In December 2024, I highlighted some potentially faulty new rules that CMS is proposing for Medicare Advantage plans, relative to LCDs. With the comment deadline approaching on January 27, 2025, I'd like to highlight the issues again and I encourage individuals and lab associations to comment, even if briefly.
IN A NUTSHELL
CMS wants to ensure Medicare Advantage plans operate under water-tight rules so that their coverage matches Fee for Service coverage. However, by focusing solely on LCD text, and not billing articles or the MolDx Registry, CMS may create new problems.
WHAT'S HAPPENING
We're in the 60 day comment period for annual Medicare Advantage rules. Labs I work with, labs I hear at conferences, and news articles, all complain about burdensome Medicare Advantage denials.
CMS is well-intentioned, and wants to esnure that Medicare Advantage plans follow LCD/NCD rules. However, the devil is in the details.
Find the proposal and online comments link here - 89 FR 99340.
WHAT CMS SAYS
CMS revisits perplexing and longstanding difficulties in getting Medicare Advantage plans, which are numerous and variable, to cover LCD-NCD services. CMS previously visited this topic in April 2023 and a memo in February 2024.
In Section U of the December 2024 proposal, CMS reiterates that M.A. plans must cover LCD NCD services. However - perhaps because M.A. plans had misused billing articles for denials - CMS states firmly that M.A. plans need only cover the TEXT of the LCD or NCD. M.A. plans are not to find coverage rules in related documents any more (like billing articles). CMS states that LCDs will always have clear coverage rules, and that any uncertain text would have been fixed by public comments.
WHY THIS IS A PROBLEM
Let me focus on the MolDx program, which handles the lion's share of CMS MoPath billings, and which I understand best.
MolDx now usually writes "foundational" LCDs, with broad guidance for coverage. For example, the transplant genomic testing policy says that such tests, like donor organ circulating DNA tests, may be medically necessary if they are validated and pass a MolDx tech assessment. However, you can't tell what tests are covered for what transplant types and how often, from the LCD. This is intentional - MolDx refers you to billing articles or more likely, its "Palmetto DEX Registry," an entirely separate, copyrighted, database not mirrored anywhere at CMS.
(In fact, a MolDx notice informs readers that updated coverage may NOT be found in LCD articles, but INSTEAD, over at the DEX database.)
For example, LCD L38671 dates from 2021, and Natera had a
press release in 2025 that "single lung transplants" were now covered for its particular brand of test. This is an obvious example of fee for service LCD coverage, impossible to tell from the 2021 LCD. It's only available by lookup in the DEX copyright database (see figure above).
When limited to the text of the LCD itself, as CMS proposes, you get only generic statements like this: "Clinical validity (CV) of any analytes (or expression profiles) measured must be established through a study published in the peer-reviewed literature for the intended use of the test in the intended population." While that's "true," it's impossible to tell what is covered, for whom, or at what intervals, from the sentence just quoted.
Exactly the same points could be made for the MolDx Minimal Residual Disease testing policy, updated in 2021, but under constant on-the-fly changes in actual coverage, through various announcements external to the LCD itself.
WHAT IS NEEDED
CMS needs to be informed about the above situations, and that, in many cases, it is IMPOSSIBLE for each different reader to conclude what is covered "by the text of the LCD alone." The comment page is here and click the green box by January 27 to comment.
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MY MODEL COMMENT
I haven't finalized my own comment, but here's a draft.
Comment on Section U, Internal Coverage Criteria (§422.101):
I am commenting as a pathologist and full-time Medicare policy expert. While I appreciate CMS's effort to clarify the use of internal coverage criteria under §422.101, I am concerned that the proposed language at §422.101(b)(6)(i)(A) and related text (e.g., 99457 col. 3 and 99458 col. 1) may severely misalign with the practical realities of Medicare coverage policies, particularly for the Molecular Diagnostic Services (MolDx) program.
MolDx LCDs frequently provide only general guidance for coverage. For example, transplant test LCD L38671 includes broad statements such as, "Clinical validity (CV) of any analytes (or expression profiles) measured must be established through a study published in the peer-reviewed literature for the intended use of the test in the intended population." In practice, actual coverage details are continuously updated in supplemental resources like the Palmetto DEX™ Diagnostics Exchange registry, which MolDx explicitly refers to as the authoritative source for test-specific coverage determinations [FN1].
While CMS assumes LCDs undergo rigorous review and provide clarity and specificity, foundational MolDx LCDs such as L38671 (genomic transplant rejection tests) and L38814 (minimal residual disease testing) remain intentionally broad. MolDx directs stakeholders to supplemental resources, including LCD articles and the DEX registry, to operationalize coverage determinations. These external resources are integral to understanding and applying coverage policy. [FN1, FN2, FN3]
Requiring Medicare Advantage (MA) plans to rely solely on explicit LCD text, as proposed, risks confusion and misinterpretation. For instance, the generic language in MolDx LCDs—e.g., “clinical validity must be established”—cannot alone guide readers at MA plans to determine which tests are covered, for whom, or under what conditions. Without reference to supplemental resources, MA plans would struggle to align with the dynamic and nuanced nature of MolDx policies.
Conclusion: I urge CMS to explicitly acknowledge the role of supplemental resources like the DEX registry in operationalizing coverage policies. Prohibiting MA plans from referencing these essential tools would undermine the intent and functionality of the MolDx program, and reverse the intentions of CMS's new rulemaking. Given that MolDx publicly and deliberately directs stakeholders to these resources as the main record of its evolving coverage decisions, CMS should revise the proposed language to accommodate their use.
FN1
https://www.discoveriesinhealthpolicy.com/2025/01/follow-up-blog-why-comment-on-new.html
FN2
https://www.discoveriesinhealthpolicy.com/2025/01/decibio-reports-on-mrd-coverage.html
FN3
https://www.natera.com/company/news/natera-announces-medicare-coverage-for-prospera-in-single-lung-transplant-recipients/
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Addendum 1/21/2025. Another example of coverage by press release, NOT by revision of the LCD, is Guardant's new coverage for "surveillance" of colon cancer recurrence. Guardant had had 1X testing to assess completeness of CRC surgery. Now, it can be used on initially-negative patient to track them under surveillance for relapse. But there's no change to the 2021 LCD for MRD, L38814.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/guardant-health-receives-medicare-coverage-130500233.html