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The Clinical Trial Model Is Up for Review

P&T Journal - October 2014 - for a PDF copy of the published version go HERE.

Time, Expense, and Quality of Results Are at Issue, As Is the Relationship to Drug Pricing

The storm seeded by the pricing of Sovaldi has led payers, patients, and the federal government to seek cover from what some view as problematic pharmaceutical industry practices, including a few partly outside of the industry’s control.

Sovaldi’s $84,000 list price for a course of treatment has raised questions about how a company such as Gilead Sciences, Inc., decides on a price tag. The answer may hinge—in small or large part, depending on who’s talking—on the length and complexity of the clinical trials a company must conduct in order to win approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the new drug. Sundeep Khosla, MD, Dean for Clinical and Translational Science at the Mayo Clinic, says clinical trials are subject to the “Valley of Death.” He explains, “This refers to the fact that the average length of time from target discovery to approval of a new drug currently averages approximately 14 years, the failure rate exceeds 95%, and the cost per successful drug exceeds $2 billion, after adjusting for all of the failures.”

According to Robert J. Meyer, Director of the Virginia Center for Translational and Regulatory Sciences at the University of Virginia School of Medicine, “It is well documented that one of the major categories of expenditure in developing a new therapeutic is the expense of conducting randomized, phase 3 clinical trials, which are intended to address the regulatory expectations in the U.S. and beyond.” However, Meyer doesn’t think the clinical trial costs for Sovaldi are substantially higher than those for similar drugs, much less those with a list price of $84,000 for a 12-week regimen. “I think pricing is driven by what the market will bear, including the value of the drug’s ability to forestall later disease,” he states. “But I can’t say clinical trial costs have no relationship to the price of drugs. The company must amortize those costs, especially the costs of the 50% of drugs that fail in phase 3 trials.”

Gilead has declined to provide data on the cost of clinical trials for Sovaldi. On March 20, 2014, U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) and colleagues sent a letter to John Martin, PhD, Chief Executive Officer of Gilead, asking for information about the methodology Gilead used to establish Sovaldi’s pricing.1 One of the things Waxman wanted to know was “the value to the company of the expedited review provided under the priority review and breakthrough therapy designation and how any savings provided by the expedited review factored into pricing decisions for the drug.” The priority review and breakthrough therapy designations are new tools that Congress has given the FDA in the past few years that enable the agency to approve a drug faster based on abbreviated clinical trials.

Cara Miller, a Gilead spokeswoman, says the company met with Waxman’s staff to “share our perspective on the scientific and medical evidence for treating a disease that causes significant morbidity and mortality in the U.S. and the benefits of Sovaldi.” But that perspective is not public, nor has Waxman himself published anything that Sovaldi may have shown his staff. Miller declines to discuss the costs of Sovaldi clinical trials or the relationship of those costs to Sovaldi pricing.

A Waxman spokeswoman says Gilead was “not able to answer all our questions, and [was] not able to provide us with information that adequately justified the cost of the drug.”

It is not just the cost of conventional clinical trials that is at issue, but also their inclusiveness. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal on August 4, 2014, Arvind Goyal, MD, Medical Director of the Illinois Department of Health Care and Family Services, raised questions about the population enrolled in the Sovaldi clinical trials.2 He complained that Gilead did not include people with alcohol and drug problems, which are prevalent among his state’s Medicaid population. “If someone is using a street drug such as heroin,” he said, “I can’t be sure they are compliant taking Sovaldi. It is a total waste.”

Miller, the Gilead spokeswoman, says: “Patients with ongoing illicit drug use such as cocaine and heroin were excluded from the clinical trials. Patients who were actively abusing alcohol were excluded from the clinical trials. However, a history of alcohol abuse or ongoing alcohol use was not exclusionary; approximately 5–10% of patients in the phase 3 studies self-reported this medical history.”

Congress Looks at Possible Reforms


Because of the many structural imperfections that prevent faster, cheaper, more accurate clinical trials, Democrats and Republicans in Congress are considering what they can do to inject doses of modernity into a dusty system. The House Energy and Commerce Committee, as part of its year-long “21st Century Cures” hearings, has been exploring varieties of unconventional clinical trials—often grouped under the rubric of “adaptive” clinical trials—and looking at ways useful flexibility can be injected into FDA requirements. At hearings in July, Jay Siegel, MD, Chief Biotechnology Officer and Head of Scientific Strategy and Policy at Johnson & Johnson, said, “I believe that we now face an extraordinary opportunity to reinvent our approach to clinical trials and, as a result, to greatly increase the quality of medical care and the quality of life itself.”
The President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology succinctly stated the problem in its 2012 report on drug innovation:3
Unfortunately, there is broad agreement that our current clinical trials system is inefficient. Currently, each clinical trial to test a new drug candidate is typically organized de novo, requiring substantial effort, cost, and time. … Navigating all of these requirements is challenging even for large pharmaceutical companies, and can be daunting for small biotechnology firms.
U.S. Rep. Joe Pitts (R-Pa.), Chairman of the House Health Subcommittee, detailed the shortcomings of the clinical trial system when he welcomed Janet Woodcock, MD, Director of the FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, to a hearing on July 11, 2014. “Widespread duplication of effort and cost also occurs because research is fragmented across hundreds of clinical research organizations, sites, and trials, and information regarding both the successes and failures of clinical trials is rarely shared among researchers,” Pitts said. “It is often difficult to identify potential participants due to a shortage of centralized registries, low awareness of the opportunity to participate in clinical trials, low patient retention, and lack of engagement among community doctors and volunteers.”

