ACCC association of cancer care centers
Join/Renew
Login
Join/Renew
Login
Education & Resources
ACCC eXchange LogInCorporate Member Sponsored ResourcesPresentations & AbstractsACCC Connect eLearning LogIn
Publications
Oncology IssuesPatient Assistance & Reimbursement GuideTrending Now in Cancer CareBusiness Case Studies for Hiring New Staff
Events
2026 ACCC Leadership SummitAnnual Meeting & Cancer Center Business SummitCapitol Hill DayNational Oncology ConferenceOncology Reimbursement MeetingsOncology State Society Meetings
Policy & Advocacy
ACCC 2026 Policy PrioritiesLetters & StatementsAccess, Payment & Reimbursement ReformWhite Bagging & Brown BaggingAdvocacy ResourcesCancer Moonshot
Membership
Join | RenewWho We AreMembership Types & BenefitsCorporate MembersACCC Member Portal FAQMember Directory
Partners
Oncology State SocietiesPartner OrganizationsCME
News
News ReleasesAdvocacy News ReleasesOncology News
About ACCC
Timeline / 50th Anniversary2025 Impact ReportPresident's ThemeACCC Innovator AwardsACCC FellowsBoard of TrusteesACCC Senior Staff
Breast CancerMetastatic Breast Cancer
Gastrointestinal CancerBiliary Tract CancerColorectal CancerGastric CancerLiver Cancer
Genitourinary CancerBladder CancerProstate CancerRenal Cell Carcinoma
Gynecologic CancerOvarian Cancer
Head & Neck Cancer
Hematologic MalignanciesAcute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL)Multiple Myeloma (MM)Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS)
Lung CancerNon-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)
Sarcoma
Skin CancerMelanomaNon-Melanoma Skin Cancers (NMSC)
Clinical Practice & TreatmentCancer DiagnosticsCare CoordinationEHR Integration for Biomarker TestingQuality Improvement Collaboration: Integration of Precision Medicine in Community OncologyTreatment
Financial NavigationFAN Boot CampFinancial Advocacy Network (FAN) Resource LibraryPatient Assistance & Reimbursement GuidePrior Authorization
Health Equity & Access3, 2, 1, Go! Practical Solutions for Addressing Cancer Care DisparitiesAppalachian Community Cancer AllianceOncology Advanced PractitionersPersonalizing Care for Patients of All BackgroundsSocial Drivers of Health
Patient-Centered CareAddressing Care Disparities for VeteransAdolescent and Young Adult (AYA)Care Action Plans for People with CancerDermatologic ToxicitiesEmpowering CaregiversGeriatric OncologyHealth LiteracyNutritionOncology PharmacyPatient NavigationPsychosocial Care in OncologyShared Decision-MakingSupportive CareSurvivorship Care
Practice Management & OperationsCancer Program FundamentalsLeadership Sustainment and Engagement VideosOncology Practice Transformation and Integration CenterOncology Team Resiliency
ResearchACCC Community Oncology Research Institute (ACORI)
Technology & InnovationTelehealth & Digital Medicine
ACCCBuzz Blog
CANCER BUZZ Podcast
Oncology Issues
Join/Renew
Login
Breast CancerMetastatic Breast Cancer
Gastrointestinal CancerBiliary Tract CancerColorectal CancerGastric CancerLiver Cancer
Genitourinary CancerBladder CancerProstate CancerRenal Cell Carcinoma
Gynecologic CancerOvarian Cancer
Head & Neck Cancer
Hematologic MalignanciesAcute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL)Mantle Cell Lymphoma (MCL)Multiple Myeloma (MM)Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS)
Lung CancerNon-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)
Sarcoma
Skin CancerMelanomaNon-Melanoma Skin Cancers (NMSC)
Clinical Practice & TreatmentCancer DiagnosticsCare CoordinationEHR Integration for Biomarker TestingQuality Improvement Collaboration: Integration of Precision Medicine in Community OncologyTreatment
Financial NavigationFAN Boot CampFinancial Advocacy Network (FAN) Resource LibraryPatient Assistance & Reimbursement GuidePrior Authorization
Health Equity & Access3, 2, 1, Go! Practical Solutions for Addressing Cancer Care DisparitiesAppalachian Community Cancer AllianceOncology Advanced PractitionersPersonalizing Care for Patients of All BackgroundsSocial Drivers of Health
Patient-Centered CareAddressing Care Disparities for VeteransAdolescent and Young Adult (AYA)Care Action Plans for People with CancerDermatologic ToxicitiesEmpowering CaregiversGeriatric OncologyHealth LiteracyNutritionOncology PharmacyPatient NavigationPsychosocial Care in OncologyShared Decision-MakingSupportive CareSurvivorship Care
Practice Management & OperationsCancer Program FundamentalsLeadership Sustainment and Engagement VideosOncology Practice Transformation and Integration CenterOncology Team Resiliency
ResearchACCC Community Oncology Research Institute (ACORI)
Technology & InnovationTelehealth & Digital Medicine
ACCCBuzz Blog
CANCER BUZZ Podcast
Oncology Issues
    • Education & Resources
    • Publications
    • Events
    • Policy & Advocacy
    • Membership
    • Partners
    • News
    • About ACCC
ACCC association of cancer care centers
1801 Research Boulevard, Suite 400, Rockville, MD 20850
Tel: 301.984.9496 Email Us
Contact UsVolunteers
Advertise
Career Center
Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
ACCC Rebranding
Copyright © 2026 Association of Cancer Care Centers. All Rights Reserved.
HomeACCCBuzz Blog

