News

Medicare proposes adding HPV screening benefit


 

References

Medicare is proposing to begin covering human papillomavirus testing once every 5 years in conjunction with the Pap smear test for its asymptomatic female beneficiaries aged 30-65 years old in an effort to better detect cervical cancer.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services issued a proposed coverage decision memo on April 16 spelling out the evidence supporting expanded coverage. Currently, the Medicare program covers a screening pelvic examination and Pap test for female beneficiaries at 1- or 2-year intervals, based on individual risk factors.

CMS began considering HPV test coverage at the request of the American Academy of Family Physicians.

In 2012, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force gave the evidence for this screening approach – Pap test plus HPV testing every 5 years for women aged 30-65 years – a grade A. HPV testing for women aged 30 years and older is already a covered preventive benefit under the Affordable Care Act. CMS officials are taking comments on the proposed coverage decision; a final coverage decision in expected in July. See the proposed coverage decision here.

Recommended Reading

High rates of oophorectomy documented in premenopausal women
MDedge ObGyn
Type, location of BRCA mutations influence risk
MDedge ObGyn
SLN mapping found accurate in endometrial cancer
MDedge ObGyn
Model accurately spots low-risk endometrial cancer
MDedge ObGyn
HPV-targeted TILs trigger CR in some advanced cervical cancer patients
MDedge ObGyn
Biomarker is linked to rucaparib benefit in ovarian cancer
MDedge ObGyn
Power morcellation debate: Crunching the data
MDedge ObGyn
QOL independently predicts outcomes in ovarian cancer
MDedge ObGyn
SCORPION: Interval debulking is safer in advanced ovarian cancer
MDedge ObGyn
Pregnancy in the cancer survivor
MDedge ObGyn