OPINION
SHWARTZ, Circuit Judge.
Patrick J. Venetz (“Venetz”) and Nancy E. Venetz appeal from the District Court’s order denying Venetz’s claim for benefits under the Diet Drug Nationwide Class Action Settlement Agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”). For the following reasons, we will affirm.
I
Venetz’s appeal arises from the multi-district class action litigation regarding the diet drugs Pondimin® (fenfluramine) and Redux® (dexfenfluramine), previously sold by American Home Products (“AHP”)
.
See In re Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
543 F.3d 179, 181 (3d Cir.2008)
(“Patterson
”). AHP settled the litigation, placed funds in a trust for claim payments, and established the “Settlement Trust” (the “Trust”) to review and administer benefit claims by Pondimin® and Redux® users who suffer from “severe heart-valve regurgitation” or other “less severe heart-valve conditions that progress to the more seri
ous levels” during the fifteen-year period following execution of the Settlement Agreement.
In
re
Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
385 F.3d 386, 390-92 (3d Cir.2004).
To obtain benefits under the Settlement Agreement, a claimant must complete and submit to the Trust a multi-part “Green Form.”
Patterson,
543 F.3d at 182. In Part I of the Green Form, the claimant provides personal background information, including the level of benefits for which he believes he is qualified. Part II of the Green Form is completed by a board-certified cardiologist or cardiothoracic surgeon (an “attesting physician”) who has reviewed the claimant’s echocardiogram and attests to the medical conditions underlying the claimant’s benefits request.
Venetz submitted a “Green Form” for Trust benefits. In it, Robert L. Rosen-thal, M.D. attested that, based on his review of Venetz’s September 29, 2002 echocardiogram, Venetz had “[m]oderate mitral regurgitation.” JA 3339. Dr. Ro-senthal also attested that Venetz underwent surgery “to repair or replace the aortic and/or mitral valve(s)” due to his use of Pondimin® or Redux®, JA 3313, and had “[v]entricular fibrillation or sustained ventricular tachycardia” resulting in “hemodynamic compromise,” JA 3315. In combination, such conditions would entitle a claimant to benefits at severity “Level V” of the Settlement Agreement Matrix A-l.
Waleed N. Irani, M.D., one of the Trust’s auditing cardiologists, evaluated Venetz’s claim and applied a “reasonable medical basis” standard to determine the validity of the moderate mitral regurgitation diagnosis.
See Patterson,
543 F.3d at 183-84. Dr. Irani found that Venetz had only mild mitral regurgitation
and, contrary to Dr. Rosenthal, concluded that there “was no reasonable medical basis” to find moderate mitral regurgitation entitling Venetz to Matrix A-l, Level V benefits. JA 3399. As a result, the Trust denied Venetz’s request for such benefits.
Venetz contested the Trust’s determination and provided declarations by Drs. Ro-senthal and Paul W. Dlabal attesting that Venetz suffered from “at least” moderate mitral regurgitation. JA 3407, 3413. The Trust forwarded Venetz’s submission to Dr. Irani. In response, Dr. Irani submitted a declaration again concluding that there was no reasonable medical basis for the Green Form’s attestation that Venetz’s echocardiogram showed moderate mitral
regurgitation.
Based on this declaration, the Trust denied Venetz’s benefits claim.
Venetz disputed this determination and requested that his claim proceed through the “Show Cause process” set forth in the Settlement Agreement and the Audit Rules. Accordingly, the Trust applied for and the District Court issued an order (PTO 8986) requiring Venetz to show cause why his claim for benefits should be paid at the level stated in his Green Form. The District Court referred the claim to the Special Master for further proceedings.
In accordance with the Audit Rules, the Special Master appointed a “Technical Ad-visor,” Gary J. Vigilante, M.D., to review Venetz’s claim and the parties’ submissions. Vigilante issued a “Technical Advis- or Report” finding no reasonable medical basis for Dr. Rosenthal’s Green Form attestation that Venetz had moderate mi-tral regurgitation because “the echocardio-gram of September 29, 2002 was of poor quality and an accurate [regurgitant jet area] could not be determined.” JA 3604. Although the Report noted evidence of mitral regurgitation, it “most likely was mild,” with the echocardiogram’s poor quality rendering it “impossible to quantify [its] severity.” JA 3599.
