Reviewed May 23, 2026

UnitedHealthcare specialty drug prior authorization — care coordinator playbook

Last reviewed: May 23, 2026 · Sources: UHCProvider.com, OptumRx Provider Portal, UHC Medical Policy Bulletins, Optum Specialty Pharmacy · Methodology

Pending SME review. This playbook is built from publicly available UnitedHealthcare and OptumRx policy documents (paraphrased, never copy-pasted). PA criteria, fax numbers, and portal URLs change frequently. Always verify portals and fax numbers on UHCProvider.com and OptumRx’s provider portal before submission. Fax numbers listed below are illustrative of current published values; confirm at the point of submission.
Quick Answer

How does UnitedHealthcare specialty drug PA work?

UHC routes specialty drug PA through three distinct entry points: UHCProvider.com for medical-benefit (buy-and-bill) drugs administered at site of service, OptumRx for pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs, and the Optum Specialty Pharmacy provider portal for white-bagged specialty referrals. Picking the wrong portal is the single most common cause of stalled UHC PAs. Standard commercial TAT is 14 calendar days; 72 hours for urgent. UHC has the most aggressive biosimilar mandate and site-of-care steerage policy among the four major commercial payers in 2026.

End-to-end PA workflow

UHC specialty drug prior authorization is a four-phase workflow for the PCC: benefits investigation through the UHCProvider.com Eligibility and Benefits module, hub program enrollment for benefits investigation support and copay or bridge-supply assistance, PA submission through the correct portal (medical vs pharmacy vs specialty pharmacy referral), and reauth tracking. Where billers most often trip is the OptumRx vs Optum Specialty Pharmacy distinction, the site-of-care steerage gate for HOPD administration, and missing biosimilar step-through documentation on first-line PAs.

1Benefits investigation

UHCProvider.com Eligibility & Benefits. Confirm medical vs pharmacy benefit channel, deductible, OOP max, accumulator status, PA flag, site-of-care flag, and biosimilar mandate flag.

2Hub enrollment

Enroll patient in manufacturer hub. Determine commercial vs government coverage (controls copay assistance eligibility). Initiate free-goods bridge if PA window is long.

3PA submission

Choose portal: UHCProvider.com for medical-benefit; OptumRx (CoverMyMeds or professionals.optumrx.com) for pharmacy-benefit; Optum Specialty referral for white-bag dispensing.

4Reauth tracking

Calendar 45-60 days pre-expiration. 6 months for most oncology; 12 months for autoimmune biologics; as-needed for episodic agents.

Where the UHC workflow breaks

Three failure patterns drive the bulk of stalled UHC specialty PAs:

  1. Wrong portal. A medical-benefit drug submitted to OptumRx (or a pharmacy-benefit drug submitted to UHCProvider.com PAAN) gets bounced silently or routed into a queue with a different criteria set, costing days.
  2. Missing biosimilar step-through. UHC's 2024-2026 biosimilar policy requires documented intolerance, immunogenicity, or failure on the preferred biosimilar before approving the reference product for bevacizumab, infliximab, rituximab, trastuzumab, pegfilgrastim, and (most recently) adalimumab via the Cordavis arrangement.
  3. Site-of-care HOPD denial. The Outpatient Hospital Site of Care Review program denies HOPD administration of many high-cost specialty biologics unless the medical necessity for HOPD is documented (clinical instability, prior infusion reaction, specific monitoring requirements). A site-of-care exception form is the documented pathway for override.
PBM integration: UHC's pharmacy benefit is administered by OptumRx — a wholly-owned subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group / Optum. Optum Specialty Pharmacy is a separate operating entity (also under the Optum umbrella) that dispenses specialty drugs and operates its own provider portal and referral workflow. OptumRx handles criteria review; Optum Specialty Pharmacy handles dispensing. They share an executive parent but do not share a portal or a PA workflow. PCCs who treat “Optum” as one entity miss steps.

Provider portals

UHC's specialty drug ecosystem spans at least four distinct provider-facing portals, and the choice of portal is determined by the benefit channel and the dispensing model. Submitting to the wrong portal is the most common operational failure on UHC PAs.

