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Use 4 Ways to Tell Diagnostic Allergy Codes Apart



Learn the ins and outs of using the 95004-95028 series
Assigning the wrong allergy test code could cost you big bucks, but you can improve your 95004-95028 pay if you know the fundamental differences between these diagnostic tests.
 
Relative value units (RVUs) for 95004-95028 vary from a high of 0.60 (95010, Percutaneous tests [scratch, puncture, prick] sequential and incremental, with drugs, biologicals or venoms, immediate type reaction, specify number of tests) to a low of 0.11 (95004, Percutaneous tests [scratch, puncture, prick] with allergenic extracts, immediate type reaction, specify number of tests). That means choosing the wrong code will significantly affect your revenue. For instance, selecting 95004 instead of 95010 will cost your practice 0.49 RVUs (more than $18) per antigen. Combine that loss with the usually accepted number of antigens tested - 14 - and you'll lose more than $253 on a single claim.
 
To avoid this unintentional revenue loss, coding experts offer four tips for distinguishing among codes in the 95004-95028 family.
1. Know the Test's Type
You should report allergy testing based on whether your allergist or nurse administers a percutaneous or an intracutaneous test. When your allergist administers the test through the skin, you should report a percutaneous skin test, says Jami Lucas, American Academy of Otolaryngic Allergy (AAOA) executive director in Washington, D.C. These tests include scratch, puncture and skin tests, which CPT defines as 95004 and 95010, she says.
 
If your allergist instead injects a substance into the patient's skin, you should report an intracutaneous or intradermal test, Lucas says. Possible tests include 95015 (Intracutaneous [intradermal] tests, sequential and incremental, with drugs, biologicals, or venoms, immediate type reaction, specify number of tests), 95024 (Intracutaneous [intradermal] tests with allergenic extracts, immediate type reaction, specify number of tests), 95027 (Intracutaneous [intradermal] tests, sequential and incremental, with allergenic extracts for airborne allergens, immediate type reaction, specify number of tests) and 95028 (Intracutaneous [intradermal] tests with allergenic extracts, delayed type reaction, including reading, specify number of tests).
2. Check the Substances Tested
The next factor that you need to consider is whether your allergist tested the patient for environmental and food allergens rather than biological or insect substances. Codes 95004, 95024 and 95028 all describe testing allergenic extracts, such as weed, grass, mite, animal dander and food, according to CPT Assistant, summer 1991. Watch out: You should also use 95027 for airborne allergens only, which includes all the environmental allergens, but not food allergies, says Michelle Lutke, coding specialist at Greenley Oaks in Sonora, Calif. On the other hand, 95010 and 95015 involve testing the patient for reactions to antibiotics, biologicals, stinging insects and local anesthetic agents.
 
Consider the following test description: Your allergist applies [...]

- Published on 2003-11-07
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