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Since this procedure does not use materials such as surgical mesh, cadaver tissue, bone screws, or staples, you cannot bill code 57288. Likewise, this is not a paravaginal defect repair, as suggested by 57284.
If you want to pick a code with a more appropriate description, try 51845 (abdomino-vaginal vesical neck suspension, with or without endoscopic control [eg, Stamey, Raz, modified Pereyra]) or 51990 (laparoscopy, surgical; urethral suspension for stress incontinence)—but if the payer considers this procedure investigational, you may run into trouble later should you be audited.
The safest course would be to bill unlisted code 53899 (unlisted procedure, urinary system) and send in documentation that supports the procedure as a viable standard of care for the presenting problem.
Ms. Witt, former program manager in the Department of Coding and Nomenclature at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, is an independent coding and documentation consultant. Reimbursement Adviser reflects the most commonly accepted interpretations of CPT-4 and ICD-9-CM coding. When in doubt on a coding or billing matter, check with your individual payer.
Since this procedure does not use materials such as surgical mesh, cadaver tissue, bone screws, or staples, you cannot bill code 57288. Likewise, this is not a paravaginal defect repair, as suggested by 57284.
If you want to pick a code with a more appropriate description, try 51845 (abdomino-vaginal vesical neck suspension, with or without endoscopic control [eg, Stamey, Raz, modified Pereyra]) or 51990 (laparoscopy, surgical; urethral suspension for stress incontinence)—but if the payer considers this procedure investigational, you may run into trouble later should you be audited.
The safest course would be to bill unlisted code 53899 (unlisted procedure, urinary system) and send in documentation that supports the procedure as a viable standard of care for the presenting problem.
Ms. Witt, former program manager in the Department of Coding and Nomenclature at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, is an independent coding and documentation consultant. Reimbursement Adviser reflects the most commonly accepted interpretations of CPT-4 and ICD-9-CM coding. When in doubt on a coding or billing matter, check with your individual payer.
Since this procedure does not use materials such as surgical mesh, cadaver tissue, bone screws, or staples, you cannot bill code 57288. Likewise, this is not a paravaginal defect repair, as suggested by 57284.
If you want to pick a code with a more appropriate description, try 51845 (abdomino-vaginal vesical neck suspension, with or without endoscopic control [eg, Stamey, Raz, modified Pereyra]) or 51990 (laparoscopy, surgical; urethral suspension for stress incontinence)—but if the payer considers this procedure investigational, you may run into trouble later should you be audited.
The safest course would be to bill unlisted code 53899 (unlisted procedure, urinary system) and send in documentation that supports the procedure as a viable standard of care for the presenting problem.
Ms. Witt, former program manager in the Department of Coding and Nomenclature at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, is an independent coding and documentation consultant. Reimbursement Adviser reflects the most commonly accepted interpretations of CPT-4 and ICD-9-CM coding. When in doubt on a coding or billing matter, check with your individual payer.