Court Opinion

ID: 4649049
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-05 15:12:54.486661+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:20.637751
License: Public Domain

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Indemnity Insurance Company of North :
America,                             :
                  Petitioner         :
                                     :
            v.                       :          No. 696 C.D. 2018
                                     :          Argued: June 10, 2020
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee :
Review Hearing Office (Insight       :
Pharmacy),                           :
                  Respondent         :

BEFORE:      HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
             HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
             HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
             HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
             HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
             HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
             HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge

OPINION
BY PRESIDENT JUDGE LEAVITT1                                    FILED: January 5, 2021

             Indemnity Insurance Company of North America (Insurer) petitions for
review of an adjudication of the Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review
Hearing Office (Hearing Office) that Insurer owed Insight Pharmacy (Pharmacy)
$6,336.02, plus interest, for a compounded medical cream Pharmacy dispensed to
Jessica Breidenbach (Claimant). In doing so, the Hearing Office affirmed the
determination of the Medical Fee Review Section of the Bureau of Workers’
Compensation (Bureau). On appeal, Insurer argues that the Hearing Office erred
because it used a nationally recognized schedule of average wholesale

1
 This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2021, when President Judge
Leavitt served as President Judge.
pharmaceutical prices, which Insurer describes as a “fictitious” number, to calculate
the amount of the reimbursement owed by Insurer to Pharmacy. Insurer also
challenges the regulation that authorizes the use of a nationally recognized schedule
of average wholesale prices to reprice provider invoices for pharmaceutical
prescriptions. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
                                   Background
             In 2013, Claimant sustained a work-related back injury and began
treatment with David Lichten, M.D., who prescribed a compounded medical cream
to treat her pain. Pharmacy dispensed the cream to Claimant and billed Insurer
$7,255.75. The invoice itemized the costs as follows: (1) gabapentin - $2,595.53;
(2) flurbiprofen - $1,580.25; (3) ketamine - $1,447.88; (4) cyclobenzaprine -
$654.22; (5) lipoderm base - $634.61; and (6) bupivacaine - $343.26. The invoice
also included the following information:

                • Dates of service
                • Date of injury
                • Prescribing physician
                • Names of the drugs/medications
                • [National Drug Code (NDC)] numbers for all components of the
                  medication
                • Prescription number

Reproduced Record at 42a (R.R. ___).
             On December 9, 2016, Insurer’s third-party administrator, Gallagher
Bassett Services, Inc., reduced the invoice by 95.5% with the following explanation:

             Unless otherwise noted, charges were reduced as they exceed the
             guidelines set forth in the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation
             Law.

R.R. 44a. Insurer paid $305.92 on Pharmacy’s invoice.

                                           2
                 Pharmacy filed an application for a fee review of the amount and
timeliness of Insurer’s payment. The Medical Fee Review Section ordered Insurer
to pay Pharmacy an additional $6,336.02, with interest, explaining as follows:

                 Per Section 127.131[, 34 Pa. Code §127.131,] Reimbursement
                 for all unlisted or unclassified drugs under Act 44[2] shall be
                 110% of the average wholesale price (AWP).

R.R. 54a.
                 Insurer requested a hearing to contest the fee review determination. In
support, Insurer offered an affidavit from Julia Leonard, a medical invoice processor
for Genex Services, Inc.3 The affidavit stated, in pertinent part, as follows:

                 3. [Insurer] received a bill from [Pharmacy] on December 2,
                 2016[.] The bill was for date of service November 21, 2016 and
                 sought payment of $342.26 for 7.20 units of “Bupivacaine Hcl
                 Powder.” []

                 4. Genex Services re-priced this bill at a rate of 110% of [AWP].
                 The Average Wholesale [Price] for 7.20 units of Bupivacain[e]
                 Hcl Powder was calculated to be $305.92, as determined via
                 review of the NDC 51927235800 at the [Red Book] value of
                 $39.73. Genex Services thereafter recommended to [Insurer] an
                 allowance of $305.92 for the bill.

Leonard Affidavit at 1; R.R. 37a. Insurer also submitted the following excerpt from
the Truven Health Analytics policy:

                 The Average Wholesale Price (AWP) as published by Truven
                 Health Analytics is in most cases the manufacturer’s[] suggested
                 AWP and does not reflect the actual AWP charged by a

2
    Act of July 2, 1993, P.L. 190, No. 44, commonly referred to as Act 44.
3
  Genex has contracted with Gallagher Bassett, which in turn provides claim adjudication services
to Insurer.
                                                  3
             wholesaler. Truven Health bases the AWP data it publishes on
             the following:

                • AWP is reported by the manufacturer, or

                • AWP is calculated based on a markup specified by the
                  manufacturer. This markup is typically based on the
                  Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC) or Direct Price
                  (DIRP), as provided by the manufacturer, but may be
                  based on other pricing data provided by the manufacturer,
                  or

                • Suggested Wholesale Price (SWP) is reported by the
                  manufacturer

             When the manufacturer does not provide an AWP, a markup
             formulated from which AWP can be calculated, or an SWP,
             Truven Health will calculate the AWP by applying a standard
             20% markup over the manufacturer supplied WAC. If a WAC
             is not provided, the standard markup will be applied to the DIRP.

                                              ***

R.R. 39a (emphasis in original).
             The Hearing Office affirmed the determination of the Medical Fee
Review Section that Insurer owed Pharmacy $6,336.02, plus interest. The Hearing
Office did not credit Leonard’s affidavit for several reasons. It found, specifically,
that Leonard’s affidavit incorrectly stated the amount of Pharmacy’s invoice;
addressed only one of five ingredients used to produce the compounded medical
cream, i.e., the bupivacaine powder; and contained arithmetic errors. In accordance
with these findings, the Hearing Office held that Insurer did not prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that it had properly reimbursed Pharmacy for the
compounded medical cream.

