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CMS NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: CMS Media Relations CMS
Finalizes Policy that will Increase the Number of Available Lifesavings
Organs by Holding Organ Procurement Organizations Accountable through
Transparency and Competition Today, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is
finalizing a rule that is designed to increase the supply of lifesaving
organs available for transplant in the United States by requiring that the
organizations responsible for organ procurement be transparent in their
performance, highlighting the best and worst performers, and requiring them
to compete on their ability to successfully facilitate transplants. The rule enacts sweeping reform of the Medicare Conditions for
Coverage (CfCs) for Organ Procurement Organizations (OPOs). OPOs, which are
entities that seek organs for the 113,000 Americans on waitlists, must meet
minimum quality measure thresholds in the CfCs to receive Medicare and
Medicaid payment. The current measures are based on self-reported data and
disincentivize OPOs from aggressively seeking any and all available organs.
The rule creates new measures designed to hold OPOs accountable for seeking –
and ensuring transplant of – as many organs as possible, and the calculation
of the measures is based on objective data. The rule is designed to increase
the number of organs available for transplant, helping tackle one of the
longstanding problems in the organ transplant system, namely that the need
for organs greatly exceeds the supply. Indeed, as the capstone of President
Trump’s July 2019 Executive Order on Advancing American Kidney Health,
the rule is the last of a long list of Trump Administration actions designed
to increase the supply of donated organs for Americans on waitlists for
lifesaving transplants. “Thousands of Americans are languishing on organ waitlists, and
twenty Americans every day die waiting for an organ. This is unacceptable and
the Trump Administration is acting. Today’s final rule is an opportunity to
improve the quality of life for millions of Americans,” said CMS
Administrator Seema Verma. “Organ transplants offer hope for a fuller life
untethered from dialysis machines and waiting lists. We’re helping to
increase the supply of donated organs available for transplant by making sure
OPOs are performing at optimal levels.” Under current rules, OPOs must meet minimum thresholds of two of
three outcome measures: the donation rate of eligible donors, the observed –
or actual – donation rate, and donor yield (meaning the number of procured
organs donated per donor). The existing measures are calculated using data
self-reported from OPOs. CMS had heard from stakeholders that these measures
and the self-reported data disincentivized OPOs from seeking as many organs
as possible, like less-than-perfect organs that would nevertheless be
lifesaving for some recipients. CMS is replacing the existing three quality
measures with two new measures, and calculating them based on objective data.
The first new measure is a donation rate measure; it measures the number of
organs an OPO has procured from eligible donors in its donation service area.
It is designed to ensure OPOs pursue all potential donors, even those only
able to donate one organ. The second measure is an organ transplantation rate
measure. No longer will OPOs be required to simply procure an organ; it must
actually be transplanted. This creates an incentive for OPOs to transplant
and use all viable organs. The measures are calculated using objective data
from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and the Centers
for Disease Control (CDC). Under the new rules, underperforming OPOs
will compete for their organizational contracts – which are necessary for
them to function as OPOs – and the worst performers will be unable to renew
their contracts. The number of Americans on waiting lists far exceeds the number
of available donor organs. The long wait for organs can be devastating
for patients and families, especially those suffering with kidney disease.
Many of these patients progress to late-stage kidney failure, face high
mortality rates, only have treatment options that are expensive and do not
produce an acceptable quality of life, and, perhaps most disappointing, are unable
to receive transplants because there are not enough kidneys donated to meet
the current demand for transplants. This final rule directly benefits each
person currently waiting for a transplant because it will increase the supply
of available organs by encouraging OPOs to procure as many organs as
possible, a goal of the President’s Executive Order. A key part of the organ donation system, OPOs are non-profit
organizations responsible for evaluating and procuring organs for transplant
from deceased donors. These organizations also provide support to donor
families, clinical management of organ donors, and professional and public
education about organ donation. Currently, there are 58 OPOs in the United
States, each assigned to its own DSA. Several government agencies, including
CMS, regulate different aspects of the U.S. organ transplant system. Federal
law tasks CMS with conducting surveys of OPOs and recertifying them (no less
frequently than every four years) based on whether they meet the OPO CfCs, which
include outcome and process measures. While OPOs are a critical part of the organ donation system in
the United States, some stakeholders have argued that many are
underperformers and have faced few consequences for their poor performance.
Current organ recovery and transplantation measure regulations are outdated
and allow OPOs to subjectively report organ recovery rates. For example,
currently OPOs can self-report eligible donor pool numbers. This means that
they can exclude data for donors that have a lower likelihood of providing a
viable organ. This self-reporting means they may be able to manipulate their
measure performance in a way that makes it appear better than reality. The specific areas in which CMS is finalizing changes to OPOs
include the following:
Today’s final rule is only one of many actions the Trump
Administration is taking through CMS related to kidney care and organ
donation. The agency is also working to improve outcomes for transplant
candidates and patients, as well as thousands of Medicare beneficiaries who
undergo costly and burdensome in-center dialysis treatments. Many of CMS’s
efforts were announced in President Trump’s 2019 Executive Order on Advancing American Kidney Health,
including a CMS-led stakeholder learning system, as part of the End-stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Treatment Choices Model.
The learning system, which was finalized on September 29, 2020, will work
with participants in the ETC Model and other key stakeholders, such as
transplant centers and OPOs, and use learning and quality improvement
techniques to help increase the availability of deceased donor kidneys for
transplant. For a fact sheet on the final rule (CMS-3380-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/newsroom/fact-sheets/organ-procurement-organization-opo-conditions-coverage-final-rule-revisions-outcome-measures-opos To view the final rule (CMS-3380-F), please visit: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/112020-opo-final-rule-cms-3380-f.pdf ### |
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Friday, November 20, 2020
CMS NEWS: CMS Finalizes Policy that will Increase the Number of Available Lifesavings Organs by Holding Organ Procurement Organizations Accountable through Transparency and Competition
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