What are the CMS Anesthesia Guidelines for 2024? Chapter II of the National Correct Coding Initiative Policy Manual for Medicare Services goes over the CMS Anesthesia Guidelines for 2024.
We’ve provided the CMS Anesthesia Guidelines for 2024 below – From the CMS.gov website –
Remember, Anesthesia Billing is complicated. Contact Fusion Anesthesia with any anesthesia billing questions you may have!
Chapter 2 – ANESTHESIA SERVICES
A. Introduction: [The principles of correct coding discussed in Chapter I apply to the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes in the range 00000-01999. Several general guidelines are repeated in this Chapter. However, those general guidelines from Chapter I not discussed in this chapter are nonetheless applicable.]
Providers/suppliers shall report the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System/Current Procedural Terminology (HCPCS/CPT) code that describes the procedure performed to the greatest specificity possible. A HCPCS/CPT code shall be reported only if all services described by the code are performed. A provider/supplier shall not report multiple HCPCS/CPT codes if a single HCPCS/CPT code exists that describes the services. This type of unbundling is incorrect coding. HCPCS/CPT codes include all services usually performed as part of the procedure as a standard of medical/surgical practice. A provider/supplier shall not separately report these services simply because HCPCS/CPT codes exist for them. Specific issues unique to this section of CPT are clarified in this chapter. Anesthesia care is provided by an anesthesia practitioner who may be a physician, a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA) with or without medical direction, or an anesthesia assistant (AA) with medical direction. The anesthesia care package consists of preoperative evaluation, standard preparation and monitoring services, administration of anesthesia, and post-anesthesia recovery care.
Preoperative evaluation includes a sufficient history and physical examination so that the risk of adverse reactions can be minimized, alternative approaches to anesthesia planned, and all questions regarding the anesthesia procedure by the patient or family answered. Types of anesthesia include local, regional, epidural, general, moderate conscious sedation, or monitored anesthesia care. The anesthesia practitioner assumes responsibility for anesthesia and related care rendered in the post-anesthesia recovery period until the patient is released to the surgeon or another physician. Anesthesiologists may personally perform anesthesia services or may supervise anesthesia services performed by a CRNA or AA. CRNAs may perform anesthesia services independently or under the supervision of an anesthesiologist or operating practitioner. An AA always performs anesthesia services under the direction of an anesthesiologist. Anesthesiologists personally performing anesthesia services and non-medically directed CRNAs bill in a standard fashion in accordance with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) regulations as communicated in the Internet-Only Manual (IOM), Publication 100-04 Medicare Claims Revision Date (Medicare): 1/1/2024 II-4 Processing Manual (MCPM) Chapter 12, Sections 50 and 140. CRNAs and AAs practicing under the medical direction of anesthesiologists follow instructions and regulations regarding this arrangement as communicated in the above sections of the IOM. Under the CMS Anesthesia Rules, with limited exceptions, Medicare does not allow separate payment for anesthesia services performed by the physician who also furnishes the medical or surgical service. In this case, payment for the anesthesia service is included in the payment for the medical or surgical procedure. Likewise, under OPPS, payment for the anesthesia service is included in the payment for the medical or surgical procedure.
B. Standard Anesthesia Coding: The following policies reflect national Medicare correct coding guidelines for anesthesia services.
1. CPT codes 00100-01860 specify “Anesthesia for” followed by a description of a surgical intervention. CPT codes 01916-01942 describe anesthesia for radiological procedures. Several CPT codes (01951-01999) describe anesthesia services for burn excision/debridement, obstetrical, and other procedures. CPT codes 99151-99157 describe moderate (conscious) sedation services. (CPT codes 01935 and 01936 were deleted January 1, 2022.) Anesthesia services include, but are not limited to, preoperative evaluation of the patient, administration of anesthetic, other medications, blood, and fluids, monitoring of physiological parameters, and other supportive services. Anesthesia codes describe a general anatomic area or service which usually relates to a number of surgical procedures, often from multiple sections of the CPT Professional. For Medicare purposes, only one anesthesia code is reported unless the anesthesia code is an Add-on Code (AOC).
