Plus, watch whether the service supports ‘breaking’ the edit.
Several bundles in the latest coding edits focus on new injection procedures for 2015 that your pain management specialist might perform. Here’s what you need to know about CCI 21.2, which became effective April 1.
Ultrasound Follow-Up Might Not Be Separately Billable
The first edits of interest to pain management involve joint injections. The procedure codes (introduced in 2015) are:
CPT® coding guidelines already instruct you to not report these codes with related procedures 20610 (Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, major joint or bursa [e.g., shoulder, hip, knee, subacromial bursa]; without ultrasound guidance) or 20611 in conjunction with 27370 (Injection of contrast for knee arthrography) or 76942 (Ultrasonic guidance for needle placement [e.g., biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device], imaging supervision and interpretation). You can, however, submit an additional code for fluoroscopic, CT, or MRI guidance when applicable.
New edit: Now, under CCI 21.2, you cannot report 20604, 20606, or 20611 with 76970 (Ultrasound study follow-up [specify]). The injection procedures are listed as the Column 1 codes, which means they include the work associated with 76970. As such, you only include the injection code on your claim.
Modifier status: The edits carry a modifier indicator of “1,” meaning that you might be able to append a modifier to 76970 and report both procedures. Verify the circumstances and ensure that you have full documentation supporting both codes before submitting a claim this way.
“In order to use a modifier to bypass the CCI edit, the provider would need to complete the procedure during a different session or at a different anatomic area from the joint injection site,” says Marvel J. Hammer, RN, CPC, CCS-P, PCS, ACS-PM, CHCO, of MJH Consulting in Denver, Co. “That being said, pain management or neurology wouldn’t typically be using 76970. Rather, they would use either the extremity or spine ultrasound code.”
Fluoroscopic Guidance Is Part of Epidural Injection
Another new set of bundling edits lists epidural codes 62310-62319 as Column 1 with 77003 (Fluoroscopic guidance and localization of needle or catheter tip for spine or paraspinous diagnostic or therapeutic injection procedures [epidural or subarachnoid]) as the Column 2 code. The descriptors for the affected epidural procedures are as follows:
“Though just released with CCI 21.2, this new edit is retroactive back to Jan. 1, 2015,” Hammer says. “This is in support of the 2015 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule that stated Medicare was going to revert back to the 2013 RVUs for these codes but that image guidance would be prohibited from being separately paid with these epidural codes.”
The Medicare stance is contradictory to CPT® directives. Because the first quarter CCI edits for 2015 did not include a bundling edit, some practices mistakenly billed 77003 with these epidural codes and were paid.
“They thought that because they were paid by Medicare, it was appropriate to continue to bill these separately,” Hammer explains. “Practices that have been paid by Medicare in 2015 for 77003 with the 62310-62319 should consult their healthcare attorney about refunding the inappropriate payment for 2015 dates of service that was previously processed. Medicare contractors will likely go back through their payment files and be reviewing any payment for 77003 with these codes for the same session and request a refund.”
You can potentially bypass the bundling edit between 77003 and codes 62310-62319 with a modifier, but Hammer says the provider would need to use the fluoroscopic guidance with a different procedure from the epidural.