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Pay-for-Performance in
Oncology: Episode-of-Care
Initiatives
James C. Robinson
Leonard D. Schaeffer Professor of Health Economics
Director, Berkeley Center for Health Technology
University of California, Berkeley
Overview
ƒ Unsatisfactory outcomes in oncology
ƒ For patients, physicians, payers
ƒ Payment reform options
ƒ Episode-of-care initiatives
2
Unsatisfactory Outcomes for Patients
ƒ Many are not on evidence-based pathways
ƒ Insufficient monitoring of disease, treatments
ƒ Both over-use and under-use of drugs
ƒ Adverse drug reactions, often leading to costly
and avoidable visits to ED, hospital admission
ƒ Lack of smooth transitions to palliative, hospice
3
Unsatisfactory Outcomes for Physicians
ƒ Not paid to manage care, but to infuse drugs
ƒ Insufficient staffing to monitor, educate patients
ƒ Need medical home for oncology
ƒ Buy-and-bill incentives to use costly drugs
ƒ Not compensated for management of oral drugs
ƒ Financial difficulties leading oncologists to sell
practices to hospitals
ƒ Hospital-based care is even more expensive, drug-intensive
4
Unsatisfactory Outcomes for Payers
ƒ Oncology costs rising rapidly
ƒ Wide performance variation across network
ƒ Prior authorization is very contentious
ƒ Disease and care management for oncology are
especially difficult for insurers
ƒ Artificial distinction between medical benefits
(infused drugs) and pharmacy benefit (oral drugs)
ƒ Hospital consolidation and pricing leverage
5
Payers’ Unsatisfactory Cost Control Initiatives
ƒ Shift from AWP to ASP reimbursement, following
Medicare, still encourages use of high-cost
biologics over low-cost generic chemotherapy
ƒ Insurer DM interferes with coordination of care at
the practice level
ƒ Specialty pharmacy distribution interferes with
inventory, availability of drugs for practices
ƒ High coinsurance for oral drugs is bad for patients
6
Payment Pathologies
ƒ Drug mark-ups are being squeezed, without
practice revenues being replaced in other ways
ƒ No payment for performance:
ƒ Care planning and management
ƒ Non-physician caregivers to monitor and educate patients
ƒ Adherence to evidence-based care
ƒ Reduced ED visits and lower costs
ƒ No reward for coordinating care:
ƒ Hospitals, infusion centers, home health,
ƒ Palliative care and hospice for end-of-life care
ƒ No reward for better outcomes
7
4 Payment Reform Options
1. Better payment methods for drugs
2. Shared savings or capitation
3. Medical home payment models
4. Bundled episode-of-care payment
8
(1) Change Payment for Oncology Drugs
ƒ Switch from AWP to ASP reduced overall drug
costs but did not create incentive for pathway
adherence, use of generic chemotherapy where
appropriate, or management of oral drugs
ƒ Any sensible payment reform must change
incentives for drug use, but need to improve the
entire course of care
ƒ Drug payment change is necessary, not sufficient
9
(2) Shared Savings or Capitation
ƒ Shared savings or capitation, based on total-costof-care (TCC) under ACO proposals, could create
great difficulties on oncology
ƒ How to divide payment with primary care, hospital?
ƒ Practices placed at risk for introduction of new expensive drugs
ƒ Would need to coordinate complex medical benefit (Part B) and
pharmacy benefit (Part D)
ƒ Risk adjustment is essential but difficult
ƒ
Incidence, severity, likelihood of patient selection and switching
ƒ
Easier to adjust for severity within an episode than to predict incidence
ƒ The ACO debate needs to closely examine
oncology and other forms of specialty care
10
(3) Medical Oncology Home Payment
ƒ Pay doctors for practicing medicine, not for office
visits and selling drugs
ƒ New payment codes for care planning and management
ƒ Continue buy-and-bill, but with limited mark-ups
ƒ Visit fees must compensate practices for monitoring and adjusting
oral drugs, so as not to encourage infusion
ƒ Reward practices for reducing ED visits
ƒ Expect practices to become medical homes
11
(4) Episode-of-Care (EOC) Payment
ƒ EOC was pioneered for acute surgery (e.g., knee
replacement) with clear begin/end of episode and
only modest need for risk adjustment
ƒ Most chronic conditions do not fit with EOC
ƒ But cancer episode begins with diagnosis, ends
after course of care (remission, progression to
more severe stage, or death) and has lots of
internal variation in costs and outcomes
ƒ EOC advocated by prominent oncologists
ƒ PB Bach et al. “Episode-Based Payment for Cancer Care: A
Proposed Pilot for Medicare.” Health Affairs, March 2011.
12
Questions for EOC Payment in Oncology
ƒ How to adjust for severity or stage of disease?
ƒ Are expensive drugs carved in or out of episode?
ƒ Carve-outs protect practices from risk: United Healthcare
ƒ Carve-ins give incentive to manage drugs: Hill Physicians IPA
ƒ How are oral oncology drugs reimbursed?
ƒ How is radiation treatment reimbursed?
ƒ How to motivate coordination with palliative and
hospice care?
13
Bringing Pay-for-Performance to Oncology
ƒ We need better metrics of performance
ƒ Selection and adherence to evidence-based pathways
ƒ Improved survival and patient-assessed quality of life
ƒ Appropriate end-of-life care
ƒ Measurement of costs for entire course of care
ƒ We need better payment methods and incentives
ƒ Payments for the drugs themselves
ƒ Payment for planning, managing, monitoring care
ƒ Payments for coordinating with hospitals, infusion, hospice, etc.
ƒ Payments for improved outcomes
14