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Coding Corner: Gain Greater Specificity With



With benign or premalignant lesions, the number of lesions -- not the lesion size -- determines your code choice

CPT 2007 brings more choices for lesion destruction coding. Now you can select CPT codes that distinguish between destruction of premalignant and benign lesions.

The CPT manual has revised descriptors for 17000-17004 so that they apply only to premalignant lesions, states the AMA’s CPT Changes 2007: An Insider’s View. Similarly, you should now reserve 17110 and 17111 for benign lesions other than skin tags or cutaneous vascular proliferate lesions, as follows:

17000 -- Destruction (e.g., laser surgery, electrosurgery, cryosurgery, chemosurgery, surgical curettement), premalignant lesions (e.g., actinic keratoses); first lesion

+17003 -- … second through 14 lesions, each (list separately in addition to code for first lesion)

17004 -- Destruction (e.g., laser surgery, electrosurgery, cryosurgery, chemosurgery, surgical curettement), premalignant lesions (e.g., actinic keratoses), 15 or more lesions

17110 -- Destruction (e.g., laser surgery, electrosurgery, cryosurgery, chemosurgery, surgical curettement), of benign lesions other than skin tags or cutaneous vascular lesions; up to 14 lesions

17111 -- … 15 or more lesions.

Cautiously Assign Units
Guidelines for assigning code units for premalignant lesions differ from those for benign lesions, so be sure you read the code descriptors carefully.

“You should report a single unit of 17000 for the first premalignant lesion the physician destroys,” said Daniel Mark Siegal, MD, MS, during a Nov. 16, 2006, presentation at the AMA CPT and RBRVS 2007 Annual Symposium in Chicago. “You would then apply a single unit of 17003 for each of the second through 14th lesions.

“If the physician removes 15 or more lesions, report only 17004. You would never report 17000 and 17004 or 17003 and 17004 during the same session,” Siegal said.

Example 1: The surgeon destroys 13 premalignant lesions. In this case, you would report 17000 (for the initial lesions) and 17003 x 12 (one unit each for the 12 additional lesions).

Example 2: The surgeon destroys 19 premalignant lesions. In this case, you would report 17004 only.

When reporting benign lesion destruction, you should report 17110 for up to 14 lesions or 17111 for 15 or more lesions.

“On a given patient on a given day, you should choose either 17110 or 17111, never both,” Siegal said.

Example 3: The surgeon destroys five benign lesions. In this case, you will report 17110.

Example 4: The surgeon destroys 22 benign lesions. Here, you should report 17111. You would not report 17110 in addition to 17111, and you should never report multiple units of 17111.

Size doesn’t matter: When you assign codes for benign or premalignant lesions, only the number of lesions, not the lesion size, matters.

“Destruction of 10 big lesions codes out the same as destruction of 10 small lesions,” Siegal said.

You Can Mix and Match, When [...]

- Published on 2007-05-24
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