[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 111 (Thursday, June 9, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37138-37153]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-13275]
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SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
20 CFR Parts 404 and 416
[Docket No. SSA-2006-0149]
RIN 0960-AF58
Revised Medical Criteria for Evaluating Respiratory System
Disorders
AGENCY: Social Security Administration.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: We are revising the criteria in the Listing of Impairments
(listings) that we use to evaluate claims involving respiratory
disorders in adults and children under titles II and XVI of the Social
Security Act (Act). The revisions reflect our program experience and
advances in medical knowledge since we last comprehensively revised
this body system in 1993, as well as comments we received from medical
experts and the public.
DATES: These final rules are effective October 7, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cheryl A. Williams, Office of
Disability Policy, Social Security Administration, 6401 Security
Boulevard, Baltimore, Maryland 21235-6401, (410) 965-1020. For
information on eligibility or filing for benefits, call our national
toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213, or TTY 1-800-325-0778, or visit our
Internet site, Social Security Online, at http://www.socialsecurity.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
We are revising and making final the rules for evaluating
respiratory disorders we proposed in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) published in the Federal Register on February 4, 2013 (78 FR
7968). The preamble to the NPRM provided an explanation of the changes
from the current rules and our reasons for proposing those changes. To
the extent that we are adopting the proposed rules as published, we are
not repeating that information here. You can view the NPRM by visiting
www.regulations.gov and searching for document ``SSA-2006-0149-0024.''
We are making a number of changes because of public comments we
received in response to the NPRM. We explain those changes in our
summary of public comments and our responses later in this preamble. We
are also making minor editorial changes for clarity throughout these
final rules.
Why are we revising the listings for evaluating respiratory disorders?
We are revising the listings for evaluating respiratory disorders
to
[[Page 37139]]
reflect our program experience and advances in medical knowledge since
we last comprehensively revised the listings for this body system, and
comments we received from medical experts and the public at an outreach
policy conference, in response to an Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM), and in response to an NPRM. We last published final
rules making comprehensive revisions to section 3.00--the respiratory
system listings for adults (people who are at least 18 years old)--and
section 103.00--the respiratory system listings for children (people
under age 18)--on October 7, 1993.\1\ Since that time, we have revised
the introductory text for children, revised some testing requirements,
added adult and child listings for lung transplants, removed criterion
C from listing 3.09, added listing 103.06 and corresponding
introductory text, and extended the effective date of the rules.\2\
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\1\ 58 FR 52346; corrected at 59 FR 1274 (January 10, 1994).
These listings appear in appendix 1 to subpart P of part 404.
\2\ See 65 FR 54747 (2000), 65 FR 57946 (2000), 67 FR 20018
(2002), 67 FR 43537 (2002), 68 FR 36911 (2003), 70 FR 35028 (2005),
71 FR 2312 (2006), 72 FR 33662 (2007), 73 FR 31025 (2008), 75 FR
33166 (2010), 77 FR 35264 (2012), 79 FR 10661 (2014), 80 FR 1
(2015), and 80 FR 19522 (2015).
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When will we begin to use these final rules?
We will begin to use these final rules on their effective date. We
will continue to use the current listings until the date these final
rules become effective. We will apply the final rules to new
applications filed on or after the effective date of these final rules
and to claims that are pending on or after the effective date.\3\ These
final rules will remain in effect for 3 years after the date they
become effective, unless we extend them, or revise and issue them
again.
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\3\ This means that we will use these final rules on and after
their effective date, in any case in which we make a determination
or decision. We expect that Federal courts will review our final
decisions using the rules that were in effect at the time we issued
the decisions. If a court reverses our final decision and remands a
case for further administrative proceedings after the effective date
of these final rules, we will apply these final rules to the entire
period at issue in the decision we make after the court's remand.
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Public Comments on the NPRM
In the NPRM, we provided the public with a 60-day comment period
that ended on April 5, 2013. We received 212 comments. The commenters
included advocacy groups, legal services organizations, State agencies
that make disability determinations for us, medical organizations, and
people who have respiratory disorders or have relatives with
respiratory disorders.
We carefully considered all of the comments that were relevant to
this rulemaking. We have tried to present the commenters' concerns and
suggestions accurately and completely, and we have responded to all
significant issues that were within the scope of these rules. We
provide our reasons for adopting or not adopting the recommendations in
the summaries of the comments and our responses. We also received
several comments supporting our proposed changes. We appreciate those
comments; however, we did not include them in our discussion of the
rules below.
As part of the rulemaking process, we held an informational
teleconference with the public on May 10, 2013, during which we
discussed general background information on the disability program,
information for people with cystic fibrosis who either apply for Social
Security disability benefits or are currently receiving disability
benefits, information we received from medical experts and members of
the public, and proposed criteria in listings 3.04 and 103.04.\4\ We
did not accept public comments during the teleconference. We have
included information related to the teleconference in the rulemaking
docket for these rules under Docket ID number SSA-2006-0149-0237.\5\
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\4\ See 78 FR 26681 (2013).
\5\ See http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=SSA-2006-
0149-0237.
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Pulmonary Function Testing
Comment: One commenter suggested that we not refer to arterial
blood gas (ABG) tests and pulse oximetry as pulmonary function tests
(PFTs) because they are monitoring devices.
Response: We are not adopting this recommendation because we use
the results of these tests to document the severity of respiratory
disorders and we believe it is appropriate, for this purpose, to refer
to ABG tests and pulse oximetry as PFTs.
Comment: Many commenters did not support removing the requirement
for spirometry tracings of the forced expiratory maneuvers used to
determine a person's highest forced expiratory volume in the first
second (FEV1) and forced vital capacity (FVC). Some
commenters explained that the tracings allow us to confirm that the
American Thoracic Society (ATS) testing standards were met. One
commenter stated that requiring tracings will enhance the quality of
the test and ensure confidence in the disability decision-making
process for respiratory disorders. Another commenter agreed with us
that accepting providers' interpretations of spirometry results without
requiring tracings might reduce the number of tests that we purchase,
but stated that not also requiring tracings might result in
inappropriate allowances. One commenter suggested that, if we do not
require tracings, we should require flow-volume loops to ensure the
integrity of the test.
Response: We are adopting the recommendation that we continue to
require spirometry tracings. In the proposed rule, we indicated that we
believed it would be appropriate to trust the professional who
supervises the test and for us to use the resulting spirometry values
without corresponding tracings to assess the severity of a person's
respiratory disorder. The public commenters (including medical experts
who use the results of spirometry in their treatment of people with
respiratory disorders, and disability examiners), however, disagreed
with us.
In its public comment, the ATS recommended that we continue to
require documentation of three acceptable tracings. We agree with that
comment.
For most claims involving respiratory disorders and in which
spirometry results are available, the evidence we receive usually does
not include the spirometry tracings. By requiring tracings, we may need
to recontact the medical source to seek the tracings or, if we know
from experience that the source either cannot or will not provide the
tracings, we may need to purchase consultative examinations to obtain
spirometry results with tracings, unless we can make a fully favorable
determination or decision on another basis. We will provide guidance to
our adjudicators on when it is appropriate to purchase a PFT when we
conduct training on the final rules.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that we continue to require
documentation of equipment calibration for spirometry.
Response: We are not adopting these recommendations because, in our
program experience, recorded calibrations that we receive almost
invariably establish spirometer accuracy. We do not believe it is
necessary to continue to require proof of equipment calibration. We
expect the professional who supervises the test to comply with the
professional standards for equipment calibrations. If, however, we have
reason to believe that the equipment was not calibrated, we may then
request calibration logs from the medical source.
Comment: Several commenters explained that the spirometry values
[[Page 37140]]
(FEV1 and FVC) for several listings (proposed 3.02A, 3.02B,
3.02C4, 3.03A, 3.04A, 3.04B, 103.02A, 103.02B, 103.04A, and 103.04B)
include too much variability in percent predicted between females and
males, as well as between different height and age categories.
Response: We agree with these commenters. While we based the values
in the spirometry tables on reference values from Hankinson, et al.,\6\
as noted in the NPRM, we agree that there was too much variability
between categories (age, gender, and height). In these final rules, the
percent predicted values (from which we derive the spirometry values
that we use in final 3.02A, 3.02B, 3.03A, 3.04A, 103.02A, 103.02B, and
103.04A) by height are all within three percentage points of one
another for a given age and gender cohort.
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\6\ Hankinson, J. L., Odencrantz, J. R., & Fedan, K. B. (1999).
Spirometric reference values from a sample of the general U.S.
population. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care
Medicine, 159(1), 179-187.
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Comment: Some commenters recommended that we include percent
predicted values in our rules rather than tables of absolute values for
measurement of lung function.
Response: We did not adopt these recommendations. We believe that
both percent predicted values and absolute values accurately represent
the severity of a person's respiratory disorder. While the percent
predicted values represent the percentage of lung function remaining,
the absolute values of FEV1 and FVC represent the actual
volumes of air that a person exhales during a forced expiratory
maneuver.
Comment: Two commenters suggested that we use the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention/National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health (CDC/NIOSH) calculator, which calculates percent
predicted values, to determine the severity of a person's respiratory
disorder.\7\
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\7\ The CDC/NIOSH calculator is available at http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/spirometry/refcalculator.html.
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Response: We did not adopt these recommendations because the
calculator is intended for use with a NIOSH spirometry training course
and the Food and Drug Administration has not approved the calculator
for clinical use.
Comment: One commenter agreed with using diffusing capacity of the
lungs for carbon monoxide (DLCO) to measure respiratory function but
recommended that we use percent predicted values rather than absolute
values to more accurately capture condition severity.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation. DLCO test results
include both the actual (absolute) and percent predicted values for the
measurement. Both values represent the ability of the lungs to transfer
gases across the alveolar-capillary membrane. Neither value is more
accurate than the other value because they both represent the same DLCO
measurement.
Comment: One commenter had three concerns with the use of pulse
oximetry in proposed 3.02C4a. First, requiring pulse oximetry and
spirometry decreases the utility of the listing. Second, the key
finding on a 6-minute walk test (6MWT) is whether desaturation occurs
with exertion and not the baseline or post-6MWT results. Lastly,
requiring printouts of pulse oximetry will dramatically reduce the
availability of pulse oximetry evidence that we can use. This commenter
suggested that the listing require desaturation with exercise
independent of spirometry.
Response: We partially adopted these recommendations. We revised
proposed 3.02C4, final 3.02C3, to require only pulse oximetry. We
believe that the percent of oxygen saturation of blood hemoglobin
measured by pulse oximetry required in 3.02C3 demonstrates a chronic
gas exchange defect of listing-level severity. If resting pulse
oximetry does not establish listing-level severity, we may use pulse
oximetry during or after a 6MWT. We require a printout of the pulse
wave during measurement because we use it to verify that perfusion to
the area covered by the probe is adequate and that the probe is
positioned properly, and because motion artifact may limit the accuracy
of pulse oximetry during the 6MWT. Furthermore, to be consistent with
this revision to final 3.02C3, we combined proposed 3.02C2, which
required two resting ABG tests to document a chronic gas exchange
defect of listing-level severity, and proposed 3.02C3, which required
one exercise ABG test, into final 3.02C2 requiring one ABG test, either
resting or during steady state exercise.
