National Coverage Analysis (NCA) View Public Comments

Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty

Public Comments

Commenter Comment Information
Lassig, Jeffrey Title: Clinical Lecturer
Organization: Department of Radiology, Division of Interventional Neuroradiology, University of Michigan
Date: 09/09/2006
Comment:

Existing literature (WASID, among others) has clearly shown that medical therapy to prevent stroke DOES NOT WORK for a significant subset of patients. Most notably, patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease have a 22-24% chance of recurrent stroke within one year of their first event. The result is not only horribly detrimental to patients, but is also a major cost to society. An intracranial stent designed specifically for that purpose provides neurointerventionalists with a much

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McKenzie, M.D., John Date: 09/09/2006
Comment:

We request that CMS grant coverage for the Wingspan under a humanitarian device exemption (HDE). This is "reasonable and necessary" because there are no other viable options. Stroke and potential stroke patients are at high risk and medical therapy (the WASID Study)proves ineffective. These patients are at risk of recurrent stroke in 45-70% of patients. Those patients treated with the Wingspan in the HDE Study had stroke rates less than 7% and no restenosis. Failure to act accordingly would

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THACKER, IKE Title: INTERVENTIONAL NEURORADIOLOGY
Organization: BAYLOR UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
Date: 09/09/2006
Comment:

Preface: I attest to no financial interest in the referenced device, or in any business entity involved in its production or distribution.

As a staff interventional neuroradiologists at Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas—the first designated Stroke Center in North Texas—I have been fortunate to participate in the treatment of five chronic stroke patients since February of this year. Each of these patients, ranging in age from 46 to 78, presented with recurrent, debilitating

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dyer, emmet hunter Title: neurosurgeon
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

The Wingspan stent has been a valuable addition to our treatment options for refractory intracranial atherosclerosis. Our endovascular surgeon has found it very helpful in multiple cases. As a vascular neurosurgeon, I consider it a significant step forward in this prevalent, difficult to treat pathology.

Schmutz M.D., James Title: Physician
Organization: Medical Imaging Associates
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

We have thankfully moved from a very poor prognosis for intracranial atherosclerotic stenoses when we could only offer medical therapy to a much better prognosis with the advent of safe and effective angioplasty techniques/tools. We now have yet another needful advance with safe delivery intracranial stents. This is an technical advance we don't want to deny our patients. The CMS population would be the greatest benfactor patient population. We need to support the use of intracranial stents

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Benitez, Ron Title: Endovascular Neurosurgeon
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG-00085R2

It is my feeling, as well as the feeling of the neurologists at my instituition, Atlantic Health System, that balloon angioplasty and stenting represent an important treatment option for patients with symptomatic intracranial disease with greater than 50% stenosis. As several current studies have shown, the rate of recurrent stroke is high in this group of patients that are already receving medical therapy. Decling coverage

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Delap, Joanna Title: Vascular and Neurointerventional Nurse Coordinator
Organization: Froedtert Hospital/MCW
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

As a vascular and neurointerventional nurse coordinator; I encounter a lot of patients with intracranial stenosis who failed medical therapy and are looking forward to have intracranial balloon angioplasty and stenting performed. I urge the CMS to approve the reimbursement for this important therapeutic alternative to our patients. Many patients are under immense pressure when this is the only alternative but it is not covered by the CMS. The coverage will take away significant burden from

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McDougall, Cameron Organization: Barrow Neurological Institute
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I was deeply disappointed to learn of the pending CMS decision regarding intracranial angioplasty and stenting. While I understand the limitations of the data currently available, I believe that the preponderance of available evidence favors intracranial angioplasty and stenting for patients with medically refractory, severe intracranial stenosis. I recognize that more work needs to be done to determine the limitations of this treatment, but I feel that the dismal natural history for

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Zaidat, Osama Title: Director of Neurointerventional Program
Organization: Medical College of Wisconsin and Froedtert Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Atherosclerotic intracranial diseases carries a high risk of subsequent stroke despite treatment with aspirin and warfarin as shown by several studies. The 2 years risk in a symptomatic stenosis of 50% or more reaches 22% and if the stenosis is 70% or more it may approch 30% over 2 years period despite medical therapy. With new technology and procedural risk of less than 5% as shown in prospective studies; it is crucial to cover such an alternative endovascular therapy with balloon

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Reid, Scott Title: Director, Health Policy and Payment
Organization: Boston Scientific Corp.
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Boston Scientific Corporation’s Neurovascular Group appreciates the opportunity to present these comments on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) proposed coverage decision on intracranial angioplasty and stenting.

Company Background
As the world’s largest company dedicated to the development, manufacturing, and marketing of less-invasive therapies, Boston Scientific supplies medical devices and technologies used by physicians representing the

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Mazumdar, Avi Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: University of Chicago
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

To: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
Intracranial atherosclerosis is a potentially treatable cause of ischemic stroke, responsible for 70-90,000 strokes annually in the United States, about 5-10% of all strokes. Once established as a diagnosis, the annual stroke risk from intracranial atherosclerosis is estimated to be 3-15%. Even with optimal medical therapy (aspirin or warfarin), the stroke rate in such patients is estimated to be 8-12 % per year. The prevalence of

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Farkas, Jeffrey Title: Director Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Maimonides MEDICAL Center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

My name is Jeffrey Farkas and I am the director of Interventional Neuroradiology at Maimonides Medical Center Brooklyn, NY. I am appealing to you to change your preliminary decision not to cover intracranial angioplasty and stenting unless the patient is enrolled in an IDE Study. The FDA decision to allow the use of the wingspan system, As a HDE was a momentous occasion for physicians that treat and prevent stroke, as well as for patients at high risk of recurrent stroke. Based on older

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Somogyi, Chris Title: INR fellow
Organization: Washington University
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I am a neurointerventional radiology fellow and have seen many patients of various ages (20's-90's) with severe vascular stenosis both intra and extracranial. Many of these patients have had cerebral infarction despite aspirin/plavix therapy. We need another option besides medical therapy for these patients. The Wingspan Stent and the Gateway Balloon hold much promise now and should prove valuable in the future.

Hartman, Jonathan Title: MD
Organization: Kaiser Permanente
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Stroke is a devastating disease and is the number one cause of long term disability in this country. Options for patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease who have failed medical therapy are limited. I ask CMS to provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed best available medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE

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Lynch, Ann-Marie Title: Executive Vice President
Organization: Advanced Medical Technology Association (AdvaMed)
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

AdvaMed appreciates the opportunity to comment on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recent proposed decision memorandum involving intracranial stenting and angioplasty (CAG-00085R2). Our comments will not be focused on the specific technology per se. Rather, we will focus on non-coverage of new humanitarian use devices.

As you know, AdvaMed follows Medicare coverage activity very closely because of the impact it has on beneficiary access to state-of-the-art medical

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Blake MD, Lindsey Title: Medical Doctor of Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

“NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG-00085R2)”

To whom it may concern within CMS,

Sunrise Medical Hospital and I would like to request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to

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Labiche, Lise Title: Director, Stroke Program
Organization: Baylor University Medical Center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Re: NCA – Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG-00085R2)

On behalf of Baylor University Medical Center, we kindly request that CMS issue an expeditious, positive national coverage decision for intracranial stenting and angioplasty in patients who receive treatment with the Humanitarian Use Device: the Wingspan™ Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter.

The current national non-coverage policy directly affects our hospital’s financial ability

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Earley, Cassandra Title: Practice Manager
Organization: Brigham and Women's Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

On behalf of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA, we thank CMS for issuing the national coverage proposal for intracranial stenting, a potentially lifesaving procedure that benefits intracranial atherosclerotic patients.

We would like to take this opportunity to point out that, apart from intracranial atherosclerosis, a condition known as arterial dissection could also be successfully treated with intracranial stenting. An arterial dissection is a tear in the lining of an

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finnegan, karen Title: chief tech interventional radiology
Organization: u of md medical center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I have been involved in 2 cases that were performed by interventional neuro radiologists. They both were successful. Before this stent, there was nothing to offer these patients other than medications. Stroke recovery is so expensive not only to the patient and their family, but society in general. I am for any treatment that prevents strokes and keeps patients out of long-term care. However, I am not in favor of anybody but interventionally trained neuro interventionalists performing this

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Thiebolt, Brett Title: Lead Interventional Technologist
Organization: St. Joseph Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I'm an Interventional Technologist who has been working in the field for 22 years. Intracranial stenting and angioplasty provide a method to decrease stroke risk in patients who have failed anticoagulation therapy. There is no alternative treatment for this group of patients. These procedures represent an important advancement in stroke treatment and prevention, and should be reimbursed as such.

Brook, Allan Title: MD
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I am the director of interventional neuroradiology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.We have many patients who run out of any options and even with a defined lesion that is clearly the only cause of a stroke, our hands are tied due to the lack of reimbursement. Wingspan is clearly safe and effective. The disabling costs of stroke are far greater than the early cost of reimbursing stroke preventive and acute therapy.

Hill, Catherine Title: Senior Manager, Regulatory Affairs
Organization: on behalf of AANS and CNS
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

The American Association of Neurological Surgeons (AANS), the Congress of Neurological Surgeons (CNS), and the American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology (ASITN) appreciate the opportunity to provide input to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS’) request for comments on the proposed decision memo for national Medicare coverage for intracranial stenting and angioplasty (CAG-00085R2), which was published on the CMS website on August 9,

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Forbes, Doris Title: Interventional Radiology Manager
Organization: Chippenham Johnston Willis Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Thank you for this opportunity to provide feedback as it relates to the recent preliminary ruling on intracranial stenting. Our practice sees the Wingspan Stent being an integral part of our Neuroscience Center. This device is central to our treatment of ICAD and stroke. This device is an absolutely necessary tool in our ability to provide patients with the best possible care. Correspondingly, national Medicare coverage of this device is equally necessary for this patient population.

Britz, Gavin Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: University of Washington
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Many patients are going to be denied the care they need without an approval.

