Reimbursement Report
Seeking Reimbursement During IDE Clinical Trials

Billing in clinical trials, which can include the device itself and any routine care associated with the procedure/product use, can be advantageous for two primary reasons:

  1. It is an opportunity to establish billing and claims history early on for the product, which can help to expedite coding, coverage, and payment upon commercialization; and
  2. It can significantly reduce the overall cost of the trial by having the sites bill Medicare (and other payers, although commercial payers are less likely to pay for patients in clinical trials).

Some companies choose not to have the sites bill because they are leery of potential delays to enrollment due to prolonged negotiations and to the CMS review time. Our experience is that these risks can be mitigated, however.

Billing in clinical trials has changed recently, so we thought it was important to summarize where it has been and where it is heading.

In 1995, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) published a rule permitting Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) to cover medical devices being studied as part of an FDA-approved IDE clinical trial (this does not apply to 510(k) studies). The rule was intended to encourage participation in clinical trials by Medicare beneficiaries. Under this rule, the FDA developed a device categorization to differentiate between novel devices (Category A) and new generations of FDA approved/cleared devices (Category B). Medicare permits, but does not mandate, coverage of Category B devices, assuming they meet all other necessary Medicare requirements.

In 2013, CMS issued a revised Clinical Trial Policy to be implemented January 1, 2015. These new rules centralize the policy, taking decision-making power away from the MACs and providing it to CMS at the national level. The ten requirements of the study for coverage are defined in the policy as follows:

CMS has also made it clear how this applies to study sponsors:

It is important to be aware of these rules as you plan your clinical trials, with your strategy for successful reimbursement in mind throughout product development.

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