Peterson ex rel. Frei-Peterson v. Utah Department of Health, Division of Health Care Financing

969 P.2d 1, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 110, 1998 WL 823835
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 27, 1998
DocketNo. 981078-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 969 P.2d 1 (Peterson ex rel. Frei-Peterson v. Utah Department of Health, Division of Health Care Financing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson ex rel. Frei-Peterson v. Utah Department of Health, Division of Health Care Financing, 969 P.2d 1, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 110, 1998 WL 823835 (Utah Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

[2]*2OPINION

GREENWOOD, Judge:

Heidi Peterson, mother of Markelle Frei-Peterson (Markelle), petitions for review of a Final Agency Order of the Department of Health, Division of Health Care Financing (DHCF), which denied Medicaid coverage for treatment of Markelle’s short bowel syndrome with human growth hormone, as recommended by Markelle’s treating physician. We affirm the Agency Order.

BACKGROUND

Two-year-old Markelle has short bowel syndrome,1 and, as a result, relies on total parenteral nutrition (TPN), a form of intravenous feeding, for almost all her nutritional needs. Her treating physician, Dr. William D. Jackson, was concerned with Markelle’s liver condition because her liver tests in June 1997 showed “marked abnormalities.” Dr. Jackson proposed to treat Markelle by using humatrope, a growth hormone that, according to Dr. Jackson, “stimulates transcription of certain regulatory genes that turn on growth of the lining of the intestine” and, hopefully, increases the patient’s ability to absorb nutrients. Medicaid currently covers the use of humatrope for the purpose of treating short-statured children; however, the use of humatrope to treat short bowel syndrome is an off-label use of the hormone.

In 1997, Primary Children’s Medical Center charitable funds financed three months of Markelle’s treatment with the growth hormone. Markelle’s mother testified at the hearing that since taking the hormone, Mar-kelle’s oral nutritional intake had improved. Dr. Jackson also testified that Markelle’s liver abnormalities had stabilized, but conceded that this stabilization actually occurred prior to and independent of the treatment with humatrope.

Dr. Jackson recommended treating Mar-kelle with the growth hormone for one year; however, Primary Children’s Medical Center would not continue financing the cost of the growth hormone treatment. Thus, Markelle requested that DHCF approve Medicaid payment for use of the growth hormone to treat her short bowel syndrome.

On July 16,1997, DHCF’s Drug Utilization Review Board (Review Board), a committee comprised of physicians, pharmacists, and other medical professionals, denied the request. The Review Board based its denial on the fact that the documentation Markelle submitted “indicated [this suggested use of humatrope] was an experimental procedure.” The decision was made pursuant to Utah Administrative Code, Rule 414-10-5(4), which states: “Experimental or medically unproven physician services or procedures are excluded from coverage .” Utah Code Admin.P. R414-10-5(4).2

[3]*3Markelle requested a hearing before an administrative law judge. At the hearing, Dr. Jackson testified to the medical necessity of the treatment. Dr. Jackson stated that although potential liver damage was of great concern, his primary reason for recommending the humatrope treatment for Markelle was to increase nutrient absorption in the bowel and enable Markelle to tolerate increased oral feedings.

In support of her request, Markelle submitted four articles about the use of huma-trope to treat short bowel syndrome. This literature discussed the symptoms of short bowel syndrome and traditional methods of treatment, and detailed a new treatment that involves dietary changes and administration of both glutamine and the humatrope growth hormone. All four articles discussed the same four-week, single-site study, and were authored by the same individuals. The articles were published in specialty publications, and at least one was subjected to peer review. However, none of the articles appeared in a major publication. Additionally, the study was neither performed at multiple sites nor did it occur over long-term. Thus, neither the articles nor the study discussed appear to come within the Utah Off-Label Drug Use Policy criteria for demonstrating that the Review Board may approve the treatment.

At the hearing, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) questioned Dr. Jackson about the growth hormone’s efficacy in preventing liver dysfunction. Dr. Jackson admitted that the hormone only did so “indirectly.” He further stated that

these studies are not large, they’re not the kind of studies in which someone would say on a blanket case that ... you will do this for everybody. But for certain indications there’s enough promise there to motivate a number of different people to continue to work along these lines.... And there’s — there is controversy.

Dr. Jackson further testified:

I can admit up front that the indications are not in your code for using it this way. The area ... does have controversy as with any new therapy, and there is a possibility that this could be disproved. And there have been other times when medicine has gone down the wrong path and [doctors] thought they ... had a therapy that was helpful but it turned out not to be true.

The ALJ found that although Markelle had begun to tolerate some oral feedings, she was nonetheless primarily dependent on parenteral nutrition, and that “[b]ecause she has short bowel syndrome, Markelle is at risk of central line catheter infections, eventual loss of intravenous access sites, and progressive liver dysfunction.”

The findings further stated that use of growth hormone for short bowel syndrome is considered an off-label use by the Food and Drug Administration. The ALJ noted that although “[t]he data is sufficient to motivate a number of reputable physicians to prescribe growth hormone for short bowel syndrome,” this use “is still considered to be controversial.”

The AL J’s recommended conclusion of law stated: “The use of growth hormone to treat small bowel syndrome is ‘experimental’ as defined in: Utah Administrative Code R414-1A-200,3 and is therefore not covered by Utah Medicaid [see R414-1A~300(1) ].”

The ALJ’s Recommended Decision stated that although Dr. Jackson “made compelling arguments for the medical necessity of using growth hormone for Markelle,” his testimony indicated that Markelle’s improvement “could have come from the maturation process and [4]*4the oral feedings Markelle has recently begun to tolerate.”

The ALJ also noted Dr. Jackson’s testimony indicated that the use of growth hormone for short bowel syndrome is still controversial. Thus, Dr. Jackson’s testimony was “not able to overcome DHCF’s evidence that the use of growth hormone to treat short bowel syndrome is an off-label usage of the drug, and it has not yet been proven to be effective for that usage.” Because Dr. Jackson’s testimony clearly indicated that the use of growth hormone to treat short bowel syndrome was not “widely utilized as a standard medical practice,” the ALJ held this use “therefore meets the criteria for an ‘experimental procedure.’ ” The ALJ accoi'dingly recommended that DHCF’s action be upheld.

DHCF issued a Final Agency Order adopting the ALJ’s Recommended Decision in its entirety. Markelle appeals.

ISSUE

The sole issue we are asked to determine on appeal is whether DHCF erred in determining that the treatment' of Markelle’s short bowel syndrome with humatrope was an experimental use of the hormone under the Utah Medicaid guidelines.

ARGUMENTS

Markelle argues DHCF erred in denying approval of payment for growth hormone treatment.

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969 P.2d 1, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 110, 1998 WL 823835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-ex-rel-frei-peterson-v-utah-department-of-health-division-of-utahctapp-1998.