PDA

View Full Version : Need Help to Fight Insurance Dragons!!!!


marshbird
10-23-2007, 09:44 AM
My insurance co. (BCBS GA.) has refused to pay for ONCO TYPE DX.

Any of you out there had luck getting the test covered? If so, would you mind telling me the name of the insurance company and the state in which you live? Of course individual info. will be kept confidential.

Any hints also would be helpful.

Many Thanks!!!

P.S. The makers of the test are alredy appealing in my behalf.

Joe
10-23-2007, 09:56 AM
Get in touch with Mr. Patrick Terry, Co-Founder of Geonomic health. They wll be very helpful in helping .

Regards

Joe

harrie
10-25-2007, 11:38 PM
My insurance company, Bluecross Blueshield, also refused payment. We are currently in the second appeal. It is disgusting.
Maryanne

Joe
10-26-2007, 04:11 AM
Geonomic Health will assist you:


http://www.genomichealth.com/oncotype/about/reimbursement.aspx


Regards
Joe

Lani
10-26-2007, 04:21 AM
for those wanting an OncoDx test or those having trouble getting insurance to pay
Perhaps it will help if you print this out and discuss it with your oncologist and/or insurance company

ASCO Issues Updated Recommendations For Breast Cancer Tumor Marker Testing [American Society of Clinical Oncology]
ALEXANDRIA, Va. — The American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) has updated its clinical practice guideline on the use of tumor markers in breast cancer. The guideline authors observed that although researchers have made progress in developing tumor markers in areas such as diagnosis and treatment planning, mammography remains the gold standard in screening for breast cancer.
A tumor marker is a substance found in a person's blood, urine, or body tissue. The presence of a tumor marker, or higher- or lower-than-normal levels of a tumor marker, may indicate an abnormal process in the body, such as cancer, and can provide further information if cancer is diagnosed. Doctors may suggest tumor marker tests at various stages in the diagnosis or treatment of cancer. These tests can provide helpful information about both the cancer and the treatment.
"Increased use of tumor markers represents a shift in our understanding of the basic biology of breast cancer, which will affect how we treat patients," said guideline co-author Lyndsay Harris, MD, Vice Chair of ASCO's Tumor Markers Expert Panel and Associate Professor and Director of the Breast Cancer Disease Unit at Yale University. "The cancer research community needs to continue to conduct more clinical trials to examine exactly how tumor markers can help with the early detection of breast cancer."
To update its clinical practice guideline, first published in 1996 and subsequently updated in 2001, the ASCO expert committee reviewed the use of tumor markers in breast cancer and made recommendations based on their effectiveness for early detection of the disease, as well as their benefit in helping to plan treatment, monitoring response to treatment, and determining a patient's prognosis.
Much progress has been made in the area of tumor markers over the past 10 years. Since the 2001 guideline, researchers have identified six new categories of tumor markers. Although currently there are insufficient data to recommend the use of any of these new tumor markers in diagnosing breast cancer, both ER/PR and HER 2 testing are still recommended for diagnosis, as noted in previous versions of this guideline. However, two new tumor marker tests were recommended for their use in determining a breast cancer patient's treatment or whether or not breast cancer is likely to return after initial treatment.
The updated recommendations covered two new tumor marker tests for patients with newly diagnosed node-negative breast cancer, or cancer that has not spread to the lymph nodes.
The Oncotype DX tumor marker test is recommended for patients with node-negative breast cancer that is ER-positive and/or PR-positive, which is the case for 50 percent of breast cancer patients. The test measures multiple genes at once to estimate the risk of breast cancer recurrence. Patients with a low recurrence score may be able to receive only hormone therapy and avoid chemotherapy. Sparing patients from unnecessary treatment may not only improve their quality of life, but it also will reduce overall health care costs.
Other tumor markers that doctors can test are urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1) markers. Testing these tumor markers can help estimate a patient's prognosis. Patients with tumors that do not have uPA and PAI-1 have a good prognosis and may not need chemotherapy. However, the test is not currently commercially available in the United States, but it is in Europe. More studies of this tumor marker are currently under way.
The guideline also encourages patients to enroll in clinical trials that focus on the use of additional tumor markers as a surveillance tool for breast cancer.
"Tumor markers can predict whether or not a patient will respond to treatment," Dr. Harris said. "The goal of these guidelines is to help doctors provide their patients with the best possible care. Patients will benefit from knowing whether or not a treatment will help them before beginning the treatment regimen."

harrie
10-27-2007, 06:25 PM
Genomic Health has been working on my appeals. I am at the position now where I might be writing a letter to my ins company stating that if they want to communicate any further with me in regards to payment or nonpayment, they are to direct all communication to my attorney.
I am tired of dealing with them.
Maryanne

hutchibk
10-28-2007, 12:30 AM
Be sure that EVERY letter you send to your insurance company, you also cc: your state board of insurance, call them and ask what division you should send it to. They take this stuff pretty seriously and need to know when there are rejections and appeals. It helped me get way on my one and only appeal regarding a rejected PET scan payment. Once they saw that the state board had been apprised, it helped them wake up to my plight really quick.