CMS Proposed Rule Encourages Home-Based Renal Dialysis Through Payment Changes

July 7, 2020
On Monday, CMS announced a proposed rule that would adjust reimbursement to encourage home-based renal dialysis for Medicare patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD)

On Monday, July 6, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that it was proposing changes to the Medicare End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Prospective Payment System (PPS). Building on the White House’s previously announced “Executive Order on Advancing American Kidney Health,” the agency announced that “CMS is proposing that certain new and innovative equipment and supplies used for dialysis treatment of patients with ESRD in the home would qualify for an additional Medicare payment. These proposed changes would encourage the development of certain new and innovative home dialysis machines that would give beneficiaries more dialysis treatment options in the home that can improve their quality of life.”

“CMS data shows that those with ESRD have the highest rate of hospitalization of any single group, a trend consistent with having to frequently leave home to receive dialysis,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma, in making the announcement. “In the midst of a deadly pandemic that poses a particular threat to those with serious underlying conditions, President Trump’s call for increased access to home dialysis has never been more urgent. Unfortunately, government rules too often stand in the way. Today’s action represents a sorely needed course direction, making it easier for ESRD facilities to make new and innovative home dialysis machines available to patients who need them.”

The announcement noted that, “Currently, more than 85 percent of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries with ESRD travel to a facility to receive their dialysis at least 3 times per week. They spend, on average, 12 hours each week attached to a dialysis machine away from home. Dialysis patients are among the most vulnerable population covered by Medicare, as many of these beneficiaries have multiple chronic conditions and comorbidities. The ESRD population also has the highest hospitalization rates due to COVID-19 among Medicare beneficiaries, highlighting the importance that this population stay at home during the public health emergency to reduce risk of exposure to the virus. In order to ensure that dialysis patients have access to the best possible care, CMS is proposing needed innovative changes to encourage more home dialysis treatment.”

The intention of the new proposal is “to expand the transition to expand the transitional add-on payment adjustment for new and innovative equipment and supplies (TPNIES) that was introduced last year to now cover qualifying new dialysis machines when used in the home. This would provide a new payment mechanism to expand access to certain new and innovative home dialysis machines, facilitating quicker availability to Medicare beneficiaries.”

The announcement stated that it "builds on previous actions taken by CMS to improve care for beneficiaries with kidney disease including:

•             The proposed ESRD Treatment Choices (ETC) Model that would encourage greater use of home dialysis and kidney transplants for Medicare beneficiaries with ESRD in order to preserve or enhance their quality of care while reducing Medicare expenditures,

•             The Kidney Care First (KCF) and Comprehensive Kidney Care Contracting (CKCC) Options of the Kidney Care Choices (KCC) Model that will test whether new care delivery and Medicare payment options can improve the quality of care and reduce the total cost of care for patients with kidney disease.

•             Refinements to eligibility for the transitional drug add-on payment adjustment (TDAPA) under the ESRD PPS to better target the additional payment to innovative renal dialysis drugs and biological products based on the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA’s) New Drug Application Classifications.”

The fact sheet on the proposed rule can be seen here.

The proposed rule was filed in the Federal Register on Monday. Its full text can be read here.

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