Copy of LCDs from above website on 12/9/13 (edited for brevity)
Indications A patient will be considered to have a life expectancy of six months or less if he/she meets the non-disease specific "Decline in clinical status" guidelines described in Part I. Alternatively, the baseline non-disease specific guidelines described in Part II plus the applicable disease specific guidelines listed in Part III will establish the necessary expectancy. Part I. Decline in clinical status guidelines Patients will be considered to have a life expectancy of six months or less if there is documented evidence of decline in clinical status based on the guidelines listed below. Since determination of decline presumes assessment of the patient’s status over time, it is essential that both baseline and follow-up determinations be reported where appropriate. Baseline data may be established on admission to hospice or by using existing information from records. Other clinical variables not on this list may support a six-month or less life expectancy. These should be documented in the clinical record. These changes in clinical variables apply to patients whose decline is not considered to be reversible. They are examples of findings that generally connote a poor prognosis. However, some are clearly more predictive of a poor prognosis than others; significant ongoing weight loss is a strong predictor, while decreased functional status is less so.
Progression of disease as documented by worsening clinical status, symptoms, signs and laboratory results. Clinical Status:
Recurrent or intractable serious infections such as pneumonia, sepsis or pyelonephritis;
Progressive inanition as documented by:
Weight loss of at least 10% body weight in the prior six months, not due to reversible causes such as depression or use of diuretics;
Decreasing anthropomorphic measurements (mid-arm circumference, abdominal girth), not due to reversible causes such as depression or use of diuretics;
Observation of ill-fitting clothes, decrease in skin turgor, increasing skin folds or other observation of weight loss in a patient without documented weight;
Decreasing serum albumin or cholesterol.
Dysphagia leading to recurrent aspiration and/or inadequate oral intake documented by decreasing food portion consumption.
Symptoms:
Dyspnea with increasing respiratory rate;
Cough, intractable;
Nausea/vomiting poorly responsive to treatment;
Diarrhea, intractable;
Pain requiring increasing doses of major analgesics more than briefly.
Signs:
Decline in systolic blood pressure to below 90 or progressive postural hypotension;
Ascites;
Venous, arterial or lymphatic obstruction due to local progression or metastatic disease;
Edema;
Pleural/pericardial effusion;
Weakness;
Change in level of consciousness.
Laboratory (When available. Lab testing is not required to establish hospice eligibility.):
Increasing pCO2 or decreasing pO2 or decreasing SaO2;
Increasing calcium, creatinine or liver function studies;
Increasing tumor markers (e.g. CEA, PSA);
Progressively decreasing or increasing serum sodium or increasing serum potassium.
Decline in Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS ) or Palliative Performance Score (PPS) due to progression of disease. Progressive decline in Functional Assessment Staging (FAST) for dementia (from 7A on the FAST).
Progression to dependence on assistance with additional activities of daily living (see Part II, Section 2).
Progressive stage 3-4 pressure ulcers in spite of optimal care.
History of increasing ER visits, hospitalizations, or physician visits related to the hospice primary diagnosis prior to election of the hospice benefit.
Part II. Non-disease specific baseline guidelines (both A and B should be met)
Physiologic impairment of functional status as demonstrated by: Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) or Palliative Performance Score (PPS) < 70%. Note that two of the disease specific guidelines (HIV Disease, Stroke and Coma) establish a lower qualifying KPS or PPS.
Dependence on assistance for two or more activities of daily living (ADLs):
Ambulation;
Continence;
Transfer;
Dressing;
Feeding;
Bathing.
Co-morbidities – although not the primary hospice diagnosis, the presence of disease such as the following, the severity of which is likely to contribute to a life expectancy of six months or less, should be considered in determining hospice eligibility.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
Congestive heart failure
Ischemic heart disease
Diabetes mellitus
Neurologic disease (CVA, ALS, MS, Parkinson’s)
Renal failure
Liver Disease
Neoplasia
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
Dementia
Aquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome/HIV
Refractory severe autoimmune disease (e.g. Lupus or Rheumatoid Arthritis)
See Part III for disease specific guidelines to be used with these baseline guidelines. The baseline guidelines do not independently qualify a patient for hospice coverage. Note: The word “should” in the disease specific guidelines means that on medical review the guideline so identified will be given great weight in making a coverage determination. It does not mean, however, that meeting the guideline is required. The only requirement is that the documentation supports the beneficiary’s prognosis of six months or less, if the illness runs its normal course.
