I just emailed a friend, for their friend, about Cyberknife and insurance, so I am pasting part of that here, in case it helps. First a comment, then some links and info.
An insurance company will typically say no if a patient calls up on their own asking for approval. They simply can't base an approval on that. They are much more likely to approve when presented with a formal case from a medical facility, complete with all relevant documentation. A patient can facilitate that by finding appropriate contacts at both the insurance company and the medical facility, then getting and faxing copies of everything to both parties.
There are of course cases where the insurance company still says no:
CBS report on denial of Cyberknife by Blue Shield, and eventual acceptance on appeal:
http://cbs5.com/investigates/CyberKnife.blue.shield.2.716740.htmlOne of many discussions of the subject on the Cyberknife patient support group forum:
http://www.cyberknifesupport.org/forum/default.aspx?f=16&m=19808From my own experience, a quote from a post I made at the time:
"I got the call today from Stanford, the insurance company has approved having Cyberknife. I am on for Sep. 10th. The scheduler Scarlett said that what helped the most was when I faxed the RN at the insurance company copies of all the reports - the radiologist report on the MRI, the audiogram, the vestibular lab tests, the radiation oncologist evaluation, and all emails from Dr. Chang at Stanford."
This issue has come up before. There are various cases in the news and on the Internet. Swamp your insurance company with information on Cyberknife; get every doctor you know who has heard of CK to write to them; get the radiation oncologist and/or neurosurgeon to send them indignant emails and phone calls. Be sure they have copies of every medical report and examination and diagnosis and treatment recommendation.
Maybe something will budge them.
Steve