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CMS NEWS
For Immediate Release
July 10, 2019
Contact: CMS Media
Relations
(202) 690-6145 | CMS Media Inquiries
HHS
To Transform Care Delivery for Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease
Today, delivering on
President Trump’s Advancing American Kidney Health Executive Order, the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azar and Centers
for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Seema Verma
announced five new CMS Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation payment
models that aim to transform kidney care so that patients with chronic kidney
disease have access to high quality, coordinated care. The proposed required
End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Treatment Choices (ETC) Model would
encourage greater use of home dialysis and kidney transplants for Medicare
beneficiaries with ESRD in order to preserve or enhance their quality of care
while reducing Medicare expenditures, and the Kidney Care First (KCF) and Comprehensive
Kidney Care Contracting (CKCC) Models will test new Medicare payment options
that aim to improve the quality of care for patients kidney disease.
“President Trump is
tackling the toughest issues in American healthcare, and few areas need
reform more than the way we treat kidney disease,” said HHS Secretary Alex
Azar. “Decades of paying for sickness and procedures in kidney care, rather
than paying for health and outcomes, has produced less-than-satisfactory
outcomes at tremendous cost. Through new payment models and many other
actions under this initiative, the Trump Administration will transform this
situation and deliver Americans better kidney health, more kidney treatment
options, and more transplants.”
The current Medicare
payment system encourages in-center hemodialysis as the default treatment for
patients beginning dialysis. According to the Government Accountability
Office, in-center hemodialysis is the most common type of dialysis and was
used by about 88 percent of dialysis patients in 2016. There are more than
430,000 Medicare Fee-for-Service beneficiaries with ESRD who spend an average
of 12 hours a week receiving in-center hemodialysis. Many beneficiaries with
ESRD suffer from poorer health outcomes, such as higher hospitalization and mortality
rates, often the result of underlying disease complications and multiple
co-morbidities.
“The way we currently pay
for chronic kidney disease and kidney failure isn’t working well for
patients,” said CMS Administrator Seema Verma. “Under President Trump’s
leadership, we are focused on strengthening Medicare and protecting the
program for the individuals it was intended to serve. These historic
initiatives aim to improve the quality of life for kidney disease patients by
preventing disease progression, encouraging transplants over dialysis, and if
dialysis is needed, more convenient home based dialysis to improve health
outcomes.”
The proposed ETC Model
would adjust certain Medicare payments to ESRD facilities and clinicians
managing ESRD beneficiaries (Managing Clinicians) that are selected for
participation in the model, through upward or downward payment adjustments
based on their home and transplant rates to increase utilization of home
dialysis and rates of kidney and kidney-pancreas transplants.
One of the goals of the
proposed ETC model is to give ESRD beneficiaries the freedom and choice of
ESRD treatment that best works with their lifestyles. For example, if a
beneficiary chooses home dialysis, they would have greater flexibility to
adjust the hours and frequency of their treatment. Under the proposed ETC
Model, CMS would make certain payment adjustments that would encourage
participating ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians to ensure that ESRD
beneficiaries have access to and receive education about their kidney disease
treatment options. Specifically, CMS would positively adjust certain Medicare
payments to participating ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians for the
first three years of the model for home dialysis and dialysis-related services.
Under the proposal, CMS
would require certain ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians to participate
in the ETC Model based on their location in randomly selected geographic
areas. Participating ESRD facilities and Managing Clinicians would account
for approximately 50 percent of adult Medicare beneficiaries with ESRD across
the country.
The proposed ETC Model
would include protections for both beneficiaries and participating ESRD
facilities and Managing Clinicians. To avoid penalizing ESRD providers with
sicker patients, the model would risk adjust the home dialysis and transplant
rates used for purposes of the performance payment adjustments. Beneficiaries
would maintain freedom of choice among healthcare providers, and would not
see a change in their Medicare cost-sharing. All current beneficiary
protections under Original Medicare would be maintained for beneficiaries
under the proposed ETC model. The payment adjustments under the proposed ETC
model would begin January 1, 2020, and end June 30, 2026.
CMS is also announcing
four optional models: The Kidney Care First (KCF) Model and the Comprehensive
Kidney Care Contracting (CKCC) Graduated, CKCC Professional, and Global
Models – that are designed to help health care providers reduce the cost and improve
the quality of care for patients with late-stage chronic kidney disease and
ESRD. These Models also aim to delay the need for dialysis and encourage
kidney transplantation.
In the KCF Model,
participating nephrology practices will receive adjusted fixed payments on a
per-patient basis for managing the care of patients with late-stage chronic
kidney disease and patients with ESRD. The payments will be adjusted based on
health outcomes and utilization compared to the participating practice’s own
experience and national standards, as well as performance on quality
measures. In addition, participating practices will receive a bonus payment
for every patient aligned to them that receives a kidney transplant based on
the transplant remaining healthy for up to three years after the
surgery.
The CKCC Models include
the Graduated, Professional, and Global Models—in which capitated payments
will be similar to the capitated payments under the KCF Model, but the Kidney
Contracting Entities – which consist of nephrologists, transplant providers,
and other health care providers including dialysis facilities –
will take responsibility for the total cost and quality of care for
their patients, and in exchange, can receive a portion of the Medicare
savings they achieve.
The KCF and CKCC Models
are expected to run from January 1, 2020, through December 31, 2023, with the
option for one or two additional performance years, at CMS’s discretion.
More information on the
proposed model is available at: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/esrd-treatment-choices-model/
The ETC Model is part of a
CMS proposed rule on specialty care models (CMS-5527-P), which can be viewed
at: https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/CMS-5527-P.pdf
For a fact sheet on the
proposed mandatory Kidney Model (ETC) please visit: https://cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/proposed-end-stage-renal-disease-treatment-choices-etc-mandatory-model
For a fact sheet on the
proposed voluntary Kidney Models (KCF and CKCC) please visit: https://cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/kidney-care-first-kcf-and-comprehensive-kidney-care-contracting-ckcc-models
For a fact sheet on the
CMS Radiation Oncology Model, also being announced today, please visit: https://cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/proposed-radiation-oncology-ro-model
More information on the
models is available at: https://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/voluntary-kidney-models/
For more information on
HHS’s Kidney Initiative please visit: https://www.hhs.gov/about/news/2019/07/10/hhs-launches-president-trump-advancing-american-kidney-health-initiative.html
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Get CMS news at cms.gov/newsroom, sign up for CMS
news via email and follow CMS on Twitter
CMS Administrator @SeemaCMS, @CMSgov, and @CMSgovPress.
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Wednesday, July 10, 2019
HHS To Transform Care Delivery for Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease
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