Reading Between the Line Items

February 15, 2018
Blair Burnett, ACCC Health Policy Analyst

Reading Between the Line Items

Implications of the Budget Deal & the President’s FY2019 Budget for Oncology

After another brief government shutdown, Congress passed the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 on Friday, February 9. Healthcare provisions embedded within this legislation will have an important impact on clinicians and patients. Of note, the two-year budget deal raises budget caps by $300 billion, funds the federal government through March 23, 2018, prevents another sequester that would have been triggered by the recent tax reform legislation, and gives Congress additional time to pass a full-year omnibus appropriations bill for Fiscal Year (FY) 2018. Read on for high-level takeaways, as well as resources for more details about the bill.

Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 Takeaways:

  • Extension of CHIP funding for an additional five years (2024-2027)
  • Prevention of the 4% sequester in Medicare that would have been triggered by the recent tax reform bill, but also an extension of the current 2% Medicare sequester through 2027
  • Inclusion of a two-year delay for the Medicaid Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) pay cuts
  • Inclusion of a technical fix to the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA) Quality Payment Program (QPP) so that Part B drug payments are excluded from MIPS adjustments
  • Inclusion of a payment rate freeze that will stabilize payments through 2019 for key radiation oncology services delivered in freestanding clinics
  • Addition of $2 billion in funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) over the next two years
  • Reduction of funding to the Affordable Care Act’s Prevention and Public Health Fund by $1.35 billion over 10 years
  • Reauthorization and continued funding for community health centers (CHCs) and teaching health centers
  • Repeal of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB), created by the ACA, which would have triggered reduced Medicare reimbursement if expenditures had risen beyond a designated amount
  • Does NOT include language for ACA market stabilization legislation that would address continued uncertainty in the private insurance market
  • Does NOT include a provision that would have made biosimilars ineligible for pass-through status, meaning 340B hospitals will still receive ASP+6% for biosimilars

Just a few days later, on Monday, February 12, the White House released The President’s Budget for FY2019, which calls for $4.4 trillion in spending and proposes to add $7 trillion to the deficit over the next 10 years.

The President’s budget proposal is meant to be a blueprint to Congress, and it’s widely believed that this package, as a whole, has little to no chance of gaining traction in Congress. However, it’s likely we will see specific policies outlined within the President’s Budget adopted by Congress or achieved through administrative action. Proposals within the President’s Budget provide insight into the Administration’s priorities for healthcare in 2019, specifically under the leadership of Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) newly appointed Secretary Alex Azar.

Key proposals from President Trump’s proposed FY 2019 budget:

  • Proposed 21% reduction in funding to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which translates to $17.9 billion less than the agency received in 2017. The President’s budget funds HHS at $68.4 billion. While this total includes $13 billion in new funding to combat the nation’s opioid epidemic, it also reflects a $1 billion reduction in funding for medical research at NIH as well as elimination of various cancer screening and prevention programs at the Centers for Prevention and Disease Control (CDC).
  • Proposal to allocate $20 million to the FDA’s Oncology Center of Excellence. Despite this funding injection, various patient and provider advocacy groups are still wary of how cancer screening and prevention programs will be impacted due to overall cuts to HHS.
  • Inclusion of language that calls for Congressional action to pass a law that eliminates the Affordable Care Act completely and instead focuses on giving states block grants to establish their own health systems. Legislation similar to this failed to pass Congress last year.
  • Proposes to allow the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to move certain drugs from Medicare Part B to Part D where there are “savings to be gained from price competition.”
  • Proposes to set an inflation limit to how fast ASP can go up (each quarter when CMS establishes the ASP+6% payment amounts, CMS would pay the lesser of (1) the actual ASP+6% or (2) the inflation-adjusted ASP+6%).
  • Proposes to reduce Wholesale Acquisition Cost (WAC) payments from 106% to 103%—this would have a big impact on newly launched products without ASP data.
  • Proposes to modify the CMS' recent changes to the 340B Drug Pricing Program finalized in the 2018 Medicare Hospital Outpatient Payment System final rule. Rather than making the reductions budget-neutral (as it does now)—the savings would be redistributed to hospitals that provide uncompensated care equaling at least 1% of their patient care costs. Hospitals that don’t meet that charity care threshold would have their savings go back to the Medicare Trust Fund.
  • Proposes to eliminate all grandfathering and exemptions from CMS’ policy to reduce payment to new off-campus hospital-based departments. The proposed budget for HHS explains that this proposal would eliminate all current exemptions for off-campus hospital outpatient departments, causing currently grandfathered off-campus hospital outpatient departments, emergency departments, and cancer hospitals to be reimbursed under the Medicare physician fee schedule—a continued shift towards site-neutral payment policy.
  • Proposal to simplify the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) in 2021 “by adopting broader claims and beneficiary survey calculated measures that assess clinician performance on quality and cost during the performance period at the group-level only.”
  • Inclusion of language that seeks to fund Cost-Sharing Reduction payments through FY2019
  • Proposal to establish a beneficiary out-of-pocket maximum in the Medicare Part D catastrophic phase. The HHS budget clarifies that this proposal would increase Part D plan sponsors’ liability for catastrophic coverage from 15 percent to 80 percent over four years, thus decreasing Medicare’s reinsurance liability from 80 percent to 20 percent.
  • Proposal to exclude manufacturer discounts from the calculation of beneficiary out-of-pocket costs in the Medicare Part D coverage gap. Currently, amounts paid by manufacturers as coverage gap discounts count toward a beneficiary’s out-of-pocket costs, for purposes of determining when catastrophic coverage begins. If enacted, this change would significantly increase the time it takes for a beneficiary to reach catastrophic coverage.

For a deeper dive on the both the budget deal and the President's proposed FY 2019 budget, here are some resources:

  • CEA Report: Reforming Biopharmaceutical Pricing at Home and Abroad
  • Kaiser Health News (KHN). Despite Big Talk On Bringing Down Drug Prices, Critics Find Trump’s Plan Modest, Underwhelming
  • Modern Healthcare. Budget Deal Approved, Includes Significant Changes for Healthcare
  • Politico. The Budget Deal's Winners and Losers
  • KHN 'What the Health?' Podcast: There's a Really Big Health Bill in That Budget Deal

________________________________________

Continue the conversation. Join your colleagues for ACCC Capitol Hill Day on March 14 and share the story of how these potential policy changes would affect cancer care delivery in your community. Then stay for the ACCC 44th Annual Meeting and Cancer Center Business Summit, March 14-17, in Washington, D.C., where you’ll garner insight and strategies to advance cancer care delivery in the face of regulatory and policy shifts.

Related Content

Extending Patient-Centered Cancer Care to Transgender and Nonbinary IndividualsACCCBuzz Blog

Extending Patient-Centered Cancer Care to Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals

Gabrielle Stearns

June 30, 2026

Transforming Oncology Authorization Through Clinical and Revenue Cycle CollaborationACCCBuzz Blog

Transforming Oncology Authorization Through Clinical and Revenue Cycle Collaboration

Rachel Radwan

June 29, 2026

Building a Blueprint for Precision Medicine: Lessons from TriHealthACCCBuzz Blog

Building a Blueprint for Precision Medicine: Lessons from TriHealth

June 25, 2026

Exploring a Bispecific Antibody for Relapsed or Refractory Multiple MyelomaACCCBuzz Blog

Exploring a Bispecific Antibody for Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma

June 22, 2026

15 Years Strong: The NCCN State Oncology Society Forum Annual MeetingACCCBuzz Blog

15 Years Strong: The NCCN State Oncology Society Forum Annual Meeting

Sean T. McCarson, MPA

June 16, 2026

Highlights from Volume 41, Number 3 Oncology IssuesACCCBuzz Blog

Highlights from Volume 41, Number 3 Oncology Issues

Gabrielle Stearns

June 15, 2026

ACCC Roundtable Series to Build a CAR T Multiple Myeloma Referral FrameworkACCCBuzz Blog

ACCC Roundtable Series to Build a CAR T Multiple Myeloma Referral Framework

Gabrielle Stearns

June 11, 2026

Precision Medicine Stewardship: Turning Complexity Into Coordinated Cancer CareACCCBuzz Blog

Precision Medicine Stewardship: Turning Complexity Into Coordinated Cancer Care

June 9, 2026

Upcoming Events

ACCC 43rd National Oncology Conference
Oncology

ACCC 43rd National Oncology Conference

In Person Conference & ConventionOctober 21, 2026 at 8:00 AM MDT450 Summer St, Boston, MA 02210Omni Boston Hotel at the Seaport, Boston
Register Now!
KaSCO 2026 Fellows Dinner
Oncology

