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Building a Fiscally Healthy VAD Program: Ensuring Financial Success and Growth

Pavan Atluri, M.D Assistant Professor of Surgery Director, Mechanical Circulatory Support and Heart Transplantation Director, Minimally Invasive and Robotic Cardiac Surgery Program Division of Cardiovascular Surgery Department of Surgery University of Pennsylvania.

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Building a Fiscally Healthy VAD Program: Ensuring Financial Success and Growth

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  1. Pavan Atluri, M.D Assistant Professor of Surgery Director, Mechanical Circulatory Support and Heart Transplantation Director, Minimally Invasive and Robotic Cardiac Surgery Program Division of Cardiovascular Surgery Department of Surgery University of Pennsylvania Building a Fiscally Healthy VAD Program: Ensuring Financial Success and Growth 9th Annual INTERMACS Meeting Saturday, May 16th, 2015

  2. Navigating Hospital Administrators • Growth is a factor of financials • Strong financials = more support • VAD therapy is expensive…..but, can be profitable • VAD programs are profitable only if quality is excellent • Limited complications • Limited LOS

  3. Review of profitability measurement at UPHS

  4. CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Payment Basics

  5. Medicare payment basics $ Hospital-specific base rate Indirect medical education Disproportionate share Regional wage rate adjustment others $ Medicare payment • HUP - #8 • PPMC - #185 • University of Michigan - #24 • New York-Presbyterian - #86 • Massachusetts General - #97 • Mayo St Mary - #150 • Northwestern Memorial - #187 Hospital base determined by several factors • As a result: • HUP rates are 61% higher • PPMC rates are 38% higher • Medicare payments are 17% higher at HUP than PPMC for the same procedure. xMS-DRG weight • Determined by CMS

  6. Medicare MS-DRG Payments Vary by Institution FY 2013 CMS Median Payment for MS-DRG 1 ≈ $202,000 High cost cases may qualify for outlier payments

  7. Medicare pays hospitals by MS-DRG Typical MCS MS-DRGs MS-DRG 1 (higher payment) versus 2 depends on presence of at least one MAJOR co-morbidity

  8. Capturing MCCs critical to financial success • MS-DRG 1 (higher payment) or MS-DRG 2 (lower payment)? • depends on presence of at least one “Major Complication and/or Co-morbidity” (MCC) • MCCs • Medicare-defined list • Changes every year • Must be SECONDARY to primary dx • A co-morbid condition • NOT an exacerbation of the primary dx • Usually describes an acute manifestation of disease rather than chronic disease states Best Practice: Create a process to review all MS-DRG 2 assignments prior to claim submission

  9. What are the common VAD MCCs? * * Medical records defines cardiogenic shock as: inotrope dependence OR Cardiac index > 2.2 Source: FY 2013 IPPS final rule MedPAR file (contains all hospital inpatient claims for Medicare beneficiaries from FY 2011) * These diagnosis codes are on the MCC list, but are not considered MCCs when the primary diagnosis is heart failure. Courtesy of Thoratec

  10. MCC examples MS-DRG1: Cardiogenic shock qualifies as a secondary & major co-morbid condition Most common MS-DRG 1 MS-DRG1: Severe malnutrition qualifies as a secondary & major co-morbid condition MS-DRG2: Acute heart failure is not secondary to chronic HF and does not qualify as a co-morbid condition MS-DRG2: Pulmonary collapse is secondary, but not a major co-morbid condition MS-DRG2: Acute kidney failure no longer on the CMS list of major co-morbid conditions

  11. What difference does it make? it pays… 70% of MSDRG 1 60% of MSDRG 1 58% of MSDRG 1 MSDRG Code

  12. Why MSDRG 1 is so important

  13. Pro Fee Coverage • Procedural payment-unique operation in that follow–up daily care is billable • Daily rounds • Day One • Acute • Less acute • Discharge day • VAD interrogation • Varies depending on: • LOS • Number & type of procedure(s) • Number of interrogations 2012 MPFS Final Rule RVUs (CY 2012 Addenda) https://www.cms.gov/PhysicianFeeSched/downloads/Addenda.zip

  14. Private PAyors

  15. Payments vary widely by payor • Medicare sets their own rates • Managed care and commercial rates are negotiated • Often include a device pass-through • Occasionally global arrangement for post-operative care • Can be significantly higher than Medicare • Balancing the payor mix is an important component of financial success

  16. Negotiate carve out contracts with private payers • “Carve-out “contracts are one of the keys to making VAD program financially healthy • “Carve-outs” pay a “better” rate for certain items • Generally, carve outs include: • All implantable prosthetic devices • All accessories to implantable prosthetics • Avoid payers bundling VADs into any transplant global package payments • If not covered under a carve out contract, negotiate rate for outpatient VAD accessories and supplies, or outsource

  17. Costs

  18. Three primary cost factors • Device cost ─ can vary widely • Heartmate II and Heartware  $80–90K per kit • Syncardia  100K • R-VAD  $34K • ECMO – minimal device cost vs Impella /Tandem • Length of Stay─varies widely • Site of Stay ─ ICU days versus Med/Surg days • SICU days are twice as costly

  19. Daily cost of the five basic phases of VAD care Implant day literally “off the charts” Post-Op 1 SICU Pre-Op 1 CathLab (optional) Implant Post-Op 2 Med/Surg Pre-Op 2 CCU or Med/Surg Example: Patient GF Note: Implant cost omitted to clarify scale

  20. VAD financial profileMedicare MSDRG#1 Heart Transplant/VAD w MCC Net Loss Payment Profitable range of length of stay Med/Surg SICU Implant Day 7 Pre-op

  21. Quality has a direct impact on financial viability due to decreased LOS, decreased ICU days, fewer drugs, fewer OR returns.... Quality

  22. Bleeding during primary admission seems to increase post-operative LOS Source: Intermacs

  23. Infection during stay increases post-operative LOS 45% had some infection during stay

  24. Keys to Success • Decrease risk through: • Appropriate patient selection • “Right-time” implant • Intermacs II – IV rather than I • Document to achieve appropriate reimbursement • MS-DRG 1 versus 2 • Improve payor mix by outreach and affiliation strategy • Improve quality • Fewer total days, ICU days, drug, and complications • Minimize re-hospitalizations for HF, GI bleeding, thrombosis • Minimize pump exchanges

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