2. A unique characteristic of anesthesia coding is the reporting of time units. Payment for anesthesia services increases with time. In addition to reporting a base unit value for an anesthesia service, the anesthesia practitioner reports anesthesia time. Anesthesia time is defined as the period during which an anesthesia practitioner is present with the patient. It starts when the anesthesia practitioner begins to prepare the patient for anesthesia services in the operating room or an equivalent area and ends when the anesthesia practitioner is no longer furnishing anesthesia services to the patient (i.e., when the patient may be placed safely under postoperative care). Anesthesia time is a continuous time period from the start of anesthesia to the end of an anesthesia service. In counting anesthesia time, the anesthesia practitioner can add blocks of time around an interruption in anesthesia time as long as the anesthesia practitioner is furnishing continuous anesthesia care within the time periods around the interruption.
Example: A patient who undergoes a cataract extraction may require monitored anesthesia care (see below). This may require administration of a sedative in conjunction with a peri/retrobulbar injection for regional block anesthesia. Subsequently, there may be an interval of 30 minutes or more during which time the patient does not require monitoring by an anesthesia practitioner. After this period, monitoring will begin again for the cataract extraction and ultimately the patient will be released to the surgeon’s care or to recovery. The time that may be reported would include the time for the monitoring during the block and during the procedure. The interval time and the recovery time are not included in the anesthesia time calculation. Also, if unusual services not bundled into the anesthesia service are required, the time spent delivering these services before anesthesia time begins or after it ends may not be included as reportable anesthesia time. However, if it is medically necessary for the anesthesia practitioner to continuously monitor the patient during the interval time and not perform any other service, the interval time may be included in the anesthesia time.
3. It is standard medical practice for an anesthesia practitioner to perform a patient examination and evaluation before surgery. This is considered part of the anesthesia service and is included in the base unit value of the anesthesia code. The evaluation and examination are not reported in the anesthesia time. If a surgery is canceled, after the preoperative evaluation, payment may be allowed to the anesthesiologist for an Evaluation & Management (E&M) service and the appropriate E&M code may be reported. (A non-medically directed CRNA may also report an E&M code under these circumstances if permitted by state law.)
Similarly, routine postoperative evaluation is included in the base unit for the anesthesia service. If this evaluation occurs after the anesthesia practitioner has safely placed the patient under postoperative care, neither additional anesthesia time units nor E&M codes shall be reported for this evaluation. Postoperative E&M services related to the surgery are not separately reportable by the anesthesia practitioner except when an anesthesiologist provides significant, separately identifiable ongoing critical care services.
Anesthesia practitioners other than anesthesiologists and CRNAs cannot report E&M codes except as described above when a surgical case is canceled. If permitted by state law, anesthesia practitioners may separately report significant, separately identifiable postoperative management services after the anesthesia service time ends. These services include, but are not limited to, postoperative pain management and ventilator management unrelated to the anesthesia procedure.
Management of epidural or subarachnoid drug administration (CPT code 01996) is separately payable on dates of service after surgery but not on the date of surgery. If the Revision Date (Medicare): 1/1/2024 II-6 only service provided is management of epidural/subarachnoid drug administration, then an E&M service shall not be reported in addition to CPT code 01996. Payment for management of epidural/subarachnoid drug administration is limited to one unit of service per postoperative day regardless of the number of visits necessary to manage the catheter per postoperative day (CPT definition). While an anesthesiologist or nonmedically directed CRNA may be able to report this service, only one payment will be made per day.
Postoperative pain management services are generally provided by the surgeon who is reimbursed under a global payment policy related to the procedure and shall not be reported by the anesthesia practitioner unless separate, medically necessary services are required that cannot be rendered by the surgeon. The surgeon is responsible for documenting in the medical record the reason that care is being referred to the anesthesia practitioner.