Dr. Woodcock said the FDA has been doing what it can to reduce clinical trial requirements, consistent with maintaining patient safety, but “some of these challenges need to be addressed by those outside of FDA.” The FDA issued guidance in December 2012 on clinical trial enrichment strategies. She pointed to Novartis’ Zykadia (ceritinib), a new drug for patients with a certain type of late-stage, non–small-cell lung cancer, which the FDA approved in April 2014 via a breakthrough therapy designation. “It took less than four years—versus the roughly 10 years it used to take—from the initial study of the drug to FDA approval,” she stated.

The FDA granted Zykadia a conditional approval based on a phase 1, single-arm study of 163 people that investigated the maximum tolerated dose, safety, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary antitumor activity of Zykadia. Dana Cooper, a Novartis spokeswoman, declined to provide details on what the company has spent so far on clinical trials for the drug. “As we manage our research investment across a portfolio of medicine in development, we do not provide estimates of research costs for individual molecules,” she says. The company is continuing phase 2 and 3 trials as a condition of FDA conditional approval. The average wholesale price for a 30-day supply of Zykadia at the recommended daily dose is $16,197, according to Red Book.

Recent FDA Efforts to Cut Approval Times


The cost of clinical trials and their required length to completion have been the subject of criticism within the pharmaceutical industry for some time. Over the past decade or so, Congress has provided the FDA with authority to approve new drugs more quickly in certain circumstances, sometimes on the basis of shortened clinical trials.4 With Sovaldi, for example, Gilead asked for and received a priority review, which reduces the FDA review goal date from 10 to six months. The FDA also awarded Sovaldi a breakthrough therapy designation, which allows a company to submit a new drug for approval based on preliminary clinical evidence “that the drug may have substantial improvement on at least one clinically significant endpoint over available therapy.” In addition, the FDA offers drug developers accelerated approval, which can be granted on the basis of studies establishing that the drug or biologic “has an effect on a surrogate endpoint that is reasonably likely to predict a clinical benefit, or on a clinical endpoint that can be measured earlier than irreversible morbidity or mortality, that is reasonably likely to predict an effect on irreversible morbidity or mortality or other clinical benefit, taking into account the severity, rarity, or prevalence of the condition and the availability or lack of alternative treatments.”

Some drugs the FDA has approved with its new authorities, based on truncated trials, have turned out to be problematic in the post-marketing period. Avandia and Avastin are two examples. “The recent history of drug misadventures provides numerous examples of rare but catastrophic side effects overlooked at current levels of testing in broader patient populations,” says Thomas J. Moore, Senior Scientist at the Institute for Safe Medication Practices and Lecturer in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at The George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services.

Moore is skeptical about the FDA’s efforts to establish a new “alternative approval pathway for certain drugs intended to address unmet medical needs.” Congress directed the FDA to do so in the Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act (FDASIA) of 2012,5 the law that established the breakthrough therapy designation. The 2012 law also included language expanding the types of evidence the FDA can use to assess whether a surrogate endpoint is likely to predict clinical benefit and encouraged usage of a broader variety of endpoints for accelerated approval. Moore says the alternative approval pathway “could compromise patient safety, is unnecessary given seven existing expedited approval programs, has no clear public health justification for exposing patients to increased risks, and is insufficiently researched and documented to permit a clear evaluation.”

The FDA held a hearing in February 2013 to seek input from industry and the public on the viability of a new alternative pathway. Paul Huckle, Chief Regulatory Officer for GlaxoSmithKline PLC, stated, “We believe that the proposed pathway should be considered in parallel, and in addition to, already existing regulatory pathways such as accelerated approval, fast track, priority review, and breakthrough therapy designation, and if implemented should be applied at the sponsor’s request.” The FDA has not published any draft, much less final, guidelines offering a new alternative pathway.

