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Effective Date: 02/04/2009 |
Title: Home Anticoagulation Monitors
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Revision Date: 03/01/2017
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Document: BI108:00
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CPT Code(s): G0248-G0250
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Public Statement
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Effective Date:
a)
This policy
will apply to all services performed on or after the above revision date which
will become the new effective date.
b)
For all
services referred to in this policy that were performed before the revision
date, contact customer service for the rules that would apply.
1)
Home
INR/Prothrombin time monitors and all supplies are covered under the DME
benefit.
2)
This
benefit is only available to patients who are expected to require life-long INR
monitoring because of long-term/permanent use of Warfarin.
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Medical Statement
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1)
ALL of the following requirements must be met:
a)
The monitor and the home testing must be prescribed by a treating
network physician, and received from a network DME provider; and
b)
The patient must have a face-to-face educational program on
anticoagulation management and must have demonstrated the correct use of the
device prior to home use; and
c)
The patient must have been taking warfarin therapy and been stable
for at least three months prior to using the home testing device; and
d)
The patient’s medical condition must not require testing more than
once a week; and
e)
The patient
must have a medical condition that is expected to require lifelong monitoring
with diagnosis code Z79.01 (Long-term [current] use of anticoagulants). A
patient expected to be on warfarin for a defined time (for example, after a
single episode of DVT due to specific limited risk factors) is not eligible for
coverage.
2)
While home
INR testing using devices such as CoaguChek has been shown to be as accurate as
that provided in a laboratory, it has not been shown to produce better clinical
outcomes or decreased complications as opposed to monitoring of INR in a
coagulation clinic.
Codes
Used In This BI:
G0248 |
Demonstrate use home INR mon |
G0249 |
Provide INR test mater/equip |
G0250 |
MD
INR test revie inter mgmt. |
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Limits
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1)
Demonstration of use of home INR monitoring is limited to once per lifetime.
2)
Billing for
supplies and equipment, and for review of results, is limited to once per 28
days.
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Background
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Prothrombin time home testing systems are portable, battery-operated instruments
for the quantitative determination of prothrombin time from finger-stick whole
blood. These products are designed to aid in the management of high-risk
patients taking oral anticoagulants. They require considerable patient training
and compliance to be useful. Self-testing and/or self-management by the patient
using home international normalization ratio (INR) monitors represent another
model of care with the potential for improved outcomes as well as greater
convenience. Self-testing may provide a convenient opportunity for increased
frequency of testing when deemed necessary. The use of the same instrument may
increase the degree of consistency in instrumentation, and self-testing provides
the potential for greater knowledge and awareness of therapy which may lead to
improved compliance. There is, however, insufficient evidence comparing the
effectiveness of patient self-testing and self-management using a home INR
monitor to care provided by an anticoagulation management service. Ansell, et
al. (2001) explained: "Although a growing number of studies indicate the
superiority of patient PST [patient self-testing] or PSM [patient
self-management of dose adjustments] over UC [usual care, i.e., patients managed
by their usual physicians], there is little evidence comparing them to care
provided by an AMS [anticoagulation management service (i.e., anticoagulation
clinic)]. PST and PSM require special patient training to implement, and therapy
should be managed by a knowledgeable provider. A definitive recommendation
cannot yet be made as to the overall value of PST or PSM."
In a
randomized controlled trial, Gardiner and colleagues (2005) ascertained if
patients can achieve accurate INR values through patient self-testing (PST) by
means of the CoaguChek S (Roche Diagnostics, Lewes, UK). The main outcome
measurements were comparability of INR values obtained by PST and the hospital
laboratory, patient acceptability as assessed by a questionnaire and
anticoagulant control. A total of 84 subjects (53 men, 31 women; median age of
59 years), receiving long-term oral anticoagulation (warfarin), were recruited.
Subjects were randomized to weekly self-testing or continuing 4-weekly hospital
laboratory monitoring of INR. Comparison of INRs (n = 234) showed no significant
differences between the CoaguChek (median INR 3.02) and laboratory testing
(median INR 3.07). There was excellent correlation between the two methods (r =
0.95), with 85% of CoaguChek results within 0.5 INR units of the laboratory
method. On four occasions, differences of greater than 1 unit INR were obtained,
but in each case the patient`s anticoagulation was unstable (INR greater than
4.5 by both methods) and the differences in INR would not have altered patient
management. The results showed that 87% of patients found self-testing
straightforward, 87% were confident in the result they obtained and 77%
preferred self-testing. These investigators concluded that PST is a reliable
alternative to hospital clinic attendance and is acceptable to the majority of
suitably trained patients.
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Reference
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Addendum:
1.
Effective 03/01/2017:
Added ICD10 diagnosis code Z79.01, Long-term (current) use of anticoagulants to
BI as a requirement for coverage.
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Application to Products
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This policy applies to all health plans and products administered by QualChoice, both those insured by QualChoice and those that are self-funded by the sponsoring employer, unless there is indication in this policy otherwise or a stated exclusion in your medical plan booklet. Consult the individual plan sponsor Summary Plan Description (SPD) for self-insured plans or the specific Evidence of Coverage (EOC) or Certificate of Coverage (COC) for those plans or products insured by QualChoice. In the event of a discrepancy between this policy and a self-insured customer’s SPD or the specific QualChoice EOC or COC, the SPD, EOC, or COC, as applicable, will prevail. State and federal mandates will be followed as they apply.
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Changes: QualChoice reserves the right to alter, amend, change or supplement benefit interpretations as needed.
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