Portal Use it for URL
UHCProvider.com Eligibility and benefits, medical-benefit Prior Authorization and Notification (PAAN), claim status, EOB lookup, appeals submission. uhcprovider.com
OptumRx Provider Portal Pharmacy-benefit specialty drug PA submission, formulary lookup, OptumRx Specialty Drug List management. professionals.optumrx.com
Optum Specialty Pharmacy provider portal Specialty Rx referral for drugs dispensed by Optum Specialty, status tracking, refill orders, white-bag fulfillment coordination. optumspecialtyrx.com
CoverMyMeds Universal PA submission accepted by OptumRx for many pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs. Often the fastest path for prescribers who already have a CoverMyMeds account. covermymeds.com
Surest (formerly Bind) For UHC members on a Surest plan, PA and benefits go through the Surest provider portal — not UHCProvider.com. Surest is a UHC product but operates a separate stack. surest.com/providers
Portal selection rule of thumb: If the drug is dispensed by Optum Specialty Pharmacy (white-bagged) under a pharmacy-benefit arrangement, initiate through the Optum Specialty referral portal — the PA review still occurs via OptumRx criteria but the referral pulls all the right docs. If the drug is buy-and-bill at the HOPD or office under the medical benefit, submit via UHCProvider.com PAAN. If the drug is a self-administered specialty injectable under the pharmacy benefit, submit via OptumRx (CoverMyMeds is often fastest).

PA fax numbers by drug class

Fax numbers change without notice. The numbers below are the published values as of the last review and are illustrative. UHC and OptumRx publish PA fax numbers on UHCProvider.com under the relevant medical policy or specialty drug PA form, and these change quarterly. Always verify the fax number on the current PA form before sending — a wrong fax number does not bounce, it disappears, and the patient’s clock is still running.
Drug class PA fax (illustrative) Notes
Oncology / chemotherapy biologics (OptumRx medical-benefit)1-888-697-8122Many UHC commercial onc biologic PAs route through OptumRx’s medical-benefit specialty review. NCCN pathway concurrence sometimes required for non-FDA-label indications.
Specialty autoimmune biologics (pharmacy benefit)1-800-527-0531Stelara, Skyrizi, Cosentyx, Taltz, Tremfya, Rinvoq, etc. Step-through documentation for anti-TNF preferred biosimilar required for most indications.
Specialty injectable / medical benefit (general)1-866-940-7328Catch-all for medical-benefit injectables not routed through OptumRx medical-benefit specialty. Confirm on the current PA form.
Ophthalmology / anti-VEGF1-866-940-7328Eylea, Vabysmo, Beovu. Off-label bevacizumab step-through may be required for some commercial plans and indications.
UHC Medicare Advantage Part B drug PA1-877-633-7748Separate review queue from commercial. Use the MA-specific PA form.
Appeals / reconsideration (commercial)1-866-654-6323Different from the PA submission line. Use the appeal form referenced in the denial letter.

The most reliable workflow is to download the drug-specific PA form fresh from UHCProvider.com each time, since the form itself prints the current submission fax at the top.

Peer-to-peer (P2P) review requests

Peer-to-peer review is UHC’s pre-appeal pathway for the prescribing physician to discuss a denied or pended PA with the reviewing medical director. P2P is usually faster than a written Level 1 appeal and can resolve denials based on missing or misinterpreted clinical context.

P2P request workflow

  1. Read the denial letter. The denial letter lists the P2P scheduling phone number and the window in which a P2P can be requested (commonly 5-10 business days from the denial date for pre-service denials). Verify the line of business — commercial, MA, and Community Plan each use different P2P queues.
  2. Call the P2P scheduling line. Have the member ID, denial reference number, prescribing physician name and direct callback number, and physician’s available windows over the next 3 business days. UHC will schedule a 15-minute call window (often 24-72 hours out).
  3. Confirm in writing. Document the scheduled time, the queue (commercial / MA / CP), the reviewer specialty if disclosed, and the reference number.
  4. Prep the prescriber. Hand off the documentation packet (below) at least 4 hours before the call so the prescriber walks in cold-prepared, not improvising.
  5. Document the call. Capture who from UHC participated (name and credential), the decision (approve, uphold, downgrade), reference number, and any commitments around resubmission with additional information.

