Hemgenix (etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb) — HCPCS J1411

CSL Behring (originated by uniQure) · Single-dose, patient-specific kit · One-time IV infusion (~30–60 min) · Adult hemophilia B (FIX deficiency)

Hemgenix is the second AAV-based gene therapy in the CareCost catalog — a one-time IV infusion that delivers a functional FIX-Padua transgene to hepatocytes via an AAV5 vector capsid. Billed under HCPCS J1411 as a per-therapeutic-dose single-billing-event J-code (not per-mg or per-vial). Dose is weight-based at 2 × 10¹³ vector genomes per kg; a 70 kg adult receives 1.4 × 10¹⁵ vg total. Anti-AAV5 neutralizing antibody (NAb) titer < 1:678 is the pivotal-trial pre-treatment gate. Hepatic transaminases must be monitored weekly × 3 months; reactive corticosteroid taper if ALT rises > 2× baseline. Manufacturer WAC at launch was approximately $3.5 million per treatment — the world's most expensive drug since 2022. Outcomes-based contracting with commercial payers and state Medicaid is the dominant commercial framework. Administration is limited to certified hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs).

ASP data:Q2 2026 (NOC / invoice for J1411)
Payer policies:verified May 2026
Manufacturer guide:CSL Behring 2026
FDA label:rev April 2026 (BLA 125772)
Page reviewed:

Instant Answer — the 5 things you need to bill J1411

HCPCS
J1411
Per-therapeutic-dose (one-time)
Standard dose
2e13 vg/kg
Weight-based vector genomes
Admin CPT
96365
+ 96366 add-on (~30–60 min IV)
AAV5 NAb gate
< 1:678
Required pre-treatment titer
WAC (one-time)
~$3.5M
World's most expensive drug
HCPCS descriptor
J1411 — "Injection, etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb, per therapeutic dose" Permanent
Generic name
etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb (also: AMT-061)
Drug class
Adeno-associated virus serotype 5 (AAV5) vector-based gene therapy carrying a codon-optimized human factor IX-Padua (hFIX-Padua) transgene under a liver-specific (LP1) promoter; targets hepatocytes for endogenous FIX expression
Vial / kit
Patient-specific single-dose kit; multiple 10 mL vials (nominal 1 × 10¹³ vg/mL) combined to deliver the calculated weight-based dose
Route
Single one-time IV infusion over approximately 30–60 minutes (rate-controlled, weight-based volume); do not bolus; do not re-dose
Dose
2 × 10¹³ vg/kg — weight-based; a 70 kg adult receives 1.4 × 10¹⁵ vg total (~140 mL volume)
Patient eligibility
Adults (≥18 yr) with hemophilia B (congenital FIX deficiency) who: currently use FIX prophylaxis therapy, OR have current/historical life-threatening hemorrhage, OR have repeated serious spontaneous bleeding episodes
Pre-treatment gate
Anti-AAV5 neutralizing antibody titer < 1:678 (HOPE-B exclusion threshold); baseline LFTs, hepatitis B/C and HIV serology, FIX inhibitor (Bethesda) assay must be negative
Corticosteroid plan
Reactive (not routine prophylactic). Initiate oral prednisone taper (typically 60 mg/day × 8–12 weeks) if ALT rises >2× baseline or above ULN; coordinate with HTC hepatology consult
NDC
63833-876-01 / 63833-0876-01 — patient-specific kit (lot- and patient-identified)
Boxed warning
No formal boxed warning. Warnings & Precautions: hepatotoxicity / transaminase elevations, infusion reactions, immune-mediated response, theoretical risk of malignancy from AAV vector integration (long-term monitoring)
FDA approval
November 22, 2022 (BLA 125772) for adults with hemophilia B; first FDA-approved gene therapy for hemophilia B. Current label revision: April 2026
ℹ️
Two AAV gene therapies, one platform pattern. Hemgenix (J1411, AAV5, hemophilia B / FIX) sits alongside Zolgensma (J3399, AAV9, pediatric SMA / SMN1) as the second AAV-based gene therapy in the CareCost catalog. Both share the one-time IV / NOC-or-invoice payment / outcomes-based contracting pattern. They are NOT interchangeable — different diseases, different vectors, different antibody thresholds, different age populations. See hemophilia B therapy class & gene therapy comparison.
⚠️
One-time means one billing event — with a permanent record. Hemgenix is administered once per patient lifetime. There is no re-dose, no maintenance, no second cycle. The single J1411 claim plus its admission/observation and 3-month monitoring services is the entire course. Documentation of anti-AAV5 NAb titer, FIX activity baseline, hepatitis serology, age ≥ 18, prior FIX prophylaxis history, bleeding episode history, and the outcomes-based contract identifier becomes permanent in the medical record because manufacturer milestone tracking runs for 5+ years post-infusion. See payer policies & outcomes-based contracts.
Phase 1 Identify what you're billing Confirm Hemgenix (J1411) vs ongoing FIX replacement therapy; verify anti-AAV5 NAb titer, age ≥18, FIX activity, and prior FIX prophylaxis or bleeding history before scheduling.

Hemophilia B therapy class — J1411 (Hemgenix gene therapy) vs FIX replacement (IDELVION / IXINITY / Alprolix / Rebinyn / BeneFIX) CMS HCPCS verified May 2026

Two completely different treatment paradigms for hemophilia B. Don't confuse them at the claim layer.

Hemophilia B (congenital factor IX deficiency, also called Christmas disease) is treated by two paradigms: (1) FIX replacement therapy — standard-half-life or extended-half-life recombinant factor IX given on demand or as prophylaxis multiple times per month indefinitely (IDELVION, IXINITY, Alprolix, Rebinyn, BeneFIX, and plasma-derived FIX concentrates), and (2) Hemgenix gene therapy — one-time IV AAV5 vector delivering a FIX-Padua transgene to hepatocytes for sustained endogenous FIX production. They have entirely different mechanisms, schedules, and billing pathways.

