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       Headlines - June 16, 2008
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R. Lewis Dark: Era of Digitized Pathology Systems Approaches

SURGICAL PATHOLOGISTS SHOULD GET READY! I predict that they will soon have the opportunity to purchase and use fully digital, automated pathology systems that can perform primary diagnosis.When that happens, it will mark the final cycle of the era when the principal method of diagnosing tissue was that of eyeballs fixed to microscopes, scanning cells as glass slides are pushed around the stage.

The introduction of digital pathology systems capable of primary diagnosis will likely be the single most disruptive event to anatomic pathology in the past two decades. That’s because automation of the primary diagnosis of tissue will upend current work flow and clinical practices in surgical pathology.

I make this prediction, based on two market developments in anatomic pathology. One development is the success of Aperio Technologies, Inc., in placing fully digital pathology systems in as many as 375 laboratories in 25 countries. This company is finding a ready market for its digital solutions that support existing pathology work flow and clinical practices.

The second market development is the long-awaited entry of General Electric into laboratory medicine. As you will read on pages 9-11, GE Healthcare is partnering with some of the best minds in digital pathology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) to create Omnyx, LLC. The aim is to develop digital pathology systems that can integrate the transmission and use of digitized pathology images across the care continuum, support improved workflow, and contribute to increased clinical quality— as well as automate primary diagnosis. The two partners estimate that the market for digitized pathology systems will be about $2 billion per year.

I suspect GE is making this move now because it believes it has digital and other technologies that can be transformational to anatomic pathology. It wants to leverage its experience at digitizing radiology and evolving radiologists into a fully digital work flow by doing the same in anatomic pathology. In the 1990s, such companies as NeoPath, Inc., and Neuromedical Systems, Inc., privately showed THE DARK REPORT how digital cytology systems and software algorithms could do accurate, automated primary diagnosis on a variety of tissue types. Now the question is: are surgical pathologists ready to accept digital pathology systems that can move them away from microscopes and in front of computer screens? GE's entry into thismarketplace is evidence that it believes the answer is: "Yes!"



NPI Rules Slow Payments To Pathology Groups, Labs

Private payers and Medicare carriers kick out high volume of claims for incorrect NPI compliance

CEO SUMMARY: New rules requiring use of National Provider Identification (NPI) numbers took effect on May 23. Since then, Medicare carriers and payers nationwide have rejected claims from pathologists and other providers that do not comply with the new NPI rules. A missing NPI on just one claim will result in the front end rejection of the entire submission file to Medicare. Cash flow to some pathology groups and other physicians has dropped. It may be another month or more before normal cash flow is restored.



GE, UPMC Create Company For Digital Path Imaging

Joint venture estimates market potential is $2 billion for fully-digitized pathology systems

CEO SUMMARY: It's a new joint venture with the potential to transform surgical pathology. General Electric Healthcare has extensive experience at supporting physicians' work flow with digitized imaging systems, plus ample experience with molecular biomarkers. The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center's pathology department is a world leader in whole-slide imaging and digitized pathology systems. Together, the two partners hope to gain FDA approval for a fully digitized pathology system in about two years.



New Senate Bills Include Repeal of Competitive Bid

Bills would kill lab competitive bidding demo, eliminate cut to physician fees, and extend TC

CEO SUMMARY: One proposed Senate bill would repeal the laboratory competitive bidding demonstration project, replace the 10.1% cut to physician fees with a 1.1% increase, and extend the so-called technical component (TC) grandfather clause. Senator Max Baucus (D-Montana), Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, is sponsor of the bill (called S 3101). Congress is under pressure to pass a Medicare funding bill before July 1, 2008, when the 10.1% reduction in physician fees will occur.



ISO 15189 Work Advances At Meeting in Vancouver

Delegates to ISO Technical Committee 212 gathered for their annual working session

CEO SUMMARY: Laboring quietly out of the public eye, an international work team of professionals, including representatives from the CDC, the FDA, and global in vitro diagnostics (IVD) manufacturers, has spent the past 14 years developing an important series of quality and safety standards for medical (clinical) laboratories. Here’s a report on events at the most recent international assembly of ISO Technical Committee 212, which gathered earlier this month in Vancouver, British Columbia.



CMS Expected to Revise Condo Lab & TC/PC Rules

Rule changes could come this summer and may also involve physician self-referral

CEO SUMMARY: Expectations are that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will take further action to rein in anatomic pathology arrangements used by physicians to capture revenue from their patient referrals. This may happen as soon as next month, when CMS publishes the 2009 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Update and requests public comment on proposed new rules. Attorneys tracking these developments believe that both anatomic pathology condo labs and TC/PC arrangements are likely to be the subject of these new rules.


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

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