a 6.0 percent
increase in Medicare FFS payments, and those furnishing 3,000 or more
treatments per year are estimated to receive a 2.8 percent increase in
Medicare FFS payments.
For AKI dialysis, we are unable to estimate whether patients would
go to ESRD facilities, however, we have estimated there is a potential
for $70 million in payment for AKI dialysis treatments that could
potentially be furnished in ESRD facilities.
Based on the estimated Medicare payment impacts described
previously, we believe that the change in revenue threshold will be
reached by some categories of small entities as a result of the
policies in this final rule. This analysis is based on the assumptions
described earlier in this section of this final rule as well as the
detailed impact analysis discussed in section VII.C of this final rule,
which includes a discussion of data sources, general
[[Page 89211]]
assumptions, and alternatives considered.
For the ESRD QIP, we estimate that of the 2,750 ESRD facilities
expected to receive a payment reduction as a result of their
performance on the PY 2027 ESRD QIP, 468 are ESRD small entity
facilities. We present these findings in Table 21 (``Updated Estimated
Distribution of PY 2027 ESRD QIP Payment Reductions'') and Table 23
(``Updated Estimated Impact of ESRD QIP Payment Reductions to ESRD
Facilities for PY 2027''). Table 21 shows the updated overall estimated
distribution of payment reductions resulting from the PY 2027 ESRD QIP.
Table 23 shows the updated estimated impact of the ESRD QIP payment
reductions to all ESRD facilities for PY 2027, and also details the
distribution of ESRD facilities by size, geography, and facility type.
For the ETC Model, we do not anticipate any impact on ESRD
facilities from our decision to finalize a change to the definition of
an ESRD Beneficiary for the purposes of beneficiary attribution in the
model. As previously stated, we estimate that the Medicare program
would save a net total of $43 million from the ETC PPA and HDPA between
January 1, 2021, and June 30, 2027, less $15 million in increased
training and education expenditures. Therefore, the net impact to
Medicare spending is estimated to be $28 million in savings.
Therefore, the Secretary has determined that this final rule will
have a significant economic impact, reflecting a positive revenue
increase, on a substantial number of small entities. This RFA section
along with the RIA constitutes our final regulatory flexibility
analysis.
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 fewer than 100 beds. We do not believe this
final rule would have a significant impact on operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals because most dialysis
facilities are freestanding. While there are 108 rural hospital-based
ESRD facilities, we do not know how many of them are based at hospitals
with fewer than 100 beds. However, overall, the 108 rural hospital-
based ESRD facilities would experience an estimated 5.9 percent
increase in payments. Therefore, the Secretary has certified that this
final rule will not have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
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. In 2024, that
threshold is approximately $183 million. We do not interpret Medicare
payment rules as being unfunded mandates but simply as conditions for
the receipt of payments from the Federal Government for providing
services that meet Federal standards. This interpretation applies
whether the facilities or providers are private, State, local, or
Tribal. Therefore, this final rule does not mandate any requirements
for State, local, or Tribal governments, or for the private sector.
G. Federalism
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 requirement costs on State
and local governments, preempts State law, or otherwise has federalism
implications. We have reviewed this final rule under the threshold
criteria of Executive Order 13132, Federalism, and have determined that
it will not have substantial direct effects on the rights, roles, and
responsibilities of State, local, or Tribal government.
H. Congressional Review Act
This final regulation is subject to the Congressional Review Act
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and has been transmitted to the Congress
and the Comptroller General for review.
VIII. Files Available to the Public
The Addenda for the annual ESRD PPS proposed and final rule will no
longer appear in the Federal Register. Instead, the Addenda will be
available only through the internet and will be posted on CMS's website
under the regulation number, CMS-1805-F, at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/ESRDpayment/End-Stage-Renal-Disease-ESRD-Payment-Regulations-and-Notices. In addition to the
Addenda, limited data set files (LDS) are available for purchase at
https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Files-for-Order/LimitedDataSets/EndStageRenalDiseaseSystemFile. Readers who
experience any problems accessing the Addenda or LDS files, should
contact CMS by sending an email to CMS at the following mailbox:
[email protected].
