At the Cuyuna Regional Medical Center in Crosby, a 145-bed hospital on the Iron Range, Dr. Paul Severson and Dr. Howard McCollister are two of only four surgeons in Minnesota implanting Linx, a small device made of wire and tiny magnetic beads to help treat chronic acid reflux disease.
While the procedure is FDA-approved, reversible and gaining doctor converts like Severson and McCollister, the number of patients with Linx remains small. The reason? The product, made by Shoreview-based Torax Medical Inc., has not won reimbursement from insurers like Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota, which classify it as "investigational."
"We have to fight for each and every single patient," McCollister said.
Linx costs about $5,000, with related expenses increasing the total. That means doctors and patients must appeal the decisions of their insurers who deny coverage, or do without a technology that studies have shown is effective in patients for whom medication doesn't work. More than 23 million Americans have gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and spend billions on medicines to treat it.
Todd Berg, Torax president and CEO, said it's not as if insurance reimbursement would open the patient floodgates. Linx is not for everyone, and the company has been conservative in training surgeons. But he said the blanket denial of a product deemed effective by the FDA is unfair to people whose disease has progressed beyond medication.
"The private insurance side is certainly a limitation, it's a problem for any innovation and for patients to have access," Berg said. "The final authority is not the FDA or the physician. It is the private insurance company. And there is no real process there."
Officials at Blue Cross said the insurer had a committee of physicians evaluate the device, but it still classifies the product as investigational because there is "a lack of evidence demonstrating an impact on improved health outcomes."
But McCollister and Severson said a recent study by the New England Journal of Medicine showed most patients with Linx had their reflux eliminated and no longer needed medication.