Glauser-Nagy v. Medical Mutual of Ohio

987 F. Supp. 1002, 21 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2543, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19759, 1997 WL 769400
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedDecember 8, 1997
Docket3:97CV7714
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 987 F. Supp. 1002 (Glauser-Nagy v. Medical Mutual of Ohio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glauser-Nagy v. Medical Mutual of Ohio, 987 F. Supp. 1002, 21 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2543, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19759, 1997 WL 769400 (N.D. Ohio 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

JOHN W. POTTER, District Judge.

. This matter is before the Court on plaintiffs motion for a preliminary injunction, and defendant’s opposition. The Court heard oral argument and received evidence on November 19-20, 1997. The parties have filed post-hearing briefs. For the following reasons, plaintiffs motion will be denied.

This is a dispute over plaintiffs entitlement to health insurance benefits which her insurance provider claims are “experimental/investigational,” and therefore not provided under her plan.

Plaintiff Karen M. Glauser-Nagy is employed by Seaway Food Town, Inc. and receives health benefits under an employer-provided self-funded plan (the Plan), which is administered by defendant Medical Mutual of Ohio (Medical Mutual). Medical Mutual also provides stop-loss coverage for the Plan.

Prior to January, 1997, Seaway Food Town’s employee health benefits plan was administered by Medical Mutual’s predecessor-in-interest, Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Ohio. The Summary Plan Description (SPD) expressly excluded coverage for services that were either “Experimental/Investigative” or “not Medically Necessary, as determined by the Plan.” (Blue Cross/Blue Shield SPD, at 23.) The Plan defined “Experimental/Investigative” as:

[A]ny treatment, procedure, facility, equipment, drug, device or supply which we do not recognize as accepted medical practice or which did not have required governmental approval when you received it. Determination will be made by the Plan in its sole discretion and will be conclusive.

Id. at 37. The Plan defined “Medically Necessary” as:

[A] service or supply that is required to diagnose or treat an injury, ailment, condition, disease, disorder or illness and which the Plan determines is:
• appropriate with regard to the standards of good medical practice.
• not primarily for the convenience of you or a Provider.
• the most appropriate supply or level of service which can be safely provided to you....

Id. at 38.

At some time in early 1997, Blue Cross/ Blue Shield of Ohio changed its name to Medical Mutual of Ohio. In June, 1997, employees were supplied with new Summary Plan Descriptions, which claimed to be retroactive to January 1, 1997. The parties have testified that the Plan coverage did not change. However, the new SPD redefined “Experimental or Investigational Drug, Device, Medical Treatment or Procedure” as:

[A] drug, device, medical treatment or procedure is Experimental or Investigational:
• if the drug or device cannot be lawfully marketed without approval of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and approval for marketing has not been given at the time the drug or device is furnished;
• if rehable evidence shows that the drug, device medical treatment or procedure is the subject of on-going phase I, II, or III clinical trials pr is under study to determine maximum tolerated dose, tox- *1006 ieity, safety, efficacy, or efficacy as eom-pared with the standard means of treatment or diagnosis; or
• if reliable evidence shows that the consensus of opinion among experts regarding the drug, device, medical treatment or procedure is that further studies or clinical trials are necessary to determine its maximum tolerated dose, toxicity, safety, efficacy, or efficacy as compared with the standard means of treatment or diagnosis.

(Medical Mutual SPD, at 32.)

In January, 1997, a 5.8-eentimeter mass, which was subsequently diagnosed to be Stage III breast cancer, 1 was discovered in plaintiffs right breast. The tumor was removed on February 27, 1997. On March 7, 1997, a 4-centimeter lymph node was removed from under plaintiffs right arm; that node was also diagnosed to be cancerous. Tests performed subsequent to the two surgeries indicated that no cancer was present in plaintiffs body. However, the likelihood that a breast cancer patient with a tumor as large as plaintiffs will develop metastatic cancer subsequent to surgical resection is 50-70% if she is not treated after surgery. A patient who is treated with standard dose chemotherapy faces a 40-50% chance of developing metastatic cancer.

Plaintiffs treating physicians, in consultation with plaintiff, recommended a three-step treatment plan for plaintiff. First, plaintiff would undergo four rounds of standard dose chemotherapy. Second, plaintiff would undergo a procedure known as high dose chemotherapy with peripheral stem cell rescue. Third, plaintiff would undergo a mastectomy and chest wall radiation.

The second phase of the recommended procedure, high dose chemotherapy with peripheral stem cell rescue (HDC-PSCR) is the procedure that is at issue in this case. The phrase “high dose chemotherapy” (HDC) refers to chemotherapy at doses that are so toxic to the patient’s bone marrow that the patient could not survive without infusions from stem cells either from the bone marrow or peripheral blood. HDC-PSCR involves harvesting healthy blood cells from the patient prior to high does chemotherapy, freezing the cells during the chemotherapy, and then reinfusing the cells back into the patient’s body once the drags have been administered. The procedure has been widely available for over ten years and is an accepted treatment for metastatic breast cancer as well as many other forms of cancer.

When, plaintiff requested pre-approval from Medical Mutual for payment for the HDC-PSCR treatment, that request was sent to an independent physician consultant for a predetermination, in accordance with Medical Mutual’s standard procedures. Medical Mutual asks its consulting physicians to use a set of guidelines developed by the Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association in conjunction with Kaiser Permanente in evaluating medical necessity. 2 Those guidelines generally state that HDC-PSCR may be approved as medically necessary for patients with metastatic (Stage IV) breast cancer, but is still experimental/investigatory as to patients with Stage II or III breast cancer. Thus, the guidelines do not authorize payment for HDC-PSCR for patients with Stage III breast cancer, as plaintiff has. In pertinent part, the guidelines provide as follows:

*1007 Thirty-three studies that include approximately 850 patients have reported outcomes of HDC/AuSCS 3 for breast cancer. Unfortunately, none of the studies was controlled, and the patients in the studies varied widely with respect to many factors that can affect outcomes irrespective of the treatment. . Furthermore, the results achieved with conventional doses overlapped the survival results achieved with HDC/AuSCS.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
987 F. Supp. 1002, 21 Employee Benefits Cas. (BNA) 2543, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19759, 1997 WL 769400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glauser-nagy-v-medical-mutual-of-ohio-ohnd-1997.