Title: Stakeholder Meeting
1- Stakeholder Meeting
- Monday, October 26, 2009
- Washington, DC
2Welcome
- On behalf of the AJRR Project Team, I hope
- that todays meeting provides a forum for
- frank dialogue about the opportunities and
- challenges that await us. Active involvement
- and commitment is critical to the ongoing
- development and implementation of the
- American Joint Replacement Registry.
3Mission Statement
- Foster a national center for data collection and
- research on total hip and knee replacement
- with far-reaching benefits to society including
- reduced morbidity and mortality, improved
- patient safety, improved quality of care and
- medical decision-making, reduced medical
- spending, and advances in orthopaedic science and
- bioengineering.
4Vision
- An Independent National Total Joint Registry
Dedicated to the Improvement in Arthroplasty
Patient Care by Data Driven Modifications in the
Behavior of Collaborating Providers,
Institutions, Manufacturers, Payors, and Patients
5Meeting Goals
- ENGAGE a Wide Range of Stakeholders
- REVIEW Work to Date
- ACHIEVE Consensus on Proposed Model and Direction
- IDENTIFY Barriers and Obstacles
- INVITE Formal Participation People/
- COMMIT to a Specific Project Timeline
6AJRR Timeline 2010
- AJRR Board Appointed
- Workgroup responsibilities transition to AJRR
Committee April 2010 - Develop and implement registry database system
- Test system 2nd Qtr 2010
- Process live data July 1, 2010
- 750 participants by year one
- Very Aggressive
7Start-up Financing Commitments
- AAOS - 300,000
- AAHKS - 50,000
- Hip Society - 50,000
- Knee Society - 50,000
- WellPoint - 50,000
- AdvaMed members - 500,000
- 1,000,000
8Recent Events
- 09/2008 Stakeholder meeting _at_ Brookings
Institute, Washington, DC - 02/2009 AAOS BOD appointed AJRR Project Team
- 02/2009 AAOS AJRR team meets with members of
industry, receives assurances of conceptual
support for the registry project
9Recent Events
- 05/2009 AJRR Kick-off Meeting _at_ BOD meeting in
NYC - 06/2009 AJRR incorporation as NFP org
- 07/2009 Developed media campaign to generate
support for AJRR - 09/2009 - Formation of workgroups
- 10/2009 All Stakeholder Meeting in DC
10Quality of Evidence for Guideline Recommendations
in CV disease
Source Robert Califf
11Focus on Post-Approval Data
- Quality improvement
- Performance measurement
- Post-marketing surveillance
- Comparative effectiveness research
12IOM Definition of CER
- The generation and synthesis of evidence that
- compares the benefits and harms of alternative
- methods to prevent, diagnose, treat, and monitor
a - clinical condition or to improve the delivery of
care. - The purpose of CER is to assist consumers,
- clinicians, purchasers, and policy makers to make
- informed decisions that will improve health care
at - both the individual and population levels.
13IOM Recommendation 6
- The CER Program should fully involve all
- key stakeholders (consumers, patients,
- clinicians, providers, payers, policymakers)
- in key aspects of CER, including strategic
- planning, priority setting, research proposal
- development, peer review, and
- dissemination.
14Total Hip and Knee Surgeries in the U.S.
1998-2006 (000s)
- Source Hospitalizations - National Hospital
Discharge Survey 1998-2006. Data obtained from
U.S. Department of Health - and Human Services Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention National Center for Health
Statistics.
15Incidence And Average Revision Charge In The U.S.
Source National Inpatient Sample, Healthcare
Cost and Utilization Project 1999-2007.
