On July 2, 2025, the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (OIG) issued Advisory Opinion 25-07 (AO 25-07), a favorable advisory opinion involving sponsored tests.
Sponsored tests are medical diagnostic tests or laboratory services whose cost is directly or indirectly paid for, in whole or in part, by a third party (often a pharmaceutical manufacturer or medical device company or related company), rather than by the patient, their insurance, or the health care provider performing the test. Typically, companies agree to pay for sponsored tests because they are necessary for a patient to access or use the company’s therapy but pose high out of pocket costs on the patient. Sponsored tests are frequently used to help match a patient to a specific drug or therapy available from the pharmaceutical manufacturer or medical device company, including true companion diagnostics, or to monitor therapeutic efficacy or to identify dangerous side effects of a prescribed therapy.
The OIG previously issued two opinions, AO 24-12 and AO 22-06, that approved sponsored test arrangements in which pharmaceutical manufacturers offered free genetic testing and genetic counseling services to patients suspected of having rare conditions for which the manufacturers produced approved medications. Under the facts in these opinions, the genetic test results alone did not directly determine whether the manufacturer's drug would be prescribed.
On June 30, 2025, the Office of Inspector General (OIG) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services posted Advisory Opinion 25-05 (AO 25-05) to its website. AO 25-05 is a favorable opinion that allows a medical device manufacturer to reimburse purchasers of its device for actual costs up to $2,500 incurred from needle stick injuries caused by failure of the device without running afoul of the federal Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS).
According to AO 25-05, the device at issue is used to administer immunizations and other drugs to patients via injections and is more expensive than typical needles. The device has a safety mechanism to protect the user that covers the needle except when the needle penetrates patient tissue during the injection. When users experience a needle stick injury, their employers usually cover the associated costs, including retraining staff, staff absences and replacement, counseling for injured workers, and possible additional costs in the event of a lawsuit or higher insurance premiums or workers compensation premiums.
The Office of Inspector General (“OIG”) for the Department of Health and Human Services recently issued an Advisory Opinion that provides insight into how the agency evaluates arrangements that deal with the integration of technology, medicine, and patient monitoring under the federal Anti-Kickback Statute (“AKS”). In Advisory Opinion No. 19-02, OIG evaluated whether a pharmaceutical manufacturer could temporarily loan a limited-functionality smartphone to financially needy patients enrolled in federal health care programs. OIG concluded that the proposed ...
Imagine there are two hospitals (or two physician groups). One is highly specialized and has developed a telemedicine program for treating stroke patients; the other is a community hospital or physician practice that would like to take part in this telemedicine program but does not want to pay for the technology needed to virtually connect with the program’s specialists. Can the telemedicine provider buy this technology for the receiving hospital or physician group, or rent it out at a deep discount, without violating the law?
This turns out to be a hard question. Under federal law ...
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