Title: Government%20Pricing%20
1Government Pricing Commercial Contracting Big
Changes Coming
Tim Nugent Managing Director Huron Consulting
Group
Debjit Ghosh Director Huron Consulting Group
John D. Shakow Counsel King Spalding, LLP
2Todays Agenda
- Investigations, Settlements, and Lawsuits
- Changes Enacted by the Deficit Reduction Act
- Operational Challenges of the Deficit Reduction
Act - Final Physician Fee Schedule Rule (ASP)
- Determining Fair Market Value for Service Fees
- Compliance Challenges for Medicare Part-D
3Section I
- Investigations, Settlements, and Lawsuits
4Pricing Litigation
- AWP cases
- Medicaid rebate cases
- Congressional investigations
- False Claims Act prosecutions
- Qui Tam actions
- (340B cases)
5Pricing Litigation AWP cases
- GSK settlement
- Plain meaning ruling (November 2, 2007)
- Track I case underway
- Attempts to remove are failing
- Federal intervention in Dey qui tam
- Magistrate Bowler decision on Baxter discovery
6Pricing Litigation State False Claims Acts
- DRA 6031
- Incentive for states to enact false claims act
laws that establish liability to the state for
entities that submit false or fraudulent claims
to a state Medicaid program - Increased percentage recovery if the state law
qualifies - OIG guidelines for evaluating state false claims
acts issued August 21, 2006 - Generally modeled after the Federal False Claims
Act
7Pricing Litigation State False Claims Acts
- Trickle down incentive to qualify for the
increased percentage of the recovery, the state
law must, among other things, reward the relator
in a way that is at least as effective in
rewarding and facilitating federal qui tam
relators - Treble damages and guaranteed percentages make
state false claims act actions more attractive to
relators
8Pricing Litigation Medicaid Integrity Program
- DRA 6034
- Comprehensive Integrity Plan issued in mid-July
- Well funded and staffed fraud investigation unit
charged with addressing programmatic
vulnerabilities including the provision of
prescription drugs to beneficiaries and the
underlying costs of those drugs as reported to
the States - Division of Fraud Research and Detection
- Enforcement authority?
9Penalties for Non-Compliance with Price Reporting
Laws
- Exclusion from the Medicaid market
- Civil monetary penalties
- Up to 100k for false statements of AMP or best
price - 10k per day for failure to file AMP or best
price - 10k per day for misreported ASP
- Civil False Claims Act (federal and state)
- Submitting false statements is a felony
(particularly on the ASP certification)
10King Settlement
- November, 2005
- 124 million settlement of a false claims act
allegation - Payments to the Federal Medicaid program, several
states, the Big 4 and PHS covered entities - Based on the following conduct (performed
"knowingly") - failing to collect and analyze its pricing
information in a manner to ensure that it would
be able to accurately report AMP and BP - failing to adequately train its personnel to
accurately calculate AMP and BP - failing to provide its employees with appropriate
software and other tools for calculating AMP and
BP correctly and - including inappropriate customers in its retail
class of trade (resulting in inaccurate AMPs).
11King Settlement (contd.)
- The "false records" are alleged to have been the
calculations themselves, included in the
quarterly CMS submissions - King's failure to have adequate systems and
training -- not that they set out to mislead or
defraud -- that was enough to trigger an FCA
investigation and settlement - Attendant invasive CIA
12Other Significant Pricing Settlements
- GlaxoSmithKline (September, 2005)
- 150 million
- AWP, AMP and ASP
- Schering Plough (July, 2004)
- 345 million
- Best price
- AstraZeneca (June, 2003)
- 355 million
- AWP and best price
- Bayer (April, 2003)
- 250 million
- Concealed discounts
- TAP (September, 2001)
- 875 million
- AWP and best price
13Corporate Integrity Agreements
- Most settlements have attendant CIAs
- Invasive
- Independent Review Organizations
- Government Audits
- Long-lasting
- Limit sales and marketing opportunities
- Expensive
- Potentially experimental
14Section II
- Changes Enacted by the Deficit Reduction Act
15Overview of the Deficit Reduction Act 2005
16Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Federal Upper Limits
- Federal FULs on multiple source drugs to fall
from 150 of lowest AWP to 250 of AMP (January
2007) - FULs set for any drug with one other
therapeutically equivalent drug (down from two)
17Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Retail Survey Prices and State Reports
- CMS to engage a private vendor to determine
nationwide average retail prices for Medicaid
drugs on a monthly basis - CMS is required to give this data to the states
- States must submit a report annually detailing
Medicaid payment rates and dispensing fees CMS
must compare the national retail sales price data
with the data reported by each state program
(January 2007)
18Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Nominal sales, best price and ASP
- Excludable nominal sales are only those made to
- 340B covered entities
- intermediate care facilities for the mentally
retarded - state owned or operated nursing facilities
- other safety net providers (as determined by HHS)
- Nominal sales information to be reported to CMS
(January 2007) - Applicable to ASP in that it mirrors best price
definition
19Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Authorized generics, AMP and best price
- Best price for all single source and innovator
multiple source drugs inclusive of the best price
at which the associated authorized generic is
sold (January 2007) - Same for AMP
20Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Physician administered drugs
- States to collect and submit to CMS utilization
and NDC data on PA single source drugs (January
2006) and the twenty most dispensed PA multiple
source drugs (January 2008) - This is an attempt to permit the states to
collect Medicaid rebates on PA drugs, which are
currently being tracked by HCPCS J-code
21Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- 340B eligibility
- Upon enactment, certain qualified childrens
hospitals will be eligible to receive 340B
covered entity pricing
22Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- State False Claims Act Laws and Other Fraud
Abuse Provisions - Powerful incentives for states to enact their own
statutes based on the Federal False Claims Act - May require entities (including pharmaceutical
manufacturers) to revise and update their
compliance training programs (January 2007)
23Deficit Reduction Act of 2005
- Rejected provisions
- Increased rebate percentages for both single
source and multiple source drugs - Federal oversight of dispensing fees
- Extension of rebates to Medicaid MCOs
- Limited ability to subject certain antipsychotic
or antidepressant single source drugs to prior
authorization
24 Issues
- Operational Compliance
- Monitor and Participate
- Pricing Transparency
- Aggregation of AMP and BP and Third Party
Authorized Generics - False Claims Act Expansions - Litigation Threat
- False Claims Act Expansions - Employee Education
- Medicaid Integrity Program
25Operational Compliance
- Need for robust systems and resources
- Frequency of reporting
- Potential changes to AMP methods resulting from
rulemaking - Ability to differentiate among different
methodological rule sets (e.g., prompt pay in ASP
v. AMP) - Possible need for update class of trade
designations (e.g., ICF/MR nominal)
26Monitor and Participate
- Need to monitor AMP reforms, consider financial
impact, and participate actively in the
regulatory process - Exclusion of prompt pay and potentially other COT
discounts will increase AMP - Mechanism to avoid apples and oranges issues
associated with Base AMP - Medicare ASP comments may have spillover effects
on Medicaid
27Pricing Transparency
- Transparency and use of AMP data in reimbursement
may raise pricing and compliance challenges - Pharmacies now have a financial interest in AMP
calculations - Need to balance rebate benefits of lower AMPs
against pharmacy product access issues - Potential pressure for fee-based arrangements in
lieu of discounts - Improper AMP calculations may raise new false
claims theories if used in pharmacy payment rates
(directly or upper limits) - Potential compliance effect on manufacturer AMP
calculation look-back procedures
28Aggregation of AMP and BP and Third Party
Authorized Generics
- DRA 6003
- AMPs and BPs are to be aggregated across all
products sold under a new drug application - Relatively simple for a vertically integrated
operation - But where authorized generics are licensed to
third party manufacturers, this aggregation poses
significant challenges
29Aggregation of AMP and BP and Third Party
Authorized Generics
- Potential implementation strategies
- share core transaction data, calculate
independently, compare and reconcile? - designate a responsible manufacturer and adopt?
