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Effective Date: 04/01/2014 |
Title: Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
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Revision Date: 03/01/2021
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Document: BI439:00
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CPT Code(s): 64999, 90867-90869, 64999
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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.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive method of induction of
a focal current in the brain and transient modulation of the function of the
targeted cerebral cortex used to treat depression and other mental problems.
2.
TMS
requires pre-authorization, and is only covered for major disabling depression
not responsive to other forms of treatment.
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Medical Statement
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I.
Repetitive Transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)
requires pre-authorization and is considered medically necessary when all of the
following are met:
A.
Age ≥ 18 years
with a diagnosis of major depressive disorder without psychosis;
B.
Oversight of treatment is
provided by a licensed psychiatrist;
C.
Failure to respond to a
combination of multiple trials of medication and evidence based psychotherapy
treatment during the current episode of illness, with the Physician’s Health
Questionaire-9 (PHQ-9) score of > 15 throughout the current course of treatment
(or other standardized scale indicating moderately severe to severe depression);
D.
The major depressive
disorder diagnosis is not part of a presentation with multiple psychiatric
comorbidities that could masquerade as major depression symptoms;
E.
Failure of or intolerance
to psychopharmacologic agents, choose one:
1.
Failure of
psychopharmacologic agents, both of the following:
a.
Lack of clinically
significant response in the current depressive episode to four trials of agents
from at least two different agent classes;
b.
At least two of the
treatment trials were administered as an adequate course of mono- or poly-drug
therapy with antidepressants, involving standard therapeutic doses of at least 6
weeks duration;
2.
The patient is unable to
take anti-depressants due to one of the following:
a.
Drug interactions with
medically necessary medications;
b.
Inability to tolerate
psychopharmacologic agents, as evidenced by trials of four such agents with
distinct side effects in the current episode;
F.
Failure of an
evidence based psychotherapy such as a formal trial of cognitive behavioral
therapy and/or interpersonal therapy;
G.
Failure of an adequate
trial of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) unless its use is contraindicated or
physician documentation states why TMS is clinically preferable;
H.
The initial request can be reviewed for up to 20 TMS sessions.
II.
Additional
sessions of TMS also require prior authorization are considered medically
necessary when all of the following criteria are met:
A.
when there has been a positive treatment
response, evidenced by
a ≥25% reduction of depression symptom severity, as measured by the
Physician’s Health Questionaire-9 (PHQ-9) score (or other
standardized depression scale),
Up to 10 additional sessions may be authorized.
B.
For patients who demonstrated >50% reduction in baseline
severity scores who are approaching PHQ-9 scores of 9 or for those who have a
history of good response to TMS followed by relapse into depression over a 6
months period, authorization of up to 6 taper TMS sessions over a period 3 weeks
will be considered.
Clinical documentation of the above treatment
failures covering the previous 18 months of treatment must be submitted along
with the prior authorization request for TMS.
Limitations:
1.
Use of TMS is
not indicated in patients with:
-
Seizure disorder, or
-
A vagus nerve
stimulator, or
-
An
implanted medical device or metal in close proximity to the brain.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation is
considered experimental and investigational and is not covered for
indications listed below (Note: This is not an all-inclusive list):
·
Depressive disorder that
does not meet above criteria
·
Patients with
psychotic symptoms
·
Alzheimer`s disease
·
Amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis
·
Anxiety disorders
·
Auditory verbal
hallucinations
·
Autism
·
Blepharospasm
·
Bulimia nervosa
·
Chronic pain
·
Dystonia
·
Fibromyalgia
·
Levodopa-induced dyskinesia
·
Migraine
·
Neuropathic pain
·
Obsessive-compulsive
disorder
·
Panic disorder
·
Parkinson disease
·
Post-stroke dysphagia
·
Schizophrenia
·
Smell and taste dysfunction
(e.g., phantosmia and phantageusia)
·
Spasticity
·
Stroke treatment (e.g.,
motor impairment, post-stroke aphasia, and post-stroke hemiplegia)
·
Tourette syndrome
·
Tinnitus
·
Traumatic brain injury.
2.
Navigated transcranial
magnetic stimulation is considered experimental and investigational for motor
function mapping and/or treatment planning of neurological diseases/disorders
(e.g., epilepsy, and resection of brain tumors) because its value and
effectiveness has not been established.
1.