Side-by-side comparison of Hemgenix (J1411) gene therapy and FIX replacement products for hemophilia B.
Hemgenix (J1411)IDELVION / Alprolix / Rebinyn (EHL FIX)IXINITY / BeneFIX (SHL FIX)
HCPCS / NDCJ1411 per-therapeutic-dose J-codeJ7202 (Idelvion) / J7201 (Alprolix) / J7203 (Rebinyn), per IUJ7193 (IXINITY) / J7195 (BeneFIX), per IU
MechanismOne-time AAV5-delivered FIX-Padua gene addition; hepatocyte expressionRecombinant FIX with albumin / Fc / GlycoPEG half-life extensionStandard recombinant or plasma-derived FIX concentrate
RouteSingle IV infusion (~30–60 min)IV bolus / push, every 7–14 daysIV bolus / push, 2–3 times per week
Dose scheduleOne-time onlyProphylaxis every 7–14 days indefinitely; or on-demandProphylaxis 2–3×/week indefinitely; or on-demand
Age / populationAdults (≥18 yr) only; FIX prophylaxis or severe bleed historyAll ages; pediatric and adult labelsAll ages; pediatric and adult labels
Inhibitor statusNegative required (Bethesda assay)Used in non-inhibitor patients; inhibitor patients use bypass agents (FEIBA, NovoSeven) or AlhemoUsed in non-inhibitor patients
Pre-treatment gateAnti-AAV5 NAb titer < 1:678; LFTs; hep B/C/HIV serology; FIX inhibitor negativeNone comparable; FIX recovery / pharmacokinetic study optionalNone comparable
List price (course)~$3.5M one-time (world's most expensive)~$700K–$900K/yr (severe prophylaxis)~$300K–$700K/yr (severe prophylaxis)
Billing pathwayMedical benefit (J-code, IP or HOPD; HTC restriction)Medical benefit OR specialty pharmacy (often self-administered at home; J-code on medical claim or NDC on pharmacy claim per benefit design)Same as EHL FIX (medical or pharmacy depending on benefit)
Outcomes-based contractsCommon (5-year FIX activity / ABR milestones)RareRare
Bridging during the workup window: Most Hemgenix candidates are on prophylactic FIX therapy at the time of evaluation and remain on it through PA review, anti-AAV5 NAb testing, hepatitis screening, and scheduling. The transition off FIX prophylaxis typically occurs in the weeks after Hemgenix administration once endogenous FIX activity reaches a sustainable threshold (commonly > 5 IU/dL); some HTCs continue FIX prophylaxis for the first 1–3 months post-infusion as a safety bridge. Document the bridging plan in the PA packet and post-infusion clinical notes.
Hemgenix is hemophilia B only. Hemgenix delivers a FIX transgene; it has no effect in hemophilia A (factor VIII deficiency). For hemophilia A, the analogous one-time AAV gene therapy is Roctavian (valoctocogene roxaparvovec), not Hemgenix. For non-factor prophylaxis in hemophilia A or in inhibitor patients, see Hemlibra (J7170) (FVIIIa mimetic, A only) and Alhemo (J7173) (anti-TFPI, A and B with inhibitors). The labels are not interchangeable.

Dosing & unit math FDA label verified May 2026

From the FDA-approved Hemgenix prescribing information (BLA 125772; label rev April 2026). Unit-of-billing is the per-therapeutic-dose event, not vials or vg; the underlying physical dose is weight-based vector genome copies.

Approved indication

  • Hemophilia B (congenital factor IX deficiency) in adult patients (≥18 years) who:
    • currently use factor IX prophylaxis therapy, OR
    • have current or historical life-threatening hemorrhage, OR
    • have repeated, serious spontaneous bleeding episodes.
  • Severity is typically severe (FIX activity ≤ 2 IU/dL) or moderate (FIX activity 2–5 IU/dL) hemophilia B; documentation must include the most recent FIX activity assay result.

Weight-based dosing

ElementValueNotes
Dose2 × 10¹³ vector genomes per kgWeight at most recent measurement before infusion; rounded per kit-build instructions
Nominal concentration1 × 10¹³ vg/mLPatient-specific kit shipped with multiple 10 mL vials combined to dose
Infusion duration~30–60 minutesRate-controlled (typically 500 mL/hr); weight-determined total volume
Total cycles1 (one-time)Per patient lifetime; not repeatable due to AAV5 seroconversion and label restriction
Age (label)≥ 18 yearsAdults only; pediatric hemophilia B continues on FIX replacement (off-label trials exploring younger patients)
Inhibitor statusNegative (Bethesda assay)FIX inhibitor patients are excluded; very rare in hemophilia B (<5% prevalence)

Worked example — 70 kg adult on routine HTC hemophilia B workflow

# Calculate physical dose
Weight: 70 kg
Dose: 2 × 10¹³ vg/kg × 70 kg = 1.4 × 10¹⁵ vector genomes total
Volume (at 1 × 10¹³ vg/mL): 1.4 × 10¹⁵ / 1 × 10¹³ = 140 mL
Kit build: patient-specific (CSL Behring dispensing)

# Billing claim line
Drug: J1411 · 1 unit per therapeutic dose (per-therapeutic-dose J-code, not per vg)
Admin: CPT 96365 (initial 60 min IV) ± 96366 if total IV time exceeds 60 min including bridging fluids
Modifier: N/A for single-dose treatment; consider site-of-service and contract-specific modifiers per MAC

# Course cost (manufacturer WAC)
One-time WAC: ~$3,500,000 per treatment (one billing event — world's most expensive drug)

# Pre-treatment workflow
Day −28 to −14: anti-AAV5 NAb titer (must be < 1:678); hepatitis B / C / HIV serology
Day −14: baseline LFTs (ALT, AST, ALP, total bili), CBC, PT/INR, FIX activity, FIX inhibitor (Bethesda)
Day 0: Hemgenix ~30–60 min IV infusion in HTC inpatient or extended observation outpatient
Weeks 1–12: weekly LFTs; FIX activity at 3 weeks then per HTC protocol
Reactive: oral prednisone 60 mg/day taper if ALT > 2× baseline or > ULN, × 8–12 weeks
Months 6 / 12 / 24 / 36 / 60: outcomes-based contract milestone assessments (FIX activity, ABR, FIX product use)

Dose modifications

Per FDA label, Hemgenix dosing is fixed at 2 × 10¹³ vg/kg. There is no dose reduction pathway because the therapy is one-time and the AAV5 vector is sized to deliver therapeutic FIX-Padua transgene copies to hepatocytes. If pre-infusion LFTs, hepatitis serology, or FIX inhibitor status are out of range, the infusion is held rather than dose-reduced; the patient continues FIX prophylaxis while eligibility is re-established.