- calculate independently, compare, combine and
report? - others
- Calculation remains the legal responsibility of
each labeler
30Aggregation of AMP and BP and Third Party
Authorized Generics
- Legal and contractual concerns
- Indemnification
- Confidentiality
- Differing methodologies and SOPs
- Antitrust
- Obligations to provide data in a timely way
- Third party reconciliation
- Audit rights
- Costs
31False Claims Act Expansions - Litigation Threat
- DRA 6031
- Incentive for states to enact false claims act
laws that establish liability to the state for
entities that submit false or fraudulent claims
to a state Medicaid program - Increased percentage recovery if the state law
qualifies - OIG guidelines for evaluating state false claims
acts issued August 21, 2006 - Generally modeled after the Federal False Claims
Act
32False Claims Act Expansions - Litigation Threat
- Trickle down incentive to qualify for the
increased percentage of the recovery, the state
law must, among other things, reward the relator
in a way that is at least as effective in
rewarding and facilitating federal qui tam
relators - Treble damages and guaranteed percentages make
state false claims act actions more attractive to
relators
33False Claims Act Expansions - Employee Education
- DRA 6032
- Any entity that receives or pays 5 million
annually to Medicaid must have written policies
regarding - federal and state false claims acts
- detection and prevention of waste fraud and abuse
- whistleblower rights (in the employee handbook)
- These policies must extend beyond just management
and employees to contractors and agents
34False Claims Act Expansions - Employee Education
- No guidance yet issued questions of scope and
depth of required educational initiatives - The DRA makes these previously voluntary
compliance policies mandatory - Manufacturers must establish these policies as a
precondition of participation in Medicaid (by
January 1, 2007) - Monitoring for compliance
35Medicaid Integrity Program
- DRA 6034
- Comprehensive Integrity Plan issued in mid-July
- Well funded and staffed fraud investigation unit
charged with addressing programmatic
vulnerabilities including the provision of
prescription drugs to beneficiaries and the
underlying costs of those drugs as reported to
the States - Division of Fraud Research and Detection
- Enforcement authority?
36Section III
- Operational Challenges of the Deficit Reduction
Act
37Overview of the Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Internal Functional Areas Impacted
- Government Price Reporting Department
- Calculating AMP and BP
- Contracting Department
- Effect on Authorized Generics
- Narrow definition of Nominal Prices
- Financial Accounting Department
- Effects on Government and Commercial Rebate
Accruals - Information Technology
- Effects on implementing changes on core
transaction systems - Effects on implementing changes on government
price reporting system - Compliance Internal Audit Functions
- Monitoring and Auditing policies, procedures,
controls and practices
38Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges
- Prompt Pay Discounts to Wholesalers for drugs
distributed to the retail pharmacy class of trade
are excluded from the AMP calculation. In
addition, manufacturers will be required to
submit data regarding the customary prompt pay
discount extended to wholesalers. - Open Questions to CMS
- Definition of a wholesaler
- How will the Base AMP be adjusted, if at all
- What data reporting is CMS going to require
regarding prompt pay discounts - Will this require a certification similar to ASP?
- Operational Readiness
- Assess data systems requirements to gather, apply
and report these amounts - Assess the impact this will have Medicaid rebates
- Assess the ability to re-file the Base AMP
39Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges, contd
- The DRA narrows the definition of ineligible
nominal price transactions by limiting
ineligibility to certain entity types to be
excluded from the Best Price Calculation. In
addition, DRA requires manufacturers to report
these nominal prices. - Entity types where defined as
- A covered entity described in section 340B(a)(4)
of the Public Health Service - An intermediate care facility for the mentally
retarded - A State-owned or operated nursing facility
- Other entities determined by the Secretary as a
safety net provider - Operational Readiness
- Assess current nominal price contractual
arrangements - Assess the current class of trade schema
- Assess the impact this will have Medicaid rebates
- Which functional area will track, manage, monitor
and report nominal pricing
40Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges, contd
- The DRA expands Childrens Hospitals
participation in Section 340B drug discount
program beginning February 8, 2006. - Operational Readiness
- If these entities are not added to HRSAs 340B
list of participating entities, manufacturers
will have to establish a process (both business
and systems) to - Identify the appropriate facility within an
entity - Assess the pricing being offered to such
facilities - Determine the appropriate inclusion/exclusion
from each of the calculations - Assess and monitor SOPs and controls to ensure
that 340B membership eligibility is being
maintained
41Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges, contd
- The DRA amends the definition of AMP and Best
Price to include all drugs that are sold under a
new drug application approved under section
505(c) of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act. Therefore, authorized generic product
pricing data will be included in the branded
product AMP and Best Price. - Open questions to CMS
- What information is required to be reported to
each entity without violating anti-trust laws - How will these amounts be included in the AMP and
Best Price calculations - Are transfer prices and/or commercial sales
prices included - Royalty, license and revenue sharing payments
- Operational Readiness
- Begin reviewing contractual arrangements and
begin discussing the process to manage and
