READER QUESTIONS:
Update Hospital Bladder Aspiration Code
Published on Sat Jan 27, 2007
Question: A pediatrician performs a suprapubic aspiration to obtain a clean urine specimen from an inpatient infant who is suspected of having sepsis. Should I code the procedure with 51701?
Ohio Subscriber
Answer: No. You should report this procedure as a bladder aspiration, not as a catheterization. Code 51701 (Insertion of non-indwelling bladder catheter [e.g., straight catheterization for residual urine]) describes insertion of a non-indwelling catheter through the urethra into the bladder to collect residual urine for urinalysis and culture. A nurse can perform this procedure in the office under direct physician supervision.
To obtain urine from an infant younger than 6 months, a pediatrician may instead use suprapubic bladder aspiration. In this collection technique, the doctor withdraws urine from the bladder into a syringe through a needle inserted through the skin into the bladder.
In 2008, you should report this procedure with 51100 (Aspiration of bladder; by needle). This code replaces 51000, which CPT inappropriately placed under the Bladder, Incision subheading in the Urinary System subsection, according to CPT Changes 2008--An Insider's View. In CPT 2008, the AMA relocated the code to a new Removal subheading subsection and renumbered it. Answers to You Be the Coder and Reader Questions provided/reviewed by Barbara J. Cobuzzi, MBA, CPC-OTO, CPC-H, CPC-P, CHCC, director of outreach programs for the American Academy of Professional Coders; Robert W. Hered, MD, chief of the ophthalmology division at Nemours Children's Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla.; Jeffrey Linzer, MD, FAAP; and Richard H. Tuck, MD, FAAP, a pediatrician at PrimeCare of Southeastern Ohio in Zanesville.