Need for More Flexibility and Infrastructure


Speeding up the FDA review process, though, is essentially nibbling around the edges of an antiquated system, where one drug is tested in a large population of people suffering from one disease, be that lung cancer, hepatitis C, or any of the conditions that afflict much smaller populations. There is broad agreement that this “one drug, one condition” methodology must change. Winds of change—actually, they are more like light breezes—are blowing through the hallways of contract research organizations and academic medical centers, which do the majority of clinical testing. The reforms include use of biomarkers to select participants, use of “adaptive” clinical trials sponsored jointly by drug companies, and establishment of nationwide academic networks with access to electronic medical records. Study participants are chosen because they have a specific genotype that is thought to be responsive to a specific agent. Large groups of patients across numerous academic centers are recruited because those genes are found in a very small percentage of those volunteers. Often new patients are recruited on a rolling basis, under a master protocol that test sites adhere to across the country. A number of agents are tested at the same time, each one in a separate small group consisting of patients who all have the same target gene.

Lung-MAP, which is testing five lung cancer agents, is a clinical trial now getting under way that uses many of the new clinical trial techniques. It is expected to screen as many as 1,250 patients each year for more than 200 cancer-related genomic alterations. Participants will eventually be divided into five “baskets,” each including patients with an identical genotype thought to be responsive to a single agent. Five agents are being tested by five companies, all of them cooperating. None of the five companies, on their own, could recruit that many patients. That kind of large population is important because each of the five biomarkers will be found in a very small percentage of people, so it is necessary to recruit large numbers in order to have enough participants in each of the five baskets.

Moving Straight From Phase 2 to Phase 3


“Another distinctive feature of Lung-MAP is the ability for a drug that is found to be effective in phase 2 to move directly into the phase 3 registration components, incorporating the patients from phase 2,” explains Roy S. Herbst, MD, PhD, Ensign Professor of Medicine, Chief of Medical Oncology, and Associate Director for Translational Research at Yale Cancer Center. “This unique statistical approach can save both time and the number of patients that would be needed to program compared to conducting separate phase 2 and phase 3 studies.”

As its endpoint, the trial is using “median progression-free survival,” which Dr. Herbst concedes is a surrogate endpoint. He explains that any of the five agents could show a positive effect as early as the first year. But clearly nothing is certain: the efficacy of the agents, the viability of the trial’s structure, or the cost savings to the five companies compared with what they would have spent had they embarked on singular, conventional trials.

Not everyone thinks the potentially fast transition from phase 2 to phase 3 is a blessing. “While this sounds attractive, this kind of adaptive trial raises many significant issues—not the least of which is the loss of the ability to conduct a true ‘learn and confirm’ development paradigm, which is the very heart of cogent drug development,” explains the University of Virginia’s Meyer. “If there is any message in the rising failure rate of phase 3 trials, I think it is that the increasingly parallel drug trials paradigm, rather than the serial learn-and-confirm model, does not allow for enough careful thought of past results to properly inform future designs.”

That kind of skepticism may explain why the FDA has not opened the door very wide to adaptive studies. The agency published draft guidance in March 2010,6 but final guidance has never appeared. Industry generally applauded the FDA’s draft, but felt it was too restrictive. The draft talked about “familiar” and “less familiar” approaches, and seemed to bestow approval on the former and skepticism on the later. “The less familiar design methods incorporate methodological features with which there is little experience in drug development at this time,” the draft stated.

Industry and Academia Slow to Help


To some extent, the fact that clinical trials take as long and cost as much as they do is partly the fault of the companies that conduct them, according to Meyer. He calls some of the steps in phase 3 trials “self-inflicted.” A recent Tufts University study7 showed the number of endpoints and procedures in clinical trials went up more than 60% from 2002 to 2012. At the same time, this study showed that a minority of the procedures, endpoints, and related trial costs in phase 3 trials were driven by regulatory requirements. This study estimated that non-core elements of these trials cost $4 billion to $6 billion in aggregate spending across the industry.

A significant portion of those “self-inflicted” costs come from companies reinventing the wheel every time they conduct a clinical trial. Those costs include setting up a network and developing and implementing a protocol. Some of those costs disappear when companies and academic centers avail themselves of clinical trial networks. But these networks are few and far between.

The National Institutes of Health inaugurated a Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) program in 2006.8 It is active at 62 sites, mostly academic medical centers, and is funded at a level of nearly $500 million. The hope was for those centers to work together on specific clinical trial projects. A 2013 report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM)9 said the program is “contributing significantly” to clinical research. But based on the number of recommendations made to improve the program, that praise seemed pro forma. The report described the program as being in an infant stage, with little cross-center or center-public collaboration, and hamstrung by a bureaucratic structure. It said: “The IOM committee envisions a transformation of the CTSA program from its current, loosely organized structure into a more tightly integrated network that works collectively to enhance the transit of therapeutics, diagnostics, and preventive interventions along the developmental pipeline; disseminate innovative translational research methods and best practices; and provide leadership in informatics standards and policy development to promote shared resources.”

