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2/12/2015
Wives, do you ever tell your husband how much money you saved him because you bought something on sale? In the medical realm, hospitals sometimes get medical devices “on sale” – well, actually at reduced or no cost for various reasons, such as premature replacements, product recalls, or as part of a clinical trial. Since the device is free or at a reduced cost, Medicare doesn’t want to reimburse the hospital for a full cost device. Therefore, hospitals must communicate the “special price” to Medicare on the claim with specific codes in order not to receive an overpayment.
Last year CMS changed the way hospitals report devices on outpatient claims when the device is provided at no cost, with full credit, or with partial credit that is 50% or greater than the cost of the device. Prior to this change, hospitals used modifiers –FB and –FC to communicate this information on the claim. Effective January 1, 2014, the use of modifiers FB and FC were discontinued, and hospitals were instructed to use Value Code FD and condition codes 49 or 50 to report device credits. However, condition codes 49 and 50 only describe devices that are replaced –
- Condition Code 49 – Product Replacement within Product Lifecycle
- Condition Code 50 – Product Replacement for Known Recall of a Product
Sometimes the original device for initial implantation is provided to the hospital at no cost, such as a free sample or due to a medical device clinical trial. Therefore for claims received on and after July 1, 2015, CMS is adding a new condition code for hospital reporting to identify medical devices for initial device placement provided at no or reduced cost due to a clinical trial or free sample (MLN Matters MM8961). The new condition code is:
- Condition Code 53 – Initial Placement of a Medical Device Provided as Part of a Clinical Trial or Free Sample
To report medical devices for initial device placement provided at no or reduced cost, hospitals will report the:
- Value Code “FD” (Credit Received from the Manufacturer for a Medical Device)
- The amount of the device credit in the amount portion for value code “FD”
- Condition Code 53
- A charge of $0.00 for the device (or a token charge of $1.00 if required by the billing system)
The OPPS payment deduction for device credits for device-dependent APCs is limited to the lesser of the device credit amount reported in the FD value field or the device offset amount for that APC.
If the device is furnished as part of a clinical trial, the claims requirements for institutional billing of clinical trials must also be followed.
Hospital Compliance Audits performed by the Office of Inspector General (OIG) have consistently identified errors with the lack of reporting device credits. From my years working in a hospital, I realize tracking and reporting such credits would be a very detailed process, involving numerous departments. But to prevent overpayments, hospitals must come up with appropriate processes to know when a credit is received or should be received, the credit amount, the reason for the credit, and get the correct data on the claim to report that credit to Medicare. So as with the wife’s “on sale” purchase, “on sale” devices still come with a price!
Debbie Rubio
2/9/2015
I try to write an article for the second Wednesday of the month newsletter about Medicare coverage policies and an article about Medicare contractors’ medical reviews for the third Wednesday. You may have noticed however, that these two topics are often intermingled. It brings to mind the age-old riddle – which came first, the chicken or the egg? Is a particular medical review based on the guidelines of a coverage policy or did the results of a review identify the need to develop a coverage policy? Actually, both scenarios occur, so sometimes it’s the chicken and sometimes the egg!
The December 2014 OIG Compliance Review of Ochsner Medical Center included the findings of a new issue not addressed in previous OIG compliance reviews. The issue is certain cochlear implant services did not meet the medical necessity requirements of the National Coverage Determination (NCD 50.3). As often is the case, the NCD requirements are extremely detailed. Cochlear implants are covered if the following conditions are met:
- Diagnosis of bilateral moderate-to-profound sensorineural hearing impairment
- Limited benefit from amplification (test scores of less than or equal to 40%)
- Cognitive ability to use auditory clues and a willingness to undergo an extended program of rehabilitation;
- Freedom from middle ear infection, an accessible cochlear lumen that is structurally suited to implantation, and freedom from lesions in the auditory nerve and acoustic areas of the central nervous system;
- No contraindications to surgery; and
- The device must be used in accordance with Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved labeling.
