While there are similarities to the Oncology Care Model, the new model has features “that could have a substantial impact on practices that choose to participate,” the authors write.
Oncology Care First (OCF), proposed as the successor to the Oncology Care Model (OCM), will be a major step toward shifting cancer care to bundled payments, according to leaders from an emerging network of community oncology practices.
Writing yesterday in JCO Oncology Practice, published by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, authors from OneOncology highlighted 3 key insights about the OCF, which could take effect by January 1, 2021. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) sent out a Request for Information on November 1, 2019, to replace the OCM, which involves 175 practices in a 5-year pilot to bring risk-sharing strategies to oncology care.
The OCM is built on a fee-for-service (FFS) framework, with practices receiving monthly payments to cover the cost of bringing services to patients that include better care coordination, 24/7 access to medical records, greater access to same-day appointments, and a focus on care planning and survivorship care. Most evaluations of the OCM say it has been good for patients, but that the pricing formulas lag behind the escalating costs of some innovative drugs.
While there are similarities to the OCM, the new model has features “that could have a substantial impact on practices that choose to participate,” the authors write.
The OneOncology authors note the following:
The potential challenges of gathering PROs were noted during a CMMI listening session, and the Community Oncology Alliance, an advocacy group, has called for this requirement to be phased in. Co-author Stephen M. Schleicher, MD, MBA, discussed with Evidence-Based Oncology™ the apparent positive changes to the drug reimbursement formula of the OCF, which calls for making pricing adjustments by cancer type.
However, “the bunding of E/M and drug administration services into one prospective payment could be a sign of what may come,” the authors write. They compare the proposal to what CMMI tried to do with the Radiation Oncology Model, which faced significant pushback.
Many leading OCM practices have just started the first year of 2-sided or “downside” risk, in which they face the prospect of owing Medicare money if they fail to reach predetermined financial benchmarks. With this in mind, the Community Oncology Alliance (COA), an advocacy group that has pressed for changes to the OCM, has called on CMMI to delay the start of the OCF until January 2022.
“We believe the proposed timeline is not feasible for both participating OCM practices and practices attempting to apply for OCF Model participation without prior participation in the OCM,” COA said in its response to the November call for feedback. “Some practices have only just accepted a shift to down-side risk in the OCM, and most have not yet received substantial data to help them understand their performance in two-sided risk. Forcing practices with OCM experience to immediately join two-sided risk in the OCF Model would expose practices to significant volatility due to a range of uncertainties in the proposed payment methodology.”
The authors in JCO Oncology Practice warn that the shift from OCM to the OCF is a greater transition than practices may realize. “These proposed changes not only represent a near-term progression toward the CMS’ goal to augment its value-based payment models for cancer, they also provide signals on how CMMI may view the future of value-based care in oncology.”
Reference
Young G, Schleicher SM, Dickson NR, Lyss AJ. Insights from the Oncology Care First proposal—where we’ve been and where we’re going in value-based care [published February 25, 2020]. JCO Oncol Pract. doi: 10.1200/JOP.20.00015.
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