SF4521 (Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026))

Hospital reimbursement for certain biological products to treat rare diseases provisions modifications

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

This bill changes how hospitals are paid for certain advanced biological products used in cell or gene therapy to treat rare diseases. It aims to create a separate inpatient reimbursement track, but only if the drug manufacturer agrees to participate in a value-based arrangement with the state and after federal approval of required documentation.

Main Provisions

  • Effective date: July 1, 2025.
  • Conditioned on federal approval: The separate reimbursement is contingent on the necessary federal approval of documentation required to enter into a value-based arrangement under section 256B.0625 subdivision 13k.
  • New inpatient reimbursement for specific products: The commissioner may provide separate reimbursement to hospitals for biological products provided in the inpatient hospital setting as part of cell or gene therapy to treat rare diseases as defined in United States Code title 21 section 360bb, but only if the drug manufacturer enters into a value-based arrangement with the commissioner.
  • Calculation of the reimbursement rate: The separate reimbursement rate for these biological products will be established based on the same methodology used for drugs administered in an outpatient setting under section 256B.0625 subdivision 13e paragraph e.
  • Payment method: Hospitals must be paid the actual acquisition cost for biological products provided under the above provision.

Significant Changes to Law

  • Introduces a dedicated, separate inpatient reimbursement pathway for biological products used in cell or gene therapy for rare diseases.
  • Links reimbursement to manufacturers entering a value-based arrangement with the state, introducing a performance- or outcome-based payment component.
  • Requires federal approval of specific documentation before the new reimbursement can apply.
  • Aligns inpatient reimbursement methodology with the outpatient drug reimbursement framework already used in Minnesota statutes.

Definitions and Key Terms Used in Provisions

  • Biological products
  • Cell therapy
  • Gene therapy
  • Inpatient hospital setting
  • Rare diseases (as defined in United States Code title 21 section 360bb)
  • Value-based arrangement
  • Commissioner
  • Documentation required to enter into a value-based arrangement
  • Outpatient setting
  • Reimbursement methodology (as used in section 256B.0625 subdivision 13e paragraph e)
  • Actual acquisition cost

Practical Effect and Implications

  • Hospitals could receive separate reimbursement for certain high-cost biologic therapies delivered in the hospital setting, potentially improving financial coverage for these treatments.
  • The requirement for a value-based arrangement means manufacturers may need to agree to performance- or outcome-based terms with the state to access this reimbursement pathway.
  • Because federal approval of documentation is needed, the new system depends on federal action, which could affect timing and implementation.

Relevant Terms - biological products - cell therapy - gene therapy - inpatient hospital setting - rare diseases - 21 U.S.C. 360bb - value-based arrangement - commissioner - documentation - federal approval - 256B.0625 - subdivision 13k - outpatient setting - 256B.0625 subdivision 13e paragraph e - actual acquisition cost

Bill text versions

Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 16, 2026SenateActionIntroduction and first reading
March 16, 2026SenateActionReferred toHealth and Human Services

Citations

 
[
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "Creates a separate reimbursement to hospitals for biological products provided in the inpatient setting as part of cell or gene therapy."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "Amends Minnesota Statutes 2024, section 256.969, subdivision 32 to establish separate inpatient reimbursement for biological products used in cell or gene therapy to treat rare diseases, contingent on a value-based arrangement with manufacturers.",
      "modified": [
        "Reimbursement rate to be based on methodology used for outpatient drugs under Minnesota Statutes 256B.0625, subdivision 13e, paragraph e; requires payment of actual acquisition cost."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "256.969, subd. 32",
    "subdivision": "subdivision 32"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "References Minnesota Statutes 256B.0625, subdivision 13k for the mechanism to provide separate reimbursement related to the cell/gene therapy biological products under a value-based arrangement.",
      "modified": [
        "Connects the 256.969, subd. 32 reimbursement framework to 256B.0625 subdivision 13k as part of the overall value-based arrangement."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "256B.0625, subd. 13k",
    "subdivision": "subdivision 13k"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "Uses the outpatient-setting reimbursement methodology under 256B.0625, subdivision 13e, paragraph e as the basis for the inpatient, cell/gene therapy reimbursement rate.",
      "modified": [
        "The rate for inpatient reimbursement is tied to the outpatient methodology described in 256B.0625, subdivision 13e, paragraph e."
      ]
    },
    "citation": "256B.0625, subd. 13e",
    "subdivision": "subdivision 13e"
  },
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "Defines the scope of rare diseases used in the bill's context, as defined in United States Code title 21, section 360bb.",
      "modified": []
    },
    "citation": "21 U.S.C. § 360bb",
    "subdivision": ""
  }
]

Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee
Loading…