- Clinical trial services are covered for individuals meeting the selection guidelines above and with hearing test scores of greater than 40% and less than or equal to 60%.
The key to coverage criteria is not only must it be met, but it must be documented in the medical record in order to support that the service met Medicare’s coverage requirements. The OIG review found one patient whose hearing test score was 42% and one patient without a documented hearing test. These two errors resulted in an overpayment of over $56,000.
Another recent coverage decision with numerous detailed requirements is the Final Decision Memo for Lung Cancer Screening with Low Dose CT. This decision memo was released last Thursday (February 5, 2015). The eligibility criteria for screening include:
- Current smoker or one who has quit within the past 15 years
- Asymptomatic (no signs or symptoms of lung cancer)
- Age 55-77
- A 30-pack years smoking history (one pack-year = smoking one pack per day for one year)
In addition to the eligibility criteria, the decision memo lists detailed requirements for the order for low dose CT, including what it must contain, when it can be written, and the requirements for what a lung cancer counseling visit must include. There are also required criteria for the reading radiologist and the imaging facility. The details of the policy are quite extensive. Remember - although the effective date of the policy is February 5, 2015, it may be a while before CMS issues the official NCD and provides billing instructions. Medicare Administrative Contractors may not be ready to process these claims until the effective date of the forthcoming manualization of this decision.
One last update concerning NCDs - MLN Matters Article MM8954 provides guidance on the use of new HCPCS code G0276 for (Percutaneous Image-guided Lumbar Decompression (PILD) for Lumbar Spinal Stenosis (LSS)). Per this update, G0276 is to be used on and after January 1, 2015 only if the clinical trial is blinded, randomized, and controlled, and contains a placebo procedure control arm. Use procedure code 0275T for clinical trials for all PILD for LSS services for dates of service prior to January 1, 2015 and after January 1, 2015 for services not meeting the criteria for G0276.
So remember – after the chicken comes the egg – or is it, after the egg, comes the chicken?!? Whichever, but if there is a coverage policy, there may be a medical review in your future – so make sure you follow the criteria for cochlear implants, low dose CT lung cancer screening, and PILD for LSS and of course – document, document, document!
Updates of Local Coverage Determinations for last month include:
Debbie Rubio
2/3/2015
Q:
What should we do when Acute Respiratory Failure is documented but the clinical signs and symptoms describing the patient do not reflect the severity of the diagnosis?
A:
Coders in this day and time have to know and be aware of more clinical factors than ever before. Look at the patient’s clinical presentation and what tests are performed. Below is a listing of just a few basic things MMP suggests looking for:
1.Documented signs / symptoms
- SOB (shortness of breath) / Respiratory distress
- Delirium and/or anxiety
- Pursed lips
- Syncope
- Use of accessory muscles
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnea
- Confusion
- Sleepiness
- Depressed consciousness
- Cyanosis (bluish color to skin, lips and/or fingernails)
2.Per Coding Clinic, Acute Respiratory Failure is supported as a diagnosis when at least 2 of the following critical values (ABG’s) are met.
- pH < 7.35
- PO2 < 60
- PCO2 > 50
Note: The above ABG levels may not apply to the patient with chronic lung disease (e.g., COPD). If a baseline PO2 is known, a decrease by 10mmHg or more indicates acute Hypoxic Respiratory Failure.
3.Type of oxygen treatment, i.e., oxygen via mask, Bipap, nasal cannula or vent?
4.Generally, patients are placed in ICU for close monitoring.
MMP recommends coding Acute Respiratory Failure if there are sufficient clinical indications and the physician has documented the diagnosis. Most importantly, if you don’t see sufficient clinical signs/symptoms/indicators documented, the physician should be queried for clarification. It is recommended that all clinical indications in the record and the type of treatment the patient received, be documented in the physician query.
