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Dialysis industry news

Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.



Congress revives efforts to fix doc payment formula - NephrologyNews.com PDF Print

Congress is racing toward a March 31 deadline to replace the much-maligned sustainable growth rate formula, used to determine Medicare payment for physicians, with a more progressive pay-for-performance model.  Missing the deadline would mean nephrologists and other specialists paid by Medicare will face a more than 20% payment cut April 1.

Legislators came close to a new payment formula last year, but could not agree on how to pay for it. President Barack Obama signed into law legislation that provided a temporary one-year patch for the SGR last April.

The latest deal would offset only about $70 billion of the more than $200 billion cost of making the permanent fix.  Late in the afternoon on March 13 , Reps. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., Sander Levin, D-Mich., Fred Upton, R-Mich., and Frank Pallone, D-N.J., the top members of two key committees, confirmed they are in talks for a permanent fix.  

“Last year, the Ways and Means and Energy and Commerce Committees came together, on a bipartisan basis, to propose a permanent alternative to the broken SGR system," they said in a statement. "We are now engaging in active discussions on a bipartisan basis — following up on the work done by leadership — to try to achieve an effective permanent resolution to the SGR problem, strengthen Medicare for our seniors, and extend the popular Children’s Health Insurance Program."

Ryan and others are proposing a two-year extension of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). The deal would be a compromise for Democrats, who hoped for a four-year extension of the program.

The “doc fix” portion would cost an estimated $174 billion of the $200 billion, spread over 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

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Lifestyle modifications improve CKD patient outcomes - NephrologyNews.com PDF Print

Adherence to four lifestyle factors can lower the risk of death in CKD patients, according to a new study in the American Journal of Kidney Diseases.

The study found that CKD patients who don’t smoke, are physically active, eat a healthy diet (comprised of more fruits, vegetables and whole grains and less red meat and sugar) and have a body mass index between 20-25 kg/m2, reduced their risk of death by 68% compared to those who did not have these lifestyle qualities.

"We have learned from research studies of other chronic conditions such as heart disease and cancer that lifestyle factors and behaviors including diet, physical activity, cigarette smoking, and body mass index play a very important role in health outcomes including cardiovascular events and mortality,” said Ana C. Ricardo, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of Illinois, Chicago. “We wanted to know if these factors were as important in individuals with chronic kidney disease, and it appears they are.”

Using data collected during four years of follow-up from 3,006 adults enrolled in the Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort (CRIC) Study, researchers tracked the relationship between lifestyle factors and health outcomes such as chronic kidney disease progression, heart disease and death. Patients had a mean age of 58 ± 11, a mean eGFR of 43 ± 14 mL/min/1.73 m2, and 45% of them had diabetes.

Over four years, there were 726 cases of worsening kidney function, 355 heart events, and 437 deaths. Those who did not smoke cigarettes had better outcomes including slower progression of CKD, and reduced risk of heart attacks and death. Regular physical activity was also associated with reduced risk of death.

Somewhat surprisingly, a body mass index greater than 25 kg/m2was associated with lower risk of cardiovascular events while a body mass index greater than 30 kg/ m2 was associated with lower risk of death.

Healthy diet patterns, independently, didn’t predict better outcomes, but increased survival when combined with nonsmoking, regular exercise and a BMI between 20-25 kg/m2. All together, adherence to all four lifestyle factors was associated with a 68% decrease in risk of death.

“This demonstrates that a holistic approach that incorporates all aspects of a person’s lifestyle and behavior can have the most impact on improving life expectancy in those with CKD,” said Thomas Manley, Director of Scientific Activities for the National Kidney Foundation. “Healthy lifestyle modifications have consistently been shown to improve a patient’s prognosis, so it makes sense for healthcare practitioners to put more emphasis on helping their patients with CKD adopt healthy daily routines and habits.”

Aside from the surprising results of the body mass index on outcomes, all four lifestyle modifications were not associated significantly with CKD progression or heart events, indicating that more research is needed in this area.

“Our findings reinforce clinical care guidelines which recommend lifestyle modifications, and suggest that current physical activity and nonsmoking recommendations for the general population are also applicable to individuals with CKD,” said Ricardo. “Furthermore, our findings suggest that additional research is needed to investigate the optimal dietary recommendations and body mass index levels to prevent disease progression and poor outcomes among individuals with CKD.”

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Diabetic nephropathy: How does exercise affect kidney disease in T1DM? - Nature.com PDF Print

Diabetic nephropathy: How does exercise affect kidney disease in T1DM?
Nature.com
Progression of nephropathy was defined by an increase in albuminuria from normoalbuminuria to microalbuminuria and from microalbuminuria to macroalbuminuria. The development of end-stage renal disease (ESRD; defined as commencement of dialysis ...