In certain circumstances, critical care services are provided by the anesthesiologist. CRNAs may be paid for E&M services in the critical care area if state law and/or regulation permits them to provide such services. In the case of anesthesiologists, the routine immediate postoperative care is not separately reported except as described above. Certain procedural services such as insertion of a Swan-Ganz catheter, insertion of a central venous pressure line, emergency intubation (outside of the operating suite), etc., are separately payable to anesthesiologists as well as non-medically directed CRNAs if these procedures are furnished within the parameters of state licensing laws.
4. Under certain circumstances, an anesthesia practitioner may separately report an epidural or peripheral nerve block injection (bolus, intermittent bolus, or continuous infusion) for postoperative pain management when the surgeon requests assistance with postoperative pain management. An epidural injection (CPT code 623XX) for postoperative pain management may be reported separately with an anesthesia 0XXXX code only if the mode of intraoperative anesthesia is general anesthesia and the adequacy of the intraoperative anesthesia is not dependent on the epidural injection. A peripheral nerve block injection (CPT codes 64XXX) for postoperative pain management may be reported separately with an anesthesia 0XXXX code only if the mode of intraoperative anesthesia is general anesthesia, subarachnoid injection, or epidural injection, and the adequacy of the intraoperative anesthesia is not dependent on the peripheral nerve block injection. An epidural or peripheral nerve block injection (code numbers as identified above) administered preoperatively or intraoperatively is not separately reportable for postoperative pain management if the mode of anesthesia for the procedure is monitored anesthesia care, moderate conscious sedation, regional anesthesia by peripheral nerve block, or other type of anesthesia not identified above. If an epidural or peripheral nerve block injection (62320-62327 or 64400-64530 as identified above) for postoperative pain management is reported separately on the same date of service as an anesthesia 0XXXX code, modifier 59 or XU may be appended to the epidural or peripheral nerve block injection code (62320-62327 or 64400-64530 as identified above) to indicate that it was administered for postoperative pain management. An epidural or peripheral nerve block injection (62320-62327 or 64400-64530 as identified above) for postoperative pain management in patients receiving general anesthesia, spinal (subarachnoid injection) anesthesia, or postoperative pain management in patients receiving general anesthesia, spinal (subarachnoid injection) anesthesia, or regional anesthesia by epidural injection as described above may be administered preoperatively, intraoperatively, or postoperatively.
5. If an epidural or subarachnoid injection (bolus, intermittent bolus, or continuous) is used for intraoperative anesthesia and postoperative pain management, CPT code 01996 (daily hospital management of epidural or subarachnoid continuous drug administration) is not separately reportable on the day of insertion of the epidural or subarachnoid catheter. CPT code 01996 may only be reported for management for days subsequent to the date of insertion of the epidural or subarachnoid catheter. 6. Anesthesia HCPCS/CPT codes include all services integral to the anesthesia procedure, such as preparation, monitoring, intra-operative care, and post-operative care until the patient is released by the anesthesia practitioner to the care of another physician. Examples of integral services include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Transporting, positioning, prepping, draping of the patient for satisfactory anesthesia induction/surgical procedures.
- Placement of external devices including, but not limited to, those for cardiac monitoring, oximetry, capnography, temperature monitoring, Electroencephalography (EEG), Central Nervous System (CNS) evoked responses (e.g., Brainstem-evoked Response (BSER)), and Doppler flow.
- Placement of peripheral intravenous lines for fluid and medication administration.
- Placement of airway (e.g., endotracheal tube, orotracheal tube).
- Laryngoscopy (direct or endoscopic) for placement of airway (e.g., endotracheal tube). • Placement of nasogastric or orogastric tube.
- Intra-operative interpretation of monitored functions (e.g., blood pressure, heart rate, respirations, oximetry, capnography, temperature, EEG, BSER, Doppler flow, CNS pressure). • Interpretation of laboratory determinations (e.g., arterial blood gases such as pH, pO2, pCO2, bicarbonate, CBC, blood chemistries, lactate) by the anesthesiologist/CRNA.
- Nerve stimulation for determination of level of paralysis or localization of nerve(s). (Codes for Electromyography (EMG) services are for diagnostic purposes for nerve dysfunction. To report these codes a complete diagnostic report must be present in the medical record.)
