Thanks for the input. I do not see anywhere in this article that answers my question. I find the physician and facility have different views, especially on the research i have gathered. We bill what was found if not a screening.
Apparently you read over this but didn't see it. It says:
1. A patient is seen in the outpatient clinic for colonoscopy due to family history of colon cancer. The patient has no personal history of gastrointestinal disease and is currently without signs and symptoms. The colonoscopy revealed a colonic polyp that was removed by snare technique. How should the diagnoses and CPT procedures for this case be coded?
a. 211.3, V76.51, V16.0, 45385
b. 211.3, V76.51, V16.0, G0105
c. V76.51, V16.0, 211.3, 45385
d. V76.51, V16.0, 211.3, G0105
e. V16.0, 211.3, V76.51, G010
Answers to CCS PREP!:
1. c.Assign code V76.51, Special screening for malignant neoplasms, colon, as the first-listed diagnosis because this was a screening colonoscopy. Code V16.0, Family history of malignant neoplasm, gastrointestinal tract, may be assigned as an additional diagnosis. Assign code 211.3, Benign neoplasm of colon as an additional diagnosis. Because the polyp was removed, 45385 is reported to identify the definitive procedure performed.
As you can see for a screening colonoscopy, you code the screening code first, followed by what was seen second. Hope this helps.
Em