By Peter Laird, MD
Mark Pennington is one of the few on hemodialysis that is able to continue work and be productive, but this may all come to an end if his new health care provider has their way in this matter. Mark has an extensive history of complications while on usual care in-center hemodialysis to include multiple hospitalizations and disability making work impossible. This all changed in 2009 when he trained for home hemodialysis with the NxStage System One. Since that time, his health has improved dramatically and he is now able to work once again.
Insurance Company Will Not Support Home Hemodialysis
(Comment #40 from Home Dialysis Central - used with permission from Mark Pennington)
For several years, I have suffered from Kidney Disease. In July of 2006, I was placed on in-center hemodialysis. This treatment was a mixed blessing. On the positive side, my overall health greatly improved. On the minus side, I suffered numerous infections – including a bout with osteomyelitis of the spine that almost claimed my life and left me disabled. Additionally, the 3 time per week, in-center dialysis would frequently leave me feeling tired and wrung out. This caused difficulty on my job and added stress to my family.
In December of 2009, my wife and I attended training and became certified to perform home hemodialysis. This 5 time per week schedule allowed for more gentle cleansing of my blood and greatly reduced the side-effects I’d felt in-center. My employer was delighted as dialysis no longer controlled my schedule and I could even work during dialysis. Also, since the machine is portable, we took the first long vacation in years last summer, camping in the Olympic Peninsula in our travel-trailer. . .
In January of 2o11, various concerns prompted me to change my employer-provided health insurance to Group Health. The Dialysis support staff at DaVita warned me that Group Health did not cover this treatment. However, that seemed contrary to the Group Health reputation as an innovator in the medical care field. Additionally, I was in great need of the managed care for my diabetes that Group Health could provide.
On January 23’rd, I received notice that my request for Group Health coverage of my frequent home hemodialysis was denied and that I would have to switch back to 3 day per week in-center dialysis.
I have appealed this decision, but doctors at Group Health have told me that it will not be overturned.
Mark R. Pennington
This is the second case of Group Health denying an optimal dialysis strategy for a patient that I am personally aware. Last year, my nephrologist in Spokane, WA asked me if I could help him with one of his nocturnal in-center patients that was doing well on the thrice weekly regimen, but Group Health decided to withdraw payment and return her to a different dialysis center for usual care. I contacted a noted dialysis researcher from Seattle who agreed to write a letter of support for this patient as well as a leading dialysis advocacy group who also offered support for this patient. Group Health has a stated policy on their website against any of the frequent dialysis strategies many simply call optimal dialysis.
Clinical Review Criteria
Frequent (Greater Than 3 Days a Week) Home Dialysis, Nocturnal or Short Daily
Conclusions:
Objective 1:
There is insufficient evidence that home nocturnal dialysis improves important health outcomes compared to in-center dialysis. An RCT found improvement in LV mass and phosphate level, intermediate outcomes, and mixed findings in QOL. There is weak evidence from a single cohort study that nocturnal dialysis lowers the rate of dialysis-related or cardiovascular- related hospitalizations. In this cohort study, all-cause hospitalizations did not decrease significantly.
There is insufficient evidence that home short-daily dialysis improves health outcomes compared to in-center dialysis. One statistical analysis found a lower mortality rate with short daily dialysis compared to national rates, but patients may have differed in ways that affect outcomes, and there was potential financial bias.
Objective 2:
There is insufficient evidence that home nocturnal dialysis 6 nights a week improves important health outcomes compared to home hemodialysis 3 times a week.
There is insufficient evidence that home short-daily dialysis 5 or more times a week improves important health outcomes compared to home hemodialysis 3 times a week.
For questions or comments contact: Clinical Criteria Documentation Team
The conclusions of the Group Health Clinical Review on frequent hemodialysis are simply false in my opinion as shown by the outcomes of the FHN and Group Health has yet to update these guidelines even though they cited the FHN in their 2008 review. In such, the denial by Group Health of Seattle of home hemodialysis to Mark Pennington is based on out of date data. Last week, I attempted to contact Group Health at the email provided on the Clinical Review page for frequent dialysis asking them if they have any plans to review this issue again since the publication of the Frequent Hemodialysis Network Trial Group results last November, but to date, I have not received a reply.
The irony that a patient in Seattle where home hemodialysis was the standard of care 40 years ago is now denied home hemodialysis that gives him his life back declares to all that the false dichotomy of health plan clinical review criteria failing to recognize the benefits of frequent hemodialysis must end. Until that time, buyer beware, Group Health of Seattle does not cover home hemodialysis and they continue to ignore the overwhelmingly positive results of the FHN as well as nearly 50 years of positive observational data. It is time for Group Health of Seattle and many other health care insurers across America to recognize the life saving benefits of longer duration and more frequent hemodialysis. This is all just my humble and honest opinion.
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