Anti-AAV5 NAb pre-treatment gate

Before infusion, anti-AAV5 neutralizing antibody (NAb) titer should be measured. Important nuance: the current FDA label (April 2026 revision) does not establish a hard numerical exclusion cutoff. The label describes that patients with pre-existing anti-AAV5 NAb titers up to 1:678 in the HOPE-B pivotal trial showed mean Factor IX activity that was numerically lower than seronegative patients but still clinically meaningful, and a single patient with a very high titer (1:3212) did not respond adequately. Most payer policies and CSL Behring patient support workflow operationalize the HOPE-B 1:678 threshold as the practical eligibility cutoff because that is the upper limit of documented response in the pivotal trial. Testing is coordinated through CSL Behring patient support and is a critical element of the workflow. Approximately 21% of adult hemophilia B patients screened in HOPE-B had detectable anti-AAV5 antibodies. Note: pre-existing AAV5 seropositivity is more common than AAV9 seropositivity in adults because AAV5 is a common environmental wild-type virus. Document the titer, the assay used, and the clinical decision rationale in the PA packet.

NDC reference FDA NDC Directory verified May 2026

NDC (10/11-digit)PackageUse
63833-876-01 / 63833-0876-01 Patient-specific single-dose kit; multiple 10 mL vials (1 × 10¹³ vg/mL) combined to deliver weight-based dose Single one-time IV infusion; kit dispensed per patient and per scheduled infusion date
Patient-specific NDC pattern. Like Zolgensma, CAR-T, and other personalized one-off therapies, Hemgenix ships as a patient-specific, lot-traceable kit. The carton NDC reflects the product family rather than a fixed activity. Document the actual kit lot number, vial count, and total administered volume from the dose-build record before posting the claim. Submit the carton-level 11-digit NDC with N4 qualifier in 24A shaded area (CMS-1500) or the equivalent UB-04 field.
Cold-chain & manufacturing constraint: Hemgenix is manufactured to order by CSL Behring (with uniQure-originated manufacturing). Lead time from confirmed-eligible PA to bedside is typically 2–6 weeks. Cancellations after kit-build trigger high spoilage costs. Engage CSL Behring patient support at the time of confirmed eligibility (severity documented, age ≥18, anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678, hepatitis serology negative) to compress the timeline.
Phase 2 Code the claim J1411 per-therapeutic-dose, CPT 96365 for the ~30–60 min IV (not chemo, not radiopharm), HTC inpatient or extended observation setting.

Administration codes CPT verified May 2026

Hemgenix is a therapeutic IV infusion (not chemo, not radiopharm, not a factor replacement push). Use therapeutic IV admin codes.

CodeDescriptionWhen to use
96365 Intravenous infusion, for therapy, prophylaxis, or diagnosis (specify substance or drug); initial, up to 1 hour Primary admin code for Hemgenix. The 30–60-minute Hemgenix infusion fits within the initial-1-hour 96365 window. Bill once per encounter as the initial therapeutic IV infusion.
96366 IV infusion, each additional hour (List separately) May apply if the encounter includes a longer pre-infusion premedication / saline bridge or post-infusion observation IV maintenance; not typical for the Hemgenix dose itself.
96413 / 96415 / 96417 Chemotherapy administration, IV infusion NOT appropriate. Hemgenix is gene therapy, not cytotoxic chemotherapy. Use 96365 (therapeutic IV).
79101 Radiopharmaceutical therapy by intravenous administration NOT appropriate. Hemgenix is not radioactive; it is a biological / gene therapy product. Use 96365.
96374 IV push, single or initial substance/drug NOT appropriate. Hemgenix is infused at a controlled rate over ~30–60 min; do not bolus or push. Unlike conventional FIX replacement (J7193 / J7202 etc., which IS pushed), Hemgenix is a true infusion.
E/M (99221–99239 inpatient; 99202–99215 outpatient) Evaluation and management code on the day of infusion If a significant separately identifiable E/M service is performed (extended pre-infusion exam, consent, bleeding-disorder counseling), bill the appropriate E/M with modifier 25.
No special handling code: Unlike CAR-T (which has dedicated handling/preparation HCPCS for apheresis and modification), Hemgenix is delivered as a ready-to-administer patient-specific kit and the thaw/prep work is bundled into the HTC infusion setting. No separate handling or preparation CPT is billed beyond the 96365 admin code and any E/M time.

Modifiers CMS verified May 2026

JZ / JW — generally N/A for single-dose patient-specific gene therapy

Hemgenix kits are patient-specific, lot-traceable, and built to deliver the exact weight-based dose. There is no physical "vial waste" in the conventional J-code sense — the entire shipped product is intended for administration to that named patient. JZ may be reported on J1411 to attest "no discarded amount from a single-dose container," consistent with CMS's July 2023 single-dose container policy, but practice varies by MAC and the per-therapeutic-dose unit definition makes JZ/JW reporting largely moot. Confirm with your MAC.

Modifier 25 — same-day E/M

Use modifier 25 on the E/M code when a significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service is performed on the same day as the infusion (consent, extended hematology counseling, baseline bleed assessment, review of weekly LFT monitoring plan, FIX prophylaxis bridging discussion).

340B modifiers (JG, TB)

Most Hemgenix is dispensed under the specialty product / specialty distribution pathway rather than via 340B, but a small number of HTC-affiliated 340B-covered entities may administer 340B-acquired Hemgenix. Confirm with your 340B compliance team and your MAC's modifier guidance. Outcomes-based contracts can complicate 340B reporting because the manufacturer rebate flow interacts with 340B pricing assumptions.

Contract-specific modifiers

Some commercial payers add a contract-specific modifier or claim attachment requirement to flag claims under an outcomes-based agreement (so the claim can be linked to the manufacturer's milestone-tracking dataset). Follow the payer's outcomes-based contract operational guide; CSL Behring patient support coordinates this end-to-end.

ICD-10-CM by indication FY2026 verified May 2026

Hemgenix is indicated for adults with hemophilia B (congenital FIX deficiency). Use D67 plus supporting codes documenting bleeding history and prior FIX prophylaxis.

IndicationICD-10 codeNotes
Hereditary factor IX deficiency (hemophilia B, Christmas disease)D67Primary code for Hemgenix. Documentation must include FIX activity level (typically ≤ 2 IU/dL severe, 2–5 IU/dL moderate) and bleeding phenotype
Hemorrhagic disorder due to FIX inhibitor (acquired)D68.311Rare in hemophilia B (<5% prevalence). If present, Hemgenix is contraindicated; document negative Bethesda assay in PA packet
Long-term (current) use of antithrombotic agent / coagulation factorZ79.899Document prior FIX prophylaxis history (IDELVION, Alprolix, BeneFIX, etc.) as supporting evidence per label criterion
History of major bleedingZ87.2Document current or historical life-threatening hemorrhage or repeated serious spontaneous bleeding episodes per label criterion
Hemarthrosis (acute joint bleed)M25.4 seriesCommon in severe hemophilia B; supports bleeding-phenotype documentation
Encounter for prophylactic measureZ29.81 (encounter for HRT) or Z51.81 (encounter for therapeutic drug level monitoring)Apply during the workup and weekly LFT monitoring phase as documented
Family history of bleeding disorderZ83.2Secondary code where applicable (hemophilia B is X-linked recessive); supports hereditary documentation
Hemgenix is hemophilia B only — D67 is the gating code. Hemophilia A (D66) is NOT in the Hemgenix label. For hemophilia A gene therapy, see Roctavian (different J-code). Acquired hemophilia (D68.311 without congenital D66/D67) is also off-label. Documentation must include the genetic and laboratory confirmation of congenital factor IX deficiency: FIX activity assay, family history if applicable, and confirmation that the patient does not have a FIX inhibitor (Bethesda assay).

