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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 8, Monday, June 1, 2010 (June 1st, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: California's Legal Challenge to Discount Pricing

PROBABLY NO TOPIC IN THE LAB TESTING INDUSTRY generatesmore controversy than discounted pricing for physicians, managed care companies, and IPAs (independent physician associations). Almost every pathologist and laboratory executive decries the corrosive effects of below-cost pricing.

Yet, many of these same lab executives quietly continue to solicit new clients by dangling deeply discounted, and often money-losing-prices to physicians and health insurers. Competing labs recognize that often the prices are at marginal cost which means that the lab doesn't recoup its fully loaded cost of performing the test. Sometimes a lab company will even offer prices that are less than the lab's marginal cost to perform the test.

The only way the lab can offer these money-losing prices is because it "pulls through" enough Medicare and other fee-for-service specimens to offset the losses incurred for testing the discount priced tests. Typically it is national lab companies or investor-owned labswhich aremostwilling to play this price game. Local labs, hospital lab outreach programs, and pathology groups continously grumble about these business practices. Among these laboratory professionals, price discounting particularly if the lab test price is less than the offering lab's marginal cost to perform the test is seen as a form of inducement or kickback.

The lab gives the discount for one part of the client's test referrals, and gains access to the Medicare and other fee-for-service specimens in exchange. At the federal level, there has never been enforcement action that draws a clear boundary as to where a deeply-discounted lab test price falls on the wrong side of the law. That allows a number of laboratory companies to operate in the grey area, while labs with conservative compliance policies lose a competitive edge in the market. I point all this out because the deeply-discounted lab test pricing game might soon get a new set of rules in California.

Last year, Attorney General Jerry Brown unsealed the whistleblower lawsuit that alleges seven lab companies in California defrauded theMedi-Cal program. Now there is news that one laboratory has signed a settlement, and two others may have also settled. Brown argues that California state law requires a lab to bill Medi-Cal at the same lowest price for a test that the lab offers its other clients. If Brown gets the other four to six labs to settle and agree to bill Medi-Cal in this manner, then hemay disrupt a long-standing lab industry practice in California. For that reason, the progress of this whistleblower suit bears watching.


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Westcliff Labs Announces BK and Sale to LabCorp

Chapter 11 bankruptcy reveals huge losses at what was once a profitable independent lab

CEO SUMMARY: Subject to court approval, Laboratory Corporation of America is poised to acquire the assets of California-based Westcliff Medical Laboratories, Inc., which just filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy action in federal court on May 19. In a separate transaction, LabCorp has an agreement to acquire Diamond Reference Laboratory of Diamond Bar, California. The two acquisitions will build LabCorp's share of the market for laboratory testing in California.



AG Jerry Brown Settles With Westcliff Med Labs

First look at the settlement agreement reveals how the AG may want labs to price tests to Medi-Cal

CEO SUMMARY: In California, Attorney General Jerry Brown is making progress in the whistleblower lawsuit alleging that seven lab companies in California violated state law by not giving Medi-Cal, the state's Medicaid program, the same lowest lab test prices they extend to physicians, managed care plans, and IPAs. Westcliff Medical Laboratories, Inc., is the first of the seven defendants to publicly acknowledge that it finalized a settlement agreement with the State of California.



Did Wrong Strategy Sink Westcliff Medical Labs?

California's third-largest commercial lab firm took just 46 months to slide into bankruptcy court

CEO SUMMARY: All sorts of people will argue all sorts of opinions about the financial demise of BioLabs, Inc., and its subsidiary, Westcliff Medical Laboratories, Inc., and why it ended up in a California bankruptcy court. Documents filed in the case indicate that, from the birth of the new company in June, 2006, it never produced an annual profit. During the 46 months of BioLabs/Westcliff's business life, its owners worked with two different management teams, each of which had a different strategy for growth.



Taming the Blood Beast With Better Utilization

Rapid yearly increases in blood product cost motivates hospital labs to educate physicians

CEO SUMMARY: For hospital labs, explosive increases in the cost of blood products is a budget buster. At St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital, a multi-year blood management program is paying big dividends. Patient safety has improved, even as utilization of blood dropped by 7,000 units per year. Annual savings from this innovative blood management program now total $4 million. One key element behind this succes was for the lab to engage and educate physicians in a multi-disciplinary approach..


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

BIO-REFERENCE GROWS 27% IN ITS SECOND QUARTER

MORE ON: Kaiser

Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 7, Monday, May 10, 2010 (May 10th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: Irish Labs Are at an Important Crossroads

GLOBAL OUTSOURCING OF CLINICAL LABORATORY TESTING IN IRELAND has entered its second phase. The Irish Health Service Executive (HSE) granted Quest Diagnostics Incorporated a contract for an additional two-years of cervical cancer screening tests while awarding 25% of the nation'' annual Pap testing to Sonic Healthcare Ltd. in a similar two-year contract.

These developments are significant, because as long as the Irish outsourcing experience is favorable, it makes it easier for other nations to outsource laboratory testing to lab testing companies located in other countries. But there is another dimension to the lab testing story in Ireland which fascinates me even more. As clients and regular readers of THE DARK REPORT know, the Irish HSE has announced a complete restructuring of laboratory services throughout the country. (See pages 6-8 and The Dark Report, January 25, 2010).

I'd like to make two observations about this ambitious project, which is a typical government health official approach to saving money. First, veteran pathologists and lab managers know all too well that, over the past 25 years, there are more disasters than successes when a government health system decides that it can take out costs by consolidating pathology testing, laying off medical technologists, and reducing the number of labs and blood collection centers serving a community. Certainly the cost of lab testing did go down in the short term in these cases. But it was physicians and patients in these communities who often endured service deficiencies, glitches in the process of consolidating lab testing, and even serious problems in the accuracy and trustworthiness of lab test results.