Kott, Brian Title: Chief of NeuroInterventional
Organization: Tacoma General Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I am a Neuro Interventionalist in Tacoma, WA and will be unable to offer my patients a treatment option when they have failed medical therapy. The limited ruling allowing for IDE coverage only will truly limit this patient population to a treatment that could prevent a secondary major stroke. The inability to offer the Wingspan Stent to this group of patients will only decrease the quality of life when this group of patients has a major stroke that could have been prevented with this

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Shanno, George Organization: Northwest Surgical Specialists
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

intracranial stenosis and acute occlusions are very dangerous disease processes with a poor natural history and very few treatment options. The Wingspan stent is the only stent available for treating these problems, and angioplasty alone often does not suffice. Clinicians like myself badly need better tools such as this to further the treatment of cerebrovascular disease.

Ghodke, Raj Title: Chief of NeuroInterventional
Organization: University of Washington Medical Center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I would strongly encourage extended coverage by CMS for this critical patient population that has failed medical therapy and is truly out of options without the Wingspan Stent coverage policy. I practice at the University of Washington and Harborview in Seattle and see a small subset of patients that have failed medical therapy and until the Wingspan Stent became available often times progressed to a devastating stroke that can now be prevented with this stent system. By limiting coverage

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Rymer, MD, Marilyn Title: Medical Director, Stroke Center
Organization: Mid America Brain and Stroke Institute
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

We are a high volume stroke center and make the commitment to 24/7 coverage for the entire region surrounding Kansas City. We serve all patients regardless of their ability to pay. We have 15 patients with critical intracranial arterial stenosis who have failed medical therapy awaiting this treatment. They all have a significant risk of stroke within the next year. They range in age from 35 to 85. Without hope of reimbursement, we cannot possible address this need and it is likely

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Soto, Rodney Title: Vascula Neurology
Organization: Sacred Heart Hospital System
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

The high recurrent stroke and death rates in medically treated patients with intracranial stenosis highlights the inportance of developing newer treatment modalities for this condition. With the current clinical studies performed it has been demostrated that intracranial stenting can be performed with acceptable risk of periprocedural stroke and death in patients with intracranial atherosclerosis. This procedure should bereimbursable for symptomatic patients with >50% stenosis who have

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Hodes, Jonathan Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

As a neurointerventional neurosurgeon deeply involved in the care of patients suffering with devastating cerebrovascular disease, I request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. This includes patients that have hemodynamically significant intracranial arterial stenosis who have suffered

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Bonovich, David Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Stroke is the leading cause of disability in the United States and affects over 750,000 patients yearly, at a cost of over $50 billion. Intracranial atherosclerosis is more common in Asian patients, Hispanics, and African Americans. We need to have a means of treating those patients with refractory symptoms of intracranial disease with angioplasty and stenting procedures to hopefully avoid long term disability from stroke. The use of the wingspan deviced and other dvices have been shown to

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Deveikis, John Title: Professor of Radiology and Neurosurgery
Organization: Medical University of South Carolina
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I am very concerned about the CMS recommendation to only provide coverage for the Wingspan Intracranial Stent and Gateway PTA Balloon when used in an IDE trial. Intracranial atherosclerotid disease can have devastating consequences for patients, and standard medical care is generally ineffective. I, along with other physicians treating these patients over the years have often been forced to resort to off-label usage of other devices and medical treatments prior to the introduction of the

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Staton, Robert Title: Assistant Director, Radiology
Organization: University Hospital
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I work at a major stroke center and have seen patients with the need for intracranial stents. I urge you to consider the needs of these patients, many of which have no other options, as you make your final determination. I hope that you will approve the use of Wingspan and have Medicare cover this lifesaving procedure.

Thanks for your consideration.

Alexander, Michael Title: Director, Duke University Neurovascular Center
Organization: Duke University Medical Center
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Patients with coronary atherosclerotic disease have a minimally invasive angioplasty and stenting option with CMS coverage. Patients with symptomatic carotid stenosis have a stenting alternative. Patients with peripheral vascular occlusive disease have a stenting option. However, patients with symptomatic intracranial stenosis do not have this treatment alternative with the CMS currently, except under IDE trial. The number of patients that have access to trials are few (limited number

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Sunenshine, Peter Title: Neurointerventional Radiologist
Organization: Scottsdale Medical Imaging, Ltd
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I am writing in support of a positive coverage decision by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services with regard to intracranial angioplasty with stenting in the appropriate clinical setting. Intracranial stenosis has been shown to be a significant etiology of stroke, approximately 8-10% of all ischemic strokes. The WASID trial and other studies have demonstrated that medical therapy is inadequate in many cases, with up to 24% of patients acquiring another stroke in the year following

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Weisman, Eric Title: Clinical Professor of Neurology
Organization: NBI / PCOM / AAN speakers Brain Attack Consortium
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Dr. Robert Feldman stepped down form a consultative post as a Neurologist at Boston Scientific a couple of years ago. Shortly after this I was contacted by a professional placement agent in Wesley Massachusetts about interviewing for the Neurology Directorship. Just prior to the fist interview I researched the work being done at Boston Scientific and elsewhere. My comments are beyond the scope of the space allowed here. The proposal and supportive data gets mixed reviews here.

Singh, Vineeta Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: University of California at San Francisco
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Angioplasty and stenting offer a safe an effective treatment for patients with symptomatic vertebrobasilar artery stenosis who have failed medical management.

Padidar, Arash Title: Interventional Radiologist
Organization: Regional Medical Center: Minimally Invasive Surgical Solutions.
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

I request that CMS provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed best available medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options.

Mayes, Gwen Title: Director of Reimbursement and Government Relations
Organization: Abiomed, Inc.
Date: 09/08/2006
Comment:

Abiomed appreciates the opportunity to comment on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) recent proposed decision memorandum involving intracranial stenting and angioplasty (CAG-00085R2). Our comments will not focus on the merits of the proposed coverage decision per se, but rather the approach taken by CMS to cover a humanitarian device.

Abiomed ABIOMED, Inc. develops, manufactures and markets medical technology designed to restore, recover or replace the pumping

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Liu, Ai-Hsi ("I-C") Organization: Washington Hospital Center
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am a neurointerventionist working at Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C. I am wrting to request reversal of the CMS non-coverage policy for intracranial angioplasty and stenting using the humanitarian use device: the Wingspan Stent System with Gateway PTA Balloon Catheter.

The non-coverage policy directly put financial constrains on my institution, and other institutions, leading to restriction in the utilization of this potentially life-saving procedure. Many, if not all,

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deshmukh, vivek Title: assistant professor of neurosurgery
Organization: george washington university
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am writing to request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the use of the Wingspan stent and gateway balloon under the current HDE indication. Intracranial stenosis is a common cause of acute stroke. The natural history of intracranial stenosis > 70% is exceptionally poor despite maximal medical therapy. Prevention of acute stroke due to intracranial stenosis would save taxpayers a huge expense, particularly as the

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Barnwell, Stanley Title: MD, PHD
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

The ability to treat patients with intracranial atheromatous disease has been one of the major unsolved problems in the treatment of stroke. Until the Wingspan system became available for physician use, there was no safe and effective device that could be safely delivered to the brain and open these severely narrowed arteries. Unless CMS allows coverage for this device and treatment, physicians will just be left watching most of their patients develop severe brain strokes that otherwise

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Prestigiacomo, Charles Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: Univesity of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I would like to begin by stating that it is quite encouraging that CMS give consideration for reimbursement for intracranial angioplasty and stenting. Though the decision to approve reimbursement for the use of this technology in the setting of IDE trials demonstrates that there is a lack of randomized evidence-based data to support intracranial angioplasty and stenting, this does not mean that the technology may have a role in a very specific population. By limiting the availability of

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MacGregor, CPC, Jodi Title: Billing Manager
Organization: UCI-Physicians Billing
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I would like to request that CMS reconsider their stance on disallowing reimbursement for the intracranial and vertebral stenting. The societies that you have quoted in your Proposed Decision Memo, I'm sure, has submitted documentation that supports evidence that these stenting systems and procdures do in fact benefit the patient in both the short and long term. Working in an acedemic facility, we tend to see and treat patients that are of a higher risk factor than most hospitals. Many

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Moran, Christopher Title: Associate Professor, Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Barnes Jewish Hospital
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I disagree with this decision, the government agencies should communicate better with one another. We have an approved device and no reimbursement. This is forcing physicians to use devices off label. Wingspan provides an option to treat patients who have failed medical management and have no other treatment options. As pointed out in the Boston Scientific response, Wingspan and Gateway already show superior results to Warfarin. This puts an undo burden on the physicians and

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Welch, Babu Title: Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery & Radiology
Organization: UT Southwestern Medical Center
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

As a neurosurgeon with cerebrovascular and endovascular specialization, I have studied, witnessed and provided the therapeutic options available to patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD). Up to this point, I have achieved some satisfaction knowing that I have provided the best available therapy to those patients in need. This is, of course, despite my disappointment when recurrent or worsening symptoms occur. This incidence of symptom recurrence and further morbidity

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Zylak, Christopher Title: Neurointerventional Radiologist
Organization: Inland Imaging
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

CMS's decision regarding intracranial angioplasty and stenting is taking a step backwards towards medical options for patients that would benefit from this. Coverage for the Wingspan Stent System is very critical in regards to giving patients access to treatment options for their condition. Sufficient evidence exists to support that the "reasonable and necessary" standard is being far too stringent if it is going to eliminate this as a medical option. For many of these patients, there

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Nwagwu, Chiedozie Title: Director, Cerebrovascular Neurosurgery
Organization: University of California, Irvine
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Dear CMS,

I extend this comment to you in order to express my opinion on your proposed coverage decision regarding intracranial angioplasty and stenting.After reviewing the proposed decision, I am very disappointed.

Intracranial stenting and angioplasty provide a method to decrease stroke risk in patients who have failed anticoagulation and antithrombotic therapies. There is no good alternative treatment for this population of patients, and the cost associated with this

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Kostanian, Varoujan Title: Director, Division, Neurointerventional Radiology
Organization: University of California, Irvine
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

This message is being sent on behalf of Dr. Varoujan Kostanian, Department of Radiological Sciences, University of California Irvine.

The Wingspan Stent System represents an important advancement in the prevention and treatment of ischemic stroke. The fact coverage would still be denied for patients treated with this technology that fall within the FDA approved HDE indication is disappointing. Many times this is the last option for this patient population. The cost associated

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Tsai, Fong Title: Professor and Chairman
Organization: University of California, Irvine
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

This message is being sent on behalf of Dr. Fong Tsai, Chairman, Department of Radiological Sciences, University of California Irvine.