Site of care & place of service Verified May 2026

Hemgenix is administered exclusively in certified hemophilia treatment centers (HTCs) — almost always a federally-funded HTC (one of ~140 in the US National HTC Network) with a multi-disciplinary hemophilia / bleeding-disorders program. The administration is typically performed in a hospital inpatient unit (planned short admission) or in a hospital outpatient infusion suite under extended observation. Office-based (POS 11), ambulatory infusion center (POS 49), and home infusion administration is not appropriate given the high-cost product, infusion-reaction risk, and post-infusion hepatic monitoring requirements.

SettingPOSClaim formEligible?
HTC-affiliated hospital inpatient (planned admission)21UB-04 / 837IYes — primary setting at many HTCs; high-cost drug typically packaged into the DRG with outlier/NTAP payment
HTC hospital outpatient (on-campus, extended observation)22UB-04 / 837IYes — OPPS pass-through historically applied; verify current Addendum B
HTC hospital outpatient (off-campus PBD)19UB-04 / 837IYes, if the HTC is certified and has appropriate post-infusion monitoring infrastructure
Standalone HTC outpatient clinic (hospital-affiliated)22 / 19UB-04 / 837IOnly if hospital-affiliated, certified, with on-site emergency capacity
Physician office11n/aNo — not appropriate for multi-million-dollar gene therapy with hepatic monitoring requirement
Ambulatory infusion suite (AIC)49n/aNo — HTC restriction
Patient home12n/aNo — despite the fact that conventional FIX replacement is routinely self-administered at home, Hemgenix gene therapy is HTC-only
HTC certification: CSL Behring maintains a list of certified Hemgenix treatment centers (most are federally-funded HTCs and large academic medical centers with hemophilia programs). Centers must demonstrate AAV gene-therapy handling capacity, multi-disciplinary bleeding-disorders team (hematology, GI / hepatology, infusion nursing, social work, genetics), and post-infusion monitoring infrastructure (weekly LFTs × 3 months minimum). New centers undergo a credentialing process before they can receive patient-specific kits. Refer to the National HTC Network directory at the National Bleeding Disorders Foundation for the regional HTC list.
Weekly outpatient monitoring follow-up: The 12 weeks of post-infusion LFT monitoring is a substantial outpatient workload. Each weekly visit bills standard outpatient labs (hepatic function panel 80076 or CMP 80053, CBC 85025, FIX activity assay at protocol-defined timepoints) plus an E/M for the hematology check. Coordinate billing with the HTC outpatient clinic.

Claim form field mapping CSL Behring 2026

Hemgenix claims are typically submitted on UB-04 (837I) by the certified HTC.

InformationUB-04 fieldNotes
NPI (facility / rendering)FL 56 / FL 76–79Certified HTC and attending hematology physician
HCPCS J1411 + revenue code 0636FL 42 (rev code) + FL 44 (HCPCS)Revenue code 0636 = "Drugs requiring detailed coding"; some payers map to 0250 or 0260
Units (per therapeutic dose)FL 461 unit per the per-therapeutic-dose J-code definition (do NOT bill per vial or per vector genome)
CPT 96365 + revenue code 0260FL 42 (rev code) + FL 44 (CPT)Revenue code 0260 = "General classification — IV therapy"
NDC qualifier + 11-digit NDC + UoM + qtyFL 43 / shaded lineN4 + 63833-0876-01 + ML + total administered volume; include kit lot number in claim notes per payer
ICD-10FL 67 + 67A–QD67 primary; Z79.899, Z87.2, Z83.2 as documented; M25.4 series if recent joint bleed
PA numberFL 63Required by all payers (commercial & Medicaid); document anti-AAV5 NAb titer, FIX activity baseline, prior FIX prophylaxis history, bleeding episode history, age ≥ 18, hepatitis serology, Bethesda assay (FIX inhibitor negative)
Outcomes-based contract identifierFL 80 / attachmentIf applicable per payer; flag the claim for milestone tracking (5-year FIX activity / ABR horizon)
DRG / NTAP (inpatient)FL 71If inpatient, hospital coding routes to the assigned DRG per current grouper; New Technology Add-on Payment may apply depending on year
Modifier (if any)FL 44 modifier lineJZ optional per MAC; contract-specific modifier per outcomes agreement; 340B JG/TB if applicable
Document the workflow timeline. Beyond the claim, the patient record must show: anti-AAV5 NAb titer report (< 1:678) with date, FIX activity assay result, FIX inhibitor (Bethesda) negative result, hepatitis B / C / HIV serology, prior FIX prophylaxis history (product, dose, duration, ABR), age (DOB and infusion date confirming ≥ 18), weight at infusion, baseline LFT/CBC/PT, and the post-infusion weekly monitoring schedule. This documentation supports the PA and the manufacturer's outcomes-based contract milestone verification at 5+ years.
Phase 3 Get paid Anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678 + hemophilia B (D67) + age ≥18 + documented FIX prophylaxis or bleed history are the gating PA criteria. Outcomes-based contracting is the dominant commercial framework.

Payer policy snapshot Reviewed May 2026

Universal PA. Anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678, hemophilia B (D67) with FIX activity assay, age ≥18, documented prior FIX prophylaxis history OR life-threatening/repeated bleeding episodes, hepatitis B/C/HIV serology, FIX inhibitor negative, and HTC certification are the universal documentation requirements.

