Question:
Answer:
Before coding the follow-up days, you should confirm whether the physician used a tunneled or non-tunneled catheter for the trial.Tunneled option:
It's fairly unusual for a physician to perform a tunneled trial catheter placement. If your physician does, however, submit 62350 (Implantation, revision or repositioning of tunneled intrathecal or epidural catheter, for long-term medication administration via an external pump or implantable reservoir/infusion pump; without laminectomy) for the trial. Code 62350 has a 10-day global period, so you would report 99024 (Postoperative follow-up visit, normally included in the surgical package, to indicate that an evaluation and management service was performed during a postoperative period for a reason[s] related to the original procedure) for follow-up care.Non-tunneled plan:
If the physician placed a nontunneled catheter, you would code the trial with either 62318 (Injection, including catheter placement, continuous infusion or intermittent bolus, not including neurolytic substances, with or without contrast [for either localization or epidurography], of diagnostic or therapeutic substance[s] [including anesthetic, antispasmodic, opioid, steroid, other solution], epidural or subarachnoid; cervical or thoracic) or 62319 (...lumbar, sacral [caudal]). Choose the code based on the anatomic catheter insertion site, not the catheter tip final location. You should be able to code follow-up days associated with 62318 or 62319 with an established patient E/M code. Choose the best option from 99212- 99214 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient ...) when supported by the provider's documentation.