12/2009 - There has been considerable public interest in the use of pharmacogenomic testing to predict a patient’s response to warfarin, an orally administered anticoagulant drug that is marketed most commonly as Coumadin. Anticoagulant drugs are sometimes referred to as "blood thinners" by the lay public. Pharmacogenomics is the study of how an individual’s genetic makeup, or genotype, affects the body’s response to drugs. It is an examination of the inherited components and variations in genes that dictate drug/medication response. Pharmacogenomics explores the ways these variations can be used to try to predict whether a patient will have a good response to a drug, a bad response, or no response at all. It is claimed that genetic variability in the CYP2C9 and/or VKORC1genes, in combination with many other factors, may partially predict a patient’s response to warfarin. On August 4, 2008, CMS opened a National Coverage Analysis. Effective date: 08/03/2009 Implementation date: 04/05/2010 (TN 111) (CR6715)
01/2013 - CMS translated the information for this policy from ICD-9-CM/PCS to ICD-10-CM/PCS according to HIPAA standard medical data code set requirements and updated any necessary and related coding infrastructure. These updates do not expand, restrict, or alter existing coverage policy. Implementation date: 04/01/2013 Effective date: 10/1/2015. (TN 1165) (CR 8109)
04/2016 - Transmittal 1630, dated February 26, 2016, is being rescinded and replaced by Transmittal 1658 to (1) remove duplicate spreadsheet NCD210.3, (2) add missing spreadsheet NCD20.33, (3) add B/MAC to requirement 3 at request of WPS/B, (4) rename the spreadsheet titles, and, (5) provide a link to the attached spreadsheets for more efficient ease of reference and accessibility. All other information remains the same. (TN 1658) (CR9540)