receive data from/to each entity - System capabilities for transferring data
- Controls in place to ensure accuracy and
completeness of the data being provided - Assess the impact Authorized Generic pricing data
may have on Medicaid Rebates
42Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges, contd
- The DRA amends the Medicaid rebate statute to
increase the reporting frequency of AMP and Best
Price from quarterly to include a monthly
reporting requirement. CMS will be providing
this information on a website accessible to the
public. - Open questions to CMS
- What methodology is required to calculate monthly
AMP and BP - What are the AMP and BP calculation restatement
or smoothing requirements - Will the Medicaid rebates still be based on the
quarterly AMP and BP calculations - Will this require certification similar to ASP
- Operational Readiness
- What processes and/or systems would need to be
updated or modified - What additional resources (both manual effort and
automated systems) are required - Can the appropriate data elements be gathered and
applied on a monthly basis - What controls are in place to ensure the data is
accurate and complete - What updates to the current policies, procedures,
systems and controls need to implemented - What will the process be for training (all levels
of management and operations) and how will the
process be monitored on a go forward basis - What level of variability would be expected from
a monthly amount and what implications may that
have on Medicaid rebates
43Overview of Deficit Reduction Act 2005
Operational Challenges, contd
- The provisions of the DRA require any entity that
receives or makes at least 5 million in annual
Medicaid payments needs to perform the following - Manufacturers must establish written policies
for all employees (including management), and of
any contactor or agent, that provides detailed
information about the False Claims Act, any
State laws pertaining to civil or criminal
penalties for false claims and statements, and
whistle blower protections under such laws. - Detailed provisions regarding the
manufacturers policies and procedures for
detecting and preventing fraud, waste, and abuse
must be included as part of such written
policies, - The employee handbook for the manufacturer must
include in a specific discussion of the laws
described above, the rights of employees to be
protected as whistleblowers, and the
manufacturer's policies and procedures for
detecting and preventing fraud, waste, and
abuse. - These requirements take effect on January 1,
2007.
44Deficit Reduction Act 2005 Next Steps
- Most manufacturers have done some level of review
to assess the impact of DRA - Some have commissioned studies or internal
projects to study the financial impact - A typical DRA Impact Assessment should assess the
following - Policy and Procedures Developing and/or
updating the current guidelines and processes, as
well as requirements of DRA - Data How is the data currently being gathered,
assessed and applied and how is the data and/or
feeds going to have to change - Systems Current data management and government
price reporting systems and what will need to be
changed to address DRA - Customer and Contracting Strategy What new
pricing and contracting strategies of products
and customer segments needs to be changed to
address the changes of DRA - Training and Monitoring - What level of training
at all levels of management and operations is
being performed, as well as what controls have
been put in place and how are they being
monitored throughout this process and going
forward - The DRA Impact Assessment should provide a
complete understanding of the current government
price reporting environment, changes required to
assess and meet the DRA requirements and a
detailed timeline of implementation throughout
the organization
45Section IV
- Final Physician Fee Schedule Rule (ASP)
46Overview of CMS Final Ruling
- Key highlights to the Final Ruling include
- Published and distributed on November 3, 2006
- Additional changes and clarification to the ASP
calculation - Addresses Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 (DRA)
effect on the Medicare Average Selling Price
(ASP) calculation - Majority of the changes are effective for the
quarter beginning January 1, 2007
47Summary of ASP Clarification and Changes
- Determining and applying fees not considered to
be Price Concessions - Application of excluding non-eligible sales on a
lagged basis - Determining and applying nominal sales
- Other price concession issues
48Determining and Applying Fees Not Considered
Price Concessions
- Currently Manufacturers must consider
- Volume Discounts
- Prompt Pay Discounts
- Cash Discounts
- Free Goods that are contingent on any purchase
requirement - Chargebacks and
- Rebates (other than rebates under the Medicaid
drug rebate program) - Clarification on the application of Service and
Administrative Fees - Fee paid must be for a bona fide, itemized
service that is actually performed on behalf of
the manufacturer - The manufacturer would otherwise perform or
contract for the service in the absence of the
service arrangement - Fee represents fair market value
- Fee is not passed on in whole or in part to a
client or customer of any entity.
49Determining and Applying Fees Not Considered
Price Concessions
- Points for consideration
- Application of the above definition is first
quarter of 2007 - Encompass any reasonably necessary or useful
services of value to the manufacturer that are
associated with the efficient distribution of
drugs - CMS would not establish a list of bona fide
services - CMS did not mandate the methodology for
determining fair market value, manufacturers must
determine a reasonable method - If a manufacturer determines that a fee meets the
requirements of a bona fide service (excluding
Not Passes On), the presumption can be made
(absence any evidence or notice to the contrary)
that the fee paid is not passed on - Contrary to DRA provisions, prompt pay discounts
extended to wholesalers will not be excluded from
ASP reporting.
