
202007-130325
2020
CVS Caremark
Self-Funded
Endocrine/ Metabolic/ Nutritional
Pharmacy/ Prescription Drugs
Medical necessity
Upheld
Case Summary
Diagnosis: Idiopathic Short Stature
Treatment: Genotropin
The insurer denied the Genotropin.
The denial is upheld.
The patient is a male diagnosed with idiopathic short stature (ISS). This request is for Genotropin. He has attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). There is no growth hormone (GH) stimulation test.
No, the proposed Genotropin is not medically necessary.
The peer-reviewed literature, including consensus clinical guidelines and randomized controlled trials are summarized below.
Classic GH Deficiency: Classic GH deficiency criteria are outlined in the consensus guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of GH deficiency published by the GH Research Society [1], the Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrinology Society [2, 3], and the medical guidelines for GH use provided by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists [4]. The above referenced guidelines are the latest available guidelines from these respective societies. The diagnosis is based on height, height velocity, biochemical and sometimes radiological findings. The height and height velocity criteria based on consensus guidelines, upon which a biochemical evaluation is to be initiated, are: 1) severe short stature, defined as a height more than 3 SD below the mean; 2) height more than 1.5 SD below the mid-parental height SD; 3) height more than 2 SD below the mean and a height velocity over 1 year more than 1 SD below the mean for chronological age, or a decrease in height SD of more than 0.5 over 1 year in children over 2 years of age; 4) in the absence of short stature, a height velocity more than 2 SD below the mean over 1 year or more than 1.5 SD sustained over 2 years. The biochemical criteria include low IGF1 or insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3 (IGFBP3) or GH stimulation testing with a peak GH less than 10ng/ml.
The patient did not meet biochemical criteria. Growth hormone stimulation testing is not reported.
Idiopathic Short Stature: Growth hormone in the treatment of idiopathic short stature (ISS) is supported by randomized controlled trials and consensus guidelines [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for this indication is for "non-growth hormone-deficient short stature, defined by height SDs less than or equal to -2.25, and associated with growth rates unlikely to permit attainment of adult height in the normal range, in pediatric patients whose epiphyses are not closed and for whom diagnostic evaluation excludes other causes associated with short stature that should be observed or treated by other means."
The patient does not have a pre-treatment height less than or equal to -2.25 SD. The patient, therefore, does not meet idiopathic short stature criteria.
The request does not meet any nationally accepted criteria for use of growth hormone. The request is therefore not medically necessary.