- Insertion of urinary bladder catheter.
- Blood sample procurement through existing lines or requiring venipuncture or arterial puncture.
The National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) program contains many edits bundling standard preparation, monitoring, and procedural services into anesthesia CPT codes. Although some of these services may never be reported on the same date of service as an anesthesia service, many of these services could be provided at a separate patient encounter unrelated to the anesthesia service on the same date of service. Providers/suppliers may use modifier 59 or XE to bypass the edits under these circumstances.
CPT codes describing services that are integral to an anesthesia service include, but are not limited to, the following:
• 31505, 31515, 31527 (Laryngoscopy) (Laryngoscopy codes describe diagnostic or surgical services)
• 31622, 31645, 31646 (Bronchoscopy)
• 36000, 36010-36015 (Introduction of needle or catheter)
• 36400-36440 (Venipuncture and transfusion)
• 62320-62327 (Epidural or subarachnoid injections of diagnostic or therapeutic substance – bolus, intermittent bolus, or continuous infusion)
• CPT codes 62320-62327 (Epidural or subarachnoid injections of diagnostic or therapeutic substance – bolus, intermittent bolus, or continuous infusion) may be reported on the date of surgery if performed for postoperative pain management, rather than as the means for providing the regional block for the surgical procedure. If a narcotic or other analgesic is injected postoperatively through the same catheter as the anesthetic agent, CPT codes 62320-62327 shall not be reported for postoperative pain management. An epidural injection for postoperative pain management may be separately reportable with an anesthesia 0XXXX code only if the patient receives a general anesthetic and the adequacy of the intraoperative anesthesia is not dependent on the epidural injection. If an epidural injection is not used for operative anesthesia but is used for postoperative pain management, modifier 59 or XU may be reported to indicate that the epidural injection was performed for postoperative pain management rather than intraoperative pain management.
Pain management performed by an anesthesia practitioner after the postoperative anesthesia care period terminates may be separately reportable. However, postoperative pain management by the physician performing a surgical procedure is not separately reportable by that provider/supplier. Postoperative pain management is included in the global surgical package.
Example: A patient has an epidural block with sedation and monitoring for arthroscopic knee surgery. The anesthesia practitioner reports CPT code 01382 (Anesthesia for diagnostic arthroscopic procedures of knee joint). The epidural catheter is left in place for postoperative pain management. The anesthesia practitioner shall not also report CPT codes 62322,62323, 62326, or 62327 (epidural/subarachnoid injection of diagnostic or therapeutic substance), or 01996 (daily management of epidural) on the date of surgery. CPT code 01996 may be reported with one unit of service per day on subsequent days until the catheter is removed. On the other hand, if the anesthesia practitioner performed general anesthesia reported as CPT code 01382 and at the request of the operating physician inserted an epidural catheter for treatment of anticipated postoperative pain, the anesthesia practitioner may report CPT code 62326-59 or XU, or 62327- 59 or XU indicating that this is a separate service from the anesthesia service. In this instance, the service is separately reportable whether the catheter is placed before, during, or after the surgery. Since treatment of postoperative pain is included in the global surgical package, the operating physician may request the assistance of the anesthesia practitioner if the degree of postoperative pain is expected to exceed the skills and experience of the operating physician to manage it. If the epidural catheter was placed on a different date than the surgery, modifier 59 or XU would not be necessary. Daily hospital management of continuous epidural or subarachnoid drug administration performed on the day(s) subsequent to the placement of an epidural or subarachnoid catheter (CPT codes 62324-62327) may be reported as CPT code 01996.
