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Effective Date Revised Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator Requirements

Published on 

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

 | FAQ 

Q:

On February 15, 2018, CMS issued a final Decision Memo that included revised criteria for Medicare coverage of Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators. When should our hospital start following the new criteria such as the requirement for the shared decision-making visit and the end of the requirement for registry data collection and submission?

A:

There are differences in the expected compliance with a coverage decision memorandum and a National Coverage Determination (NCD).  CMS addresses this in the Medicare Program Integrity Manual, Chapter 13, section 13.1.1:

“CMS prepares a decision memorandum before preparing the national coverage decision. The decision memorandum is posted on the CMS Web site, that tells interested parties that CMS has concluded its analysis, describes the clinical position, which CMS intends to implement, and provides background on how CMS reached that stance. Coverage Decision Memos are not binding on contractors or ALJs. … The decision outlined in the Coverage Decision Memo will be implemented in a CMS-issued program instruction within 180 days of the end of the calendar quarter in which the memo was posted on the Web site.”

Providers need to bear in mind however, that the final NCD backdates the effective date of the changes to the date of the decision memo. The issue lies with the implementation date which is communicated in a CMS Transmittal once the NCD changes are finalized. Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) will not start enforcing the new rules until the implementation date, but then they will enforce rules for dates of service on and after the date of the decision memo. This means once the final update to the NCD is made and manualized, the effective date will revert to the date of the decision memo but following the new rules will be based on an implementation date.  Claims submitted on and after the implementation date, will follow the new guidelines for dates of service on and after February 15, 2018 (decision memo date).

Best practice is for providers to implement new requirements, such as the shared decision-making visit, as quickly as possible. Until an implementation date is communicated, providers should not stop complying with the requirements of the current NCD if they are continuing to submit claims for the service.  For this NCD, continue to report to a registry and submit applicable claims with the Q0 modifier indicating registry submission and abide by the current waiting periods until the revised NCD is released.  Another option for providers is to follow the new criteria in the Decision Memo and hold claims until after the implementation date of the revised NCD.

For more information about the Decision Memo, see the prior Wednesday@One ICD Decision Memo article.

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This material was compiled to share information.  MMP, Inc. is not offering legal advice. Every reasonable effort has been taken to ensure the information is accurate and useful.