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“Pathways to Success” MSSP proposed regulation: Summary white paper

ByColleen Norris, Cory Gusland, Charlie Mills, and Hugh Larson
20 August 2018

On August 8, 2018, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) released a sweeping proposed regulation that, if enacted, will significantly change the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP). The proposed regulation, titled “Pathways to Success,” accelerates the path for accountable care organizations (ACOs) to participate in shared risk arrangements while simultaneously softening key provisions, allowing lower revenue ACOs to participate with reduced total financial risk. In addition, CMS has proposed numerous methodological and operational changes. In this paper we provide a summary of the proposed regulation’s key provisions and briefly discuss how they might impact the MSSP.

Introduction of the BASIC and ENHANCED tracks

If the new regulation is adopted, CMS will discontinue all current tracks—1, 2, and 3, as well as Track 1+ under the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI)—and replace these options with the BASIC and ENHANCED tracks1 for contract periods beginning on or after July 1, 2019. Due to the off-cycle contract period, expiring agreements will be granted a six-month extension in order to avoid a six-month gap in participation.

  • The BASIC track has five levels of risk designated A through E. The lowest levels of risk (A and B) are upside only and bear many of the same features as the current Track 1. Levels C through E introduce upside and downside risk, culminating in the highest risk level E, which is commensurate with the current Track 1+ and qualifies as an Advanced Alternative Payment Model (APM).2
  • The ENHANCED track is for ACOs that can or are required to take on more substantial financial risk. The ENHANCED track has the same financial parameters as the current Track 3, offering greater risk and reward than Level E of the BASIC track as well as qualifying as an Advanced APM.2
  • Agreement periods for both tracks will be five years whereas previously agreement periods were three years.

Figure 1 shows both the current and future ACO track options.

Figure 1: Current and Future ACO Track Options

Current ACO Tracks Future ACO Tracks
Track 1 BASIC With five levels, transitions ACOs from risk similar to the current Track 1 to risk similar to the current Track 1+
Track 1+
Track 2 N/A  
Track 3 ENHANCED Financial parameters in the ENHANCED track are the same as Track 3

The BASIC track will be of special interest to ACOs currently in Track 1 or Track 1+, or ACOs considering entering the program. ACOs in the BASIC track will start at one of the five levels of risk (A through E) based on their experience and Medicare revenue levels and will transition each year3 to the next level of risk, culminating in reaching level E. CMS describes this as the “glide path” approach to taking on more risk, and requires ACOs to transition to higher levels of risk more rapidly (e.g., from level B to D instead of B to C). Furthermore, ACOs reaching level E in the BASIC track will be eligible for qualifying participant (QP) status under the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA). Lastly, unlike current rules, risk track will not drive assignment methodology, with ACOs being able to select retrospective or prospective assignment under both tracks each performance year.

Figure 2 summarizes the financial parameters for each of the five levels in the BASIC track. In general, as ACOs move to higher risk levels, the shared savings rate and the loss sharing limit increase.

Figure 2: Savings and Loss Sharing Parameters by BASIC Track Risk Level

  Loss Sharing Limit
(lesser of…)
Risk Level MSR / MLR Shared Savings Rate** Shared Loss Rate % of Parts A + B Revenue % of Updated Benchmark
Level A Based on ACO size 25% x
Quality Score
N/A N/A
Level B Based on ACO size 25% x
Quality Score
N/A N/A
Level C Choice of MSR / MLR* 30% x
Quality Score
30% 2% 1%
Level D Choice of MSR / MLR* 40% x
Quality Score
30% 4% 2%
Level E*** Choice of MSR / MLR* 50% x
Quality Score
30% 8% 4%

Source: Table 2 in the proposed regulations.

*Options for chosen minimum savings rate (MSR) and/or minimum loss ratio (MLR) are 0.0%, 0.5%, 1.0%, 1.5%, and 2.0%, or an MSR/MLR that varies based on ACO size (consistent with Levels A and B).

**The shared savings limit is 10% of benchmark for all levels in the BASIC track.

***Level E loss sharing parameters will be set each year consistent with the generally applicable nominal amount standard as defied in the Quality Payment Program (QPP).

How does CMS calculate the revenue vs. the benchmark-based cap?

One of the chief barriers to date for provider-led ACOs moving to shared risk in the current Track 2 or Track 3 is that an ACO’s financial loss exposure is based upon its benchmark, which can be significant; e.g., a bad year could result in ACO participants owing CMS the equivalent of multiple years of their Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) revenue. Understanding this challenge, CMS tested a revenue-based or benchmark-based loss limit in Track 1+, and is now proposing this type of loss limit in the shared-risk levels of the BASIC track. Going forward, the determination of a revenue-based or benchmark-based loss-sharing limit will be formula-driven rather than relying on an ACO to attest to its ownership structure (as is currently the case in Track 1+). This also results in a shared risk model that better adapts to the unique structure of an ACO (e.g., provider-led vs. integrated delivery system-led).

