Making the Case for Advanced Microbiology Tests: A Framework for Demonstrating Clinical Utility to Payers
This expert consensus addresses the disconnect between the clinical value of advanced microbiology diagnostics and payer reimbursement decisions. The authors propose a framework for designing clinical studies that demonstrate utility of rapid molecular tests and MALDI-TOF MS to hospital administrators and insurance carriers. The paper outlines what manufacturers and labs should demonstrate to support adoption of next-generation microbiology tools.
The original study
Clinical Utility of Advanced Microbiology Testing Tools.
- Authors
- Miller MB, Atrzadeh F, Burnham CA, Cavalieri S, Dunn J, Jones S, et al.
- Journal
- Journal of clinical microbiology
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 31217268
Original abstract
Advanced microbiology technologies are rapidly changing our ability to diagnose infections, improve patient care, and enhance clinical workflow. These tools are increasing the breadth, depth, and speed of diagnostic data generated per patient, and testing is being moved closer to the patient through rapid diagnostic technologies, including point-of-care (POC) technologies. While select stakeholders have an appreciation of the value/importance of improvements in the microbial diagnostic field, there remains a disconnect between clinicians and some payers and hospital administrators in terms of understanding the potential clinical utility of these novel technologies. Therefore, a key challenge for the clinical microbiology community is to clearly articulate the value proposition of these technologies to encourage payers to cover and hospitals to adopt advanced microbiology tests. Specific guidance on how to define and demonstrate clinical utility would be valuable. Addressing this challenge will require alignment on this topic, not just by microbiologists but also by primary care and emergency room (ER) physicians, infectious disease specialists, pharmacists, hospital administrators, and government entities with an interest in public health. In this article, we discuss how to best conduct clinical studies to demonstrate and communicate clinical utility to payers and to set reasonable expectations for what diagnostic manufacturers should be required to demonstrate to support reimbursement from commercial payers and utilization by hospital systems.