Part III. Disease Specific Guidelines Note: These guidelines are to be used in conjunction with the “Non-disease specific baseline guidelines” described in Part II. Cancer Diagnoses
Disease with metastases at presentation OR
Progression from an earlier stage of disease to metastatic disease with either:
A continued decline in spite of therapy; or
Patient declines further disease directed therapy.
Note: Certain cancers with poor prognoses (e.g., small cell lung cancer, brain cancer and pancreatic cancer) may be hospice eligible without fulfilling the other criteria in this section. Non-Cancer Diagnoses Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis General Considerations:
ALS tends to progress in a linear fashion over time. Thus the overall rate of decline in each patient is fairly constant and predictable, unlike many other non-cancer diseases.
However, no single variable deteriorates at a uniform rate in all patients. Therefore, multiple clinical parameters are required to judge the progression of ALS.
Although ALS usually presents in a localized anatomical area, the location of initial presentation does not correlate with survival time. By the time patients become end-stage, muscle denervation has become widespread, affecting all areas of the body, and initial predominance patterns do not persist.
Progression of disease differs markedly from patient to patient. Some patients decline rapidly and die quickly; others progress more slowly. For this reason, the history of the rate of progression in individual patients is important to obtain to predict prognosis.
In end-state ALS, two factors are critical in determining prognosis: ability to breathe, and to a lesser extent ability to swallow. The former can be managed by artificial ventilation, and the latter by gastrostomy or other artificial feeding, unless the patient has recurrent aspiration pneumonia. While not necessarily a contraindication to Hospice care, the decision to institute either artificial ventilation or artificial feeding may significantly alter six month prognosis.
Examination by a neurologist within three months of assessment for hospice is advised, both to confirm the diagnosis and to assist with prognosis.
Patients are considered eligible for Hospice care if they do not elect tracheostomy and invasive ventilation and display evidence of critically impaired respiratory function (with or without use of NIPPV) and / or severe nutritional insufficiency (with or without use of a gastrostomy tube). Critically impaired respiratory function is as defined by:
FVC < 40% predicted (seated or supine) and 2 or more of the following symptoms and/or signs: Dyspnea at rest; Orthopnea; Use of accessory respiratory musculature; Paradoxical abdominal motion; Respiratory rate > 20; Reduced speech / vocal volume; Weakened cough; Symptoms of sleep disordered breathing; Frequent awakening; Daytime somnolence / excessive daytime sleepiness; Unexplained headaches; Unexplained confusion; Unexplained anxiety; Unexplained nausea.
If unable to perform the FVC test patients meet this criterion if they manifest 3 or more of the above symptoms/signs.
Severe nutritional insufficiency is defined as: Dysphagia with progressive weight loss of at least five percent of body weight with or without election for gastrostomy tube insertion. These revised criteria rely less on the measured FVC, and as such reflect the reality that not all patients with ALS can or will undertake regular pulmonary function tests. Dementia due to Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of dementia (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria.
Patients with dementia should show all the following characteristics:
Stage seven or beyond according to the Functional Assessment Staging Scale;
Unable to ambulate without assistance;
Unable to dress without assistance;
Unable to bathe without assistance;
Urinary and fecal incontinence, intermittent or constant;
No consistently meaningful verbal communication: stereotypical phrases only or the ability to speak is limited to six or fewer intelligible words.
Patients should have had one of the following within the past 12 months:
Aspiration pneumonia;
Pyelonephritis;
Septicemia;
Decubitus ulcers, multiple, stage 3-4;
Fever, recurrent after antibiotics;
Inability to maintain sufficient fluid and calorie intake with 10% weight loss during the previous six months or serum albumin < 2.5 gm/dl.
Note: This section is specific for Alzheimer’s disease and Related Disorders, and is not appropriate for other types of dementia. Heart Disease Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of heart disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. (1 and 2 should be present. Factors from 3 will add supporting documentation.)
At the time of initial certification or recertification for hospice, the patient is or has been already optimally treated for heart disease, or are patients who are either not candidates for surgical procedures or who decline those procedures. (Optimally treated means that patients who are not on vasodilators have a medical reason for refusing these drugs, e.g., hypotension or renal disease.)
Patients with congestive heart failure or angina should meet the criteria for the New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class IV. (Class IV patients with heart disease have an inability to carry on any physical activity. Symptoms of heart failure or of the anginal syndrome may be present even at rest. If any physical activity is undertaken, discomfort is increased.) Significant congestive heart failure may be documented by an ejection fraction of less than or equal to 20%, but is not required if not already available.
Documentation of the following factors will support but is not required to establish eligibility for hospice care:
Treatment-resistant symptomatic supraventricular or ventricular arrhythmias;
History of cardiac arrest or resuscitation;
History of unexplained syncope;
Brain embolism of cardiac origin;
Concomitant HIV disease.