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Clinical Negligence Leads to Amputation and Lawsuit - Renal and Urology News PDF Print

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For CMS, one step forward, two steps back - NephrologyNews.com PDF Print

In the movie, the “Wizard of Oz,” the Cowardly Lion, Tin Man, and Scarecrow all got what they wanted from the Great and Powerful.  After the gifts were handed out, Dorothy said, “Oh, I don’t think there is anything in that black bag for me…”

Indeed, the dialysis community found a few things in the Wizard’s black bag this past week as Congress quickly wrapped up some Medicare legislation that dealt with a host of health care issues. While doctors kept trying to pour cold water on the sustainable growth rate, hoping it would melt away, Congress ducked out of the room––for now.

House bill, HR 4372, "Protecting Access to Medicare," won final approval in the Senate yesterday by a 64-35 vote, just hours before the SGR would have delivered a 24% pay cut to physicians for 2015. The bill had been negotiated by House speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and awaits President Obama’s signature.


Related: ESRD community benefits from new Medicare bill


Perhaps most interesting in the Congressional action on the Medicare bill (regretfully not including language gathering steam in the Senate and the House that would fund lifetime coverage of immunosuppressive drugs for kidney transplant patients), is how legislators laid waste to deadlines imposed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services on a series of regulatory changes––both for physician practices and dialysis providers. If you are in the mood for extending deadlines––like patching the SGR for the 17th time––you may just as well keep kicking those other cans down the road, too.

Some deadlines that are now, well, very much alive.

Delay #1
After months of working on a new payment system to replace the old and often-criticized SGR, observers believed that the new formula would win approval. It had the support of the American Medical Association and physicians in general, partly because it included pay increases over the next 10 years, coupled with a new pay-for-performance incentive. At the Renal Physicians Association’s annual meeting last week, Public Policy Director Rob Blaser said, “The fact that the SGR bills in both the House and Senate were all passed unanimously by members on both sides of the aisle acknowledges that everyone wants to fix the SGR and get it off the table.”

But when the House passed HR 4372, with a 13-month patch on the SGR instead of approving a new payment system, physician groups howled. And some Senators who voted against the bill yesterday agreed. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., said the temporary patch for one year was an example of “why the American people are disgusted with (Congress). We should be fixing this problem, instead of delaying the problem,” Coburn said before the legislation passed.

The patch freezes physician payment until March 2015; Congress needs to pass physician payment reform before then.

Delay #2
Last month, CMS Administrator Marilyn Tavenner told health care executives that the Oct. 1 deadline for physician practices to transition to ICD-10 was not going to change, telling the audience “enough is enough” on already granted extensions. Yesterday, Congress looked the other way, however, and granted a one-year extension – at least. The language allows for leniency.

It does give physician practices more time to embrace the new codes into their E M R systems. Other data collection systems have benefited from getting time outs; CMS wisely delayed implementation of CROWNWeb numerous times. So if the new CPT payment codes were to launch before practices were ready, that would create a payment traffic jam that could last a long time.

Delay #3
Last November, despite protests from members of Congress and dialysis providers that CMS’s planned 12% cut to the ESRD payment bundle was too harsh, the agency approved it anyway, although agreeing to stretch it out over four years. Yesterday, with the House-Senate approval of the new Medicare bill, most of that cut will go away after 2015. So the scenario went like this:

  • Congress ordered CMS to cut the composite rate payment after two government reports said the agency was paying between 8-12% more than it should be for dialysis drugs because its payment formula was based on 2007 usage.
  • CMS, which had no plans to make the cuts, followed orders and proposed a 12% cut.
  • Some members of Congress, alarmed at what they had asked for, pressured CMS to give providers some leniency as some of them said they might have to close clinics if the 12% when through.
  • CMS held it’s ground, and approved the 12% cut, but allowed payment to stretch over at least the next four years, using the annual market basket update as a surrogate for paying money back to Medicare.
  • Congress then took that plan and made its own modifications, so that dialysis facilities only face minor cuts after 2016.

When CMS issued the proposed rule in 2010 for the new ESRD bundled payment rate, it included all oral medications. Dialysis providers said that was too much to handle, so CMS agree to extend the inclusion of oral drugs without IV equivalents to 2014, when all clinics would have to be fully vested into the bundle (the agency allowed a “blended” composite rate for clinics that wanted to transition into the bundle until 2014). Just before the clock stuck midnight on the legislative eve of 2014, drug manufacturers lobbied Congress to delay the CMS rule for including oral drugs another two years. Permission granted. The new oral drug inclusion date was 2016.

The press went wild over the extension, accusing legislators of bowing before rich drug lobbyists. Before the paint was barely dry on that extension, however, Congress yesterday approved another extension – this time a whopping eight more years.  Few people saw it coming and, unlike the first extension’s widespread news coverage suggesting pharma had lined the pockets of legislators, there has been no mention in the lay press over this extension, and no logical explanation of why eight was the magic number. “The delay seems pretty much out of left field to me,” said one lobbyist before the vote.

So next time CMS staffers approve or proposed regulations that include a deadline, it might be advisable to check with Congress first.

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