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MOLDX UPDATE Elaine K Jeter, MD MolDX Program • Established to address: • Granular identification • Coding to accommodate to growth of molecular testing • Implement core clinical guidance for coverage • Molecular Diagnostic Testing Policy: • Labs must register their test & obtain unique ID • Applies to all molecular codes – except micro • Test ID is required claim element • New test TA for coverage 11/4/2015 2 MolDX Registration Stats Total FDA & LDT 6550 Tests with LCD applications 1032 Tests with NCD applications 147 Tests with Article applications 1089 11/4/2015 3 MolDX Coverage Stats Tests Covered Total FDA & LDT FDA – unmodified FDA – modified 2619 Tests Not Covered 3302 219 154 19 17 *Tests determined to be either not a Medicare Benefit (i.e. statutorily excluded) or not reasonable and necessary (R&N) by NCD or LCD. Medicare does not cover tests that are screening in nature, confirmatory, or testing absent any signs or symptoms of disease. 11/4/2015 4 Reasons for Non-coverage • No benefit category • • • • Screening Confirmatory testing when dx is known Quality measure Test doesn’t apply to Medicare population • SSA §(a)(1)(A) – “reasonable & necessary” • Lack of or insufficient clinical utility physician survey • Lack of analytical validation 11/4/2015 5 MolDX TAs Total TAs since inception 102 Non-covered 51 Tests with LCD 22 Tests with CDD LCD 4 Tests with educational article 16 Tests in process 3 Pre-submission 4 Incomplete 2 11/4/2015 6 Why so Many Policies? • Over-utilization/abuse • CYP testing • Hypercoagulability/Thrombophilia • Controlled Substance Monitoring and DOA Testing • CV Risk Assessment • Special stains and IHC 11/4/2015 7 Prostate CDD Policies • Decipher (GenomeDx) – to determine which high-risk patients after RP can be closely followed rather than post-op XRT • ConfirmMDx (MDxHealth) – to determine which biopsy negative patients can avoid unnecessary repeat biopsies • Prolaris (Myriad) – to determine which low risk by biopsy prostate cancer patients can be managed by AS • Oncotype Prostate (Genomic Health) – to determine which low risk by biopsy prostate cancer patients can be managed by AS 11/4/2015 8 MolDX Roll Out • Operate under a JOA • • • • JM (SC, NC, VA, WV) JE (CA, NV, HI & Pacific islands) JF (WA, OR, ID, UT, AZ, MT, WY, SD, ND, AK) J15 (Oh, KY) • Under discussion with other jurisdictions • PAMA & Proposed Rule – silent on nat’l roll out 11/4/2015 9 Hospital Labs • Incorrect info • MolDX identifiers • Does not apply to IP or OP labs billing Part A • Applies to all hospital outreach labs that bill Part B • CMS • Current system can’t accommodate narrative field • Developing work-around 11/4/2015 10 Next Generation Sequencing • Technology that analyzes hundreds of genes simultaneously • Two major types • Hot Spot Testing – looks at portions of genes and only specific types of mutations – identify SNVs and dup/dels • Comprehensive Genomic Profiling – looks at entire genes and all known mutations – identify SNVs, dup/dels, CNVs and translocations 11/4/2015 11 Multi-gene “Hot Spot Testing Missed Missed Found Found Missed Hot Spot NGS panels identify: • Pre-specified mutations occurring in very limited areas of genes of interest, • Fail to detect all classes of genomic alterations 11/4/2015 12 Comprehensive Genomic Testing Chromosome Exon 1 Exon 2 Exon 3 Exon 4 Sequences coding regions of genes in their entirety Exon 3 Comprehensive NGS panels sequence all exomes and all classes of genomic alterations: single nucleotide variants, dup/dels, copy number variants and translocations. 11/4/2015 13 NGS is Here • May replace several individual tests & provide potential healthcare cost savings • Decrease number biopsies • Decrease aggregate cost • Possible decrease ‘shot gun’ use of chemotherapy • May possibly improve patient outcomes • Identify patients for targeted therapy missed by Companion Dx or LDT • Identify patients for clinical trials & investigational therapies 11/4/2015 14 NGS High Points • No standardization or cross validation of platforms • Generally more sensitive than companion dx methodologies – unclear if better outcomes • Less tissue required for analysis • Pressure to cover this technology • Academic centers • Industry – vocal high profile companies & political ears 11/4/2015 15 Non-standardized Testing • Three components • Pre-analytical • Sequencing • Data interpretation using complex algorithms • No comparison between labs or platforms, and disagree on methods to determine components • 80% concordance – simplest DNA alterations • 20% concordance – complicated alterations 11/4/2015 16 Low Allele Frequency • NGS – high assay sensitivity & tumor heterogeneity • Detect alterations in very small number of cells • Report positive alteration – directly guide tx • 100% therapeutic response to cells, but the vast majority of tumor remains untreated and the patient experiences a poor outcome 11/4/2015 17 False Results • High false positives • ~50% of reported alterations are erroneous • Driver mutations vs passenger mutations • Many patients will receive