                                          4
               Insurer petitioned for this Court’s review. On December 19, 2019, this
Court directed the parties to file supplemental briefs to address the following
question:

               The Act of October 27, 2014, P.L. 2894, re-wrote Section
               306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Workers’ Compensation Act to limit
               reimbursement for pharmaceutical goods and services to 110%
               “of the average wholesale price (AWP) of the product, calculated
               on a per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.” 77 P.S. §531
               (added language emphasized). The language was added to the
               statute after extensive nationwide litigation questioning the
               accuracy of the AWP value. How, if at all, should this
               amendment impact statutory construction of the undefined term
               “average wholesale price (AWP) of the product”?

Order, 12/19/2019 (emphasis in original). In their supplemental briefs, both parties
took the position that the 2014 amendment to Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) did not alter
the meaning of the term “Average Wholesale Price.”4
                                              Appeal
               On appeal,5 Insurer raises three issues. First, Insurer argues that the
Hearing Office erred by using a “fictitious” AWP set forth in a trade publication and
not the “actual” AWP to determine the repriced amount of Pharmacy’s invoice.
Second, Insurer argues that the Bureau’s medical cost containment regulation

4
  In its supplemental brief, Insurer contends that “the legislature did not intend to alter the meaning
of the term ‘Average Wholesale Price’” in enacting the changes to Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A).
Insurer Supplemental Brief at 4. It argues that the legislature meant for the term “Average
Wholesale Price” to “be understood according to its plain meaning.” Id. Similarly, Pharmacy
contends that Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A), both before and after the 2014 amendment, requires the
reimbursement rate for drugs and services to be 110% of the AWP. Pharmacy Brief at 7.
5
  This Court’s review of the Hearing Office’s adjudication considers whether necessary findings
of fact are supported by substantial evidence, whether constitutional rights were violated, and
whether the Hearing Office erred as a matter of law. Walsh v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation
Fee Review Hearing Office (Traveler’s Insurance Company), 67 A.3d 117, 120 n.5 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2013).
                                                  5
contravenes the relevant provisions of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act).6
Third, Insurer argues that the General Assembly has unconstitutionally delegated its
legislative authority on the repricing of pharmaceutical prescriptions to Truven
Health Analytics, a private company. We address these issues seriately.
                                            Analysis
                         Act 44 and Its Implementing Regulation
                 In 1993, the General Assembly enacted Act 44 to establish measures to
contain the spiraling cost of medical treatment of work injuries. Act 44 added
Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) to the Act, which presently states as follows:

                 The reimbursement for drugs and professional pharmaceutical
                 services shall be limited to one hundred ten per centum of the
                 average wholesale price (AWP) of the product, calculated on a
                 per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.

77 P.S. §531(3)(vi)(A). Although Act 44 does not define AWP, the Bureau has
promulgated a regulation to address this point, and it states as follows:

                 (a) Payments for prescription drugs and professional
                 pharmaceutical services shall be limited to 110% of the average
                 wholesale price (AWP) of the product.

                 (b) Pharmacists and insurers may reach agreements on which
                 Nationally recognized schedule shall be used to define the AWP
                 of prescription drugs. The Bureau in resolving payment disputes,
                 may use any of the Nationally recognized schedules to determine
                 the AWP of prescription drugs. The Bureau will provide
                 information by an annual notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin as
                 to which of the Nationally recognized schedules it is using to
                 determine the AWP of prescription drugs.

                 (c) Pharmacists may not bill, or otherwise hold the employe
                 liable, for the difference between the actual charge for the

6
    Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.4, 2501-2710.
                                                6
              prescription drugs and pharmaceutical services and 110% of the
              AWP of the product.

34 Pa. Code §127.131 (emphasis added). The Bureau’s most recent notice on which
“Nationally recognized” schedule it uses states as follows:

              Under 34 Pa. Code §127.131(b) (relating to payments for
              prescription drugs and pharmaceuticals – generally), the
              Department of Labor and Industry, Bureau of Workers’
              Compensation, gives notice that it utilizes the Red Book,
              published by Truven Health Analytics, to determine the average
              wholesale price of prescription drugs.

47 Pa. B. 5740 (September 9, 2017).
                                             I.
              In its first issue, Insurer contends that the Hearing Office erred in using
a “fictitious” AWP to reprice Pharmacy’s invoice. Insurer argues that Truven Health
Analytics, and the two other Nationally recognized schedules,7 do not report the
actual AWP. Rather, Insurer contends that these Nationally recognized schedules
“use secret, amorphous, and confusing criteria and formulae to derive an entirely
[fictitious] AWP.” Insurer Brief at 20.
              In a payment dispute, it is the burden of the insurer to establish by a
preponderance of evidence that it has properly reimbursed the provider. Liberty
Mutual Insurance Company v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation, Fee Review
Hearing Office (Kepko), 37 A.3d 1264, 1269 n.11 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012). To support
its position that it had properly reimbursed Pharmacy, Insurer offered Leonard’s
affidavit, which stated that Insurer owed Pharmacy $305.92 for 7.20 units of
bupivacaine powder on Pharmacy’s invoice of $7,255.75. Before the Hearing

