RAC VS ONCOLOGY A COALITIONBUILDING PROTOTYPE Dane J
RAC VS. ONCOLOGY A COALITION-BUILDING PROTOTYPE Dane J. Dickson MD TO QUELL ONEROUS ATTACKS President Idaho Society of Clinical Oncology
2
Sun Tzu 孫子 – The Art of War “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. ” 3
Know yourself � Remember �FDA Labels �Guidelines (NCCN, ASCO, etc. ) �Published Literature (not abstracts!!!!) �Standard of Care Payment for an issue doesn’t necessarily mean that the payer agrees with your medical decision 4
RAC Demonstration Program � 2003 Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) – Section 306 � 3 -year demonstration program using Recovery Audit Contractors (RACs) to detect and correct improper payments in the Medicare FFS program � Initially started in states of New York, Massachusetts, Florida, South Carolina and California � Ended on March 27, 2008 5
Results of the 3 year project 6
Results of the 3 year project 7
Results of the 3 year project • Only 14% of audits appealed (with a 33. 3% chance you would win). • If you are a RAC you have a 95% success rate. 8
Results of the 3 Year Project � Lessons Learned: �“Claim RACs are able to find a large volume of improper payments. ” �“Providers do not appeal every overpayment determination. ” �“Overpayments collected were significantly greater than program costs. ” �… �“It is possible to find companies willing to work on a contingency fee basis. ” 9
Results of the 3 year Project � “The RAC demonstration had limited financial impact on most providers. . . those repayments were small in comparison with the providers’ overall income from Medicare. ” “. . . the RAC. . . cost only 20 cents for each dollar collected” 10
Results of the 3 year Project 11
Updated Statement of Work Sept 1, 2011 � Added a 3 rd audit category �Semi-automated Review �“To be used in [cases where] a clear CMS policy does not exist but in most instances the items and services as billed would be clinically unlikely or not consistent with evidence-based medical literature. ” �Prior to this, only Automated and Complex Reviews 12
Updated Statement of Work Sept 1, 2011 RACK – Medieval Torture Device RA – Egyptian Sun Deity 13
RAC Regions Follows the DME Regions for Medicare � Region A: Performant Recovery � https: //www. dcsrac. com/Default. aspx � Region B: CGI Federal, Inc. https: //racb. cgi. com/default. aspx � Region C: Connolly, Inc. http: //www. connolly. com/healthcare/Pages/CM SRac. Program. aspx � Region D: Health. Data. Insights, Inc. http: //www. healthdatainsights. com/rac. htm 14
CMS – RAC Regions 15
Semi-Automated Review 8/30/2012 “This letter is notify you that the Recovery Auditor HDI believes that Medicare has potentially made an overpayment to you. . Pegfilgrastim should not be administered during the 24 hours after chemotherapy. ” 16
How RACs Determine Major Audits “Low Hanging Fruit” Proprietary Data Review RAC CMS Audit Item 17
Notification of Audit Item 18
Finding RAC Audit Items � Region A https: //www. dcsrac. com/Issues. Under. Review. aspx � Region B https: //racb. cgi. com/Issues. aspx � Region C http: //www. connolly. com/healthcare/pages/Approved. I ssues. aspx � Region D https: //racinfo. healthdatainsights. com/Public 1/New. Iss ues. aspx 19
Simplifying the RAC Process RAC Request Provider Rebuttal Appeal 1 MAC Appeal 2 QIC MAC: QIC: ALJ: DAB: Appeal 3 ALJ Appeal 4 DAB Appeal 5 US District Court Medicare Administrative Contractor Qualified Independent Contractor Administrative Law Judge HHS – Departmental Appeals Board 20
Sun Tzu 孫子 – The Art of War “. . . in war the victorious. . . only seek battle after the victory has been won, whereas he who is destined to defeat fights first and then looks afterwards for victory. ” 21
Objectives, Strategies, and Allies 22
Objectives/Strategie s 3 CMS “Stop Audit” 1 CMS MAC to CMS to RAC “Stop Audit” 1 3 1 MAC RAC 4 RAC “Unreasonable” 4 Provider Rebuttal 1 2 2 MAC “Overturn RAC” 23
Escalated Strategies (If Needed) Patients 5 Congress 5 6 Corporate Leadership “Very bad PR” CMS 6 5 Share Holders Performant: CGI: Connolly: HDI: 5 Congress “Bad Policy” MAC Provider RAC PFMT GIB Private HMSY 24
Business of RAC HDI Acquired by HMS Holdings � 11/7/2011 Announced � 3 month increase of 25% vs. 10% for Dow � � Approx. increase in market value $670 Million 25
“Why bring a nuclear missile to a knife fight? ” Inherent conflict of interest of the RAC � Defining “not consistent with medical literature” � Personal Experience/Concerns with RAC � � Loss of Records ○ Inability of RAC to find records � Faxed � Certified mail ○ Response not received = automatic denial, and no further work needed to be done by RAC (MAC now does the work) � Over 3 year look back on audit item ○ Surprising given complete access to billing and payment records 26
Unified Oncology Coalition Idaho Oregon Utah Montana Washington Alaska Nebraska S. California COA SAC ASCO CPC State Societies MAC PRIT CMS RAC 27
States/State Societies Alaska - Denali Oncology Group Southern California (MOASC) Idaho Society of Clinical Oncology (ISCO) Montana – Frontier Cancer Nebraska Oncology Society (NOS) Oregon Society of Medical Oncology (OSMO) � Society of Utah Medical Oncologists (SUMO) � Washington State Medical Oncology Society (WSMOS) � � � 28