Comment: One commenter recommended that a clinical evaluation
accompany the pulse oximetry measurement in proposed 3.02C4 because a
pulse oximetry measurement should not be considered a primary
diagnostic tool.
Response: We agree with the commenter, but did not make any changes
as a result. Proposed and final 3.00D1 explain that we need a person's
medical history, physical examination findings, the results of imaging,
and pulmonary function tests to document and assess the severity of a
person's respiratory disorder. Consequently, the rules already require
the type of clinical evaluation of a person's respiratory disorder that
the commenter suggested.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we require pulse oximetry be
performed while the person is breathing room air or on oxygen
supplementation. This commenter also suggested that we include a
requirement that nail polish is removed prior to testing and that, if
finger circulation is not good, we accept ear lobe pulse oximetry.
Response: We did not adopt these recommendations because the
purpose of the pulse oximetry measurement is to determine oxygen
(O2) saturation on room air and not with oxygen
supplementation. We do not require that a finger probe be used. It is
the responsibility of the professional supervising the test to choose
the most appropriate probe (for example, finger or ear) and to also
ensure that proper testing protocol (including removal of nail polish)
is followed.
Asthma
Comment: One commenter suggested that we remove the requirement for
reduced lung function between asthma exacerbations (that is, baseline
obstruction).
Response: We did not propose to change this requirement and,
therefore, are not adopting this recommendation. We currently require
baseline obstruction (current 3.00C) established by spirometry while
the person is medically stable to document listing-level asthma. We
continued to include this requirement in final 3.00I2a and 3.03A.
Comment: One commenter asked us to continue to consider adherence
to therapy for asthma.
Response: We agree with the commenter, but did not make any changes
as a result. We consider any hospitalization for an exacerbation of
asthma lasting at least 48 hours to be despite prescribed therapy,
unless we have evidence to the contrary.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we add a criterion to
proposed 103.03 for the need for endotracheal intubation, which is a
type of treatment for respiratory failure.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation because we do not
believe we need to specify the types of treatments we consider under
103.03 when a child is hospitalized for asthma. We did, however, add
guidance in final 3.00I1 and 103.00G1 to explain that we evaluate
respiratory failure resulting from chronic asthma under final 3.14 or
103.14.
[[Page 37141]]
Cystic Fibrosis
Comment: Many commenters recommended that we continue to consider
treatment for cystic fibrosis (CF) outside of the hospital. The
commenters stated that physicians treat CF pulmonary exacerbations in a
variety of ways including hospitalization and through use of
intravenous antibiotics and inhaled nebulized therapies outside of the
hospital setting. Some commenters explained that treatment at home for
CF pulmonary exacerbations indicates the same severity of illness as a
hospitalization for CF and is increasingly the method preferred by
treating physicians.
Response: We adopted these recommendations. We included a criterion
in final 3.04G and 103.04G that requires 10 consecutive days of
intravenous antibiotic treatment, without specifying where (for
example, in a hospital) the treatment occurs, for CF pulmonary
exacerbations. We also added guidance in final 3.00J3 and 103.00H3 to
explain that treatment for CF exacerbations usually includes
intravenous antibiotics and intensified airway clearance therapy (for
example, increased frequencies of chest percussion or increased use of
inhaled nebulized therapies, such as bronchodilators or mucolytics). We
want to assure the commenters that we are able to evaluate CF under the
criteria in final listings 3.04 and 103.04, using medical equivalence,
the functional equivalence rules for children, or at other steps in our
sequential evaluation process.
Comment: Multiple commenters suggested that we revise proposed
3.04D and 103.04E, which required any two of six listed CF
exacerbations and complications. Some commenters explained that four of
the listed exacerbations and complications (spontaneous pneumothorax,
respiratory failure, pulmonary hemorrhage, and hypoxemia) are serious
health issues for people with CF. The commenters recommended that we
revise the list to more accurately reflect the progression of CF and
that we require only one of these four exacerbations or complications
to establish that a person is disabled.
Response: We adopted these recommendations by adding standalone
listing criteria for spontaneous pneumothorax in final 3.04C and
103.04D, respiratory failure in final 3.04D and 103.04E, pulmonary
hemorrhage requiring vascular embolization in final 3.04E and 103.04F,
and hypoxemia measured by pulse oximetry in final 3.04F.
Comment: One commenter stated that ABG tests in proposed 3.04B do
not correlate well to disability for people with CF, and that ABG tests
are not generally used in most specialized CF care centers.
Response: We adopted this recommendation and removed proposed 3.04B
that required ABG test results to evaluate the severity of CF in the
final rule.
Comment: One commenter said that proposed 103.04C for hypoxemia
with the need for at least 1.0 liter per minute of oxygen
supplementation for at least 4 hours per day for at least 90
consecutive days is ``significantly too strict'' for children with CF.
The commenter stated that any child whose CF meets the proposed listing
would already be on a lung transplant list.
Response: We adopted this recommendation and have not included
proposed 103.04C in the final rule. While being on a lung transplant
list is not a listing criterion, we believe children with CF whose
impairment would have met proposed 103.04C will have an impairment that
meets the requirements in one of the listings for CF included in the
final rule.
Comment: Multiple commenters objected to the proposed lower
spirometry values for evaluating CF in proposed 3.04A and 103.04A.
Response: We adopted these comments and modified the spirometry
values in proposed 3.04A and 103.04A. Our revisions to all spirometry
values to minimize variability, as we described above, in addition to
the fact that people with CF are disabled at a comparatively higher
level of lung function than people who do not have CF, resulted in none
of the values in final 3.04A and 103.04A being lower than the
corresponding values in current 3.04A and 103.04A.
Pulmonary Hypertension
Comment: Multiple commenters recommended that we not use
echocardiograms to evaluate the severity of chronic pulmonary
hypertension in proposed 3.09B. One commenter stated that results from
echocardiograms do not accurately reflect the presence of moderate
pulmonary hypertension that causes marked functional limitations.
Another commenter stated that only cardiac catheterization should be
used to evaluate disability for pulmonary hypertension in proposed
3.09A.
Response: We adopted these recommendations and removed the
echocardiography requirement from final 3.09. We also removed
echocardiography from the list of examples of medical imaging
techniques in proposed 3.00D2 (final 3.00D3).
Comment: One commenter suggested that we add listing criteria to
proposed 3.09A, which requires only cardiac catheterization for chronic
pulmonary hypertension.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation because adding the
suggested listing criteria to 3.09 increases the severity level of the
listing. We believe final 3.09 is medically appropriate and represents
an inability to perform any gainful activity. When we have the results
of cardiac catheterization and those results meet the requirements of
the listing, we do not need additional criteria to support listing-
level severity. Adding listing criteria creates an unnecessary evidence
burden on claimants.
Respiratory Failure
Comment: One commenter suggested that we exclude asthma and obesity
as underlying conditions for respiratory failure in proposed 3.14 and
103.14.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation. Final 3.14 and
103.14 require that we evaluate respiratory failure resulting from any
chronic respiratory disorder except CF. Obesity is not a ``chronic
respiratory disorder'' and, therefore, respiratory failure cannot be
evaluated under these listings if obesity is the person's only
impairment. (We address how to consider the effects of obesity combined
with a respiratory disorder in final 3.00O.) We believe it is
appropriate to evaluate respiratory failure resulting from chronic
asthma under these listings.
Comment: One commenter recommended that we consider noninvasive
ventilation as an alternative to invasive ventilation for treatment of
respiratory failure resulting from CF.
Response: We adopted this recommendation because ventilatory
support in respiratory failure associated with any underlying chronic
respiratory disorder, including CF, while traditionally provided by
invasive ventilation, is now often provided by noninvasive ventilation.
In either case, cyclical positive pressure is applied to the airway to
assist ventilation and reduce the work of breathing. We believe it is
reasonable to count the total ventilatory support time, whether it be
invasive or noninvasive ventilation, for our purposes, so we added this
alternative to final 3.04D, 3.14, 103.04E, and 103.14.
Other Comments
Comment: One commenter suggested that we include a listing for
people with
[[Page 37142]]
respiratory disorders who are dependent on oxygen supplementation.
Response: We are not adopting this recommendation because the use
of supplemental oxygen does not, by itself, indicate an impairment of
listing-level severity. In proposed 3.00D1 and final 3.00D2 and
103.00D2, we explain that if a person uses supplementation oxygen, we
still need medical evidence to establish the severity of his or her
respiratory disorder.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we include a criterion in
3.02 that requires three hospitalizations within a 12-month period for
any chronic respiratory disorder except CF.
Response: We adopted this recommendation in final 3.02D because we
agree that three hospitalizations of 48 hours or longer, 30 days or
more apart, within a 12-month period that we are considering in
connection with an application or continuing disability review for
exacerbations or complications of a chronic respiratory disorder will
prevent a person from engaging in any gainful activity and, therefore,
represents listing-level severity.
Additionally, we are able to evaluate chronic respiratory disorders
resulting in fewer than three hospitalizations in a consecutive 12-
month period using medical equivalence, under other listing criteria,
or at other steps in our sequential evaluation process. For example, if
a claimant's chronic respiratory disorder does not precisely meet the
hospitalization requirements in final 3.02D, we may find that the
disorder is medically equivalent to that listing, if the disorder is at
least medically equal in severity and duration to the listing criteria.
Our medical equivalence rules permit us to find that a disorder is
medically equivalent to a listing at step 3 if there are other findings
related to the disorder that are at least of equal medical significance
to the listing criteria (see Sec. Sec. 404.1526 and 416.926).
Although some of our listings include criteria for repeated
hospitalizations (3.02D, 3.03B, 3.04B, 3.07, 103.02E, 103.03, and
103.04C), our medical equivalence policy accommodates recent trends in
clinical care that emphasize quality of, rather than quantity of,
medical treatment. The medical equivalence policy also accommodates
claimants' varying level of access to medical care (as well as the
preference of some medical providers to reduce the use of emergency
department and hospital-level medical interventions). This
accommodation accounts for differences in medical care people with
similar disorders receive depending on the medical resources available
to them. The medical equivalence policy provides some flexibility in
determining whether a claimant is disabled at step 3 of the sequential
evaluation process by allowing us to consider whether the claimant's
impairment meets the listed criteria or is at least equal in severity
and duration to the criteria of any listed impairment. The final
listings do not provide substantive instructions to our adjudicators
for determining such equivalence because we can better provide this
information through operating instructions and training
If we are not able to find that a person's impairment due to a
chronic respiratory disorder is disabling using our listings, we may
still find the person disabled at the final steps of the sequential
evaluation process.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we include a criterion in
3.02 for persistent chronic lung infections that are refractory to
treatment or provide guidance in our internal operating instructions
for how to evaluate these cases.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation because we explain
in final 3.00Q that we evaluate limitations in respiratory function
resulting from chronic lung infections under 3.02. We will, however,
provide guidance to our adjudicators on how to evaluate chronic lung
infections that are resistant to treatment when we conduct training on
these final rules.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we include a listing for
prolonged, active infectious periods of mycobacterium tuberculosis
(MTB) lasting longer than 12 months.