The District Court affirmed the Trust’s denial of Venetz’s claim, crediting the opinions of Drs. Irani and Vigilante that Venetz “failed to establish a reasonable medical basis for finding that he was not diagnosed ‘as having Mild Mitral Regurgitation.’” JA 19 (citing Settlement Agreement § IV.B.2.d.(2)(a), 893-94.). Venetz appeals.
II
Venetz raises two issues on appeal. First, he asserts that “there is no rule of
law” for determining, nor does the Settlement Agreement define, what constitutes a “reasonable medical basis” under the Settlement Agreement. Appellant Br. 16-17. As a result, he argues that deference should be given to his physician, and that the claimant should be required to show only that his physician’s opinions are not “absurd, ridiculous, extreme, or irrational.” Reply Br. 26. He further asserts that “the Trust [should be required to] put forth evidence to show that the attesting physician and any physician in support of the claim failed to act as ordinary and prudent physicians.” Appellant Br. 24. Second, he argues that the District Court misapplied that standard in affirming the Trust’s denial of his benefits claim.
We disagree with both arguments. Although the Settlement Agreement does not define the term “reasonable medical basis,” JA 964-66, the standard is articulated in, among other things: (i) the practices identified by the District Court in
In re Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
236 F.Supp.2d 445 (E.D.Pa.2002)
(“PTO 2610
”); (ii) other orders of the District Court,
Patterson,
548 F.3d at 186; and (iii) the “Auditing Cardiologist Training Course,”
see id.
at 185-86 & 187 n. 16 (rejecting argument that “the District Court has not concretely defined ‘reasonable medical basis’ ”). As such, the standard exists and “[Venetz] and h[is] attorneys had sufficient notice” of it.
Id.
at 187 n. 16.
In
PTO 2610,
the District Court explained that a diagnosis lacks a “reasonable medical basis” if it is “beyond the bounds of medical reason,”
PTO 2640,
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OPINION
SHWARTZ, Circuit Judge.
Patrick J. Venetz (“Venetz”) and Nancy E. Venetz appeal from the District Court’s order denying Venetz’s claim for benefits under the Diet Drug Nationwide Class Action Settlement Agreement (the “Settlement Agreement”). For the following reasons, we will affirm.
I
Venetz’s appeal arises from the multi-district class action litigation regarding the diet drugs Pondimin® (fenfluramine) and Redux® (dexfenfluramine), previously sold by American Home Products (“AHP”)
.
See In re Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
543 F.3d 179, 181 (3d Cir.2008)
(“Patterson
”). AHP settled the litigation, placed funds in a trust for claim payments, and established the “Settlement Trust” (the “Trust”) to review and administer benefit claims by Pondimin® and Redux® users who suffer from “severe heart-valve regurgitation” or other “less severe heart-valve conditions that progress to the more seri
ous levels” during the fifteen-year period following execution of the Settlement Agreement.
In
re
Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
385 F.3d 386, 390-92 (3d Cir.2004).
To obtain benefits under the Settlement Agreement, a claimant must complete and submit to the Trust a multi-part “Green Form.”
Patterson,
543 F.3d at 182. In Part I of the Green Form, the claimant provides personal background information, including the level of benefits for which he believes he is qualified. Part II of the Green Form is completed by a board-certified cardiologist or cardiothoracic surgeon (an “attesting physician”) who has reviewed the claimant’s echocardiogram and attests to the medical conditions underlying the claimant’s benefits request.
Venetz submitted a “Green Form” for Trust benefits. In it, Robert L. Rosen-thal, M.D. attested that, based on his review of Venetz’s September 29, 2002 echocardiogram, Venetz had “[m]oderate mitral regurgitation.” JA 3339. Dr. Ro-senthal also attested that Venetz underwent surgery “to repair or replace the aortic and/or mitral valve(s)” due to his use of Pondimin® or Redux®, JA 3313, and had “[v]entricular fibrillation or sustained ventricular tachycardia” resulting in “hemodynamic compromise,” JA 3315. In combination, such conditions would entitle a claimant to benefits at severity “Level V” of the Settlement Agreement Matrix A-l.
