Fine Tune Your Thyroid FNA Claims

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  • 8/16/2019 Fine Tune Your Thyroid FNA Claims

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    The Coding Institute LLC, 2222 Sedwick Road, Durham, NC 27713, Eenterprise Contact: Sam Nair, Direct: 704 303 8150,

    [email protected]

    Fine Tune Your Thyroid FNA Claims

    By Susan Dooley

    Are you reporting a fine needle aspiration procedure (FNA) of the thyroid? If the documentation clearly

    specifies fine needle aspiration, you can choose from two CPT® code options to report this procedure:

      10021, Fine needle aspiration; without imaging guidance

      10022, Fine needle aspiration; with imaging guidance.

    Fine needle aspiration is a procedure that aspirates, or sucks out, a small amount of cells or fluid

    collected from a cyst, mass, or nodule. FNA is performed with a very fine needle, usually from about 18

    to 25 gauge, along with a syringe. Needles used for FNA are very thin, with a smaller diameter gauge, or

    opening, than regular needles. The higher the number of the gauge, the finer or smaller the inner andouter diameter of the needle; a 25 gauge needle has a smaller diameter than an 18 gauge. (Sutures are

    similarly numbered; a 7-0 suture is much finer than a 2-0 suture.)

    FNA of the thyroid is frequently, though not always, performed with ultrasound guidance to ensure that

    the needle is positioned in the correct area, such as in a suspicious thyroid nodule.

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]

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    The Coding Institute LLC, 2222 Sedwick Road, Durham, NC 27713, Eenterprise Contact: Sam Nair, Direct: 704 303 8150,

    [email protected]

    Watch Your Image(ing)!

    When you report 10022, don’t forget to also report an appropriate imaging code, such as: 

      76942, Ultrasonic guidance for needle placement (e.g., biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization

    device), imaging supervision and interpretation

      77002, Fluoroscopic guidance for needle placement (eg, biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization

    device).

    How many units of the imaging can you report? For Medicare, just one per encounter. Pull out the 2016

    NCCI Manual, and turn to Chapter 9. It tells us this: “CPT® codes 76942, 77002, 77003, 77012, and 77021

    describe radiologic guidance for needle placement by different modalities. CMS payment policy allows

    one unit of service for any of these codes at a single patient encounter regardless of the number of

    needle placements performed. The unit of service for these codes is the patient encounter, not number

    of lesions, number of aspirations, number of biopsies, number of injections, or number of localizations.” 

    Here’s a nice bonus tip for 76942: CPT® Assistant (March 2011) tells us that to report 76942, your

    provider doesn’t have to use the ultrasound guidance to guide the needle’s actual insertion through the

    skin. As long as the ultrasound imaging guides where your provider places the needle, you can report

    this code with 10022.

    Check Your Units for Fine Needle Aspiration

    How many times on the same day of service can you report an FNA code, you wonder? In chapter 3,

    page 12, of the 2016 NCCI Manual, we discover this: “The unit of service for fine needle aspiration (CPT

    codes 10021 and 10022) is the separately identifiable lesion. If a physician performs multiple ‘passes’

    into the same lesion to obtain multiple specimens, only one unit of service may be reported. However, a

    separate unit of service may be reported for separate aspiration(s) of a distinct separately identifiable

    lesion.” 

    So there you have it — all you have to do is count the separate lesions in the procedure report. If your

    provider uses ultrasound guidance to perform FNA on two separate lesions in the right lobe of the

    thyroid and on one separate lesion in the left lobe, then you would report three units of 10022.

    How About You?

    Does your provider perform image-guided FNAs? Got any tips for us? Write to us. 

    mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]

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