Drug-Coated Balloons Net Medicare Inpatient Bonus Payments

The positive hospital inpatient reimbursement decision for recently launched Medtronic and CR Bard peripheral artery devices follows prior positive policy rulings in the outpatient setting. Meanwhile, CMS rejected Boston Scientific's new-technology add-on application for the Watchman stroke device, but the agency did establish a pricier payment category for the new procedure.

Recently launched drug-coated balloons for peripheral artery disease were awarded Medicare new-technology add-on payments by CMS for the coming fiscal year, building on prior positive reimbursement news for the devices.

Under a policy finalized in the Medicare hospital inpatient prospective payment system, procedures in fiscal year 2016 that employ either...

Read the full article – start your free trial today!

Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Medtech Insight for daily insights

  • Start your 7-day free trial
  • Explore trusted news, analysis, and insights
  • Access comprehensive global coverage
  • Enjoy instant access – no credit card required

More from Policy & Regulation

Experts Call For Database Of Medical Device Labels

 
• By 

A recent JAMA column called for the US FDA to create an online database of medical device labeling, arguing that the move would increase transparency and help researchers, among other benefits. Medtech Insight discussed the idea with the paper’s lead author.

EU Authorities Unite In Call For Urgent Overhaul Of Medtech Regulations

 

EU member states have issued a consensus statement on the urgent need to build momentum to tackle governance and centralization issues as part of much-needed reform of the EU medtech regulatory system.

Whoops! FDA Says Company Marketed Unauthorized Device. The Company Says The FDA Is Wrong

 

A recent FDA warning letter claims a Boston firm that specializes in wearable technology marketed a blood pressure device without agency approval. The company rejects the assertion and says the agency is out of step with federal law.

With CMS Coverage Established, Medtronic Looks To Next Steps For Renal Denervation

 
• By 

US Medicare has proposed national coverage of renal denervation for patients with uncontrolled hypertension. The treatment is seeing other advances as well, with Medtronic piloting a longer catheter and a multi-organ approach and a blood test to identify the best candidates fresh on the

More from Medtech Insight

Digital Health Roundup: Autonomous Robots, Medtronic’s Surgeon School, Sleep & FDA Rules

In this week's Digital Health Roundup, Medtech Insight's team discusses progress on autonomous surgery, Medtronic's new partnership with IRCAD, FDA cybersecurity news, and C-suite interviews with OpenWater, Flow Neuroscience and EnsoData.

Whoops! FDA Says Company Marketed Unauthorized Device. The Company Says The FDA Is Wrong

 

A recent FDA warning letter claims a Boston firm that specializes in wearable technology marketed a blood pressure device without agency approval. The company rejects the assertion and says the agency is out of step with federal law.

With CMS Coverage Established, Medtronic Looks To Next Steps For Renal Denervation

 
• By 

US Medicare has proposed national coverage of renal denervation for patients with uncontrolled hypertension. The treatment is seeing other advances as well, with Medtronic piloting a longer catheter and a multi-organ approach and a blood test to identify the best candidates fresh on the