Response: We did not adopt this recommendation because prolonged,
active infectious periods of MTB lasting longer than 12 months are
extremely rare. MTB is generally treatable with a 6-month course of
antibiotics. If, however, active infectious periods associated with
resistance to, or intolerance of, multiple antibiotics last longer than
12 months, we will evaluate the impairment under an appropriate
listing.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we place the tables in Part A
directly following the listings for which they are used, similar to how
the tables appear in Part B.
Response: We adopted this recommendation because we agree that it
is easier for an adjudicator to use a table when it is located directly
following its listing.
Other Changes
In proposed 3.00O and 103.00L, we included guidance explaining
that, for listings that require a specific number of events within a
12-month period, the 12-month period must occur within the period we
are considering in connection with the application or continuing
disability review. We did not, however, provide a reference to proposed
3.00O and 103.00L in each proposed listing. In these final rules, we
include this guidance in each listing (final 3.02D, 3.03B, 3.04B,
3.04F, 3.04G, 3.07, 3.14, 103.02E, 103.03, 103.04C, 103.04G, and
103.14) and, as a result, it is unnecessary to also include the same
guidance in the introductory text.
In proposed 3.00D3 and 103.00D3, we included a requirement that
pulmonary function testing be conducted in accordance with the most
recently published standards of the ATS. We do not include this
statement in these final rules because we now include in final 3.00E
and 103.00E (for spirometry) and in final 3.00F (for DLCO) the specific
ATS testing standards that we require to evaluate respiratory
disorders. The ATS may revise its testing standards at any time, in
which case we would review any new standards and, if appropriate,
publish proposed changes to our requirements for public comment before
revising the rules.
In these final rules, we are redesignating current 103.00F as
103.00K and revising the reference to 103.00F in listing 103.06 to
103.00K. We are not revising the introductory text or the listing
requirements, both of which we added to the respiratory body system in
2015.\8\
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\8\ See 80 FR 19522.
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What is our authority to make rules and set procedures for determining
whether a person is disabled under the statutory definition?
The Act authorizes us to make rules and regulations and to
establish necessary and appropriate procedures to implement them.
Sections 205(a), 702(a)(5), and 1631(d)(1) of the Act.
Regulatory Procedures
Executive Order 12866, as Supplemented by Executive Order 13563
We consulted with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and
determined that these final rules meet the criteria for a significant
regulatory action under Executive Order 12866, as supplemented by
Executive Order 13563. Therefore, OMB reviewed them.
[[Page 37143]]
Regulatory Flexibility Act
We certify that these final rules will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities because they
affect individuals only. Therefore, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as
amended, does not require us to prepare a regulatory flexibility
analysis.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule does not create any new or affect any existing
collections and, therefore, does not require OMB approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
(Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Program Nos. 96.001, Social
Security--Disability Insurance; 96.002, Social Security--Retirement
Insurance; 96.004, Social Security--Survivors Insurance; and 96.006,
Supplemental Security Income).
List of Subjects
20 CFR Part 404
Administrative practice and procedure; Blind, Disability benefits;
Old-age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance; Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements; Social Security.
20 CFR Part 416
Administrative practice and procedure; Aged, Blind, Disability
benefits; Public assistance programs; Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements; Supplemental Security Income (SSI).
Carolyn W. Colvin,
Acting Commissioner of Social Security.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, we are amending 20 CFR
part 404 subpart P and part 416 subpart I as set forth below:
PART 404--FEDERAL OLD-AGE, SURVIVORS AND DISABILITY INSURANCE
(1950-)
Subpart P--Determining Disability and Blindness
0
1. The authority citation for subpart P of part 404 continues to read
as follows:
Authority: Secs. 202, 205(a)-(b) and (d)-(h), 216(i), 221(a),
(i), and (j), 222(c), 223, 225, and 702(a)(5) of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 402, 405(a)-(b) and (d)-(h), 416(i), 421(a), (i), and
(j), 422(c), 423, 425, and 902(a)(5)); sec. 211(b), Pub. L. 104-193,
110 Stat. 2105, 2189; sec. 202, Pub. L. 108-203, 118 Stat. 509 (42
U.S.C. 902 note).
0
2. Amend appendix 1 to subpart P of part 404 by:
0
a. Revising item 4 of the introductory text before part A;
0
b. Revising the body system name for section 3.00 in the table of
contents;
0
c. Revising section 3.00 in part A;
0
d. Revising in part B the body system name for section 103.00 in the
table of contents; and
0
e. Revising section 103.00 in part B.
The revisions read as follows:
Appendix 1 to Subpart P of Part 404--Listing of Impairments
* * * * *
4. Respiratory Disorders (3.00 and 103.00): October 7, 2019.
* * * * *
Part A
* * * * *
3.00 Respiratory Disorders.
* * * * *
3.00 RESPIRATORY DISORDERS
A. Which disorders do we evaluate in this body system?
1. We evaluate respiratory disorders that result in obstruction
(difficulty moving air out of the lungs) or restriction (difficulty
moving air into the lungs), or that interfere with diffusion (gas
exchange) across cell membranes in the lungs. Examples of such
disorders and the listings we use to evaluate them include chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (chronic bronchitis and emphysema,
3.02), pulmonary fibrosis and pneumoconiosis (3.02), asthma (3.02 or
3.03), cystic fibrosis (3.04), and bronchiectasis (3.02 or 3.07). We
also use listings in this body system to evaluate respiratory
failure (3.04D or 3.14), chronic pulmonary hypertension (3.09), and
lung transplantation (3.11).
2. We evaluate cancers affecting the respiratory system under
the listings in 13.00. We evaluate the pulmonary effects of
neuromuscular and autoimmune disorders under these listings or under
the listings in 11.00 or 14.00, respectively.
B. What are the symptoms and signs of respiratory disorders?
Symptoms and signs of respiratory disorders include dyspnea
(shortness of breath), chest pain, coughing, wheezing, sputum
production, hemoptysis (coughing up blood from the respiratory
tract), use of accessory muscles of respiration, and tachypnea
(rapid rate of breathing).
C. What abbreviations do we use in this body system?
1. ABG means arterial blood gas.
2. BiPAP means bi-level positive airway pressure ventilation.
3. BTPS means body temperature and ambient pressure, saturated
with water vapor.
4. CF means cystic fibrosis.
5. CFRD means CF-related diabetes.
6. CFTR means CF transmembrane conductance regulator.
7. CO means carbon monoxide.
8. COPD means chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
9. DLCO means diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon
monoxide.
10. FEV1 means forced expiratory volume in the first
second of a forced expiratory maneuver.
11. FVC means forced vital capacity.
12. L means liter.
13. mL CO (STPD)/min/mmHg means milliliters of carbon monoxide
at standard temperature and pressure, dry, per minute, per
millimeter of mercury.
14. PaO2 means arterial blood partial pressure of oxygen.
15. PaCO2 means arterial blood partial
pressure of carbon dioxide.
16. SpO2 means percentage of oxygen
saturation of blood hemoglobin measured by pulse oximetry.
17. 6MWT means 6-minute walk test.
18. VI means volume of inhaled gas during a DLCO test.
D. What documentation do we need to evaluate your respiratory
disorder?
1. We need medical evidence to document and assess the severity
of your respiratory disorder. Medical evidence should include your
medical history, physical examination findings, the results of
imaging (see 3.00D3), pulmonary function tests (see 3.00D4), other
relevant laboratory tests, and descriptions of any prescribed
treatment and your response to it. We may not need all of this
evidence depending on your particular respiratory disorder and its
effects on you.
2. If you use supplemental oxygen, we still need medical
evidence to establish the severity of your respiratory disorder.
3. Imaging refers to medical imaging techniques, such as x-ray
and computerized tomography. The imaging must be consistent with the
prevailing state of medical knowledge and clinical practice as the
proper technique to support the evaluation of the disorder.
4. Pulmonary function tests include spirometry (which measures
ventilation of the lungs), DLCO tests (which measure gas diffusion
in the lungs), ABG tests (which measure the partial pressure of
oxygen, PaO2, and carbon dioxide, PaCO2, in the arterial blood), and
pulse oximetry (which measures oxygen saturation, SpO2, of
peripheral blood hemoglobin).
E. What is spirometry and what are our requirements for an
acceptable test and report?
1. Spirometry, which measures how well you move air into and out
of your lungs, involves at least three forced expiratory maneuvers
during the same test session. A forced expiratory maneuver is a
maximum inhalation followed by a forced maximum exhalation, and
measures exhaled volumes of air over time. The volume of air you
exhale in the first second of the forced expiratory maneuver is the
FEV1. The total volume of air that you exhale during the
entire forced expiratory maneuver is the FVC. We use your highest
FEV1 value to evaluate your respiratory disorder under
3.02A, 3.03A, and 3.04A, and your highest FVC value to evaluate your
respiratory disorder under 3.02B, regardless of whether the values
are from the same forced expiratory maneuver or different forced
expiratory maneuvers.
2. We have the following requirements for spirometry under these
listings:
a. You must be medically stable at the time of the test.
Examples of when we would not consider you to be medically stable
include when you are:
(i) Within 2 weeks of a change in your prescribed respiratory
medication.
(ii) Experiencing, or within 30 days of completion of treatment
for, a lower respiratory tract infection.
[[Page 37144]]
(iii) Experiencing, or within 30 days of completion of treatment
for, an acute exacerbation (temporary worsening) of a chronic
respiratory disorder. Wheezing by itself does not indicate that you
are not medically stable.
(iv) Hospitalized, or within 30 days of a hospital discharge,
for an acute myocardial infarction (heart attack).
b. During testing, if your FEV1 is less than 70
percent of your predicted normal value, we require repeat spirometry
after inhalation of a bronchodilator to evaluate your respiratory
disorder under these listings, unless it is medically
contraindicated. If you used a bronchodilator before the test and
your FEV1 is less than 70 percent of your predicted
normal value, we still require repeat spirometry after inhalation of
a bronchodilator unless the supervising physician determines that it
is not safe for you to take a bronchodilator again (in which case we
may need to reschedule the test). If you do not have post-
bronchodilator spirometry, the test report must explain why. We can
use the results of spirometry administered without bronchodilators
when the use of bronchodilators is medically contraindicated.
c. Your forced expiratory maneuvers must be satisfactory. We
consider a forced expiratory maneuver to be satisfactory when you
exhale with maximum effort following a full inspiration, and when
the test tracing has a sharp takeoff and rapid rise to peak flow,
has a smooth contour, and either lasts for at least 6 seconds or
maintains a plateau for at least 1 second.
3. The spirometry report must include the following information:
a. The date of the test and your name, age or date of birth,
gender, and height without shoes. (We will assume that your recorded
height on the date of the test is without shoes, unless we have
evidence to the contrary.) If your spine is abnormally curved (for
example, you have kyphoscoliosis), we will substitute the longest
distance between your outstretched fingertips with your arms
abducted 90 degrees in place of your height when this measurement is
greater than your standing height without shoes.
b. Any factors, if applicable, that can affect the
interpretation of the test results (for example, your cooperation or
effort in doing the test).
c. Legible tracings of your forced expiratory maneuvers in a
volume-time format showing your name and the date of the test for
each maneuver.