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure, Administrator of the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services, approved this document on October 23, 2024.
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 410
Diseases, Health facilities, Health professions, Laboratories,
Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Rural areas, X-
rays.
42 CFR Part 413
Diseases, Health facilities, Medicare, Puerto Rico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 494
Diseases, Health facilities, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 512
Administrative practice and procedure, Health care, Health
facilities, Health insurance, Intergovernmental relations, Medicare,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 410--SUPPLEMENTARY MEDICAL INSURANCE (SMI) BENEFITS
0
1. The authority citation for part 410 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395m, 1395hh, 1395rr, and 1395ddd.
0
2. Section 410.52 is amended by revising paragraph (a) introductory
text to read as follows:
Sec. 410.52 Home dialysis services, supplies, and equipment: Scope
and conditions.
(a) Medicare Part B pays for the following services, supplies, and
equipment furnished to a patient with ESRD or an individual with Acute
Kidney Injury (AKI) as defined in Sec. 413.371 of this chapter in his
or her home:
* * * * *
[[Page 89212]]
PART 413--PRINCIPLES OF REASONABLE COST REIMBURSEMENT; PAYMENT FOR
END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE SERVICES; PROSPECTIVELY DETERMINED PAYMENT
RATES FOR SKILLED NURSING FACILITIES; PAYMENT FOR ACUTE KIDNEY
INJURY DIALYSIS
0
3. The authority citation for part 413 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1395d(d), 1395f(b), 1395g, 1395l(a),
(i), and (n), 1395m, 1395x(v), 1395x(kkk), 1395hh, 1395rr, 1395tt,
and 1395ww.
0
4. Section 413.196 is amended by revising paragraph (d)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 413.196 Notification of changes in rate-setting methodologies
and payment rates.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(2) The wage index using the most current wage data for occupations
related to the furnishing of renal dialysis services from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics and occupational mix data from the most recent full
calendar year of Medicare cost reports submitted in accordance with
Sec. 413.198(b).
* * * * *
0
5. Section 413.231 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 413.231 Adjustment for wages.
(a) CMS adjusts the labor-related portion of the base rate to
account for geographic differences in the area wage levels using an
appropriate wage index (established by CMS) which reflects the relative
level of wages relevant to the furnishing of renal dialysis services in
the geographic area in which the ESRD facility is located.
* * * * *
0
6. Section 413.234 is amended by revising paragraph (c) introductory
text and adding paragraph (c)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 413.234 Drug designation process.
* * * * *
(c) Transitional drug add-on payment adjustment. A new renal
dialysis drug or biological product is paid for using a transitional
drug add-on payment adjustment, which is based on 100 percent of
average sales price (ASP), except as provided in paragraph (c)(4) of
this section. If ASP is not available then the transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment is based on 100 percent of wholesale acquisition
cost (WAC) and, when WAC is not available, the payment is based on the
drug manufacturer's invoice. Notwithstanding the provisions in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section, if CMS does not receive a
full calendar quarter of ASP data for a new renal dialysis drug or
biological product within 30 days of the last day of the 3rd calendar
quarter after we begin applying the transitional drug add-on payment
adjustment for the product, CMS will no longer apply the transitional
drug add-on payment adjustment for that product beginning no later than
2-calendar quarters after we determine a full calendar quarter of ASP
data is not available. If CMS stops receiving the latest full calendar
quarter of ASP data for a new renal dialysis drug or biological product
during the applicable time period specified in paragraph (c)(1) or (2)
of this section, CMS will no longer apply the transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment for the product beginning no later than 2-calendar
quarters after CMS determines that the latest full calendar quarter of
ASP data is not available.
