Yes, meant to say if it was not biopsied prior to excision or shave.
You should always hold for path so know whether to bill the benign vs. malignant excision codes.
If you didn't biopsy it prior, and the provider could not specify what the lesion was, D49.2 shows medical necessity. You can code the final results, but sometimes the final result is not covered for that procedure. Since the provider couldn't specify what it was, and no biopsy was taken, D49.2 will allow it to get paid. Most carrier's LCDs usally have D49.2 (Neoplasm of unspecified behavior) as a covered DX to show medical necessity.
Shave removals don't require path confirmation. So you can bill them with D49.2 as well.
Or you can code the final path, as long as it's covered.
Alternatively, if the provider that reasonable certainty that a lesion was a certain diagnosis, and shaved or excised, and it came back as that, but that condition is not covered, it may be considered medically unnecessary or cosmetic and the patient may be responsible for the cost of the procedure. As long as they were notified, signed an ABN, or equivalent form for commercial carriers.