Second, I'll guess that the Irish Health Service Executive, in developing its "total laboratory consolidation" plan with a consulting company from England back in the years 2004-2007, did not spend much money sending a team of experienced pathologists, laboratory scientists, and healthcare policy makers on a tour to several countries to do first-hand investigations of successful, innovative regional laboratories, along with an on-the-ground visit to some of the larger-and often not-sosuccessful- laboratory consolidation projects.

If this assumption is true, it is an interesting comment on the due diligence of Ireland's healthcare leaders that they would embark on a major makeover of the nation's pathology service without having invested a rather modest amount of time and money to send their laboratory profession's best and brightest out on a factfinding tour of the world's best examples of lab testing. To the contrary, might it be true that the HSE, for the cost of a consulting fee to an English company, has gotten the answer it wanted and is proceeding with a laboratory restructuring and consolidation plan that was likely pre-ordained as early as 2004?


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Optimism & Opportunity at Executive War College

This year's gathering was high-energy and marked by a positive outlook for lab testing

CEO SUMMARY: Instead of our annual review of key speakers as a source of emerging trends and common themes, this year we assess the attitudes, opinions, and activities of the pathologists, laboratory administrators, managers, and industry executives in attendance at the 15th Annual Executive War College. These people are the grass roots of laboratory medicine and they are ready to tackle all the coming challenges in healthcare and the laboratory testing marketplace. ALL SESSION AUDIO RECORDINGS ARE AVAILABLE NOW!



Sonic Health Wins Irish Contract for Pap Testing

First nation in the world to outsource 100% of its Pap testing also renews contract with Quest

CEO SUMMARY: Evidently the Irish Health Service is satisfied with its decision to outsource all the nation�s cervical cancer screening tests. In recent weeks, it announced that two international laboratory companies would handle Pap testing for the next two years. Sonic Healthcare, Ltd., won a contract to perform 25% of Ireland's 300,000 Pap tests annually. Quest Diagnostics renewed its contract and will perform the balance. Both lab companies indicate they will build laboratory facilities in Ireland.



Pathologists Can Still Earn Medicare PQRI Incentives

Federal program offers pathologists a 2% bonus during 2010 for reporting required quality measures

CEO SUMMARY: During 2010, the Medicare Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) will pay a 2% bonus to pathologists who register and report data on 80% of their cases for the specified CPT codes. However, independent pathology laboratories still cannot participate in the PQRI program. Also, PSA, LLC, reports it can be challenging to audit the Medicare PQRI bonus amount paid at year's end against the actual amount that was billed to Medicare by individual pathologists for the CPT codes included in the PQRI program.



French Company Buys Pittsburgh-Based RedPath

ExonHit Therapeutics acquires Redpath�s proprietary molecular test and its CLIA laboratory

CEO SUMMARY: Here's a deal that is all about proprietary molecular assays and access to new markets. With its purchase of RedPath Integrated Pathology, ExonHit Therapeutics, S.A., of Paris, France, gains a CLIA laboratory and access to the U.S. market, even as the new owner opens the door to the European market for RedPath. As announced by the two companies, ExonHit will spend $22.5 million to acquire RedPath Innovative Pathology and will pay an additional $9.5 million if RedPath achieves certain sales targets.



LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Letter to Editor on EMR Donations, Deeply-Discounted Client Prices

Starting 10 years ago, physicians in Bristol, England alerted NHS officials about problems in lab test accuracy



EMR Donations, Client Bill Issues in Anatomic Path

Federal law has lots to say on EHR donations and discounted client bill pricing to referring docs

CEO SUMMARY: In today's market for anatomic pathology services, local pathology practices are facing tough competition from national pathology companies that are quite aggressive at using EHR donations and discounted client bill arrangements to win new clients. Attorney Jane Pine Wood of McDonald Hopkins identifies federal safe harbor requirements governing EHR donations involving laboratories and referring physicians, then discusses compliance issues triggered by discounted client billing arrangements.

INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

PERKIN ELMER PAYS $90 MILLION TO BUY SIGNATURE GENOMICS

MORE ON: Aurora

Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 6, Monday, April 19, 2010 (May 7th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: Is Laboratory Industry Ready for Facebook and MySpace?

WHO COULD HAVE IMAGINED, JUST A FEW YEARS AGO, that social networking sites such as Facebook.com, MySpace.com, and YouTube.com would become a useful platform that allows clinical laboratories, pathology groups, and in vitro diagnostics (IVD) companies to engage in two-way conversations with patients and customers?

After all, in those days, the preponderance of active users of these social networking services were young people. There were no obvious business reasons why a clinical laboratory might want to establish its own page on any of these sites. If that was the popular wisdom then, it is not accurate today.

In my neighborhood, even the retired ladies now maintain Facebook or MySpace pages and regularly communicate with each other via this medium. Of course, since elderly folks tend to have a variety of health problems, there is plenty of conversation taking place about these topics. I suspect that is why certain lab companies, like Myriad Genetics with its predictive genetic test for breast cancer, have established a presence on these social networking sites and find themuseful for communicating with women concerned about breast cancer.

On pages 3-6, THE DARK REPORT provides the lab industry's first briefing about why IVD companies and certain clinical laboratories are consciously incorporating social networking activities into their marketing and business development programs. I suspect it will surprise many pathologists and lab managers at how rapidly social networking has become a useful conduit for organizations to directly conduct two-way conversations with patients, customers, and prospects.