KaSCO 2026 Fellows Dinner

In Person Conference & ConventionJuly 16, 2026 at 6:00 PM CDT101 West 22nd Street, Kansas City, MO, USALidia's Kansas City, Kansas City
Register Now!
MSCO 2026 Professional Development Workshop
Oncology

MSCO 2026 Professional Development Workshop

In Person Conference & ConventionJuly 18, 2026 at 3:30 PM CDT5005 Glumack Drive, Minneapolis, MN, USAInterContinental Hotel Minneapolis – St. Paul Airport, Minneapolis
Register Now!
NOS 2026 Dinner at the Las Vegas Best of ASCO
Oncology

NOS 2026 Dinner at the Las Vegas Best of ASCO

In Person Conference & ConventionJuly 24, 2026 at 5:30 PM PDT101 Montelago Blvd, Henderson, NV 89011, USAThe Westin Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa , Henderson
Register Now!
WSMOS 2026 Dinner at the Seattle Best of ASCO
Oncology

WSMOS 2026 Dinner at the Seattle Best of ASCO

In Person Conference & ConventionJuly 24, 2026 at 5:30 PM PDT1415 5th Ave, Seattle, WA, USAHilton Motif Seattle, Seattle
Register Now!
KYSCO 2026 Tri-State Multi-Disciplinary Cancer Care Summit
Oncology

KYSCO 2026 Tri-State Multi-Disciplinary Cancer Care Summit

In Person Conference & ConventionJuly 25, 2026 at 7:30 AM EDT638 Madison Ave, Covington, Kentucky 41011, USAHotel Covington, Covington
Register Now!
HSCO 2026 August Dinner Symposium
Oncology

HSCO 2026 August Dinner Symposium

In Person Conference & ConventionAugust 12, 2026 at 5:30 PM HST6600 Kalanianaʻole Highway suite 110, Honolulu, HI 96825, USARoy's Restaurants – Hawaii Kai, Honolulu
Register Now!
LOS 2026 Cancer Congress - National Oncology Updates
Oncology

LOS 2026 Cancer Congress - National Oncology Updates

In Person Conference & ConventionAugust 14, 2026 at 11:00 AM CDT859 Convention Center Blvd, New Orleans, LA, USANew Orleans Marriott Warehouse Art District, New Orleans
Register Now!
Advertisement
Advertisement

Trending Now on
ACCCBuzz Blog

Extending Patient-Centered Cancer Care to Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals

Extending Patient-Centered Cancer Care to Transgender and Nonbinary Individuals

In a recent article from Oncology Issues, authors conducted a systematic literature review and found that two main drivers of care disparities exist for transgender and nonbinary individuals with cancer: rigid binary gender frameworks and gaps in mental health care.

Transforming Oncology Authorization Through Clinical and Revenue Cycle Collaboration

Transforming Oncology Authorization Through Clinical and Revenue Cycle Collaboration

2026 ACCC Innovator Award Winner St. Luke's Cancer Institute noticed a significant administrative burden being placed on providers to review medical necessity validation for complex oncology therapies. To address the resulting rise in peer-to-peer requirements, delays in care, and pre-service denials, the team designed and implemented a new Clinical Documentation Integrity Registered Nurse role.

Building a Blueprint for Precision Medicine: Lessons from TriHealth

Building a Blueprint for Precision Medicine: Lessons from TriHealth

ACCC launched its Precision Medicine Stewardship Program to highlight institutions that have successfully built the infrastructure, workflows, and leadership models needed to deliver precision medicine at scale. TriHealth Cancer and Blood Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio, offers a compelling example of what it takes to move from aspiration to execution.

Exploring a Bispecific Antibody for Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma

Exploring a Bispecific Antibody for Relapsed or Refractory Multiple Myeloma

Although patients with relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma now have more treatment options than ever, their journeys are often complex. As clinicians consider when to introduce newer therapies such as bispecific antibodies, they must account for prior treatments, treatment-related toxicities, and comorbidities that may impact treatment decisions.

View All ACCCBuzz Blogs

Recently Heard on
CANCER BUZZ Podcast

MDS: Low Risk Isn’t No Risk - [Podcast] Ep. 239

Beyond Body Art: Restoring Wholeness Through Paramedical Tattooing - [Podcast] Ep. 238

Bridging Radiation and Oncology in SCLC Care - [Podcast] Ep. 237

Championing Bispecific Antibodies in the VA - [Podcast] Ep. 236

View All Podcasts

Latest from Oncology Issues

June 2026
June 2026
April 2026
February 2026
December 2025
October 2025
View All Oncology Issues

Join the Conversation

ACCC eXchange Digital Banner
Login