PayerPA?Key documentation requirementsOutcomes-based contract?
UnitedHealthcare
Gene Therapy Medical Policy
Yes Age ≥ 18; hemophilia B with FIX activity ≤ 2 IU/dL (severe) or moderate with severe bleeding phenotype; documented FIX prophylaxis history or life-threatening/repeated bleeding; anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678; hepatitis B/C/HIV serology; FIX inhibitor negative (Bethesda); certified HTC; hematology consult; baseline LFTs Yes (Optum gene therapy benefit)
Aetna
CPB Etranacogene Dezaparvovec
Yes FDA-label-aligned; FIX deficiency confirmation; anti-AAV5 NAb; site-of-care restriction; hematology specialty review Yes (case-by-case)
BCBS plans
Vary by plan
Yes Generally aligned with FDA label and MASAC recommendations (NBDF Medical and Scientific Advisory Council); some Blues plans have specific gene-therapy benefit pools Common at large plans
Cigna / Evernorth Yes FDA-label-aligned; HTC; comprehensive documentation packet Yes (Accredo specialty channel)
State Medicaid (most states) Yes State-specific; commonly aligned with FDA label; SRA + outcomes-based agreement common; CMS Cell and Gene Therapy (CGT) Access Model multi-state arrangement launched 2025 for Hemgenix Yes (state-specific; CMS CGT model)
Medicare Part B Per MAC LCD / contractor pricing FDA-label-aligned; HTC; hematology consult; baseline LFTs / serology; outcomes contract if available Limited (Medicare CMM pilot pathways)

Outcomes-based contracts — how they work for billers

CSL Behring offers outcomes-based agreements (OBAs) with most major commercial payers and a growing list of state Medicaid programs. The typical structure: full WAC (~$3.5M) is paid at administration; if specified clinical milestones are not met over a 5-year horizon, a percentage of the WAC is refunded by the manufacturer to the payer. Milestones commonly include sustained FIX activity threshold (e.g., > 5 IU/dL or > 12 IU/dL at multiple timepoints), annualized bleed rate (ABR) reduction, and elimination or reduction of FIX product utilization. The provider's role: document FIX activity (chromogenic and one-stage assays), bleed events, and FIX product use at standardized intervals (3, 6, 12, 24, 36, 60 months post-infusion). CSL Behring patient support coordinates this longitudinally. The rebate/refund flow is payer-side and does not affect the provider's payment at administration.

CMS Cell and Gene Therapy (CGT) Access Model

In January 2025, CMS launched the Cell and Gene Therapy Access Model, a voluntary multi-state Medicaid arrangement designed specifically for high-cost one-time gene therapies starting with sickle cell disease and expanding to hemophilia. CSL Behring and participating states negotiate uniform outcomes-based pricing through CMS as a facilitator. Verify your state's participation status and the impact on Hemgenix Medicaid PA / claim workflow with your state Medicaid agency.

Step therapy & prior FIX therapy

Hemgenix's FDA label explicitly requires documentation of current FIX prophylaxis OR life-threatening hemorrhage OR repeated serious spontaneous bleeding episodes. In practice, this means nearly every Hemgenix candidate has been on prophylactic FIX (IDELVION, Alprolix, BeneFIX, Rebinyn, or IXINITY) before gene therapy. Document the FIX product history (manufacturer, dose, schedule, duration, ABR on FIX prophylaxis) in the PA packet as direct evidence the label criterion is met.

Medicare / Medicaid reimbursement CMS Q2 2026 (NOC / invoice)

Hemgenix is not currently priced via the standard quarterly ASP file (NOC / invoice pathway). For inpatient HOPD administration, J1411 may be packaged into the DRG with NTAP or outlier payment; for outpatient, OPPS pass-through historically applied.

J1411 payment framework

One-time per-therapeutic-dose gene therapy · payment driven by invoice / NOC and payer-specific outcomes contracts

Per-treatment WAC
~$3.5M
manufacturer WAC, one-time
5-year outcomes window
60 months
FIX activity / ABR / FIX product use milestones
CMS CGT model
Active
multi-state Medicaid pricing (2025+)
ASP does not apply in the conventional sense. Because Hemgenix is a one-time per-therapeutic-dose gene therapy with a single manufacturer (CSL Behring) and a unique pricing structure (outcomes-based contracts, low patient volume, no ongoing volume-weighted utilization), CMS has not priced J1411 via the quarterly ASP file. Verify the current quarter's MEDICARE_ASP entry (J1411 typically will not appear in our ASP layer for that reason). Many state Medicaid programs and commercial plans use the manufacturer WAC or a negotiated outcomes-based contract price as the payment basis.
OPPS Addendum B status: When Hemgenix was first approved (November 2022), J1411 received OPPS pass-through status (typically status indicator G). Pass-through status is time-limited (2–3 years), so the early pass-through window has been expiring or transitioning. For the current calendar year, verify the J1411 status indicator in OPPS Addendum B. If packaged (status N), the HOPD absorbs drug cost in the APC rate — not tenable for a $3.5M product, so most HTCs route inpatient or negotiate stop-loss / outcomes-based coverage.

Inpatient (Medicare / Medicaid)

When Hemgenix is administered inpatient, the drug cost is bundled into the assigned DRG. Without a high-cost outlier or New Technology Add-On Payment (NTAP), this is not financially viable for the hospital. Most state Medicaid programs and Medicare contractors have negotiated supplemental rebate agreements (SRAs) and outcomes-based agreements specifically to handle Hemgenix cash flow. The CMS Cell and Gene Therapy (CGT) Access Model provides a multi-state Medicaid framework. Confirm the state Medicaid or Medicare contractor policy and the hospital's contract before scheduling the inpatient admission.

Outpatient (Medicare / Medicaid)

For outpatient HOPD administration, J1411 is billed with the appropriate revenue code (0636 or 0260 per payer), CPT 96365 admin, and supporting documentation. OPPS pass-through (if active) pays the drug at ASP+6% / invoice; if pass-through has expired, packaging into the APC bundle is generally not viable and outpatient billing depends on payer-specific contractor pricing.

Coverage

No NCD specific to Hemgenix or to AAV-based gene therapies generally. Coverage falls under MAC LCDs and payer-specific medical / pharmacy benefit policies. All MACs and major commercial payers cover J1411 for FDA-approved on-label indications with documented hemophilia B (D67), age ≥ 18, anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678, FIX inhibitor negative, hepatitis B/C/HIV serology, and the required pre-/post-infusion monitoring framework.

Code history

  • J1411 — "Injection, etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb, per therapeutic dose"; effective dates vary by CMS HCPCS quarterly file (introduced after the November 2022 FDA approval). Verify the current descriptor and effective date.
  • C9399 — transitional pass-through C-code historically used at initial launch (2022–2023); retired when J1411 became permanent.
  • J3490 — unclassified drug code; historically used at launch for some payers; not appropriate once J1411 is permanent.
  • J3590 — unclassified biologic code; legacy alternative to J3490 for biologics; not appropriate once J1411 is permanent.