Even for a clinical trial network such as the one being developed by Lung-MAP, one can see what a huge task it is to assemble 5,000 patients, obtain and massage their personal health data, and de-identify that data. Paula Brown Stafford, MPH, President of Clinical Development at Quintiles, a major contract research organization, thinks Congress should create a central repository of accessible, securely de-identified patient-level data and make it available for research use through appropriate licensing. “And just think about the amount of time that would be cut out of the trial,” she says, “from four years [for] finding patients down to 14 days because we have the data that gives us access to identify the patients.” Dr. Herbst says, for example, that Lung-MAP registered 10 patients in the first two months the trial was in progress.

No one would argue the merits of a more national clinical trial infrastructure, backed by national disease registries and fueled by electronic medical records. The use of biomarkers to select trial participants is a bit more dicey, given its reliance on diagnostic tests that may or may not have received FDA approval.

Congress is likely to include clinical trial reforms in the next reauthorization of the Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA). In past reauthorizations, the emphasis has been on speeding FDA approval, not clinical trials. Helping companies get to the FDA with a new drug application more quickly and more cheaply, in a way consistent with protecting safety and efficacy, should be the focus this time. Given the importance of this objective, it shouldn’t be necessary to wait until 2017, when PDUFA is scheduled to be reauthorized for the sixth time.

Author bio: 
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

FERC's Moeller Presses Online Gas Trading Platform; Industry Unenthusiastic

Pipeline & Gas Journal - October 2014 - for the online version go HERE.

FERC "pipeline" Commissioner Phillip Moeller held a workshop Sept. 18 to explore the possibility of the commission, on its own or through a third party, establishing an online trading platform for the nomination and confirmation of pipeline deliveries of natural gas. The proposal was made at a technical conference in April by Don Sipe, a Maine attorney, on behalf of the American Forest and Paper Association.

That workshop examined operational and resource issues in the gas and electric industries arising from last winter’s polar vortex. Sipe served two terms as chair of the New England Power Pool and for over a decade was vice chair of NEPOOL for the end use sector.

The potential of an online scheduling tool is just one idea FERC is studying to address several somewhat related issues dealing with getting adequate natural gas to electric utilities during cold snaps. Some proposals deal with scheduling, others with delivery, some only on the natural gas side of the issue, others with better coordination between gas pipelines and electric wholesalers.

Moeller says about the online trading workshop and scheduling issues more broadly, "We have to at least try and move the concept forward before next winter. Pipelines have the incentive to keep their electric generator customer base happy, so they should be in favor of these efforts because generators are not happy now with the lack of transparency and liquidity after hours."

Sipe says the response to his proposal from the industry at large could best be characterized as "thunderous silence." The current system of commodity trading is "old school," where generators faced with short-notice supply needs essentially use, according to Sipe, their rolodexes to call various marketers in search of gas and available capacity.

Joan Dreskin, INGAA general counsel, responds that pipelines are aware of Sipe's proposal, but haven't piped up because Sipe has advanced a concept, not a detailed proposal. "We are eager to learn more, but do have some serious reservations, as to who will pay for the online trading platform, and whether it will add value for our customers." She notes, for example, that some customers could lose out if pipelines have to make their capacity fungible.

"Pipelines have worked to customize tariffs for customers and not all firm transportation recourse tariffs look the same," she explains. "It is unclear how a uniform trading platform would work if you are not comparing apples to apples."

An online trading platform would theoretically allow electric generators to find out much more quickly whether pipelines will be able to supply gas needed on short notice such as when an Independent System Operator (ISO) must quickly find a replacement generator due to an outage or an unexpected change in load. Typically, an ISO, such as the one operating in New England, needs to know, in real time within 15 minutes whether a given generator will be able to supply the necessary power to local electric utilities on any given day. This is particularly an issue during a cold weather snap or a heat wave or when unexpected generator outages require the ISO to dispatch previously offline units.

However, in the current system, it takes much longer for generators to nominate gas on a given pipeline's system, and even longer for the pipeline to confirm it can supply the gas at a given price. That can sometimes take three to four hours. This is particularly tough on merchant generators which frequently don't have firm capacity. At times, this uncertainty will lead the system operator to dispatch more generation than needed because it is unsure which, if any of the units will be able to get gas.

Generators, in turn, may nominate more gas than needed to fulfill ISO requests. Subsequently, the ISO may find itself with more generation that it needs and “dispatch down” a certain number of generators that had gone out and secured supply. Left with excess supply, generators may either have to resell at a loss or face imbalance penalties. If generators cannot recover these costs in some fashion they are harmed, and conversely, if they can recover these costs electricity consumers end up paying these added charges.

The pipeline industry generally believes the solution to the problem is to build more pipeline capacity. "I agree we need to build more pipelines, but that appears to be the sole focus of the industry," explains Sipe. He believes the apparent lack of enthusiasm for considering expanding an online trading platform such as the Intercontinental Exchange, to coordinate more closely with and perhaps automate the nomination and confirmation process in real time trading, has to do with some uncertainty as to whether FERC could mandate such a trading platform, who would pay for it and perhaps some hesitancy on the part of marketers to be more transparent in their pricing. But he believes pipelines and others industry participants could make more money from "being more efficient."

