United States Ex Rel. Spay v. CVS Caremark Corp.

875 F.3d 746
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 16, 2017
Docket15-3548
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 875 F.3d 746 (United States Ex Rel. Spay v. CVS Caremark Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. Spay v. CVS Caremark Corp., 875 F.3d 746 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

McKEE, Circuit Judge.

We are asked to consider the viability of two potential defenses to an alleged False Claims Act violation that arise in the context of the Medicare Part D Program: the government knowledge inference, which can defeat a finding of scienter in certain circumstances, and the element of materiality. 1 The District Court relied upon the government knowledge inference doctrine in dismissing the claims. Although we disagree with the court’s reliance on that doctrine, we nevertheless affirm the court’s dismissal of this suit because the misrepresentations it is based upon were not material to the government’s decision to pay the underlying claims.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. The Medicare Part D Program

Part D of the Medicare program is a voluntary prescription drug benefit program that subsidizes the cost of prescription drugs and prescription drug insurance premiums for Medicare enrollees. 2 The Part D program operates as a public-private partnership between the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) and government contractors. CMS contracts with private insurance companies called “Sponsors” that administer prescription drug plans. The Sponsors, in turn, subcontract with “first-tier entities,” such as Pharmacy Benefit Managers (“PBM”s), that provide administrative and healthcare services, including claims processing. PBMs then contract with the pharmacies-that actually dispense prescription medications to Medicare enrollees. Defendant Caremark Rx LLC 3 was one of the largest PBMs in the United States from 2006 to 2007.

Unlike many other government healthcare programs, Medicare Part D is not a fee-for-service program, in which the healthcare provider is reimbursed for providing specific services. Instead, a Sponsor submits a bid in the year prior to the calendar year in which Part D benefits will actually be delivered, and CMS—after calculating average costs—-prospectively compensates Sponsors for their anticipated costs through regular monthly payments. 4 At the end of the year, CMS undertakes a reconciliation process, wherein it compares actual costs to payments made to Sponsors during the past calendar year. 5 This suit stems from-plaintiffs’ claim that Sponsors intentionally submitted false information about their costs during the reconciliation process. According to plaintiffs, this false information resulted in CMS paying Sponsors more than they were actually entitled to during the reconciliation.,

1. Part D Claims Processing

Processing payments and claims under Medicare Part D involves (1) the pharmacy claim, which the pharmacy submits to its PBM, and (2) the Prescription Drug Event (“PDE”) record, which the Sponsor submits to CMS.

Before a pharmacy dispenses drugs to a Medicare recipient, fit first submits ah electronic pharmacy claim to the recipient’s Part D Sponsor (or the Sponsor’s agent). The pharmacy claim' contains information about the patient and the patient’s prescription. If the pharmacy claim is accepted, the PBM transmits its approval to the pharmacy, and the drug is dispensed to the Medicare recipient. If the pharmacy claim is rejected, the PBM sends the pharmacy a “Reject Code” that explains why it was rejected. Once the pharmacy claim is approved and the medication dispensed, the Sponsor reimburses- the pharmacy for the cost of the- prescription, minus the amount of any copay that the pharmacy may have received from the Medicare recipient. This process is , called the claims “adjudication.” Although- it sounds rather laborious and time-consuming, modern technology allows the adjudication to occur in real-time,' and PBMs typically inform pharmacies whether a claim has been approved or rejected within seconds—while the Medicare recipient waits at the pharmacy counter.

Additionally, throughout the year, Sponsors submit- PDE records to CMS for all prescriptions dispensed to Medicare recipients under Part D. Sponsors often submit those records to CMS through PBMs that act as the Sponsor’s agent. These PDE records are created electronically. They consist of summary extracts that include at least 34 mandated data fields about each prescription that was -filled and the drug that was dispensed. Sponsors are required to give CMS a PDE for all of the prescriptions dispensed to a Part D Medicare recipient. 6 From 2006 to 2007, the PDEs were only used for the end-of-year reconciliation, This dispute focuses on two of the 34 data fields on the PDEs: the Prescriber ID and the Prescriber ID Qualifier.

The Prescriber ID was a unique number-issued to an individual with prescribing authority such as a.physician, dentist, or nurse practitioner. The PDE’s layout allowed for entry of any of four compatible sources of a Prescriber ID: (1) a National Provider Identifier (“NPI”); 7 (2) a Universal Provider Identification Number-(“UPIN”);' (3) a state license number; or (4) a Drug Enforcement Agency number. The Prescriber ID Qualifier specified which of these four types of numbers was being submitted. The automated 'system that CMS used to process the PDEs would reject any PDE with a blank Prescriber ID or blank Prescriber ID Qualifier field. As a result, the dispensing pharmacy would not be paid for the corresponding prescription.

2. Dummy Prescriber IDs

In March 2006, Caremark employees identified approximately 4,600 PDEs that had been authorized for payment by Care-mark, but not yet submitted to CMS, that had “errored out” due to the lack of a compatible Prescriber ID. 8 In an attempt to resolve the problem, Caremark .used a dummy -Prescriber ID (AA0000000) for all of the corresponding data fields on each of those 4,500 PDEs. Caremark then programmed that dummy Prescriber ID into its computer system. Thereafter, when any claim with a missing or incorrectly formatted Prescriber ID was processed, the system would default to the dummy Prescri-ber ID, .which the computer would enter into the appropriate data field. This allowed Caremark to submit for payment PDEs that would have otherwise had missing or incorrectly formatted Prescriber IDs, without, trigging CMS error codes that would have resulted from an incorrect, or nonconforming, value in the Pres-criber ID data field. Caremark later began to use additional dummy Prescriber IDs, all of which served the same purpose. In 2006-2007, Caremark generated PDE records containing 66 different dummy Pres-criber IDs, none of which identified the actual prescriber, or corresponded to anyone with actual prescribing authority. ■

B. Procedural History

Appellant Relator Spay is a former pharmacist and co-founder of a company that audits pharmacies. In 2007, during an audit of one of Caremark’s 9

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 F.3d 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-spay-v-cvs-caremark-corp-ca3-2017.