2/3/2015
On January 26th, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell “announced measurable goals and a timeline to move the Medicare program, and the health care system at large, toward paying providers based on the quality, rather than the quantity of care they give patients.” According to the CMS Press Release, “this is the first time in the history of the Medicare program that HHS has set explicit goals for alternative payment models and value-based payments.”
This call to action by Secretary Burwell brings to mind the Institute for Health Improvement’s (IHI) Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycle that involves planning a test or observation, trying out the test on a small scale, analyzing data and studying the results and finally, refining the change based on what was learned.
Plan-Do-Study
Long before the Affordable Care Act, it was obvious that the current state of healthcare in the United States was more reactive than proactive and that the current Prospective Payment System was not financially sustainable.
In a related Fact Sheet to the January 26th announcement, CMS indicated that “the Affordable Care Act offers many tools to improve the way providers are paid to reward for quality and value instead of quantity, to strengthen care delivery by better integrating and coordinating care for patients, and to make information more readily available to consumer and providers. Doing so will improve coordination and integration of health care, engage patients more deeply in decision-making and improve the health of patients – with a priority on prevention and wellness.”
While not an all-inclusive list, specific examples of progress attributed to the Affordable Care Act by CMS include:
- Years 2011, 2012 and 2013 saw the slowest growth in real per capita national healthcare expenditures on record in part due to slow growth in per-beneficiary spending across Medicare, Medicaid, and the private insurance beneficiary population.
- “Looking forward, due primarily to the persistent slowdown in health care costs, the Congressional Budget Office now estimated that Federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid in 2020 will be $188 billion below what it projected as recently as August 2010.”
- The Partnership for Patients has been instrumental in “patient harm falling by 17%, saving 50,000 lives and billions of dollars.”
- The Affordable Care Act tied Medicare payment for hospitals to readmission rates. Since 2012 the efforts made by hospitals “translates into an 8 percent reduction in the rate and an estimated 150,000 fewer hospital readmissions among Medicare beneficiaries between January 2012 and December 2013.”
- Providers are engaged as evidenced by the fact that currently “there are 424 organizations currently participating in Medicare ACOs, serving over 7.8 million Medicare beneficiaries” and the “ACOs participating in the Shared Savings Program and the Pioneer ACO Model combined generated over $417 million in savings for Medicare.”
- The three mandated quality programs for hospitals (Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program, Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program and Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction Program) reward hospitals for the quality of care they provide to patients.
- Improvement in the availability of information to guide the beneficiary in their decision-making has been made available through Physician Compare, updates to Hospital Compare, and the May 2013 release of Charge Data for Hospital and Physician Services by CMS.
Act
Again, Secretary Burwell made the HHS call to action by setting explicit alternative payment model goals and value based payment goals to “help drive the health care system towards greater value-based purchasing – rather than continuing to reward volume regardless of quality of care delivered.”
Alternative Payment Models Goal
By the end of 2016 have 30 percent of Medicare payments in alternative payment models.
By the end of 2018 have 50 percent of Medicare payments in alternative payment models.
The Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) and Pioneer Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), the Bundled Payment for Care Initiative, and the Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative are examples of current Alternative Payment Models. “HHS is working with private payers, including health plans in the Health Insurance Marketplace and Medicare Advantage plans, as well as state Medicaid programs to move in the same direction toward alternative payment models and value-based payment to providers and to meet or exceed the goals outlined above wherever possible.”
Value Based Payments Goal
By 2016 have 85 percent of Medicare fee-for-service payments tied to quality of value.
By 2018 have 90 percent of Medicare fee-for-service payments tied to quality of value.
The Hospital Value Based Purchasing Program, Hospital Readmission Reduction Program and the Hospital-Acquired Condition Program are the three Affordable Care Act Mandated Quality Programs that have begun to tie a hospitals payment to quality of value.
