To obtain judicial review of claims arising under the Medicare Act, a plaintiff must first present the claims to the Secretary of Health and Human Services. In this case, we consider whether a plaintiff may satisfy this presentment requirement by filing comments in an informal rulemaking. We also consider whether a plaintiff may cure any failure to present through administrative filings made while a case is pending on appeal.
I
The Medicare program provides federally-funded health insurance to qualifying elderly and disabled individuals.
The Outpatient Prospective Payment System ("OPPS"), a component of Part B, reimburses hospitals that provide covered outpatient services.
This case involves the so-called "340B Program," which allows certain hospitals to purchase outpatient drugs from manufacturers at or below specified prices. See Public Health Services Act § 340B, 42 U.S.C. § 256b. When hospitals treat Medicare beneficiaries with these drugs, they are reimbursed through OPPS.
In setting the annual reimbursement rates for drugs obtained through the 340B Program, the Secretary must use either the "average acquisition cost" of the drug, taking into account "hospital acquisition cost survey data," or, if those data are unavailable, the "average price" of the drug, as established under different provisions of Medicare. 42 U.S.C. § 1395l (t)(14)(A)(iii). The relevant cross-referenced provision fixes payment rates at 106% of the average sales price. See
The regulation at issue here sets the OPPS reimbursement rate for these drugs for 2018. It reduces the rate from 106% to 77.5% of the average sales price. Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment and Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment Systems and Quality Reporting Programs,
The plaintiffs in this case are three hospitals and three hospital associations. They sued to challenge the regulation on November 13, 2017, the very day it was published in the Federal Register, and before its effective date of January 1, 2018. The plaintiffs claimed that, under 42 U.S.C. § 1395l (t)(14)(A)(iii), the Secretary lacked authority to establish an average-price metric keyed to estimates of average acquisition costs, rather than actual survey data of those costs. Further, they claimed that a nearly 30% reduction cannot qualify as a mere payment adjustment. Without submitting any individual claims for reimbursement to HHS, they sought declaratory *825and injunctive relief against the new regulation.
The district court held that the plaintiffs had failed to present claims for reimbursement to the Secretary, as required to obtain judicial review of claims under Medicare, and it therefore dismissed the complaint for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Am. Hospital Ass'n v. Hargan ,
II
We review de novo a dismissal for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. See , e.g. , Fla. Health Scis. Ctr. v. Sec'y of Health & Human Servs. ,
Three statutes create the scheme for obtaining judicial review of Medicare claims. First,
Two preliminary points are undisputed. First, despite these channeling provisions for Medicare claims, federal-question jurisdiction remains available where necessary to preserve an opportunity for judicial review. See , e.g. , Ill. Council ,
The Supreme Court has held that § 405(g) imposes two distinct preconditions for obtaining judicial review of covered Medicare claims. First, the plaintiff must have "presented" the claim to the Secretary; this requirement is not waivable, because without presentment "there can be no 'decision' of any type," which § 405(g) clearly requires.
*826Mathews v. Eldridge ,
When the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, neither the hospital plaintiffs, nor any members of the hospital-association plaintiffs, had challenged the new reimbursement regulation in the context of a specific administrative claim for payment. Nor could they have done so, for the new regulation had not yet even become effective. Therefore, they had neither presented their claim nor obtained any administrative decision at all, much less the "final decision" required under § 405(g).
The hospitals contend that they satisfied the presentment requirement by filing comments opposing the regulation during the rulemaking. This argument is hard to square with the text of § 405(g) -a regulation cannot easily be described as a "final decision," and a notice-and-comment rulemaking cannot easily be described as a "hearing" in which all commenters have assumed "party" status. To the contrary, a "final decision" is akin to a "final disposition," which the Administrative Procedure Act labels an "order" and distinguishes from a regulation or "rule."
The hospitals' argument is also foreclosed by precedent, which makes clear that the presentment requirement generally prevents anticipatory legal challenges to Medicare rules and regulations. For example, in Ringer , the Supreme Court held that § 405(g) barred a patient from seeking prospective relief to establish that a particular kind of surgery was " 'reasonable and necessary' within the meaning of the Medicare Act."
Likewise, in Illinois Council , the Supreme Court held that an association of providers was barred from "claiming that certain Medicare-related regulations violated various statutes and the Constitution."
*827were nothing more than notice-and-comment rulemaking.
Finally, in National Kidney Patients' Association , this Court held that § 405(g) blocked Medicare providers from challenging a "rate reduction" in a new regulation by "proceed[ing] directly to district court, seeking a preliminary injunction" against the regulation.
Against all of this, the plaintiffs invoke Eldridge and Action Alliance of Senior Citizens v. Sebelius ,
Alternatively, the hospitals contend that they cured their presentment problem through payment demands made to HHS during the pendency of this appeal. Those demands come too late to establish subject-matter jurisdiction in the district court. "It has long been the case that 'the jurisdiction of the court depends upon the state of things at the time of the action brought.' " Grupo Dataflux v. Atlas Global Grp. ,
The hospitals respond that, under Mathews v. Diaz ,
III
Because the plaintiffs failed to satisfy the presentment requirement of
Affirmed.
