Some call it intentional, others call it Murphy's law, but I tend to
call it the law of unintended consequences. As a software developer, I
am intimately aware that any time you intervene in a complex system you
have the opportunity to create an
unanticipated and sometimes undesirable outcome.
At Intellicure,
we've spent months getting ready for some dramatic changes to
debridement coding. For a quick refresher, the AMA has dispensed with
the system of coding multiple surgical debridements as multiple
independent procedures and replaced it with a system of adding the
surface areas of the multiple sites and then using a series of primary
and add-on codes to reflect the total surface area debrided. Our Chief
Medical Officer, Dr. Caroline Fife has done a great job of describing
these changes using a series of real world examples to illustrate the
new process using a series of
slides and webinars (available to Intellicure clients).
We
recently noticed that CMS' Medically Unlikely Edits (MUE) have not been
updated to reflect the new code instructions for CPT 97598, and still
list it with a quantity of “1”. We've begun making inquiries to certain
Medicare contractors, but at the time of this writing correctly coded
claims are going to get rejected presuming they have a quantity of more
than "1" which would of course occur when you debride a wound (or
wounds) with a collective surface area that measures more than 40 sq.
cm.We are also going to be following CMS' guidance
to get a MUE updated so this may all be resolved when the second quarter
NCCI/OCE edits are released in April. Until then, for the answer of how
to report the any extra 97598s, I suggest that providers contact
their pertinent Medicare medical directors, explain the issue, and ask
how
their particular system will process the claims. Until CMS changes the
MUEs, the Medicare contractors will have to program
their computers to accept additional units of this code, which will
probably be done by modifier which they'll have to share.