Manufacturers of innovative medical devices are on pins and needles right now. That is because the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) delayed implementation of a
final rule that was supposed to take effect on March 15, 2021 that would have ensured at least four years of Medicare coverage for new medical products cleared by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as breakthrough devices under Section 510(k). Unlike many Trump administration regulations, the breakthrough device coverage rule may still come to fruition. But CMS is currently studying the rule and will not make a final decision sooner than May 15. Here is a look at the rule and its prospects of actually taking effect.
The Final Rule
Medicare covers only medical services and products that are “reasonable and necessary.” The
Social Security Act (Section 1862((a)(1)(A), to be precise) gives the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary authority to determine whether a particular service or product meets the standard. However, HHS has never established a formal regulation to define “reasonable and necessary.” The rule, which was finalized on Jan. 12, creates such a definition, one that would enable breakthrough devices to qualify as reasonable and necessary.
Specifically, the rule would grant national Medicare coverage of breakthrough devices for a four-year period starting on the date of FDA market authorization. Once the period ends, CMS would then re-evaluate the device based on clinical and real world evidence of improved health outcomes to determine whether to make Medicare coverage permanent.
The policy behind the rule is to give Medicare beneficiaries better access to new medical technologies. Technically, the rule applies only to devices that pass through the Medicare Coverage of Innovative Technology (MCIT) pathway, which does not include laboratory developed tests (LDTs). However, CMS had made it clear that the MCIT rule would serve as a template that could be extended to breakthrough diagnostics, drugs and/or biologics that are not currently in the MCIT pathway.
The Biden Brake
Immediately upon taking office, the Biden administration signaled its suspicion and skepticism of the health care policies of its predecessor and imposed a blanket freeze on new regulations adopted in the regime’s final days. (To find out about the other regulations affected, see
G2 Blog, How the Transition from Trump to Biden Will Affect Federal Regulation and Reimbursement,” Feb. 19, 2021). In addition, critics have attacked the rule for throttling CMS’ clinical scrutiny and opening the door scientifically unproven devices as part of the Trump administration’s supposed disdain for science and regulation. This criticism was bound to resonate with the new President who has expressed similar views on Trump policy.
Takeaway
Although the delay in implementation comes as no surprise, the final rule’s ultimate demise is by no means a forgone conclusion. On the contrary, lack of a clear Medicare coverage definition of “reasonable and necessary” has been a problem for decades, serving not only as a thorn in the side of the medical device and lab industry but also in blocking the access of Medicare patients. The attempt to address the problem also enjoys bipartisan support in Congress.
But the Biden administration refuses to be rushed. In announcing the final rule’s delay, CMS initiated a new 30-day comment period to gather public feedback on operational issues, overlapping rules, breakthrough device volume, patient protection and commercial insurance. And if the final rule does make it through, the door will be opened to extending it to LDTs. So, stay tuned.