How to Reach the Goals
Secretary Burwell also announced the creation of a Health Care Payment Learning and Action Network. This Network “will accelerate the transition to more advanced payment models by fostering collaboration between HHS, private payers, large employers, providers, consumers, and state and federal partners. Working together, Learning and Action Network partners will:
- Serve as a convening body to facilitate joint implementation and expansion of new models of payment and care delivery
- Identify areas of agreement around movement toward alternative payment models and define how best to report on these new payment models
- Collaborate to generate evidence, share approaches, and remove barriers
- Develop common approaches to core issues such as beneficiary attribution, financial models, benchmarking, and risk adjustment
- Create implementation guides for payers and purchasers
Alignment between HHS, private sector payers, employers, providers, and consumers will help health care payments transition more quickly from pure fee-for-service to alternative payment models – a critical step toward better care, smarter spending, and healthier people.” The first Network meeting is set for March 2015.
As health care in this country is propelled towards new payment models and payment for quality instead of quantity, there are a couple of valuable resources that hospitals should be familiar with.
First is the CMS Innovation Center. Per the Affordable Care Act, “the purpose of the [Center] is to test innovative payment and service delivery models to reduce program expenditures…while preserving or enhancing the quality of care furnished to individuals under such titles.” I encourage you to visit their website to find out where and what Innovation is Happening in your state and while there check out the November 10, 2014 CMS Innovation Center Update Webinar that featured Dr. Patrick Conway, CMS Deputy Administrator for Innovation and Quality and CMS Chief Medical Officer.
A second resource is the Health Care Transformation Task Force. On January 28, 2015, just two days after the CMS announcement, this group “whose members include six of the nation’s top 15 health systems and four of the top 25 health insurers, challenged other providers and payers to join its commitment to put 75 percent of their business into value-based arrangements that focus on the Triple Aim of better health, better care and lower costs by 2020.”
Resources:
Fact Sheet: Better Care, Smarter Spending, Healthier People: Why It Matters: http://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Fact-sheets/2015-Fact-sheets-items/2015-01-26-2.html
Fact Sheet: Better Care, Smarter Spending, Healthier People: Paying Providers for Value, Not Volume: http://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Fact-sheets/2015-Fact-sheets-items/2015-01-26-3.html
Fact Sheet: Better Care, Smarter Spending, Healthier People: Improving Out Health Care Delivery System: http://www.cms.gov/Newsroom/MediaReleaseDatabase/Fact-sheets/2015-Fact-sheets-items/2015-01-26.html
American Hospital Association Response to January 26th Announcement:
http://www.aha.org/presscenter/pressrel/2015/150126-pr-medicare.shtml
American Medical Association Response to January 26th Announcement: http://www.ama-assn.org/ama/pub/news/news/2015/2015-01-26-hhs-shifting-medicare-reimbursements-volume-value.page
Beth Cobb
2/3/2015
I love reading, writing and the English language – I am such a grammar geek that I actually belong to a “grammar” blog. In writing, you want to make sure you are choosing your words wisely and appropriately – in other words, definitions matter. As we see in this quarter’s Medicare Compliance Newsletter, definitions also matter when billing for your services to Medicare, especially the definitions related to procedure and diagnosis codes.
Last week we addressed a couple of CERT issues from the January Medicare Quarterly Provider Compliance Newsletter that affected hospital inpatient claims. This week we will look at some deficiencies with outpatient records identified by the Recovery Auditors.
Extracorporeal Photopheresis – CPT 36522
Medicare covers extracorporeal photopheresis (drug and UVA light treatment of white blood cells) only for certain conditions per National Coverage Determination 110.4. This procedure is covered by Medicare for:
- Palliative treatment of skin manifestations of cutaneous T-cell lymphoma that has not responded to other therapy
- Patients with acute cardiac allograft rejection whose disease is refractory to standard immunosuppressive drug treatment
- Patients with chronic graft versus host disease whose disease is refractory to standard immunosuppressive drug treatment
Medicare claims for CPT 36522 must contain one of the following ICD-9 diagnosis codes for the above covered conditions to support medical necessity and be eligible for Medicare payment: 202.10-202.18 and 202.20-202.28, 996.83, or 996.85. A RAC automated review identified overpayments for claims with this service that did not contain an appropriate diagnosis code.