In fact, it might be smart for clinical labs and pathology groups to invite their Generation Y pathologists and medical technologists to enlighten the marketing and sales teams at their labs about how social networking works. An even bolder move would be to empower themost enthusiastic of these Gen Y laboratory professionals to help design social networking programs in tandem with the lab's sales and marketing team.

By way of full disclosure, this aging curmudgeon acknowledges that he doesn't surf such social networking sites as FaceBook.com and MySpace.com. However, he has learned that he can go to YouTube.com and easily find entertaining clips of musical performers popular during his youth. With just a couple of mouse clicks, performances by Mitch Miller and Patti Page can be accessed!


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Social Networking Is New Laboratory Marketing Channel

Clinical labs and IVD companies encourage customer dialogue at Facebook, YouTube, Twitter

CEO SUMMARY: Using social marketing sites on the Web allows labs and IVD manufacturers to interact with customers in ways that were not possible years ago. Marketers use these interactive web sites to supplement traditional methods of advertising. Inviting customers to discuss your company and products on a Facebook site can result in powerful word-ofmouth testimonials. But proceed with caution! Negative comments about your company or laboratory can pop up as well.



Pre-authorization Coming For Pricey Molecular Tests

Health insurers ready to control utilization of expensive genetic and molecular tests

CEO SUMMARY: In response to the steep ramp-up in the utilization of genetic and molecular testing, the nation's largest health insurers are preparing to institute new guidelines for coverage and reimbursement. These will include pre-authorization by physicians, a more effective genetic test coding arrangement for claims submission by laboratories, and implementation of evidence-based medicine (EBM) guidelines. All of these developments create opportunities for clinical laboratories to step up and add value in new ways to payers.



ISO 15189 Accreditation Requires Specific Steps For Global Recognition

CEO SUMMARY: This intelligence briefing is the third in an ongoing series about quality management systems (QMS) and their role in advancing the performance of clinical laboratories and improving the quality of the testing services they provide. ISO 15189 is a set of standards for medical laboratories based on the ISO 9001 quality management system. It provides a way for medical laboratories to demonstrate to outside examiners both conformance to the QMS and competence in the performance of laboratory testing services.


Competitive Bidding Update: Two Years Later, CMS Still Holds Labs' Competitive Bid Documents



LAB QUALITY: Errors in Surgical Pathology Surface in the United Kingdom

Starting 10 years ago, physicians in Bristol, England alerted NHS officials about problems in lab test accuracy


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

FIRE DESTROYS TACOMA FACILITY OF STERLING LABS

HBO BIOPIC ABOUT JACK KEVORKIAN TO AIR ON APRIL 24





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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 5, Monday, March 29, 2010 (March 29th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: For Better or for Worse: Nation Has New Health Law

CONGRESS AND THE CURRENT ADMINISTRATION HAVE THEIR HEALTH LAW. Whether this new law serves the citizens of this country for the better or for the worse will not be known for several years into the future.

I suspect that many of our elected officials in the House and Senate do not fully understand the major elements of the health bill that has just become law. I believe I amalso on safe ground to state the opinion that few of these "servants of the people" actually took the 2,700+ pages of the bill and perused themcarefully before deciding how to cast their vote.

Therein lies the rub. First, these legislators have exempted themselves and their Congressional staffs from the health mandates that they are imposing on the remainder of the country. They know this insulates themselves and their families from whatever negative consequences develop fromthe parts of the new law which prove detrimental to the healthcare system. As an American citizen of good standing, I find it sad that our political leaders deliberately take themselves out of the legislative solution they consider best for the nation.
 
Second, in coming years, none of us should be surprised when various unintended consequences of this health law become obvious and troublesome. Expect these same senators and representatives to tell news reporters that "I didn't know that was in the bill," or "I didn't understand how this specific mandate would cause health providers to change the way they practiced medicine."

Forgive me for being skeptical about these developments. Like many of you, early last year I was hopeful that the goal of improving our nation's health system would include a robust exploration of innovative ways to organize healthcare.

Healthcare's "best practices" examples, such as Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Kaiser Permanente, and Geisinger Health, would be studied by policymakers and legislators. As part of the health bill, seed funding to encourage similar "health innovation incubators" would be authorized with the goal of covering more people at lower cost while achieving improved health outcomes.

On this point, I am not aware of any provision in the new law that financially encourages a health system, hospital, or physician group to experiment with innovative ways to organize and deliver healthcare. I amwilling to be proven wrong on this point. If you know of such a provision, contact me at our editorial offices. In the meantime, like most of you, I am reserving judgement about whether this health law is good for our country. Like the residents of Missouri, I say "Show me."






2.3% Medical Device Tax Hits Clinical Labs in 2013

Newly-enacted health reform bill requires medical device companies to pay excise tax

CEO SUMMARY: One aspect of the massive new health bill is that medical device companies will pay a 2.3% tax, effective January 1, 2013. Students of economics know that it is customers who invariably end up paying such direct taxes. Thus, clinical laboratories in the United States should prepare to see this 2.3% tax show up as a line item on sales contracts and in the form of higher prices for in vitro diagnostics analyzers, lab equipment, reagents, consumables, and even medical software.



Business Advantages From Whole Slide Imaging

*

WSI creates ways to significantly improve collaboration between pathologists and physicians

CEO SUMMARY: Whole slide imaging (WSI) is a niche product today, but it offers the potential to redefine the practice of pathology. That's the opinion of pathologists presenting at a digital pathology workshop last month. One pathologist explained how WSI significantly improves collaboration between pathologists and referring physicians. Another pathologist explained how regulators soon may require standards for WSI and why such standards are likely to result in a call for standards for light microscopes as well.