4. If we purchase spirometry, the medical source we designate to
administer the test is solely responsible for deciding whether it is
safe for you to do the test and for how to administer it.
F. What is a DLCO test, and what are our requirements for an
acceptable test and report?
1. A DLCO test measures the gas exchange across cell membranes
in your lungs. It measures how well CO diffuses from the alveoli
(air sacs) of your lungs into your blood. DLCO may be severely
reduced in some disorders, such as interstitial lung disease (for
example, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, asbestosis, and sarcoidosis)
and COPD (particularly emphysema), even when the results of
spirometry are not significantly reduced. We use the average of two
of your unadjusted (that is, uncorrected for hemoglobin
concentration) DLCO measurements reported in mL CO (STPD)/min/mmHg
to evaluate your respiratory disorder under 3.02C1.
2. We have the following requirements for DLCO tests under these
listings:
a. You must be medically stable at the time of the test. See
3.00E2a.
b. The test must use the single-breath technique.
(i) The VI during the DLCO maneuver must be at least 85 percent
of your current FVC, and your time of inhalation must be less than 4
seconds. (See 3.00E for our rules for programmatically acceptable
spirometry.) If you do not have an FVC measurement on the same day
as the DLCO test, we may use your FVC from programmatically
acceptable spirometry administered within 90 days of the DLCO test.
(ii) Your breath-hold time must be between 8 and 12 seconds.
(iii) Your total exhalation time must be less than or equal to 4
seconds, with a sample collection time of less than 3 seconds. If
your FVC is at least 2.0 L, the washout volume must be between 0.75
L and 1.0 L. If your FVC is less than 2.0 L, the washout volume must
be at least 0.5 L.
3. The DLCO test report must include the following information:
a. The date of the test and your name, age or date of birth,
gender, and height without shoes. (We will assume that your recorded
height on the date of the test is without shoes, unless we have
evidence to the contrary.) If your spine is abnormally curved (for
example, you have kyphoscoliosis), we will substitute the longest
distance between your outstretched fingertips with your arms
abducted 90 degrees in place of your height when this measurement is
greater than your standing height without shoes.
b. Any factors, if applicable, that can affect the
interpretation of the test results (for example, your cooperation or
effort in doing the test).
c. Legible tracings of your VI, breath-hold maneuver, and volume
of exhaled gas showing your name and the date of the test for each
DLCO maneuver.
d. At least two acceptable (see 3.00F2) DLCO measurements within
3 mL CO (STPD)/min/mmHg of each other or within 10 percent of the
highest value.
4. We may need to purchase a DLCO test to determine whether your
disorder meets 3.02C1 when we have evidence showing that you have a
chronic respiratory disorder that could result in impaired gas
exchange, unless we can make a fully favorable determination or
decision on another basis. Since the DLCO calculation requires a
current FVC measurement, we may also purchase spirometry at the same
time as the DLCO test, even if we already have programmatically
acceptable spirometry.
5. Before we purchase a DLCO test, a medical consultant (see
Sec. Sec. 404.1616 and 416.1016 of this chapter), preferably one
with experience in the care of people with respiratory disorders,
must review your case record to determine if we need the test. The
medical source we designate to administer the test is solely
responsible for deciding whether it is safe for you to do the test
and for how to administer it.
G. What is an ABG test, and what are our requirements for an
acceptable test and report?
1. General. An ABG test measures PaO2,
PaCO2, and the concentration of hydrogen ions
in your arterial blood. We use a resting or an exercise ABG
measurement to evaluate your respiratory disorder under 3.02C2.
2. Resting ABG tests.
a. We have the following requirements for resting ABG tests
under these listings:
(i) You must be medically stable at the time of the test. See
3.00E2a.
(ii) The test must be administered while you are breathing room
air; that is, without oxygen supplementation.
b. The resting ABG test report must include the following
information:
(i) Your name, the date of the test, and either the altitude or
both the city and State of the test site.
(ii) The PaO2 and
PaCO2 values.
c. We may need to purchase a resting ABG test to determine
whether your disorder meets 3.02C2 when we have evidence showing
that you have a chronic respiratory disorder that could result in
impaired gas exchange, unless we can make a fully favorable
determination or decision on another basis.
d. Before we purchase a resting ABG test, a medical consultant
(see Sec. Sec. 404.1616 and 416.1016 of this chapter), preferably
one with experience in the care of people with respiratory
disorders, must review your case record to determine if we need the
test. The medical source we designate to administer the test is
solely responsible for deciding whether it is safe for you to do the
test and for how to administer it.
3. Exercise ABG tests.
a. We will not purchase an exercise ABG test.
b. We have the following requirements for exercise ABG tests
under these listings:
(i) You must have done the exercise under steady state
conditions while breathing room air. If you were tested on a
treadmill, you generally must have exercised for at least 4 minutes
at a grade and speed providing oxygen (O2) consumption of
approximately 17.5 milliliters per kilogram per minute (mL/kg/min)
or 5.0 metabolic equivalents (METs). If you were tested on a cycle
ergometer, you generally must have exercised for at least 4 minutes
at an exercise equivalent of 5.0 METs.
(ii) We may use a test in which you have not exercised for at
least 4 minutes. If you were unable to complete at least 4 minutes
of steady state exercise, we need a statement by the person
administering the test about whether the results are a valid
indication of your respiratory status. For example, this statement
may include information about your cooperation or effort in doing
the test and whether you were limited in completing the test because
of your respiratory disorder or another impairment.
c. The exercise ABG test report must include the following
information:
[[Page 37145]]
(i) Your name, the date of the test, and either the altitude or
both the city and state of the test site.
(ii) The PaO2 and
PaCO2 values.
H. What is pulse oximetry, and what are our requirements for an
acceptable test and report?
1. Pulse oximetry measures SpO2, the
percentage of oxygen saturation of blood hemoglobin. We use a pulse
oximetry measurement (either at rest, during a 6MWT, or after a
6MWT) to evaluate your respiratory disorder under 3.02C3 or, if you
have CF, to evaluate it under 3.04F.
2. We have the following requirements for pulse oximetry under
3.02C3:
a. You must be medically stable at the time of the test. See
3.00E2a.
b. Your pulse oximetry measurement must be recorded while you
are breathing room air; that is, without oxygen supplementation.
c. Your pulse oximetry measurement must be stable. By
``stable,'' we mean that the range of SpO2
values (that is, lowest to highest) during any 15-second interval
cannot exceed 2 percentage points. For example: (1) The measurement
is stable if the lowest SpO2 value during a
15-second interval is 87 percent and the highest value is 89
percent--a range of 2 percentage points. (2) The measurement is not
stable if the lowest value is 86 percent and the highest value is 89
percent--a range of 3 percentage points.
d. If you have had more than one measurement (for example, at
rest and after a 6MWT), we will use the measurement with the lowest
SpO2 value.
e. The pulse oximetry report must include the following
information:
(i) Your name, the date of the test, and either the altitude or
both the city and State of the test site.
(ii) A graphical printout showing your
SpO2 value and a concurrent, acceptable pulse
wave. An acceptable pulse wave is one that shows the characteristic
pulse wave; that is, sawtooth-shaped with a rapid systolic upstroke
(nearly vertical) followed by a slower diastolic downstroke (angled
downward).
f. We may need to purchase pulse oximetry at rest to determine
whether your disorder meets 3.02C3 when we have evidence showing
that you have a chronic respiratory disorder that could result in
impaired gas exchange, unless we can make a fully favorable
determination or decision on another basis. We may purchase pulse
oximetry during and after a 6MWT if your SpO2
value at rest is greater than the value in Table V.
g. Before we purchase pulse oximetry, a medical consultant (see
Sec. Sec. 404.1616 and 416.1016 of this chapter), preferably one
with experience in the care of people with respiratory disorders,
must review your case record to determine if we need the test. The
medical source we designate to administer the test is solely
responsible for deciding whether it is safe for you to do the test
and for how to administer it.
3. We have the following requirements for pulse oximetry under
3.04F:
a. You must be medically stable at the time of the test. See
3.00E2a.
b. Your pulse oximetry measurement must be recorded while you
are breathing room air; that is, without oxygen supplementation.
c. If you have had more than one measurement (for example, at
rest and after a 6MWT), we will use the measurement with the lowest
SpO2 value.
d. The pulse oximetry report must include your name, the date of
the test, and either the altitude or both the city and State of the
test site. If you have CF, we do not require a graphical printout
showing your SpO2 value and a concurrent,
acceptable pulse wave.
I. What is asthma and how do we evaluate it?
1. Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the lung airways
that we evaluate under 3.02 or 3.03. If you have respiratory failure
resulting from chronic asthma (see 3.00N), we will evaluate it under
3.14.
2. For the purposes of 3.03:
a. We need evidence showing that you have listing-level (see
Table VI in 3.03A) airflow obstruction at baseline while you are
medically stable.
b. The phrase ``consider under a disability for 1 year'' in
3.03B does not refer to the date on which your disability began,
only to the date on which we must reevaluate whether your asthma
continues to meet a listing or is otherwise disabling.
c. We determine the onset of your disability based on the facts
of your case, but it will be no later than the admission date of
your first of three hospitalizations that satisfy the criteria of
3.03B.
J. What is CF and how do we evaluate it?
1. General. We evaluate CF, a genetic disorder that results in
abnormal salt and water transport across cell membranes in the
lungs, pancreas, and other body organs, under 3.04. We need the
evidence described in 3.00J2 to establish that you have CF.
2. Documentation of CF. We need a report signed by a physician
(see Sec. Sec. 404.1513(a) and 416.913(a) of this chapter) showing
both a and b:
a. One of the following:
(i) A positive newborn screen for CF; or
(ii) A history of CF in a sibling; or
(iii) Documentation of at least one specific CF phenotype or
clinical criterion (for example, chronic sino-pulmonary disease with
persistent colonization or infections with typical CF pathogens,
pancreatic insufficiency, or salt-loss syndromes); and
b. One of the following definitive laboratory tests:
(i) An elevated sweat chloride concentration equal to or greater
than 60 millimoles per L; or
(ii) The identification of two CF gene mutations affecting the
CFTR; or
(iii) Characteristic abnormalities in ion transport across the
nasal epithelium.
c. When we have the report showing a and b, but it is not signed
by a physician, we also need a report from a physician stating that
you have CF.
d. When we do not have the report showing a and b, we need a
report from a physician that is persuasive that a positive diagnosis
of CF was confirmed by an appropriate definitive laboratory test. To
be persuasive, this report must include a statement by the physician
that you had the appropriate definitive laboratory test for
diagnosing CF. The report must provide the test results or explain
how your diagnosis was established that is consistent with the
prevailing state of medical knowledge and clinical practice.
3. CF pulmonary exacerbations. Examples of CF pulmonary
exacerbations include increased cough and sputum production,
hemoptysis, increased shortness of breath, increased fatigue, and
reduction in pulmonary function. Treatment usually includes
intravenous antibiotics and intensified airway clearance therapy
(for example, increased frequencies of chest percussion or increased
use of inhaled nebulized therapies, such as bronchodilators or
mucolytics).
