Due to existing payment structures and practice patterns for colonoscopy, reducing endoscopist reimbursement may diminish access to and quality of colorectal cancer screening.
Colonoscopy reimbursements highlight some of the challenges in balancing the goals of maximizing public health while carefully allocating limited resources. Colonoscopy is an important modality in screening for colorectal cancer, a common malignancy that is both preventable and treatable at an early stage. However, colonoscopy has highly variable costs within the United States, and these costs are purportedly excessive compared to those of other countries. Public concerns about the cost of colonoscopy have promulgated suggestions to reduce endoscopist reimbursement. However, relying on a strategy of just reducing professional fee payment to the performing endoscopist may be problematic. First, endoscopist reimbursement is only a small proportion of the overall cost for colonoscopy. Second, endoscopists in different practice settings may respond differentially to reimbursement reductions. Finally, the blunt tool of reducing endoscopist reimbursement for all colonoscopies may incur the unintended consequence of reducing access to high-quality colonoscopy for screening and surveillance of colorectal cancer. Alternative approaches are warranted to ensure appropriate utilization of colonoscopy for maximal societal benefit.
Am J Manag Care. 2014;20(9):e365-e368
• Colonoscopy is an essential and effective modality in screening for colorectal cancer.
• Endoscopist fees are a small component of the overall reimbursement for colonoscopy.
• Physicians in difference practice settings may respond to cuts by reducing access to and quality of colonoscopy.
• Alternative approaches are warranted to ensure appropriate utilization of colonoscopy for maximal societal benefit.
Public concerns about the cost of colonoscopy have promulgated suggestions to reduce endoscopist reimbursement. However, this approach may compromise screening and prevention of colorectal cancer.Despite recent reductions in the rate of increasing healthcare expenditures, public attention remains focused on the high cost and high volume of certain procedures.1 Healthcare costs burden both individuals and businesses, creating pressure for policy makers and providers alike to improve the delivery of healthcare and to provide more value for less cost. Colonoscopy reimbursements highlight some of the challenges in balancing the goals of maximizing public health while carefully allocating limited resources.
Colonoscopy is an important modality in screening for colorectal cancer, a common malignancy that is both preventable and treatable at an early stage.2,3 However, colonoscopy has highly variable costs within the United States, and these costs are purportedly excessive compared with those of other countries.4 Medicare paid physicians who perform colonoscopy professional fees of $239 million for 1.1 million screening and diagnostic colonoscopies in 2012.5 The 2014 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule reduced reimbursement for upper endoscopy as a misvalued service,6 and colonoscopy reimbursement will likely meet a similar fate in 2015 due to public scrutiny of Medicare reimbursements for colonoscopy.4,7
Table 1
Table
2
Careful review of all payment policies by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services is warranted. However, relying on a strategy of just reducing professional fee payment to the performing endoscopist may be problematic. First, endoscopist reimbursement is only a small proportion of the overall cost for colonoscopy (). Second, endoscopists in different practice settings ( ) may respond differentially to reductions in reimbursements. Finally, the blunt tool of reducing endoscopist reimbursement for all colonoscopies may incur the unintended consequence of reducing access to high-quality colonoscopy for screening and surveillance of colorectal cancer.
Medicare physician reimbursement for colonoscopy is based on the resource-based relative value scale (RBRVS), from which commercial payers also typically derive their physician fee schedules.8 However, the professional fee paid to the performing endoscopist accounts for as little as 20% of the total cost of colonoscopy (Table 1), when taking payments to the associated facility, and for anesthesia and pathology, into consideration as well. Additionally, the different facility reimbursements among office, ambulatory surgery center, and hospital outpatient settings also drive variability in overall cost. For example, the hospital outpatient facility fee is more than double the endoscopist fee, so direct reimbursement to the endoscopist represents a small portion of total cost to Medicare and other payers. Therefore, reducing the endoscopist professional fee by 50% would reduce the total cost of a colonoscopy by only 10% to 32% (Table 1), depending on the site of service and type of colonoscopy. Few (<5%) colonoscopies occur in the physician office setting (Table 2), the site of service with the largest impact of a reduced endoscopist fee. Thus, reducing only the endoscopist reimbursement would not directly create a large reduction in the overall cost of each colonoscopy.
