Otsuka Precision Health Inc. and Click Therapeutics Inc. pondered the signature question of cognitive behavioral therapy when setting the market approach for their jointly developed prescription digital therapeutic for major depressive disorder, Rejoyn.
Device makers and physicians alike were less than enthused about several features of the draft Medicare inpatient rule for fiscal year 2025, but thanks in part to support from the device industry, the final rule provides a new code that encompasses both left atrial appendage closure and ablation, a change that may reduce spending without dinging sales of these devices.
There is no evidence to support the differences in prices that the U.K.’s national health service (NHS) is paying for transcatheter heart valves from Abbott Laboratories, Boston Scientific Corp., Edwards Lifesciences Corp. and Medtronic plc, according to the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.
The U.S. CMS announced the release of the Transitional Coverage for Emerging Technologies policy, which is less than clear on the definition of a key term.
The U.S. Medicare program’s final rule for fiscal year 2025 inpatient care retains several controversial proposals, but some device makers fared well in their new technology add-on payment (NTAP) applications, including Dublin-based Medtronic plc, which won NTAP payments for two devices.
The U.S. CMS proposed a series of changes to the Medicare series of codes for diagnostic-related groups, and device makers had pointed remarks about some of those proposals.
Thermoablation of thyroid nodules meets the patient’s standard of minimal invasiveness and is supported by the literature as an effective treatment for these nodules, which may become cancerous.
The U.S. Medicare physician fee schedule for 2025 appears set to reduce the number of services that can be provided via telehealth, but the proposed rate cut of 2.8% for physician services triggered a backlash from specialty medical societies, which seem destined to lobby Capitol Hill for a reversal of these cuts.
The draft version of the U.S. Medicare hospital outpatient rule for 2025 carries more than a dozen applications for a new technology pass-through payment next year, but Boston Scientific Corp.’s Agent balloon for treatment of in-stent restenosis might not be eligible for NTPT payment because of a debate over whether the device can be assigned to an existing Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System code.
The U.S. Medicare draft prospective payment system for end-stage renal disease encodes a few changes that will cheer industry, including a provision that would increase patient access to pharmaceuticals that are available only in oral form.