64400-64530 (Peripheral nerve blocks – bolus injection or continuous infusion)
• CPT codes 64400-64530 (Peripheral nerve blocks – bolus injection or continuous infusion) may be reported on the date of surgery if performed for postoperative pain management only if the operative anesthesia is general anesthesia, subarachnoid injection, or epidural injection and the adequacy of the intraoperative anesthesia is not dependent on the peripheral nerve block. Peripheral nerve block codes shall not be reported separately on the same date of service as a surgical procedure if used as the primary anesthetic technique or as a supplement to the primary anesthetic technique. Modifier 59 or XU may be used to indicate that a peripheral nerve block injection was performed for postoperative pain management, rather than intraoperative anesthesia, and a procedure note shall be included in the medical record. • 67500 (Retrobulbar injection)
• 81000-81015, 82013, 80345, 82270, 82271 (Performance and interpretation of laboratory tests)
• 43753, 43754, 43755 (Esophageal, gastric intubation)
• 92511-92520, 92537, 92538 (Special otorhinolaryngologic services)
• 92950 (Cardiopulmonary resuscitation)
• 92953 (Temporary transcutaneous pacemaker)
• 92960, 92961 (Cardioversion)
• 93000-93010 (Electrocardiography)
• 93040-93042 (Electrocardiography)
• 93303-93308 (Transthoracic echocardiography when used for monitoring purposes) However, when performed for diagnostic purposes with documentation including a formal report, this service may be considered a significant, separately identifiable, and separately reportable service.
• 93312-93317 (Transesophageal echocardiography when used for monitoring purposes) However, when performed for diagnostic purposes with documentation including a formal report, this service may be considered a significant, separately identifiable, and separately reportable service.
• 93318 (Transesophageal echocardiography for monitoring purposes)
• 93355 (Transesophageal echocardiography for guidance for transcatheter intracardiac or great vessel(s) structural intervention(s))
• 93561-93562 (Indicator dilution studies) (CPT codes 93561-93562 were deleted January 1, 2022.)
• 93701 (Thoracic electrical bioimpedance)
• 93922-93981 (Extremity or visceral arterial or venous vascular studies) However, when performed diagnostically with a formal report, this service may be considered a significant, separately identifiable, and if medically necessary, a separately reportable service.
• 94640 (Inhalation/IPPB treatments)
• 94002-94004, 94660-94662 (Ventilation management/CPAP services) If these services are performed during a surgical procedure, they are included in the anesthesia service. These services may be separately reportable if performed by the anesthesia practitioner after post-operative care has been transferred to another physician by the anesthesia practitioner. Modifier 59 or XU may be reported to indicate that these services are separately reportable. For example, if an anesthesia practitioner who provided anesthesia for a procedure initiates ventilation management in a post-operative recovery area before transfer of care to another physician, CPT codes 94002-94003 shall not be reported for this service since it is included in the anesthesia procedure package. However, if the anesthesia practitioner transfers care to another physician and is called back to initiate ventilation because of a change in the patient’s status, the initiation of ventilation may be separately reportable.
• 94664 (Inhalations)
• 94680-94690
• 94760-94762 (Oximetry)
• 96360-96379 (Drug administration)
• 99202-99499 (Evaluation and management)
This list is not a comprehensive listing of all services included in anesthesia services.
7. Per Medicare Global Surgery rules, the physician performing an operative procedure is responsible for treating postoperative pain. Treatment of postoperative pain by the operating physician is not separately reportable. However, the operating physician may request that an anesthesia practitioner assist in the treatment of postoperative pain management if it is medically reasonable and necessary. The actual or anticipated postoperative pain must be severe enough to require treatment by techniques beyond the experience of the operating physician. For example, the operating physician may request that the anesthesia practitioner administer an epidural or peripheral nerve block to treat actual or anticipated postoperative pain. The epidural or peripheral nerve block may be administered preoperatively, intraoperatively, or postoperatively. An epidural or peripheral nerve block that provides intraoperative pain management is included in the 0XXXX anesthesia code and is not separately reportable, even if it also provides postoperative pain management. (See Chapter II, Section B, Subsection 4 for guidelines regarding reporting anesthesia and postoperative pain management separately by an anesthesia practitioner on the same date of service.)
If the operating physician requests that the anesthesia practitioner perform pain management services after the postoperative anesthesia care period terminates, the anesthesia practitioner may report it separately using modifier 59 or XU. Since postoperative pain management by the operating physician is included in the global surgical package, the operating physician may request the assistance of an anesthesia practitioner if it requires techniques beyond the experience of the operating physician.