COA/Administrators � COA �Amazing communication and mobilization �Rapid response and focused perspective �Involved CMS/PRIT � State Administrators �Logistic support �Communication and direction THANK YOU! 29
American Society of Clinical Oncology Although physicians clearly do not like to receive letters from the RACs, the concerns described below are well beyond such general frustrations and involve very specific, significant flaws with this particular audit. Any one of these concerns warrant suspension of the audit. Especially given the implications when these issues are taken in combination, we urge CMS to intervene and suspend the ongoing RAC audit in Region D and to ensure that the same audit is not pursued in other regions of the United States. 30
CMS - PRIT Physicians Regulatory Issues Team � Small group since 1999 � “. . . working hard to identify issues, chase them down, and create solutions that are truly tangible to the practicing physician. ” CMS Position � Suffers from lack of funding and low visibility � William D Rogers MD Medical Officer CMS and Director Physicians Regulatory Issues Team 31
MAC - Noridian Medicare Administrative Contractor – Jurisdiction F and Minnesota � After receiving information from the State Societies � � Contacted CMS – halted audit � “We are going to overturn them all on appeal any way. . . ” Bernice Hecker MD Contract Medical Director Parts A&B Noridian Administrative Services � “GET INVOLVED!” 32
Noridian – Coverage Letter “Based on the evidence, the administration of same-day pegfilgrastim has become an accepted standard of care and in particular, in situations where patients are believed to be a higher risk of potential noncompliance with day 2 administration. “. . . the administration of pegfilgrastim before the traditional 14 day window has become an accepted standard of care to maintain dosedensity or reduce neutropenic complications in regimens with substantial myelosuppression. ” 33
? Final Results of Audits � RAC contacted our practice saying that our appeal was accepted and no overpayment existed � This included the audit that they lost � Most practices had all same day pegfilgrastim audits overturned but. . . � Nebraska fights on – ? If RAC reviewed, ? If MAC reviewed, ? next steps 34
Why does one RAC Drug Audit Matter? 35
36
37
COA/ISCO National Post. Payment Review Survey (1 of 3) Informal, non-scientific survey written by ISCO and sent by COA (thank you Mary Jo Wichers and Bo Gamble) to practice administrators nation wide. Completely voluntary with no follow up. # of respondents States Represented 26 19 How Frequent are Post Payment Reviews in the Following Areas: Chemotherapy 62% WBC 31% RBC 15% Anti-emetics 15% (Note: each area independent – some practices have received audits in multiple areas) 38
COA/ISCO National Post. Payment Review Survey (2 of 3) Who is conducting the audits? Medicare 70% Medicaid 3% Private Insurers 27% How often has the audit been performed even when a pre-authorization was obtained: 34% How often was the following successful in retaining payment: Provide Records 64% Showing guidelines or compendia 27% Providing clinical trial information 17% Talking to Medical Director 6% Legal Action 1% 39
COA/ISCO National Post. Payment Review Survey (3 of 3) When a claim had to be repaid, how often was the following the reason for the repayment: Lack of unbiased review by payer 35% Mistake by Billing or Coding 28% Other 19% Use of therapy outside of guidelines or compendia 14% Limited research 5% Number of man hours spent on post payment review/month 20 hours Average days until resolution of a single review 53 days 40
Where do we go from here? 41
Using an Unified Oncology Coalition to Drive Policy Patients and Advocates COA State Societies SAC ASCO National (CMS) Statewide (Private Insurers) 42
Possible Areas to Address � Pre-authorization �Develop a standardized method of authorization for all insurers �Simplify the process – especially with onlabel drug usage � Quality Measures �Develop standard methodology of measuring quality �Simplify the process 43
Possible Areas to Address Establishing National Rules for Drug Audits Private Insurers: 1. If pre-authorization was given – then this claim shall never be subject to post-payment review. 2. If pre-authorization becomes even more arduous, then there shall be an expectation that payers will reimburse this administrative burden. 3. Any disputed claim should be subjected to an independent review board. Medicare: 1. Any RAC audit item that deals with a “standard of care” issue – should be reviewed and agreed upon by an independent society before CMS approves it. Both: When dealing with the appropriate use of drug: 1. FDA Label trumps everything else, NCCN Drug Formulary/etc. next, NCCN/ASCO Guidelines next. 2. Sequencing of drug shall not be a look-back audit item. If a payer wants to look at sequencing (i. e. pathway) it should be established and communicated up front. 44
Summary “If we don’t lead, we will concede. ” 45
- Slides: 45