Use of Point-of-Care Testing Reduces Mortality by 50%

In a thinly-populated region the size of Texas and New Mexico combined, an integrated clinical care program based on point-of-care testing (POCT) has delivered impressive gains in health outcomes. For rural residents, mortality rates from cardiovascular disease have fallen by 50%. There were comparable declines in hospital length of stay and the rate of readmissions. A reliable test result and speed to answer fromPOC testing is a major factor in these improved outcomes.


Serious Problems Plague Newfoundland Laboratory

Inaccurate cyclosporine test results trigger lab director resignations and more media scrutiny

Newfoundland's St. John laboratory was rocked by revelations in February that its cyclosporine testing was flawed, exposing patients to the harmful affects from inappropriately high doses of the immunosuppressant drug. Within weeks of this news, the Chief of Laboratory Medicine resigned. Now a team from Toronto's University Health Network (UHN) is at the laboratory to conduct a review of operations and make recommendations to the health authority.



INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

JUAN ROSAI, MD'S CASES TO BE PUT IN DIGITAL ARCHIVE

PHLEBOTOMIST GETS LUCKY, WINS $111,250






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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 4, Monday, March 8, 2010 (March 8th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: Oncologists Cut Into Pathologists' Revenue Pie

EVENTS NOW UNFOLDING IN DALLAS, TEXAS, SIGNAL A DIFFERENT DIRECTION for pathology and clinical laboratory testing. As you will read on pages 3-9, in May, just weeks from now, a new laboratory company, funded with $40 million from an unlikely combination of four partners, is about to become operational.

The primary business objective of the new partnership between Pathologists Bio-Medical Laboratories, Baylor Health Care, Texas Oncology, and US Oncology is to build a state-of-the-art reference and esoteric laboratory, to be known as MedFusion. First the partnership will offer this testing to hospitals and other clients in the Dallas area, before expanding across Texas and into other parts of the United States.

I want to focus on another intriguing aspect of the new business relationship among these four unexpected bedfellows. Within the same building where MedFusion's laboratory is located, US Oncology is building its own laboratory that will focus on providing oncology testing for its 1,300 oncologists who practice in Texas and in 38 other states across the country.

Because it currently serves about 720,000 cancer patients per year in this country,US Oncology has the ability to refer a huge volume of biopsies and cancer tests to its new laboratory, currently under construction in Dallas. At the same time, the pathologist-owners of Pathologists Biomedical Laboratories (PBL) in Dallas have positioned themselves to become the primary and preferred source of pathology subspecialty expertise to analyze and diagnose these specimens.

The obvious conclusion is that US Oncology represents the first wave of oncologists ready to cut into the pathologists' revenue pie, just as dermatologists, urologists, and gastroenterologists have done during the past two decades. I think that conclusion�even if true�is rather simplistic and misses a more subtle and important insight.

Personalized medicine and companion diagnostics are making the diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other diseases more complex. I believe the Dallas pathologists at PBL have their sights on amuchmore valuable prize. They are positioning themselves to become an essential part of the cancer care team. In coming years, this means that they evolve into necessary consultants on every case of cancer, from diagnosis to selection of therapies and monitoring the patients' progress. As that happens, I predict these Dallas pathologists will earn more compensation by providing services that have significant value to patients and their care teams.


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Baylor Pathologists Form Lab with US Oncology

Four partners prepare to open two sizable new laboratory businesses to be based in Dallas

CEO SUMMARY: In Dallas, Pathologists Bio-Medical Laboratories is part of a new laboratory partnership that includes Baylor Health Care System, Texas Oncology, and US Oncology. The four partners ponied up a total of $40 million in cash and debt to build a state-of-the art laboratory in a 172,000 square foot building. To be called "MedFusion," the laboratory partnership expects to provide reference and esoteric testing to Baylor Health, hospitals, other clients, and to clinical trial service organizations.



Two New Pathology Models Will Soon Be Tried in Dallas

Goal is to deeply integrate laboratory testing into healthcare continuum in ways that add value

CEO SUMMARY: There are notable aspects to how and why four unlikely partners are banding together to invest $40 million and create the nation's newest reference and esoteric testing laboratory. It was the pathologists at Baylor University Hospital in Dallas, Texas, who originated the vision and initiated conversations with the other three partners. This new business shows how pathologists can leverage their knowledge and play a greater role in advancing personalized medicine.



Multispectral Tests Use "Smart" Systems To Analyze Tissue

Pathology Updates: Pathology Errors in Canada Make National News Once Again

Mastectomy on a patient who didn't have cancer triggers suspension of one pathologist, review of cases


Preparing for New Lab Role In Personalized Medicine

Multiple disruptive forces are actively reshaping clinical laboratory testing and anatomic pathology

Laboratory medicine is about to find itself between the two jaws of a powerful vise. One jaw is pending major legislative overhaul of the entire healthcare system, along with dwindling reimbursement as Medicare and Medicaid runs out of money. The other jaw is personalized medicine, companion diagnostics, and expensive molecular testing. As these jaws squeeze tighter, clinical laboratories and anatomic pathology groups will need effective response strategies.


