Home Infusion Therapy & Immunoglobulin

Infusion therapy delivers medication through a needle or catheter when oral options aren’t effective. Most often given intravenously, it can also be subcutaneous. Treatments include IVIG, antibiotics, antivirals, antifungals, chemotherapy, hydration, pain management, and nutrition—commonly used for chronic or rare conditions on a weekly or monthly basis.
Frequently Asked Questions
Infusion therapy involves the administration of medication through a needle or catheter. It is prescribed when a condition is so severe it cannot be treated effectively by oral medications, or there are no oral therapies that meet the needs of the patient. Typically, infusion therapy means that a drug is administered intravenously, but the term may also refer to subcutaneous infusions. Prescription drug therapies commonly administered via infusion include intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), antibiotics, antifungals, antivirals, chemotherapy, hydration, pain management, and parenteral nutrition. Infusion therapy is also provided to patients for treating a wide assortment of often chronic and sometimes rare diseases for which specialty infusion medications are effective when given on a weekly or monthly basis.
Diseases commonly requiring infusion therapy include neuromuscular, dermatological, and immune diseases and infections that are unresponsive to oral steroids or oral antibiotics, including cancer and cancer-related pain, dehydration, and gastrointestinal diseases or disorders which prevent normal functioning of the gastrointestinal system. Other conditions treated with specialty infusion therapies may include congestive heart failure, Crohn’s disease, hemophilia, rheumatoid arthritis, and more.
The term "specialty infusion therapy" refers to the administration of medications that require specialized infusion methods. In this situation, "specialty" indicates that the drug therapy itself requires significant pharmacy expertise to safely administer the therapy in the home, as well as to obtain third-party payment for the therapy and coordinate the interactions between the home infusion pharmacy and the home health nursing service. Complex ordering, shipping, mixing, storing, delivering, and monitoring activities are all involved in the specialty infusion therapy process.
Until the 1980s, patients receiving infusion therapy had to remain in the inpatient hospital setting for the duration of their therapy. Heightened emphasis on cost-containment in health care, as well as developments in the clinical administration of the therapy, led to strategies to administer infusion therapy in alternate settings. For individuals requiring long-term therapy, inpatient care is not only tremendously expensive but also prevents the individual from resuming normal lifestyle and work activities and may increase the chances of contracting a hospital-acquired infection. The technological advances that enabled safe and effective administration of infusion therapies in the home, the desire of patients to resume normal lifestyles and work activities while recovering from illness, and the cost-effectiveness of home care are important. Consequently, home infusion therapy has evolved into a comprehensive medical therapy service that is a much less costly alternative to inpatient hospital treatment. Home infusion has been proven to be a safe and effective alternative to inpatient care for many disease states and therapies. For many patients, receiving treatment at home or in an outpatient infusion suite setting is preferable to inpatient care. A thorough patient assessment and home assessment are performed before initiating infusion therapy at home to ensure that the patient is an appropriate candidate for home care.
An infusion therapy provider is most normally a “closed-door,” state-licensed pharmacy that specializes in provision of infusion therapies to patients in their homes or other alternate-sites. The infusion therapy always originates with a prescription order from a qualified physician who is overseeing the care of the patient. Extensive professional pharmacy services, care coordination, infusion nursing services, supplies, and equipment are provided to optimize efficacy and compliance. Qualified infusion pharmacies must satisfy licensing and other regulatory requirements imposed by state pharmacy boards as well as accreditation standards required by most third-party payers. Home infusion pharmacies may also provide additional professional therapies and services.
Pertaining directly to the medications used, the infusion pharmacy ensures that infusion drugs are: - Compounded in a sterile environment. - Maintained at an appropriate temperature and in air quality controlled conditions to ensure sterility and stability of the drug. - Administered at exactly the right dose and on the right schedule by a highly trained home IV Nurse. - Administered using an appropriate drug delivery device, typically an electronic pump. - Flushed with the proper flushing solution between doses to assure the IV catheter remains functional. - Monitored for adverse reactions and therapeutic efficacy. Infusion pharmacies also provide an extensive array of professional services: 1. Patient assessment and admission. 2. Education and training. 3. Care planning and coordination with physicians, nurses, and the patient’s payor. 4. Care management by clinical infusion pharmacists. 5. Trouble-shooting and treatment plan oversight. Also essential are the specialized equipment (infusion pumps, etc.) and many administration supplies (such as IV sets, syringes, and more) required for infusion therapy. The infusion pharmacy also supplies these to the patient and services the equipment when necessary.
To ensure safe and proper administration of infusion drugs, infusion pharmacists provide the following services: - Comprehensive assessment that considers patient history, current physical and mental status, lab reports, cognitive and psychosocial status, family/care partner support, prescribed treatment, concurrent oral prescriptions, and over-the-counter medications. - Maintenance of appropriate procedures for the compounding and distribution of sterile infusion products as outlined in the national standards and state and federal regulations. - Drug interaction monitoring and identification of potential drug, dose, or drug catheter incompatibilities. - Comprehensive admission procedures that include patient education of medical and disposable equipment use, medication storage and handling, emergency procedures, vascular access device management, and recognition and reporting of adverse drug reactions. - Comprehensive care planning that considers actual or potential drug or equipment-related problems, therapy monitoring with specific patient goals, and coordination of activities with other providers such as home health agencies and physicians. - Ongoing patient monitoring and reassessment activities to continually assess for response to treatment, drug complications, adverse reactions, and patient compliance. - Laboratory report reviews, as applicable, and subsequent consults with care professionals to adjust medication orders if necessary. - Maintenance of appropriate physical facilities for storage, preparation, dispensing, and quality control of all infusion medications and equipment. - Ongoing employee education and competence validation activities. - Maintaining an active accreditation status with an approved accrediting body. This is a significant commitment that allows the infusion pharmacy to assure outside parties that the services provided to its patients are of the highest quality. It is typically also needed to be allowed to provide therapy for insurance companies and to comply with State and Federal regulations. - Performance improvement programs that include collection of clinical outcomes data, patient perception data, trending and analysis of these and other performance measurement data, and root cause evaluations of all sentinel events. These essential specialized services listed above are paid for by the majority of health insurance plans.
Depending on local practices, regulation, and availability of skilled infusion nurses, infusion nursing services are provided directly by the infusion pharmacy or by an affiliated or separate nursing agency. Along with the infusion pharmacy staff, infusion nurses are key members of the infusion care team and work closely in the coordination of care plans and other activities with the infusion pharmacy and the ordering physician. When infusion therapy is provided in the home of a patient, the infusion nurse will ensure proper patient education and training and monitor the care of the patient in the home. Infusion nurses will have special education, training, and expertise in home or other alternate-site administration of drugs and biologics via infusion. Services they typically provide include evaluation and assessment, education and training for the patient or caregiver, inspection and consultation of home environment, catheter insertion, and patient assessment.
Medicare Part B covers some IV and enteral nutritional and cancer treatment drugs in the home, but their admission criteria to assure payment is complex and often not obtainable for many patients under actual clinical conditions. Most infusion drugs, including those not covered under Part B, may be covered by the Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit. However, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has determined that Part D does not have the authority to cover the infusion-related services, equipment, and supplies under Part D. Thus, it is recommended that you speak directly to a reimbursement specialist to determine eligibility for your individually ordered medication and services since the Medicare approval process involving Parts B and D can be complex.