Article

Working with a co-surgeon: How should procedures be billed?

"It should be noted that payer policies and payment for assistant at surgery will vary if you are paid as primary surgeon during the same encounter," write Ray Painter, MD, and Mark Painter.

Ray Painter, MD

Mark Painter

I plan to work with a friend of mine in an unaffiliated urology group to perform a cystoprostatectomy, ileal loop, and lymph node dissection. How should I code for the following two scenarios? First, if I perform the prostatectomy and charge for the prostatectomy and then assist on the rest of the surgery; and second, if I perform the lymph node dissection and then assist on the rest of the surgery.

The codes available to report the primary procedure of cystectomy, 51590 (Cystectomy, complete, with ureteroileal conduit or sigmoid bladder, including intestine anastomosis) and 51595 (Cystectomy, complete, with ureteroileal conduit or sigmoid bladder, including intestine anastomosis; with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy, including external iliac, hypogastric, and obturator nodes), include by description cystectomy and loop. As one can see from the description, the primary procedure can be reported with or without nodes.

Also from the Painters: Increase reimbursement, reduce take-backs with these 4 steps

When we check the National Correct Coding Initiative bundling edits, prostatectomy codes 55840 (Prostatectomy, retropubic radical, with or without nerve sparing) and 55845 (Prostatectomy, retropubic radical, with or without nerve sparing; with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy, including external iliac, hypogastric, and obturator nodes) are not included in either 51590 or 51595 and can therefore be reported separately. However, lymphadenectomy can only be reported once, so code combination is important. Based on the scenarios you have provided, we see two potential coding options.

For scenario 1, in which you perform the prostatectomy and assist on the remainder of the surgery, Surgeon 1 would bill 51595 and 55840–80 or –82. You would bill 55840 and 51595–80 or –82 as appropriate. Modifier –80 specifies an “Assistant Surgeon.” According to CPT, surgical assistant services may be identified by adding modifier –80 to the usual procedure number(s). Modifier –82 specifies an “Assistant Surgeon” (when qualified resident surgeon not available). The unavailability of a qualified resident surgeon is a prerequisite for use of modifier –82 appended to the usual procedure code number(s) as appropriate.

Next: "Documentation should be clear on what is performed and should include medical support for the use of two surgeons as well as the appropriate diagnosis"It should be noted that payer policies and payment for assistant at surgery will vary if you are paid as primary surgeon during the same encounter. Also, you should consider that payment policies may allow the payer to review records to determine if the reason you are split-billing the procedure is appropriate clinically or is being provided simply for financial gain. As always, documentation should be clear on what is performed and should include medical support for the use of two surgeons as well as the appropriate diagnosis.

For the second scenario that you have listed in which you perform the lymphadenectomy and assist on the rest of the procedure, Medicare does not have a great option but private payers may.

Read: How to evaluate, implement new technology in your practice

For private payers, follow CPT definitions and use 51595 and 55840 and apply modifier –62 to 51595 and 55840-80 (or –82) (“Two Surgeons”). Per CPT, when two surgeons work together as primary surgeons performing distinct part(s) of a procedure, each surgeon should report his/her distinct operative work by adding modifier –62 to the procedure code and any associated add-on code(s) for that procedure as long as both surgeons continue to work together as primary surgeons. Each surgeon should report the co-surgery once using the same procedure code. If additional procedure(s), including add-on procedure(s), are performed during the same surgical session, separate code(s) may also be reported with modifier –62 added.

Note: If a co-surgeon acts as an assistant in the performance of additional procedure(s), other than those reported with the modifier –62, during the same surgical session, those services may be reported using separate procedure code(s) with modifier –80 or modifier –82 added, as appropriate.

The problem you are up against with Medicare is that Medicare now requires that the two surgeons working together to perform the primary service be of different specialties. As you are both urologists, use of –62 would not be allowed when reporting the service to Medicare. As such, coding for Medicare should be 51595 and 55840 for the other urologist and 51595-80 and 55840-80 (–82 if you are in a teaching facility and a qualified resident is not available). As assistant at surgery, you are not required to dictate a separate operative note but must be referenced as being present for the critical portions or the entirety of the case in the primary surgeon’s note.

Send coding and reimbursement questions to Ray Painter, MD, and Mark Painter c/o Urology Times, at urology_times@mmhgroup.com.

Questions of general interest will be chosen for publication. The information in this column is designed to be authoritative, and every effort has been made to ensure its accuracy at the time it was written. However, readers are encouraged to check with their individual carrier or private payers for updates and to confirm that this information conforms to their specific rules.

Related Videos
Phillip M. Pierorazio, MD, answers a question during a video interview
Phillip M. Pierorazio, MD, answers a question during a video interview
Woman typing on laptop | Image Credit: © Gorodenkoff - stock.adobe.com
Related Content
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.