Find out the details that differentiate assistive, augmentative, and autonomous AI. With the year coming to a close, you probably feel like you’re relatively well-versed in the nuances of the 2023 CPT® code book. But have you noticed Appendix S? The new appendix, “Artificial Intelligence Taxonomy for Medical Services and Procedures,” helps provide guidance for “classifying various artificial intelligence (AI) applications for medical services and procedures.” Considering AI’s ever-widening scope, there’s no better time to familiarize yourself with CPT® guidance for handling AI-related procedures. Get Up to Speed With the AI Appendix The CPT® Editorial Panel decided to add Appendix S to the CPT® code set during the September 2021 meeting. The appendix went into effect on Jan. 1, 2022, to provide guidance on coding for AI applications. Since the appendix wasn’t effective until the start of 2022, it wasn’t present in the published 2022 CPT® code book. However, the 2023 CPT® code book has the AI guidance in Appendix S.
“AI needs a descriptive framework that is used to develop the coverage that, in turn, will adequately pay for expert systems, machine learning, and the algorithm-based services,” said Robert Jarrin, JD, managing member of The Omega Concern LLC in the “Coding, Coverage, and Payment for AI Medical Services” segment during the “An ONC Artificial Intelligence Showcase — Seizing the Opportunities and Managing the Risks of Use of AI in Health IT” virtual event. Jarrin added that Medicare payment rates include direct and indirect practice expenses (PE); the latter’s values are based on the Physician Practice Information survey conducted in 2007 and 2008 — “way before we actually had tangible AI in healthcare.” The emerging technologies tend to rely on fees tied to software, licensing, and analysis, rather than the typical equipment and hardware purchases. “Coding will need to reflect AI, as in the work performed by machines, which is why the AMA created Appendix S ... as a taxonomy to provide guidance for classifying AI,” Jarrin said. “I think it’s a testimony to how important this is that the AMA chose to release this taxonomy a full year in advance of when it would normally release a new code. This taxonomy is intended to cover not only AI in the formal sense like machine learning, but also what we might call expert systems, and that is the advanced use of computer technology in order to augment the role of the physician,” said Richard Frank, MD, PhD, CMO of Siemens Healthineers, member of CPT® Editorial Panel, who co-presented with Jarrin during the virtual event. Understand the 3 As of AI CPT® Coding Guidelines The CPT® AI taxonomy appendix categorizes AI into three main hierarchies based on “the clinical procedure or service provided to the patient and the work performed by the machine on behalf of the physician or other qualified healthcare professional (QHP).” These AI classifications are as follows: Assistive AI is the work done by the machine to only “detect clinically relevant data,” according to CPT®. A physician or other QHP is required to interpret the data and report the results. Augmentative AI occurs when the machine performs the work and analyzes or quantifies the data “in a clinically meaningful way” in CPT®’s words. This category also requires a physician or QHP to interpret and report the data. With autonomous AI, the machine performs the work, then automatically analyzes the data, interprets the information, and produces clinically relevant conclusions independently without physician or QHP involvement. Learn the Levels of Autonomous AI Since autonomous AI can operate nearly free of human interaction, the CPT® Editorial Panel felt the need to establish different levels of autonomy. “We decided there needed to be at least three levels within [autonomous AI]; we considered more, but I think the simpler, the better. As long as this covers the range of what we expect autonomous devices to be doing,” Frank said. The three levels of autonomous AI differ in the amount of physician or QHP involvement, as explained below: Level I: AI comes to conclusions and suggests diagnosis or management options. This level requires the physician or QHP to make the medical decision. Level II: AI draws conclusions and begins the diagnosis or management options with an alert to the physician or QHP. The provider then has the option to override the AI’s decisions. Level III: AI draws conclusions and initiates the management. Only by a physician’s or other QHP’s initiative to intervene could the service be interrupted. Could the AI Coding Framework Anticipate Future Uses? Appendix S guidelines indicate that there isn’t a certain product, service, or procedure where AI is necessary to describe the intended medical use. As a result, the appendix doesn’t list specific codes for which the guidelines could apply, although example codes are listed as references.
According to the presenters, the CPT® Editorial Panel created the taxonomy to define the relationship between the work completed by the machine and the work done by a human, as well as show the relevance to AI. “This taxonomy, this framework for AI code descriptors, anticipates what features that will be, as well as what business models there may be,” Frank said. Expect AI to Continue to Impact Healthcare There’s no doubt that AI is the latest buzzword, and its prevalence in healthcare and society in general is rapidly flowing with the momentum of a freight train. Take smartphones; we may not think of them as AI, but smartphones epitomize our daily use of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI-ML), and similar technological techniques are already firmly integrated into healthcare. And AI is projected to advance even faster than smartphones have. As AI continues to reshape the healthcare industry, practitioners and coders will benefit from being adaptable, flexible, and knowledgeable. “Given the power and potential of AI technologies, I agree that we need to embrace this fast-moving current. My hope is that the future of AI continues to be in service to and in support of the medical decision makers,” says Jan Blanchard, CPC, CPMA, pediatric solutions consultant at Vermont-based PCC.