Facet Joint Injections
According to the newsletter, “Medicare will consider facet joint blocks to be reasonable and necessary for chronic pain (persistent pain for three (3) months or greater) suspected to originate from the facet joint.” Due to findings from RAC reviews, Medicare reminds providers about the following facts of facet joint injections:
- It is expected that facet injections reported with CPT codes 64490-64495 will be performed under fluoroscopic guidance.
- Multiple nerves innervate each facet joint, but injections are to be reported per facet joint level, not per nerve. Facet joint levels refer to the joints that are blocked and not the number of medial branches that innervate them. For example, CPT codes 64490 and 64493 are used to report all of the nerves that innervate the first level paravertebral facet joint and not each nerve; CPT codes 64491, 64492, and 64494, 64495 report all nerves at the second and third additional levels and not each additional nerve.
- Codes 64490-64495 are unilateral procedures.
- Use modifier 50 to report bilateral injections (facet joint injections on both the right and left sides of one level of the spine). If multiple bilateral injections are performed, modifier 50 should accompany each facet CPT joint injection code that was performed on both sides of one level.
- Only one facet injection code should be reported at a specific level and side injected (e.g., right L4-5 facet joint), regardless of the number of needle(s) inserted or number of drug(s) injected at that specific level.
IV Infusion Units
Providers are to report only one “initial” intravenous infusion code for chemotherapy and therapeutic infusions (CPT codes 96413, 96365, and 96369) per day unless the patient has two different infusion sites or more than one visit on the same day. In the case of two infusion sites or multiple encounters, it is appropriate to append a -59 modifier to the second “initial” service. An initial infusion code is defined in MLN Matters Article MM3818 as the code that “best describes the key or primary reason for the encounter and should always be reported irrespective of the order in which the infusions or injections occur." Also be sure to follow the CPT reporting hierarchy for drug administration codes in selecting the initial service.
Hospitals need to bear in mind that for drug administrations, observation services spanning more than one day are considered one encounter as explained in the Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 4, section 230:
“Drug administration services are to be reported with a line item date of service on the day they are provided. In addition, only one initial drug administration service is to be reported per vascular access site per encounter, including during an encounter where observation services span more than 1 calendar day.”
As always, it benefits providers to pay attention to the details when billing Medicare – such as the definitions of “initial” infusion and facet joint “level” versus nerve. In coding and billing, definitions matter!
Debbie Rubio
1/27/2015
Yes, it is true that in this age of electronic health records (EHRs) that most Physician notes are no longer written with a pen. However, in the January 2015 release of the Medicare Quarterly Compliance Newsletter, there are two Comprehensive Error Rate Testing (CERT) review findings that share the denial commonality of “the physician’s failure to document a reasonable expectation that the beneficiary would require a hospital stay that would cross 2 or more midnights.” So hand written or electronic, it is a fact that the denials were due to the Physician’s pen.
First, for those that may still be unfamiliar with this newsletter, it is a resource provided by the CMS to serve as an “educational product, to help providers understand the major findings identified by MACs, Recovery Auditors, Program Safety Contractors, Zone Program Integrity Contractors, the Comprehensive Error Rate Testing (CERT) review contractor and other governmental organizations, such as the Office of Inspector General.” If you are interested in viewing past issues, the CMS maintains a Newsletter Archive of all of the newsletters to date.
The January edition of the newsletter includes findings from the Office of Inspector General (OIG), Recovery Auditor and CERT. This article focuses on two of the CERT findings.