4. For 3.04G, we require any two exacerbations or complications
from the list in 3.04G1 through 3.04G4 within a 12-month period. You
may have two of the same exacerbation or complication or two
different ones.
a. If you have two of the acute exacerbations or complications
we describe in 3.04G1 and 3.04G2, there must be at least 30 days
between the two.
b. If you have one of the acute exacerbations or complications
we describe in 3.04G1 and 3.04G2 and one of the chronic
complications we describe in 3.04G3 and 3.04G4, the two can occur
during the same time. For example, your CF meets 3.04G if you have
the pulmonary hemorrhage we describe in 3.04G2 and the weight loss
we describe in 3.04G3 even if the pulmonary hemorrhage occurs during
the 90-day period in 3.04G3.
c. Your CF also meets 3.04G if you have both of the chronic
complications in 3.04G3 and 3.04G4.
5. CF may also affect other body systems such as digestive or
endocrine. If your CF, including pulmonary exacerbations and
nonpulmonary complications, does not meet or medically equal a
respiratory disorders listing, we may evaluate your CF-related
impairments under the listings in the affected body system.
K. What is bronchiectasis and how do we evaluate it?
Bronchiectasis is a chronic respiratory disorder that is
characterized by abnormal and irreversible dilatation (enlargement)
of the airways below the trachea, which may be associated with the
accumulation of mucus, bacterial infections, and eventual airway
scarring. We require imaging (see 3.00D3) to document this disorder.
We evaluate your bronchiectasis under 3.02, or under 3.07 if you are
having exacerbations or complications (for example, acute bacterial
infections, increased shortness of breath, or coughing up blood)
that require hospitalization.
L. What is chronic pulmonary hypertension and how do we evaluate
it?
1. Chronic pulmonary hypertension is an increase in the blood
pressure of the blood vessels of the lungs. If pulmonary
hypertension is not adequately treated, it can eventually result in
right heart failure. We evaluate chronic pulmonary hypertension due
to any cause under 3.09.
2. Chronic pulmonary hypertension is usually diagnosed by
catheterization of the
[[Page 37146]]
pulmonary artery. We will not purchase cardiac catheterization.
M. How do we evaluate lung transplantation? If you receive a
lung transplant (or a lung transplant simultaneously with other
organs, such as the heart), we will consider you to be disabled
under 3.11 for 3 years from the date of the transplant. After that,
we evaluate your residual impairment(s) by considering the adequacy
of your post-transplant function, the frequency and severity of any
rejection episodes you have, complications in other body systems,
and adverse treatment effects. People who receive organ transplants
generally have impairments that meet our definition of disability
before they undergo transplantation. The phrase ``consider under a
disability for 3 years'' in 3.11 does not refer to the date on which
your disability began, only to the date on which we must reevaluate
whether your impairment(s) continues to meet a listing or is
otherwise disabling. We determine the onset of your disability based
on the facts of your case.
N. What is respiratory failure and how do we evaluate it?
Respiratory failure is the inability of the lungs to perform their
basic function of gas exchange. We evaluate respiratory failure
under 3.04D if you have CF-related respiratory failure, or under
3.14 if you have respiratory failure due to any other chronic
respiratory disorder. Continuous positive airway pressure does not
satisfy the criterion in 3.04D or 3.14, and cannot be substituted as
an equivalent finding, for invasive mechanical ventilation or
noninvasive ventilation with BiPAP.
O. How do we consider the effects of obesity when we evaluate
your respiratory disorder? Obesity is a medically determinable
impairment that is often associated with respiratory disorders.
Obesity makes it harder for the chest and lungs to expand, which can
compromise the ability of the respiratory system to supply adequate
oxygen to the body. The combined effects of obesity with a
respiratory disorder can be greater than the effects of each of the
impairments considered separately. We consider any additional and
cumulative effects of your obesity when we determine whether you
have a severe respiratory disorder, a listing-level respiratory
disorder, a combination of impairments that medically equals the
severity of a listed impairment, and when we assess your residual
functional capacity.
P. What are sleep-related breathing disorders and how do we
evaluate them?
1. Sleep-related breathing disorders (for example, sleep apnea)
are characterized by transient episodes of interrupted breathing
during sleep, which disrupt normal sleep patterns. Prolonged
episodes can result in disorders such as hypoxemia (low blood
oxygen) and pulmonary vasoconstriction (restricted blood flow in
pulmonary blood vessels). Over time, these disorders may lead to
chronic pulmonary hypertension or other complications.
2. We evaluate the complications of sleep-related breathing
disorders under the listings in the affected body system(s). For
example, we evaluate chronic pulmonary hypertension due to any cause
under 3.09; chronic heart failure under 4.02; and disturbances in
mood, cognition, and behavior under 12.02 or another appropriate
mental disorders listing. We will not purchase polysomnography
(sleep study).
Q. How do we evaluate mycobacterial, mycotic, and other chronic
infections of the lungs? We evaluate chronic infections of the lungs
that result in limitations in your respiratory function under 3.02.
R. How do we evaluate respiratory disorders that do not meet one
of these listings?
1. These listings are only examples of common respiratory
disorders that we consider severe enough to prevent you from doing
any gainful activity. If your impairment(s) does not meet the
criteria of any of these listings, we must also consider whether you
have an impairment(s) that meets the criteria of a listing in
another body system. For example, if your CF has resulted in chronic
pancreatic or hepatobiliary disease, we evaluate your impairment
under the listings in 5.00.
2. If you have a severe medically determinable impairment(s)
that does not meet a listing, we will determine whether your
impairment(s) medically equals a listing. See Sec. Sec. 404.1526
and 416.926 of this chapter. Respiratory disorders may be associated
with disorders in other body systems, and we consider the combined
effects of multiple impairments when we determine whether they
medically equal a listing. If your impairment(s) does not meet or
medically equal a listing, you may or may not have the residual
functional capacity to engage in substantial gainful activity. We
proceed to the fourth step and, if necessary, the fifth step of the
sequential evaluation process in Sec. Sec. 404.1520 and 416.920 of
this chapter. We use the rules in Sec. Sec. 404.1594 and 416.994 of
this chapter, as appropriate, when we decide whether you continue to
be disabled.
3.01 Category of Impairments, Respiratory Disorders
3.02 Chronic respiratory disorders due to any cause except CF
(for CF, see 3.04) with A, B, C, or D:
A. FEV1 (see 3.00E) less than or equal to the value
in Table I-A or I-B for your age, gender, and height without shoes
(see 3.00E3a).
Table I--FEV1 Criteria for 3.02A
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table I-A Table I-B
---------------------------------------------------------------
Age 18 to attainment of age 20 Age 20 or older
Height without shoes Height without ---------------------------------------------------------------
(centimeters) < means less shoes (inches) < Females FEV1 Males FEV1 Females FEV1 Males FEV1
than means less than less than or less than or less than or less than or
equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L,
BTPS) BTPS) BTPS) BTPS)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<153.0........................ <60.25.......... 1.20 1.45 1.05 1.20
153.0 to <159.0............... 60.25 to <62.50. 1.30 1.55 1.15 1.35
159.0 to <164.0............... 62.50 to <64.50. 1.40 1.65 1.25 1.40
164.0 to <169.0............... 64.50 to <66.50. 1.45 1.75 1.35 1.50
169.0 to <174.0............... 66.50 to <68.50. 1.55 1.85 1.45 1.60
174.0 to <180.0............... 68.50 to <70.75. 1.65 2.00 1.55 1.75
180.0 to <185.0............... 70.75 to <72.75. 1.75 2.10 1.65 1.85
185.0 or more................. 72.75 or more... 1.80 2.15 1.70 1.90
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
B. FVC (see 3.00E) less than or equal to the value in Table II-A
or II-B for your age, gender, and height without shoes (see
3.00E3a).
[[Page 37147]]
Table II--FVC Criteria for 3.02B
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table II-A Table II-B
---------------------------------------------------------------
Age 18 to attainment of age 20 Age 20 or older
Height without shoes Height without ---------------------------------------------------------------
(centimeters) < means less shoes (inches) < Females FVC Females FVC Females FVC
than means less than less than or less than or less than or Males FVC less
equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L, than or equal
BTPS) BTPS) BTPS) to (L, BTPS)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<153.0........................ <60.25.......... 1.35 1.65 1.30 1.50
153.0 to <159.0............... 60.25 to <62.50. 1.50 1.80 1.40 1.65
159.0 to <164.0............... 62.50 to <64.50. 1.60 1.90 1.50 1.75
164.0 to <169.0............... 64.50 to <66.50. 1.70 2.05 1.60 1.90
169.0 to <174.0............... 66.50 to <68.50. 1.80 2.20 1.70 2.00
174.0 to <180.0............... 68.50 to <70.75. 1.90 2.35 1.85 2.20
180.0 to <185.0............... 70.75 to <72.75. 2.05 2.50 1.95 2.30
185.0 or more................. 72.75 or more... 2.10 2.60 2.00 2.40
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
C. Chronic impairment of gas exchange demonstrated by 1, 2, or
3:
1. Average of two unadjusted, single-breath DLCO measurements
(see 3.00F) less than or equal to the value in Table III for your
gender and height without shoes (see 3.00F3a); or
Table III--DLCO Criteria for 3.02C1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Height without shoes Females DLCO less than Males DLCO less than or
Height without shoes (centimeters) (inches) < means less or equal to (mL CO equal to (mL CO (STPD)/
< means less than than (STPD)/min/mmHg) min/mmHg)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<153.0.............................. < 60.25................. 8.0 9.0
153.0 to <159.0..................... 60.25 to <62.50......... 8.5 9.5
159.0 to <164.0..................... 62.50 to <64.50......... 9.0 10.0
164.0 to <169.0..................... 64.50 to <66.50......... 9.5 10.5
169.0 to <174.0..................... 66.50 to <68.50......... 10.0 11.0
174.0 to <180.0..................... 68.50 to <70.75......... 10.5 11.5
180.0 to <185.0..................... 70.75 to <72.75......... 11.0 12.0
185.0 or more....................... 72.75 or more........... 11.5 12.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Arterial PaO2 and
PaCO2 measured concurrently by an ABG test,
while at rest or during steady state exercise, breathing room air
(see 3.00G3b), less than or equal to the applicable values in Table
IV-A, IV-B, or IV-C; or
Tables IV-A, IV-B, and IV-C--ABG Criteria for 3.02C2
Table IV-A
[Applicable at test sites less than 3,000 feet above sea level]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arterial PaO2
less than or
Arterial PaCO2 (mm Hg) and equal to (mm
Hg)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 or below............................................. 65
31...................................................... 64
32...................................................... 63
33...................................................... 62
34...................................................... 61
35...................................................... 60
36...................................................... 59
37...................................................... 58
38...................................................... 57
39...................................................... 56
40 or above............................................. 55
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table IV-B
[Applicable at test sites from 3,000 through 6,000 feet above sea level]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arterial PaO2
less than or
Arterial PaCO2 (mm Hg) and equal to (mm
Hg)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 or below............................................. 60
31...................................................... 59
32...................................................... 58
33...................................................... 57
34...................................................... 56
35...................................................... 55
36...................................................... 54
37...................................................... 53
38...................................................... 52
39...................................................... 51
40 or above............................................. 50
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table IV-C
[Applicable at test sites over 6,000 feet above sea level]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arterial PaO2
less than or
Arterial PaCO2 (mm Hg) and equal to (mm
Hg)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
30 or below............................................. 55
31...................................................... 54
32...................................................... 53
33...................................................... 52
34...................................................... 51
35...................................................... 50
36...................................................... 49
37...................................................... 48
38...................................................... 47
39...................................................... 46
40 or above............................................. 45
------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. SpO2 measured by pulse oximetry (see
3.00H2) either at rest, during a 6MWT, or after a 6MWT, less than or
equal to the value in Table V.