By law, the RBRVS focuses on reimbursing accurately and consistently for the resources (eg, time and intensity of physician work; practice expenses of clinical staff, supplies, and equipment) needed to provide a service. The RBRVS cannot account for the value of that service, as can occur with value-based insurance design.9 Any reduction in endoscopist fees must occur by reductions in the time and intensity of endoscopist work and cannot be offset by any measured or perceived clinical benefit of the endoscopy.5
The clinical benefits of colonoscopy are well established. Routine colorectal cancer (CRC) screening is recommended by the US Preventive Services Task Force for all individuals aged 50 to 75 years, and can include screening colonoscopy, flexible sigmoidoscopy, or stool-based testing.10 While no prospective study demonstrates superiority of any one modality, colonoscopy is an essential component for any population-based screening program, whether performed as primary screening or for patients that screen positive in stool-based tests. Yet, only about 65% of eligible patients in the United States are current on colorectal cancer screening recommendations.11 In an effort to encourage colorectal cancer screening, prior laws and the Affordable Care Act (ACA) mandate that colonoscopy must be covered by Medicare and all private insurers, and there has been a concomitant decline in colorectal cancer mortality in the past decade.12 However, colonoscopy overuse coexists, with regional variations, repeat colonoscopy more frequently than guidelines recommend, and excessive use of anesthesia services.13,14 This creates a particularly vexing issue, with simultaneous underutilization and overutilization of colonoscopy in this country.15
The endoscopist practice setting (Table 2) may contribute to these different utilization patterns, as well as to differing responses to changes in physician reimbursement. As described, the site of service drives how much the endoscopist fee contributes to the overall reimbursement for the procedure (Table 1). In the physician office setting, the endoscopist fee is a large component, while in the outpatient hospital suite, it is a smaller component compared to facility and other fees. Additionally, the relationship of the endoscopist to the facility may play a critical role, as the endoscopist may receive significant revenue through ownership of the facility. In private practice settings, the physician may have ownership of the facility and other service lines, but in an employed or academic setting, they may only directly receive reimbursement for the physician fee.16 The variety of practice and organizational settings demonstrates the heterogeneity in colonoscopy reimbursement, and how a simple change in reimbursement could have varying degrees of response, based upon site of service and facility ownership.
Given the complexity of practice environments, it is plausible that a decrease in reimbursement could unleash unintended consequences upon both access and quality. Traditional economics suggests that when reimbursements decrease exogenously, utilization decreases with supply directed to other activities. Physicians who perform colonoscopy may redirect their activities to other services, or they may selectively reduce access to their services by patients who carry certain insurance types that reimburse less, such as Medicare or Medicaid. Reductions in Medicare reimbursement for bone scans to screen for osteoporosis resulted in decreased access in this population.17 In the case of screening colonoscopy, initial coverage by Medicare resulted in higher screening rates and earlier identification of colorectal cancer.18 Therefore, reducing endoscopist reimbursement could potentially reduce access to screening in practice settings where physician income is limited to the endoscopist fee.
On the other hand, physicians could respond to reduction in endoscopist reimbursement with an increase in utilization, to achieve an expected target income.19 Medicare reductions in the 1990s in surgeon reimbursement for coronary bypass surgery led to an increase in utilization of the procedure.20 In the case of colonoscopy, physicians may respond by performing more and/or shorter procedures in order to maintain their target income.15 Not all colonoscopies offer the same quality and outcomes, so physicians should spend more, not less, time finding and removing polyps.21,22 While it is hard to predict exactly how physicians would respond to the reduction of colonoscopy professional fees, potential responses such as de-emphasizing screening colonoscopy or performing shorter exams would reduce the societal benefit of CRC screening.
Rather than reduce endoscopist fees, alternative reimbursement policies could improve the efficiency of colonoscopy, while encouraging greater access.9,23 First, requiring certain training and competence measures could be a precondition for reimbursement eligibility. Second, the payment for colonoscopy could be tied to quality standards, such as guideline-based indications and frequencies for screening, and rates of adenoma detection or cecal intubation. Third, a bundled colonoscopy payment including endoscopist, facility, pathology, and anesthesia services would align providers (including potentially supervised nonphysician providers)24,25 and facilities to coordinate care efficiently, and could be easily done under existing law.
By implementing these 3 policies, all payers (including Medicare) would only pay for necessary procedures, performed by qualified endoscopists, focused on increasing access to evidence-based screening and surveillance. While each of these alternatives may have their own challenges, implementation of all 3 would be a large step in the right direction of aligning reimbursement to achieve societal benefit from colonoscopy and provide a model for other services.
In summary, colonoscopy provides enormous benefit to individuals and to society, as colorectal cancer remains one of the few effectively preventable and treatable malignancies. Presently, one third of United States adults older than 50 years did not receive colorectal cancer screening.11 The current cost-conscious environment fosters discussions of spending wisely on efficient and effective programs, and avoiding overutilization. However, the endoscopist fee is a small component of the overall cost of colonoscopy, and merely reducing endoscopist reimbursement for colonoscopy risks the possibilities of diminished access to and quality of screening and consequently increased colon cancer mortality. While the ACA may increase demand for screening colonoscopy through a larger insured population and removal of cost sharing, it remains unclear if such increased demand would mitigate reduction in endoscopist reimbursement. The case of colonoscopy also provides insight into the policy implications for other common procedures with multiple reimbursement components such as prostate biopsy, cataract surgery, and arthroscopy. Achieving the goals of reducing costs and overutilization requires a more nuanced understanding of the comprehensive sources of colonoscopy costs, and realignment of physician incentives towards access and quality.Acknowledgments
We would like to thank Miriam Laugesen for her review of an earlier version of this manuscript. Author Affiliations: Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (SJM, SM); Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics, University of Pennsylvania, PennMedicine Center for Health Care Innovation, Philadelphia (SJM).
Source of Funding: None reported.