Pre-call documentation checklist

Suggested prescriber talking points

30-second opener
“I’m Dr. [name], the prescribing physician for [patient initials], member ID [last four]. We’re here on a P2P for [drug] for [indication], denial reference [number], stated reason [reason]. I want to walk through three points: the indication, the prior therapy history, and why the alternative isn’t clinically appropriate for this patient.”
When the reviewer cites step therapy
“The patient has documented [intolerance / failure / contraindication] on [preferred drug] from [date] — specifically [AE / lab finding / clinical event]. Continuing on the preferred drug would [specific clinical risk]. The requested drug is the next-line option per [NCCN / guideline / compendia reference].”
When the reviewer cites biosimilar mandate
“The patient was stable on reference [drug] from [date] with documented response. Switching to the preferred biosimilar carries a documented risk of [immunogenicity / loss of response / known antibody concern] based on [trial / case series / clinical history]. The cost-equivalent biosimilar would not be expected to maintain the current response pattern.”
When the reviewer cites site-of-care policy
“HOPD administration is medically necessary for this patient because [specific clinical factor: prior Grade 3+ infusion reaction requiring intervention / hemodynamic instability / monitoring requirement not available at the alternative site of care]. The SUPREME Medical Necessity form supporting this is attached and documents [factor].”

Site-of-care policy

UHC’s Outpatient Hospital Site of Care Review program (sometimes called Site of Service or SoS) is the most aggressive site-of-care steerage program among the four major commercial payers in 2026. The program denies HOPD administration of designated high-cost specialty drugs in favor of office-based infusion centers, ambulatory infusion suites, or home infusion when the patient is clinically stable enough for those settings. The drug PA and the site-of-care PA are separate reviews on the same submission and either can fail independently.

Drug / classSteered toHOPD exception criteria (typical)
Infliximab (Remicade and biosimilars Inflectra, Renflexis, Avsola)Office-based or ambulatory infusionDocumented prior Grade 3+ infusion reaction; hemodynamic instability; concurrent comorbidity requiring HOPD monitoring.
Rituximab (Rituxan and biosimilars Truxima, Ruxience, Riabni)Office-based or ambulatory infusionFirst-cycle administration sometimes allowed at HOPD; subsequent cycles steered if first cycle was uneventful.
Ocrelizumab (Ocrevus)Office-based, ambulatory, or home infusionDocumented prior infusion reaction; geographic access constraint; complex comorbidity.
IVIG (intravenous immunoglobulin)Home infusion or ambulatory infusionDocumented prior reaction requiring HOPD-level intervention; cardiopulmonary instability; pediatric or geriatric monitoring need.
Vedolizumab (Entyvio IV)Office-based or ambulatorySC formulation may be steered preferentially over IV at any setting; document medical necessity for IV.
Burosumab (Crysvita)Office-based or home administrationPediatric administration considerations; specialty pharmacy delivery often required.

Site-of-care exception workflow

When HOPD administration is medically necessary, the exception pathway uses the UHC SUPREME Medical Necessity Form (or the current equivalent listed in the site-of-care medical policy). The form documents: the clinical reason HOPD is necessary (prior Grade 3+ infusion reaction with intervention, hemodynamic instability, concurrent comorbidity requiring HOPD-level monitoring, complex pediatric or geriatric situation), the failed or contraindicated alternative sites, the prescribing physician’s attestation, and the planned administration protocol. Submit through UHCProvider.com PAAN with the drug PA. Site-of-care exceptions are typically decided within the same TAT as the drug PA.

If site-of-care is denied but the drug PA is approved, the practice can still administer the drug — just not at the HOPD. Coordinate with the patient and the practice’s associated office-based or ambulatory infusion site to redirect administration without breaking the PA approval.

Biosimilar mandate policy

UHC has been the most aggressive of the four major commercial payers on biosimilar substitution since 2022, with policy expanding meaningfully in 2024 and 2025 around adalimumab via the Cordavis private-label arrangement. The policy applies to new starts almost universally and increasingly to continuing patients on reference product without documented clinical reason to stay on reference.