Waleed N. Irani, M.D., one of the Trust’s auditing cardiologists, evaluated Venetz’s claim and applied a “reasonable medical basis” standard to determine the validity of the moderate mitral regurgitation diagnosis.
See Patterson,
543 F.3d at 183-84. Dr. Irani found that Venetz had only mild mitral regurgitation
and, contrary to Dr. Rosenthal, concluded that there “was no reasonable medical basis” to find moderate mitral regurgitation entitling Venetz to Matrix A-l, Level V benefits. JA 3399. As a result, the Trust denied Venetz’s request for such benefits.
Venetz contested the Trust’s determination and provided declarations by Drs. Ro-senthal and Paul W. Dlabal attesting that Venetz suffered from “at least” moderate mitral regurgitation. JA 3407, 3413. The Trust forwarded Venetz’s submission to Dr. Irani. In response, Dr. Irani submitted a declaration again concluding that there was no reasonable medical basis for the Green Form’s attestation that Venetz’s echocardiogram showed moderate mitral
regurgitation.
Based on this declaration, the Trust denied Venetz’s benefits claim.
Venetz disputed this determination and requested that his claim proceed through the “Show Cause process” set forth in the Settlement Agreement and the Audit Rules. Accordingly, the Trust applied for and the District Court issued an order (PTO 8986) requiring Venetz to show cause why his claim for benefits should be paid at the level stated in his Green Form. The District Court referred the claim to the Special Master for further proceedings.
In accordance with the Audit Rules, the Special Master appointed a “Technical Ad-visor,” Gary J. Vigilante, M.D., to review Venetz’s claim and the parties’ submissions. Vigilante issued a “Technical Advis- or Report” finding no reasonable medical basis for Dr. Rosenthal’s Green Form attestation that Venetz had moderate mi-tral regurgitation because “the echocardio-gram of September 29, 2002 was of poor quality and an accurate [regurgitant jet area] could not be determined.” JA 3604. Although the Report noted evidence of mitral regurgitation, it “most likely was mild,” with the echocardiogram’s poor quality rendering it “impossible to quantify [its] severity.” JA 3599.
The District Court affirmed the Trust’s denial of Venetz’s claim, crediting the opinions of Drs. Irani and Vigilante that Venetz “failed to establish a reasonable medical basis for finding that he was not diagnosed ‘as having Mild Mitral Regurgitation.’” JA 19 (citing Settlement Agreement § IV.B.2.d.(2)(a), 893-94.). Venetz appeals.
II
Venetz raises two issues on appeal. First, he asserts that “there is no rule of
law” for determining, nor does the Settlement Agreement define, what constitutes a “reasonable medical basis” under the Settlement Agreement. Appellant Br. 16-17. As a result, he argues that deference should be given to his physician, and that the claimant should be required to show only that his physician’s opinions are not “absurd, ridiculous, extreme, or irrational.” Reply Br. 26. He further asserts that “the Trust [should be required to] put forth evidence to show that the attesting physician and any physician in support of the claim failed to act as ordinary and prudent physicians.” Appellant Br. 24. Second, he argues that the District Court misapplied that standard in affirming the Trust’s denial of his benefits claim.
We disagree with both arguments. Although the Settlement Agreement does not define the term “reasonable medical basis,” JA 964-66, the standard is articulated in, among other things: (i) the practices identified by the District Court in
In re Diet Drugs Prods. Liab. Litig.,
236 F.Supp.2d 445 (E.D.Pa.2002)
(“PTO 2610
”); (ii) other orders of the District Court,
Patterson,
548 F.3d at 186; and (iii) the “Auditing Cardiologist Training Course,”
see id.
at 185-86 & 187 n. 16 (rejecting argument that “the District Court has not concretely defined ‘reasonable medical basis’ ”). As such, the standard exists and “[Venetz] and h[is] attorneys had sufficient notice” of it.
