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Medicare's Decision on Whether to Cover Amyloid Brain PET Scans

Medicare's Decision on Whether to Cover Amyloid Brain PET Scans
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febrero 21, 2013
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earlier_diagnosisAlthough the FDA approved florbetapir (Amyvid) in April 2012 as a tracer for PET scans in detecting brain amyloid, Medicare has not covered it. The test costs about $3,000 in total and some patients have been paying for it out of pocket.

Last month, a Medicare advisory panel voted against medicare coverage for amyloid brain PET scans. Although the technology has been around for eight years, and numerous studies have shown its accuracy in detecting amyloid plaques, the committee felt that it did not improve health outcomes in patients. One major concern has been what to do with a positive result from the scan given that no current therapy exists to alter the progression of the disease.

It is expected that such a test would be used not for patients who have clear-cut Alzheimer’s dementia, but rather to identify those who are at greatest risk for developing the disease. There have been many studies that have shown the connection between amyloid in the brain and subsequent development of memory problems and Alzheimer’s dementia. However, the question still remains as to what to do once the scan is found to be positive. I would submit that there is much to be gained, not only from a positive scan, but even more so from a negative scan.

The test may, in fact, be most useful in patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). About 50 percent of patients will progress to full-blown Alzheimer's disease dementia within five years. This scan would help us determine to which group a patient belongs: MCI due to Alzheimer's disease or not due to Alzheimer's disease. Such early detection would allow patients and families to plan for the future as opposed to the cases I see routinely in the clinic where the first manifestation of memory impairment is something such as a medication overdose, financial mistakes or other functional issues with potentially serious complications.

As a clinician, I see great benefits not only in being able to accurately inform my patients about the cause of their cognitive impairment, but also being able to tell a patient with MCI that he or she does not have amyloid in the brain—that is, not on the path towards Alzheimer’s dementia. In these cases, we would initiate other studies as part of the work up to evaluate the cause of the patient’s cognitive impairment. In fact, just one day prior to the Medicare advisory panel meeting, the Alzheimer’s Association and the Society for Nuclear Medicine published guidelines specifying in which patients amyloid scans would have the greatest impact on outcome.

Until such coverage is available, we will rely on clinical history, neurological and cognitive evaluation, blood tests and volumetric MRI for evaluating patients with cognitive complaints. As disease-modifying treatments become available, the coverage of such scans will no longer be in question.

Michael S. Rafii, M.D., Ph.D.

Director, Memory Disorders Clinic Associate Medical Core Director, Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study University of California San Diego

This post originally appeared in Alzheimer's Insights, an ADCS Blog.

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