Title: Medical Device Regulatory, Reimbursement and Compliance Congress
1Medical Device Regulatory, Reimbursement and
Compliance Congress
Value-Based Pricing The Good, The Bad, and The
Ugly
March 27, 2008
Randel E. Richner, BSN, MPH President, Founder
2Reform
- There is no problem, however difficult, which if
we roll up our sleeves, we cannot completely
ignore. - --George Carlin
3Policy Overview
3
- Technology Is Good.
- Technology per se, does not cause increased
health care costs - It is only randomly possible to accurately detect
the true value of technology due to a fragmented
care delivery, migration of services, and system
issues (complex overlay of private/public
insurers to track and monitor care and value).
Misaligned payment systems may cause perverse
care incentives and artificial determinants of
value. - The calculation of risk in determining the
threshold of value is largely ignored.
4New, Innovative and Complex Technologies
4
- Devices are getting smarter and are providing
more information - Intelligent devices
- Biotechnology Revolution
- Personalized Medicine
- Combination Products
- Information-Rich Therapeutics
5Typical Market Development
Early adopter Early Majority Late
majority
Prove Principle Drive Adoption
Change Standard
6Innovation PTCA
7- Technology Assessment and Value
8Technology Access
8
Decision-Making Occurs at Multiple Levels
Organizations Involved
- CMS, (Global--International)
- Major national third party payers and benefit
managers
- Medicare Intermediaries and Carriers, DMERCs
- Regional health plans
- Medicaid administrators
- IDNs
- Physician groups
- Hospitals
9FDA/CMS Divergencies
9
- FDA regulator public health/safety
- Safe products
- Assumes Market sorts out clinical value and
comparative effectiveness - Standards vary by risk
- CMS regulator purchaser
- Improved health for good value
- Increased focus on clinical benefits blur into
public health effort - Decisions are broad, policy-based
Uncertainties How will CMS define and pay for
incremental benefit? How long will full coverage
of labeled indications take?
10Evidence Development and Value
- Technology Assessment
- Evidence Based Medicine
- Coverage with Evidence Requirements
- Practice Based Management
- Pay for Performance
- Quality Outcomes
- Outcomes Assessment
- Cost-Effectiveness Analsyis
- Outcomes Demonstration Projects
- Overuse, Underuse, Misuse
- Superior Medical outcomes
- Least Costly Alternative
- Substantial Equivalence
- Comparative Effectiveness
11Type of data you collect depends on the category
of product
Similar to Another Product Expansion of Existing Technology Truly New and Innovative
Evidence Required Usually FDA approval with same indications suffice for inclusion in existing coverage Publication of Controlled Studies (usually 1-2) Coverage under Protocol Publication of 2 4 RCTs with ongoing study through Registry Data, Cost-Effectiveness Data
Evidence Should Prove Similar clinical efect and outcomes, cost-efficacy a plus for differentiation Incremental clinical and / or economic value of the device relative to its predicate Higher degree of certainty. RCTs show improved outcomes over other treatments, with lower costs
Clinical Trial Data Types Necessary/ Optional Regulatory approval, Practical clinical trial, limited cost study RCTs, Cost-effectiveness, Long-term outcomes, Ongoing Practical Clinical Trials RCTs, Cost-effectiveness, Long-term outcomes, Practical Clinical Trial, Post-market registry
12- Payment Misalignments and determining Value
13Medicares Complex Reimbursement Processes
13
- Each payment system has its own rules, based in
statute, and uses data from the providers it pays - Different payments in different sites for the
same items or services - Can create inappropriate incentives
- Providers learn to balance underpaid/overpaid
services to achieve bottom-line - Benefits of less invasive services, migration to
less costly settings, not recognized in value
calculations
14Major CMS Payment Systems
14
- PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEMS
- Inpatient PPS
- Outpatient PPS
- Inpatient Rehab
- Long-term Care Hospital
- Inpatient Psych
- Skilled Nursing Facility
- Home Health
- FEE SCHEDULES
- Physicians
- Ambulatory Surgical Centers
- Clinical Labs
- Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics
Orthotics - Ambulance
- ESRD
15Example of Payment Divergences
15
Diagnostic Colonoscopy CPT 45378 1.15 million
procedures performed in 2003
- Payment Site Utilization
- OPPS 513 56
- ASC 446 22
- PFS-PE 177 6
physician fee schedule (PFS) practice expense (PE)
16Home Hemodialysis provides great value providers
limit adoption
- Major clinical benefits
- LVH, heart failure improvement
- Anemia
- Rehabilitation/QOL
- 15-25 annual savings potential (10-17K of 70K
costs) - Kaiser promoting home dialysis
VS.
17Daily home dialysis challenges
Largest savings in hospital costs, which are part
of a different budget (Part A vs. Part B) and are
not realized by the dialysis provider
18 19Consider Unique technology-specific issues
- Risk should the level of evidence be the same
for a new MRI test as for a new brain aneurysm
stent? - Operator Skill How does one design the impact
of physician end-user skills on patient outcomes
and study design? - Life Cycles How do we expect to use traditional
study approaches with minimum of 3 years from
start to pubs when technology changes within a 2
years? - Combinatorial science How does the study
account for the manufacturing changes (polymers,
voltages, wires and metals, drugs) on the effect
of patient outcomes? - Physician end-user involvement How are
physicians mobilizing to determine the outcomes
critical to study to determine value?
20Drug RisksNear-Term Fatalities Per Person-Year
21Transportation
22Solution 1 Value
- New Study Paradigm. Encourage access, innovation
- Risk-based stratification of evidence
- Physician end-user involvement
- Focus on treatment comparisons rather than
individual product comparisons - Electronic records, and HIT advances invest in
this infrastructure. - Gold standard, database, epidemiological studies
- Bayesian analysis preexisting data are
constantly adjusted using new data as acured
potential reduction of sample sizes, and ability
to continually update probability of success or
failure. - Collaborate with NIH, AHRQ, Private, public
entities. - Global interactions and use of data
23Solution 2 Reward the Future
- Reward preventative services and interventions
that can clearly demonstrate a significant value
over existing products. - Integrate nanotechnology, IT, molecular
diagnostics and combination therapies
(drugs/devices) into existing payment schemas. - Evaluate new medical technologies at CMS through
the Council of Medical Technology and Innovation
adapt payment mechanisms. - Use an episode of care as a reward technology
that moves from acute to home setttings (works in
Kaiser-like systems where physician payment is
not linked to utilization providers and payers
are aligned) - Include physician payments and incentives in the
episode of care. - PREEMPTIVE, PREDICTIVE, PERSONALIZED, and
PARTICIPATIVE
24Solution 3 Value includes Risk
- Avoid the temptation to regulate when events
occur before the technology is tested thoroughly.
- Partner with industry and medicine on improved
methods to accurately measure risk. - Use FDA-critical path initiatives as model.
25- Progress in the leading technology of our time
has been so dramatic that it has brought about,
time and again, swift qualitative changes in the
material world around us, change that surely
cannot be expressed simply as variations in
prices or quanities. - Trajtenberg, Economist, 1990.
26www.neocuregroup.com Founder President Randel
E. Richner, BSN, MPH 508-655-6161 ?
Richner_at_neocuregroup.com