50Application of Excluding Non-Eligible Sales on a
Lagged Basis
- Certain chargebacks, rebates and other
transactions are not eligible for ASP
calculation, however are lagged in nature, such
as - VA transactions
- 340B transactions
- Eligible SPAP transactions
- Other ASP ineligible entities.
- A 12 month rolling average ratio methodology
based on units must be calculated to more
accurately estimate and exclude these sales from
the ASP calculation, such as - Sum of the lagged exempted sales units for the
most recent 12-month period - Sum sales units after non-lagged exempt sales
have been subtracted from total sales units for
the same period. - A / B rolling average percentage estimate for
lagged exempt sales - C Sales (both and units) after non-lagged
exempt sales have been subtracted for the current
quarter
51Determining and Applying Nominal Sales
- Currently ASP requires sales considered to be
nominal to be excluded from the ASP calculation - A price less than 10 of the AMP in the same
quarter for which AMP is computed. - Effective January 1, 2007, DRA revised to limit
this definition to nominal prices made to the
following - Covered entities as described in section 340B(a)
(4) of the Public Health Services Act - Intermediate care facilities for the mentally
retarded (ICFs/MR) - State-owned or operated nursing facilities
- Any other facility or entity that the Secretary
determines is a safety net provider. - Effective January 1, 2007, ASP definition of
nominal pricing will mirror the DRA definition,
therefore a single method for identifying nominal
sales for both ASP and AMP will be in effect.
52Other Price Concession Issues
- Lagged Price Concession for NDCs with less than
12 months of Sales - If less than 12 months of data is available than
the 12 month rolling average will be based on the
lesser period, except when the products NDC has
been re-designated. - Re-designated NDCs
- Use of sales and price concession data for both
the prior and re-designated NDCs to estimate
lagged price concessions applicable to the
re-designated NDC. - Bundled Price Concessions
- Given the potentially wide range of bundling
arrangements that might exist and the information
they currently have around such arrangements,
methodology for applying bundled arrangements
was provided at this time. - MedPac is studying this issue in the upcoming
year and this position may change.
53Other Price Concession Issues
- Other ASP Reporting Issues
- Further clarification around drugs covered by
Medicare Part B, as well as resources to assist
in identifying NDCs requiring ASP reporting - Manufacturers are not required to report ASP
data for an NDC beginning the reporting period
after the expiration date of the last lot sold
occurs - Wholesalers that relabel or repackage NDCs and
pharmacies must report ASP data to the extent
they qualify as a manufacturer for Medicaid drug
rebate purposes - Returns should not be included in the ASP
calculation - Units of drugs sold to an approved CAP vendor for
use under the CAP are excluded from the ASP
calculation - If a manufacturer has a good cause for
resubmitting its quarterly ASP data, it may do so
following the submission instructions available
at - http//questions.cms.hhs.gov/cgi-bin/cmshhs.efg
54Section V
- Determining Fair Market Value for Service Fees
55Stark II Definition for Fair Market Value
- Fair Market Value
- This term appears in most of the compensation
exceptions. The definition in the final rule is
almost the same as the January 1998 proposal. It
defines "fair market value" as the value in an
arm's-length transaction, consistent with the
general market value. "General market value" is
defined as the price an asset brings, or the
compensation that would be included in a service
agreement, as the result of bona fide bargaining
between well-informed buyers and sellers who are
not otherwise in a position to generate business
for the other party on the date of the
acquisition or time of the service agreement. The
fair market price is the price at which other
sales have been consummated for similar assets in
a particular market, and for services, the
compensation included in other bona fide service
agreements with comparable terms at the time of
the agreement.
56The Compliance Challenge
- Unlike Medicaid, PHS, and Federal Supply Schedule
Pricing, ASP is a reimbursement mechanism. - The level of reimbursement may adversely affect
physician choice for a product. - In particular, the treatment of service fees may
be a critical factor in the determination of ASP.