Cranial electrical
stimulation (also known as cerebral electrotherapy, craniofacial
electrostimulation, electric cerebral stimulation, electrosleep,
electrotherapeutic sleep, transcerebral electrotherapy, transcranial
electrotherapy, as well as the Liss Body Stimulator that is used to treat
alcoholism) is considered experimental and investigational because its value and
effectiveness has not been established. It is not covered for any indication,
including the following (not an all-inclusive list):
·
Alcoholism
·
Alzheimer`s disease
·
Autism
·
Chemical dependency
·
Chronic pain
·
Dementia
·
Depression
·
Headaches
·
Fibromyalgia
·
Mood and sleep disturbances
·
Neuropathic pain
·
Parkinson disease
·
Stroke treatment (e.g.,
motor impairment, post-stroke aphasia, and post-stroke hemiplegia)
·
Traumatic brain injury
·
Visual rehabilitation
Codes Used In This BI:
0310T
Motor function mapping using non-invasive TMS (Code term 01/01/2018 and
replaced by 64999)
90867
Therapeutic repetitive TMS treatment; initial
90868
Subsequent delivery and management
90869
Subsequent motor threshold re-determination
64999
Unlisted procedure, nervous system
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Limits
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1.
Use of TMS is
not indicated in patients with:
-
Seizure disorder,
or
-
A vagus nerve
stimulator, or
-
An
implanted medical device or metal in close proximity to the brain.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation is considered experimental and
investigational and is not covered for indications listed below. Note:
This is not an all-inclusive list.
·
Alzheimer`s
disease
·
Amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis
·
Anxiety
disorders
·
Auditory
verbal hallucinations
·
Autism
·
Blepharospasm
·
Bulimia
nervosa
·
Chronic
pain
·
Depressive
disorder that does not meet above criteria
·
Dystonia
·
Fibromyalgia
·
Levodopa-induced
dyskinesia
·
Migraine
·
Mood
disorders
·
Neuropathic
pain
·
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
·
Panic
disorder
·
Parkinson
disease
·
Patients with psychotic symptoms
·
Post-stroke
dysphagia
·
Schizophrenia
·
Smell and
taste dysfunction (e.g., phantosmia and phantageusia)
·
Spasticity
·
Stroke
treatment (e.g., motor impairment, post-stroke aphasia, and post-stroke
hemiplegia)
·
Tourette
syndrome
·
Tinnitus
·
Traumatic
brain injury
2.
Navigated
transcranial magnetic stimulation is considered experimental and investigational
for motor function mapping and/or treatment planning of neurological
diseases/disorders (e.g., epilepsy, and resection of brain tumors) because its
value and effectiveness has not been established.
3.
Cranial
electrical stimulation (also known as cerebral electrotherapy, craniofacial
electrostimulation, electric cerebral stimulation, electrosleep,
electrotherapeutic sleep, transcerebral electrotherapy, transcranial
electrotherapy, as well as the Liss Body Stimulator that is used to treat
alcoholism) is considered experimental and investigational because its value and
effectiveness has not been established. It is not covered for any indication,
including the following. Note: This is not an all-inclusive list.
·
Alcoholism
·
Alzheimer`s
disease
·
Autism
·
Chemical
dependency
·
Chronic
pain
·
Dementia
·
Depression
·
Headaches
·
Fibromyalgia
·
Mood and
sleep disturbances
·
Neuropathic
pain
·
Parkinson
disease
·
Stroke
treatment (e.g., motor impairment, post-stroke aphasia, and post-stroke
hemiplegia)
·
Traumatic
brain injury
·
Visual
rehabilitation
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Background
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Transcranial
magnetic stimulation has been investigated in the treatment of various
psychiatric disorders, especially depression. This procedure is usually carried
out in an outpatient setting. In contrast to electroconvulsive therapy, TMS does
not require anesthesia or analgesia. Furthermore, it does not affect memory and
usually does not cause seizures. Martin et al (2003) conducted a systematic
review of randomized controlled trials that compared rTMS with sham in patients
with depression. The authors concluded that current trials are of low quality
and provide insufficient evidence to support the use of rTMS in the treatment of
depression. This is in accordance with the observations of Fitzgerald and
colleagues (2002) who noted that TMS has a considerable role in neuropsychiatric
research. It appears to have considerable potential as a therapeutic tool in
depression, and perhaps a role in several other disorders, although widespread
application requires larger trials and establishment of sustained response, as
well as Gershon et al (2003) who stated that TMS shows promise as a novel
anti-depressant treatment. Systematic and large-scale studies are needed to
identify patient populations most likely to benefit and treatment parameters
most likely to produce success.
An Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality`s review (Gaynes et al, 2011) reported that
there is insufficient evidence to evaluate whether non-pharmacological
treatments are effective for TRD. The review summarized evidence of the
effectiveness of 4 non-pharmacological treatments: (i) ECT, (ii) rTMS, (iii)
VNS, and (iv) Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) or inter-personal
psychotherapy. With respect to maintaining remission (or preventing relapse),
there were no direct comparisons (evidence) involving ECT, rTMS, VNS, or CBT.
With regard to indirect evidence, there were 3 fair trials compared rTMS with a
sham procedure and found no significant differences, however, too few patients
were followed during the relapse prevention phases in 2 of the 3 studies
(20-week and 6-month follow-up) and patients in the 3rd study (3-month
follow-up) received a co-intervention providing insufficient evidence for a
conclusion. There were no eligible studies for ECT, VNS or psychotherapy. The
review concluded that that comparative clinical research on non-pharmacologic
interventions in a TRD population is early in its infancy, and many clinical
questions about efficacy and effectiveness remain unanswered. Interpretation of
the data is substantially hindered by varying definitions of TRD and the paucity
of relevant studies. The greatest volume of evidence is for ECT and rTMS.
However, even for the few comparisons of treatments that are supported by some
evidence, the strength of evidence is low for benefits, reflecting low
confidence that the evidence reflects the true effect and indicating that
further research is likely to change our confidence in these findings. This
finding of low strength is most notable in 2 cases: ECT and rTMS did not produce
different clinical outcomes in TRD, and ECT produced better outcomes than
pharmacotherapy. No trials directly compared the likelihood of maintaining
remission for non-pharmacologic interventions. The few trials addressing adverse
events, subpopulations, subtypes, and health-related outcomes provided low or
insufficient evidence of differences between non-pharmacologic interventions.
The most urgent next steps for research are to apply a consistent definition of
TRD, to conduct more head-to-head clinical trials comparing non-pharmacologic
interventions with themselves and with pharmacologic treatments, and to
delineate carefully the number of treatment failures following a treatment
attempt of adequate dose and duration in the current episode. There is also a
lack of scientific evidence in the use of TMS as a diagnostic tool for
psychiatric disorders, and treatment for chronic pain. Pridmore et al (2005)
stated that in studies of TMS for the treatment of chronic pain, there is some
evidence that temporary relief can be achieved in a proportion of sufferers.
Work to this point is encouraging, but systematic assessment of stimulation
parameters is necessary if TMS is to attain a role in the treatment of chronic
pain. Furthermore, Canavero and Bonicalzi (2005) noted that TMS has no role in
the management of patients with central pain, a major chronic pain syndrome.
In 2014, Dunner et al reported 1 year follow-up with maintenance
therapy from a large multicenter observational study (42 sites) of rTMS for
patients with TRD (Dunner, 2014). A total of 257 patients agreed to participate
in the follow-up study out of 307 who were initially treated with rTMS. Of
these, 205 completed the 12-month follow-up, and 120 patients had met the
Inventory of Depressive Symptoms-Self Report (IDS-SR) response or remission
criteria at the end of treatment. Ninety-three of the 257 patients (36.2%) who
enrolled in the follow-up study received additional rTMS (mean of 16.2
sessions). Seventy-five of the 120 patients (62.5%) who met response or
remission criteria at the end of the initial treatment phase (including a 2
month taper phase) continued to meet response criteria through follow-up.
The literature on repetitive TMS (rTMS) for treatment-resistant
depression (TRD) includes numerous double-blind, randomized sham-controlled
short-term trials. Results of these trials show mean improvements of uncertain
clinical significance across groups as a whole. The percentage of subjects who
show a clinically significant response is reported at approximately 2 to 3 times
that of sham controls, with approximately 15% to 25% of patients meeting the
definition of clinical response. Based on the short-term benefit observed in
randomized controlled trials, clinical input, and the lack of alternative
treatments aside from electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in patients with treatment
resistant depression, rTMS meets primary coverage criteria in patients with TRD
who meet specific criteria.
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Reference
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Gaynes BN, Lux L, Lloyd S, et al.