DARK INDEX: Assessing the Year-End Financials For Nation's Biggest Lab Companies

Quest Diagnostics, LabCorp, Sonic Health, and Bio-Reference Labs report performance


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

DLS IN HONOLULU BUILDS NEW LAB

LENETIX LAB SELLS TO BIO-REFERENCE






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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 3, Monday, February 15, 2010 (February 15th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: New Cycle Begins for Lab and Pathology Acquisitions

THERE'S A NEW TRANSITION JUST GETTING STARTED in the laboratory testing industry. For the past two decades, laboratory acquisition activity has primarily centered around independent clinical laboratories-often owned by local pathologists. This was true in both the size of the transactions and in the volume of transactions. Our stories on pages 3-9 describe these processes.

That is about to change. From 2010 onward, laboratory acquisition activity is likely to center around two different segments of the laboratory testing industry. One segment involves the laboratory outreach businesses owned and operated by hospitals and health systems. The second segment is comprised of the regional and local anatomic pathology laboratories and group practices owned by pathologists. For both segments, a new cycle of acquisition activity is now beginning.

In segment one, in the 14 months since January 2009, four significant acquisitions of hospital/health system-owned lab outreach businesses have taken place. Plus, there is the investment by Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) in Pathology Associates Medical Laboratories (PAML) that happened in November 2009.

Collectively, these laboratory acquisitions and investments demonstrate that hospitals and health systems are waking up to the substantial value that is created from a profitable laboratory outreach program. It is reasonable to expect that-as hospital CEOs learn about these acquisitions and the prices realized by the sellers-more hospitals and more health systems will be willing to entertain the sale of their laboratory outreach businesses.

For segment two involving anatomic pathology laboratories, the simple fact that will drive laboratory acquisitions is the pending retirements of baby boomer pathologists who are partners in these laboratories and pathology group practices. Thatmotive played a role inmost of the pathology laboratory acquisitions announced during the past 14 months. (See table on page 5.)

I believe the longer-term impact of these developments will be the further consolidation of both segments of the laboratory testing industry. Deal-by-deal, hospital laboratory outreach business will be sold and resold into the hands of the nation's largest lab operators. A similar process will unfold in anatomic pathology. It will take some time to consolidate the 3,300 independent pathology practices that exist today, but that cycle of change is now under way.


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Pace of Lab Acquisitions Increased during 2009

Lab buyers show strong interest in acquiring both clinical labs and anatomic pathology groups

CEO SUMMARY: After two years of relatively slow sales of clinical labs, there is pent up demand for lab acquisitions and a declining supply of independent labs available for sale. That's the assessment of one expert on laboratory mergers and acquisitions, who predicts that the accelerating pace of clinical lab and anatomic pathology practice acquisitions seen in the second half of 2009 is likely to carry on well into 2010. Professional investors continue to look for opportunities to buy into the laboratory testing market.



Predict 2010 To Be Busy For Lab Owners & Buyers

Capital gains tax rates may rise next year and that may motivate laboratory sellers to do deals soon

CEO SUMMARY: Along with a recovering economy, the possibility of an increase in the capital gains tax rate for 2011 may encourage owners of clinical labs and anatomic pathology companies to sell their businesses during 2010. That could make 2010 a busy year for laboratory mergers and acquisitions, particularly if valuations for laboratory companies hold or increase from current levels. A growing number of credible buyers is another reason why laboratory sellers are likely to make 2010 a busy year for laboratory M&A.

(LIVE! Mergers and Acquisitions Audio Conference Recording by Chris Jahnle - LEARN MORE)



Multispectral Tests Use "Smart" Systems To Analyze Tissue

Research Pathologists Use Next Research Pathologists Use Next Generation Methods

CEO SUMMARY: ogists at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania are using a new system that combines image analysis software and algorithms to evaluate images containing numerous stains and biomarkers. Pathologists teach the system to identify tumor cells and distinguish them from non-tumor cells. Now used for research purposes, this sophisticated digital pathology system is designed to do much of the manual activity required of a pathologist when assessing an image while producing highly accurate quantitative data.


LAB BRIEFS: BECKMAN COULTER REPORTS EARNINGS THAT INCLUDE OLYMPUS
ANTHEM CRITICIZED AFTER RAISING PREMIUMS BY 39% IN CALIFORNIA
LABCORP EXPANDS ITS BILLING OPERATIONS IN GREENSBORO, NC
MEDTOX REPORTS GAIN IN CLINICAL LAB VOLUME AS DRUG TESTING DECLINES


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

ADD TO: GENETIC & MOLECULAR TESTS

TRANSITIONS: Philip Chen, M.D., Ph.D., resigned from Sonic Healthcare





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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 2, Monday, January 25, 2010 (January 25th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: Anatomic Pathology's Likely Path of Transformation

RECENT DEALS INVOLVING PRIVATE EQUITY FIRMS and several of the nation's larger pathology groups hint at a major transformation soon to come to the pathology profession. No one should be surprised that pathologists of the baby boomer generation will be an important trigger in this transformation.

It is the coming wave of retirements by baby boomer pathologists that will provide the momentum for these changes to the profession. As you will read on pages 13-14, our editor observes that many pathology group practices will soon need money to cash out their retiring partner-pathologists. In response to this need, a growing number of pathology groups will either allow themselves to be acquired or will sell significant equity to outside investors. In both cases, some of the money raised by these methods will be used to purchase back the equity owned by the retiring partners.

I can see this having two direct consequences to the pathology profession. First, it is likely to signal the end of the pre-eminence of the private pathology group practice, usually anchored by one or more contracts with community hospitals. Because of either outright sale of the practice or the sale of significant equity to outside investors, private pathology practices-professional corporations (PCs)-will begin to decline in numbers and influence.That's because the buyers or new investors of these private practice groups will operate themusing a different business model than the professional corporation.