Reference productPreferred biosimilar(s) and HCPCSMandate type
Bevacizumab (Avastin, J9035) Mvasi (Q5107), Zirabev (Q5118), Alymsys (Q5126), Vegzelma (Q5129), Avzivi (newest) Mandatory step-through. Reference Avastin denied without documented intolerance / failure on a preferred biosimilar.
Trastuzumab (Herceptin, J9355) Ogivri (Q5114), Herzuma (Q5113), Ontruzant (Q5112), Trazimera (Q5116), Kanjinti (Q5117) Mandatory step-through. Multiple biosimilars in the preferred tier; specific preferred biosimilar(s) vary by plan year.
Rituximab (Rituxan, J9312) Truxima (Q5115), Ruxience (Q5119), Riabni (Q5123) Mandatory step-through across hematology, oncology, and rheumatology indications (with some rheumatology nuance on continuation).
Infliximab (Remicade, J1745) Inflectra (Q5103), Renflexis (Q5104), Avsola (Q5121) Mandatory step-through for new starts. Continuing patients on Remicade may be required to switch unless documented intolerance / immunogenicity.
Pegfilgrastim (Neulasta, J2505) Fulphila (Q5108), Udenyca (Q5111), Ziextenzo (Q5120), Nyvepria (Q5122), Stimufend, Fylnetra Mandatory step-through. Preferred biosimilar(s) vary by plan year.
Filgrastim (Neupogen, J1442) Zarxio (Q5101), Nivestym (Q5110), Releuko (Q5125) Mandatory step-through.
Adalimumab (Humira, J0135) Multiple biosimilars: Amjevita, Cyltezo, Hyrimoz, Hadlima, Yusimry, Idacio, Yuflyma, Simlandi, plus Cordavis private-label distribution Step-through added 2024+. Cordavis (CVS Health subsidiary, also leveraged by Aetna) handles select biosimilar distribution under exclusive arrangements with UHC.

Biosimilar exception criteria

UHC will consider an exception to the biosimilar mandate when the prescriber documents one of: a prior trial of the preferred biosimilar with documented intolerance or AE; documented immunogenicity (anti-drug antibody formation) on the biosimilar; loss of clinical response on the biosimilar after switch; or a clinical situation where switching from reference to biosimilar carries documented risk (rare immunogenicity concerns in stable maintenance patients with specific clinical histories). The exception submission should include the prior therapy timeline, the AE or immunogenicity documentation, and the prescriber’s clinical rationale. The Cordavis adalimumab arrangement has its own exception pathway documented in UHC’s 2024+ specialty drug policy bulletins.

Specialty pharmacy network

UHC’s in-network specialty pharmacy ecosystem is anchored by Optum Specialty Pharmacy, the captive specialty pharmacy under the Optum umbrella (sibling to OptumRx). For most pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs, Optum Specialty is the default and frequently the only in-network specialty pharmacy under the member’s plan. A limited set of additional specialty pharmacies remain in-network for specific drug classes or specific manufacturer-mandated dispensing arrangements (e.g., REMS-restricted distribution).

Specialty pharmacyStatusUsed for
Optum Specialty PharmacyIn-network (primary captive)Most pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs across all therapeutic areas. Default white-bag dispenser for medical-benefit drugs where UHC mandates white-bagging.
BriovaRxLegacy / consolidatedFolded into Optum Specialty; legacy patient files may still reference BriovaRx.
Manufacturer-mandated REMS pharmaciesIn-network for specific drugsFor REMS-restricted drugs (e.g., select hematology, immunomodulatory agents) the manufacturer’s designated specialty pharmacy network is in-network by default regardless of normal UHC steering.
Acaria Health, Senderra Specialty, BioPlus, etc.Variable / out-of-network on most plansGenerally out-of-network for UHC commercial absent a specific plan exception. Verify per plan.

White-bagging vs brown-bagging vs buy-and-bill

White-bagging (the specialty pharmacy dispenses the drug and ships it directly to the site of care, where it is administered) is UHC’s preferred fulfillment model for designated specialty drugs and is mandatory for drugs on the UHC Specialty Drug Mandate List. The dispensing fee, drug cost, and shipping route through the pharmacy benefit (OptumRx + Optum Specialty), not through the practice’s buy-and-bill billing.

Brown-bagging (the specialty pharmacy ships the drug to the patient, who brings it to the site of care) is generally not permitted by UHC for parenteral specialty drugs due to chain-of-custody and stability concerns.

Buy-and-bill (the practice purchases the drug, administers it, and bills the medical benefit for both the drug and the administration) remains the default for most chemotherapy and many oncology biologics administered in HOPD or community oncology settings, and for specialty drugs not on the white-bag mandate. Verify the current sourcing requirement for each drug before ordering inventory — a buy-and-bill claim for a drug on the white-bag mandate will be denied.