Table V--SpO2 Criteria for 3.02C3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Test site altitude (feet above sea
level) SpO2 less than or equal to
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than 3,000......................... 87 percent.
3,000 through 6,000..................... 85 percent.
Over 6,000.............................. 83 percent.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 37148]]
OR
D. Exacerbations or complications requiring three
hospitalizations within a 12-month period and at least 30 days apart
(the 12-month period must occur within the period we are considering
in connection with your application or continuing disability
review). Each hospitalization must last at least 48 hours, including
hours in a hospital emergency department immediately before the
hospitalization.
3.03 Asthma (see 3.00I), with both A and B:
A. FEV1 (see 3.00E1) less than or equal to the value
in Table VI-A or VI-B for your age, gender, and height without shoes
(see 3.00E3a) measured within the same 12-month period as the
hospitalizations in 3.03B.
Table VI--FEV1 Criteria for 3.03A
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VI-A Table VI-B
---------------------------------------------------------------
Age 18 to attainment of age 20 Age 20 or older
Height without shoes Height without ---------------------------------------------------------------
(centimeters) < means less shoes (inches) < Females FEV1 Males FEV1 Females FEV1 Males FEV1
than means less than less than or less than or less than or less than or
equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L,
BTPS) BTPS) BTPS) BTPS)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<153.0........................ <60.25.......... 1.65 1.90 1.45 1.60
153.0 to <159.0............... 60.25 to <62.50. 1.75 2.05 1.55 1.75
159.0 to <164.0............... 62.50 to <64.50. 1.85 2.15 1.65 1.90
164.0 to <169.0............... 64.50 to <66.50. 1.95 2.30 1.75 2.00
169.0 to <174.0............... 66.50 to <68.50. 2.05 2.45 1.85 2.15
174.0 to <180.0............... 68.50 to <70.75. 2.20 2.60 2.00 2.30
180.0 to <185.0............... 70.75 to <72.75. 2.35 2.75 2.10 2.45
185.0 or more................. 72.75 or more... 2.40 2.85 2.20 2.55
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AND
B. Exacerbations or complications requiring three
hospitalizations within a 12-month period and at least 30 days apart
(the 12-month period must occur within the period we are considering
in connection with your application or continuing disability
review). Each hospitalization must last at least 48 hours, including
hours in a hospital emergency department immediately before the
hospitalization. Consider under a disability for 1 year from the
discharge date of the last hospitalization; after that, evaluate the
residual impairment(s) under 3.03 or another appropriate listing.
3.04 Cystic fibrosis (documented as described in 3.00J2) with A,
B, C, D, E, F, or G:
A. FEV1 (see 3.00E) less than or equal to the value
in Table VII-A or VII-B for your age, gender, and height without
shoes (see 3.00E3a).
Table VII--FEV1 Criteria for 3.04A
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table VII-A Table VII-B
---------------------------------------------------------------
Age 18 to attainment of age 20 Age 20 or older
Height without shoes Height without ---------------------------------------------------------------
(centimeters) < means less shoes (inches) < Females FEV1 Males FEV1 Females FEV1 Males FEV1
than means less than less than or less than or less than or less than or
equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L, equal to (L,
BTPS) BTPS) BTPS) BTPS)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<153.0........................ <60.25.......... 1.65 1.90 1.45 1.60
153.0 to <159.0............... 60.25 to <62.50. 1.75 2.05 1.55 1.75
159.0 to <164.0............... 62.50 to <64.50. 1.85 2.15 1.65 1.90
164.0 to <169.0............... 64.50 to <66.50. 1.95 2.30 1.75 2.00
169.0 to <174.0............... 66.50 to <68.50. 2.05 2.45 1.85 2.15
174.0 to <180.0............... 68.50 to <70.75. 2.20 2.60 2.00 2.30
180.0 to <185.0............... 70.75 to <72.75. 2.35 2.75 2.10 2.45
185.0 or more................. 72.75 or more... 2.40 2.85 2.20 2.55
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
B. Exacerbations or complications (see 3.00J3) requiring three
hospitalizations of any length within a 12-month period and at least
30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur within the period we
are considering in connection with your application or continuing
disability review).
OR
C. Spontaneous pneumothorax, secondary to CF, requiring chest
tube placement.
OR
D. Respiratory failure (see 3.00N) requiring invasive mechanical
ventilation, noninvasive ventilation with BiPAP, or a combination of
both treatments, for a continuous period of at least 48 hours, or
for a continuous period of at least 72 hours if postoperatively.
OR
E. Pulmonary hemorrhage requiring vascular embolization to
control bleeding.
OR
F. SpO2 measured by pulse oximetry (see
3.00H3) either at rest, during a 6MWT, or after a 6MWT, less than or
equal to the value in Table VIII, twice within a 12-month period and
at least 30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur within the
period we are considering in connection with your application or
continuing disability review).
Tables VIII--SpO2 Criteria for 3.04F
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Test site altitude (feet above sea
level) SpO2 less than or equal to
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less than 3,000......................... 89 percent.
3,000 through 6,000..................... 87 percent.
Over 6,000.............................. 85 percent.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
G. Two of the following exacerbations or complications (either
two of the same or two different, see 3.00J3 and 3.00J4) within a
12-month period (the 12-month period must
[[Page 37149]]
occur within the period we are considering in connection with your
application or continuing disability review):
1. Pulmonary exacerbation requiring 10 consecutive days of
intravenous antibiotic treatment.
2. Pulmonary hemorrhage (hemoptysis with more than blood-
streaked sputum but not requiring vascular embolization) requiring
hospitalization of any length.
3. Weight loss requiring daily supplemental enteral nutrition
via a gastrostomy for at least 90 consecutive days or parenteral
nutrition via a central venous catheter for at least 90 consecutive
days.
4. CFRD requiring daily insulin therapy for at least 90
consecutive days.
3.05 [Reserved]
3.06 [Reserved]
3.07 Bronchiectasis (see 3.00K), documented by imaging (see
3.00D3), with exacerbations or complications requiring three
hospitalizations within a 12-month period and at least 30 days apart
(the 12-month period must occur within the period we are considering
in connection with your application or continuing disability
review). Each hospitalization must last at least 48 hours, including
hours in a hospital emergency department immediately before the
hospitalization.
3.08 [Reserved]
3.09 Chronic pulmonary hypertension due to any cause (see 3.00L)
documented by mean pulmonary artery pressure equal to or greater
than 40 mm Hg as determined by cardiac catheterization while
medically stable (see 3.00E2a).
3.10 [Reserved]
3.11 Lung transplantation (see 3.00M). Consider under a
disability for 3 years from the date of the transplant; after that,
evaluate the residual impairment(s).
3.12 [Reserved]
3.13 [Reserved]
3.14 Respiratory failure (see 3.00N) resulting from any
underlying chronic respiratory disorder except CF (for CF, see
3.04D), requiring invasive mechanical ventilation, noninvasive
ventilation with BiPAP, or a combination of both treatments, for a
continuous period of at least 48 hours, or for a continuous period
of at least 72 hours if postoperatively, twice within a 12-month
period and at least 30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur
within the period we are considering in connection with your
application or continuing disability review).
* * * * *
Part B
* * * * *
103.00 Respiratory Disorders.
* * * * *
103.00 Respiratory Disorders
A. Which disorders do we evaluate in this body system?
1. We evaluate respiratory disorders that result in obstruction
(difficulty moving air out of the lungs) or restriction (difficulty
moving air into the lungs), or that interfere with diffusion (gas
exchange) across cell membranes in the lungs. Examples of such
disorders and the listings we use to evaluate them include chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (103.02), chronic lung disease of
infancy (also known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia, 103.02C or
103.02E), pulmonary fibrosis (103.02), asthma (103.02 or 103.03),
and cystic fibrosis (103.04). We also use listings in this body
system to evaluate respiratory failure resulting from an underlying
chronic respiratory disorder (103.04E or 103.14) and lung
transplantation (103.11).
2. We evaluate cancers affecting the respiratory system under
the listings in 113.00. We evaluate the pulmonary effects of
neuromuscular and autoimmune disorders under these listings or under
the listings in 111.00 or 114.00, respectively.
B. What are the symptoms and signs of respiratory disorders?
Symptoms and signs of respiratory disorders include dyspnea
(shortness of breath), chest pain, coughing, wheezing, sputum
production, hemoptysis (coughing up blood from the respiratory
tract), use of accessory muscles of respiration, and tachypnea
(rapid rate of breathing).
C. What abbreviations do we use in this body system?
1. BiPAP means bi-level positive airway pressure ventilation.
2. BTPS means body temperature and ambient pressure, saturated
with water vapor.
3. CF means cystic fibrosis.
4. CFRD means CF-related diabetes.
5. CFTR means CF transmembrane conductance regulator.
6. CLD means chronic lung disease of infancy.
7. FEV1 means forced expiratory volume in the first
second of a forced expiratory maneuver.
8. FVC means forced vital capacity.
9. L means liter.
D. What documentation do we need to evaluate your respiratory
disorder?
1. We need medical evidence to document and assess the severity
of your respiratory disorder. Medical evidence should include your
medical history, physical examination findings, the results of
imaging (see 103.00D3), spirometry (see 103.00E), other relevant
laboratory tests, and descriptions of any prescribed treatment and
your response to it. We may not need all of this evidence depending
on your particular respiratory disorder and its effects on you.
2. If you use supplemental oxygen, we still need medical
evidence to establish the severity of your respiratory disorder.
3. Imaging refers to medical imaging techniques, such as x-ray
and computerized tomography. The imaging must be consistent with the
prevailing state of medical knowledge and clinical practice as the
proper technique to support the evaluation of the disorder.
E. What is spirometry and what are our requirements for an
acceptable test and report?
1. Spirometry, which measures how well you move air into and out
of your lungs, involves at least three forced expiratory maneuvers
during the same test session. A forced expiratory maneuver is a
maximum inhalation followed by a forced maximum exhalation, and
measures exhaled volumes of air over time. The volume of air you
exhale in the first second of the forced expiratory maneuver is the
FEV1. The total volume of air that you exhale during the
entire forced expiratory maneuver is the FVC. We use your highest
FEV1 value to evaluate your respiratory disorder under
103.02A and 103.04A, and your highest FVC value to evaluate your
respiratory disorder under 103.02B, regardless of whether the values
are from the same forced expiratory maneuver or different forced
expiratory maneuvers. We will not purchase spirometry for children
who have not attained age 6.
