Wednesday, December 18, 2024

New rules for evaluating transplant centers

 Historically, transplant centers ('hospitals') have been primarily evaluated on the one year graft survival on the transplants that they do.*  Now Medicare announces it will test a new model, that will emphasize the number of transplants conducted ("achievement"), in addition to somewhat less emphasis on the ratio of deceased donor kidneys accepted or rejected ("efficiency") and graft survival ("quality").

Medicare Program; Alternative Payment Model Updates and the Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model.  A Rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on 12/04/2024 

"a. Proposed IOTA Model Overview

"End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) is a medical condition in which a person's kidneys cease functioning on a permanent basis, leading to the need for a regular course of long-term dialysis or a kidney transplant to maintain life.[2]

"The best treatment for most patients with kidney failure is kidney transplantation. Nearly 808,000 people in the United States are living with ESRD, with about 69 percent on dialysis and 31 percent with a kidney transplant.[3]

"Relative to dialysis, a kidney transplant can improve survival, reduce avoidable health care utilization and hospital acquired conditions, improve quality of life, and lower Medicare expenditures.[4 5]

"However, despite these benefits of kidney transplantation, evidence shows low rates of ESRD patients placed on kidney transplant hospitals' waitlists, a decline in living donors over the past 20 years, and underutilization of available donor kidneys, coupled with increasing rates of donor kidney discards, and wide variation in kidney offer acceptance rates and donor kidney discards by region and across kidney transplant hospitals.[6 7] 

...

"The IOTA Model will be a mandatory model that will begin on July 1, 2025, and end on June 30, 2031, resulting in a 6-year model performance period comprised of 6 individual performance years (“PYs”). The IOTA Model will test whether performance-based incentives paid to, or owed by, participating kidney transplant hospitals can increase access to kidney transplants for patients with ESRD, while preserving or enhancing quality of care and reducing Medicare expenditures. CMS will select kidney transplant hospitals to participate in the IOTA Model through the methodology proposed in section III.C.3.d of this final rule. As this will be a mandatory model, the selected kidney transplant hospitals will be required to participate. CMS will measure and assess the participating kidney transplant hospitals' performance during each PY across three performance domains: achievement, efficiency, and quality.

"The achievement domain will assess each participating kidney transplant hospital on the overall number of kidney transplants performed during a PY, relative to a participant-specific target. The efficiency domain will assess the kidney organ offer acceptance rate ratios of each participating kidney transplant hospital relative to a national ranking or the participating kidney transplant hospital's past organ offer acceptance rate ratio. The quality domain will assess the quality of care provided by the participating kidney transplant hospitals via a composite graft survival ratio. Each participating kidney transplant hospital's performance score across these three domains will determine its final performance score and corresponding amount for the upside risk payment that CMS would pay to the participating kidney transplant hospital, or the downside risk payment that would be owed by the participating kidney transplant hospital to CMS. The upside risk payment will be a lump sum payment paid by CMS after the end of a PY to a participating kidney transplant hospital with a final performance score of 60 or greater. Conversely, beginning in PY 2, the downside risk payment will be a lump sum payment paid to CMS by any participating kidney transplant hospital with a final performance score of 40 or lower. There is no downside risk payment for PY 1 of the model.

...

"The three performance domains will include: (1) an achievement domain worth up to 60 points, (2) an efficiency domain worth up to 20 points, and (3) a quality domain worth up to 20 points.

"The achievement domain will assess the number of kidney transplants performed by each IOTA participant for attributed patients, with performance on this domain worth up to 60 points. The final performance score will be heavily weighted on the achievement domain to align with the IOTA Model's goal to increase access to kidney transplants to improve the quality of care and reduce Medicare expenditures. The IOTA Model theorizes that improvement activities, including those aimed at reducing unnecessary deceased donor discards and increasing living donors, may help increase access to kidney transplants."

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CMS gives a high level overview here: Increasing Organ Transplant Access (IOTA) Model

and later today there's a webinar you can register for:

"The CMS Innovation Center will be hosting a welcome webinar to present an overview of the model on December 18, 2024, from 2 to 3 p.m. ET. Register to attend: https://cms.zoomgov.com/webinar/register/WN_hvGDyZTxQ5eNhX1OBolevA
 

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*see Wednesday, October 2, 2024 Regulation of Organ Transplantation and Procurement (Chan and Roth in the JPE)

That paper suggests desirable regulations  would coordinate transplant and OPO incentives, and link them both to the health outcomes of all patients attributable to a given transplant center (and not just those patients who were transplanted). 

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