Surgical Procedures Related to Hemodialysis being billed as an Inpatient
Provider Types Affected: Physicians and Hospitals
Background
Placement of an arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is the best option for beneficiaries requiring hemodialysis for end-stage renal disease (ESRD). The procedure is typically an outpatient procedure. “Inpatient hospital admission is appropriate when the beneficiary has some other acute problem requiring inpatient care or when a serious post-operative complication arises.”
Medicare payment to a hospital for surgical procedures includes the procedure itself and all normal post-op recovery and monitoring even if the monitoring extends overnight. Also, hemodialysis and a beneficiary’s need for chronic hemodialysis “does not justify an inpatient hospital admission for a vascular access-related procedure.”
Review Finding
Most improper payments identified by the CERT were due to the hospital inappropriately billing Medicare for the surgery and post-op care as an inpatient hospital admission.
Denial due to the Physician’s Pen
The CERT asserted that the most common denial for an inpatient hospitalization spanning less than 2 midnights “is the physician’s failure to document a reasonable expectation that the beneficiary would require a hospital stay that would cross 2 or more midnights.”
What You Should Know
“Physicians do not need to include a separate attestation of the expected length of stay; rather, this information may be inferred from the physician’s standard medical documentation, such as his or her plan of care, treatment orders, and physician’s notes. Expectation of time and the determination of the underlying need for medical care at the hospital are supported by complex medical factors such as history and comorbidities, the severity of signs and symptoms, current medical needs, and the risk of an adverse event, which are expected to be documented in the physician’s assessment and plan of care.”
The 2 Midnight Rule and Elective Procedures
Provider Types Affected: Physicians Facilities and Hospitals
Background
The 2014 IPPS Final Rule (CMS-1599-F) 2-Midnight Rule provision maintains that an inpatient admission and payment under Medicare Part A is generally appropriate when the physician:
- “Expects the beneficiary to require a stay that crossed at least two midnights; and
- Admits the beneficiary to the hospital based upon that expectation.”
Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) have been performing reviews under the Probe and Educate Program that began with admissions on or after October 1, 2013 and is currently set to end on March 31, 2015.
This review focuses on the review findings “as they pertain to admissions for elective procedures.”
Exception to the 2 Midnight Rule and Unforeseen Circumstances
When the Expected Length of Stay was Less Than 2 Midnights
It would not be appropriate to admit a beneficiary as an inpatient when they present for an elective surgical procedure that is not designated as Inpatient Only by Medicare and the physician does not expect to keep the patient in the hospital beyond 2 midnights.
Contractors will deny this type of claim unless there is documentation in the record of an approved exception. Currently the only approved exception is “newly initiated mechanical ventilation (excluding anticipated intubations related to minor surgical procedures or other treatment).”
When the Expected Length of Stay was 2 or More Midnights
There are times when a physician expects a beneficiary to require a 2 midnight or longer hospitalization but due to unforeseen circumstance the stay is less than 2 midnights. CMS approved examples of unforeseen circumstances includes “unexpected death, transfer to another hospital, departure against medical advice, clinical improvement, and election of hospice care in lieu of continued treatment in the hospital.”
Denial due to the Physician’s Pen
The CERT again asserted in this review that the most common denial for an inpatient hospitalization spanning less than 2 midnights “is the physician’s failure to document a reasonable expectation that the beneficiary would require a hospital stay that would cross 2 or more midnights.”
Two examples of Medicare Part A Inpatient Denied Claims provided in this review include a vascular procedure where the documentation did not support the inpatient admission and a urologic procedure where there was no inpatient order and the documentation did not support a 2 midnight expectation.
What You Should Know
Just as in the first CERT review findings, this article asserts that what you should know is that “Physicians do not need to include a separate attestation of the expected length of stay; rather, this information may be inferred from the physician’s standard medical documentation, such as his or her plan of care, treatment orders, and physician’s notes. Expectation of time and the determination of the underlying need for medical care at the hospital are supported by complex medical factors such as history and comorbidities, the severity of signs and symptoms, current medical needs, and the risk of an adverse event, which are expected to be documented in the physician’s assessment and plan of care.”