7
 Those sources are First DataBank and Medispan. Insurer Brief at 19 n.5. Insurer asserts that
First DataBank, however, no longer reports on AWP. Id.
                                             7
Office, Insurer asserted that $305.92 exceeded “the [actual] AWP and [was] more
than the average retail price of the ingredients” in the compounded medical cream.
Adjudication at 5, Finding of Fact (F.F.) No. 15; R.R. 103a.
             The Hearing Office rejected the Leonard affidavit as having no
credibility or evidentiary weight. First, the calculations used therein lacked a
foundation. The affidavit proposed a unit price of $39.73 for the bupivacaine
powder, but it offered no evidence to support that price or that it was the correct unit
price as of “the date of dispensing.” See 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Act, 77 P.S.
§531(3)(vi)(A). Second, even assuming that the Leonard affidavit used the correct
unit price for the bupivacaine powder as of the date of dispensing, $39.73 multiplied
by 7.2 units multiplied by 110% yields a payment amount of $314.66, not $305.92.
This omission and concomitant math error rendered the Leonard affidavit incredible
and entitled to no weight, in the view of the Hearing Office.
             The Hearing Office next observed that although Insurer advocated for
the use of the “actual” AWP, rather than a “fictitious” AWP, Insurer offered no
evidence on this point. The Leonard affidavit made the conclusory and unfounded
claim that Insurer’s payment of $305.92 exceeded the actual AWP of the ingredients
in the compounded medical cream. However, the affidavit did not identify its source
for this claim, and it did not explain why using the “actual” AWP limited the inquiry
to only one and not all of the ingredients used in the compounded medical cream
dispensed by Pharmacy.
             In its brief to this Court, Insurer repeats these claims. It also states that
another one of the ingredients in the compounded medical cream, gabapentin, has

                                           8
an average retail price of $35 for 90 pills.8 Insurer Brief at 36-37. Insurer then states
that the AWP for gabapentin is $140 per bottle, i.e., higher than the retail price.
Stated otherwise, Insurer contends that the use of a “fictitious” AWP allowed
Pharmacy to charge $2,595.53 for 36 units of gabapentin. However, the amount of
gabapentin used in the compounded medical cream has a total retail price of $39.00
by Insurer’s calculation. It follows, according to Insurer, that its payment to
Pharmacy of $305.92, exceeded the average retail price for the ingredients.
              Insurer’s argument lacks any support in the record certified to this
Court. The Leonard affidavit did not address gabapentin or state the average retail
price for a bottle of this medication in pill form. Nor did it state that pills could be
used to produce a compound cream. Likewise, this affidavit did not support
Insurer’s contention to this Court that Nationally recognized schedules use “secret
amorphous, and confusing criteria” to establish the AWP. Insurer Brief at 20.
              It is axiomatic that factual statements in a brief that have no basis in the
certified record cannot be considered by an appellate court. Bingnear v. Workers’
Compensation Appeal Board (City of Chester), 960 A.2d 890, 896 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2008). Under Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1951,9 the record of

8
  At oral argument Pharmacy responded, inter alia, that “pills” cannot be used to manufacture a
compounded medical cream.
9
  It states:
         (a) Composition of the record.--Where under the applicable law the questions raised
         by a petition for review may be determined by the court in whole or in part upon
         the record before the government unit, such record shall consist of:
                 (1) The order or other determination of the government unit sought
                 to be reviewed.
                 (2) The findings or report on which such order or other
                 determination is based.
              (3) The pleadings, evidence and proceedings before the government
              unit.
                                              9
determination of a government unit consists of the order sought to be reviewed, the
findings or report on which the appeal is based, and the pleadings, evidence and
proceedings before the government unit. This Court is confined to that record, and
it will not consider extra-record facts or evidence. Pryor v. Workers’ Compensation
Appeal Board (Colin Service Systems), 923 A.2d 1197, 1201 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
Accordingly, we will disregard Insurer’s statements and claims about the average
retail price for gabapentin and challenges to the value of Nationally recognized
schedules of average wholesale prices.
              Insurer’s claim that the AWP is “fictitious” does not advance its
position. Insurer seems to believe that the AWP must be the number used by a
pharmaceutical company to set its wholesale price. However, any “average price”
will be a number calculated from marketplace data, and that price may, or may not,
actually be “used” by a vendor of merchandise.           Truven Health Analytics
acknowledges that its published Average Wholesale Price “does not reflect the
actual AWP charged by a wholesaler.” R.R. 39a (emphasis added).
              In sum, Insurer did not meet its burden of proving that it properly
reimbursed Pharmacy for the compounded medical cream it dispensed to treat
Claimant’s work injury. Accordingly, we affirm the Hearing Office’s adjudication
on this point.

                                         II.
              Insurer next argues that the Bureau’s regulation is incompatible with
the plain meaning of Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Act, which directs the use of
the AWP to calculate reimbursement for a particular pharmaceutical product.

PA. R.A.P. 1951(a).
                                         10
Insurer asserts that the Bureau’s regulation exceeded this statutory directive because
it authorizes the AWP to be based on data gathered and published by private
organizations. Most recently, the Bureau identified “the Red Book, published by
Truven Health Analytics,” as its source for the AWP of pharmaceuticals. 47 Pa. B.
5740 (September 9, 2017). Insurer contends that this schedule does not reflect the
“actual AWP” charged by pharmaceutical companies and, thus, it violates Section
306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Act to use this schedule. Insurer Brief at 10-11.
             To begin, this argument of Insurer also lacks support in the record. As
noted, the Leonard affidavit addressed only bupivacaine powder, and it did not offer
any evidence on the “actual AWP” for any other ingredient in the compounded
medical cream dispensed to Claimant. Accordingly, the Hearing Office found, as
fact, that Insurer did “not rely upon the actual AWP in ascertaining the amount due”
on Pharmacy’s invoice. Adjudication at 5, F.F. No. 16, n.4; R.R. 103a (emphasis in
original).
             We turn, then, to Insurer’s contention that the cost containment
regulation does not conform to Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi) of the Act, which limits the
reimbursement for prescription drugs to 110% of the AWP for the product. When
enacted, Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi) stated as follows:

             The reimbursement for prescription drugs and professional
             pharmaceutical services shall be limited to one hundred ten per
             centum of the average wholesale price of the product.