Patient assistance — CSL Behring patient support CSL Behring verified May 2026

  • CSL Behring Hemgenix patient support: CSL Behring main line 1-800-676-4266 — benefits investigation, prior authorization assistance, anti-AAV5 NAb testing logistics, certified HTC referral, travel and lodging support, FIX prophylaxis bridging coordination, post-infusion monitoring scheduling, outcomes-based contract operational support
  • CSL Behring Patient Assistance Foundation: 501(c)(3) charitable foundation providing free product for uninsured / underinsured patients meeting income requirements; Hemgenix access pathway is highly individualized given the WAC scale
  • National Bleeding Disorders Foundation (NBDF, formerly NHF): bleeding.org — federally-funded HTC directory, MASAC clinical guidelines (Medical and Scientific Advisory Council) including the MASAC document on gene therapy in hemophilia, peer/patient support, emergency financial assistance for travel and lodging
  • Hemophilia Federation of America (HFA): hemophiliafed.org — patient advocacy, financial assistance programs, helping hands grants for emergency needs, mentorship and educational resources for adults considering gene therapy
  • Foundations: PAN Foundation (rare/genetic disease funds where applicable), HealthWell Foundation, Patient Advocate Foundation — primarily supplemental for non-drug costs (travel, lodging, monitoring labs); verify open hemophilia / rare-disease funds quarterly
  • Travel & lodging: CSL Behring patient support coordinates with Healthcare Hospitality Network, Ronald McDonald House (rare for adult patients), and Hope Lodge for patients traveling to certified Hemgenix HTCs (regional access varies)
Need to model what a specific patient will actually pay across the one-time infusion plus 12 weeks of post-infusion monitoring after copay assistance, deductible, coinsurance, and OOP max? Run a CareCost Estimate — J1411 pre-loaded with the post-infusion monitoring workflow.
Phase 4 Fix problems Missing anti-AAV5 NAb documentation, pediatric attempted (adults only), missing prior FIX prophylaxis or bleed history, hepatic monitoring gaps, and missing kit lot documentation are the top denial drivers.

Safety & FDA-label monitoring FDA label warnings & precautions

Warnings & Precautions (no boxed warning at FDA approval). Hemgenix's prescribing information includes warnings for hepatotoxicity (transaminase elevations), infusion reactions, immune-mediated response to the vector, and a theoretical risk of malignancy related to AAV vector integration. Document discussion of these warnings in the consent. Long-term monitoring (up to 15 years) for malignancy and sustained FIX activity is recommended.

FDA-label warnings & precautions

  • Hepatotoxicity / transaminase elevations: ALT elevations occur in approximately 17% of patients in the HOPE-B trial. Monitor ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase, and total bilirubin at baseline (within 2 weeks pre-infusion) and weekly for at least 3 months post-infusion. If ALT rises > 2× baseline or above ULN, initiate reactive oral corticosteroid taper (commonly prednisone 60 mg/day with gradual taper over 8–12 weeks); coordinate with HTC hepatology consult.
  • Infusion reactions: can occur during or immediately after the infusion. Monitor vital signs during and for at least 3 hours post-infusion in HTC setting; have emergency response capability on standby. Pre-medication is not routinely required but may be considered per HTC protocol.
  • Immune-mediated response / immunogenicity: patients seroconvert (develop anti-AAV5 antibodies) after Hemgenix; re-dosing is not feasible. The label warns of immune-mediated response that can reduce FIX expression.
  • Theoretical risk of malignancy (AAV vector integration): the long-term safety monitoring plan includes annual or biannual follow-up for hepatic adverse events including hepatocellular carcinoma for up to 15 years; coordinate with HTC long-term registry.
  • Active hepatitis B / C / HIV: patients with detectable hepatitis B or C viral load or uncontrolled HIV are excluded; the AAV5 vector is hepatotropic and uncontrolled hepatic infection increases risk. Document negative serology pre-infusion.
  • Anti-AAV5 NAb seropositivity: patients with anti-AAV5 NAb titer ≥ 1:678 are excluded per HOPE-B; lower titers may reduce vector transduction but are not absolutely excluded — document shared decision-making.
  • Embryo-fetal toxicity: Hemgenix is not indicated in pregnant patients; reproductive counseling for adults of reproductive age.

Outcomes-based milestone tracking

Beyond the FDA-label safety monitoring, the manufacturer's outcomes-based contract typically requires documentation of FIX activity (chromogenic and one-stage assays), annualized bleed rate (ABR), and FIX product utilization at 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months post-infusion. CSL Behring patient support coordinates this longitudinal data collection in cooperation with the certified HTC. Long-term safety registries (up to 15 years) capture malignancy and durability data per FDA post-marketing commitments.

Common denials & how to fix them

Denial reasonCommon causeFix
Anti-AAV5 NAb titer not documented or ≥ 1:678Pre-treatment NAb titer test result missing from PA packet, expired, or above the 1:678 thresholdOrder anti-AAV5 NAb titer through CSL Behring patient support–coordinated reference lab; result must be < 1:678 and current within 2–4 weeks of infusion date. This is the #1 cause of Hemgenix denial.
Pediatric attempted (adults only)PA submitted for patient < 18 yearsHemgenix is not FDA-approved for patients < 18 yr. Continue pediatric FIX prophylaxis (IDELVION, Alprolix, BeneFIX, etc.). #2 cause of denial.
No prior FIX prophylaxis OR documented bleed historyPA submitted without evidence of current FIX prophylaxis or current/historical life-threatening hemorrhage or repeated serious spontaneous bleeding episodes per labelSubmit FIX prophylaxis history (product, dose, schedule, duration, ABR) OR documented bleeding episodes from chart / HTC records. #3 cause of denial.
Hepatic function monitoring plan missingPA packet missing the 3-month post-infusion weekly LFT (ALT, AST, ALP, total bili) scheduleDocument the weekly × 3 months LFT monitoring schedule + reactive corticosteroid taper plan if ALT > 2× baseline or > ULN. #4 cause of denial.
Kit lot / NDC documentation incompleteClaim missing 11-digit NDC, kit lot number, or total administered volumeResubmit with N4 + 63833-0876-01 + ML + total volume; include kit lot number in claim notes. Document on the dose-build record. #5 cause of denial.
FIX inhibitor positive (Bethesda assay)FIX inhibitor present (rare in hemophilia B <5%)Hemgenix is contraindicated; transition to bypass therapy or Alhemo (J7173) for inhibitor prophylaxis.
Active hepatitis B / C or uncontrolled HIVHepatitis B or C viral load detectable; HIV with detectable viral loadTreat hepatitis to undetectable viral load (HCV: DAAs; HBV: nucleotide/nucleoside analogues); achieve HIV viral suppression on ART; re-screen and re-submit PA.
Site of care not certified HTCAdministering site is not on CSL Behring's certified Hemgenix HTC listRe-route the patient to a certified HTC; CSL Behring patient support maintains the directory. Office-based, AIC, and home administration is not eligible.
Wrong HCPCS (J3490 / J3590 / C9399)Claim submitted under unclassified or retired transitional codeResubmit under J1411. J3490 / J3590 are reserved for unclassified drugs / biologics; C9399 was a transitional pass-through C-code retired when J1411 became permanent.
Wrong admin CPT (96413 chemo, 79101 radiopharm, 96374 push)Coder applied wrong admin family (e.g., treating gene therapy like FIX replacement push)Resubmit with CPT 96365 (therapeutic IV, initial 60 min). Hemgenix is a therapeutic gene therapy IV — not chemo, not radiopharm, not push (unlike conventional FIX replacement which IS pushed).
Outcomes-based contract flag missingClaim not linked to OBA milestone-tracking datasetApply the payer's outcomes-based contract identifier per the contract operational guide; coordinate with CSL Behring patient support. Without the OBA flag, the manufacturer rebate flow may break.

