Primary Care Coding Alert

Revert to 'Crossed-Out' for Your Inhalation Solution Drugs

Albuterol, levalbuterol pay depends on returning to more specific J codes Although you just got used to the most recent rules for reporting nebulizer treatment medications, payment depends on updating your codes -- again. Your 2008 superbill should be fresh off the presses from its changes to albuterol/levalbuterol codes J7602 (Albuterol, all formulations including separated isomers, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, noncompounded, administered through DME, concentrated form, per 1 mg [albuterol] or per 0.5 mg [levalbuterol]) and J7603 (- unit dose ...). But you-ll now need to shift the supply codes back to the following: - J7611 -- Albuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, noncompounded, administered through DME, concentrated form, 1 mg - J7612 -- Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, noncompounded, administered through DME, concentrated form, 0.5 mg - J7613 -- Albuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, noncompounded, administered through DME, unit dose, 1 mg - J7614 -- Levalbuterol, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, noncompounded, administered through DME, unit dose, 0.5 mg. For instance, in March, "We were using J7603 for albuterol," says Diane Nelson, RTR, CPC, medical coder for Vanguard Medical Services in Frederick, Md. In April, "We changed back to J7613." The CMS fee schedule Web site recognizes codes J7611-J7614, and 7602-J7603 are not on the fee schedule at all. Switch Back to Drug-Specific Codes You may recall that you previously removed J7611-J7614 from your encounter sheet. HCPCS 2007 revised these codes and swept them away just six months later. CMS deleted J7611-J7614, effective July 1, 2007, says Denae M. Merrill, CPC-E/M, owner of Merrill Medical Management in Saginaw, Mich., in AudioEducator.com's audioconference "Code Correctly for Albuterol: Master the J Code Switch" on May 5, 2008. Keep up: CMS replaced J7611-J7614 with Q4093 (Albuterol, all formulations including separated isomers, inhalation solution, FDA-approved final product, non-compounded, administered through DME, concentrated form, per 1 mg [albuterol] or per 0.5 mg [levalbuterol]) and Q4094 (- unit dose ...), which HCPCS 2008 deleted on Dec. 31, 2007. So far this year, you should have been using J7602 (replaced Q4093) and J7603 (replaced Q4094), which are for albuterol and levalbuterol, all formulations, non-compounded. You chose the correct code based on whether you used the concentrated (J7602) or unit dose form (J7603). Current: The spring-quarter updates to HCPCS delete J7602-J7603 and reinstate J7611-J7614, effective beginning April 1, 2008. Why the full circle? CMS wanted to go back to using noncompounded solution codes that differentiate between albuterol and levalbuterol, Merrill, tells The Coding Institute. Codes J7602-J7603 lumped the drugs, which didn't make financial sense. Focus on 2 J7611-J7614 Factors You can get the correct noncompounded solution supply code if you zoom in on two items: - form -- concentrated (J7611-J7612) or unit dose (J7613-J7614). [...]
You’ve reached your limit of free articles. Already a subscriber? Log in.
Not a subscriber? Subscribe today to continue reading this article. Plus, you’ll get:
  • Simple explanations of current healthcare regulations and payer programs
  • Real-world reporting scenarios solved by our expert coders
  • Industry news, such as MAC and RAC activities, the OIG Work Plan, and CERT reports
  • Instant access to every article ever published in your eNewsletter
  • 6 annual AAPC-approved CEUs*
  • The latest updates for CPT®, ICD-10-CM, HCPCS Level II, NCCI edits, modifiers, compliance, technology, practice management, and more
*CEUs available with select eNewsletters.

Other Articles in this issue of

Primary Care Coding Alert

View All