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6 New J Codes Make Inhalation Coding Easier



Bonus: Don't let premix and compound solution requirements mix you up
You now have greater flexibility in code selection when report inhalation solutions, thanks to HCPCS 2005 introducing six new J codes.
Take Your Pick of New Nebulizer Med Codes
This year you have two new codes for compounded inhalation solutions:


 J7616 - Albuterol, up to 5 mg and ipratropium bromide, up to 1 mg, compounded inhalation solution, administered through DME 

 J7617 - Levalbuterol, up to 2.5 mg and ipratropium bromide, up to 1 mg, compounded inhalation solution, administered through DME.

HCPCS 2005 introduces J7616-J7617, along with J codes for albuterol:

 J7611 - Albuterol, inhalation solution, administered through DME, concentrated form, 1 mg 

 J7613 - Albuterol, inhalation solution, administered through DME, unit dose, 1 mg

and levalbuterol:

 J7612 - Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, administered through DME, concentrated form, 0.5 mg

J7614 - Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, administered through DME, unit dose, 0.5 mg.



Old way: When a physician administered a nebulizer treatment containing a compounded inhalation solution of albuterol and levalbuterol, you should have assigned J7621 (Albuterol, all formulations, including separated isomers, up to 5 mg [albuterol] or 2.5 mg [levalbuterol], and ipratropium bromide, up to 1 mg, compounded inhalation solution, administered through DME). HCPCS 2005 deletes this J code.

New way: You should now specify whether the allergist uses a compounded inhalation solution of:

 albuterol and ipratropium bromide - J7616

 levalbuterol and ipratropium bromide - J7617.

Bill Premixed Solution With Compounded Code
Codes J7616 and J7617 may come in handy more than you think. Even if you premix albuterol/levalbuterol and ipratropium bromide, you should still use these new compounded inhalation solution J codes, says Kent J. Moore, manager of Health Care Financing and Delivery Systems for the American Academy of Family Physicians in Leawood, Kan.

Reason: "Medicare implies that premixed and compounded are synonymous," Moore says. In the 2005 fee schedule proposed rule (see page 61 of the document at www.cms.hhs.gov/providers/drugs/mpfs_05pr.pdf), CMS talks about suppliers furnishing albuterol and ipratropium bromide in "a premixed form (either commercially premixed or pharmacy-compounded)."

"So if a physician's office (like a pharmacy) mixes the two and administers them, they should use the compounded inhalation solution codes: J7616 or J7617," Moore says.

Example: "We mix levalbuterol and ipratropium bromide solutions ourselves," says Angela McDougal, CCS-P, coding analyst at Bend Memorial Clinic in Bend, Ore. The clinic orders premixed albuterol and ipratropium bromide.

The clinic should use the compounded codes for either solution (J7616-J7617) rather than the component codes, such as J7613 and J7644 (Ipratropium bromide, inhalation solution administered [...]

- Published on 2005-06-09
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