Second, each time a private pathology group either sells itself to a buyer or sells a significant share of equity to outside investors, these investors will insist on one major change in the pathology group's business activity. That change will be to increase the rate of growth in specimens and revenue. To achieve this, these pathology groups will initiate their first-ever sales and marketing programs or expand and intensify existing sales efforts.

Thus, the rather collegial pathology profession we see today, dominated by private pathology group practices (often smaller groups serving community hospitals and not funding a professional sales program) is about to undergo a gradual transformation. If professional investors change anatomic pathology in a similar fashion to how the clinical laboratory was changed between 1985 and the present, then we should expect a fundamental restructuring of the anatomic pathology sector. This may take more than 10 years to accomplish, due to the pace of retirement by baby boomer pathologists.


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Ireland Is Restructuring National Lab Test System

Government health program plans to integrate, consolidate, and regionalize lab testing services

CEO SUMMARY: Working from a consultant's report and recommendations based on studies dating back to 2006 and 2007, Ireland's Health Service Executive is moving forward to effect a comprehensive reconfiguration of clinical laboratory testing across the nation. This may be the first time that the government health program of a developed nation has attempted to consolidate, regionalize, and integrate all the laboratory testing services within its borders.



Predict 60,000 Doctors To Adopt EMRs Each Year

Expanding EMR use by physicians creates opportunity for clinical labs & pathology groups

CEO SUMMARY: Only about 180,000 U.S. physicians have adopted electronic medical record (EMR) systems over the past 14 years-mostly in largermedical groups. Now experts believe asmany as 60,000 physicians per year will begin to adopt EMRs because of new federal incentives funded by the stimulus bill passed early last year. This is amajor development and requires a response by every clinical lab and pathology group practice, since physicians will need their lab provider to enable electronic lab test ordering and lab test reporting for their EMRs.



Health Market Update: Rate of Health Spend Increase in 2008 Was Lowest Since 1960

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services report says a total of $2.3 trillion was spent on health during 2008, which is an increase of 4.4%


Two Big Pathology Groups Tap Investors for Capital

Each deal infuses new capital in the group, while leaving pathologists with significant control

CEO SUMMARY: Pathology supergroups in California and Tennessee have each announced major recapitalizations. Both groups will use some of the money to cash out retiring partners. The balance of the new capital will be used to expand their businesses. With so many baby boomer pathologists approaching retirement, these two transactions are likely to be studied by many pathology groups and should be considered early examples of a trend that is soon to become more prominent.



Pathology Inc. Sells Equity to Raise Capital

Pathology group accesses growth capital by selling shares to professional investors

CEO SUMMARY: In looking how to propel its business to the next level, the partners at Pathology Inc. opted not to sell their pathology group practice. Instead, they chose to raise capital by selling equity in their company to a group of investors. In this exclusive interview, executives from Pathology Inc. share their business strategy. Among the priorities are expansion of the sales and marketing program, possible acquisitions of other lab companies, and acquiring sophisticated information technology.

INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

ADVAMED CREATES NEW DIAGNOSTICS ADVOCACY EFFORT

MORE ON: NeoGenomics, Inc., of Ft. Myers, Florida,






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Complete Issue > Volume XVII, Number 1, Monday, January 4, 2010 (January 4th, 2010 — $ 36.00)
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R. Lewis Dark: Lab Medicine's Potential Versus Its Challenges

WE ARE STARTING A NEW YEAR. But is it the start of a new decade? That depends on how one decides to determine the first year of a decade. Even Webster's Dictionary recognizes this difference of opinion as to the start year of a decade.

For the word "decade," Webster's Dictionary offers a definition with two distinctions, as follows. "...2) a period of ten years; esp., in the Gregorian calendar: a) officially a ten-year period beginning with the year 1, as 1921-1930, 1931- 1940, etc.; and, b) in common usage, a ten-year period beginning with a year 0, as 1920-1929, 1930-1939, etc. "Therefore, Webster's provides cover to advocates of either method for measuring the start and finish of an individual decade.

Having provided you with an argument you can use to defend either method of defining the start of a decade, I'd like to share some thoughts on what lies ahead in laboratory medicine for the years that run from 2010 to 2019 (a decade as defined by "common usage," according to Webster's).

First is the opportunity. All of us in laboratory medicine will be part of history�s first-ever exploration of the human genome and all the processes associated with the mysteries of life. Science is peeling back the secrets of DNA, RNA, and the human proteome, while at the same time learning practical was to use this knowledge to heal the sick and improve the health and life of every individual, potentially from the moment of conception to death.

This is an unprecedented opportunity for laboratorymedicine. Pathologists and laboratory scientists are poised to contribute immense value to individuals and to society at large. Itmeans that entrepreneurs in lab testing should do well in the coming years by recognizing how to adopt laboratory businessmodels in the new ways necessary to package and deliver valuable diagnostic, therapeutic, and patient-monitoring services to the healthcare system.

On the other hand, the challenge for labmedicine will be how to overturn the resistance to change that is a trait of healthcare in the United States so that the best new genetic science can find its way into clinical diagnostics. It is a challenge built around the adage of "follow the money." Expect the folks getting themoney today to resist changes to the status quo which favor rapid adoption of new genetic and molecular testing technologies. Therefore, whether you agree that the new decade starts in 2010 or 2011, what remains true is that the next 10 years have the potential to make pathology a pre-eminent clinical service because of how it delivers life-saving and life-enhancing genetic/molecular information.