Step therapy requirements

UHC enforces step therapy across the major specialty therapeutic areas. The most-mandated step-throughs in 2026:

Indication / classRequired first-lineStep-up after documented failure / intolerance
Plaque psoriasis / psoriatic arthritis Adalimumab biosimilar (or other preferred anti-TNF) Stelara (ustekinumab), Cosentyx (secukinumab), Taltz (ixekizumab), Skyrizi (risankizumab), Tremfya (guselkumab), Bimzelx (bimekizumab)
Rheumatoid arthritis Methotrexate (oral DMARD), then adalimumab biosimilar or other preferred anti-TNF Orencia (abatacept), Actemra (tocilizumab) / Tofidence biosimilar, Kevzara (sarilumab), Rinvoq (upadacitinib), Olumiant (baricitinib)
IBD (Crohn’s / UC) Adalimumab biosimilar or infliximab biosimilar (anti-TNF preferred) Stelara, Entyvio (vedolizumab), Skyrizi, Rinvoq, Omvoh (mirikizumab); JAK inhibitors for UC after anti-TNF in adults
Wet AMD / DME / RVO (anti-VEGF) Bevacizumab (Avastin or biosimilar) off-label intravitreal use for some commercial plans / indications Eylea (aflibercept) / Eylea HD, Vabysmo (faricimab), Beovu (brolucizumab), Lucentis biosimilars
Multiple sclerosis (DMTs) Oral first-line: Tecfidera / Vumerity (dimethyl / diroximel fumarate) or Aubagio (teriflunomide) / Tolura biosimilar Higher-efficacy DMTs: Ocrevus (ocrelizumab), Briumvi (ublituximab), Kesimpta (ofatumumab), Tysabri (natalizumab), Lemtrada (alemtuzumab), Mavenclad (cladribine)
Atopic dermatitis Dupixent (dupilumab) for many plans; some require topical / oral failure first Adbry (tralokinumab), Ebglyss (lebrikizumab), Cibinqo (abrocitinib), Rinvoq
Severe asthma (biologics) ICS / LABA optimization documented Xolair (omalizumab), Nucala (mepolizumab), Fasenra (benralizumab), Dupixent, Tezspire (tezepelumab) — biomarker-driven selection

Step therapy exception language

UHC will consider a step therapy exception when the prescriber documents one of: intolerance (with specific AE description and date), contraindication (with ICD-10 code or clinical reason), failure (with specific clinical metric and treatment duration), or prior payer step-through grandfathering (the patient previously completed the step-through under a prior payer and continued response on the requested agent). Exception submissions should include the prior therapy timeline with dates, doses, durations, and documented outcome, plus the prescribing physician’s clinical rationale.

Common denials and how to fix them

Denial patternWhat it meansFix / appeal language
Site-of-care site-shift Drug PA approved but HOPD administration denied under the Outpatient Hospital Site of Care Review program. Practice can administer the drug but not at the HOPD. Submit the SUPREME Medical Necessity exception form with documented HOPD necessity (prior infusion reaction, hemodynamic instability, monitoring requirement, complex comorbidity). Or redirect to an in-network office-based or ambulatory infusion site.
Missing biosimilar step-through PA denied because the requested reference product is subject to a biosimilar mandate and step-through documentation was not provided. Resubmit with documented prior trial of the preferred biosimilar (dates, dose, duration), AE / intolerance / immunogenicity documentation, or clinical rationale for staying on reference (e.g., stable continuation patient with switching risk).
Out-of-network specialty pharmacy The drug was sourced through a specialty pharmacy not in UHC’s in-network specialty pharmacy panel; claim denied for OON SP. Redirect dispensing through Optum Specialty Pharmacy (the default in-network captive SP) or, for REMS-restricted drugs, through the manufacturer’s designated REMS specialty pharmacy. Resubmit through OptumRx PA referral.
PA missing for site-of-service Drug PA approved at office or ambulatory site but HOPD claim received without a separate site-of-service PA on file. Site-of-service PA is a separate review from the drug PA. Submit the site-of-care PA through UHCProvider.com PAAN with the SUPREME form and resubmit the claim.
Wrong portal used for submission Medical-benefit drug submitted to OptumRx (or pharmacy-benefit drug submitted to UHCProvider.com PAAN). Submission landed in the wrong queue with the wrong criteria set. Reroute to the correct portal. For buy-and-bill medical-benefit: UHCProvider.com PAAN. For pharmacy-benefit specialty: OptumRx (CoverMyMeds or professionals.optumrx.com). For Optum Specialty white-bag: Optum Specialty referral portal.
Step therapy not satisfied Requested agent denied because step-through on the preferred first-line was not documented. Resubmit with the prior therapy timeline (dates, doses, durations, outcomes), or submit a step therapy exception with intolerance / contraindication / failure / prior-payer-grandfathering documentation.
Diagnosis not supported by clinical documentation ICD-10 on the PA does not match the clinical note or lacks supporting labs / imaging. Resubmit with the most recent clinical note explicitly stating the diagnosis, plus supporting labs / imaging (e.g., HER2 IHC/FISH for HER2-targeted therapy, MRI for MS DMT, ACR criteria documentation for RA).
Quantity limit / dose exceeds policy Requested dose or quantity exceeds the UHC / OptumRx policy maximum for the indication. Submit a quantity limit exception with weight-based or BSA-based dose calculation, documented clinical rationale, and any compendia or label support for the higher dose.