Former 77 P.S. §531(3)(vi) (emphasis added). The General Assembly did not define
the term “average wholesale price.”
             In Commonwealth v. TAP Pharmaceutical Products, Inc., 36 A.3d 1112
(Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), vacated on other grounds, 94 A.3d 364 (Pa. 2014), this Court
explained as follows:
                                         11
             Since the late 1960s, almost every branded prescription drug sold
             in the United States has an [AWP], which is published in
             commercial compendia like Red Book, First DataBank, and
             Medispan. During the period covered by this lawsuit, AWP is
             provided in a current, digital format for each available branded
             pharmaceutical, in each dosage and packaging size. The digital
             format and the constantly updated value are essential for use in
             computer-dominated reimbursement systems, such as those used
             by [the Department of Human Services and Department of
             Aging]….

Id. at 1130. While critical of the AWP-based system for drug reimbursement, this
Court explained that the AWP provided an efficient estimate of acquisition costs for
pharmaceuticals. Further, this Court observed:

             The reference to published prices was not intended to modify the
             accuracy of the average price phrase; rather, the reference to
             published prices was intended to establish a widely-available
             third-party source of average prices. Establishing such a source
             relieves the [Department of Human Services and Department of
             Aging] of legal mandates to ascertain, by alternative methods,
             estimated acquisition costs…. In short, the reference to
             published prices does not change the plain meaning of the cost to
             be ascertained.

Id. at 1161 (citing Commonwealth v. TAP Pharmaceutical Products, Inc. (Pa.
Cmwlth., No. 212 M.D. 2004, filed October 14, 2010) (single-judge op.) (Simpson,
J.), slip op. at 8) (citation omitted). In short, the AWP provides an objective estimate
of acquisition costs for pharmaceuticals available through national pricing
schedules.
             In 2014, after the extensive TAP litigation, the General Assembly
amended Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi) of the Act. See Act of October 27, 2014, P.L. 2894,
No. 184. The amendment did not define the term “average wholesale price.” It did,
however, add a phrase so that Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) now reads as follows:

                                          12
             The reimbursement for drugs and professional pharmaceutical
             services shall be limited to one hundred ten per centum of the
             average wholesale price (AWP) of the product, calculated on a
             per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.

77 P.S. §531(3)(vi)(A) (emphasis added to identify new language). The parties
addressed the 2014 amendment in their supplemental briefs.
             Insurer explains that the 2014 amendment did not change the meaning
of “average wholesale price (AWP) of the product” in Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of
the Act. The language specifying that the AWP must be “calculated on a per unit
basis, as of the date of dispensing” simply clarified the application of the AWP
methodology. Specifically, the amendment requires that the AWP be calculated on
the date dispensed and that the employer is only responsible for the cost of the units
dispensed, as opposed to the whole package. Insurer Supplemental Brief at 15-16.
Pharmacy agrees.
             Insurer then argues that pharmaceutical industry compendia, such as
Truven Health Analytics’ Red Book, do not report the actual wholesale price of
pharmaceuticals. Asserting that “there is no readily available resource from which
to get the [actual] AWPs,” Insurer urges that the “best proxy that can be used is the
average retail price.” Insurer Brief at 38. We reject this contention.
             The legislature could have amended Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) to
define “average wholesale price” to mean “average retail price,” as suggested by
Insurer. It did not do so.
             The concurring and dissenting opinion of Judge Ceisler agrees with
Insurer’s “persuasive statutory construction argument that the AWP” denotes the
“actual average wholesale price, not a fictitious AWP.” Indemnity Insurance
Company of North America v. Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review

                                         13
Hearing Office (Insight Pharmacy), __ A.3d __, __ (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 696 C.D.
2018, filed January 5, 2021) (Ceisler J., concurring & dissenting), slip op. at 1
(emphasis in original). In support, Judge Ceisler relies upon federal court decisions
as well as an October 18, 2013, sponsoring memorandum of Representative
Marguerite Quinn. The majority agrees with Judge Ceisler that our task is to
construe “AWP” according to its plain meaning. The majority opinion does just that.
             First, the legislature dictated the use of the industry AWP, not the AWP
charged by a single manufacturer. The AWP is a number derived by averaging the
wholesale prices of all manufacturers or wholesalers. The TAP litigation developed
the “fictitious” moniker for “AWP.”            Other than conveying a derogatory
connotation, this adjective has little meaning. A number calculated from data
collected from the market place is neither “fictitious” nor “actual.” The number is
either accurate or inaccurate, but it has no “actual” existence.
             In any case, Insurer asserts that it is the average retail price that should
be the measure used in any pharmaceutical reimbursement system. To read “average
wholesale price” to mean “actual retail price” does violence to the words used by the
legislature. Insurer needs to make its case to the General Assembly and seek an
amendment to Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) before the industry average retail price can
become the appropriate standard for use in a system of pharmaceutical
reimbursement.
             Second, the sponsoring memorandum of Representative Quinn does not
advance Insurer’s assertion that AWP means a number derived from retail prices.
The memorandum advises that Representative Quinn intends, at some time, to
introduce legislation to “decrease costs in the workers’ compensation system,” but
that legislation is not identified either by bill number or printer’s number. Insurer

