Check for reprogramming and say no to 95990, 95991 with 62367-62370.
Services for drug infusion pumps can be difficult to report. You have different codes that apply for different situations, as your coding needs to be very specific for refills, analysis, and programming. Find out more about reporting the refilling services, and gear up to file clean claims.
Starting point: Your provider will fill the pump with medication when he originally inserts the device. You’ll submit 62362 (Implantation or replacement of device for intrathecal or epidural drug infusion; programmable pump, including preparation of pump, with or without programming) for the procedure, but nothing else. The insertion includes the initial fill of the pump as well as any potential programming which are not separately billable (based on the descriptor’s verbiage “including preparation of pump” and “with or without programming”). “However, subsequent pump refill and reprogramming is separately reportable,” says Gregory Przybylski, MD, director of neurosurgery at the New Jersey Neuroscience Institute, JFK Medical Center, Edison. “Keep in mind that there are distinct codes for pump refill performed by the physician compared with refill by an assistant.”
Decide Which Refill Code Applies
CPT® includes several codes related to pump insertion and maintenance. When you’re coding for a pump refill, you have two choices:
“The primary difference between 62369 and 62370 is who is performing the services,” explains Marvel J. Hammer, RN, CPC, CCS-P, PCS, ACS-PM, CHCO, of MJH Consulting in Denver, Co. “The 62370 code is specifically for physicians and other qualified health care professionals only. The 62369 code is typically used when one of the practice’s clinical staff, who has had the appropriate training to perform the pump refill, performs the service.”
Caveat: One key is that the refill and/or programming services need to be within the provider’s scope of practice, Hammer says. Some states allow RNs to perform this service but other states may not. “This is one of the unusual circumstances in which reimbursement policy considers the type of health care professional performing the pump refill,” Przybylski says.
Skip A4220 With 62369
Medicare payment for programmable pump analysis, reprogramming, and refill includes the refill kit.
What it means: You do not submit HCPCS code A4220 (Refill kit for implantable infusion pump) separately with CPT® codes 62369 or 62370.
“The relative value units in procedure codes have a practice expense component that includes supplies that are used with the procedure,” Przybylski says. “CPT® codes 62369 and 62370 include the refill kit among the practice expense inputs, but not the medication that would be instilled.”
Don’t Mix and Match Refill Codes
Code A4220 isn’t the only one you need to steer clear of when reporting a pump refill. Two other codes for implantable programmable pump services should never be filed with 62369 or 62370, according to CPT® guidelines. They are:
Directions: You report codes 95990 and 95991 for refilling an implanted reservoir or constant flow (non-programmable) pump. CPT® includes a parenthetical note with 95990 and 95991 that states, “Do not report 95990, 95991 in conjunction with 62367-62370. For analysis and/or reprogramming of implantable infusion pump, see 62367-62370.” Codes 62367-62370 include a similar note directing you to see 95990 and 95991 for “refilling and maintenance of a reservoir or an implantable infusion pump for spinal or brain drug delivery without reprogramming.”
Explanation: Physicians use implantable infusion pumps to deliver therapeutic levels of drugs to a specific organ or anatomic site for a prolonged period of time. Codes 62367-62370 and codes 95990-95991 all refer to performing “electronic analysis,” which is done to determine the reservoir, alarm, and drug prescription statuses. Pay attention to the other details in your provider’s notes to determine which code set should be your focus.
Example: Sometimes a patient comes in with complaints of increased symptoms (pain) and questions if the pump is working, Hammer says. The provider may do an analysis to check the settings, reservoir status, etc. If everything is found to be accurate, there wouldn’t be a need to do any re-programming. That would fall under 62367. Code 62368 applies when, for example, the patient comes in for evaluation following the pump implantation and the pump settings are titrated up to better address the patient’s pain but the pump is not refilled.