His proposal wouldn't be a panacea," concludes Dreskin, "but we are willing to talk about it."

Author bio: 
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

Congress Likely to Include Pension "Smoothing" in Highway Bill

Strategic Finance - September 2014

What is a corporate pension funding provision doing in a federal highway funding bill? Well, both the House and Senate are scraping for new revenue with which to replenish the Highway Trust Fund, which is on the precipice of bankruptcy. The House has passed its bill, and the Senate is close to doing so. The two bills have three pools of new federal revenue totaling $11 billion, one of which consists of "pension smoothing" revenue. This will effect only single-employer plans, which currently insure about 30 million Americans, still working and retired. Those plans have argued that the formula used by the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC) to assess future corporate pension liabilities results in excessively and unrealistically underfunded results. That is because of the low interest rate environment. The two bills substitute, at least temporarily, a new formula that will lead to funding calculations which will be more realistic. That will mean companies will have to dedicate less money to funding future, potential liabilities, leading to smaller tax deductions, leading to greater federal revenue.  However, neither bill does anything to reform the PBGC premium structure, which assesses companies a flat rate per participant and a variable rate which applies only to companies with severely underfunded pensions. Plan sponsors have argued that instead of companies having to pay the same flat rate, the rate should be adjusted on a per-company basis based on the degree of solvency for the company. Companies with fully-funded pension plans resent having to essentially overpay premiums in order to cover the mistakes made by bankrupt companies, whose legacy pension costs they are forced, to some extent, to cover.

Author bio: 
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

Hospitals Struggle With ACA Challenges

P&T Journal - September 2014 - for a PDF copy of the published version go HERE.

More Regulatory Changes Are in the Offing in 2015

The results released on July 10, 2014, by CareFirst of Maryland, a Blue Cross Blue Shield plan, probably had some Maryland hospitals shaking in their boots. It wouldn’t be surprising if hospitals around the country felt the vibrations.

CareFirst was reporting for the first time on the results of its patient-centered medical home (PCMH) program, which the insurer initiated three years ago. The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) established a formal PCMH pilot program within Medicare, and insurers in the commercial market who aren’t part of the pilot, such as CareFirst, have been experimenting with the concept too. A PCMH program pays physicians incentives to monitor the health of their patients more closely, with the objective of minimizing referrals to specialists and hospital admissions. Members seen by medical home physicians participating in the CareFirst program experienced 6% fewer hospital admissions, 11% fewer days in the hospital, and 11% fewer outpatient visits than other CareFirst clients last year.1

The PCMH is just one of the ACA initiatives aimed at reducing hospital admissions and, by extension, hospital revenue. The ACA’s emphasis on primary care as a bulwark against hospitalization, and its endorsement of accountable care organizations (ACOs) and bundled payments, is having, and will continue to have, a major impact on hospital revenue—in some cases not in a good way, speeding hospital consolidations and closures. Stephen Schimpff, MD, retired Chief Executive Officer of the University of Maryland Medical Center, puts it this way:
It is a changing world for hospitals; it is harder to thrive in the way in which it was done in the past. We used to be in the business of disease and pestilence, the more disease and pestilence the better. Now we are in a totally different business, improving the health of your community.
But the ACA has been something of a double-edged sword. While its payment initiatives are staunching the flow of patients to hospitals, its insurance expansion has opened the spigot. The ACA’s Medicaid expansion has sent waves of people through hospital doors in some states. Many of them were previously “self pay”—with some percentage being “no pay”—and hospitals are suddenly being compensated for their care. The health insurance marketplaces have brought eight million customers, not all of them newcomers, to hospital doors. However, hospitals have had to contend with the pricing demands of qualified health plans (QHPs), which sell individual health plans and must comply with federal rules, some of which filter down to hospitals.

The Revolution Gathers Steam


Just as the application of steam power to manufacturing in Great Britain in the mid-1700s ignited the industrial revolution, the 2010 passage of the ACA has prompted an emerging upheaval in health care. Traditional hospital operations across a broad range of activities have been upended and are being refashioned.

Hospitals are merging at a pace previously unseen, buying insurance companies (and being bought by insurance companies), and piling into “clinically integrated networks” faster than high school seniors jumping into beach-bound cars on the last day of school. Health systems are also buying physician practices to establish PCMHs or ACOs, or simply to have a better footing to contend with insurance companies outside of Medicare that are requiring some form of risk-based “value,” “bundled,” or “capitated” purchasing contract—terms that are being tossed around with varying meanings.

“At the strategic level, the Affordable Care Act has certainly colored the internal dialog at Catholic Health Initiatives [CHI] around the positioning of our health system and our markets,” says Juan Serrano, Senior Vice President of Payer Strategy and Operations at CHI, which owns about 90 hospitals around the country. CHI has about 15 hospitals participating in the Shared Savings Program at the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS).