                                          14
Supplemental Brief, Appendix. Stated otherwise, there is no way to connect this
memorandum to the 2014 amendment.
             Even assuming the amendment initiated by Representative Quinn does
relate to Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Act, the statement of a single legislator is
not entitled any weight. The General Assembly has circumscribed the use of
comments and reports in statutory construction. Section 1939 of the Statutory
Construction Act of 1972 states as follows:

             The comments or report of the commission, committee,
             association or other entity which drafted a statute may be
             consulted in the construction or application of the original
             provision of the statute if such comments or report were
             published or otherwise generally available prior to the
             consideration of the statute by the General Assembly, but
             the text of the statute shall control in the event of conflict
             between its text and such comments or report.

1 Pa. C.S. §1939. The “remarks and understanding of individual legislators are not
relevant in ascertaining the meaning of a statute,” McCormick v. Columbus
Conveyor Company, 564 A.2d 9077, 910 n.1 (Pa. 1989), and the “records of
individual legislators in debate are not relevant for the obvious reason that they
represent only one person’s view and not that of the opposing or enacting body.”
Zemprell v. Thornburgh, 407 A.2d 102, 109 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1979).
             In short, in its plain meaning, Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) requires the
use of “average wholesale price” and not “average retail price.” Insurer could have
produced evidence to support a calculation of an AWP more accurate than the one
authorized by the regulation and listed by the Bureau in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.
Instead, Insurer offered a conclusory affidavit laden with simple math errors as the
sum total of its evidence.

                                          15
               The regulation authorizes the Bureau to use an AWP produced by a
Nationally recognized pricing schedule for “resolving payment disputes.” 34 Pa.
Code §127.131. It does not mandate the use of a particular Nationally recognized
pricing schedule. To the contrary, an insurer and a provider may agree on which
“Nationally recognized” schedule to use, and it need not be the one published by the
Bureau each year in the Pennsylvania Bulletin. 34 Pa. Code §127.131.
               Likewise, the regulation does not prevent a provider or employer from
proposing a Nationally recognized schedule other than the one listed by the Bureau
in the Pennsylvania Bulletin when litigating a repricing dispute before the Medical
Fee Review Section or the Hearing Office. Insurer was free to offer evidence of
another source of data to establish the AWP for each of the ingredients used in the
compounded medical cream that would have allowed the fact finder to reprice
Pharmacy’s invoice to a different result. However, Insurer did not present any
evidence relevant to the “actual” AWP of the ingredients that Pharmacy used to
produce the compounded medical cream dispensed to Claimant.
               Insurer’s challenge to the regulation lacks merit.

                                                III.
               In its third issue, Insurer asserts that the Bureau’s regulation improperly
connects the amount of medical compensation owed to an AWP set by private
companies. Insurer argues that the regulation has delegated legislative authority to
private persons, in violation of Article II, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania
Constitution.10 In support of its argument, Insurer directs the Court to Protz v.

10
  Article II, Section 1 of the Pennsylvania Constitution states that “[t]he legislative power of this
Commonwealth shall be vested in a General Assembly, which shall consist of a Senate and a House
of Representatives.” PA. CONST. art. II, §1.
                                                16
Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Derry Area School District), 161 A.3d 827
(Pa. 2017).
              The regulation does not specify Truven Health Analytics. Rather, the
regulation allows the Bureau to use, in a limited way, information from a Nationally
recognized schedule of prices compiled from the marketplace. The regulation does
not preclude an employer from offering another Nationally recognized schedule or
some other source of price data, such as an internationally recognized schedule, to
establish the AWP for pharmaceuticals dispensed to workers’ compensation
claimants. Insurer made no attempt to establish the so-called “actual” AWP with
evidence. It was not prevented by the regulation to make a case for the use of an
“actual” AWP to reprice Pharmacy’s invoice. Simply, Insurer lacks any basis for its
constitutional claim.
                                    Conclusion
              Insurer had the burden of proving that its reimbursement of $305.92 to
Pharmacy for the compounded medical cream dispensed to Claimant satisfied
Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the Act. It did not come close. For the reasons set
forth above, we discern no error in the Hearing Office’s adjudication that Insurer
owed Pharmacy $6,336.02, plus interest, for the prescription. Accordingly, we
affirm the Hearing Office’s adjudication.

                                    _____________________________________
                                    MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge

                                         17
         IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Indemnity Insurance Company of North :
America,                             :
                  Petitioner         :
                                     :
            v.                       :    No. 696 C.D. 2018
                                     :
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee :
Review Hearing Office (Insight       :
Pharmacy),                           :
                  Respondent         :

                                  ORDER

            AND NOW, this 5th day of January, 2021, the adjudication of the
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation Fee Review Hearing Office dated April 24, 2018,
in the above-captioned matter is AFFIRMED.

                                 _____________________________________
                                 MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Indemnity Insurance Company of              :
North America,                              :
                  Petitioner                :
                                            :
      v.                                    : No. 696 C.D. 2018
                                            : ARGUED: June 10, 2020
Bureau of Workers’ Compensation             :
Fee Review Hearing Office (Insight          :
Pharmacy),                                  :
                 Respondent                 :

BEFORE:        HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge
               HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
               HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
               HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
               HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
               HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
               HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge

CONCURRING AND DISSENTING
OPINION BY JUDGE CEISLER                                          FILED: January 5, 2021

      I agree with the majority’s conclusion that Petitioner, Indemnity Insurance
Company of North America (Insurer) failed to meet its burden of proving that it
reimbursed Insight Pharmacy (Pharmacy) correctly for the prescribed pain cream,
and therefore, that the Hearing Officer’s decision should be affirmed. I write
separately, however, to stress a critical distinction between the actual and fictitious
average wholesale price (AWP), which I believe must be acknowledged. Insurer
presents a persuasive statutory construction argument that the AWP, for purposes of
pharmaceutical reimbursements under the Workers’ Compensation (WC) Act,1 is the
actual average wholesale price, not a fictitious AWP.