The Wingspan Stent System represents an important advancement in the prevention and treatment of ischemic stroke. The fact coverage would still be denied for patients treated with this technology that fall within the FDA approved HDE indication is disappointing. Many times this is the last option for this patient population. The cost associated

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Greco, CPC, Anita Title: Adminstrive Analyst
Organization: University of California, Irvine
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I work at UCI Medical Center and I deal with coding and reimbursement. After reviewing the CMS decision on reimbursement for intracranial stenting and angioplasty I am more than just disappointed. This proposal as outlined is not nearly enough. I urge CMS to reconsider this coverage decision to include the HDE population consistant with the FDA approved HDE indication. Not to mention the significant financial burden for not only the facitilty but the patient as well. It is my

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Turk, Aquilla Title: Assistan Professor of Radiology and Neurosurgery
Organization: University of Wisconsin
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

The recent release of a dedicated intrcranial stent system has been a great advancement in the fight against symptomatic intracranial atheroscleosis. This patient subset has a disease that has a terrible natural history with few alternatives. These patients have already failed medical therapy and the only remaining option has been coronary devices which are difficult to utilize for this purpose and have a much higher potential for morbidity. I sincerely hope that you reconsider

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Howington, Jay Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

i see plenty of patients in my hospital in whom they have had TIAs or a CVA despite maximal medical therapy and have >50% intracranial stenosis in the vessel that irrigates the territory of the neurologic event and am unable to perform an intracranial angioplasty/stent because the hospital forbids it on reimbursemnt grounds. This is a procedure with very tight indications that when properly used can drastically change an individual's life. Please expand the coverage to those symptomatic

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Orr, Nelson Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

“NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG-00085R2)”

I have worked in the field of Interventional Neuroradiology for @ 15 years and been witness to the developement of several new innovative products for treatment of vascular disease. The Wingspan manufactured by Boston Scientific for the treatment of Carotid disease is a product we are anxiously waiting to use. It is the next step in successful treatment of patients with symptomatic narrowing of the carotid arteries. It is

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Huang-Ho, Amy Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am a diagnostic neuroradiology fellow at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. At Mass General we have a large stroke population and have aggressively treated stroke using intravenous and intra-arterial methods. I have helped put togther—as a fellow—many multidisciplinary conferences involving interventional neuroradiology/neuroradiology/stroke neurology/and neurosurgery. The staff spend quite a bit of time discussing appropriate treatments for the various patients. I

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Broyles, Elizabeth Title: Clinical Nurse Coordinator
Organization: Baylor University Medical Center
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

As the clinical nurse coordinator of the neuro-interventional radiology department@ Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas TX. I respectfully request that CMS re-think and expand it's reimbursement coverage for the treatment of ICAD using the Wingspan-Gateway System. Based on the fact that the WASID trial has shown that patients with a greater than 70% stenosis have at least a 25% chance of having a stroke within 1 year, and the fact that the Wingspan-Gateway System is FDA approved

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Rucker, Creed Title: M.D.
Organization: Teaching hospital
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am an interventional neuroradiologist. It is unfortunate that coverage for intracranial stenting won't be provided. This really limits the treatment for these patients with cerebral ischemia that is not responsive to medical therapy. Thank you, Creed Rucker

Gonzalez, Ramon Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am the division chief of Neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital. My research and clincal research focus has historically been on stroke.

I believe CMS should expand its coverage decision to include patients who have >50% stenosis, are symptomatic and have failed medical therapy.

The WASID data has been clear in demonstrating the limitations of medical therapy and coverage should therefore be expanded as outlined above.

Thank you.

Ross, Christine Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am the executive administrative assistant for the Interventional Neuroradiology Service at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

I have firsthand experience dealing with carotid registries and studies. The CMS ruling on carotids has made it very difficult for patients that have been seen by three services (interventional, neurology and surgery) and referred by all three for stenting to be treated in a timely fashion. I take the frustrated phone calls from patients and families

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Muller, Lois Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I have been a nurse for over 25 years. I have been involved in neuroendovascular procedures for the last six years at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

I am concerned that the recent ruling by CMS will limit the use of neuroendovascular stents in the treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Patients that would likely benefit may be denied access to these therapies.

Stroke is a horrible disease and we should reach for opportunities to prevent people from

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Yoo, Albert Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am an interventional neuroradiology fellow at the Massachusetts General Hospital. In my previous capacity as a diagnostic neuroradiologist, I saw the ravages of stroke on patient's films. Now, I see it first hand in patients.

I believe that CMS should amend its decision expiditiously to allow broader coverage of ICAD treatment with Wingspan.

It is clear from the WASID data that there are significant limitations in the medical treatment of ICAD.

To deny care to

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Turner, Raymond Title: Endovascular Fellow, Dept of Neurosurgery
Organization: Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty is a useful tool in endovascular therapy. Please reconsider your decision regarding this therapy.

Liu, Amon Title: Senior Physician, Dept. of Interventional Neurorad
Organization: The Permanente Medical Group
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I ask CMS to provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed best available medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options.

schweickert, patty Title: Nurse Pract.
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

The Wingspan Stent is the only device available to our physicians for the treatment of ICAD. From our experience, the device has worked extremely well and is key in our management of stroke. This device should be covered nationally by Medicare.

Albers, Gregory Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I ask CMS to reconsider its proposed decision and provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options.

Boutin, Selene Title: NP, MSN
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Based on our experience, the Wingspan Stent is the only option for effectively treating ICAD. Because of its critical nature in the treatment of this disease state, CMS should grant national Medicare coverage for the device.

Dumont, Aaron Title: Instructor of Neurosurgery
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

On behalf of the Neurosurgery faculty at the University of Virginia, I am asking CMS to grant coverage for intracranial stenting cases that require the use of the Wingspan Stent. This HDE device is the only available option we have for treating specific disease states and it should be covered accordingly.

Brown, Morry Title: NeurpInterventional Fellow
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

On behalf of the NeuroRadiology staff at UVa, I ask that Medicare grant national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent. This device is integral to our stroke and ICAD service. It should be reimbursed accordingly.

English, Joey Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: University of California San Francisco
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am writing to request that CMS provide reimbursement for ischemic stroke patients with intracranial atherosclerosis who have failed best available medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. As that available technology is already FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to only patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options. This would place undue burden on our UCSF patients, or more likely, simply

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sanderson, frank Title: NeuroInterventional Fellow
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I ask that CMS grant national Medicare coverage for the Wingspan Stent, a HDE device. This device is a vital part of our stroke treatments and it should be reimbursed as such.

Brennfleck, Suzanne Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. The FDA has recognized this as an HDE device, which has helped make this device accesible to more patients. The Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter isindicated for patients with intracranial

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Mull, Joy Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our patients need access to the Wingspan Stent for treating intracranial atherosclerosis. And request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage for this procedure

Evans, Avery Title: Associate Professor of Radiology and Neurosurgery
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

On behalf of the Neurointerventional faculty at the University of Virginia, I am requesting that CMS grant national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent under its current HDE status. I forsee this device being an important part of our treatment for ICAD and hopethat CMS covers it accordingly. Up to now, there has never been an appropriate device for this disease, and I believe that this device is a very important addition to our

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bello, jacqueline Title: Dir. of Neuroradiology; Prof. of Radiology
Organization: Montefiore Med Ctr.; Albert Einstein Coll. of Medicine
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I direct the division of neuroradiology at Montefiore Medical Center, and have worked in the field of neuroradiology for over 20 years.

For the patient population at risk for acute stroke from intracranial stenosis, there is no alternative treatment to the Wingspan Stent that is as effective, as minimally invasive, and as safe with respect to vascular complications.

The days and dollars lost due to devastating intracranial strokes are on a different scale exponentially, compared with

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Smith, Wade Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Dear CMS,

As a physician who treats patients with complicated neurovascular disease, and who has some publications in this realm, I do come across patients who have failed medical therapy for intracranial atherosclerosis and whom we recommend for stenting. I am not in favor of treating patients with stents primarily, but I am in favor of providing stenting therapy to these refractory patients. I understand that CMS is undergoing consideration of reimbursement for intracranial

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Chang, Steven Title: Associate Professor of Neurosurgery
Organization: Stanford University
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I ask CMS to reconsider its proposed decision and provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options.

Cowan, Michael Title: Neurosurgeon
Organization: Carolina Neurosurgery and Spine Associates
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Tour practice with excellent results for our patients without other good treatment options. Please reconsider reimbursement which at present stands as a major impediment for patient

Smith, Mark Organization: Carolina Neurosurgery and Spine Associates
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

To whom it may concern: Cerebral vascular stenosis remains a common cause of stroke and disability in the United States. While cerebral PTA does provide immediate arterial caliber improvement, its durability remains in question. Angioplasty alone is also innapropriate for certain disease processes. Because of these reasons, I recommend approval of stenting in addition to angioplasty. This treatment methodology is well proven in other organ systems (cardiac, carotid), and a CMS non

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Schwartz, MD, PhD, Neil Title: Instructor
Organization: Stanford University, Stanford Stroke Center
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I ask CMS to reconsider its proposed decision and provide reimbursement for stroke patients who have failed medical therapy and need access to angioplasty or angioplasty/stenting. With technology that is currently FDA HDE approved, the current proposal to limit reimbursement to just patients in an IDE trial would limit access to many patients that have no other options.

The natural history of intracranial atherosclerosis is very poor with strictly medical management. Despite

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Gandhi, Dheeraj Title: Assistant Professor
Organization: University of Michigan
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Dear Sir,

The preliminary decision on reimbursement of intracranial angioplasty and stenting is quite disappointing.

Intracranial atherosclerosis is a steadily growing problem and we are seeing more and more patients with this entity. Unfortunately, when the medical management is failing, these patients do not have many other options. We have had some gratifying results from intracranial angioplasty and stenting in such patients. Endovascular treatment in such situations is

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Rivet, Dennis Title: Staff Neurosurgeon
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Patients treated with technologies granted humanitarian use device (HUD) designations and humanitarian device exemptions (HDEs) from the FDA do not have other treatment options. Currently, there is no set policy for determination of coverage on a national level and this left to the discretion of a local coverage determination (LCD). And indeed, in the majority of cases in the past, devices approved under HDE status have received coverage. One way of viewing this policy is that it maintains

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Howard, Joy Title: Physician Assistant
Organization: Carolina Neurosurgery and Spine Associates
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our patients desperately need access to this treatment.