Appeals process

UHC’s appeals structure has three levels for commercial pre-service appeals: Level 1 internal appeal (filed in writing within the timeframe stated in the denial letter, typically 180 days for commercial; TAT 30 days for pre-service); Level 2 internal appeal (filed if Level 1 upholds; TAT 30 days for pre-service); and external review by an Independent Review Organization (IRO) (filed if Level 2 upholds; TAT typically 45 days standard, 72 hours expedited). For Medicare Advantage, the structure is Plan Reconsideration → Independent Review Entity (IRE, Maximus or C2C) → ALJ → Medicare Appeals Council → Federal Court, with CMS-mandated TATs at each level. Always read the denial letter carefully for the deadline to file each level — missing the window forfeits the appeal right.

Reauthorization intervals

Drug classTypical reauth intervalRequired reauth documentation
Oncology biologics (most) 6 months Restaging imaging or labs showing response or stable disease; current performance status; updated clinical note confirming continued indication and tolerability.
Hematology / supportive care 6-12 months depending on agent Current labs (CBC, ferritin, iron studies as relevant); clinical response or maintenance status.
Autoimmune biologics (RA, IBD, psoriasis, AS) 12 months Current disease activity score (DAS-28, PASI, HBI, Mayo) showing response or maintained remission; updated clinical note; current weight for dose calculation.
MS DMTs 12 months MRI within the past 12 months showing absence of new disease activity (typically); current EDSS or clinical assessment; relapse history.
Anti-VEGF (retinal) 3-6 months Current OCT showing response; visual acuity; injection log.
Rare disease / enzyme replacement (e.g., Crysvita, Strensiq, Vyvgart, Empaveli) 12 months (some 6) Current labs (disease-specific biomarkers); growth parameters (pediatric); current clinical assessment.
Episodic / event-triggered (e.g., Andexxa, hospitalized antibiotics, Berinert HAE) As-needed per episode or per HAE treatment plan Documentation of the qualifying event or HAE attack history; concurrent clinical scenario.

Reauth workflow

Calendar the reauth date 45-60 days before expiration. Refresh the clinical packet with: the most recent clinical note (within 30-60 days), current labs or imaging required by the drug class, current dose record showing on-label compliance, and any new diagnosis information. Submit the reauth through the same portal used for the original PA. If the reauth packet is submitted late and approval lapses, document any therapy continuation gap and prepare a justification for therapy continuation pending re-approval. UHC’s grace policy for in-progress reauth varies by line of business and is not guaranteed.

Frequently asked questions

Which UHC portal do I use to submit a specialty drug prior authorization?

It depends on how the drug is dispensed. For buy-and-bill medical-benefit drugs administered at an HOPD, infusion center, or office, submit through UHCProvider.com under Prior Authorization and Notification (PAAN). For pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs routed through OptumRx, submit via the OptumRx Provider Portal at professionals.optumrx.com (or CoverMyMeds). For drugs dispensed by Optum Specialty Pharmacy under a white-bag arrangement, the referral and PA flow through the Optum Specialty Pharmacy provider portal. Using the wrong portal is the single most common cause of stalled UHC specialty PAs.

What is the difference between OptumRx and Optum Specialty Pharmacy?

OptumRx is the pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) that administers UHC’s pharmacy benefit, manages the formulary, and performs PA review for pharmacy-benefit specialty drugs. Optum Specialty Pharmacy is the dispensing specialty pharmacy operated under the Optum umbrella. They share a parent (UnitedHealth Group / Optum) but operate as separate entities with separate portals, separate PA processes, and separate reps. A UHC PA can route through OptumRx for criteria review while the actual product is dispensed by Optum Specialty Pharmacy under a white-bag arrangement.

