Transforming Episode Accountability Model (TEAM): Impact on Orthopaedic, Spine, and Bone Health Clinical Practice and Opportunities to Drive Osteoporosis Diagnosis and Treatment - European Medical Journal

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Transforming Episode Accountability Model (TEAM): Impact on Orthopaedic, Spine, and Bone Health Clinical Practice and Opportunities to Drive Osteoporosis Diagnosis and Treatment

1 Mins
Rheumatology
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Authors:
Rita T. Roy , 1 * Lindsay D. Orosz , 1 Daniel Allen , 1 Ethan Waugh , 1 Paul Anderson , 2 Christian Péan 3
  • 1. National Spine Health Foundation, Reston, Virginia, USA
  • 2. University of Wisconsin School of Medicine, Madison, USA
  • 3. Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
*Correspondence to [email protected]
Disclosure:

Péan has received consulting fees from Arthrex, Inc., Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc., and Smith & Nephew plc; serves as Chief Executive Officer, Co-Founder, and Board Member of RevelAi Health, Inc., which is his primary employer; holds founder equity (common stock and/or stock options) in RevelAi Health, Inc.; has patents planned, issued, or pending assigned to RevelAi Health, Inc., with the individual listed as inventor; and holds leadership or fiduciary roles in the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and at the Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy. Orosz and Roy have received research grants from Amgen, ATEC, Medimaps, and Acuity Surgical, paid to the institutions. Anderson has received consulting fees from Amgen and Angita, with payments made to the individual; honoraria for lectures or educational events from Amgen, with payment made to the individual; support for attending meetings and/or travel from Amgen, with payment made to the individual; and has participated on an advisory board for Orthofix. The other authors have declared no conflicts  of interest.

Citation:
EMJ Rheumatol. ;13[Suppl 1]:50-52. https://doi.org/10.33590/emjrheumatol/W6R2UCQD.
Keywords:
Bone health optimisation (BHO), Fracture Liaison Service (FLS), osteoporosis, preoperative optimisation, Transforming Episode Accountability Model (TEAM), value-based care.

Each article is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 License.

BACKGROUND AND AIMS

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Transforming Episode Accountability Model (TEAM) is a mandatory 5-year, episode-based payment model launched in January 2026. Approximately 700 acute care hospitals across selected core-based statistical areas will be financially accountable for cost and quality across a 30-day post-discharge episode for five surgical categories, including spinal fusion and surgical hip/femur fracture treatment. Undiagnosed osteopenia or osteoporosis affects nearly half of patients undergoing spinal fusion, and poor bone quality markedly increases the risk of hardware failure, pseudarthrosis, fragility fractures, and downstream utilisation, positioning bone health optimisation (BHO) as a key driver of both clinical quality and episode-level financial performance  under TEAM.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The authors present a clinical and operational framework,1 developed by the National Spine Health Foundation’s Spine and Bone Health Task Force, to align preoperative BHO and Fracture Liaison Service (FLS) principles with TEAM accountability requirements (Figure 1). The framework comprises four integrated components: 1) a six-step preoperative screening algorithm using FRAX® (University of Sheffield, UK), dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, Trabecular Bone Score (TBS), and CT Hounsfield Units, with risk stratification into low, moderate, and high categories; 2) a seven-step preoperative BHO checklist covering risk identification, screening documentation, International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision (ICD-10) coding, active optimisation planning, evaluation and management coding considerations, diagnosis carry-forward, and use of modifier 22 when bone quality complicates surgery; 3) a 30-day postoperative playbook structured around the TEAM episode window with a 3–6 month bridge to long-term FLS-based management; and 4) operational alignment with TEAM’s mandatory primary care provider referral requirement to enable structured handoff of osteoporosis diagnosis, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry results, supplementation plans, and pharmacologic therapy.

Figure 1: The TEAM Toolkit.
The TEAM Toolkit is the clinical and operational framework developed by the Spine Health Foundation. The cover page (left), table of contents (middle), and the patient handout tool (right) are shown here.
TEAM: Transforming Episode Accountability Model.

DISCUSSION

Three implications follow from this framework. First, although hospitals hold formal TEAM accountability, surgeon-level workflow decisions including preoperative bone status documentation, intraoperative fixation strategy for compromised bone, discharge disposition, and post-discharge follow-up directly determine episode reconciliation outcomes. Second, systematic ICD-10 coding for osteoporosis, osteopenia, vitamin D deficiency, and related risk factors protects target-price calculation through accurate risk adjustment. Third, TEAM’s mandatory primary care referral creates a structural bridge previously absent under fee-for-service, supporting long-term continuation of pharmacologic osteoporosis therapy beyond the surgical episode.

CONCLUSION

TEAM creates structural and financial alignment for systematic bone health programmes in USA acute care hospitals performing spine and orthopaedic surgery. By embedding preoperative BHO, standardised coding, and structured post-acute handoff into the surgical episode, hospitals can simultaneously reduce complications, lower episode costs, and expand FLS uptake in alignment with Capture the Fracture® standards (International Osteoporosis Foundation [IOF], Nyon, Switzerland). The framework presented offers a practical template for translating TEAM compliance into durable improvements in osteoporosis diagnosis and treatment for surgical patients.

References
Roy R et al. Transforming episode accountability model: an opportunity to drive bone health optimization and Fracture Liason Service uptake in the United States. Abstract MR-D12. WCO-IOFESCEO, 16-19 April, 2026.

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