* * * * *
(4) For calendar years 2025 and 2026, the transitional drug add-on
payment adjustment amount for a phosphate binder is based on 100
percent of ASP plus an additional amount derived from 6 percent of per-
patient phosphate binder spending based on utilization and cost data.
* * * * *
0
7. Section 413.236 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(4) and (c) to
read as follows:
Sec. 413.236 Transitional add-on payment adjustment for new and
innovative equipment and supplies.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) Has a complete Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System
(HCPCS) Level II code application submitted, in accordance with the
HCPCS Level II coding procedures on the CMS website, by the HCPCS Level
II code application deadline for biannual Coding Cycle 2 for non-drug
and non-biological items, supplies, and services as specified in the
HCPCS Level II coding guidance on the CMS website prior to the
particular calendar year;
* * * * *
(c) Announcement of determinations and deadline for consideration
of new renal dialysis equipment or supply applications. CMS will
consider whether a new renal dialysis supply or equipment meets the
eligibility criteria specified in paragraph (b) of this section and
announce the results in the Federal Register as part of its annual
updates and changes to the ESRD prospective payment system. CMS will
only consider a complete application received by CMS by February 1
prior to the particular calendar year. FDA marketing authorization for
the equipment or supply must occur by the HCPCS Level II code
application deadline for biannual Coding Cycle 2 for non-drug and non-
biological items, supplies, and services as specified in the HCPCS
Level II coding guidance on the CMS website prior to the particular
calendar year.
0
8. Section 413.237 is amended by adding paragraph (a)(1)(vii) to read
as follows:
Sec. 413.237 Outliers.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(vii) Renal dialysis drugs and biological products that are
Composite Rate Services as defined in Sec. 413.171.
* * * * *
0
9. Section 413.373 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 413.373 Other adjustments to the AKI dialysis payment rate.
(a) CMS applies the wage-adjusted add-on per treatment adjustment
for home and self-dialysis training as set forth at Sec. 413.235(c) to
payments for AKI dialysis claims that include such training.
(b) The payment rate for AKI dialysis may be adjusted by the
Secretary (on a budget neutral basis for payments under section 1834(r)
of the Act) by any other adjustment factor under subparagraph (D) of
section 1881(b)(14) of the Act.
0
10. Section 413.374 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 413.374 Renal dialysis services included in the AKI dialysis
payment rate.
(a) The AKI dialysis payment rate applies to renal dialysis
services (as defined in subparagraph (B) of section 1881(b)(14) of the
Act) furnished under Part B by a renal dialysis facility or provider of
services paid under section 1881(b)(14) of the Act, including home
services, supplies, and equipment, and self-dialysis.
* * * * *
PART 494--CONDITIONS FOR COVERAGE FOR END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
FACILITIES
0
11. The authority citation for part 494 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. l302 and l395hh.
0
12. Section 494.10 is amended by revising the definitions of ``Home
dialysis'' and ``Self-dialysis'' to read as follows:
[[Page 89213]]
Sec. 494.10 Definitions.
* * * * *
Home dialysis means dialysis performed at home by a patient or
caregiver who has completed an appropriate course of training as
described in Sec. 494.100(a).
Self-dialysis means dialysis performed with little or no
professional assistance by a patient or caregiver who has completed an
appropriate course of training as specified in Sec. 494.100(a).
* * * * *
0
13. Section 494.70 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (10)
and (c)(1)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 494.70 Condition: Patients' rights.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) Respect, dignity, and recognition of his or her individuality
and personal needs, and sensitivity to his or her psychological needs
and ability to cope with kidney failure;
* * * * *
(10) Be informed by the physician, nurse practitioner, clinical
nurse specialist, or physician's assistant treating the patient for
kidney failure of his or her own medical status as documented in the
patient's medical record, unless the medical record contains a
documented contraindication;
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) How plans in the individual market will affect the patient's
access to, and costs for the providers and suppliers, services, and
prescription drugs that are currently within the individual's plan of
care as well as those likely to result from other documented health
care needs. This must include an overview of the health-related and
financial risks and benefits of the individual market plans available
to the patient (including plans offered through and outside the
Exchange).