16AJRR Consultants
- Robert Portman, JD providing guidance on
governance, organizational, privacy, and
protection issues - Sean Tunis, MD leading the consensus building
effort among key stakeholder groups - William Yasnoff, MD, PhD lending expertise to
the creation of the core data set and in
addressing data collection barriers
17Charter and Objectives
18AJRR Project Charter
- Goals
- Collect Data
- Provide Reports
- Reduce Revision Rates
- Requirements
- Validated Protected Data
- Feedback Analysis Reports
- Patient Access to Their Own Data
19AJRR Project Charter
- Challenges
- Make Data Submission Easy for Hospitals
- Match Revisions to Original Operation
- Ensure Financial Sustainability
- Estimated Costs
- Startup 781K (2009) 2,503K (2010)
- Ongoing 20 per Procedure
20Governance Structure
21AJRR Governance Structure
- Incorporated in Illinois in June 2009
- Will seek 501(c)(3) status as supporting
organization - Will not qualify as broadly-supported public
charity or fee supported - Can qualify as supporting organization of another
(c)(3)i.e., AAOS - Must be controlled by supported org.
22AJRR Governance Structure
- Control Test
- There are several options, but the one that best
fits the AJRR and that will give the IRS maximum
comfort is for AAOS to appoint a majority of the
board of directors. - Proposed bylaws drafted to meet this test
23AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Composition of BOD
- 3 AAOS appointments
- 1 Hip Society
- 1 Knee Society
- 1 AAHKS
- 1 at-large orthopaedic surgeon
24AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Composition of BOD
- 2 Industry members
- 2 Payor members
- 1 hospital member
- 1 lay/public member
25AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Composition of BOD
- CEO/Medical Director (ex officio wov)
- Immediate Past President (ex officio wov)
- Board Observers FDA, AHRQ, CMS representatives
26AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- All appointments subject to ratification by AAOS
Board - Removal by 2/3 vote of AAOS Board
- 3-year staggered terms option for 1 renewal term
27AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Officers
- Chair
- Vice Chair
- Secretary-Treasurer
- Chair/Vice Chair from ortho members
- Secretary-Treasurer non-ortho member
28AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Officers
- Chair1 two-year term
- Vice Chair1 two-year term and then succeeds to
Chair per AJRR BOD - Secretary-Treasurertwo-year term subject to 1
renewal term chairs Finance/Audit Committee
29AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committeesbroad representation
- Executive Committee
- Finance/Audit Committee
- Data Management
- Data Protection/Security
- Others TBD
30AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committees
- Executive Committee
- Officers
- At-large member selected by AJRR BOD
- CEO/Medical Director (ex officio wov)
31AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committees
- Executive Committee
- Acts for AJRR BOD in-between meetings
- Except for big issues like bylaws amendments
dissolution appointment of officers/directors
32AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committees
- Finance/Audit Committee
- Chaired by Secretary-Treasurer
- At least one financial expert
33AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committees
- Data Management
- Data Collection
- Data Analysis
- Technology/Software
34AJRR Governance Structure
- Proposed Bylaws
- Committees
- Data Protection/Security
- Confidentiality
- HIPAA compliance
- Protection from legal discovery
- Liability issues
35AJRR Governance Structure
- Next Steps
- Initial BOD Approves Bylaws
- File Tax Exemption Application
- Constitute BOD
- Off and running!
- Develop/adopt policies and procedures (in
progress)
36AJRR Governance Structure
37Stakeholder Responses
38Afternoon Session
39Welcome
- On behalf of the AJRR Project Team, I hope
- that todays meeting provides a forum for
- frank dialogue about the opportunities and
- challenges that await us. Active involvement
- and commitment is critical to the ongoing
- development and implementation of the
- American Joint Replacement Registry.
40Mission Statement
- Foster a national center for data collection and
- research on total hip and knee replacement
- with far-reaching benefits to society including
- reduced morbidity and mortality, improved
- patient safety, improved quality of care and
- medical decision-making, reduced medical
- spending, and advances in orthopaedic science and
- bioengineering.
