Kulakowski v. Rochester Hospital Service Corp.

779 F. Supp. 710, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19039, 1991 WL 283889
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedDecember 17, 1991
DocketCIV-91-6505T
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 779 F. Supp. 710 (Kulakowski v. Rochester Hospital Service Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kulakowski v. Rochester Hospital Service Corp., 779 F. Supp. 710, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19039, 1991 WL 283889 (W.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER

TELESCA, Chief Judge.

INTRODUCTION

The plaintiff Rebecca Kulakowski (“Mrs. Kulakowski”) is a 34-year old woman who suffers from metastatic breast cancer. In late October 1991, Mrs. Kulakowski requested pre-approval from defendants (collectively, “Blue Choice”) for a course of treatment for her cancer which involves the combined use of high doses of chemotherapy and an autologous bone marrow transplant (“HDC/ABMT”). Several weeks later, her request was denied. She then commenced this action pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(1)(B) 1 , seeking to enforce *712 her rights as a beneficiary of a health insurance plan administered by Blue Choice.

Presently before me is Mrs. Kulakow-ski’s motion for a preliminary injunction to require Blue Choice to pay for her HDC/ ABMT treatment. A hearing on the motion was held Wednesday, December 11, 1991, and written final submissions were filed Friday, December 13, 1991. For the reasons discussed below, plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction is granted.

FACTS

Mrs. Kulakowski is a covered beneficiary under a health care and hospitalization insurance plan issued by Blue Choice and maintained by her husband’s employer. The terms of this plan are contained in a written contract (the “Contract”) which is annexed to the complaint. As discussed in more detail below, in relevant part the Contract expressly excludes coverage for “experimental procedures 2 .”

Mrs. Kulakowski’s cancer was first discovered in February 1989. She underwent a left mastectomy in April 1989; chemotherapy and radiation therapy followed, through January 1990, when she achieved a remission. Her remission ended in the summer of 1991 and in the fall of 1991, a swollen lymph node was removed from Mrs. Kulakowski’s neck. Her treating oncologist, Dr. James Rooney, diagnosed metastatic breast cancer and referred Mrs. Kulakowski to Dr. John DiPersio, the Director of the Bone Marrow Transplant Clinic (the “Clinic”) at Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York.

The Clinic specializes in providing HDC/ ABMT treatment to cancer patients. HDC/ABMT is a procedure by which bone marrow stem cells are extracted (“harvested”) from the patient’s body and frozen in storage while the patient receives massive doses of chemotherapy to destroy the cancer. Such doses, although universally acknowledged as more effective in destroying cancer cells, would be fatally toxic to bone marrow left in place during the course of chemotherapy. After the chemotherapy is completed, the patient’s own bone marrow is reintroduced into his system.

HDC/ABMT was first used to treat a number of other types of cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma, and Hodgkins Disease (a form of lymphoma). Many health care insurance providers, including Blue Choice, provide coverage for HDC/ABMT for lymphomas, leukemia, and neuroblasto-ma. While the application of HDC/ABMT in cases of breast cancer is a more recently developed treatment, many other health care insurers, including major insurers in the Western New York area, do provide coverage for such treatment.

When Dr. Rooney recommended that Mrs. Kulakowski seek treatment at the Clinic, he was intimately familiar with her condition and the treatments she had already undergone. Before accepting her as a patient at the Clinic, Dr. DiPersio both reviewed Mrs. Kulakowski’s medical records and examined her personally. Both Dr. Rooney and Dr. DiPersio have stated that HDC/ABMT offers Mrs. Kula-kowski the best chance of achieving and maintaining remission from her present cancer and her only chance of a “long-term” remission, which is the medical euphemism for a cure for a disease with a miserably low cure rate. In opening argument, plaintiff’s counsel stated that breast cancer will strike one out of every nine American women and that 45,000 American women die from it each year.

After reviewing her medical history, Dr. DiPersio informed Mrs. Kulakowski that she is an “excellent” candidate for HDC/ ABMT because of her present condition: *713 she is generally very healthy and, with the removal of the cancerous lymph node, she seems to have very little/no other cancer tumors present. Dr. DiPersio has advised Mrs. Kulakowski that she should begin the treatment as soon as practicable and has, in the meantime, begun a regimen of radiotherapy to maintain her condition.

The cost of HDC/ABMT at the Clinic currently averages $92,000. Before it will commence the treatment, the Clinic requires either substantial payment or a letter from the patient’s health insurer indicating that coverage will be provided. In a letter dated October 17, 1991, Dr. DiPersio formally requested authorization and pre-certification for a course of treatment (“protocol”) for Mrs. Kulakowski at the Clinic which included both chemotherapy and an autologous bone marrow transplant — that is, he sought assurances that Blue Choice would cover Mrs. Kulakow-ski’s HDC/ABMT.

In November 1991, Blue Choice denied coverage to Mrs. Kulakowski. The denial came in an 8-page letter from the Medical Director of Blue Choice, Dr. Joseph Stan-kaitis. Dr. Stankaitis had never seen or examined Mrs. Kulakowski, but based on a review of both her records and applicable medical literature, he opined that HDC/ ABMT as proposed for her would be “experimental” and, therefore, excluded from coverage under the Contract. After reviewing the steps which Blue Choice had taken in making its decision to deny coverage, Dr. Stankaitis stated to Mrs. Kulakow-ski:

We have concluded that although the treatment offered to you may be promising in view of the alternatives currently available to you, autologous bone marrow transplantation for metastatic breast cancer is, at this time, under continued scientific testing and research, with questions as to its safety and efficacy.

With respect to the “alternatives” currently available to Mrs. Kulakowski, both Dr. DiPersio and Dr. Rooney had told her that, without HDC/ABMT, she will die, either very quickly if she elected no treatment or after a matter of months if she elected conventional chemotherapy, and those months to be spent dealing with the side effects of conventional chemotherapy which, in the equally euphemistic terms of several of the doctors who testified at the hearing on this motion, are devastating to the patient’s “quality of life.” At the hearing on this motion, plaintiff presented the testimony of Dr. DiPersio as both a treating physician and an expert; defendants presented the testimony of Dr. Stankaitis, over whose signature the denial letter was issued; the testimony of Dr. Marvin Hoffman, currently a Vice-President for Medical Affairs of Blue Cross/Blue Shield of the Rochester area, who, while neither an expert in oncology or hematology or any other related field nor a currently practicing physician, has, in his corporate capacity, attended a number of medical seminars in the recent past, including one sponsored by the University of Chicago Medical School on breast cancer and ABMT; Elaine Ritter Schaffer, a registered nurse who, in her capacity as Medical Affairs Administrator of Blue Choice, requested Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
779 F. Supp. 710, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19039, 1991 WL 283889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kulakowski-v-rochester-hospital-service-corp-nywd-1991.