Neurosurgery Coding Alert

News You Can Use:

Reclaim Thousands in Reimbursement Lost by the PLIF/Interbody Fusion Bundle

After protests against the edit, NCCI retroactively deletes the bundle

You can stop stressing about how the 22630/22612 bundle from the National Correct Coding Initiative's edits will hurt your practice's reimbursement. The NCCI has not only reversed the edit but made the deletion retroactive, so you can collect any money you-ve lost since April due to the edit.

In our May article -New Fusion Bundles Are Headed Your Way, Thanks to Version 12.1,- we reported that version 12.1 of the NCCI bundled 22630 (Arthrodesis, posterior interbody technique, including laminectomy and/or diskectomy to prepare interspace [other than for decompression], single interspace; lumbar) into 22612 (Arthrodesis, posterior or posterolateral technique, single level; lumbar [with or without lateral transverse technique]), effective April 1.

Reap the Benefits of Voicing Your Concerns

Spine surgeons and their associations vehemently argued against the edit, saying that the two procedures were not mutually inclusive of one another and that they would continue to fight the edit. The NCCI recently released a statement confirming that the edit will be deleted with version 12.3 of the new edits, which will be released on Oct. 1, 2006.

-The North American Spine Society (NASS) and the AANS/CNS sent a letter to the NCCI last month documenting reasons why the edits were incorrect, and NCCI and CMS agreed with our analysis and agreed to reverse the edits, effective Oct. 1 and retroactive to April 1,- says Matthew J. Twetten, senior manager of reimbursement and health policy at the NASS.

Resubmit Claims in October

Because the edit deletion will be retroactive to April 1, you can resubmit your claims after Oct. 1 if your carrier denied any claims based on the edit. Experts advise that you include a letter explaining why you-re resubmitting the claim seeking reimbursement for the interbody fusion.
 
Coders are already reviewing claims to check for previous denials that they-ll need to appeal. Changes to NCCI edits -always cause me to dig deeper and check for accuracy and documentation to substantiate anything we are billing,- says Katherine Phelan, coder for St. John's Health System in Tulsa, Okla.

Don't miss: If your surgeon performed both the PLIF and interbody fusion procedures together and you only billed the PLIF (22612) because you knew the payer would deny 22630, you can still resubmit your claim, even though you don't have a denial letter. You should send the payer a copy of the surgeon's op report, along with a letter stating that you collected for the PLIF but that you-re now requesting payment for the interbody fusion, which you originally didn't bill due to the previous edit.
 
Going forward: Once the NCCI formalizes the edit deletion on Oct. 1, you will not need to append any modifiers to your claim if you bill 22630 and 22612 together, unless your payer requires you to append modifier 51 (Multiple procedures) to subsequent line items. If that is the case, you will report 22612 followed by 22630-51, because 22612 is the higher-paying service.
 
Bottom line: The edit deletion will boost your neurosurgery coding reimbursement. -Of course, it will mean more money for the practice, and I do think it is a good thing for reimbursement,- says Margaret Mize, CPC, coder for Birmingham Neurosurgery and Spine Group in Alabama. -There are so many neurosurgery codes that are bundled together now that it is hard to get really good reimbursement.-

Other Articles in this issue of

Neurosurgery Coding Alert

View All