HIV Disease Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of their illness (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. (1 and 2 should be present; factors from 3 will add supporting documentation.)
CD4+ Count < 25 cells/mcl or persistent (2 or more assays at least one month apart) viral load >100,000 copies/ml, plus one of the following:
CNS lymphoma;
Untreated, or persistent despite treatment, wasting (loss of at least 10% lean body mass);
Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) bacteremia, untreated, unresponsive to treatment, or treatment refused;
Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy;
Systemic lymphoma, with advanced HIV disease and partial response to chemotherapy;
Visceral Kaposi’s sarcoma unresponsive to therapy;
Renal failure in the absence of dialysis;
Cryptosporidium infection;
Toxoplasmosis, unresponsive to therapy.
Decreased performance status, as measured by the Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) scale, of less than or equal to 50%.
Documentation of the following factors will support eligibility for hospice care:
Chronic persistent diarrhea for one year;
Persistent serum albumin < 2.5;
Concomitant, active substance abuse;
Age > 50 years;
Absence of or resistance to effective antiretroviral, chemotherapeutic and prophylactic drug therapy related specifically to HIV disease;
Advanced AIDS dementia complex;
Toxoplasmosis;
Congestive heart failure, symptomatic at rest;
Advanced liver disease.
Liver Disease Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of liver disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. (1 and 2 should be present, factors from 3 will lend supporting documentation.)
The patient should show both a and b:
Prothrombin time prolonged more than 5 seconds over control, or International Normalized Ratio (INR) > 1.5;
Serum albumin < 2.5 gm/dl.
End stage liver disease is present and the patient shows at least one of the following:
Ascites, refractory to treatment or patient non-compliant;
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis;
Hepatorenal syndrome (elevated creatinine and BUN with oliguria (< 400 ml/day) and urine sodium concentration < 10 mEq/l);
Hepatic encephalopathy, refractory to treatment, or patient non-compliant;
Documentation of the following factors will support eligibility for hospice care:
Progressive malnutrition;
Muscle wasting with reduced strength and endurance;
Continued active alcoholism (> 80 gm ethanol/day);
Hepatocellular carcinoma;
HBsAg (Hepatitis B) positivity;
Hepatitis C refractory to interferon treatment.
Pulmonary Disease Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of pulmonary disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. The criteria refer to patients with various forms of advanced pulmonary disease who eventually follow a final common pathway for end stage pulmonary disease. (1 and 2 should be present. Documentation of 3, 4, and 5, will lend supporting documentation.)
Severe chronic lung disease as documented by both a and b:
Disabling dyspnea at rest, poorly or unresponsive to bronchodilators, resulting in decreased functional capacity, e.g., bed to chair existence, fatigue, and cough; (Documentation of Forced Expiratory Volume in One Second (FEV1), after bronchodilator, less than 30% of predicted is objective evidence for disabling dyspnea, but is not necessary to obtain.)
Progression of end stage pulmonary disease, as evidenced by increasing visits to the emergency department or hospitalizations for pulmonary infections and/or respiratory failure or increasing physician home visits prior to initial certification. (Documentation of serial decrease of FEV1>40 ml/year is objective evidence for disease progression, but is not necessary to obtain.)
Hypoxemia at rest on room air, as evidenced by pO2 less than or equal to 55 mmHg, or oxygen saturation less than or equal to 88%, determined either by arterial blood gases or oxygen saturation monitors, (these values may be obtained from recent hospital records) OR hypercapnia, as evidenced by pCO2 greater than or equal to 50 mmHg. (This value may be obtained from recent [within 3 months] hospital records.)
Right heart failure (RHF) secondary to pulmonary disease (Cor pulmonale) (e.g., not secondary to left heart disease or valvulopathy).
Unintentional progressive weight loss of greater than 10% of body weight over the preceding six months.
Resting tachycardia > 100/min.
Renal Disease Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stage of renal disease (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria. Acute Renal Failure (1 and either 2, 3 or 4 should be present. Factors from 5 will lend supporting documentation.)
The patient is not seeking dialysis or renal transplant, or is discontinuing dialysis. As with any other condition, an individual with renal disease is eligible for the Hospice benefit if that individual has a prognosis of six months or less, if the illness runs its normal course. There is no regulation precluding patients on dialysis from electing Hospice care. However, the continuation of dialysis will significantly alter a patient’s prognosis, and thus potentially impact that individual’s eligibility. When an individual elects Hospice care for end stage renal disease (ESRD) or for a condition to which the need for dialysis is related, the Hospice agency is financially responsible for the dialysis. In such cases, there is no additional reimbursement beyond the per diem rate. The only situation in which a beneficiary may access both the Hospice benefit and the ESRD benefit is when the need for dialysis is not related to the patient’s terminal illness.
