| Literature DB >> 33958748 |
Maren T Scheuner1,2,3,4, Michael P Douglas5, Paloma Sales6,7, Sara L Ackerman8, Kathryn A Phillips5,9,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Germline testing laboratories have evolved over several decades. We describe laboratory business models and practices and explore their implications on germline testing availability and access.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33958748 PMCID: PMC8460432 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-021-01184-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Fig. 1Conceptual model representing key concepts linking laboratory business models, business practices, and availability of and access to germline testing.
As depicted, the conceptual model shows the laboratory business model, defined as the operational plan to market germline tests, influences the availability of germline genetic testing. We defined availability as the supply of germline tests (i.e., performed by a laboratory and included on the test menu). Factors external to the laboratory that influence laboratory business models include payer coverage and reimbursement policies; reimbursed Common Procedural Technology codes; testing volume; competition; complexity of the health insurance industry; consumer interest; evidence of clinical utility of germline testing; regulation; labor unions; and shareholders. Factors internal to the laboratory that influence the business model include laboratory structure (e.g., free standing vs. integrated within an organization); ability to automate and optimize processes; efficiencies of scale; culture/philosophy to generate the evidence showing clinical utility of germline testing; and philosophy regarding data sharing. The laboratory business practices, defined as the strategies to support the business plan, influence access to germline testing. We defined access as the opportunity to obtain germline tests. Factors external to the laboratory that influence business practices include germline testing volume; prior authorization requirements; payer requirements for reporting germline results; availability of the genetics workforce; and labor unions. Factors internal to the laboratory that influence business practices were related to the laboratory setting, e.g., the academic setting constrained pricing and hiring of staff. Utilization of germline tests occurs when there is uptake of germline testing by individuals.
Fig. 2Word cloud illustrating the 48 unique topics identified.
The size of font is directly proportional to the number of times a topic was mentioned across the six domains assessed. The domains included (1) laboratory business models, (2) factors influencing laboratory business models, (3) laboratory business practices, (4) factors influencing laboratory business practices, (5) the evolution of business models, and (6) research ideas to improve availability of and access to germline testing. Pricing was most common topic, followed by payer contracts, coverage and reimbursement, testing volume, evidence (of clinical validity, clinical utility, personal utility, and economic value), and genetic test reports.
Laboratory business model characteristics.
| Emergent topics and subtopics | For-profit and not-for-profit full-service laboratories (FSL) | For-profit germline laboratories (PGL) | Not-for-profit germline laboratories (NGL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Billing | |||
| Third-party billinga | √ | √ | √ |
| Client billingb | √ | ||
| Direct patient billing | √ | ||
| Contracting | |||
| Payersc | √ | √ | |
| Health-care organizations/hospitals | √ | √ | √ |
| Value-based reimbursementd | √ | ||
| Researche | √ | ||
| Business arrangements | |||
| Acquisitions/mergers | √ | √ | |
| Investors | √ | ||
| Partnerships | |||
| Industryf | √ | ||
| Academiag | √ | √ | √ |
| Pricing | |||
| Diagnostic service | √ | √ | √ |
| Commodity-basedh | √ | ||
| Consumer-facing servicei | |||
| Available | √ | ||
| Not available | √ | √ | |
aThe payer, an insurance company or health agency uninvolved in the direct care of the patient that pays for the care or services rendered to the patient (i.e., the first party).
bDescribed as “account” or “passthrough” billing, where medical providers compensate a laboratory for testing services and submit claims to payers for those services.
cPayers, as described by key informants: health insurance companies, employer groups.
dReimbursed based on cost-effective, improved quality of care rather than volume.
eContracts to perform germline testing, most often exome or genome sequencing, to support research performed by other organizations (e.g., biotechnology companies, pharmaceutical companies, or academic institutions).
fPartnerships with pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies for companion diagnostics and gene discovery.
gFSLs tend to gain technological expertise (test development, results interpretation) through academic partnerships, whereas PGLs and NGLs typically have research partnerships with academia.
hDiscounted pricing with the expectation of future payoffs.
iConsumers request genetic testing using a laboratory-contracted physician or medical corporation.
Laboratory business practice characteristics.
| Emergent topics and subtopics | For-profit and not-for-profit full-service laboratories (FSL) | For-profit | Not-for-profit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quality services | |||
| Preferred provider statusa | √ | √ | |
| State-of-the-art, first-in-class services | √ | √ | |
| Pricing | |||
| Premium pricing | √ | √b | √ |
| Low- and no-cost pricing | √c | ||
| Provider-focused strategies | |||
| Assist with prior authorization | √ | √ | |
| Easy-order web-based portals | √ | ||
| Tailored genetic test reports | √ | ||
| Provide medical genetics expertise | √ | √ | |
| Consumer/patient-focused strategies | |||
| Website engagement with ongoing feedback | √ | ||
| No-cost post-test genetic counseling | √ | ||
| Offer medical genetics consultation | √ | ||
| Marketing strategiesd | √ | ||
| Communication strategiese | √ | ||
aMeets payers’ criteria for genetic testing enabling the laboratory to avoid prior authorization requirements with possible auditing by the payer periodically.
bOnly one PGL key informant mentioned premium pricing.
cLow-cost with cash/self-pay, no-cost options for research testing or hardship cases, or no cost for cascade testing in family members.
dExamples: sales team differentiates products from competitors; marketing to nongenetics providers; payers market division for contracting.
eExamples: media/news releases; communicating with technology assessment groups; communicating with payers about their coverage policies.
Key informant suggestions for research needed to improve availability of and access to germline testing.
| Research suggestions | Example suggestions | For-profit and not-for-profit full-service laboratories (FSL) | For-profit germline laboratories | Not-for-profit germline laboratories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Building genetic test panels | Genes to be reported on a panel; building appropriate test panels | |||
| Reporting genetic test results | Need structured genetic health reports in electronic health records so genetic information can be consumed | |||
| Demonstrate clinical validity and utility | Demonstrate value of germline testing; demonstrate clinical utility; how to aggregate data to help inform clinical utility; utility of genetic testing for different clinical scenarios and conditions; compare diagnostic yield of genetic testing vs. other diagnostics; polygenic risk scores clinical validity and utility | |||
| Demonstrate personal utility | Show patient and family perceived utility | |||
| Outcomes research | Partnerships to achieve long-term outcomes; outcomes research for exome | |||
| Develop study designs | Convene stakeholders to identify evidence gaps and create study designs to fill evidence gaps; need study designs for rare diseases | |||
| Economic evaluation | Cost analyses/cost-effectiveness of genetic testing; cost-effectiveness of genome compared to other testing; clinical utility and cost savings (longer term studies), show economic benefit from testing; examine how demand for economic utility benefits/harms patients | |||
| Develop clinical guidelines | Harms/benefits of strict guidelines for genetic testing, for number of genes on panel; focus on guideline development for categories of genetic disorders to inform care pathways instead of rare individual conditions; make sure guideline committees make clear recommendations, don’t use words like “suggest” or “consider” but “recommend” | |||
| Legal analysis of genetic test pricing | Standardization and transparency in pricing; legal analysis of two-tier pricing | |||
| Policy analysis of payer coverage | Payer medical policy development and analysis; how to align Medicare and Medicaid; how to influence payer coverage decisions | |||
| Policy analysis of genetic test regulation | Impact of legislation and FDA regulation on lab developed tests; transparency in molecular test coding | |||
| Educate stakeholders | Educate nongenetics providers; educate Centers for Medicare and Medicaid policymakers and commercial payers |