SAN DIEGO–A San Diego-based medical diagnostic laboratory has paid $4,036,622.74 in a civil settlement to resolve allegations that it violated the False Claims Act by paying improper kickbacks to physicians and physician groups in exchange for patient referrals.
Pathway Genomics Corporation provides analysis of genetic testing kits for a variety of purposes within the field of clinical genomics, including tests that analyze the risk for certain genetic diseases and tests concerning the responsiveness of certain medications. These tests are performed on a patient’s saliva sample, typically collected by a physician and mailed to Pathway’s laboratory for analysis.
To ensure that health care providers remain motivated solely by their patients’ medical needs, the federal Anti-Kickback Statute and False Claims Act prohibit offering, paying, soliciting or receiving money or items of value to induce referral of goods or services covered by federally funded health care programs.
The settlement resolves allegations that Pathway induced health care providers to refer Pathway genetic testing kits and services, and then received government reimbursement for those tests in violation of the law. As alleged, Pathway offered physicians and medical groups reimbursements of up to $20 for each saliva kit they collected and submitted to Pathway for testing. The United States alleges that individual physicians received as much as $13,534 in reimbursements from Pathway and that most of the physicians had never ordered these costly genetic tests before enrolling in Pathway’s reimbursement program. It is further alleged that, as its referrals increased, Pathway billed the high costs of these laboratory analyses to federal health care programs such as Medicare and TRICARE. Pathway has since voluntarily discontinued its physician reimbursement program.
“Kickbacks to health care providers in exchange for patient referrals undermine the medical judgment of physicians and exploit the trust of patients,” said U.S. Attorney Laura Duffy. “Kickback arrangements with physicians also place vital taxpayer funds at risk. As this settlement demonstrates, this office will continue to aggressively combat fraud against federal health care programs.”
“While genomic testing is a valuable and relatively recent medical tool, when specialized laboratories pay for referrals they aren’t breaking any new ground but rather engaging in the same old kickback schemes,” said Chris Schrank, Special Agent in Charge for the Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Southern California Region. “Federal law enforcement will not let new technologies deter them from bringing violators to justice.”
The allegations resolved by the settlement were originally brought by a whistleblower in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act. The Act permits private parties to sue, on behalf of the government, companies and individuals who have falsely claimed federal funds and to share in any recovery. The whistleblower in this case, former Pathway employee Monique Gipson, will receive $686,225.