Creatinine clearance < 10 cc/min (<15 cc/min. for diabetics); or < 15cc/min (< 20cc/min for diabetics) with comorbidity of congestive heart failure.
Serum creatinine > 8.0 mg/dl (>6.0 mg/dl for diabetics).
Chronic Kidney Disease (1 and either 2, 3 or 4 should be present. Factors from 5 will lend supporting documentation.)
The patient is not seeking dialysis or renal transplant, or is discontinuing dialysis; As with any other condition, an individual with renal disease is eligible for the Hospice benefit if that individual has a prognosis of six months or less, if the illness runs its normal course. There is no regulation precluding patients on dialysis from electing Hospice care. However, the continuation of dialysis will significantly alter a patient’s prognosis, and thus potentially impact that individual’s eligibility. When an individual elects Hospice care for end stage renal disease (ESRD) or for a condition to which the need for dialysis is related, the Hospice agency is financially responsible for the dialysis. In such cases, there is no additional reimbursement beyond the per diem rate. The only situation in which a beneficiary may access both the hospice benefit and the ESRD benefit is when the need for dialysis is not related to the patient’s terminal illness.
Creatinine clearance <10 cc/min (< 15 cc/min for diabetics); or < 15cc/min (< 20cc/min for diabetics) with comorbidity of congestive heart failure.
Serum creatinine > 8.0 mg/dl (>6.0 mg/dl for diabetics).
Signs and symptoms of renal failure:
Uremia;
Oliguria (< 400 cc/24 hours);
Intractable hyperkalemia (> 7.0) not responsive to treatment;
Uremic pericarditis;
Hepatorenal syndrome;
Intractable fluid overload, not responsive to treatment.
Stroke and Coma Patients will be considered to be in the terminal stages of stroke or coma (life expectancy of six months or less) if they meet the following criteria: Stroke
Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS) or Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) of < 40% .
Inability to maintain hydration and caloric intake with one of the following:
Weight loss > 10% in the last 6 months or > 7.5% in the last 3 months;
Serum albumin < 2.5 gm/dl;
Current history of pulmonary aspiration not responsive to speech language pathology intervention; Sequential calorie counts documenting inadequate caloric/fluid intake;
Dysphagia severe enough to prevent patient from continuing fluids/foods necessary to sustain life and patient does not receive artificial nutrition and hydration.
Coma (any etiology):
Comatose patients with any 3 of the following on day three of coma:
abnormal brain stem response;
absent verbal response;
absent withdrawal response to pain;
serum creatinine > 1.5 mg/dl.
Documentation of the following factors will support eligibility for hospice care:
Documentation of medical complications, in the context of progressive clinical decline, within the previous 12 months, which support a terminal prognosis:
Aspiration pneumonia;
Pyelonephritis;
Refractory stage 3-4 decubitus ulcers;
Fever recurrent after antibiotics.
Documentation of diagnostic imaging factors which support poor prognosis after stroke include:
For non-traumatic hemorrhagic stroke:
Large-volume hemorrhage on CT:
Infratentorial: greater than or equal to 20 ml.;
Supratentorial: greater than or equal to 50 ml.
Ventricular extension of hemorrhage;
Surface area of involvement of hemorrhage greater than or equal to 30% of cerebrum;
Midline shift greater than or equal to 1.5 cm.;
Obstructive hydrocephalus in patient who declines, or is not a candidate for, ventriculoperitoneal shunt.
For thrombotic/embolic stroke:
Large anterior infarcts with both cortical and subcortical involvement;
Large bihemispheric infarcts;
Basilar artery occlusion;
Bilateral vertebral artery occlusion.
Other Comments For claims submitted to the fiscal intermediary or Part A MAC: this coverage determination also applies within states outside the primary geographic jurisdiction with facilities that have nominated National Government Services to process their claims. Bill type codes only apply to providers who bill these services to the fiscal intermediary or Part A MAC. Bill type codes do not apply to physicians, other professionals and suppliers who bill these services to the carrier or Part B MAC. Limitation of liability and refund requirements apply when denials are likely, whether based on medical necessity or other coverage reasons. The provider/supplier must notify the beneficiary in writing, prior to rendering the service, if the provider/supplier is aware that the test, item or procedure may not be covered by Medicare. The limitation of liability and refund requirements do not apply when the test, item or procedure is statutorily excluded, has no Medicare benefit category or is rendered for screening purposes.