41Vision
- An Independent National Total Joint Registry
Dedicated to the Improvement in Arthroplasty
Patient Care by Data Driven Modifications in the
Behavior of Collaborating Providers,
Institutions, Manufacturers, and Payors
42Meeting Goals
- ENGAGE a Wide Range of Stakeholders
- REVIEW Work to Date
- ACHIEVE Consensus on Proposed Model and Direction
- IDENTIFY Barriers and Obstacles
- INVITE Formal Participation People/
- COMMIT to a Specific Project Timeline
43AJRR Timeline 2010
- AJRR Board Appointed
- Workgroup responsibilities transition to AJRR
Committee April 2010 - Develop and implement registry database system
- Test system 2nd Qtr 2010
- Process live data July 1, 2010
- 750 participants by year one
- Very Aggressive
44Start-up Financing Commitments
- AAOS - 300,000
- AAHKS - 50,000
- Hip Society - 50,000
- Knee Society - 50,000
- WellPoint - 50,000
- AdvaMed members - 500,000
- 1,000,000
45Workgroups
46Workgroup Composition
- Currently populated by surgeons and AdvaMed
representatives - Membership will expand to include additional
stakeholder representatives - Governmental reps will be invited to sit-in
47Workgroups
- Major areas of activity identified
- Opportunity to begin working with stakeholders to
address organizational and operational issues - Will serve as a bridge from the current project
structure to the new Board of Directors
48AJRR Workgroups and Chairs
- Steering John Callaghan, MD
- Governance and Management Daniel Berry, MD
- Regulatory/Legal/Privacy E. Anthony Rankin, MD
- Core Data William J. Maloney, MD
49Workgroup Composition
- Currently populated by surgeons and AdvaMed
representatives - Membership will expand to include additional
stakeholder representatives
50Steering Workgroup
- John J. Callaghan, MD
- Chair
- Daniel J. Berry, MD
- Cheryl Blanchard, PhD
- Rhonda Fellows
- Peter Heeckt, MD, PhD
- William J. Maloney, MD
- E. Anthony Rankin, MD
- Karen L. Hackett, FACHE, CAE Staff Liaison
- Sean Tunis, MD, MSc Consultant
- Ex-officio
- David G. Lewallen, MD
- Richard J. Stewart
51Steering Workgroup
- Oversee the development of the AJRR Business Plan
and Budget - Obtain AJRR financing
- Oversee relationships with stakeholders,
specifically including the Federal Government
(e.g., CMS, AHRQ, etc.) - Oversee relationships with outside entities,
including - Congress
- Other registries, both international and domestic
- News media
- Monitor legislation impacting the AJRR
- Develop the surgeon support base for the registry
52Steering Workgroup
- Met via teleconference 10/7
- Review draft changes
- Key issue discussed
- Adverse event reporting
- Surgeon buy-in and oversight
- Stakeholder buy-in
53Steering Workgroup
54Governance and Management Workgroup
- Daniel J. Berry, MD Chair
- Kevin J. Bozic, MD, MBA
- Robert Durgin
- Matthew Hull
- Joshua J. Jacobs, MD
- Michael L. Parks, MD
- Eric Rugo
- Richard N. Peterson - Staff Liaison
- Robert M. Portman Consultant
- Ex-officio
- David G. Lewallen, MD
- Richard J. Stewart
55Governance and Management Workgroup
- Recommend AJRR Board representation and
governance - Propose AJRR bylaws
- Oversee corporate filings as appropriate (e.g.,
Illinois annual reports. Internal Revenue
applications, tax returns, etc.) - Determine the staffing needs of the Registry and
begin recruitment of necessary AJRR staff,
assuming the AJRR Board and/or Chief Executive
Officer are not in place - Oversee the procurement of necessary operational
services on behalf of AJRR - Oversee the development of AJRR policies and
procedures (e.g., conflict of interest, record
retention/destruction, antitrust compliance,
whistleblower, etc.)