Frequently asked questions

Is Hemgenix a one-time treatment?

Yes. Hemgenix is administered as a single one-time IV infusion. There is no repeat or maintenance dose. The FIX-Padua transgene delivered by the AAV5 vector is intended to drive endogenous factor IX production in hepatocytes for years post-infusion (the HOPE-B trial demonstrated durable FIX activity at multiple years of follow-up). Re-dosing is not supported by the label and is generally not feasible because patients seroconvert (develop high-titer anti-AAV5 antibodies) after the first administration.

What is the HCPCS code for Hemgenix?

Hemgenix is billed under HCPCS J1411 — "Injection, etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb, per therapeutic dose." This is a single-dose, per-therapeutic-dose J-code (not per-mg or per-vector-genome). Each Hemgenix administration is billed as J1411 × 1 unit. Do not use J3490 / J3590 unclassified or C9399 transitional pass-through (all retired/legacy).

Why is Hemgenix the world's most expensive drug?

At ~$3.5M list price, Hemgenix has held the title of world's most expensive drug since its November 2022 launch, surpassing Zolgensma's ~$2.125M. The pricing reflects: (1) one-time replacement of years of FIX prophylaxis spend ($300K–$900K/year for severe hemophilia B), (2) very small eligible patient population (hemophilia B prevalence ~1 in 25,000 male births; only a fraction are AAV5-NAb-eligible adults), (3) complex manufacturing and patient-specific kit-build, and (4) the outcomes-based contracting framework that defers payment risk to the manufacturer if FIX activity / ABR milestones are not met.

What is the anti-AAV5 NAb threshold?

Per the HOPE-B pivotal trial exclusion criteria, patients with anti-AAV5 neutralizing antibody (NAb) titer ≥ 1:678 were excluded. The FDA label reflects this gate. Approximately 21% of hemophilia B patients screened had detectable anti-AAV5 antibodies. Missing or absent NAb documentation is the #1 cause of Hemgenix PA denial. Coordinate testing through CSL Behring patient support 4 weeks ahead of the planned infusion.

How does outcomes-based contracting work for Hemgenix billers?

CSL Behring offers outcomes-based agreements (OBAs) to payers. Full WAC is paid at administration; if specified clinical milestones (sustained FIX activity, ABR reduction, FIX product use reduction) are not met over a 5-year horizon, a percentage of WAC is refunded by the manufacturer to the payer. The provider organization is not party to the rebate flow but documents FIX activity (chromogenic and one-stage), bleeding events, and FIX product use at 3, 6, 12, 24, 36, and 60 months post-infusion. CSL Behring patient support coordinates this longitudinal data collection.

How is Hemgenix administration paid for given the $3.5M price tag?

Through payer contracts and outcomes-based agreements, not patient out-of-pocket. Most adult patients are commercial-payer or Medicare-eligible; severe hemophilia B patients often qualify for Medicare under disability. State Medicaid programs increasingly access Hemgenix through the CMS Cell and Gene Therapy Access Model (multi-state Medicaid framework launched 2025). Commercial payers use a combination of standard medical benefit + stop-loss reinsurance + outcomes-based contracts + benefit-pool carve-outs. Patient OOP exposure is typically capped at the plan's OOP maximum (varies by plan), not the WAC. CSL Behring patient support and copay-assistance foundations help bridge any residual exposure.

Inpatient billing vs outpatient billing — which is right?

Both pathways are used. Many HTCs bill inpatient under a planned short admission (DRG with NTAP / outlier payment). Other HTCs bill outpatient with extended observation under OPPS pass-through (if active for the calendar year). The choice is driven by payer contract, hospital revenue cycle policy, and clinical risk tolerance. Confirm with the hospital's revenue cycle team and the payer before scheduling.

Is corticosteroid prophylaxis required?

Reactive, not routine prophylactic. Unlike Zolgensma (mandatory pre-infusion oral prednisolone for SMA), the Hemgenix label does not require routine prophylactic corticosteroids. However, transaminase elevations (~17% in HOPE-B) typically trigger a reactive 8–12-week tapering oral prednisone course (commonly 60 mg/day) when ALT rises > 2× baseline or > ULN. Document the reactive plan in the PA packet and chart at every weekly monitoring visit.

What liver toxicity monitoring is required?

Per FDA label: ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase, and total bilirubin at baseline (within 2 weeks pre-infusion) and weekly for at least 3 months post-infusion. Concurrent FIX activity assay at protocol-defined timepoints (typically week 3 and per HTC protocol thereafter). Document the monitoring schedule in the PA packet and chart at every visit. Hepatitis B / C / HIV serology must be negative pre-infusion.

How do the National Bleeding Disorders Foundation and HFA support patients?

The National Bleeding Disorders Foundation (NBDF, bleeding.org; formerly NHF) and Hemophilia Federation of America (HFA, hemophiliafed.org) do not directly pay for Hemgenix drug cost (that is the payer / Medicare / Medicaid / CSL Behring path). They provide: federally-funded HTC directory, MASAC clinical guidelines (NBDF), helping hands financial assistance (HFA), peer/patient support, and emergency travel/lodging assistance. Refer adults considering gene therapy to NBDF and HFA early in the PA process.