Patel, Aman Title: Director of Neuroendovascular Surgery
Organization: Mount Sinai Hospital, New York
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

RE:NCA-Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty CAG-00085R2)

We at Mount Sinai Hospital are writing to request revision to the recent CMS ruling regarding coverage for stenting and/or angioplasty for patients with symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD) who continue to have symptoms despite being on adequate medical amnagement. This ruling would affect patients treated with the Humanitarian Use Devices: Wingspan™ Stent System and Gateway™ PTA Balloon

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Agner, Celso Title: M.D., MSc
Organization: University of Illinois at Chicago
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Since stroke is the leading cause of disability in the United States and affects over 700,000 patients yearly, with a high incidence of medically-refractory intracranial stenoses as etiology, it is reasonable to consider intracranial stenting for a select group of patients who are, from the clinical standpoint, more likely to develop recurrent severe strokes despite maximal medical therapy. Since recurrence is not only a TIA but may represent a disabling and fatal stroke, the current

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Myers , MD, Mark Title: Interventional Neuroradiologist
Organization: St. Paul Radiology
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

We have treated 5 patients to date with the Wingspan stent sytem. Those patients are doing well and have had a reduction in recurrent events (TIA/stroke). We still have 6 patients on a list who are waiting anxiously for treatment pending reimbursement.

We kindly ask CMS to reconsider their non-coverage decision for this life-saving device.

Thank you again for your time and consideration of this public health policy initiative.

Sincerely,
Dr. Mark Myers, MD

Sheridan, Robert Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I have worked as a technologist for over a decade centered in two institutions. Both institution, while having different flavors dealt with many neurovascular patients. I am currently the operations manager for the Interventional Neuroradiology service at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

What has been constant through both of these practices is the care that goes into thinking about each and every one of the neurovascular patients. I am very concerned that our experience with

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Carvalho, Kimberly Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

My name is Kim Carvalho. I am the technical manager for the interventional neuroradiology service at Massachusetts General Hospital. In that capacity I work with our INR specialists including Dr. Hirsch, Pryor, Rabinov and Nogueira. Unique in this practice amongst other practices in our department is that the doctors are from all of the neurologic disciplines. I am very impressed that patients are given the best opportunity to maximize non-interventional care with careful selection

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Nicol, Ewen Title: Supervisor Patient Care and Research
Organization: University of Michigan
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

To whom it may concern, I would like to request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage for intracranial angioplasty and intracranial stenting cases, At University of Michigan we have found that there are many patients who could benefit from this type of procedure. However, the issue of non coverage has prevented these patients from even hearing about this treatment option. All of the procedural cases where we have utilized intracranial stenting were in patients who had received maximal

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Groves, Concetta Title: Interventional Radiology Nurse
Organization: University of Maryland
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I have been an Interventional Radiology nurse for over 15 years, and have seen an incredible amount of medical breakthroughs in this profession.

I feel that the more profound advances have been in the Neurointerventional Radiology Dept. We are now dealing with stroke patients like the Cardiology Dept deals with heart attack patients. The Wingspan Stent is one of these medical advances that will increase productive life expectancies of patients that had no other options. It is

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Shrewsbury, Mark Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

My name is Mark Shrewsbury. I work as a technologist in the Interventional Neuroradiology Service for several years at Massachusetts General Hospital. I have personally experienced dealing with neurovascular patients and neurovascular disease at a very fundamental level. The doctors spend extensive time vetting each of these patients and I think appropriate access should be given to CMS covered patients.

Wicky, Stephan Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the recent decision regarding Wingspan for intracranial atherosclerotic disease. I am the director of Vascular and Interventional Radiology at the Massachusetts General Hospital. I work closely with my NeuroInterventional Colleagues. I have been very involved at a seminal level in the world of carotid and other vessel stenting. In Europe, I was involved in the development and use of the only covered intracranial stent. I believe that the

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Carroll, Vivian Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our patients need access to the Wingspan Stent for treating intracranial atherosclerosis.

schloeder, lisa Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

If we want to continue to be a leading force in the treament of strokes, this technology must be avaiable in our area.

Hopkins, Alexandria Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

This device would be greatly beneficial in treating atherosclerotic placques in the prevention of strokes. Living in the stroke belt in the South, we see multitudes of patients that this would prevent devastating strokes in.

Price, Alden Title: Self Employed
Organization: Price Financial
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our patients need access to the Wingspan that for treating intercranial atherosclerosis and request that CMS grant national medicare coverage for this procedure.

Price, Marlow Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Our patients need access to the Wingspan Stent for treating intracranial atherosclerosis. And request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage for this procedure”

Adornato, Viki Title: Clinical Coordinator, Speech Language Pathology
Organization: Carolinas Rehabilitation/Carolinas Medical Center
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracaranial stenting and angioplasty cases using the Wingspan stenting system under the current Humanitarian Device Exception (HDE)labeled indication.

As a healthcare professional with over 20 years in the treatment of patients following CVA, I have seen the devastating effects that such an insult can have on individuals and on their loved ones. In the field of Speech Language Pathology, we work with those patients who lose

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Langley, Jennifer Title: Medical coder
Organization: Carolina Neurosurgery and Spine Assoc.
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Patients need access to this promising treatment. The families do not need to be stuck with a $50,000 hospital bill that will be denied by Medicare, Medicaid, & all private insurers based on their current policy. The FDA thought it was promising enough to give it Humanitarian Device Exeption (FDA approved). This is a promising and effective way to improve their illness. Would you want your family member to be denied this life saving service or stuck with a $50,000 bill?

Walker, Patti Title: Registered Nurse
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I feel this is an important item to be covered in order to treat patients effectively and ultimately save health care dollars by keeping affected patients out of long term care facilities and ongoing medical expenses.

Stiling, Ben Title: Director
Organization: CMC Neuroscience & Spine Institute
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

The wingspan stent has been a valuable asset in our practice with excellent results for our patients without other good treatment options. Please reconsider reimbursement which at present stands as a major impediment for patient access

Zwirblia, Michael Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I have been involved with neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital for several years. For the past six months, I have served as an administrative asst. for the Interventional Neuroradiology group at MGH. We see many patients with cerebrovascular disease. I never believe that insurance coverage should be a barrier to patients being able to get appropriate therapy. I urge expansion of the proposed CMS coverage decision in line with my above stated belief system.

Iyer, Sanjay Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Wingspan stent is a very promising option in an otherwise untreatable condition.

page, brenda Title: Director of Surgical Services
Organization: Carolina Center for Specialty Surgery
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

Please support the Wingspan Stent. If not it limits patients availability to treatment to medically refractory intracranial atherosclerosis. Thank you.

Mason, Katherine Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

People are living longer and thus making quality of life that much more important. Ability to do new procedures is essential to provide our patients with every opportunity to provide them with increased quality of life. Therefore, I am requesting that you reconsider your stance on this very important issue. Thank you for your consideration. Katherine Mason, RN

Carter, Beth Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I would like to urge CMS to allow payment for the Wingspan Stent. This would offer a treatment to many patients who have no other alternative with intracranial atherosclerotic disease. I believe CMS has a moral obligation to pay for a treatment that has been proven to save lives.

Giauque, Anthony Title: MD
Date: 09/07/2006
Comment:

I am a physician who practices neuroradiology and neurointerventional radiology. In my experience there are select patients who have intracranial stenosis and cannot undergo surgical bypass and would benefit from intracranial stenting. In many of these patients this is a life-saving intervention. Some of them are on Medicare. Withholding reimbursement for Medicare patients will restric their access to the proceedure and sadly will amount to an early death sentence.

Hellinger, Frank Title: Director, Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Florida Hospital, Orlando
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

Dear CMS committee members,

I found the discussion of the CMS coverage policy posted on the web to be very thoughtful. I believe the proposed coverage policy is overly restrictive and that this will lead to harm to patients and will result in greater overall costs to Medicare as a result of preventable non- fatal strokes. Patients with severe(>70%) symptomatic intracranial stenoses represent a small group of very high risk patients whose treatment should be covered.

An

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Jayaraman, Mahesh Title: Interventional Neuroradiologist
Organization: Rhode Island Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I would urge CMS to reconsider their preliminary decision regarding intracranial angioplasty. Recent data has shown intracranial angioplasty to be save and effective at preventing subsequent ischemic events (Marks et al, Stroke, 2006). The ability to offer endovascular therapy to patients with intracranial angioplasty may prevent strokes in patients in whom medical therapy has shown to be only prevent a portion of strokes.

The recent subgroup analysis of the WASID data (Kasner

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Lempert MD, Todd Title: Chief of Neuro Interventional
Organization: Scripps Memorial Hospital - La Jolla
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

To whom it may concern,

I would like to commment on the following:NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)

Scripps Memorial Hospital and myself strongly stress that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above

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Luh, George Title: MD
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I would strongly urge CMS to extend coverage for all patients that fall within the FDA approved HDE indications for use with Wingspan and Gateway Balloon system. There is no other technology available for this group of patients and the cost associated with this procedure would represent a significant financial burden for both the patient and hospital. When you consider that the results of having a stroke create a huge financial and social burden to families and society, I think it would be

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Marchuk, Robert Title: AVP
Organization: Glendale Adventist Medical Center
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

The recient CMS descision not to grant national Medicare coverage for intercranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent System with Gateway PTA Balloon catheter under HDE label indication reflects a rigid application of the "reasonable and necessary" HDE coverage policy in cases where there are no other vialbel treatments.

Several current studies have shown that patients treated with medical therapy alone suffered subsequent recurrance of symptoms or death

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Malek, Reza Title: Director of Neurointerventional Radiology
Organization: Minimally Invasive Surgical Solutions
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I feel very stringely that this devide needs to be approved for coverage. The patients that need this device have no good alternative options. The challenge for having payment only to centers that have an IDE trial is that most patients will not have access to care. There is less than 400 physicians in the country that technicallt can perform/ use this device; by reducing that number to a few centers it would practically makes it not accessable to majority of patients. It is of note that

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Rodriguez, Augustin Title: Imaging Services Manager
Organization: Scripps Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

"NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)". Our hospital Scripps Memorial in San Diego strongly requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

we would greatly appreciate if you can extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation

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Bendok, Bernard Title: Co-director neuroendovascular program
Organization: Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

The recently publised WASID trial results suggest that individuals with symptomatic intracranial stenosis of 70% or greater have a one year recurrent stroke risk of 22%. This subgroup should be approved for treatement with angioplasty in stenting. I am concerned that these patients will be denied treatment based on the CMS decision. These patients could be tracked in a registry.