Id.
at 187 n. 16.
In
PTO 2610,
the District Court explained that a diagnosis lacks a “reasonable medical basis” if it is “beyond the bounds of medical reason,”
PTO 2640,
286 F.Supp.2d at 458, and provided the following examples:
(1) failing to review multiple loops and still frames; (2) failing to have a Board Certified Cardiologist properly supervise and interpret the echocardiogram; (3) failing to examine the regurgitant jet throughout a portion of systole; (4) over-manipulating echocardiogram settings; (5) setting a low Nyquist limit; (6) characterizing “artifacts,” “phantom jets,” “backflow” and other low velocity flow as mitral regurgitation; (7) failing to take a claimant’s medical history; and (8) overtracing the amount of a claimant’s regurgitation.
JA 16 (citing
PTO
264,0). Thus, a diagnosis predicated upon any of these facts would lack a reasonable medical basis.
The Audit Rules also address who bears the burden of showing the existence of a reasonable medical basis. For instance, under Audit Rule 24, the auditing cardiologist’s findings are essentially viewed as correct, unless the claimant can show his attesting physician’s opinion has a reasonable medical basis. Thus, “[o]nce the Trust denies a claim and the claim advances to a show cause proceeding, the claimant has the burden of proving there was a reasonable medical basis for the attesting physician’s representations.”
Patterson,
543 F.3d at 189. To carry this burden, the claimant must present evidence rebutting the auditing cardiologist and/or the Technical Advisor’s conclusion that the attesting physician lacked a reasonable medical basis for his opinion.
See id.
at 190. Therefore, Venetz’s assertion that his doctor’s views should be deemed presumptively correct and rejected only if
they are absurd, ridiculous, extreme, or excessive, is inconsistent with the factors used to determine whether a reasonable medical basis exists and the Audit Rules governing the Settlement Trust, which require him to show why the auditing cardiologist and Technical Advisor are wrong and that his physicians had a reasonable medical basis for them opinion. We will not disturb the agreed-upon and court-approved burdens of proof nor read new definitions into the Settlement Agreement and thus we reject his first argument.
We also reject his second argument, as the District Court did not clearly err in affirming the Trust’s denial of Ven-etz’s benefits claim.
See In re Orthopedic Bone Screw Prods. Liab. Litig.,
246 F.3d 315, 320 (3d Cir.2001) (“The test is not what this court would have done under the same circumstances; that is not enough. [We] must feel that only one order could have been entered on the facts.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). Here, the District Court evaluated the medical opinions presented to it and determined that Venetz failed to rebut the findings of the auditing cardiologist, Dr. Irani, and the Technical Advisor, Dr. Vigilante. For example, the District Court credited the Technical Advisor’s finding that Ven-etz’s “level of regurgitation was inflated ‘due to inclusion of low velocity nonturbu-lent flow’ ” and an “ ‘inappropriately’ low” Nyquist limit, and as a result, his echocar-diogram “ “was performed significantly below the appropriate standard of care.’ ” JA 16-17 (quoting Technical Advisor Report at 7-8, JA 3599-3600). Notably, Dr. Dla-bal, one of Venetz’s attesting physicians, even conceded that “ ‘[t]he Nyquist Limit on this study is set at a somewhat low level.’ ” JA 16 n. 16 (quoting Declaration of Dr. Dlabal at 2, JA 3413). This deficiency shows that that there is a basis for concluding that Venetz’s doctors’ opinions lacked a reasonable medical basis. As a result, Venetz has failed to demonstrate that the only conclusion that may be drawn from the record is that his echocar-diogram showed moderate mitral regurgitation. Thus, the District Court did not abuse its discretion in holding that Venetz failed to meet his burden of proving that there was a reasonable medical basis for his attesting physician’s finding of moderate mitral regurgitation.
Ill
For these reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s Order affirming the Trust’s denial of Venetz’s claim for benefits.