Does UHC require biosimilar step-through for Avastin, Herceptin, Remicade, and Rituxan?

Yes. UHC has been among the most aggressive commercial payers on biosimilar substitution. For new starts (and increasingly for continuing patients without documented intolerance), UHC’s specialty drug management policy requires use of a preferred biosimilar before the reference product for bevacizumab (Mvasi, Zirabev, Alymsys, Vegzelma), trastuzumab (multiple biosimilars), infliximab (Inflectra, Renflexis, Avsola), rituximab (Truxima, Ruxience, Riabni), and pegfilgrastim (Fulphila, Udenyca, Ziextenzo, Nyvepria). UHC has also extended biosimilar policy to adalimumab (Humira), with private-label coordination through Cordavis.

How aggressive is UHC site-of-care steerage in 2026?

Very. Since 2023, UHC has expanded its Outpatient Hospital Site of Care Review program to require prior authorization (and frequently to deny) HOPD administration of high-cost specialty drugs that can be administered safely in office-based infusion or home infusion settings. Drugs commonly targeted include infliximab, rituximab, ocrelizumab, IVIG, vedolizumab, and burosumab. The PA criteria require specific documentation of medical necessity for the HOPD setting — clinical instability, monitoring requirements, prior infusion reactions, or other site-specific factors. The SUPREME Medical Necessity exception form is the documented pathway for HOPD overrides.

What is the UHC specialty pharmacy PA turnaround time?

Standard PA review TAT is typically 14 calendar days under commercial plans and 72 hours for urgent requests; Medicare Advantage standard PA TAT is 14 calendar days and 72 hours for expedited. In practice, OptumRx pharmacy-benefit PA decisions on common specialty biologics often return within 24-72 hours when all required clinical documentation is present at submission. Missing biosimilar step-through documentation, missing diagnosis-specific labs, or missing prior therapy records will extend the review window and trigger a request-for-information.

How do I request a UHC peer-to-peer review after a denial?

Peer-to-peer review is requested through the denial letter’s listed P2P scheduling line (number varies by line of business and plan; verify on the denial). Most P2Ps must be requested within a stated window (commonly 5-10 business days from the denial date for pre-service denials). The prescribing physician must conduct the P2P personally; advanced practice providers are generally not accepted on the call. Prep the prescriber with the original PA package, the denial letter and stated reason, the most recent clinical note, prior therapy documentation, and any compendia citation (NCCN, DrugDex Cat I/IIa) supporting the request.

Does UHC require white-bagging for specialty drugs, or is buy-and-bill still allowed?

Both still exist for UHC commercial membership, but the trend is toward white-bagging through Optum Specialty Pharmacy for self-administered injectables and increasingly for office-administered biologics. Buy-and-bill remains the default for chemotherapy and many oncology biologics administered in HOPD or community oncology settings. For specific drugs on the UHC Specialty Drug Mandate List, the payer requires sourcing through a designated specialty pharmacy and will deny buy-and-bill claims. Always verify the current sourcing requirement for the specific drug and plan before ordering inventory.

How do UHC Community Plan (Medicaid) and UHC Medicare Advantage PA criteria differ from commercial?

Each line of business maintains a separate medical and pharmacy policy set. UHC Community Plan (the Medicaid managed-care book) follows state-specific Medicaid formulary and PA criteria layered on top of UHC’s base medical policy, with state-by-state variation in step therapy and prior authorization. UHC Medicare Advantage follows CMS Part B and Part D coverage rules with UHC’s additional medical-necessity criteria for non-formulary requests and step edits. PA forms and submission portals are similar to commercial (UHCProvider.com / OptumRx), but always confirm the criteria set against the member’s specific plan ID before submission — the same drug can have very different PA criteria across UHC’s three books.

Sources

All sources are publicly available payer policy documents or paraphrased from trade-association educational materials. Payer policy URLs, fax numbers, and criteria change. Verify any operational detail (fax, portal URL, specific PA criteria) on UHCProvider.com or OptumRx’s provider portal before submission. The methodology by which we resolve source conflicts is described in the Methodology.

Editorial review & sourcing
Reviewed by
CareCost Estimate editorial team (Pending SME review)
Last reviewed
May 23, 2026
Update triggers
UHC Specialty Drug Mandate List update, OptumRx PA criteria revision, biosimilar mandate expansion, site-of-care policy bulletin change, Cordavis distribution arrangement update, reader-reported correction.
Independence
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