2. We have the following requirements for spirometry under these
listings:
a. You must be medically stable at the time of the test.
Examples of when we would not consider you to be medically stable
include when you are:
(i) Within 2 weeks of a change in your prescribed respiratory
medication.
(ii) Experiencing, or within 30 days of completion of treatment
for, a lower respiratory tract infection.
(iii) Experiencing, or within 30 days of completion of treatment
for, an acute exacerbation (temporary worsening) of a chronic
respiratory disorder. Wheezing by itself does not indicate that you
are not medically stable.
b. During testing, if your FEV1 is less than 70
percent of your predicted normal value, we require repeat spirometry
after inhalation of a bronchodilator to evaluate your respiratory
disorder under these listings, unless it is medically
contraindicated. If you used a bronchodilator before the test and
your FEV1 is less than 70 percent of your predicted
normal value, we still require repeat spirometry after inhalation of
a bronchodilator unless the supervising physician determines that it
is not safe for you to take a bronchodilator again (in which case we
may need to reschedule the test). If you do not have post-
bronchodilator spirometry, the test report must explain why. We can
use the results of spirometry administered without bronchodilators
when the use of bronchodilators is medically contraindicated.
c. Your forced expiratory maneuvers must be satisfactory. We
consider a forced expiratory maneuver to be satisfactory when you
exhale with maximum effort following a full inspiration, and when
the test tracing has a sharp takeoff and rapid rise to peak flow,
has a smooth contour, and either lasts for at least 6 seconds (for
children age 10 and older) or for at least 3 seconds (for children
who have not attained age 10), or maintains a plateau for at least 1
second.
3. The spirometry report must include the following information:
a. The date of the test and your name, age or date of birth,
gender, and height without shoes. (We will assume that your recorded
height on the date of the test is without shoes, unless we have
evidence to the contrary.) If your spine is abnormally curved (for
example, you have kyphoscoliosis), we will substitute the longest
distance between your outstretched fingertips with your arms
abducted 90 degrees in place of your height when this measurement is
greater than your standing height without shoes.
[[Page 37150]]
b. Any factors, if applicable, that can affect the
interpretation of the test results (for example, your cooperation or
effort in doing the test).
c. Legible tracings of your forced expiratory maneuvers in a
volume-time format showing your name and the date of the test for
each maneuver.
4. If you have attained age 6, we may need to purchase
spirometry to determine whether your disorder meets a listing,
unless we can make a fully favorable determination or decision on
another basis.
5. Before we purchase spirometry for a child age 6 or older, a
medical consultant (see Sec. 416.1016 of this chapter), preferably
one with experience in the care of children with respiratory
disorders, must review your case record to determine if we need the
test. If we purchase spirometry, the medical source we designate to
administer the test is solely responsible for deciding whether it is
safe for you to do the test and for how to administer it.
F. What is CLD and how do we evaluate it?
1. CLD, also known as bronchopulmonary dysplasia, or BPD, is
scarring of the immature lung. CLD may develop as a complication of
mechanical ventilation and oxygen therapy for infants with
significant neonatal respiratory problems. Within the first 6 months
of life, most infants with CLD are successfully weaned from
mechanical ventilation, and then weaned from oxygen supplementation.
We evaluate CLD under 103.02C, 103.02E, or if you are age 2 or
older, under 103.03 or another appropriate listing.
2. If you have CLD, are not yet 6 months old, and need 24-hour-
per-day oxygen supplementation, we will not evaluate your CLD under
103.02C until you are 6 months old. Depending on the evidence in
your case record, we may make a fully favorable determination or
decision under other rules before you are 6 months old.
3. We evaluate your CLD under 103.02C if you are at least 6
months old and you need 24-hour-per-day oxygen supplementation. (If
you were born prematurely, we use your corrected chronological age.
See Sec. 416.924b(b) of this chapter.) We also evaluate your CLD
under 103.02C if you were weaned off oxygen supplementation but
needed it again by the time you were 6 months old or older.
4. We evaluate your CLD under 103.02E if you are any age from
birth to the attainment of age 2 and have CLD exacerbations or
complications (for example, wheezing, lower respiratory tract
infections, or acute respiratory distress) that require
hospitalization. For the purpose of 103.02E, we count your initial
birth hospitalization as one hospitalization. The phrase ``consider
under a disability for 1 year from the discharge date of the last
hospitalization or until the attainment of age 2, whichever is
later'' in 103.02E does not refer to the date on which your
disability began, only to the date on which we must reevaluate
whether your impairment(s) continues to meet a listing or is
otherwise disabling.
G. What is asthma and how do we evaluate it?
1. Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the lung airways
that we evaluate under 103.02 or 103.03. If you have respiratory
failure resulting from chronic asthma (see 103.00J), we will
evaluate it under 103.14.
2. For the purposes of 103.03:
a. The phrase ``consider under a disability for 1 year''
explains how long your asthma can meet the requirements of the
listing. It does not refer to the date on which your disability
began, only to the date on which we must reevaluate whether your
asthma continues to meet a listing or is otherwise disabling.
b. We determine the onset of your disability based on the facts
of your case, but it will be no later than the admission date of
your first of three hospitalizations that satisfy the criteria of
103.03.
H. What is CF and how do we evaluate it?
1. General. We evaluate CF, a genetic disorder that results in
abnormal salt and water transport across cell membranes in the
lungs, pancreas, and other body organs, under 103.04. We need the
evidence described in 103.00H2 to establish that you have CF.
2. Documentation of CF. We need a report signed by a physician
(see Sec. 416.913(a) of this chapter) showing both a and b:
a. One of the following:
(i) A positive newborn screen for CF; or
(ii) A history of CF in a sibling; or
(iii) Documentation of at least one specific CF phenotype or
clinical criterion (for example, chronic sino-pulmonary disease with
persistent colonization or infections with typical CF pathogens,
pancreatic insufficiency, or salt-loss syndromes); and
b. One of the following definitive laboratory tests:
(i) An elevated sweat chloride concentration equal to or greater
than 60 millimoles per L; or
(ii) The identification of two CF gene mutations affecting the
CFTR; or
(iii) Characteristic abnormalities in ion transport across the
nasal epithelium.
c. When we have the report showing a and b, but it is not signed
by a physician, we also need a report from a physician stating that
you have CF.
d. When we do not have the report showing a and b, we need a
report from a physician that is persuasive that a positive diagnosis
of CF was confirmed by an appropriate definitive laboratory test. To
be persuasive, this report must include a statement by the physician
that you had the appropriate definitive laboratory test for
diagnosing CF. The report must provide the test results or explain
how your diagnosis was established that is consistent with the
prevailing state of medical knowledge and clinical practice.
3. CF pulmonary exacerbations. Examples of CF pulmonary
exacerbations include increased cough and sputum production,
hemoptysis, increased shortness of breath, increased fatigue, and
reduction in pulmonary function. Treatment usually includes
intravenous antibiotics and intensified airway clearance therapy
(for example, increased frequencies of chest percussion or increased
use of inhaled nebulized therapies, such as bronchodilators or
mucolytics).
4. For 103.04G, we require any two exacerbations or
complications from the list in 103.04G1 through 103.04G4 within a
12-month period. You may have two of the same exacerbation or
complication or two different ones.
a. If you have two of the acute exacerbations or complications
we describe in 103.04G1 and 103.04G2, there must be at least 30 days
between the two.
b. If you have one of the acute exacerbations or complications
we describe in 103.04G1 and 103.04G2 and one of the chronic
complications we describe in 103.04G3 and 103.04G4, the two can
occur during the same time. For example, your CF meets 103.04G if
you have the pulmonary hemorrhage we describe in 103.04G2 and the
weight loss we describe in 103.04G3 even if the pulmonary hemorrhage
occurs during the 90-day period in 103.04G3.
c. Your CF also meets 103.04G if you have both of the chronic
complications in 103.04G3 and 103.04G4.
5. CF may also affect other body systems such as digestive or
endocrine. If your CF, including pulmonary exacerbations and
nonpulmonary complications, does not meet or medically equal a
respiratory disorders listing, we may evaluate your CF-related
impairments under the listings in the affected body system.
I. How do we evaluate lung transplantation? If you receive a
lung transplant (or a lung transplant simultaneously with other
organs, such as the heart), we will consider you to be disabled
under 103.11 for 3 years from the date of the transplant. After
that, we evaluate your residual impairment(s) by considering the
adequacy of your post-transplant function, the frequency and
severity of any rejection episodes you have, complications in other
body systems, and adverse treatment effects. Children who receive
organ transplants generally have impairments that meet our
definition of disability before they undergo transplantation. The
phrase ``consider under a disability for 3 years'' in 103.11 does
not refer to the date on which your disability began, only to the
date on which we must reevaluate whether your impairment(s)
continues to meet a listing or is otherwise disabling. We determine
the onset of your disability based on the facts of your case.
J. What is respiratory failure and how do we evaluate it?
Respiratory failure is the inability of the lungs to perform their
basic function of gas exchange. We evaluate respiratory failure
under 103.04E if you have CF-related respiratory failure, or under
103.14 if you have respiratory failure due to any other chronic
respiratory disorder. Continuous positive airway pressure does not
satisfy the criterion in 103.04E or 103.14, and cannot be
substituted as an equivalent finding, for invasive mechanical
ventilation or noninvasive ventilation with BiPAP.
K. How do we evaluate growth failure due to any chronic
respiratory disorder?
1. To evaluate growth failure due to any chronic respiratory
disorder, we require documentation of the oxygen supplementation
described in 103.06A and the growth measurements in 103.06B within
[[Page 37151]]
the same consecutive 12-month period. The dates of oxygen
supplementation may be different from the dates of growth
measurements.
2. Under 103.06B, we use the appropriate table(s) under 105.08B
in the digestive system to determine whether a child's growth is
less than the third percentile.
a. For children from birth to attainment of age 2, we use the
weight-for-length table corresponding to the child's gender (Table I
or Table II).
b. For children age 2 to attainment of age 18, we use the body
mass index (BMI)-for-age table corresponding to the child's gender
(Table III or Table IV).
c. BMI is the ratio of a child's weight to the square of his or
her height. We calculate BMI using the formulas in 105.00G2c.
L. How do we evaluate respiratory disorders that do not meet one
of these listings?
1. These listings are only examples of common respiratory
disorders that we consider severe enough to result in marked and
severe functional limitations. If your impairment(s) does not meet
the criteria of any of these listings, we must also consider whether
you have an impairment(s) that meets the criteria of a listing in
another body system. For example, if your CF has resulted in chronic
pancreatic or hepatobiliary disease, we evaluate your impairment
under the listings in 105.00.