56Governance and Management Workgroup
- Discussions concerning the structure and function
of the AJRR Board are ongoing - Stakeholder perspectives vary and comments are
being taken under advisement - Other issues on the agenda include
- Incorporation as an Illinois not-for-profit
- Application for 501(c) (3) status
- Application for trademark protection
57Governance and Management Workgroup
58Regulatory/Legal/Privacy Workgroup
- E. Anthony Rankin, MD Chair
- Donald C. Fithian, MD
- Norman A. Johanson, MD
- Alicia Napoli
- David N. Royster
- Marlene K. Tandy, M.D., J.D.
- Jeanie Kennedy Staff Liaison
- Melissa Young, JD Staff Liaison
- Robert M. Portman Consultant
- Ex-officio
- David G. Lewallen, MD
- Richard J. Stewart
59Regulatory/Legal/Privacy Workgroup
- Oversee compliance with regulatory requirements,
including - Medical Device Reporting requirements
- Adverse Event Reporting
- FDAs sentinel initiative
- Maximize protection from disclosure of registry
data - Research de-identification methodologies
- Ensure compliance with the legal aspects of
privacy and confidentiality requirements - Monitor regulatory proposals impacting the AJRR
- Unique Device Identification
60Regulatory/Legal/Privacy Workgroup
- Currently drafting 2 memos 1 on Legal issues, 1
on policy issues - Privacy HIPAA compliance is likely the biggest
issue - Breach rules will apply
- Business Associate (BA) agreements for sites is
necessary (covered under High Tech Act of 2009) - Participation agreements needed
- Adverse Event (AE) Reporting AJRR not a
manufacturer or user facility - AJRR should define policies and procedures for AE
reporting, access, etc. - Other issues EHR, Sentinel Initiative, UDI
61Regulatory/Legal/Privacy Workgroup
62Core Data Workgroup
63Core Data Workgroup
- William J. Maloney, MD Chair
- Thomas C. Barber, MD
- Doug Dennis, MD
- Leesa Galatz, MD
- William Jiranek, MD
- Mark A Kester, PhD
- Henrik Malchau, MD, PhD
- Pam Plouhar
- Jing Xie, PhD
- Katherine Sale Staff Liaison
- William Yasnoff, MD, PhD Consultant
- Ex-officio
- David G. Lewallen, MD
- Richard J. Stewart
64Core Data Workgroup
- Draft Core Data items
- Work with hospitals and surgeon in determining
Core Data collectability and sources refine Core
Data items - Determine timing of data submissions (e.g.,
daily, monthly, etc.) - Determine submission mode(s)
- Paper
- Fax
- Online
- Develop procedures on validating collected data
- Oversee technical data protection
- Oversee a pilot project on Core Data collection,
submission validation - Review, suggest incentives for hospital
participation
65Core Data Workgroup
- Three key areas
- Triggers for data entry
- Core Data set
- Mechanisms for data entry
66Triggers for Data Entry
- Goal
- Tracks what goes in and what comes out
- Triggers
- ICD-9 procedure codes
67Triggers for Data Entry
68Core Data Elements
- Stratified Data Collection
- Level One Data
- Minimum data set to have a functioning registry
- Institutional responsibility
69Core Data Elements
- Level One Data
- Patient
- Name
- Date of birth
- Social security number
- Diagnosis (ICD-9 codes)
- Sex
70Core Data Elements
- Level One Data
- Surgeon
- Name
- Surgeon volume computed
- Hospital
- Name
- Address
- Hospital volume computed
71Core Data Elements
- AJRR Unique Identifiers
- Patient
- Surgeon
- Hospital
72Core Date Elements
- Why Unique Identifiers
- Allows index procedures to be linked to
subsequent events - Permits patients access to their own information
- Enables linkage to other data bases
- Helps to maintain confidentiality
73Core Data Elements
- Level One Data
- Procedure
- Type (ICD-9 codes)
- Date of Surgery
- Age at surgery computed
- Laterality
- Implants
74Survival Free of Cup Revision
Cup Type
HG-II
Implex Titanium
PFC
Primary
PSL
Revision
Reflection
Spherical
Trilogy
75Australian Registry
76Australian Registry
77Link v. Oxford v. PCA
78Core Data Elements
- Level Two Data