Author Disclosures: Alternate Advisor for American Gastroenterological Association to the American Medical Association/Specialty Society Relative Value Unit Update Committee (SJM); Grand Rounds speaker, lecturer consultant, and expert witness on documentation, coding, billing, and reimbursement to hospitals, physicians, departments, practice groups, professional societies, insurers, and attorneys (defense “qui tam,” US Attorneys General, and the Office of the Inspector General); consultant to Apnicure, Aetna, Pfizer, Novartis, and Johnson & Johnson; expert witness in workers’ compensation and in medical negligence matters; stock held (by spouse) in Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson; director of American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP)Enterprises, a wholly owned for-profit subsidiary of ACCP (SM).
Authorship Information: Concept and design (SJM, SM); acquisition of data (SM); analysis and interpretation of data (SM); drafting of the manuscript (SJM, SM); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (SJM, SM); administrative, technical, or logistic support (SM); and supervision (SM).
Address correspondence to: Shivan J. Mehta, MD, MBA, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, 1133 Blockley Hall, 423 Guardian Dr, Philadelphia, PA 19104. E-mail: shivan.mehta@uphs.upenn.edu.1. Blumenthal D, Stremikis K, Cutler D. Health care spending—a giant slain or sleeping? N Engl J Med. 2013;369(26):2551-2557.
2. Mandel JS, Bond JH, Church TR, et al. Reducing mortality from colorectal cancer by screening for fecal occult blood. Minnesota Colon Cancer Control Study. N Engl J Med. 1993;328(19):1365-1371.
3. Nishihara R, Wu K, Lochhead P, et al. Long-term colorectal-cancer incidence and mortality after lower endoscopy. N Engl J Med. 2013;369(12):1095-1105.
4. Rosenthal E. The $2.7 trillion medical bill: colonoscopies explain why U.S. leads the world in health expenditures. New York Times. June 1, 2013.
5. RBRVS DataManager Online [computer program]. 2014 version. Chicago, IL: American Medical Association, 2014.
6. CY 2014 physician fee schedule final rule with comment period. CMS website.http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service-Payment/PhysicianFeeSched/index.html.
7. Whoriskey P, Keating D. How a secretive panel uses data that distort doctors’ pay. Washington Post. July 20, 2013.
8. American Medical Association; Smith SL, ed. Medicare RBRVS: The Physicians’ Guide 2014. Chicago, IL: American Medical Association; 2013.
9. Saini SD, Fendrick AM. Value-based insurance design: implications for gastroenterology. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2010;8(9):767-769.
10. US Preventive Services Task Force. Screening for colorectal cancer: US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation statement. Ann Intern Med. 2008;149(9):627-637.
11. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Vital signs: colorectal cancer screening, incidence, and mortality--United States, 2002-2010. MMWR. 2011;60(26):884-889.
12. Siegel R, Desantis C, Jemal A. Colorectal cancer statistics, 2014. CA Cancer J Clin. 2014;64(2):104-117.
13. Goodwin JS, Singh A, Reddy N, Riall TS, Kuo YF. Overuse of screening colonoscopy in the Medicare population. Arch Intern Med. 2011;171(15):1335-1343.
14. Liu H, Waxman DA, Main R, Mattke S. Utilization of anesthesia services during outpatient endoscopies and colonoscopies and associated spending in 2003-2009. JAMA. 2012;307(11):1178-1184.
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16. Allen JI, Nayak RS. Private practice gastroenterology: challenges and opportunities. Gastroenterology. 2012;143(1):5-9.
17. King AB, Fiorentino DM. Medicare payment cuts for osteoporosis testing reduced use despite tests’ benefit in reducing fractures. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011;30(12):2362-2370.
18. Gross CP, Andersen MS, Krumholz HM, McAvay GJ, Proctor D, Tinetti ME. Relation between Medicare screening reimbursement and stage at diagnosis for older patients with colon cancer. JAMA. 2006;296(23):2815-2822.
19. McGuire TG, Pauly MV. Physician response to fee changes with multiple payers. J Health Econ. 1991;10(4):385-410.
20. Yip WC. Physician response to Medicare fee reductions: changes in the volume of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgeries in the Medicare and private sectors. J Health Econ. 1998;17(6):675-699.
21. Barclay RL, Vicari JJ, Greenlaw RL. Effect of a time-dependent colonoscopic withdrawal protocol on adenoma detection during screening colonoscopy. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2008;6(10):1091-1098.
22. Corley DA, Jensen CD, Marks AR, et al. Adenoma detection rate and risk of colorectal cancer and death. N Engl J Med. 2014;370(14):1298-1306.
23. Allen JI. The value of colonoscopy. Gastroenterology. 2014;146(2):573-575.
24. Endoscopy by non-physicians: guidelines for clinical application from the ASGE. American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy. Gastrointest Endosc. 1999;49(6):826-828.
25. Day LW, Siao D, Inadomi JM, Somsouk M. Non-physician performance of lower and upper endoscopy: a systematic review and metaanalysis. Endoscopy. 2014;46(5):401-410.
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