Tarrel, Ron Title: Neurologist
Organization: Abbott Northwestern
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

Abbott Northwestern Hospital requests that Medicare reverse their non-coverage decision on Wingspan Stent system.

The FDA approved Wingspan under an HDE, which means they found it to be safe. As a breakthrough technology treating small patient populations without alternatives, Wingspan's HDE approval is sufficient to meet the reasonable and necessary standard for establishing Medicare coverage.

CMS's decision to deny national Medicare coverage to the Wingspan HDE population

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Perl II, MD, John Title: Interventional Neuroradiologist
Organization: Abbott Northwestern Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

On behalf of Abbott Northwestern Hospital, we kindly request that CMS grant a positive national coverage decision for intracranial angioplasty and stenting while using the Wingspan stent system. Under the current non-coverage policy, our institution is financially constrained in its ability to provide this ICAD treatment.

There is enough clinical data to support the need for this life-saving device in a small patient population, and therefore we are asking CMS to reverse their

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DiBenedetto, Joseph Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

My name is Joe DiBenidetto. I have been a vascular technologist with emphasis in neurovascular disease for 27 years at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

I have had many career opportunities. There are serveral reasons I have stayed in this narrow area all of these years.

1) the progression of technology to treat neurovascular disease in a minimally invasive fahion has changed the overall treatment of cerebrovascular disease. I cite as an example how pioneering work to treat

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Aylward, Kerri Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

My comment to CMS is as follows. I am a technologist who works on a vascular interventional floor at the Massachusetts General Hospital. We work in close association with our neuroendovascular colleagues.

I am always impressed by the care they take in picking their patients for therapy. They are extremely dedicated practioners who carefully review the best treatment option for each patient. Within their service, there are radiologists/neurologists and neurosurgeons and this

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Vanderboom, Teresa Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I would like to comment to CMS on the recent policy decision regarding the Wingspan Stent System for the treatment of Intracranial Atherosclerotic Disease.

I am the clinical coordinator on the Interventional Neuroradiology/Endovascular Neurosurgery Service at Massachusetts General Hospital. Every week, I am responsible for one of our conferences. This conference is a multidisciplinary affair with vascular neurologists, INR specialists, vascular neurosurgeons and diagnostic

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Levy, Elad Title: Associate Professor of Neursurgery and Radiology
Organization: UB Neurosurgery
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I urge CMS to reconsider the decision regarding non-coverage for intracranial stenting for medically refractory symptomatic intracranial stenosis. We know that recurrent stroke rates for patients with high-grade stenoses are in excess of 20%. We have the ability to safely deploy stents in the intracranial circulation reducing this stenosis. While we do not know the long-term effects of these stents, we do know that the 1 year stroke rates following stenting were approximately 10% (Euro

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Vincent, Sherril Title: Vice President, Finance
Organization: Alexian Brothers Medicial Center
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

Alexian Brothers Medical Center requests that CMS cover angioplasty and stenting of intracranial atherosclerosis in patients with symptoms refractory to medical therapy. Alexian Brothers Medical Center is a JCAHO-certified Primary Stroke Center and meets the Brain Attack Coalition guideline criteria for Comprehensive Stroke Center. With our sister hospital St. Alexius, we treat more than 700 patients annually who have had stroke or are at risk of stroke from arterial stenoses and

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Hartnett, Kelly Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

My name is Kelly and I am a nurse working in the section of Interventional Neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital. In my experience, the doctors are very compulsive in their consideration of patients for endovascular treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease. I think it is important for CMS to allow its broad spectrum of covered patients to benefit from this type of cutting edge care.

Pryor, Johnny Title: Director Interventional Neuroradiology
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am an interventional neuroradiologist/endovascular neurosurgeon at Massachusetts General Hospital. I believe that it is important for all patients who are governed by Medicare and Medicaid to be allowed equal access to new and proven technologies. I would favor expansion of CMS guidelines for treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease with stenting.

Kaganas, M.D., Alexander Title: Strategic Sourcing Specialist
Organization: New York Presbyterian Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am writing to urge CMS to issues a positive national coverage decision for Intracranial PTA and Stenting. As a physician working in hospital procurement, I routinely face the financial costs of performing such high tech life saving procedures. The high clinical worth of this technology is reinforced to me by our world renowned physicians who also have submitted their opinions to CMS. Lack of coverage puts our institution into a difficult position where these vital procedures become an

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Dabus, Guilherme Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am an interventional neuroradiologist and I am involved in the treatment of patients with ICAD. The WASID study showed that medical therapy for the treatment of intracranial atherosclerosis is limited with a high stroke rate. The use of intracranial angioplasty and stenting has been shown to be safe and effective in selected cases. Therefore, intracranial angioplasty and stenting is an important tool that should be avaiable and offered to this selected population with ICAD.

Hanley, Chris Title: Massachusetts General Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am a technologist working with the neuroendovascular group at Massachusetts General Hospital. Our doctors spend a great deal of time vetting appropriate patients for the treatment of intracranial atheorsclerotic disease. In fact, at least once/week there is a meeting of all the doctors from multiple neuorologic specialties to discuss these types of cases. I have seen the doctors spend considerable time picking appropriate cases for treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease. I

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Pillar, David Title: Chief Tech, Neuroradiology
Organization: University of Virginia Health System
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

As a Neuroradiology Chief Tech and a taxpayer; the expertise and technology required to protect you and me from ICAD strokes should be encouraged and reimbursed. Reimbursing for ICAD is likely another one of many expensive requests made of you. The fiscal cost in the long run and human cost in the grander picture are surely greater- I don't know your role and do not envy the complex decision-making process you are allowing me to add comments to. It is incumbent upon me though to remark that

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Levy, Armond Title: Neurosurgeon
Organization: Greater St. Louis Neurosurgical Specialists
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

Although intracranial PTA/stenting is not yet supported by the type and volume of data associated with carotid endarterectomy or carotid stenting, it clearly follows similar logical pathways. If a patient has a symptomatic intracranial lesion which doesn't respond to antiplatelet agents, the natural history is poor. Intracranial PTA/stenting, while fraught with much higher complication rates than the analogous procedures in the neck, clearly improves the natural history of these dangerous

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Young, Joe Title: Interventional Radiology Supervisor
Organization: Cox Medical Center South
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the important patient care issue fo reimbursement for intracranial stenting and angioplasty.

The Interventional Radiology department of Cox Medical Center South strives to provide the highest quality care for our patients, while maintaining fiscal responsibility. We have a strong neuro practice, with a referral base of about 150 miles. We are a CMS-certified Carotid Artery Stenting facility. We strive to stay current in our practice, both in

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Bean, James Title: Neurosurgeon
Organization: Neurosurgical Associates, Lexington Kentucky
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am a neurosurgeon in practice in Lexington Ky. We have performed numerous carotid stenting procedures under IDE research protocols. We have performed a small numbe of intracranial procedures. We agree with the proposedv policy, creating an IDE and noncoverage outside of approved trials, until sufficient evidence is accumulated to prove usefulness. Too early clinical coverage eliminates the incentive to complete valid clinical trials that prevent overuse, underuse, and misuse of the

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Tarr, Rob Title: Head of the Cerebrovascular and Stroke Center
Organization: University Hospitals of Cleveland
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

As a physician that is intimately involved with treating patients who have had or are at risk for stroke, I am writing with utmost concern regarding the CMS coverage decision for intracranial angioplasty and stenting which was issued August 9, 2006. The coverage decision as issued limits coverage to patients being treated under a category B investigational device exemption. Unfortunately, the narrow scope of this coverage decision will exclude many patients who would benefit from this

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Wood, Thomas Title: Coordinator Neuro Interventional
Organization: Overlook Hospital
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

I am in total support for incresed coverage for the wingspan stent. This is a needed device that the market has lacked for a long time. With the many advances in stroke intervention this being just one more we we need to ensure the public has the opportunity to gain the benefits of such a device. We are continually making strides in stroke intervention and I personally witness them daily. Please consider a broader outreach for payment with this device. Thank You

dalal, shamsher Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

The intracranial stent is a useful tool in specific clinical conditions and needs to be put to use. I favour approval for the use of the device.

Walton, William Title: Intervention Coordinator / Manager
Organization: VCU Medical Center
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

The VCU Medical Center Interventional Neuro Radiology Division requests thyat the CMS grant national Medicare coverage to include intercranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the BSCI Wingspan Stent under it's current HDE status. This stent is an integral intrument/ device in the treatment of athlesclerotic disease and stroke mangement.

Spinos M.D., Efstathios Title: NeuroInterventionalist, Chief of Rad CJW Med Cntr
Organization: CJW Medical Center
Date: 09/06/2006
Comment:

The current national non-coverage policy in essence withholds this potentially life saving treatment from many critically ill patients without other options available.Patients with intracranial atherosclerosis and flow limiting symptomatic stenoses have a stroke rate of 20-30%.The Wingspan stent system coupled with the Gateway balloon have a 98% procedural success rate and a 90% stroke-free clinical responce.There is a significant cost to IC PTA and stenting as it is done under general

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Johnston, Faith Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

According to a new study by Brown, Morgensen, et.al from the University of Michigan published August 16, 2006 in the online version of the journal Neurology, the total direct and indirect costs of stroke in the next 45 years will be $1.52 trillion for non-Hispanic whites, $313 billion for Latinos, and $379 billion for African-Americans. Aggressive efforts in stroke prevention and treatment are essential for the physical and economic health of Americans as well as the economic health of this

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Mandell, Howard Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

Regarding file code 00085R2: NCA for intracranial stenosis and angioplasty.Please reconsider reimbursement for wingspan stenting in the tx of medically refractory sx intracranialstenosis. This represents a major advancement in tx options and is needed to improve pt outcomes.Lack of appropriate reimbursement is a very unfair situation and is a major impediment for pt access.

Turner, Robert Title: Manager Angio Cath Lab
Organization: St Charles Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

I think there needs to be strict protocals but needs to be approved. These people have no real alternative. These people have already had strokes of different degrees.