      1
          Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§1-1041.1, 2501-2710.
      1.     Insurer’s Initial Argument
      In 1993, in response to spiraling medical expenses leading to a proposed 52%
hike in insurance premiums, the General Assembly enacted the Act of July 2, 1993,
P.L. 190, No. 44, commonly known as Act 44 (1993 WC Amendment), which
amended the WC Act by adding cost containment provisions, such as Section
306(f.1)(3)(vi)(A) of the WC Act, 77 P.S. §531(3)(vi)(A), governing reimbursement
for prescription drugs based on 110% of the AWP. However, the 1993 WC
Amendment did not define AWP.
      Section 127.131 of the Workers’ Compensation Medical Cost Containment
Regulations, 34 Pa. Code §127.131 (relating to payment for prescription drugs and
pharmaceuticals), promulgated under the cost containment provisions in the 1993
WC Amendment, provided the Workers’ Compensation Bureau (Bureau) with the
option of choosing any of three nationally recognized schedules to determine AWP.
Insurer contends the General Assembly dictated that AWP be used as a benchmark
for drug pricing. However, the Bureau, not the General Assembly, determined that
AWP was obtainable from any one of the three nationally recognized schedules and
elected to use data from the Truven Red Book.
      Insurer argues that the three national schedules do not report the actual AWPs.
Rather, they have developed entirely fictitious AWPs. For example, Insurer asserts
that Gabapentin, one of the compounds in the compounded cream at issue here, has
an average retail price of $35 for a bottle of 90 pills. See Pet’r’s Br. at 36-37.
However, Insurer claims the same quantity of the drug has a fictitious AWP of $140
per bottle. Therefore, the workers’ compensation reimbursement, 110% of the
fictitious AWP for Gabapentin, would be $154 for a bottle of 90 pills; yet the retail

                                       EC - 2
price for the same amount of Gabapentin is only $35 per bottle.2 Accord In re
Pharm. Indus. Average Wholesale Price Litig., 491 F. Supp.2d 20, 40-41 (D. Mass.
2007), aff’d, 582 F.3d 156 (1st Cir. 2009), cert. dismissed sub nom. AstraZeneca
Pharms. LP v. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Mass., 561 U.S. 1056 (2010) (MDL 2007)
(explaining how the gap between the true price for acquisition and the reported
AWPs ballooned; some actual AWPs were 60% to 90% below the reported AWPs).
Insurer argues that switching from the fictitious AWP to the originally intended
actual AWP could save Pennsylvania employers and insurance carriers hundreds of
millions of dollars in unnecessary spending on pharmaceuticals.
       2.      Statutory Construction
       The WC Act has never defined the term “average wholesale price.” However,
the Act of October 27, 2014, P.L. 2894, No. 184 (2014 WC Amendment), now
provides for reimbursement for pharmaceutical goods and services at 110% of the
AWP, “calculated on a per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.” 77 P.S. § 531.
Insurer contends that in light of this Court’s decision in Commonwealth v. TAP
Pharmaceutical Products, Inc., 36 A.3d 1112 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), vacated on other
grounds, 94 A.3d 364 (Pa. 2014), and the addition of the above language to 77 P.S.
§531, the legislature intended “average wholesale price” to mean the actual AWP.
       Insurer’s supplemental brief addresses this issue in comprehensive and
persuasive detail. Insurer asserts that by offering no changes to the meaning of the

       2
         Insurer asserts there is no readily available resource to determine the actual AWP for the
ingredients in the compounded cream at issue, and therefore, the best proxy that can be used is the
average retail price. Insurer suggests that although the retail price would obviously be higher than
the actual AWP, it would still be more reasonable than the grossly inflated fictitious AWP. There
is persuasive logical appeal in Insurer’s reasoning that where the actual retail price is substantially
less than the purported AWP, the AWP must be incorrect, and thus, fictitious. However, I agree
with the majority that Insurer cites no authority from the record or otherwise in support of its
argument concerning the amounts of the specific retail and wholesale prices it posits.

                                               EC - 3
AWP, the 2014 WC Amendment demonstrates legislative approval for the courts’
prior plain language reading of the term.
               a.      Legislative History
      The 1993 WC Amendment added medical cost-containment provisions to the
WC Act. These provisions were modeled after the Medicare system. In enacting
the 1993 WC Amendment, the legislature provided no definition for the term
“average wholesale price.”
      About six months earlier, Pennsylvania had enacted the Act of December 18,
1992, P.L. 792, No. 128 (1992 Preservation Act Amendment), amending the Lottery
Fund Preservation Act3 to include provisions providing pharmaceutical assistance
for the elderly and requiring the Department of Aging to reimburse medical
providers for prescription drugs based on “average wholesale cost.” Former 72 P.S.
§ 3762-303(H)(12)(i). Like the 1993 WC Amendment, the 1992 Preservation Act
Amendment provided no definition of “average wholesale cost.”
      Four years later, in 1996, Pennsylvania enacted Act 134 of 1996 (1996
Lottery Law Amendment),4 repealing the Lottery Fund Preservation Act and adding
Section 502 to Pennsylvania’s State Lottery Law (Lottery Law),5 defining AWP as
“average wholesale cost,” which is “[t]he cost of a dispensed drug based upon the
price published in a national drug pricing system in current use by the Department
of Aging as the [AWP] of a prescription drug in the most common package size.”
72 P.S. § 3761-502. The 1996 Lottery Law Amendment remained in place for many