8. Several nerve block CPT codes (e.g., 64416 (brachial plexus), 64446 (sciatic nerve), 64448 (femoral nerve), 64449 (lumbar plexus)) describe “continuous infusion by catheter (including catheter placement).” Two epidural/subarachnoid injection CPT codes 62324- 62327 describe continuous infusion or intermittent bolus injection including catheter placement. If an anesthesia practitioner places a catheter for continuous infusion epidural/subarachnoid or nerve block for intraoperative pain management, the service is included in the 0XXXX anesthesia procedure and is not separately reportable on the same date of service even if it also provides postoperative pain management.
Per CMS Global Surgery rules, postoperative pain management is a component of the global surgical package and is the responsibility of the physician performing the global surgical procedure. If the physician performing the global surgical procedure does not have the skills and experience to manage the postoperative pain and requests that an anesthesia practitioner assume the postoperative pain management, the anesthesia practitioner may report the additional services performed once this responsibility is transferred to the anesthesia practitioner. Pain management services subsequent to the date of insertion of the catheter for continuous infusion may be reported with CPT code 01996 for epidural/subarachnoid infusions and with E&M codes for nerve block continuous infusions.
C. Radiologic Anesthesia Coding – Medicare’s anesthesia billing guidelines allow only one anesthesia code to be reported for anesthesia services provided in conjunction with radiological procedures. Radiological Supervision and Interpretation (RS&I) codes may be applicable to radiological procedures being performed. The appropriate RS&I code may be reported by the appropriate provider/supplier (e.g., radiologist, cardiologist, neurosurgeon, radiation oncologist). The RS&I codes are not included in anesthesia codes for these procedures. Since Medicare anesthesia rules, with one exception, do not permit the physician performing a surgical or diagnostic procedure to separately report anesthesia for the procedure, the RS&I code(s) shall not be reported by the same provider/supplier reporting the anesthesia service. Medicare generally allows separate reporting for moderate conscious sedation services (CPT codes 99151-99153) when provided by the same physician performing a medical or surgical procedure except when the anesthesia service is bundled into the procedure, e.g., radiation treatment management. If a physician performing a radiologic procedure inserts a catheter as part of that procedure, and through the same site a catheter is used for monitoring purposes, it is inappropriate for either the anesthesia practitioner or the physician performing the radiologic procedure to separately report placement of the monitoring catheter (e.g., CPT codes 36500, 36555-36556, 36568-36569, 36580, 36584, 36597).
D. Monitored Anesthesia Care – Monitored anesthesia care may be performed by an anesthesia practitioner who administers sedatives, analgesics, hypnotics, or other anesthetic agents so that the patient remains responsive and breathes on their own. Monitored anesthesia care provides anxiety relief, amnesia, pain relief, and comfort. Monitored anesthesia care involves patient monitoring sufficient to anticipate the potential need to administer general anesthesia during a surgical or other procedure. Monitored anesthesia care requires careful and continuous evaluation of various vital physiologic functions and the recognition and treatment of any adverse changes. CMS recognizes this type of anesthesia service as a payable service if medically reasonable and necessary. Monitored anesthesia care includes the intraoperative monitoring by an anesthesia practitioner of the patient’s vital physiological signs in anticipation of the need for administration of general anesthesia or of the development of adverse reaction to the surgical procedure. It also includes the performance of a pre-anesthesia evaluation and examination, prescription of the anesthesia care, administration of necessary oral or parenteral medications, and provision of indicated postoperative anesthesia care. CPT code 01920 (Anesthesia for cardiac… (not to include Swan-Ganz catheter)) may be reported for monitored anesthesia care in patients who are critically ill or critically unstable. Issues of medical necessity are addressed by national CMS policy and local contractor coverage policies.