The revenue-based loss sharing limit is calculated by multiplying the ACO participants’ total Part A and B FFS revenue by the applicable revenue-limit percentage for the risk level in the BASIC track. The table in Figure 3 shows an example of this calculation for “Level E” parameters as defined for 2019 and 2020. The loss-sharing limit is the lesser of the benchmark-based cap or the revenue-based cap.

Figure 3: Sample Calculation of the Loss-Sharing Limit in the BASIC Track

Benchmark-Based Approach Revenue-Based Approach
ACO's total updated benchmark expenditures $93,411,313 ACO participants' total Medicare Part A and Part B FFS revenue $13,630,983
Nominal standard percentage 4.00% Nominal standard percentage 8.00%
Benchmark-based cap $3,736,453 Revenue-based Cap $1,090,479

Source: Table 4 in the proposed regulations.

It is important to note that in the calculation of the revenue-based approach, the ACO participants’ total Part A and Part B FFS revenue4 is used, including any revenue from services provided to beneficiaries that are not assigned to the ACO.5 While this approach may cause a revenue-based loss limit to be greater than a benchmark-based loss limit for some ACOs, we expect the revenue-based loss limit will still be lower than the benchmark-based loss limit for most provider-led ACOs.

At what level will an ACO enter the BASIC track “glide path”?

CMS has proposed complex rules for determining the level at which an ACO is eligible to enter the BASIC track “glide path,” based on an ACO’s applicant type, experience level, and whether the ACO is considered low- or high-revenue. Figure 4 summarizes the options available for ACOs.

Figure 4: ACO Entry Options

Applicant Type Experienced / Inexperienced Low Revenue / High Revenue BASIC, Glide Path BASIC, Level E ENHANCED
New Legal Entity Inexperienced Low Yes
(A through E)
Yes Yes
High Yes
(A through E)
Yes Yes
Experienced Low No Yes Yes
High No No Yes
Renewing or Re-entering ACOs Inexperienced Low Yes
(B through E)
Yes Yes
High Yes
(B through E)
Yes Yes
Experienced Low No Yes Yes
High No No Yes

Source: Tables 5 and 6 in the proposed regulations.

Brief descriptions of the preceding terms follow.

Defining experienced vs. inexperienced ACOs

An ACO is determined to be experienced if either of the following conditions apply:

  • The ACO previously participated in a performance-based Medicare ACO initiative6 or deferred entry into a second MSSP agreement period under Track 2 or Track 3.
  • 40% or more of the ACO’s providers participated in a performance-based Medicare ACO initiative or were part of a deferred renewal arrangement in any of the five most recent performance years prior to the agreement start date.

Defining low-revenue vs. high-revenue ACOs

Low-revenue and high-revenue ACOs are defined based on the ACO participants’ Part A and B FFS revenue for the most recent 12 months of available data, as follows:

  • High-revenue ACO: If the ACO participants’ recent total Part A and B FFS revenue (which may include revenue for beneficiaries not assigned to the ACO) is at least 25% of the total Medicare Part A and Part B FFS expenditures for the ACO’s assigned beneficiaries for the 12-month period.
  • Low-revenue ACO: If the ACO participants’ recent total Part A and B FFS revenue is less than 25% of the total Medicare Part A and Part B FFS expenditures for the ACO’s assigned beneficiaries for the 12-month period.

Changes to the benchmark calculation

In the proposed regulation, CMS has restructured four key components of the benchmark calculation:

1) Regional adjustment

Regional adjustment to the benchmark is designed to address two issues: incentivizing participation of ACOs that are already efficient compared to their regions (and will therefore have a low benchmark), and creating a more sustainable model for ACOs that have reduced expenditures versus their historical levels. In the current program, regional experience is used to trend and adjust the benchmark starting in the second contract period. CMS has proposed revisions to this approach so that regional blending starts immediately (even in the first contract period) and the effect of the regional adjustment is capped at +/-5% of national Medicare FFS per capita expenditures. Figure 5 summarizes the key changes.

Figure 5: Proposed Changes to Regional Adjustment

Program feature Current Proposed
Regional blending Second and subsequent contract periods First and subsequent contract periods
Maximum blending ratio 70% regional experience 50% regional experience
Blending cap None 5% of national Medicare FFS per capita expenditures

2) Risk adjustment

CMS is proposing to do away with the “newly assigned” and “continuously assigned” designations of the existing program and replace them with an adjustment based on the risk score ratio capped at +/-3% versus benchmark year three (up to a five-year gap) by eligibility category. This is intended to more accurately measure morbidity changes, and limit the effect of changes to coding practices.

