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Medicare Expands Coverage for Artificial Heart Devices

by Barbara Kram, Editor | May 06, 2008
Artificial hearts are used
in patients with severe
heart failure who are
extremely sick and at
imminent risk of death.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued a final National Coverage Determination (NCD) expanding Medicare coverage of artificial hearts when they are implanted as part of a study that is approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and that meets CMS' Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) clinical research criteria.

"Our decision revises a long-standing non-coverage policy and allows beneficiary access to this advanced technology," said CMS Acting Administrator Kerry Weems. "Our decision also encourages the completion of FDA post-approval studies."

Artificial hearts are used in patients with severe heart failure who are extremely sick and at imminent risk of death. Heart failure affects more than 5 million patients in the United States. Over 500,000 new cases are diagnosed annually, and more than 50,000 heart failure patients die from the disease every year.
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Artificial hearts can be used so that a patient will live until a donor heart becomes available for transplant or, for patients who cannot receive transplants, to extend their lives. Since the device requires that a portion of the patient's heart be removed, an artificial heart patient must be supported by the device through the end of life or until heart transplantation.

The use of artificial heart technology has not been available to Medicare beneficiaries due to a 1986 non-coverage policy. Since the 1986 policy, two artificial heart device manufacturers have conducted clinical trials studying the safety and health outcomes of using their devices in these very sick patients. CMS believes there is now sufficient scientific evidence on the use of artificial hearts to allow coverage of these devices for beneficiaries in the carefully controlled clinical environment of an FDA-approved study.

This controlled clinical environment is one of the protections afforded beneficiaries under the Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) framework. CED allows CMS to determine that a technology can be covered when it is provided within a research setting where there are added safety, patient protections, monitoring, and clinical expertise available to the beneficiary.

Ultimately, this additional data will develop into new clinical evidence that can assists in the Medicare coverage process. An even more important outcome of this CED framework, however, is the production of evidence that will influence clinical practice and help Medicare beneficiaries and providers make the most appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic decisions.