Jahan, Reza Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

August 29, 2006

RE: NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG-00085R2)

UCLA is one of the leading Stroke Centers in the United States. As such, we see several unfortunate patients per year who, while on appropriate medical therapy, are having neurological events (strokes and TIAs) due to intracranial atherosclerosis. The natural history of this group of patients is terrible and our prior treatment options were limited and of high risk. We now have a device that is

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Wakhloo, Ajay Title: Professor of Radiology, Neurosurgery and Neurology
Organization: Chief Division of Neuroimaging and Intervention at UMASS
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

Currenlty there is no safe alternative for the treatment of symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease in patients who experience stroke on blood thinners and antiplatelet agents. Wingspan is the first stent which is designed for the use in brain and has shown to be safe and efficacious.

My own experience in treating more than 40 patients with angioplasty and stenting for symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease who are refractory to medical treatment is very

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Warren, Leah Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

September 5, 2006
Re: NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)

To Whom It May Concern:

I am a Physician Assistant working with an endovascular neurosurgeon, Joe Bernard M.D., in Charlotte, NC. We have treated approximately 15 patients with the Wingspan stent and Gateway balloon system. I have seen first-hand the remarkable improvement these patients have made with treatment using this incredible system.

Each of the patients we have treated was experiencing

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Hart, Kevin Organization: University Health System
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

CMS's current coverage review for the Wingspan® Stent System reflects a rigid application of the "reasonable and necessary" test in making national coverage policy. The "reasonable and necessary" standard should be less stringent in cases of HDE devices where there are no other viable treatments.

The FDA recognizes an alternate level of clinical evidence (safety plus probable benefit) in its approval process for HDE devices, and CMS should rely on a similar standard of

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Mullin, Marvin Organization: Mercy Health Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Milone, Willetta Organization: St. Francis Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Han, Patrick Title: Endovascular Neurosurgeon
Organization: St. John Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Powers, Matt Title: INR
Organization: St. John Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Plumlee, Mindi Organization: St. John Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Carstens, George Title: INR
Organization: St. Francis Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Jackson, Mike Organization: Integris Baptist Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Snowden, Georgianne Title: INR
Organization: Integris Baptist Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Tytle, Tim Title: INR
Organization: Mercy Health Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Phillips, Marcus Organization: Baptist St. Anthony
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Andrew, John Title: INR
Organization: Baptist St. Anthony
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Shah, Rakesh Title: INR
Organization: Baptist St. Anthony
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Doss, Lashelle Organization: Covenant Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Windisch, Tom Title: INR
Organization: Covenant Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Borowski, Adam Title: INR
Organization: Providence Health Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Peters, Ron Organization: Providence Health Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Ciceri, Brandie Organization: Scott & White Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

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Pelt, Jake Organization: Scott & White Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

More

Martinez, Eric Organization: Scott & White Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Lesley, Walter Title: INR
Organization: Scott & White Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Nelson, Kerie Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Kim, Stanley Title: Endovascular Neurosurgeon
Organization: St. David's Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Ross, Laura Organization: St. David's Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

More

Serrano, Maria Organization: St. David's Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

More

Vidouria, Andrew Organization: Brackenridge Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

More

Migl, Melissa Organization: Brackenridge Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Horowitz, Barry Title: INR
Organization: Seton Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Masaryk, Anthony Title: INR
Organization: Seton Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Davis, Julie Organization: Brackenridge Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

Carnright, Richard Organization: Seton Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

More

Mahaffey, Jody Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B Investigational

More

brown, lisa Title: RN
Organization: Washington Hospital Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

I am an RN who works with a Neuro Interventional Radiologist who may be using the Wingspan stent. I feel that this is a much needed device and should be recognized through Medicare.This stent could possibly prevent patients from having potential TIA's and strokes.

Rutledge, Neal Organization: Seton Medical Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

My hospital requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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pema, peter Title: chairman dept. of Radiology
Organization: Riverside Methodist Hospital
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

pts with severe intracranial stenosis and symptoms have an approximate 25% major stroke rate over the next several years.....with medical therapy alone.....That is a high rate! We have the technology to address this high stroke rate....stents....most hde's have to go to the individual institutions review board on a case by case basis...so these procedures will be monitored closely ...progress says we have to offer this technology to pts....stenting has been the way to treat disease

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Olan, MD, Wayne Title: Director, Neuradiology/ MRI
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

Dear Sirs, I am director of Neuroradiology and MRI at Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, MD and Consulting Physician to the National Institutes of Health, Stroke Center. Boston Scientific/Target has been at the forefront of medical innovation with respect to intracranial stenting and angioplasty. Both procedures are used to open or widen blood vessels into or feeding the brain, essential in the treatment of or prevention of devastating strokes. The recognition of these procedures and the

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Fifi, Johanna Title: Fellow
Organization: Washington Hospital Center
Date: 09/05/2006
Comment:

I request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

It is reasonable to extend coverage to qualified patients that fail medical management in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category B

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Bernard, Joe Title: Endovascular Neurosurgeon
Organization: Carolinas Medical Center; Northeast Medical Center
Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

Carolinas Medical Center , the flagship of the 4th largest healthcare system in the country, and myself, as a representative of a 17 physician neurosurgery group and an endovascular neurosurgeon respectfully request that national Mediacare coverage be granted to the Wingspan Stent/ Gateway Balloon System for medically refractory, symptomatic intracranial Atheroscerotic disease. I applaud the decision for coverage in a Category B IDE trial, but I urge you to reconsider & approve this for

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Chaloupka, John Title: Professor and Director
Organization: University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics
Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

RE:NCA-Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty CAG-00085R2)

Dear Policy Committee Members-

I am again writing to respectfully request your assistance in revising the recently proposed CMS ruling of August 8, 2006 regarding national coverage for stenting and angioplasty in patients with symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease (ICAD), who receive treatment with the Humanitarian Use Devices: Wingspan™ Stent System and Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter. Although

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Mericle, M.D., Robert A. Title: Director, Cerebrovascular and Neuro-Endovascular P
Organization: Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

Intracranial angioplasty and stenting is a potentially life-threatening procedure for a small number of patients with severe symptomatic intracranial stenosis, who usually have no alternative but to suffer a massive stroke. There is a current FDA-approved HUD/HDE device (Wingspan intracranial stent and Gateway intracranial angioplsty balloon), designed especially for this purpose, but without CMS leadership and funding recommendations, these patients will suffer, and the massive

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Shanaberger, Steve Title: Director of Radiology
Organization: Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital
Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)

On behalf of our Radiology Interventional Lab at Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, NC we would like to request that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent System with Gateway PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We request that you extend coverage in addition to your recommendation to

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Guterman, Lee Title: neurosurgeon
Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

the wingspan device is the only stent made for the intracranial atherosclerotic disease. I have been placing stents in the intracranial circualtion for over a decade and the wingspan represents new technology that is unmatched in its flexibility and deliverability. AS a result I feel strongly that it has the best safety profile. Without this tool at our disposal, the treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease will continue to linger and patients will continue to have unnecessary

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Dawson, Bob Date: 09/04/2006
Comment:

West Jefferson Medical Center and myself would like to request that CMS issue an expeditious response in favor of coverage for intracranial stenting and angioplasty.

There is a need for better therapy for these patients. They simply do not respond to medical therapy such as aspirin; and many of them only see minimal change from just angioplasty alone.As an INR, I would like to give these patients a better option and I believe that the Wingspan stent system is a step in the right

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Anderson, Dwayne Date: 09/02/2006
Comment:

I am an INR at Our Lady of the Lake in Baton Rouge, Louisiana and I would like to thank you for hearing our request for a very important medical initiative. Patients that are suffering Intracranial Atherosclerosis are a sick patient population. Especially those that have suffered previous strokes, failed medical therapy and/or angioplasty. We would really appreciate a national coverage for treating ICAD with the WingSpan stent system.According to the Wingspan study, these patients have

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Getzoff; M.D., Andrew Title: INR
Date: 09/02/2006
Comment:

On behalf of my hospital, St. Vincent's in Little Rock, Arkansas, we would like to urge CMS in adapting a national coverage for ICAD involving the WingSpan stent. In the past decade or so, intracranial stenting has become a treatment for this population of patients that fail medical therapy and/or balloon angioplasty.The WingSpan study suggests a 97.7% procedure success rate. These patients deserve a better option or they are at risk of suffering another stroke.

Buechner, M.D., David Date: 09/02/2006
Comment:

My hospital, Methodist University, in Memphis, Tennessee would be very appreciative of CMS granting a national coverage policy for the treatment of intracranial atherosclerotic disease; specifically, coverage involoving the current HDE device: Wingspan and Gateway.Many patients with this condition simply do not respond to medical therapy and need a better option or they risk another stroke.According to the WingSpan HDE study, these patients that were treated with balloon angioplasty and a

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Chan, Alex Title: Diagnostic & Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Radiology of Huntsville, P.C.
Date: 09/02/2006
Comment:

Without Medicare coverage, patients/physicians/hospitals may feel pressure to either use off-label products to save cost, or feel pressure to deny this procedure that may help patients failing medical therapy.

Van Der Veer MD, craig Title: director : Neuroscience and Spine Institute
Organization: Carolinas Medical Center
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

I am writting as the Director of the NeuroScience and Spine Insitute, at Carolinas Medical Center, in Charlotte NC. We have treated 15 patients with the Wingspan Stent with excellent results, all in situations which had no viable options. The patients were at risk for massive infacts and thereby requiring long term care, but instead were able to be dicharged home. We are a 20 Neurosurgeon group who requests that CMS reconsider it,s current stance and allow reimbursnemt for the application

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Janardhan, MD, Vallabh Title: Stroke and Interventional Neurologist
Organization: University of Minnesota
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

Intracranial stenosis is a deadly condition that has life threatening complications and is very common in blacks, asians and hispanic populations. I would like to request CMS to reconsider its decision about re-imbursement for Intracranial angioplasty and stenting as this decision will significantly impact the care we can offer our patients.

Intracranial stenosis from atherosclerosis is a very serious disease and the WASID trial was conducted to evaluate the role of best medical therapy

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Chong, Brian Title: Director, Endovascular Surgical Neuroradiology
Organization: Mayo Clinic Arizona
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

On behalf of Mayo Clinic Arizona and our patients, we respectfully request that CMS issue an expeditious, positive national coverage decision for intracranial stenting and angioplasty in patients who receive treatment with the Humanitarian Use Device: the Wingspan™ Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter. The current national non-coverage policy directly affects our hospital’s financial ability to provide this treatment to critically ill patients.