* * * * *
0
14. Section 494.80 is amended by revising the introductory text to read
as follows:
Sec. 494.80 Condition: Patient assessment.
The facility's interdisciplinary team consists of, at a minimum,
the patient or the patient's designee (if the patient chooses), a
registered nurse, a physician treating the patient for kidney failure,
a social worker, and a dietitian. The interdisciplinary team is
responsible for providing each patient with an individualized and
comprehensive assessment of his or her needs. The comprehensive
assessment must be used to develop the patient's treatment plan and
expectations for care.
* * * * *
0
15. Section 494.90 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 494.90 Condition: Patient plan of care.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(4) The dialysis facility must ensure that all dialysis patients
are seen by a physician, nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist,
or physician's assistant providing dialysis care at least monthly, as
evidenced by a monthly progress note placed in the medical record, and
periodically while the hemodialysis patient is receiving in-facility
dialysis.
* * * * *
0
16. Section 494.100 is amended by revising paragraph (a)(3)(i) to read
as follows:
Sec. 494.100 Condition: Care at home.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) The nature and management of their kidney failure.
* * * * *
0
17. Section 494.120 is amended by revising the introductory text to
read as follows:
Sec. 494.120 Condition: Special purpose renal dialysis facilities.
A special purpose renal dialysis facility is approved to furnish
dialysis on a short-term basis at special locations. Special purpose
dialysis facilities are divided into two categories: vacation camps
(locations that serve patients with kidney failure while the patients
are in a temporary residence) and facilities established to serve
patients with kidney failure under emergency circumstances.
* * * * *
0
18. Section 494.130 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 494.130 Condition: Laboratory services.
The dialysis facility must provide, or make available, laboratory
services (other than tissue pathology and histocompatibility) to meet
the needs of the patient. Any laboratory services, including tissue
pathology and histocompatibility must be furnished by or obtained from,
a facility that meets the requirements for laboratory services
specified in part 493 of this chapter.
0
19. Section 494.170 is amended by revising the introductory text to
read as follows:
Sec. 494.170 Condition: Medical records.
The dialysis facility must maintain complete, accurate, and
accessible records on all patients, including home patients who elect
to receive dialysis supplies and equipment from a supplier that is not
a provider of dialysis services and all other home dialysis patients
whose care is under the supervision of the facility.
* * * * *
PART 512--RADIATION ONCOLOGY MODEL AND END STAGE RENAL DISEASE
TREATMENT CHOICES MODEL
0
20. The authority citation for part 512 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1302, 1315a, and 1395hh.
0
21. Section 512.310 is amended by revising the definition of ``ESRD
Beneficiary'' to read as follows:
Sec. 512.310 Definitions.
* * * * *
ESRD Beneficiary means a beneficiary who meets any of the
following:
(1) Is receiving dialysis or other services for end-stage renal
disease, up to and including the month in which the beneficiary
receives a kidney transplant up to and including the month in which the
beneficiary receives a kidney transplant.
(2) Has already received a kidney transplant and has a non-AKI
dialysis or MCP claim at least 12 months after the beneficiary's latest
transplant date.
(3) Has a kidney transplant failure less than 12 months after the
beneficiary's latest transplant date as identified by:
(i) Two or more MCP claims in the180 days following the date on
which the kidney transplant was received;
(ii) 24 or more maintenance dialysis treatments at any time after
180 days following the transplant date; or,
(iii) Indication of a transplant failure after the beneficiary's
date of transplant based on data from the Scientific Registry of
Transplant Recipients (SRTR) database.
(4) If a beneficiary meets more than one of criteria described in
paragraphs (3)(i) through (iii) of this definition, the beneficiary
will be considered an ESRD beneficiary starting with the earliest month
in which transplant failure was recorded.
* * * * *
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2024-25486 Filed 11-1-24; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P