Neurology & Pain Management Coding Alert

You Be the Coder:

Botox Supplies

Test your coding knowledge. Determine how you would code this situation before looking at the box below for the answer.

Question: Although we try to schedule our Botox (type A) injection patients close together, we still have a lot of waste because of the drug's short shelf life. Is there a way to recover some of this expense?

Missouri Subscriber

 
 

Answer: Botox can cost several hundred dollars per 100-unit vial, and as you note the drug has a very short shelf life. Once you open a vial, you must use it within four hours.

A single vial of Botox can treat several patients. To prevent waste and lower costs, Medicare and other insurers encourage physicians to schedule several patients to receive injections within the same one- to four-hour period. The HCPCS supply code for Botox is J0585 (Botulinum toxin type A, per unit). The code is payable by the unit, not by milligrams or ccs. For each claim, indicate how many units the patient received in block 24G of the CMS 1500 claim form.

You may claim and receive reimbursement for "wasted units." For the last patient to receive injections from a given vial, record the amount (in units) of wasted medication. Add the units injected to the number of wasted units and report the total on the final patient's claim form. Medicare will reimburse for the unused Botox because of the drug's short shelf life. Documentation must reflect the exact amount of drug discarded.

Most Medicare carriers will also allow providers to bill for a full vial of the medication for a single patient. Just as when the vial is split between two or more patients, however, documentation must reflect the exact dosage of the drug given and the exact amount of the drug discarded.

Receiving reimbursement for the drug for non-Medicare patients can be more difficult. To combat this problem, you may ask patients with private insurance to arrange for payment for the drug with the pharmacy. The patient fills the prescription and brings it to the neurologist's office to be administered. In this case, the neurologist bills for the injection only, not the drug.

Note: For 2002, HCPCS has added code J0587 for Botox type B (Myobloc), which is billed in a similar fashion as that described above for type A.