Below,

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Thomas, Jeffrey Title: Neurosurgical Director, Stroke Care Service
Organization: California Pacific Medical Center
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

Intracranial atherosclerotic disease is a serious medical condition with very limited therapeutic options. The introduction of an FDA- HDE approved device (the intracranial Wingspan stent) by Boston Scientific is a promising therapeutic alternative for patients who remain symptomatic from the condition despite maximal medical therapy. This was the intent of the HDE approval provision. The subsequent decision by CMS to deny national Medicare coverage for the Wingspan HDE population is

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Murphy, Kieran Title: director of interventional neuroradiology
Organization: Johns Hopkins University school of medicine
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

September 1, 2006

Dear Sirs:

We are writing in support of reimbursement for CMS patients who undergo intracranial and stenting and angioplasty and vertebral stenting and angioplasty with the Wing Span device.

Repeatedly in the last few months since we began using this device, we have imposed tremendous stress and financial strain on patients who have failed maximal medical therapy and who are having terrifying intracranial posterior circulation strokes who require intervention

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Sauvageau, Eric Title: Assistant Professor Neurological Surgery
Organization: University of South Florida
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

I write to request that you provide coverage for intracranial stenting for patients with symptomatic intracranial arterial stenosis.

The WASID Trial has proven that best medical therapy for symptomatic intracranial stenosis results in a greater than 21% two year risk of stroke. Sub-analysis revealed that women and patients with stenosis >70% are particularly at risk.

Good preliminary results have been obtained with the gateway/wingspan platform.

There is no

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Rasmussen, Peter Title: Director of Cerebrovascular Disease
Organization: Cleveland Clinc Foundation
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

We have used Wingspan system at the CCF for approximately 25 patients. These were patients that had no medical alternative and were actively having symptoms and ongoing strokes. This device is incredibly helpful. We do not believe this is reasonable for these patients to be paying for these treatments when it is clearly beneficial to their life and quality of existence.

Please reconsider your decision to support reimbursement for this procedure.

Yahia, Abutaher Title: Endovadcular Neurology/Stroke and Neurocritical
Organization: Michigan State and Wayne State Universiy
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

Intracranial stenosis responsible for 10% all stroke leading 100,000 of stroke/year in USA. With the best mrdical treatment the chance of stroke and death is approximately 30 to 45% for intracranial stenosis. The wingspan stent is the only hope for those patients who have intracranial stenosis. In last 4 months I used 20 wingspan and saved those patient from a devastitating stroke and disability.I wanted to help more people, but my institution stoped me from doing for cases, since hospital

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Mayr, Brian Title: Inventory Specialist
Organization: Fairview University Medical Center, Interventional Rad.
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

As an Inventory Specialist, the justification for bringing in these stents while being conscious of cost management is difficult when there is no viable reimbursment options available.

We have pts. who desperately need treatment, and we would like to provide an entire stroke management program, but no reimbursment available, this is a limited option. Please reconsider, ultimately, it's the patients who suffer.

Ringer, Andrew Title: Associate Professor of Neurosurgery
Organization: Mayfield Clinic, University of Cincinnati
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

Andrew J. Ringer, MD; Todd Abruzzo, MD; Thomas A. Tomsick, MD
For the Greater Cincinnati / Northern Kentucky Stroke Team

Re:NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2

As medical science and technology evolve, it becomes necessary to continually evaluate the appropriate application of this technology to medical practice. For many years, the prevention of stroke in patients with intracranial arterial stenosis has been limited to anticoagulation. Recent medical

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Yilek, Amy Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

Please reconsider your decision regarding coverage for intracranial angioplasty/stenting.We have patients who could benefit. Wouldn't it save money in the end if these patients don't have strokes?

Monita, Jane Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

We have a few patients who are in need of this new technology. I specifically have one patient who is very anxious because he has had a stroke already and would be a great candidate for this stent. He can not afford to cover the cost of this procedure on his own. He is currently managing on medications but the waiting and wondering associated with this have cause great anxiety to he and his family. He is limited in his daily life because of the worry. Please reconsider your decision to

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Bartz, Sandra Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

We are an interventional neuroradiology service who currently have 6 patients on a waiting list for intracranial stenting. Many continue to have intermitent symptoms despite aggresive medical management. This device was approved as an HDE. We have found in the 4 patients we have treated that the device is easy to use and very beneficial. Please reconsider your decision re medicare coverage.

Norder, Tina Title: TN
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

the treatment and prevention of stroke is lifesaving. Stroke is a devastating and sometimes fatal health insult that needs the best treatment course possible to ensure a good outcome for the patient and the patients family. Please do not place barriers on the care of these human beings and give the appropriate coverage/reimbursement for treatments that save lives and decrease disability.

Williams; M.D., Michael Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

On behalf of LSU Health Sciences in Shrevport, Louisiana, we are requesting that CMS issue a positive national coverage decision for intracranial stenting and angioplasty. The current non-coverage policy directly affects our hospital's financial ability to provide this life-saving treatment to our critically ill patients. Most ICAD patients are treated with medical therapy, but in many cases, this is not sufficient. These particular patients are left at a high risk of having another stroke.

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Tomsick, Thomas Title: Professor Radiology, Director Interventional Neuro
Organization: None; Past President ASITN
Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

I approve of CMS restriction of payment for application of Wingspan technology and device application as proposed. However, I feel reimbursement for other procedures/device uses should follow similar logic. For example, use of Concentric Clot Removal device (whose approval was based on less compelling data than Wingspan) should be reimbursed only for those uses that follow its FDA label, where rtPA use is contraindicated or has failed. Furthermore, where a new DRG and payment schedule is

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Ku, Andrew Date: 09/01/2006
Comment:

I disagree with Medicare's non coverage policy for intracranial angioplasty for patients with high grade stenosis of intracranial vessels. In patients who have stenosis and are symptomatic you are dooming them to stroke or death. I have to tell these patients that I cannot treat them because the procedures are non reimbursable. Industry is not willing to spend the money on IDEs because the market is too small. Medicare's decision defeats the purpose of HDE devices. Only life insurance

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Paulsen, MD, Richard Title: Director, Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Jewish Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

I request that CMS reverse their boycott of payment for and lack of support for ICAD treatment with intracranial PTA/Stent placement. We have been performing this lifesaving procedure for years with excellent results and numerous scientific publications support this procedure as well. Just today I performed a PTA/stent in a diabetic 50 yo BF with recurrent TIAs and an 80% M1 stenosis with CT perfusion evidence of lack of cerebrovascular reserve and impending large R MCA stroke. I

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Nogueira, Raul Title: Assistant in Neurology
Organization: Massachusetts General Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

Intracranial atherosclerotic disease is responsible for 10% of all strokes (~70,000 cases/ year in US). The WASID trial recently confirmed the very poor prognosis of patients with symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease. As many as 50% will die or have another stroke if left untreated. The preliminary data from WingSpan treatment has shown that 90% of Wingspan patients were free of strokes related to their treated lesions 6 months after their treatment. Depriving patients from

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Growney, Marion Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

I am a Nurse Practitioner working in Interventional Neuroradiology at Massachusetts General Hospital.In our clinics and on our service, we see the ravages of stroke patients. As I understand it, the current proposed CMS policy would significantly limit our ability to provide neuroendovascular treatment to our patients. I think CMS should broadly cover appropriately selected patients, that have failed medical therapy, to be treated with intracranial angioplasty and stenting.

hirsch, joshua Title: Director: Interventional Neuroradiology
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

I am the Director of Interventional Neuroradiology/Enodvascular Neurosurgery of Massachusetts General Hospital. We are a multispecialty group composed of specialists dedicated to the care of intracranial vascular disease. The WASID study was very helpful in determining the limitations of medical therapy in the treatment of ICAD. As meaningful interventional alternatives are becoming available, I believe that CMS should allow for these treatments to our appropriately selected patients. I am

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Mangla, Sundeep Title: Director of Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: SUNY Downstate Medical Center
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

As a physician who treats patients with medically refractory cerebrovascular occlusive disease, I kindly request that CMS issue an expeditious, positive national coverage decision for intracranial stenting and angioplasty in patients who receive treatment with the Humanitarian Use Device: the Wingspan™ Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter.

The current national non-coverage policy directly affects our team and hospital’s financial ability to provide this

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Mace, Lisa Title: Radiation Technologist
Organization: The Methodist Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

"NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)"

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for

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Klucznik, Richard Title: Director of Interventional Neuroradiology
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

Regarding "NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty(CAG-00085R2)"

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national

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Fiorella, David Title: Neuroradiologist
Organization: Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

Our own evolving data (Fiorella et al., ASNR presentation, 2006) indicates that PTAS with the Wingspan system is likely safer than other available technologies for the treatment of intracranial atheromatous lesions and is very likely to be superior to medical therapy for selected patients (symptomatic intracranial stenosis >70%; WASID data). CMS's policy would continue to limit access for medically refractory patients with symptomatic intracranial atherosclerotic disease and the natural

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Fairbanks, Greg Title: Manager - Endovascular
Organization: The Methodist Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category

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Walters, Karen Title: RN BSN - Interventional Radiology
Organization: The Methodist Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category

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Meyer, Denise Title: Research Administrator
Organization: The Methodist Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category

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Barraza, Lori Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

My hospital institution requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication.

