Special Fraud Alert: Laboratory Payments to Referring Physicians
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Notice.
Citation: "79 FR 40115"
"Notices"
SUMMARY: This Special Fraud Alert addresses compensation paid by laboratories to referring physicians and physician group practices (collectively, physicians) for blood specimen collection, processing, and packaging, and for submitting patient data to a registry or database.
I. The Anti-Kickback Statute
One purpose of the anti-kickback statute is to protect patients from inappropriate medical referrals or recommendations by health care professionals who may be unduly influenced by financial incentives. Section 1128B(b) of the Social Security Act (the Act) makes it a criminal offense to knowingly and willfully offer, pay, solicit, or receive any remuneration to induce, or in return for, referrals of items or services reimbursable by a Federal health care program. When remuneration is paid purposefully to induce or reward referrals of items or services payable by a Federal health care program, the anti-kickback statute is violated. By its terms, the statute ascribes criminal liability to parties on both sides of an impermissible "kickback" transaction. Violation of the statute constitutes a felony punishable by a maximum fine of
II. Remuneration From Laboratories To Referring Physicians
Arrangements between referring physicians and laboratories historically have been subject to abuse and were the topic of one of the
FOOTNOTE 1 Special Fraud Alert: Arrangements for the Provision of Clinical Laboratory Services (
FOOTNOTE 2 See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 11-07, p. 7. END FOOTNOTE
Likewise, when a laboratory pays a physician more than fair market value for the physician's services or for services the laboratory does not actually need or for which the physician is otherwise compensated, the anti-kickback statute is implicated. Such payments are suspect under the anti-kickback statute because of the implication that one purpose of the payments is to induce the physician's Federal health care program referrals.
Arrangements in which laboratories provide free or below-market goods or services to physicians or make payments to physicians that are not commercially reasonable in the absence of Federal health care program referrals potentially raise four major concerns typically associated with kickbacks--corruption of medical judgment, overutilization, increased costs to the Federal health care programs and beneficiaries, and unfair competition. This is because such transfers of value may induce physicians to order tests from a laboratory that provides them with remuneration, rather than the laboratory that provides the best, most clinically appropriate service. Such transfers of value also may induce physicians to order more laboratory tests than are medically necessary, particularly when the transfers of value are tied to, or take into account, the volume or value of business generated by the physician. We are particularly concerned about these types of arrangements because the choice of laboratory, as well as the decision to order laboratory tests, typically is made or strongly influenced by the physician, with little or no input from patients.
Although physicians may order any tests they believe are appropriate to diagnose and treat their patients,
FOOTNOTE 3 Section 1862(a)(1)(A) of the Act. END FOOTNOTE
FOOTNOTE 4 31 U.S.C. 3729 et seq. END FOOTNOTE
A. Blood-Specimen Collection, Processing, and Packaging Arrangements
OIG has become aware of arrangements under which clinical laboratories are providing remuneration to physicians to collect, process, and package patients' specimens. This Special Fraud Alert addresses arrangements under which laboratories pay physicians, either directly or indirectly (such as through an arrangement with a marketing or other agent) to collect, process, and package patients' blood specimens (Specimen Processing Arrangements). /5/ Specimen Processing Arrangements typically involve payments from laboratories to physicians for certain specified duties, which may include collecting the blood specimens, centrifuging the specimens, maintaining the specimens at a particular temperature, and packaging the specimens so that they are not damaged in transport. Payments under Specimen Processing Arrangements typically are made on a per-specimen or per-patient-encounter basis and often are associated with expensive or specialized tests.