tx they will not respond to • Patients will be shunted from other treatments they could have received while chasing the erroneous result • False negatives • Most “hotspot” labs must perform FISH testing to rule out false negatives 11/4/2015 18 Lack Data Collection • NGS panels place patients in harms way by allowing patients to: • Receive testing & tx that compete with existing trials • Receive ineffective treatments • Miss publication of key toxicities that lead to better understanding of disease • Potentially hamper, rather than advance science, by use of off-label drugs without a body of literature 11/4/2015 19 Solutions to NGS Pitfalls • Standardize Testing • CAP/AMP developing standards • FDA assessment of LDTs • Compare testing with existing literature established with targeted therapy – does it improve outcomes • Attach high quality testing as inclusion criteria in current and future clinical trials • Collect outcomes and aggregate nationally 11/4/2015 20 Example of Problem • NSCLC NCCN Guidelines – Version 7.2015 • ALK and EGFR – adequate literature for coverage • Adenocarcinoma – test all patients • Squamous histology – if never smokers, small bx used in testing, or mixed histology • ROS1 – adequate literature for coverage after NCCN review 11/4/2015 21 Limited Published Info Emerging Targeted Agents for NSCLC Patients with Genetic Alterations Genetic Alterations (Driver event) Available Targeted Agent with Activity against Driver Event in Lung Cancer BRAF V600E mutation Vermurafenib¹, Dabrafenib² MET amplification Crizotinib³,⁴ ROS1 rearrangements Crizotinib⁵ HER2 mutations Trastuzumab⁶ (cat 2B), Afatinib⁷ (cat 2B) RET Cabozantinib⁸ (cat 2B) Case report 11/4/2015 22 Emerging Targeted Agents • Evidence is inadequate – case reports, abstracts, small trials • Multiple ongoing trials waiting final reporting on these agents • Insufficient evidence to allow wholesale coverage • Unclear where to include these other agents in biologic pathways 11/4/2015 23 Coverage & Coding Issues • Genes in NGS panels must meet R&N determination • AMA acknowledges error to “unbundle” – currently correcting their error 11/4/2015 24 NGS in MolDX • NGS panel must submit new DEX registration • End date prior test registrations • Must include genes in NGS panel • Coverage remains the same – based on R&N • Reimbursement will change • Working with AMA 11/4/2015 25 ICD-10 • Unspecified codes were intentionally removed from 9 to 10 crosswalk – specificity is the purpose of ICD-10 • LCDs back to CAC to remove ICD-10s that were erroneously included • Request addition of specific ICD-10s where needed with reasoning – add as needed 11/4/2015 26 CSM & DOA Policy Goals • For pain & substance use disorder patients: • Define appropriate indications • Testing frequency for prescribed substances • Define documentation requirements • Tests ordered & medical indication for specific test selection • Provide education-testing methods & limitations 11/4/2015 27 10000 20000 30000 40000 Assay of cocaine 0 # of claims 82520 Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 41 / 174 Providers 11/4/2015 28 10000 15000 20000 Assay of dihydrocodeinone 0 5000 # of claims 82646 Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 66 / 114 Providers 11/4/2015 29 83805 15000 0 5000 # of claims 25000 Assay of meprobamate Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 55 / 133 Providers 11/4/2015 30 83840 30000 0 10000 # of claims Assay of methadone Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan Jul Jan 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 44 / 177 Providers 11/4/2015 31 Drug Testing Claims Data • Utilization spikes • Physician owned labs (POLs) – self-referral • Billing semi-quant testing with Quantitative codes • Using methodology codes (83542 – LC-MS) to bill for opioid metabolites; 83925 – opiate(s), drug & metabolites • Billing schemes to induce referrals • Labs charges physician below market flat fee, physician marks up to private payers 11/4/2015 32 Testing for Substance Use 11/4/2015 33 UDT Testing for Pain Risk Group Baseline Frequency of Testing Low Risk Prior to initiation of COT Random testing – 1-2x/yr for prescribed meds, non-prescribed meds that pose a safety risk if taken with prescribed meds, and illicit substances based on patient hx, clinical presentation, and/or community usage Moderate Risk Prior to Initiation of COT Random testing – 1-2x/6 mo for prescribed meds, non-prescribed meds that pose a safety risk if taken with prescribed meds, and illicit substances based on patient hx, clinical presentation, and/or community usage High Risk Random testing – 1-3x/3 mo for prescribed meds, non-prescribed meds that pose a safety risk if taken with prescribed meds, and illicit substances based on patient hx, clinical presentation, and/or community usage 11/4/2015 Prior to Initiation of COT 34 UDT Coding/Billing Claim • One drug per claim line • Each drug must use short string text in SV101-7 field of claim • Up to 7 drugs reimbursed per CPT • Tiered panel reimbursement: • 8-15 • 16-34 • >35 11/4/2015 35 Questions? [email protected] 11/4/2015 36