We kindly request that you extend coverage to the above population in addition to your recommendation to propose national coverage for intracranial angioplasty and stenting within the context of a Category

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Hoh, Brian Title: Assistant Professor of Neurosurgery and Radiology
Organization: University of Florida
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

I would ask the CMS to reconsider their decision regarding reimbursement for intracranial angioplasty and stent placement. I am seeing many patients with symptomatic intracranial stenosis with ongoing TIAs while on antiplatelet medication and/or warfarin. I believe they should be treated and the patients want treatment, however, my hospital will not allow me to treat them because of the financial loss associated with it. This should be reconsidered for the sake of the patients. Thanks,

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Akhtar, Naveed Title: Chir\ef, Intervantional Neuroradiology
Organization: Mid-America Brain & Stroke Institute @ St. Luke's Hospital
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

While I appreciate the proposed coverage decision for intracranial angioplasty and stenting the proposal, as written, is not enough. The fact that coverage would still be denied for patients treated with the Wingspan and Gateway balloon in the current FDA approved HDE population is disapointing. I urge the CMS to reconsider this coverage decision to include the HDE population consistent with the intent of the HDE approval provision to increase patient access to treatment options for rare

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RAI, ANSAAR Title: Director of Interventional Neuroradiology
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

I am an Interventional Neuroradiologist and assistant professor of radiology and neurosurgery. I am also the director of endovascular services at West Virginia University Hospitals. Treatment of intracranial stenosis is of paramount importance in terms of stroke prevention. It is one of the most gratifying procedures to perform. I have had patients significantly debilitated because of their symptoms who were able to resume normal lifestyle and work after treatment of stenosis with the

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Madison, Michael Title: Director of Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: St. Paul Radiology
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

We have a number of patients who present with eminent potentially life-threatening stroke symptoms related to intracranial atherosclerotic disease. Our initial experience with the wingspan stent system suggests to us that these patients can clearly benefit by having access to this technology. I believe strongly that the costs of this technology will diminish the overall costs to society by reducing the significant stroke costs in this patient population.

Wojak, Joan Title: Director of Diagnostic and Interventional Neurorad
Organization: Our Lady of Lourdes Regional Medical Center
Date: 08/31/2006
Comment:

It is dangerous to force practitioners to use a stent when angiopalsty alone is sufficient for 75% of intracranial stenoses; as the results from several centers have indicated (Marks et al, forthcoming paper by Wojak et al, and numerous others). I for one will have to drastically reduce the number of patients with lesions SYMPTOMATIC on medical therapy that receive treatment because many of these lesions cannot be reached with the WingSpan device. I believe that WingSpan is a step in the

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Contreras, Jaime Title: Neurointerventional radiology fellow
Organization: Stanford Hospitals
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

Please consider favorably the reimbursment for intracranial stenting and angioplasty in the setting of intracranial stenosis. This is an important and viable modality for a difficult to treat disease. Thank you.
Jaime Contreras, MD.

Dodd, Robert Organization: Stanford University Medical Center
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

I am a neurosurgeon who treats patients with intracranial atherosclerotic disease. We have had several patients who have continued to fail medical therapy as in the WASID study, who have shown considerable improvement with primary angioplasty and or stent placement. I believe a large randomized study is necessary to prove the efficacy of these treatments, but I also feel that there is considerable evidence in the literature from single centers (including ours) which supports both of

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Marks, Michael Title: Professor of Radiology and Neurosurgery
Organization: Stanford University Medical Center
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

I just want to encourage the CMS to carefully consider allowing reimbursement for angioplasty and stenting for symptomatic intracranial stenosis. It is clear from the results of the WASID trial that there is NO acceptable medical therapy which is able to reduce the rate of stroke in patients with this disease who are symptomatic. Several single center studies published in journal such as the American Journal of Neuroradiology and Stroke have shown that angioplasty in the intracranial

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Vertinsky, Alexandra Title: Neuroradiology Fellow (Dr)
Organization: Stanford
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

intracranial angioplasty stenting, in my view, has improved patient care in many situations where other options are not available. therefore, i support medicare coverage for this fda approved procedure.

Goldberg, David Title: Director Interventional Neuroradiology
Organization: Bay Imaging Consultants
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

I have used the WingSpan stent in one patient this year who was having daily TIA's despite maximum medical therapy. There would have been no way to get a coronary stent into the position of the MCA stenosis previous to the WingSpan stent. After the patient was treated, the patients sypmtoms completely resolved and she now leads a normal daily life. Without the stent, this patient would have eventually had a life devastating stroke. This new device is crucial for intracranial

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Jahromi, Babak Title: Fellow, Endovascular Neurosurgery
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

Please consider granting national Medicare coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. Using the "safety plus probable benefit" (rather than "reasonable and necessary") in your approval coverage of this HDE device would significantly enhance hospital resource allocation and therefore patient access. Clinical rationale is as follows:

Two separate recently reported prospective

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Halbach, Van Title: Interventional Neuroradiologist
Organization: UCSF Medical Center
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

I would strongly urge CMS to extend coverage for all patients that need intracranial angioplasty or stenting that meet the indication of FDA approved devices. The current proposed rule would deny coverage for many patients treated with Wingspan in the current FDA approved HDE population.

UCSF and our patients face significant financial burdens if coverage is denied

Singh, Tejinder Title: Clinical fellow, Neurointerventional Radiologist
Organization: UCSF
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

Medical device technology is rapidly evolving particularly for the treatment of strokes. What was previously considered untreatable now has genunine and effective treatment options. As with most medical conditions, prevention is the best form of therapy. There now exists an excellent preventative device for stroke related to intracranial atherosclerosis. The device is approved for this purpose by the FDA but paradoxically is not covered for payment by medicare or some insurers. This is an

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Louis, Susan Title: NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty
Date: 08/30/2006
Comment:

To whom it may concern, Neurointerventional Surgery and Borgess Medical Center–a division of Ascension Health, requests that CMS grant national Medicare coverage toIntracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan® Stent System with Gateway™ PTA Balloon Catheter under the current Humanitarian Device Exemption (HDE) labeled indication. CMS's current coverage review for the Wingspan® Stent System reflects a rigid application of the "reasonable and necessary"

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Heck, Don Title: MD
Organization: Forsyth Radiology Associates
Date: 08/29/2006
Comment:

I advise CMS to reconsider this decision. We know conclusively that patients with >70% symptomatic intracranial stenosis have a very high rate of strokes in the affected territory, about 23% within the first year even with aspirin therapy (WASID). This is similar to the 2 year risk of medical therapy for patients with 70% or greater symptomatic carotid stenosis. Similar to patients with 70% or greater symptomatic carotid stenosis, the highest risk period for the patient with intracranial

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Tummala, Ramachandra Title: Endovascular fellow
Organization: University at Buffalo Neurosurgery
Date: 08/29/2006
Comment:

Although stenting for intracranial stenosis seems to be an expensive endeavor, two facts must be considered. First, the natural history of symptomatic intracranial stenosis seems to be unfavorable and cost of stenting would be far outweighed by the cost of the care incurred by a subsequent stroke. Second, stenting is currently the only alternative to patients with symptomatic intracranial stenosis who have failed medical therapy. The decision not to reimburse the Wingspan stent is

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Finch, Ira Title: President
Organization: Bay Imaging Consultants
Date: 08/28/2006
Comment:

Intracranial stenting and angioplasty provide a method to decrease stroke risk in patients who have failed anticoagulation therapy. There is no alternative treatment for this group of patients. These procedures represent an important advancement in stroke treatment and prevention, and should be reimbursed as such.

Hopkins, Leo Nelson Title: Chairman and Professor
Organization: University at Buffalo Neurosurgery, Inc.
Date: 08/28/2006
Comment:

August 28, 2006

RE: NCA for Intracranial Stenting and Angioplasty (CAG – 00085R2)

Dear CMS Associate:

I write to request that you provide coverage for intracranial stenting for patients with symptomatic intracranial arterial stenosis. Although I am certain you will receive many comments backed by references from the literature, let me provide you with a brief and simple statement as to why noncoverage for these patients will result in patients suffering severe strokes and

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Hetts, Steven Title: Clinical Instructor of Radiology
Organization: UCSF Medical Center
Date: 08/24/2006
Comment:

Dear CMS,

As an interventional neuroradiologist, I treat patients with intracranial arterial stenoses. We have been unable to perform intracranial stenting with the Wingspan device as our medical center is requiring that patients supply a bond in the amount of three times their hospitalization cost to allay our medical center's concern that the Wingspan stent and the entire hospitalization relating to it will not be covered by insurance. This is obviously an intimidating burden for

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Higashida, MD, Randall Title: MD
Organization: UCSF Medical Center- Radiology
Date: 08/24/2006
Comment:

I am a practicing neuro interventional radiologist at UCSF Medical Center. I specialize in the diagnosis and treatment of acute ischemic stroke, and want to offer my patients, "state of the art" treatment for stroke. I am urging that CMS, reconsider its current ruling, to not fully reimburse payment to both hospitals and physicians, who use the FDA approved Wingspan Intracranial Stent System, and Gateway Balloon, for treatment of patients who have suffered a stroke, and are at high risk,

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Meyers, Nan Title: Clinical Nurse Specialist
Organization: Borgess Medical Center
Date: 08/24/2006
Comment:

I'm requesting that CMS grant national coverage to intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases involving the Wingspan Stent System with Gateway PTA Balloon Catheter under the current humaniatarian Device Exemption label.

Our NeuroInterventional Lab performed 12 such procedures in the last 11 months. Following are the 3 month outcomes:

III. Follow up(3 months)


a. No deaths
b. Of 12 patients, 1 patient (8%) has a deficit. Rankin score

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Messe, Steven Title: Assistant professor
Organization: Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
Date: 08/24/2006
Comment:

I am a vasular Neurologist at the University of Pennsylvania and I am writing to ask CMS to grant national Medicare coverage to medically refractory intracranial angioplasty and stenting cases. There is high level evidence from the WASID study that patients with symptomatic intracranial disease are at tremendous risk of recurrence despite medical therapy; specific subgroups such as those with >70% stenosis and recent symptoms have a risk of recurrent stroke that exceeds 25% in the first

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brown, george Date: 08/23/2006
Comment:

I am a neurointerventionalist in Des Moines, Iowa. My Boston Scientific rep informed me of the FDA approval of intracranial angioplasty and stenting but without any reinbursement by medicare. This is absurd. Please fix this problem if you want this potentially lifesaving procedure available. In addition, the overall medicare reimbursements for almost all technically difficult and time intensive neurointerventional procedures pales in comparison to the time and reimbursements for other

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Adamson, MD, James Title: VP & Chief Medical Officer
Organization: Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield
Date: 08/10/2006
Comment:

Covering this procedure because the FDA has given an HDE appears contrived. As stated, an HDE is for conditions that affect fewer than 4,000 individuals in the U.S. Also, as stated, Of the 900,000 strokes or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs), about 70,000 to 90,000 are caused by intracranial arterial stenosis (Chimowitz et al., 2005). I'm missing something; why did the FDA make the decision to provide an HDE for the device with numbers such as these, and then why did Medicare agree to

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