Monday, March 26, 2012

When the Feds Come Knocking

Slightly over a year ago, the Department of Justice (DOJ) launched an investigation of a large number of institutions regarding concerns that implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD) procedures were performed for reasons outside of the criteria set forth in Medicare’s National Coverage Decision (NCD).  This investigation occurred just after Al-Khatib and others published a report January 4, 2011 in JAMA that suggested as many as 22.5% of implantable defibrillators implanted for primary prevention of sudden death were not evidence-based.  While the physician community took issue with the Al-Khatib paper, the media firestorm it generated paired with the announcement to the Heart Rhythm Society physician community that a federal investigation was underway, had a chilling effect on ICD implantation nationwide.  Drs. Jonathan S.Steinberg and Suneet Mittal report on their experience with DOJ investigators under this heavy regulatory oversight in today’s Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

Steinberg and Mittal's diplomatic account carefully describes the challenges of retrospective audits performed by lawyers from the Department of Justice and those of their targeted health care facilities. The DOJ identified 229 cases as potentially inappropriate cases based on Medicare code criteria.  (This represented 8.7% of the de novo non-resynchronization ICD implants done for primary prevention at their institutions). After determining that some of these targeted cases were actually for secondary prevention or other coding transgressions, the authors could medically justify all but thirty-four (15%)  (or a very low 1.5% of all ICD’s implanted for primary prevention of sudden death) at their institution.  As has been the case in most reports, the majority of outside NCD-directed ICD implants occurred because of timing violations—too close to the diagnosis of heart failure, heart attack and coronary intervention. These timing constraints constitute the primary issue before implanting doctors: their professional society guidelines do not -- in all cases -- recognize similar timing restrictions.

It is surprising that we are not told what sanctions, if any, were levied against their respective institutions.   Perhaps the authors felt this important detail was unimportant to disclose or perhaps they were prohibited from doing so.  Perhaps their penalty is still being determined: after all, nothing drives behavior like fear.  To this end, we found the authors' compliments of the government's legal team unusual to report in a scientific manuscript, as if the they were suffering from Stockholm Syndrome.

We should acknowledge that the authors have added much needed clarity to the gray area of decision-making surrounding ICD implantation. Their explanations of timing violations highlight problems with coding, confusion around incidental PCI intervention in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, and demonstrate the overlap decisions that must be made when bradycardia and tachycardia functions might be required for our patients.  This kind of clinically-relevant nuance was lacking in the impugnable Al-Khatib JAMA piece.

We can only speculate the large cost of the legal fees and man-hours devoted to this review process.  We will never know how many patients died during, or now after, the course of this investigation because they were not offered ICDs because ICDs can only be offered to patients who meet Medicare’s rigid, outdated, and still-to-be-updated National Coverage Decision for implantable defibrillators.   But perhaps this is the price of regulation that America is willing to pay in return for cost savings.  Perhaps we should not be concerned that professional guidelines for care delivery should be second fiddle to government mandates for ICD implantation.

With this latest report, a new era for medical practice is now upon us – one where priorities of low cost care and high quantity of care determined by non-medical personnel supersede the highest quality of medical care to our patients.   For regulators, it is easy to be a Monday-morning armchair quarterback evaluating health care delivery.  It is far harder, however, to decide prospectively who is likely to die (or not) when they sit before you with a newly-diagnosed cardiomyopathy and ejection fraction of 12%. 

When government and legal officials who carry no responsibility for the long-term well-being of our patients have the authority to retrospectively impugn and penalize doctors (and their health care facilities) based merely on retrospective reviews of billing codes and outdated payment mandates, they risk irrevocable harm to patients who might qualify for devices according to updated professional guidelines.  Doctors everywhere should stand up collectively to disown the practice of using NCD mandates, rather than updated professional guidelines, to determine appropriate care for patients.

After all, our patients are depending on us.

Westby G. Fisher, MD
Director, Cardiac Electrophysiology
NorthShore University Health System and
Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine
Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago
Evanston, IL

John Mandrola, MD
Cardiac Electrophysiologist
Baptist Medical Associates
Louisville, KY

Addendum 27 Mar 2012: Link to Steinberg/Mittal article finally added.

Addendum 14 Sep 2012: Update on the DOJ Decision

References:

Jonathan S. Steinberg and Suneet Mittal. "The Federal Audit of Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator Implants: Lessons Learned." J Am Coll Cardiol. April 3, 2012, 59 (14) 1270-4. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2011.12.026

Epstein AE, DiMarco JP, Ellenbogen KA, et al. ACC/AHA/HRS 2008 guidelines for device-based therapy of cardiac rhythm abnormalities. J Am Coll Cardiol. May 27, 2008;51(21):e1-62.

Al-Khatib S, Hellkamp A, Curtis J, et al. Non–Evidence-Based ICD Implantations in the United States JAMA. 2011;305(1):43-49. doi: 10.1001/jama.2010.1915

Note: This post also appears on Dr. John Mandrola's blog: http://www.drjohnm.org/

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

They the government not 'we the government' believe that since 'they' are footing the bill, you must submit to increased regulation and in this case pure intimidation. My personal belief is that the academicians have whispered in the ears of the pols enough saying that the private practice docs are flagrant abusers filled with avarice 'cutting of legs making 40,50,60 thousand/surgery' (sound familiar). This is driven by professional jealousy. The success of the private practioner is not through hard work and dedication to patient care. It is through fraud, waste, and abuse.

Cudos to you for having the courage to speak up.

Margaret Polaneczky, MD (aka TBTAM) said...

I assume you've sent this in to JAMA.

Great post.

Tim Hulsey, MD said...

Wes said, "ICDs can only be offered to patients who meet Medicare’s rigid, outdated, and still-to-be-updated National Coverage Decision for implantable defibrillators."
Medicare criteria are rigid and outdated, but the EMR is accurate and up-to-date, with all the details the Feds need to hang physicians. We're helping them prosecute us unnecessarily!

Anonymous said...

A related question that I struggle with: what do you do with a post cabg patient with an EF of 30% that remains in complete heart block? Do you place a biv ICD because of the low EF and expected 100% ventricular pacing or do you place a dual chamber pacemaker and re evaluate in three months after acei and beta blocker are maximized? Do follow the medicare guidelines increase the risk of infection with two procedures in 3-4 months? What is the right thing to do?