I encourage you to take the time to read this entire newsletter as it provides the issues, what you should know as well as valuable links to resources to find more information about each review type.
Beth Cobb
1/27/2015
Q:
Have the Medicare coverage requirements for pneumococcal vaccinations changed?
A:
Yes, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) has issued new recommendations for pneumococcal vaccinations and Medicare has modified their coverage requirements in response to the new recommendations.
As announced in MLN Matters Article MM9051, effective for dates of service on and after September 19, 2014, Medicare will cover the administration of two different pneumococcal vaccinations.
- An initial pneumococcal vaccine to all Medicare beneficiaries who have not previously received a vaccine (based on ACIP recommendations a 13-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine – PCV13 should be administered first)
- Followed by a second, different vaccine a year later (23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine – PPSV23)
Patients, age 65 and older, who have already received the PPSV23 vaccine, should receive the PCV13 vaccine a year or more after the date of their last PPSV23 vaccine.
These new guidelines differ from the previous coverage of pneumococcal vaccine which was only for individuals at high risk of serious pneumococcal disease (age 65 and older, risk from chronic disease, or immune-compromised patients) with a repeat vaccine after five years for only patients at highest risk (May 1, 1981- September 18, 2014).
Note that a physician’s order is not required for patients to obtain a pneumococcal vaccine.
1/12/2015
Updated January 29, 2015
Motivational speakers like catchy words and phrases – remember such terms as “synergy” and “apples to apples”. Sometimes we hear these terms so much that they become irritating, but with this year’s code changes, providers have to be careful or they will be trying to correlate things that don’t go together – it’s like “apples to oranges”. Here are just a few examples.
Radiation Oncology – CPT Codes for Hospitals; HCPCS Codes for Physicians
The CPT code changes for radiation oncology for 2015 represent significant changes in how radiation therapy services and associated image guidance are reported. Since CMS decided not to pursue proposed cuts to physician radiation oncology payments, CMS created new HCPCS codes for physicians to use in reporting services for 2015 that crosswalk from the 2014 CPT codes. These codes are not for hospital reporting. The HCPCS codes G6001-G6017 are assigned a status indicator of B for OPPS. Hospitals are to report the new CPT codes for radiation oncology services.
Drug Screening Codes – HCPCS Codes for Medicare; CPT Codes for Non-Medicare Payers
Another area with major CPT code changes for 2015 is the Laboratory Drug Screening Codes. CPT deleted old codes and developed new codes based mainly on the testing methods used for analysis. Since Medicare’s HCPCS codes for drug screen tests were already based on the complexity of the laboratory testing methods, you would think these would match. Unfortunately, a direct crosswalk from CPT codes to HCPCS codes is not possible. CPT is based on the type of method (optical observation, immuno- or enzyme assay, or more complex methods). Medicare’s G codes (G0431 and G0434) are based on the testing complexity assigned by the FDA to the testing kit or analyzer – methods may fit into different complexities depending on the type of analyzer. Most hospitals are finding that selecting the new codes takes both clinical and coding expertise for correct assignment.
New Modifiers – Continue to Use 59 Modifier or Use New Modifiers
Due to concerns about the overuse and misuse of modifier 59, CMS developed new more specific modifiers available for use beginning January 1, 2015. These new X {ESPU} modifiers are a subset of modifier 59 with more specific descriptions:
- XE –separate encounter
- XS – separate structure
- XP – different practitioner
- XU – Unusual, non-overlapping service
The confusion here is whether to go ahead and use the new modifiers now or wait for further CMS guidance. There have been conflicting statements from CMS concerning this:
- “As a default, at this time CMS will initially accept either a -59 modifier or a more selective - X{EPSU} modifier as correct coding, although the rapid migration of providers to the more selective modifiers is encouraged.” (MLN MM8863)
- Beginning on January 1, 2015, providers canuse the X modifiers if they are currently using modifier59 for a reason within the published definition of the X modifiers. Providers also have the option to continue using modifier59 until CMS issues examples of circumstances in which the X modifiers are or are not appropriate.” (October 23rd Provider Connects eNews)
There are probably many more examples in the world of Medicare coding and billing of “apples to oranges” comparisons. If you think of some good examples, please share them with MMP at info@mmplusinc.com .