Nonpharmacological interventions for treatment-resistant depression in
adults. Comparative effectiveness review No. 33. (Prepared by RTI
International-University of North Carolina (RTI-UNC) Evidence based Practice
Center under Contract No. 290-02-0016I). AHRQ Publication No. 11-EHC056-EF.
Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. September 2011.
Available at:
http://www.effectivehealthcare.ahrq.gov/ehc/products/76/787/Treatment-Resistant-Depression_executivesummary.pdf
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Henkin RI, Potolicchio SJ Jr, Levy LM.
Improvement in smell and taste dysfunction after repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation. Am J Otolaryngol. 2011; 32(1):38-46.
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Meng Z, Liu S, Zheng Y, Phillips JS.
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for tinnitus. Cochrane Database
Syst Rev. 2011; (10):CD007946.
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Guo J, Zhou M, Yang M, et al. Repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis or motor neuron disease. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011;
(9):CD008554.
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Freitas C, Mondragón-Llorca H, Pascual-Leone
A. Noninvasive brain stimulation in Alzheimer`s disease: Systematic review
and perspectives for the future. Exp Gerontol. 2011; 46(8):611-627.
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Avenanti A, Coccia M, Ladavas E, et al.
Low-frequency rTMS promotes use-dependent motor plasticity in chronic
stroke: A randomized trial. Neurology. 2012; 78(4):256-264.
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Corti M, Patten C, Triggs W. Repetitive
transcranial magnetic stimulation of motor cortex after stroke: A focused
review. Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2012; 91(3):254-270.
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Steeves T, McKinlay BD, Gorman D, et al.
Canadian guidelines for the evidence-based treatment of tic disorders:
Behavioural therapy, deep brain stimulation, and transcranial magnetic
stimulation. Can J Psychiatry. 2012; 57(3):144-151.
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Kupfer DJ, Frank E, Phillips ML. Major
depressive disorder: New clinical, neurobiological, and treatment
perspectives. Lancet. 2012; 379(9820):1045-1055.
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Leung A, Donohue M, Xu R, et al. rTMS for
suppressing neuropathic pain: A meta-analysis. J Pain. 2009;
10(12):1205-1216.
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Schneider SA, Pleger B, Draganski B, et al.
Modulatory effects of 5Hz rTMS over the primary somatosensory cortex in
focal dystonia -- an fMRI-TMS study. Mov Disord. 2010; 25(1):76-83.
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Allan CL, Herrmann LL, Ebmeier KP.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation in the management of mood disorders.
Neuropsychobiology 2011; 64(3):163-169.
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Szaflarski JP, Vannest J, Wu SW, et al.
Excitatory repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation induces improvements
in chronic post-stroke aphasia. Med Sci Monit. 2011; 17(3):CR132-CR139.
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Short EB, Borckardt JJ, Anderson BS, et al.
Ten sessions of adjunctive left prefrontal rTMS significantly reduces
fibromyalgia pain: A randomized, controlled pilot study. Pain. 2011;
152(11):2477-2484.
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Peng Z, Chen XQ, Gong SS. Effectiveness of
repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for chronic tinnitus: A
systematic review. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2012; 147(5):817-825.
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Plewnia C, Vonthein R, Wasserka B, et al.
Treatment of chronic tinnitus with theta burst stimulation: A randomized
controlled trial. Neurology. 2012; 78(21):1628-1634.
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Triggs WJ, Hajioff D. Transcranial magnetic
stimulation for tinnitus: No better than sham treatment? Neurology. 2012;
78(21):1624-1625.
Addendum:
1.
Effective 05/01/2017: Added verbiage for diagnosis of severe major depressive disorder
(single or recurrent) to be documented by standardized rating scales.
2.
Effective 01/01/2018:
Request for TMS requires failure of at least three different drug regimens from
two different drug classes. Also, prior authorization request will require
submission of clinical documentation of drug treatment failures covering the
previous 18 months of treatment.
3.
Effective 3/1/2021:
TMS requires failure or intolerance to adequate pharmacotherapy, psychotherapy
and documentation by ordering physician for reasons for ECT to not be clinically
appropriate for the member.
Updated to show 0310T termed 01/01/2018 and
replaced by code 64999.
EOC Statement:
See
investigational section.
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Application to Products
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This policy applies to all health plans 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) for those plans insured by QualChoice. In the event of a discrepancy between this policy and a self-insured customer’s SPD or the specific QualChoice EOC, the SPD or EOC, 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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