The Shared Savings Program is an ACO option, a companion to the smaller, more radical Pioneer ACO program. Both programs promote what has come to be called “value purchasing,” in which Medicare and Medicaid, and an increasing number of commercial insurers, pay hospitals for integrated clinical care. There were 32 Pioneer ACOs and about 350 hospitals in the Shared Savings Program. Only two organizations have terminated Medicare ACOs, while seven have shifted from the Pioneer program (in which they must assume “downside” risk for losses) to the more financially forgiving Shared Savings Program, which permits one-sided (bonus-only) financial arrangements.

About 100 hospitals participate in the Medicare bundled payments pilot program, which is another product of the ACA. Medicare has also begun testing PCMHs, although the CMS had been experimenting with the concept prior to ACA passage. The demonstration program kicked off in 2011. It pays a monthly care management fee for beneficiaries receiving primary care from a designated medical group. The care management fee is intended to cover care coordination, improved access, patient education, and other services to support chronically ill patients. The program is operating in select states, and like other ACA programs it has sent ripples into the commercial marketplace, where companies such as CareFirst have inaugurated their own programs. The idea is to keep patients from being referred to specialists at hospitals, where care is more expensive.

While “clinical integration” and “value purchasing” have become watchwords in the hospital industry thanks to the ACA, the law has also prompted some hospitals to look outward, beyond their normal operational borders, particularly in terms of capitalizing on the eight million entrants into the federal and state health insurance marketplaces. As a result, hospitals are slowly moving into the health insurance business. CHI recently purchased QualChoice, a health insurance company based in Arkansas. Serrano says the purchase may become a platform for CHI to offer plans in the state and federal marketplaces. “The purchase of QualChoice allows us to accelerate our value delivery to the market; it gives us a distribution channel for our products and new models of care: for example, new disease management programs and narrow networks,” he states.

Some hospitals participate in the ACO and bundled payment programs simultaneously. “We are working with both health systems that have bundles with CMS, and with health systems that have bundles with CMS while at the same time participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program,” explains Morgan Bridges-Guthrie, a spokeswoman for Premier, Inc., which provides buying, data, and other services to hospitals. “So, ACOs instituting bundled payment programs is a natural fit.”
Hospital executives will need to be even more nimble next year as ACA programs continue to morph. The QHPs that sell individual policies in federal and state insurance marketplaces face new requirements in 2015, some of which affect hospitals. In addition, the CMS will rework its ACO program, both the narrow Pioneer and broader Shared Savings models.

Debate Over ACA Shifts to New Issues


The debate about the ACA seems to have morphed since spring 2014. Then, there were questions about whether the eight million people the Obama administration had forecast would enroll in federal and state marketplaces would actually show up. When they did, the question became whether all of the new entrants would pay their premiums and actually get coverage. Most did. Competing studies by national organizations have offered differing results about what percentage of that eight million (or whatever the final 2014 number turns out to be) were previously uninsured. That was the whole point of the ACA, to insure the uninsured. But even the fire over that question has died down.

Interestingly, no one seems too concerned that 90% of marketplace participants are receiving federal subsidies for their premiums and that those premiums average 75%. Maybe those federal costs are less than what taxpayers were paying for the portion of the eight million who were previously costing hospitals money in the form of uncompensated care. However, a report from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) inspector general in July said that at the end of 2013, the federal marketplace (13 states have their own marketplaces) had 2.9 million inconsistencies relating to an applicant’s income status and Social Security number.2

It is probably because of the federal subsidies that QHPs, having offered reasonable premiums for the four plan levels (bronze, silver, gold, and platinum) in 2014 while they got a feel for the costs of covering essential health benefits, now feel free to jack up 2015 premiums. Companies began filing 2015 premiums with HHS this summer; they take effect on January 1, 2015. The Wall Street Journal in June looked at potential 2015 premium increases in 10 states and found that the largest carriers were proposing increases of 8% to 22.8%.3 These proposed increases may not stick: Both the states and HHS have the power to negotiate lower rates. But it seems clear that a certain percentage of marketplace participants will switch to lower-priced plans using more constricted networks. This will put even more pressure on hospitals.

A New World for Hospitals


That uncertainty aside, some trends now seem immutable. In the name of clinical integration, some of the biggest hospital companies, such as CHI and Ascension Health, have been adding hospitals and considering buying insurance companies. The not-for-profit Denver-based CHI system, which provides health care services in 18 states, assumed control of several hospitals and a health system and purchased a majority interest in a physician-owned health plan last year.