FOOTNOTE 5 The same principles described in this Special Fraud Alert apply to arrangements that are similar or analogous to Specimen Processing Arrangements, including arrangements under which clinical laboratories pay physicians to collect and package patients' buccal swabs or urine specimens or provide free or below-market point of care urine testing cups to health care providers who use the cups to perform billable in-office testing. END FOOTNOTE
Medicare allows the person who collects a specimen to bill
FOOTNOTE 6 Section 1833(h)(3) of the Act; Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
FOOTNOTE 7 Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
FOOTNOTE 8 Medicare Claims Processing Manual,
FOOTNOTE 9 The five character codes and descriptions included in this document are obtained from Current Procedural Terminology (CPT(R)), copyright 2014 by the American Medical Association (AMA). CPT is developed by the AMA as a listing of descriptive terms and five character identifying codes and modifiers for reporting medical services and procedures. Any use of CPT outside of this document should refer to the most current version of the Current Procedural Terminology available from AMA. Applicable FARS/DFARS apply. END FOOTNOTE
FOOTNOTE 10 CPT code 36415 is included on the clinical laboratory fee schedule. As of the date of issuance of this Special Fraud Alert,
Medicare reimburses physicians for processing and packaging specimens for transport to a clinical laboratory through a bundled payment. /11/ Physicians who wish to report the work involved in preparing a specimen to send to a laboratory may use CPT code 99000, "Handling and/or conveyance of specimen for transfer from the office to a laboratory." /12/ CPT code 99000 is intended to reflect the work involved to prepare a specimen prior to sending it to a laboratory, including centrifuging a specimen, separating serum, labeling tubes, packing the specimens for transport, filling out laboratory forms, and supplying necessary insurance information and other documentation. /13/
FOOTNOTE 11 Since 2003, CPT code 99000 has been listed as a "Bundled Code" in the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS). See, e.g., Physician Fee Schedule--
FOOTNOTE 12 Even though physicians are not directly reimbursed under this code, as they are with CPT code 36145, they may choose to report this CPT code so that the costs associated with the services they perform are taken into account in CMS's calculation of the practice expense component of a procedure's relative value unit. See Overview, MPFS, available at https://www.cms.gov/apps/physician-fee-schedule/overview.aspx. END FOOTNOTE
FOOTNOTE 13 Coding Clarification: Handling and/or Conveyance of Specimen for Transfer from the Physician's Office to a Laboratory, CPT Assistant (AMA),
The anti-kickback statute is implicated when a clinical laboratory pays a physician for services. Whether an actual violation of the statute occurs depends on the intent of the parties--the anti-kickback statute prohibits the knowing and willful payment of such amounts if even one purpose of the payment is to induce or reward referrals of Federal health care program business. This is true regardless of whether the payment is fair market value for services rendered. The probability that a payment is for an illegitimate purpose is increased, however, if a payment exceeds fair market value or if it is for a service for which the physician is paid by a third party, including
When determining the fair market value of a physician's services, a clinical laboratory should consider whether the services for which it may compensate the physician have been, or may be, paid for, including through a bundled payment, by
Characteristics of a Specimen Processing Arrangement that may be evidence of such unlawful purpose include, but are not limited to, the following:
* Payment exceeds fair market value for services actually rendered by the party receiving the payment.
* Payment is for services for which payment is also made by a third party, such as
* Payment is made directly to the ordering physician rather than to the ordering physician's group practice, which may bear the cost of collecting and processing the specimen.
* Payment is made on a per-specimen basis for more than one specimen collected during a single patient encounter or on a per-test, per-patient, or other basis that takes into account the volume or value of referrals.
* Payment is offered on the condition that the physician order either a specified volume or type of tests or test panel, especially if the panel includes duplicative tests (e.g., two or more tests performed using different methodologies that are intended to provide the same clinical information), or tests that otherwise are not reasonable and necessary or reimbursable.
* Payment is made to the physician or the physician's group practice, despite the fact that the specimen processing is actually being performed by a phlebotomist placed in the physician's office by the laboratory or a third party.
OIG's concerns regarding Specimen Processing Arrangements are not abated when those arrangements apply only to specimens collected from non-Federal health care program patients. Arrangements that "carve out" Federal health care program beneficiaries or business from otherwise questionable arrangements implicate the anti-kickback statute and may violate it by disguising remuneration for Federal health care program business through the payment of amounts purportedly related to non-Federal health care program business. Because physicians typically wish to minimize the number of laboratories to which they refer for reasons of convenience and administrative efficiency, Specimen Processing Arrangements that carve out Federal health care program business may nevertheless be intended to influence physicians' referrals of Federal health care program business to the offering laboratories.
Finally, because the anti-kickback statute ascribes criminal liability to parties on both sides of an impermissible "kickback" arrangement, physicians who enter into Specimen Processing Arrangements with laboratories also may be at risk under the statute.