Can a patient on IDELVION switch to Hemgenix?

Yes — Hemgenix's label explicitly covers patients on FIX prophylaxis. Switching is gated by anti-AAV5 NAb < 1:678, age ≥ 18, hemophilia B severity, hepatic and serology clearance, and FIX inhibitor negative. After Hemgenix, the FIX prophylaxis is typically discontinued once endogenous FIX activity reaches a sustainable threshold (commonly > 5 IU/dL); some HTCs continue FIX prophylaxis as a safety bridge for 1–3 months. Document the bridging plan in the PA packet.

Hemgenix vs Hemlibra vs Alhemo — which is which?

Three different non-FIX-replacement bleeding-disorder therapies with very different roles. Hemgenix (this page, J1411) is one-time AAV5 gene therapy for adult hemophilia B (FIX deficiency). Hemlibra (J7170) is a bispecific FVIIIa mimetic for hemophilia A prophylaxis (factor VIII deficiency), given subcutaneously weekly to monthly indefinitely. Alhemo (J7173) is an anti-TFPI mAb for prophylaxis in hemophilia A or B with inhibitors. They are not interchangeable — different mechanisms, different patient populations, different J-codes, completely different schedules.

Reference Sources & methodology Every claim on this page is sourced. Methodology and review history below.

Source documents

  1. DailyMed — HEMGENIX (etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb) current FDA label
    Current FDA-approved label (BLA 125772, rev April 2026; SETID 35b2db65-4c6c-4173-ab56-b2bca69193bd) including warnings & precautions for hepatotoxicity, infusion reactions, immune-mediated response, theoretical malignancy risk, dosing, AAV5 NAb data, monitoring schedule, NDC, package insert
  2. FDA Drugs@FDA — HEMGENIX (BLA 125772)
    FDA approval history, supplements, and current prescribing information for etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb (originally approved November 22, 2022)
  3. CSL Behring — Hemgenix product page
    Manufacturer hub: benefits investigation, PA assistance, anti-AAV5 NAb testing logistics, certified HTC directory, outcomes-based contract operations
  4. CMS — Medicare Part B Drug ASP Pricing File
    Quarterly ASP file; J1411 historically priced via NOC / invoice rather than via ASP file (verify quarterly)
  5. CMS — OPPS Addendum A / Addendum B
    Hospital outpatient status indicators; check J1411 status quarterly (pass-through vs packaged)
  6. CMS — Cell and Gene Therapy (CGT) Access Model
    Multi-state Medicaid framework for high-cost gene therapies; launched January 2025, includes hemophilia
  7. National Bleeding Disorders Foundation (NBDF, formerly NHF)
    Federally-funded HTC directory, MASAC clinical guidelines (including MASAC document on gene therapy in hemophilia), peer/patient support
  8. Hemophilia Federation of America (HFA)
    Patient advocacy, helping hands grants for emergency needs, mentorship for adults considering gene therapy
  9. Pipe et al., NEJM 2023 — HOPE-B pivotal trial of etranacogene dezaparvovec
    Phase 3 single-arm trial; basis for FDA approval; anti-AAV5 NAb gate < 1:678 established here
  10. UnitedHealthcare — Hemgenix Medical Drug Policy
  11. Aetna CPB — Etranacogene Dezaparvovec
  12. FDA National Drug Code Directory
  13. CMS — JW/JZ modifier policy (CR 12056, eff. July 2023)

About this page

We maintain this page as a living reference. Medicare ASP pricing is bound to our underlying CareCost data layer and refreshes automatically when CMS publishes new quarterly files. Coding and policy content is reviewed at least quarterly and updated whenever a source document changes.

Found an error? Email hello@carecostestimate.com.

Refresh cadence

ElementCadenceHow it's refreshed
Medicare ASP / OPPS status indicatorQuarterlyAuto-bound to CareCost ASP layer; OPPS Addendum B reviewed each calendar quarter. J1411 historically priced via NOC / invoice.
Payer policies (UHC, Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, state Medicaid, CMS CGT model)Semi-annualManual review against published payer policy documents; outcomes-based contract terms reviewed annually with CSL Behring patient support.
HCPCS / CPT / modifier rulesAnnualReviewed against CMS HCPCS quarterly files and AMA CPT releases.
NDC, dosing, FDA label, warnings & precautions, monitoring scheduleEvent-drivenTied to manufacturer document version + FDA label revision date.

Reviewer

SME-audited 2026-05-22 — corrections applied. Page audited against primary sources (DailyMed current label SETID 35b2db65-4c6c-4173-ab56-b2bca69193bd, rev April 2026; FDA Drugs@FDA; HOPE-B NEJM 2023). Corrections: BLA number updated from 125740 to 125772 (the correct BLA for etranacogene dezaparvovec-drlb); AAV5 NAb gate framing clarified (label does not set a numerical exclusion cutoff; 1:678 reflects HOPE-B upper response limit operationalized by payers); FDA label source link updated to current DailyMed entry. No boxed warning at current label revision (April 2026).

Change log

  • — SME audit pass: BLA corrected (125740 → 125772), label revision date verified (April 2026), DailyMed SETID added to source list, AAV5 NAb pre-treatment gate language clarified to distinguish FDA label content from HOPE-B operational threshold. No new boxed warnings; warnings & precautions unchanged.
  • — Initial publication. ASP data: Q2 2026 (J1411 priced via NOC / invoice; not in standard ASP layer). Second gene therapy page in the CareCost catalog (after Zolgensma). Manufacturer source: CSL Behring 2026. Comparison vs FIX replacement (IDELVION, IXINITY, Alprolix, Rebinyn, BeneFIX) and adjacent non-factor therapies (Hemlibra, Alhemo). HOPE-B pivotal trial data referenced for anti-AAV5 NAb gate (< 1:678) and transaminase elevation frequency (~17%).

Methodology

Every claim on this page is sourced inline. Pricing reflects the current CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File and the OPPS Addendum B status indicator (where applicable; J1411 is commonly priced via NOC / invoice). Payer policies are read directly from each payer's published medical/pharmacy policy documents. Indication list, dosing, anti-AAV5 NAb threshold, corticosteroid plan, and monitoring schedule are verified against the current FDA label revision. Outcomes-based contracting context is verified against CSL Behring patient support operational guidance and the CMS Cell and Gene Therapy Access Model framework. We do not paraphrase from billing-software vendor blogs.

One-time gene therapy. One billing event. Five years of FIX activity milestone tracking.

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