In the reverse scenario, health insurers are buying hospitals. Highmark Inc., one of the biggest Blue Cross/Blue Shield plans in the country, in 2013 bought the West Penn Allegheny health system, which boasts eight hospitals in western Pennsylvania. Highmark offers marketplace and nonmarketplace policies in Pennsylvania, Delaware, and West Virginia, and is the only marketplace carrier in the third state. Spokesman Aaron Billger says Highmark’s acquisition of the West Penn hospitals was not done with marketplace leverage in mind. Rather, the hospitals provide Highmark with a platform to create an integrated delivery network—called the Allegheny Health Network—that serves as an ACO/PCMH-type destination for the 218,000 policyholders (marketplace and nonmarketplace) in western Pennsylvania.

Highmark’s ACO program is not a part of either Medicare model, so it illustrates how the commercial insurance marketplace is picking up the ACA ball and running with it. There were 147,000 Highmark-insured individuals whose physician practices were members of the Highmark Accountable Care Alliance between October 2012 and October 2013. In clinical quality performance measures, those practices showed a 26% improvement in quality scores and a reduction in medical costs, with total six-months savings of about $11.5 million.

ACA Impact on Hospital Financial Health Unclear


This scurrying by hospitals to capitalize on the new ACA programs has had an uneven financial impact on them. A June Modern Healthcare analysis of earnings reports for about 200 hospitals and health systems, both not-for-profit and investor-owned, found that hospital margins narrowed significantly last year despite an improving economy.4 The magazine wrote: “Despite a buoyant stock market streak by some publicly traded chains, health care providers as a group continue to operate with slim and shrinking margins. Overall, a smaller percentage of health care providers saw positive operating margins last year compared with the previous two years.”

The Modern Healthcare analysis found that the average operating margin in 2013 was 3.1%, down from 3.6% in 2012 based on data available for 179 health systems, which included acute-care, post-acute-care, rehabilitation, and specialty hospital groups and some stand-alone hospitals. A total of 61.3% of organizations in the Modern Healthcare analysis saw their operating margins deteriorate over the previous year.

Probably the best news for many hospital systems is the influx of Medicaid patients, via the ACA Medicaid expansion. For example, LifePoint Hospitals reported a 14% increase in net income in the first quarter of 2014. That is based on just seven of LifePoint’s 20 states expanding Medicaid, although 35% of its self-pay volume was generated in those states in 2013. About 22% of its self-pay patients during the first quarter had enrolled in Medicaid, and 3% had enrolled in an exchange plan—on the high end of previous expectations. Diane Huggins, Vice President of Communications at LifePoint, says not all of the gain in net income came from treating new Medicaid recipients. “Clearly, there were a confluence of factors that impacted our Q1 2014 results compared to the same quarter of the prior year in addition to Medicaid expansion,” she states.

There has been little analysis of how ACOs have specifically affected hospitals, which are just one member of an ACO team that depends heavily on physician practices as, for want of a better term, quarterbacks. However, hospitals are the key team member because they drive shared savings via better quality care that results in fewer hospital readmissions. The only financial results issued so far by the CMS were in July 2013 for the 32 Pioneer ACOs.5 Thirteen of the 32 produced shared savings with CMS, generating a gross savings of $87.6 million in 2012 and saving nearly $33 million for the Medicare Trust Funds. Overall, Pioneer ACOs performed better than published rates in fee-for-service Medicare for all 15 clinical quality measures for which comparable data are available. Medicare has not published any comparable results for the Pioneer programs in 2013 or for the much larger Shared Savings ACO program.

The Pioneer results are partly encouraging and partly not. Some hospitals earned substantial profits. Others turned themselves inside out to no avail. “We’ve spent a lot of money and haven’t shown much progress on the revenue side,” said Richard Barasch, Chairman and CEO of Universal American Corp., at an investor conference in June. “There’s a limit to our public service feelings about this. We are going to scale it back to some degree.” Universal has 34 ACOs and is one of the biggest players in the ACO world. Most of its ACOs participate in the Shared Savings Program.
The CMS has not published financial results or health outcomes from its Bundled Payments for Care Improvement (BPCI) initiative. Its four bundled payment models allow providers to bid as a team to provide a continuum of services for a predetermined target amount to include physician payment, nursing-home care, surgery, and other care, most commonly for treatments such as heart, colon, and spinal surgery, as well as hip and knee replacements.

The Premier, Inc., Bundled Payment Collaborative includes 17 health care provider systems with more than 45 hospitals across the nation. Members of the collaborative are committed to sharing best practices and data with each other. They focus on improving care and reducing costs across multiple episodes of care, including hip and knee joint replacements, lumbar spinal fusions, coronary artery bypass grafts, heart valve replacements, congestive heart failure, percutaneous coronary interventions, and colon resections.

“We haven’t charted the financial impact yet,” Premier’s Bridges-Guthrie explains when asked how the Premier bundled payments participants have fared so far. “Our Bundled Payment Collaborative members went live beginning of January, so it is a bit too early to tell real results versus estimates. At this time, we only have partial results. Unfortunately, it’s just too early to know performance.”