      3
          Act of August 14, 1991, P.L. 342, No. 36, former 72 P.S. §§ 3761-101 – 3762-904.

      4
          Act of November 21, 1996, P.L. 741, No. 134.

      5
          Act of August 26, 1971, P.L. 351, as amended, 72 P.S. §§ 3761-101 – 3761-2103.

                                            EC - 4
years without any substantive changes.6 By contrast, the legislature never amended
the WC Act to provide a definition of the AWP.
              b.     Federal Multidistrict AWP Litigation
       Artificial inflation of fictitious AWPs regarding Medicare reimbursements
gave rise to federal multidistrict litigation alleging fraudulent inflation of the costs
of pharmaceutical drugs. In In re Pharmaceutical Industry Average Wholesale
Price Litigation, 460 F. Supp.2d 277, 287 (D. Mass. 2006) (MDL 2006), a federal
judge in the multidistrict litigation concluded that the AWP was not an industry
term of art, but rather must be accorded its plain meaning.
              c.     Pennsylvania AWP Litigation – TAP
       In 2004, in TAP, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania similarly filed a
complaint against numerous pharmaceutical companies, alleging fraudulent
manipulation of AWPs7 with regard to prescription cost reimbursements by the
Department of Aging. The 1996 Lottery Law Amendment required the Department
of Aging to reimburse for pharmaceuticals using the AWP “based upon the price
published in a national drug pricing system in current use by the Department of
Aging.” 72 P.S. § 3761-502. The defendants in TAP argued that this reference to
national price compendia showed a different legislative intent from that of the
Medicare statutes in the federal litigation. This Court rejected that argument:
       Defendants’ [argument] “appears to boil down to the remarkable
       proposition that the Legislature delegated responsibility for . . . drug
       reimbursement to the pharmaceutical industry, and that drug

       6
        However, the Act of July 10, 2006, P.L. 1061, amended the Lottery Law to reduce the
payment rate from 90% to 88% of the “average wholesale cost.” See 72 P.S. §§ 3761-509 – 3761-
510.

       7
        The Commonwealth filed an Amended Complaint in 2005. See Commonwealth ex rel.
Pappert v. TAP Pharm. Prods., Inc., 885 A.2d 1127, 1131 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).

                                          EC - 5
      manufacturers were thereafter free to report whatever prices and obtain
      whatever level of reimbursement they desired.” [(Citation omitted).]
      Clearly, this would lead to an absurd result, and would favor a private,
      rather than public interest, which we must presume the Legislature did
      not intend. 1 Pa. C.S. §1922(1), (5). It is also noteworthy that there is
      no known judicial acceptance of this position.

TAP, 36 A.3d at 1194, App. B. Thus, like the federal court in MDL 2006, this Court
held that the AWP must be interpreted according to its plain meaning, concluding
that “those writing Pennsylvania’s reimbursement laws sought a formula to give an
easily-ascertained, objective, accurate estimate of acquisition costs for
pharmaceuticals, not a fictitious value allowing reimbursement unrelated to prices
actually paid by providers.” Id. at 1194-95 (emphasis added). Therefore, the
legislature “intended the phrase ‘average wholesale price’ to mean what it plainly
says, that is, an average of wholesale prices paid by providers.” Id. (emphasis
added).
      In short, both the federal court in MDL 2006 and this Court in TAP found the
term “average wholesale price,” in relation to reimbursement of prescription
costs, must be interpreted according to its plain meaning.
             d.    2014 WC Amendment
                   i.     Added Language
      Relevant here, the 2014 WC Amendment added 12 words to the end of the
sentence in the WC Act which mandates the AWP standard: “The reimbursement
for [prescription] drugs and professional pharmaceutical services shall be limited to
one hundred ten per centum of the average wholesale price (AWP) of the product,
calculated on a per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.” 77 P.S. §531(3)(vi)(A)
(emphasis added). These 12 words clarified how the AWP standard was applied,
not how AWP is defined.

                                       EC - 6
                    ii.    Legislative Intent
      The 2014 WC Amendment revised Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi) of the WC Act in
order to reduce pharmaceutical costs and limit physician self-dispensing. See, e.g.,
Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi)(H) of the WC Act, 77 P.S. § 531(3)(vi)(H) (“The Workers’
Compensation Advisory Council shall annually conduct a study of the impact of this
sub-clause, including calculation of the savings achieved in the dispensing of
pharmaceuticals”); H.B. 1846 § 1.1, Reg. Sess. (Pa. 2013) (requiring the
Pennsylvania Compensation Rating Bureau to calculate the savings achieved
through the implementation of the amendment of Section 306(f.1)(3)(vi); “the
amount of the savings shall be used to provide an immediate reduction in rates,
equal to the savings, applicable to employers’ workers’ compensation policies”)
(emphasis added).
      One cost problem identified by the drafters of the 2014 WC Amendment
involved healthcare providers that were relying on National Drug Code (NDC)
numbers from repackaged drugs that were purchased in bulk and then sold to
physicians in smaller lots at much higher prices. This led to an “artificial and inflated
AWP of repacked drugs” (10/18/13 Pennsylvania House of Representatives Memo,
attached in Appendix to Insurer’s supplemental brief).
      To achieve the goal of lower pharmaceutical costs, the 2014 WC Amendment
sought to (1) end the practice of pharmaceutical billing based on inflated NDCs
provided by drug re-packagers (as opposed to the original manufacturer’s NDCs)
and (2) strictly limit the practice of physicians self-dispensing pharmaceuticals. A
Pennsylvania House of Representatives Memorandum circulated by the 2014 WC
Amendment’s sponsor, Representative Marguerite Quinn, spelled out the
amendment’s objectives:

                                         EC - 7
           • Require physicians to include the original drug manufacturer’s
               NDC submissions for reimbursement;
           • Establish a maximum reimbursement rate of 110% for physician-
               dispensed drugs;
           • Prohibit the use of repackaged NDC numbers;
           • Limit physician dispensing to drugs needed in the first five days
               following initial treatment;

           • Ultimately decrease costs in the workers’ compensation system
               without sacrificing the quality of healthcare services received
               by patients.
Id.
       This was not the only clarification the legislature provided for applying the
AWP standard. Under the prior law, healthcare providers seeking to maximize
profit could argue for AWP based on a per package calculation as opposed to a per
unit calculation. The healthcare provider would then bill for a whole bottle of pills
as opposed to the one or two pills actually dispensed.8 The 2014 WC Amendment’s
clarification that AWP must be recorded on a “per unit basis” addressed this issue
and also financially enforced the restrictions on physician dispensing.9
       Thus, the 2014 WC Amendment provided no change to the statutory meaning
of the AWP, but merely clarified when and in what increments the standard of the

       8
         In fact, the State Lottery Law requires the Pennsylvania Department of Aging to
reimburse prescription drugs based upon the “average wholesale price of a prescription drug in the
most common package size.” 72 P.S. § 3761-502 (emphasis added).

       9
         The 2014 WC Amendment’s limits on physician dispensing allow physicians to seek
reimbursement only for a seven-day supply of certain controlled substances such as those
containing hydrocodone. Determining the AWP based upon a per unit basis, as opposed to a per
package basis, precludes an end run around this prohibition.

                                             EC - 8
AWP should be applied. In clarifying when AWP is measured and whether it is
recorded for individual units or an entire package, the legislature did nothing to
change the underlying meaning of the “average wholesale price.” The amendment’s
added language reflected these concerns by requiring the AWP to be “calculated on
a per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing.” 77 P.S. §531(3)(vi)(A) (emphasis
added). The legislature did not intend in any way to deviate from the plain meaning
of “average wholesale price.”
                     iii. Presumption of Legislative Concurrence
       “The failure of the General Assembly to change the law which has been
interpreted by the courts creates a presumption that the interpretation was in
accordance with the legislative intent; otherwise the General Assembly would have
changed the law in a subsequent amendment.” Fonner v. Shandon, Inc., 724 A.2d
903, 906 (Pa. 1999); see Fletcher v. Pa. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Guar. Ass’n, 985 A.2d
678 (Pa. 2009). Thus, the legislature’s decision not to amend the plain meaning of
AWP via the 2014 WC Amendment must be understood in the context of its timing.
       In October 2013, Representative Marguerite Quinn circulated a memorandum
to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, announcing legislation addressing
physician self-dispensing. Before her bill was even introduced, the federal ruling in
the multidistrict litigation held that the term “average wholesale price” in the
Medicare statute on which the legislature relied in drafting the 1993 WC
Amendment10 must be understood according to its plain meaning. MDL 2006, 460
F. Supp.2d at 284. Likewise, three years before the 2014 WC Amendment was
introduced, this Court held in TAP that the legislature intended “average wholesale
price” to be given its plain meaning. TAP, 36 A.3d at 1194-95.

       10
        Notably, like the Medicare statutes, the WC Act contains no reference to national price
compendia.

                                           EC - 9
       If the legislature disagreed with the plain meaning of the term as endorsed by
the Courts, it was free to amend the Act accordingly. It did not do so. Therefore,
there is a presumption that the Courts’ interpretation of the plain meaning of AWP
was in accord with legislative intent. Fletcher; Fonner.
       3.      Conclusion
       I agree with Insurer’s persuasive statutory construction argument. The AWP,
for purposes of pharmaceutical reimbursements under the WC Act, is the actual
average wholesale price, “calculated on a per unit basis, as of the date of dispensing,”
77 P.S. § 531, not a fictitious AWP.
       Nonetheless, I agree with the majority that in this particular case, Insurer must
reimburse Pharmacy as determined by the Hearing Office, because Insurer did not
sustain its burden of proving it properly reimbursed Pharmacy. Insurer failed to
present evidence of the actual AWP11 of any of the ingredients in the compounded
cream, miscalculated the amount due on the one ingredient it paid for, offered no
evidence of any AWP for five of the six ingredients, and offered no evidence of any
payment for five of the six ingredients.
       Accordingly, I concur in the outcome but respectfully dissent from the
majority’s statutory analysis.

                                             __________________________________
                                             ELLEN CEISLER, Judge

Judge McCullough joins in this Concurring and Dissenting Opinion.

       11
           As a practical matter, one effect of this decision may be that pharmacies will have to
provide documentation of their actual AWP, in light of the added calculation limitations in order
to establish an amount that is 110% of the AWP and obtain reimbursement. The Bureau may, and
should, clarify that requirement by regulation. Arguably, therefore, the added language concerning
calculation of the AWP should solve Insurer’s alleged difficulty in obtaining actual AWPs in the
future.
                                            EC - 10