Debbie Rubio
1/12/2015
The human race continues to make amazing strides in technology that are wondrous and change the very ways we live and even how long we may live. There are devices that monitor how many steps we take in a day, that allow us to control our home electrical systems from our smart phones and that track our “global positioning” wherever we go. And in the medical realm, there is a new FDA-approved device to clip mitral valve leaflets together and potentially prevent the heart failure that could result from mitral regurgitation. This device is inserted via a Transcatheter Mitral Valve Repair (TMVR) procedure.
A National Coverage Determination (NCD) for coverage of TMVR was announced in MLN Matters Article MM9002 effective for dates of service on and after August 7, 2014. Medicare will cover TMVR for treatment of Mitral Regurgitation (MR) when furnished under Coverage with Evidence Development (CED). This means that patients receiving this procedure must be entered into a national qualified registry or part of a FDA-approved, randomized clinical trial.
Some of the requirements for coverage of TMVR for mitral regurgitation include:
- The TMVR procedure must be performed by an interventional cardiologist and/or cardiac surgeon
- For treatment of significant, symptomatic, degenerative mitral regurgitation for FDA-approved indication or for non-listed indications for MR within context of approved clinical trial
- Face-to-face examination and evaluation of patient prior to TMVR by cardiac surgeon and cardiologist experienced in mitral valve surgery with documentation of their decision and rationale
- Performed in a hospital with appropriate infrastructure and with a surgical program, interventional cardiology program, and heart team that meets certain specific requirements. There are numerous and very detailed requirements that the hospital must meet – refer to the NCD for the specifics of these requirements.
TMVR is non-covered for the treatment of MR when not furnished under CED according to the NCD criteria. TMVR used for the treatment of any non-MR indications are non-covered by Medicare.
Hospital Claim Requirements
This is an inpatient-only procedure. Hospital inpatient claims (11x type of bill) must contain:
- ICD-9 Procedure Code - 35.97 - Percutaneous mitral valve repair with implant
- ICD-9 Diagnosis Code for TMVR for MR Claims is - 424.0 – Mitral valve disorder
- Secondary ICD-9 diagnosis code V70.7
- Condition Code 30
- An 8-digit National Clinical Trial Number
For complete information, including instructions for physician claims, see the MLN Matters article referenced above.
This month’s coverage updates include a number of retired LCDs from the MACs within our client regions and Palmetto finalized the LCD on Wound Debridements. Please refer to our coverage article from July 2014 for more information about the various wound care/debridement local coverage policies.
Debbie Rubio
1/6/2015
Q:
How should laceration repairs by steri-strips or dermabond be coded?
A:
According to the CPT manual a wound closure/repair with adhesive strips as the sole repair material are not reported with a separate CPT code but as part of the evaluation and management (E/M service). This means that laceration repairs performed in the Emergency Department using only steri-strips would be included as part of the determination of the ED visit level.
For tissue adhesives, which would include dermabond, you can report a CPT code from the repair section.
This guidance is in the first paragraph under the ‘Repair (Closure)’ section in the CPT book. The complete paragraph reads:
“Use the codes in this section [CPT codes 12001-13160] to designate wound closure utilizing sutures, staples, or tissue adhesives (eg, 2-cyanoacrylate), either singly or in combination with each other, or in combination with adhesive strips. Wound closure utilizing adhesive strips as the sole repair material should be coded using the appropriate E/M code.”
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