Changes in ACA Programs on the Way


Even as hospitals try to gain traction in current ACA programs, some of those programs will be changing. The CMS was supposed to publish a proposed rule in May 2014 detailing changes it wants to make in the Shared Savings Program. That proposal had not been issued as of mid-July. But just the prospect of the proposed rule forced the American Hospital Association (AHA) to launch a pre-emptive strike in the form of a long letter to Patrick Conway, MD, Acting Director of the CMS Innovation Center. In that letter, Linda E. Fishman, Senior Vice President of Public Policy Analysis and Development, said the AHA continues to have “significant concerns about the design of the current Pioneer ACO Model and the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP).”6

The two programs are similar in many regards, although the Pioneer program offers greater potential rewards to participants for greater savings. Both the Pioneer and Shared Savings ACOs enroll Medicare recipients and accept “risk.” Payment is based on traditional fee-for-service (FFS) in the first two years, but Pioneer ACOs can transition to population-based payment after that if “results” warrant the transition. Population-based payment is per-beneficiary-per-month compensation intended to replace some or all of the ACO’s FFS payments. The CMS also requires that 50% of Pioneer revenue come from participating in “risk” contracts with other payers by the end of the second performance period.

The AHA wants a laundry list of changes, as does the American Medical Group Association (AMGA), whose members—larger physician group practices—typically drive the ACOs, which almost always include hospitals. Fishman’s letter to Dr. Conway complained that the Pioneer ACO and MSSP programs place too much risk and burden on providers with too little opportunity for reward in the form of shared savings. She made a number of suggestions for changes to improve the programs, all of them technical and all of them practically requiring a doctorate in statistics to understand for anyone not steeped in ACO terminology and methodology. Suffice it to say that the AMGA has some of the same concerns about requirements, for example, attached to the minimum savings rate (MSR) for ACOs. The MSR accounts for the potential random variation in savings that may not be linked to improvements in quality and efficiency.

The QHPs already have new rules to follow in 2015, those established by the so-called “2015 Letter to Issuers in the Federally-facilitated Marketplaces.” 7 One change drills down to hospitals and opens up new liability: the first-time imposition of civil money penalties (CMPs) for any breach of federal rules by any party, including consumer assistance entities such as hospitals. When the draft letter was published, the AHA argued that applying CMPs to individual and institutional assisters, especially voluntary certified application counselors (CACs), would have a chilling effect on some hospitals continuing to serve in that role. It wanted the CMS to reconsider the application of CMPs to voluntary assisters, and to limit CMPs in general to egregious violations of selected requirements in which there are no other enforcement mechanisms already in place. Otherwise, hospitals could be penalized for simple human errors of judgment or facts that are unintentional, nonmalicious, and consistent with the purpose of the ACA—to provide coverage to the uninsured.

The CMS seems to have ignored the AHA’s pleas, so hospitals may have to tiptoe around efforts to sign up federal marketplace customers. Some hospitals may trip over sign-ups or other impediments suddenly strewn in their path thanks to the ACA. But some hospitals will prosper, too, as they figure out how to make this revolution work for them.

Author bio: 
Mr. Barlas, a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C., covers topics inside the Beltway.

References

  1. CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield. 2013;PCMH program performance report. July 102014;Available at: https://member.carefirst.com/carefirst-resources/pdf/pcmh-program-performance-report-2013.pdf. Accessed July 14, 2014
  2. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General Marketplaces faced early challenges resolving inconsistencies with applicant data. June 2014;Available at: http://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-01-14-00180.pdf. Accessed July 14, 2014
  3. Radnofsky L. Premiums rise at big insurers, fall at small rivals under health law. Wall Street Journal June 182014;Available at: http://online.wsj.com/articles/premiums-rise-at-big-insurers-fall-at-small-rivals-under-health-law-1403135040. Accessed July 14, 2014
  4. Kutscher B. Fewer hospitals have positive margins as they face financial squeeze. Modern Healthcare June 232014;Available at: http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20140621/MAGAZINE/306219968/1135. Accessed July 14, 2014
  5. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Pioneer accountable care organizations succeed in improving care, lowering costs. [Press release]. July 162013;Available at: http://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Press-Releases/2013-Press-Releases-Items/2013-07-16.html. Accessed July 14, 2014
  6. American Hospital Association Letter from Linda E Fishman, Senior Vice President, Public Policy Analysis and Development, to Patrick Conway, MD, Acting Director, Innovation Center, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. April 172014;Available at: http://www.aha.org/advocacy-issues/letter/2014/140417-cl-aco.pdf. Accessed July 14, 2014
  7. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. 2015 letter to issuers in the federally-facilitated marketplaces. March 142014;Available at: http://www.cms.gov/CCIIO/Resources/Regulations-and-Guidance/Downloads/2015-final-issuer-letter-3-14-2014.pdf. Accessed July 14, 2014