57Example w/o Service Fees
- WAC/List Price 100.00
- Only discount (constructive or otherwise) is
prompt pay at 2 or 2.00 - Average Sales Price 98.00
- Reimbursement at 106 of ASP 103.88
- Assume product is sold by wholesaler/distributor
at list or 100.00 - Net difference to provider at purchase price of
100.00 3.88
58Example w/ Service Fees Treated as Discount
- WAC/List Price 100.00
- Only discount (constructive or otherwise) is
prompt pay at 2 WAC or 2.00 - Average Sales Price 98.00
- Reimbursement at 106 of ASP 103.88
- Assume product is sold by wholesaler/distributor
at list or 100.00 - Net difference to provider at purchase price of
100.00 3.88
Service fees paid to wholesalers/distributors
1.5 of WAC or 1.50
If treated as a discount ASP 96.50 (reduced
from 98.00)
Reimbursement at 106 of ASP 102.29
Net difference to provider at purchase price of
100.00 2.29
59CMS Final Guidance - Treatment of Service Fees
- Clarification on the application of Service and
Administrative Fees - Fee paid must be for a bona fide, itemized
service that is actually performed on behalf of
the manufacturer - The manufacturer would otherwise perform or
contract for the service in the absence of the
service arrangement - Fee represents fair market value
- Fee is not passed on in whole or in part to a
client or customer of any entity. - Bona fide service fees paid at fair market
value can be excluded from the calculation of
ASP.
60Typical Types of Fees This May Affect
- Typical customer classes that may be affected
- Wholesalers
- Distributors
- Specialty Pharmacies
- MCOs PBMs
- GPOs
- Various fee types
- Inventory management
- Service level delivery
- Chargeback processing
- Data fees
- Customer solicitation and management
- Product and patient support
- Shipping and handling (pick, pack, ship, etc.)
- Brand protection activities
61The Standards Being Imposed
- Bona Fide Service Fees
- A determination must be made by the manufacturer
with regard to the specific itemized service
being bona fide based on the latest guidance. - The guidance provides a basic minimum standard
for determination. - Specifically, it states the following -
itemized service actually performed by an
entity on behalf of the manufacturer. - Fair Market Value
- CMS is also providing a basic minimum standard
for FMV. - Based on the above referenced quote, FMV is being
referenced as at the same rate had these
services been performed by other entities.
62Valuation Basics Service Agreements
- In applying the cost approach to services, a
cost build-up approach is often utilized.
Under the cost build-up approach, actual or
expected costs incurred are analyzed and an
assumed profit level is estimated to derive an
indication of the fair market value of the
services. - In applying the market approach we are looking
for agreements involving the sale of similar
services. This market data is adjusted for
significant differences. Based on types of
services provided, data provided, pricing for
services can greatly impact value and lead to
appropriate adjustments. - Services provided by outside companies
Outsourcing functions (e.g., sales force
training, contract enrollment and administration,
call center support, data fees) - Services performed in similar settings or
environments and - Our industry knowledge from other projects of a
similar nature. - In applying the income approach to services,
analyses of various rates of return provide
corroboration for estimated fair market values.
63Section VI
- Compliance Challenges for Medicare Part-D
64CMS Issued Comprehensive FWA Guidance for Part-D
Plan Sponsors
- Earlier this year, CMS issued comprehensive
Fraud, Waste and Abuse (FWA) guidance to
Medicare Part-D Plan Sponsors. - Prescription Drug Benefit Manual Chapter 9
- Section 60 outlines the implementation guidelines
for detecting, correcting, and preventing FWA. - CMS provides examples of risks to Part-D Plan
Sponsors, Pharmacies, Prescribers, Wholesalers,
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, and Medicare
Beneficiaries.
65Section 70.1.6 Pharmaceutical Manufacturer
Fraud, Waste and Abuse
- Lack of integrity of data to establish payment
and/or determine reimbursement - Kickbacks, inducements, and other illegal
remuneration - Inappropriate marketing and/or promotion of
products reimbursable by federal health care
programs - Improper inducements inappropriate discounts,
inappropriate product support services,
inappropriate educational grants, inappropriate
research funding, or other inappropriate
remuneration - Formulary and formulary support activities
- Inappropriate relationships with formulary
committee members, payments to PBMs, and
formulary placement payments
66Section 70.1.6 Pharmaceutical Manufacturer
Fraud, Waste and Abuse
- Inappropriate relationships with physicians
- Switching arrangements
- Incentives to physicians to prescribe medically
unnecessary drugs - Consulting and advisory payments, payments for
detaling, business courtesies and other
gratuities, and educational and research funding - Improper entertainment or incentives offered by
sales agents - Illegal off-label promotion Illegal promotion
of off-label drug usage through marketing,
financial incentives, or other promotion
campaigns. - Illegal usage of free samples
67Questions?