Jun 27, 2014
By Nicole Hughes Waid, Partner
On June 25, 2014, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued the “Special Fraud Alert: Laboratory Payments to Referring Physicians.” Specifically, this Special Fraud Alert supplements prior guidance documents and advisory opinions and describes two specific trends OIG has identified involving transfers of value from laboratories to physicians that OIG believes present a substantial risk of fraud and abuse under the anti-kickback statute:
A. Blood-Specimen Collection, Processing, and Packaging Arrangements
OIG warns that it has become aware of arrangements under which clinical laboratories are providing remuneration to physicians to collect, process, and package patient specimens. The Special Fraud Alert addresses arrangements under which laboratories pay physicians, either directly or indirectly (such as through an arrangement with a marketing or other agent) to collect, process, and package patients’ blood specimens (Specimen Processing Arrangements). Specimen Processing Arrangements typically involve payments from laboratories to physicians for certain specified duties, which may include collecting blood specimens, centrifuging the specimens, maintaining the specimens at a particular temperature, and packaging the specimens so they are not damaged in transport.
Medicare allows the person who collects a specimen to bill Medicare for a nominal specimen collection fee in certain circumstances. The anti-kickback statute is implicated when a clinical laboratory pays a physician for services, and the anti-kickback statute is violated when the intent of the payment is to induce or reward referrals of Federal healthcare program business. OIG warns that the following characteristics of a Specimen Processing Arrangement, among others, may be evidence of an illegal kickback:
B. Registry Payments
OIG also warns that it has become aware of arrangements under which clinical laboratories are establishing, coordinating, or maintaining databases, either directly or through an agent, purportedly to collect data on the demographics, presentation, diagnosis, treatment, outcomes, or other attributes patients have undergone, or who may undergo, certain tests performed by the offering laboratories. These specialized and expensive tests are known as “Registry Arrangements” and are paid for by Federal healthcare programs.
Payments from a laboratory to a physician to compensate the physician for services-related data collection and reporting may be reasonable in certain limited circumstances; however, OIG warns that these payments violate the anti-kickback statute when the intent of the payment is to induce or reward referrals of Federal healthcare program business. OIG warns that the following characteristics of a Registry Arrangement, among others, may be evidence of an illegal kickback:
The tests associated with the Registry Arrangement are presented on the offering laboratory’s requisition in a manner that makes it more difficult for the ordering physician to make an independent medical necessity decision with regard to each test for which the laboratory will bill (e.g., disease-related panels).