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New Clinical Lab Trends To Shape Events in 2010

Trends point to more emphasis on excellence in clinical laboratory management and operations

CEO SUMMARY: In presenting this list of macro trends for clinical laboratories, several themes are in play. They range from a continued emphasis on improving lab operations to the need to acquire and deploy sophisticated information technology. During the next few years, the long-predicted retirement of Baby Boomers will kick in. That will aggravate the existing shortage of medical technologists and skilled lab professionals. It is just one of several critical issues soon to challenge lab executives and pathologists.



LAB INDUSTRY MACRO TREND FOR CLINICAL LABORATORIES

No 1: Quality Management Systems Now an Option for Clinical Laboratories

No 1: Quality Management Systems Now an Option for Clinical Laboratories

No 2: More Labs Use Lean Six Sigma To Improve TAT, Performance

No 3: Work Flow and Work Processes Become a Management Driver

No 4: Automation Serves Lab Goals To Improve TAT, Quality, Service

No 5: Automation Is New Option In Micro, Histology, Molecular

No 6: Hospital Lab Outreach Programs Become Service-Rich Offerings

No 7: As Docs Adopt EMRs, Labs Offer E-Prescribing, Imaging Orders

No 8: EMR Funding Incentives Open Door to New Compliance Issues

No 9: Middleware Comes into Its Own And Gives Labs Extra Function

No 10: SaaS and Cloud Computing Gaining Acceptance by Laboratories

No 11: Molecular Testing Contributes Ever More Clinical Value

No 12: Consumers Step Up Interest In Ordering Their Lab Tests

No 13: Home Brew Testing Grows, As Does FDA Intent to Regulate

No 14: Patient Satisfaction Surveys Raise Competitive Bar

No 15: Clinical Labs Get Creative To Maintain Med Tech Staff Levels

No 16: Point-of-Care Testing Poised To Make Bigger Contributions

No 17: Multi-Modality Diagnosis Makes Early Progress

No 18: Many Local Labs Still Access Managed Care Contracts

No 19: Underfunding for Laboratory Testing Can Undermine Quality







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R. Lewis Dark: Lab Utilization Is Healthcare's Ticking Time Bomb 

TODAY I WOULD LIKE TO SPEAK TO ONE OF THE ELEPHANTS IN THE LAB INDUSTRY'S ROOM. It is the ticking time bomb of lab utilization. Sometime in the next 36 to 60 months, this time bomb will go off. It will catch both health policy makers and payers unprepared and, the consequences will be corrosive to the laboratory testing profession.

Going forward, three trends will drive utilization of lab testing. One trend is the increased volume of lab tests ordered by physicians who are responding to pressures and financial incentives to provide all the recommended care to 100% of their patients. For example, think of 100%of diabetic patients getting HgA1c tests annually at the same time that doctors diligently work to diagnose more of the tens of millions of undiagnosed diabetics in this country. The increased utilization of lab tests is a result that is desired by the health system.

Second is the natural uptake of lab testing that occurs as baby boomers leave their fifth decade of life and push into their sixth decade. Both payers and laboratories that bid private Medicare contracts know that, on average, an individual 65 years and older, uses more than four times the number of lab tests per year than a commercial life. Again, this increased utilization is a natural consequence of the aging process and the system should ethically be prepared to provide those services, as appropriate.

Third is the ongoing addition of new diagnostic tests to the existing lab test catalogue. As physicians have new diagnostic assays that support more precise and earlier diagnosis for an expanding number of diseases, they will naturally and appropriately order a higher volume of tests. As with the two other trends, this trend underpins higher diagnostic and treatment accuracy-which benefits the healthcare system by reducing the overall cost per episode of care.

However, in THE DARK REPORT'S travels across the United States and a number of other developed countries in Europe and the Pacific Rim, it has been unable to identify any government health system or healthcare policy maker which recognizes and discusses these approaching developments. This lack of perceptive analysis about the essential value of clinical laboratory testing, in the context of the three trends described above, represents a "black hole" for the lab medicine profession. It means that health policy makers are not likely to establish budgets and reimbursement for lab testing based on the most relevant factors. As that happens, further underfunding for lab testing will occur.



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2009's Top Ten Lab Stories Reflect Some Good, Bad

Year unfolds with a mixed bag of developments even as economic recession dampens activity

CEO SUMMARY: As the closing year of the first decade of the new century and the new millennium, 2009 brought neither disruption nor upheaval to the majority of laboratories in the United States. Rather, it was marked by at least two themes. One was how public disclosure of problems with lab testing services generated media headlines. The other was economic, and ranged from the effects of the recession to how specific healthcare reform proposals might negatively affect the financial status of laboratories.



Quest Diagnostics' Vitamin D Test Alert/Retest Effort Makes Headlines

Quest Diagnostics Pays $302 Million To Resolve Federal Qui Tam Lawsuit

Hospitals Prune Budgets, Causing Laboratories to Rein in Spending

Labs Dodge $750 Million Annual Tax Proposed in Baucus Reform Bill

Labs Experience Quiet Fall Flu Season Despite More Cases of Novel A/H1N1

Testing Failures in Canadian Labs Are Warning to Govt. Health Programs

Cost of Whole Genome Sequencing Falls as Low as $20,000 per Person

Auckland Lab Contract Decision Disrupts Physicians and Patients

Companion Diagnostics Activity Gains Momentum During 2009

Catholic Health Initiatives Invests In Pathology Associates Med Labs



DNV Offers Accreditation For Both CMS and ISO

DNV offers hospital accreditation that combines CMS CoP with ISO 9001 compliance

CEO SUMMARY: For about a year, hospitals and health systems have had a new choice formeeting the Medicare Conditions of Participation. This new choice is Det Norske Veritas (DNV). Because DNV offers a dual process for achieving Medicare accreditation and ISO 9001 certification, it brings client hospitals a different bundle of benefits. As hospitals adopt ISO 9001, it will require the clinical laboratory to align management and operations to the standards of this quality management system (QMS).