- Variables, if collected, would enhance the value
of the data analysis - Risk adjustment
- Depending on the data element, could be either an
institutional or surgeon responsibility
79Core Data Elements
- Level Two Data
- Patient
- BMI
- Co-morbidities
- CHF, COPD
- Process of Care
- Antibiotic prophylaxis
80Core Data Elements
- Level Two Data
- The list of potential data elements is endless
- The Data Committee will need to balance the
burden of data collection with the value any
given element provides
81Core Data Elements
- Level Three Data
- Clinical Outcome Tools
- WOMAC, SF-36
- Patient Satisfaction
- Depending on the tool, could be either a surgeon
or patient Responsibility
82Core Data Elements
- Level Four Data
- Radiographs
- Provide more in depth analysis of why and how
implants/procedures fail
83Core Data Elements
- Data Collection Strategy
- Start with level one data
- Define least burdensome approaches to data
collection - Expand hospital participation
- Add data elements incrementally
84Mechanisms for Data Entry
- Web based
- High volume hospitals and hospitals with
electronic medical record - IT solution
- Create institutional registry with existing data
- Download to AJRR
85Mechanisms for Data Entry
- Low volume hospitals or no electronic medical
record - Web based application to enter data on a case by
case basis - Complete level one data set
- Administrative claims form AJRR supplement
- Implant information, laterality
86Core Data Elements
87Implementation Challenges
88Implementation Challenges
- Engagement and support from Critical Stakeholders
influencing TJA outcome - Recruiting Surgeons and Hospitals
- Make Data Submission Easy for Hospitals
- Incentivize submission as quality measure?
- Match Revisions to Original Operation
- Assure Appropriate Stakeholder Data
Confidentiality - Ensure Financial Sustainability
89Implementation Challenges
- Hospital Buy-in
- Data Capture
- Reporting
- Back to institutions
- Vendors
- Physicians
- Flexibility is crucial
90Implementation Challenges
- Hospital Buy-in
- Patient safety improvement through easier
management of recalls - Better information for contracting decision
making - Better information for marketing
- Improved ability to track and manage quality of
care
91Implementation
- Data Capture
- Flexibility Important
- Bar Code Scanning
- Capture rate
- Infrastructure
- Bar code location
- Paper capture for later data entry
- Decreased accuracy
- System integration with existing hospital systems
- Proven difficult in the past
92Implementation
- Reporting
- To Institutions
- To Vendors
- To Physicians
93Federal Stakeholder Responses
94Funding
95Registry Funding Models
- Hospital Fees
- Fee paid by hospital for each patient or annual
fee for participation - Most common model for private U.S. registries
- ICD Registry 3000 annual fee
- STS Registry 3750 annual fee
- NOPR 50 fee per patient
96Registry Funding Models
- Government Funding
- In U.S., typically large multi-year grants from
AHRQ or NIH. - Primary funding source for international
registries - University of Rochester Muscular Dystrophy
Registry has received a series of 4 year grants
from NIAMS and NINDS
97Registry Funding Models
- Manufacturer Grants
- Large, multi-year grants from industry beyond
initial start-up phase - Global Orthopaedic Registry (GLORY) received
grants for 10 years, but funding ended and the
registry is much smaller - German Arthroplasty Register relied on grants for
several years but had to seek other funding and
reduce scope - Manufacturer Fee per Implant
- Manufacturers pay per implant fee to the registry
98Registry Funding Models
- Payer Add-on Fees
- Public and private health plans pay set per
implant fee to the registry, on top of standard
reimbursement - Common among international public joint
registries - UK National Joint Registry 20.00 per implant in
2009 - New Zealand National Joint Register 10 per
implant
99Wrap Up and Next Steps