E. General Policy Statements
1. The Medically Unlikely Edit (MUE) values and NCCI Procedure-to-Procedure (PTP) edits are based on services provided by the same physician to the same beneficiary on the same date of service. Physicians shall not inconvenience beneficiaries nor increase risks to beneficiaries by performing services on different dates of service to avoid MUE or NCCI PTP edits.
2. In this manual, many policies are described using the term “physician.” Unless indicated differently the use of this term does not restrict the policies to physicians only but applies to all practitioners, hospitals, providers, or suppliers eligible to bill the relevant HCPCS/CPT codes pursuant to applicable portions of the Social Security Act (SSA) of 1965, the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), and Medicare rules. In some sections of this manual, the term “physician” would not include some of these entities because specific rules do not apply to them. For example, Anesthesia Rules (CMS IOM Publication 100-04 MCPM Chapter 12 (Physician/Nonphysician Practitioners), Section 50 (Payment for Anesthesiology Services)) and Global Surgery Rules (CMS IOM, Publication 100-04 MCPM Chapter 12 (Physician/Nonphysician Practitioners), Section 40 (Surgeons and Global Surgery)) do not apply to hospitals.
3. Providers/suppliers reporting services under Medicare’s hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) shall report all services in accordance with appropriate Medicare IOM instructions.
4. In 2010, the CPT Professional modified the numbering of codes so that the sequence of codes as they appear in the CPT Professional does not necessarily correspond to a sequential numbering of codes. In the Medicare NCCI Policy Manual use of a numerical range of codes reflects all codes that numerically fall within the range regardless of their sequential order in the CPT Professional.
5. Providers/suppliers shall not report drug administration CPT codes 96360-96379 for anesthetic agents or other drugs administered between the patient’s arrival at the operative center and discharge from the post-anesthesia care unit.
6. With limited exceptions, Medicare Anesthesia Rules prevent separate payment for anesthesia for a medical or surgical procedure when provided by the physician performing the procedure. The provider/supplier shall not report CPT codes 00100- 01999, 62320-62327, or 64400-64530 for anesthesia for a procedure. Additionally, the provider/supplier shall not unbundle the anesthesia procedure and report component codes individually. For example, introduction of a needle or intracatheter into a vein (CPT code 36000), venipuncture (CPT code 36410), drug administration (CPT codes 96360-96379) or cardiac assessment (e.g., CPT codes 93000-93010, 93040-93042) shall not be reported when these procedures are related to the delivery of an anesthetic agent. Medicare generally allows separate reporting for moderate conscious sedation services (CPT codes 99151-99153) when provided by the same physician performing a medical or surgical procedure except when the anesthesia service is bundled into the procedure, e.g., radiation treatment management.
7. Intraoperative neurophysiology monitoring (HCPCS/CPT codes 95940, 95941, and G0453) and other 90000 neurophysiology testing codes (e.g., CPT codes 92652, 92653, 95822, 95860, 95861, 95867, 95868, 95870, 95907-95913, 95925-95937) shall not be reported by the physician/anesthesia practitioner performing an anesthesia procedure, since it is included in the global package for the primary surgical service code. However, when performed by a different physician during the procedure, intra-anesthesia neurophysiology monitoring/testing may be separately reportable by the second physician.
8. CPT code 36591 describes “collection of blood specimen from a completely implantable venous access device.” CPT code 36592 describes “collection of blood specimen using an established central or peripheral catheter, venous, not otherwise specified.” These codes shall not be reported with any service other than a laboratory service. That is, these codes may be reported if the only non-laboratory service performed is the collection of a blood specimen by one of these methods.
9. CPT code 96523 describes “irrigation of implanted venous access…” This code may be reported only if no other service is reported for the patient encounter.
10. Regarding the need for documentation in the medical record, refer to SSA Section 1833(e). No payment shall be made to any provider of services or other person under this part unless there has been furnished such information as may be necessary in order to determine the amounts due such provider or other person under this part for the period with respect to which the amounts are being paid or for any prior period.
See Full CMS 2024 Rules here: https://www.cms.gov/files/document/medicare-ncci-policy-manual-2024-chapter-2.pdf