2. If you have a severe medically determinable impairment(s)
that does not meet a listing, we will determine whether your
impairment(s) medically equals a listing. See Sec. 416.926 of this
chapter. Respiratory disorders may be associated with disorders in
other body systems, and we consider the combined effects of multiple
impairments when we determine whether they medically equal a
listing. If your impairment(s) does not meet or medically equal a
listing, we will also consider whether it functionally equals the
listings. See Sec. 416.926a of this chapter. We use the rules in
Sec. 416.994a of this chapter when we decide whether you continue
to be disabled.
103.01 Category of Impairments, Respiratory Disorders
103.02 Chronic respiratory disorders due to any cause except CF
(for CF, see 103.04), with A, B, C, D, or E:
A. FEV1 (see 103.00E) less than or equal to the value
in Table I-A or I-B for your age, gender, and height without shoes
(see 103.00E3a).
Table I--FEV1 Criteria for 103.02A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table I-A Table I-B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 6 to attainment of age 13 (for both females and males) Age 13 to attainment of age 18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Females FEV1 Males FEV1
Height without shoes (centimeters) Height without shoes FEV1 less than Height without shoes Height without shoes less than or less than or
< means less than (inches) < means less or equal to (centimeters) < means (inches) < means less equal to (L, equal to (L,
than (L, BTPS) less than than BTPS) BTPS)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<123.0............................. <48.50............... 0.80 <153.0............... <60.25............... 1.35 1.40
123.0 to <129.0.................... 48.50 to <50.75...... 0.90 153.0 to <159.0...... 60.25 to <62.50...... 1.45 1.50
129.0 to <134.0.................... 50.75 to <52.75...... 1.00 159.0 to <164.0...... 62.50 to <64.50...... 1.55 1.60
134.0 to <139.0.................... 52.75 to <54.75...... 1.10 164.0 to <169.0...... 64.50 to <66.50...... 1.65 1.70
139.0 to <144.0.................... 54.75 to <56.75...... 1.20 169.0 to <174.0...... 66.50 to <68.50...... 1.75 1.85
144.0 to <149.0.................... 56.75 to <58.75...... 1.30 174.0 to <180.0...... 68.50 to <70.75...... 1.85 2.00
149.0 or more...................... 58.75 or more........ 1.40 180.0 or more........ 70.75 or more........ 1.95 2.10
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
B. FVC (see 103.00E) less than or equal to the value in Table
II-A or II-B for your age, gender, and height without shoes (see
103.00E3a).
Table II--FVC Criteria for 103.02B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table II-A Table II-B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 6 to attainment of age 13 (for both females and males) Age 13 to attainment of age 18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Females FVC
Height without shoes (centimeters) Height without shoes FVC less than Height without shoes Height without shoes less than or Males FVC less
< means less than (inches) < means less or equal to (centimeters) < means (inches) < means less equal to (L, than or equal
than (L, BTPS) less than than BTPS) to (L, BTPS)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<123.0............................. <48.50............... 0.85 <153.0............... <60.25............... 1.65 1.65
123.0 to <129.0.................... 48.50 to <50.75...... 1.00 153.0 to <159.0...... 60.25 to <62.50...... 1.70 1.80
129.0 to <134.0.................... 50.75 to <52.75...... 1.10 159.0 to <164.0...... 62.50 to <64.50...... 1.80 1.95
134.0 to <139.0.................... 52.75 to <54.75...... 1.30 164.0 to <169.0...... 64.50 to <66.50...... 1.95 2.10
139.0 to <144.0.................... 54.75 to <56.75...... 1.40 169.0 to <174.0...... 66.50 to <68.50...... 2.05 2.25
144.0 to <149.0.................... 56.75 to <58.75...... 1.55 174.0 to <180.0...... 68.50 to <70.75...... 2.20 2.45
149.0 or more...................... 58.75 or more........ 1.70 180.0 or more........ 70.75 or more........ 2.30 2.55
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
C. Hypoxemia with the need for at least 1.0 L per minute of
continuous (24 hours per day) oxygen supplementation for at least 90
consecutive days.
OR
D. The presence of a tracheostomy.
1. Consider under a disability until the attainment of age 3; or
2. Upon the attainment of age 3, documented need for mechanical
ventilation via a tracheostomy for at least 4 hours per day and for
at least 90 consecutive days.
OR
E. For children who have not attained age 2, CLD (see 103.00F)
with exacerbations or complications requiring three hospitalizations
within a 12-month period and at least 30 days apart (the 12-month
period must occur within the period we are considering in connection
with your application or continuing disability review).
[[Page 37152]]
Each hospitalization must last at least 48 hours, including hours in
a hospital emergency department immediately before the
hospitalization. (A child's initial birth hospitalization when CLD
is first diagnosed counts as one hospitalization.) Consider under a
disability for 1 year from the discharge date of the last
hospitalization or until the attainment of age 2, whichever is
later. After that, evaluate the impairment(s) under 103.03 or
another appropriate listing.
103.03 Asthma (see 103.00G) with exacerbations or complications
requiring three hospitalizations within a 12-month period and at
least 30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur within the
period we are considering in connection with your application or
continuing disability review). Each hospitalization must last at
least 48 hours, including hours in a hospital emergency department
immediately before the hospitalization. Consider under a disability
for 1 year from the discharge date of the last hospitalization;
after that, evaluate the residual impairment(s) under 103.03 or
another appropriate listing.
103.04 Cystic fibrosis (documented as described in 103.00H),
with A, B, C, D, E, F, or G:
A. FEV1 (see 103.00E) less than or equal to the value
in Table III-A or Table III-B for your age, gender, and height
without shoes (see 103.00E3a).
Table III--FEV1 Criteria for 103.04A
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table III-A Table III-B
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Age 6 to attainment of age 13 (for both females and males) Age 13 to attainment of age 18
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Females FEV1 Males FEV1
Height without shoes (centimeters) Height without shoes FEV1 less than Height without shoes Height without shoes less than or less than or
< means less than (inches) < means less or equal to (centimeters) < means (inches) < means less equal to (L, equal to (L,
than (L, BTPS) less than than BTPS) BTPS)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<123.0............................. <48.50............... 1.00 <153.0............... <60.25............... 1.75 1.85
123.0 to <129.0.................... 48.50 to <50.75...... 1.15 153.0 to <159.0...... 60.25 to <62.50...... 1.85 2.05
129.0 to <134.0.................... 50.75 to <52.75...... 1.25 159.0 to <164.0...... 62.50 to <64.50...... 1.95 2.15
134.0 to <139.0.................... 52.75 to <54.75...... 1.40 164.0 to <169.0...... 64.50 to <66.50...... 2.10 2.30
139.0 to <144.0.................... 54.75 to <56.75...... 1.50 169.0 to <174.0...... 66.50 to <68.50...... 2.25 2.45
144.0 to <149.0.................... 56.75 to <58.75...... 1.70 174.0 to <180.0...... 68.50 to <70.75...... 2.35 2.60
149.0 or more...................... 58.75 or more........ 1.80 180.0 or more........ 70.75 or more........ 2.50 2.70
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
OR
B. For children who have not attained age 6, findings on imaging
(see 103.00D3) of thickening of the proximal bronchial airways,
nodular-cystic lesions, segmental or lobular atelectasis, or
consolidation, and documentation of one of the following:
1. Shortness of breath with activity; or
2. Accumulation of secretions as manifested by repetitive
coughing; or
3. Bilateral rales or rhonchi, or reduction of breath sounds.
OR
C. Exacerbations or complications (see 103.00H3) requiring three
hospitalizations of any length within a 12-month period and at least
30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur within the period we
are considering in connection with your application or continuing
disability review).
OR
D. Spontaneous pneumothorax, secondary to CF, requiring chest
tube placement.
OR
E. Respiratory failure (see 103.00J) requiring invasive
mechanical ventilation, noninvasive ventilation with BiPAP, or a
combination of both treatments, for a continuous period of at least
48 hours, or for a continuous period of at least 72 hours if
postoperatively.
OR
F. Pulmonary hemorrhage requiring vascular embolization to
control bleeding.
OR
G. Two of the following exacerbations or complications (either
two of the same or two different, see 103.00H3 and 103.00H4) within
a 12-month period (the 12-month period must occur within the period
we are considering in connection with your application or continuing
disability review):
1. Pulmonary exacerbation requiring 10 consecutive days of
intravenous antibiotic treatment.
2. Pulmonary hemorrhage (hemoptysis with more than blood-
streaked sputum but not requiring vascular embolization) requiring
hospitalization of any length.
3. Weight loss requiring daily supplemental enteral nutrition
via a gastrostomy for at least 90 consecutive days or parenteral
nutrition via a central venous catheter for at least 90 consecutive
days.
4. CFRD requiring daily insulin therapy for at least 90
consecutive days.
103.05 [Reserved]
103.06 Growth failure due to any chronic respiratory disorder
(see 103.00K), documented by:
A. Hypoxemia with the need for at least 1.0 L per min of oxygen
supplementation for at least 4 hours per day and for at least 90
consecutive days.
AND
B. Growth failure as required in 1 or 2:
1. For children from birth to attainment of age 2, three weight-
for-length measurements that are:
a. Within a consecutive 12-month period; and
b. At least 60 days apart; and
c. Less than the third percentile on the appropriate weight-for-
length table under 105.08B1; or
2. For children age 2 to attainment of age 18, three BMI-for-age
measurements that are:
a. Within a consecutive 12-month period; and
b. At least 60 days apart; and
c. Less than the third percentile on the appropriate BMI-for-age
table under 105.08B2.
103.07 [Reserved]
103.08 [Reserved]
103.09 [Reserved]
103.10 [Reserved]
103.11 Lung transplantation (see 103.00I). Consider under a
disability for 3 years from the date of the transplant; after that,
evaluate the residual impairment(s).
103.12 [Reserved]
103.13 [Reserved]
103.14 Respiratory failure (see 103.00J) resulting from any
underlying chronic respiratory disorder except CF (for CF, see
103.04E), requiring invasive mechanical ventilation, noninvasive
ventilation with BiPAP, or a combination of both treatments, for a
continuous period of at least 48 hours, or for a continuous period
of at least 72 hours if postoperatively, twice within a 12-month
period and at least 30 days apart (the 12-month period must occur
within the period we are considering in connection with your
application or continuing disability review).
* * * * *
PART 416--SUPPLEMENTAL SECURITY INCOME FOR THE AGED, BLIND, AND
DISABLED
Subpart I--Determining Disability and Blindness
0
3. The authority citation for subpart I of part 416 continues to read
as follows:
Authority: Secs. 221(m), 702(a)(5), 1611, 1614, 1619, 1631(a),
(c), (d)(1), and (p), and 1633 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
421(m), 902(a)(5), 1382, 1382c, 1382h, 1383(a), (c), (d)(1), and
(p), and 1383b); secs. 4(c) and 5, 6(c)-(e), 14(a), and 15, Pub. L.
98-460, 98 Stat. 1794, 1801, 1802, and 1808 (42 U.S.C. 421 note, 423
note, and 1382h note).
[[Page 37153]]
Sec. 416.926a [Amended]
0
4. Amend Sec. 416.926a by removing paragraph (m)(1) and redesignating
paragraphs (m)(2) through (6) as (m)(1) through (5).
[FR Doc. 2016-13275 Filed 6-8-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191-02-P