Palivizumab
(Synagis™) is considered medically necessary for use in protection against lower
respiratory tract infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), under the
following conditions:
1.
Infants 28
weeks 6 days or less gestational age (GA) who are younger than 12 months at the
start of the RSV season. For infants born during the RSV season, fewer than
five (5) monthly doses will be needed.
2.
Pre-term
infants who develop chronic lung disease (CLD) of prematurity defined as
gestational age < 32 weeks, 0 days and a requirement for >21% oxygen for at
least the first 28 days after birth, OR
3.
Children 12
months of age or younger with hemodynamically significant congenital heart
disease (CHD) are most likely to benefit from Palivizumab prophylaxis. Those
most likely to benefit include infants with acyanoticheart disease who are
receiving medication to control congestive heart failure and will require
cardiac surgical procedures and infants with moderate to severe pulmonary
hypertension. OR
4.
Infants, in
the first year of life, with neuromuscular disease or congenital anomaly that
impairs the ability to clear secretions from the upper airway because of
ineffective cough. OR
5.
Children
younger than 24 months of age who are profoundly immunocompromised during the
RSV season. This may include children receiving chemotherapy or who are
immunocompromised because of other conditions (e.g. solid organ or hematopoietic
stem cell transplantation).
6.
Palivizumab
prophylaxis is only approved in the second year of life in children who required
at least 28 days of supplemental oxygen after birth and who continue to require
medical intervention (supplemental oxygen, chronic corticosteroid, or diuretic
therapy).
It is
considered medically necessary to initiate prophylaxis against RSV just before
onset of the RSV season, and to terminate prophylaxis at the end of the RSV
season. Administration of RSV prophylaxis beyond the RSV season is considered
medically necessary only if the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
or a local health department reporting to and confirmed by the CDC indicates an
outbreak of RSV in the member`s geographic area that persists beyond the RSV
season.
Note:
To determine if there is an RSV outbreak in the member`s geographic area, please
refer to CDC surveillance summaries of weekly RSV laboratory test result data
for each region of the United States, posted at the following website:
http://www.cdc.gov/surveillance/nrevss/rsv/default.html
Surveillance summaries for RSV are also published periodically in the
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report at
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/ .
Codes Used In This BI:
90378 –
Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Monoclonal Antibody, Recombinant, for
Intramuscular use, 50mg, each.