Lab Briefs: DNA NANOCHIP IS GOAL OF IBM SCIENTISTS, QIAGEN NV POISED TO BECOME NEXT IVD FIRM TO TOP $1 BILLION DOLLARS, HEALTH INFORMATION ON THE INTERNET CHANGES PATIENT-DOCTOR TALKS


The Dark Index: Laboratory Merger & Acquisitions Saw Several Deals during 2009

Sonic and LabCorp remain opportunistic buyers, some pathology groups tap private equity capital



Catholic Health Initiatives Ramps Up Lab Outreach

78-hospital health system says lab outreach is right vehicle to support integrated patient care

CEO SUMMARY: Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) wants to expand its presence in outpatient and outreach services. It sees hospital laboratory outreach programs as a key component of this strategy. It will use an equity investment in Pathology Associates Medical Laboratories (PAML) as the foundation of a series of laboratory outreach joint ventures between its 78 hospitals and PAML. Along with generating a new source of revenue, CHI expects these lab JVs will help it establish tightly-integrated electronic links with office-based physicians.

INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

TRANSITIONS Aperio Technologies, Inc., of Vista, California,

MORE ON: Fraud The criminal complaint states that Adeyemi stole the identities of more than 150 of his coworkers.

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R. Lewis Dark: The $1,000 Genome and Laboratory Testing

IT WAS 1953 WHEN JAMES D.WATSON AND FRANCIS CRICK, working from X-ray data collected by Rosalind Franklin, described the double helix structure of the DNA molecule. That discovery inspired scientists to begin investigating the genetic basis of life.

In the 56 years since Watson and Crick published their findings, there has been steady progress at cracking open the human genome. One useful marker for this progress is the declining expenses required to sequence a base pair of DNA. In 1990, it cost $10 to sequence one base pair of DNA. Currently, Knome, Inc., says it will sell a whole genome sequence to anyone for $20,000. That represents a cost of $0.0003 per base pair of DNA.

But wait! That's not all... Complete Genomics, Inc., is selling a whole human genome for $20,000. That is a further reduction of 80% in the cost to sequence one base pair of DNA. (See pages 13-16.) These two examples demonstrate that both the cost and time required to sequence the entire human genome are rapidly falling to the goal of $1,000 and one hour.

I predict this will have a profound effect on laboratory medicine as we know it today. For the first time in human history, it will be economically feasible and scientifically possible to sequence the entire genome of individual humans. As many of you are aware, this is expected to revolutionize the prescription drug industry. It will also play a role in helping physicians make pre-symptomatic diagnoses for a variety of diseases.

But, it is the second application of cheap, fast, accurate gene sequencing that will be disruptive to pathology and laboratory testing as we know it today. Imagine the ability to use a lab-on-a-chip, operated within a handheld device, to do sophisticated molecular analysis of a patient's specimen, for pennies per gene, that produces highly sensitive results in minutes.

Tome, this is themore significant point about the race to the $1,000 whole human genome, sequenced in one hour or less. The same technologies which enable this achievement will be downsized and miniaturized for the express purpose of supporting sophisticated molecular assays to be performed in clinical laboratories, physicians' offices, point-of-care (POC) settings, and maybe even for patient self-test purposes. Although this will be disruptive to existing clinical and business models for pathology and clinical lab testing, it will also create tremendous new opportunities for the pathology profession.



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Costs Falling Swiftly for Whole Genome Sequence

Complete Genomics says it is now selling $20,000 sequences to researchers and pharma

CEO SUMMARY: Several companies want to be first to achieve the holy grail in sequencing: an accurate whole human genome sequence produced in an hour for $1,000. Complete Genomics announced earlier this month that it could sequence the full human genome for a materials cost of $4,400 (not including labor and overhead). Another competitor, Illumina, is selling whole genome sequences for $48,000 to private individuals- and has customers!



Explaining Certification Versus Accreditation

ISO standards make it important for labs to understand the meaning of each term

CEO SUMMARY: Early signs are that the quality management systems (QMS) most likely to find favor with hospitals and clinical laboratories in the United States will be those that meet standards developed by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO. Many hospitals and clinical labs are considering adopting ISO 9001 or ISO 15189, respectively. As they do, it will be important to understand how the terms "accreditation," "certification," and "registration" are used in the application of standards published by ISO.



Geisinger's Use of EHR Creates Opportunity for Lab to Add Value

Integrated EHR allows clinicians to use lab test data to greater effect

CEO SUMMARY: Every health reform proposal makes it a high priority to implement a universal electronic medical record (EHR). Because lab test data is the essential component of a successful EHR, laboratory managers and pathologists may soon have a once-in-alifetime opportunity to use EHR implementation to boost the value to lab testing services. This is exactly what the laboratory at Geisinger Health has achieved in the 15 years since the system first implemented its integrated EHR solution.


Molecular Update: "Liked the Product-Bought the Company," BD Acquires HandyLab and Jaguar System


Health IT Update: Xerox, Dell, and Hewlett-Packard Each Buy Into IT Outsourcing Market

Growth opportunities are expected in outsourcing of information technology services to providers


INTELLIGENCE: Late & Latent

TRANSITIONS Aperio Technologies, Inc., of Vista, California,

MORE ON: Fraud The criminal complaint states that Adeyemi stole the identities of more than 150 of his coworkers.



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