3) Trend

Currently, an ACO’s benchmark is trended using national trends for the first agreement period and regional trends (based on the ACO’s beneficiary county mix) for the second agreement and subsequent periods. CMS is proposing to change to a “national-regional blend” approach for all agreement periods. Under this approach an ACO’s benchmark trend is calculated by blending the regional trend and the national trend based on the ACO’s share of total assignment-eligible beneficiaries in each county. This partially addresses a prior issue with regional trends in which large or rural ACOs that dominated a region were essentially competing against their own trends.

4) Agreement periods and rebasing

CMS is proposing to change the length of future agreement periods from the current three years to five years. Consistent with the current approach, the benchmark will be rebased (i.e., recalculated using updated experience data) for each agreement period. Therefore, the benchmark will be rebased every five years instead of every three years. This longer rebasing period will provide ACOs with more stability in their benchmarks, but will also make the risk adjustment and trend (and the changes discussed above) more significant in the benchmark calculations.

Key changes to other program features

CMS has also proposed several key changes to other program features. These changes provide ACOs with appealing options for better effecting high-quality and lower-cost care.

Figure 6: Key Changes to Other Program Features

Program Feature Current Under Proposed Regulation
Assignment: Prospective vs. retrospective Prospective or retrospective assignment is fixed by track. Under both the BASIC and ENHANCED track ACOs will be able to choose between prospective or retrospective assignment and can change their elections annually.
Assignment: Service codes used Assignment is based on a set of procedure codes as defined in version 6 of the program specifications. CMS is proposing to add several new codes, including those for advanced care planning, administration of health risk assessment, prolonged evaluation and management (E&M) services, and annual depression screening. CMS is also proposing changes for the use of E&M codes for the purposes of attribution while a patient is being treated at a SNF.
Beneficiary opt-in Not available. CMS is proposing an option for ACOs to choose an alternative “opt-in” beneficiary assignment methodology. Under this approach, a beneficiary would be assigned to an ACO if the beneficiary “opted-in.”
SNF waiver The skilled nursing facility (SNF) waiver is available to participants in Tracks 1+ and 3. The SNF waiver will be available to ACOs in performance-based risk levels (i.e., ACOs in levels C, D, and E of the BASIC track and ACOs in the ENHANCED track), regardless of the assignment methodology chosen or whether a beneficiary loses assignment to the ACO.
Telehealth Medicare will pay for telehealth services in limited circumstances. Medicare will pay for telehealth services under broader circumstances for ACOs in performance-based risk levels and that are using prospective attribution. (Under prospective alignment, telehealth restrictions apply 90 days after a beneficiary loses assignment to the ACO.)
Incentive payments Limited ability to incentivize beneficiaries to participate in healthy behaviors. ACOs in performance-based risk levels will be allowed to provide an incentive payment to beneficiaries of up to $20 for each qualifying primary care service.

Conclusion

In these proposed regulations, CMS has defined a set of paths for MSSP ACOs. Each path leads to downside risk and has its own set of guardrails. By changing the program to better fit its own goals and stakeholder feedback, CMS has created both challenges and opportunities for ACOs. The effect of these changes, whether positive or negative, will vary significantly across ACOs based on their structure, experience, and region. It is critical for all ACOs to understand the specific implications to their organization to ensure future success.

1ACOs currently participating in Tracks 1, 1+, 2, or 3 will be allowed to complete their current three-year agreements, or may elect to terminate their existing contracts early and switch to either the BASIC or ENHANCED track at or after July 1, 2019.

2To be an Advanced APM, an APM must also meet certain criteria related to certified electronic health record technology and quality measures.

3ACOs entering the BASIC track on July 1, 2019, will not be required to move to the next level of risk in 2020, but will continue upon the glide path in 2021 and subsequent years.

4Including beneficiaries not necessarily assigned to the ACO.

5Although this revenue is reduced for sequestration, it includes supplemental payments like indirect medical education (IME), disproportionate share hospital (DSH), uncompensated care payments, and individually identifiable payments from demonstration or pilot programs. Also, this revenue is not reduced to reflect the truncation of claims for high-cost beneficiaries under the revenue-based approach.

6Performance-based Medicare ACO initiatives include Track 1+, Track 2, Track 3, Pioneer ACO model, Next Generation ACO model, and performance-based risk tracks of the Comprehensive End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Care model, and in the future participation in either the BASIC or ENHANCED tracks. CMS also reserves the right to specify other ACO initiatives involving two-sided risk.


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