B. Registry Payments
OIG has become aware of arrangements under which clinical laboratories are establishing, coordinating, or maintaining databases, either directly or through an agent, purportedly to collect data on the demographics, presentation, diagnosis, treatment, outcomes, or other attributes of patients who have undergone, or who may undergo, certain tests performed by the offering laboratories. Typically these are specialized and expensive tests paid for by Federal health care programs. This Special Fraud Alert addresses such "Registries" or "Registry Arrangements," whether they are referred to as "registries" or "observational outcomes databases" or by other terminology.
Laboratories that participate in Registry Arrangements often assert that they are intended to advance clinical research to promote treatment, to provide physicians with valuable clinical knowledge for patients with similar disease profiles, and to provide other benefits to physicians or the health care industry generally. Registry Arrangements may take various forms; however, they typically involve payments from laboratories to physicians for certain specified duties, including, by way of example only, submitting patient data to be incorporated into the Registry, answering patient questions about the Registry, and reviewing Registry reports.
Registry Arrangements may induce physicians to order medically unnecessary or duplicative tests, including duplicative tests performed for the purpose of obtaining comparative data, and to order those tests from laboratories that offer Registry Arrangements in lieu of other, potentially clinically superior, laboratories.
Characteristics of a Registry Arrangement that may be evidence of such unlawful purpose include, but are not limited to, the following:
* The laboratory requires, encourages, or recommends that physicians who enter into Registry Arrangements perform the tests with a stated frequency (e.g., four times per year) to be eligible to receive, or to not receive a reduction in, compensation.
* The laboratory collects comparative data for the Registry from, and bills for, multiple tests that may be duplicative (e.g., two or more tests performed using different methodologies that are intended to provide the same clinical information) or that otherwise are not reasonable and necessary.
* Compensation paid to physicians pursuant to Registry Arrangements is on a per-patient or other basis that takes into account the value or volume of referrals.
* Compensation paid to physicians pursuant to Registry Arrangements is not fair market value for the physicians' efforts in collecting and reporting patient data.
* Compensation paid to physicians pursuant to Registry Arrangements is not supported by documentation, submitted by the physicians in a timely manner, memorializing the physicians' efforts.
* The laboratory offers Registry Arrangements only for tests (or disease states associated with tests) for which it has obtained patents or that it exclusively performs.
* When a test is performed by multiple laboratories, the laboratory collects data only from the tests it performs.
* The tests associated with the Registry Arrangement are presented on the offering laboratory's requisition in a manner that makes it more difficult for the ordering physician to make an independent medical necessity decision with regard to each test for which the laboratory will bill (e.g., disease-related panels).
Other characteristics not listed above may increase the risk of fraud and abuse associated with a Registry Arrangement or provide evidence of unlawful intent. For example, the risk of fraud and abuse would be particularly high if a laboratory were to pay, and collect data for its Registry from, only a subset of physicians who were selected on the basis of their prior or anticipated referral volume, rather than their specialty, sub-specialty, or other relevant attribute.
The anti-kickback statute does not prohibit laboratories from engaging in, or paying compensation for, legitimate research activities. However, claims that Registries are intended to promote and support clinical research and treatment are not sufficient to disprove unlawful intent. Even legitimate actions taken to substantiate such claims, including, for example, retaining an independent
Finally, because the anti-kickback statute ascribes criminal liability to parties on both sides of an impermissible "kickback" arrangement, physicians who enter into Registry Arrangements with laboratories also may be at risk under the statute.
III. Conclusion
OIG is concerned about the risks that Specimen Processing Arrangements and Registry Arrangements pose under the anti-kickback statute. This Special Fraud Alert reiterates our longstanding concerns about payments from laboratories to physicians in excess of the fair market value of the physicians' services and payments that reflect the volume or value of referrals of Federal health care program business. Should interested parties continue to have questions about the structure of a particular Specimen Processing Arrangement or Registry Arrangement, the OIG Advisory Opinion process remains available. Information about the process may be found at: http://oig.hhs.gov/faqs/advisory-opinions-faq.asp.
To report suspected fraud involving Registry Arrangements, Specimen Processing Arrangements, or similar arrangements, contact the OIG Hotline at https://forms.oig.hhs.gov/hotlineoperations/or by phone at 1-800-447-8477 (1-800-HHS-TIPS).
Dated:
Inspector General.
[FR Doc. 2014-16219 Filed 7-10-14;
BILLING CODE P
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