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Last Updated: February 2026 | Verified for 2026 AMA, CPT & CMS Guidance (Coding, Coverage & Documentation)

Quick Reference: CPT 20605 (Arthrocentesis, Intermediate Joint/Bursa)

  • What 20605 means: Arthrocentesis (aspiration and/or injection) of an intermediate joint or bursa without ultrasound guidance. Typical examples include wrist, elbow, ankle, temporomandibular (TMJ), acromioclavicular (AC) joint, and olecranon bursa.
  • One unit per joint, per session: The descriptor “aspiration and/or injection” means you do not bill separately for aspiration and injection in the same joint during the same encounter; report one unit per joint treated.
  • Ultrasound changes the code: If ultrasound guidance is used and documented according to CPT requirements, report the corresponding with ultrasound arthrocentesis code (for intermediate joint, that is 20606), rather than 20605. Ultrasound guidance should not be billed separately when using the “with US” arthrocentesis code.
  • Laterality matters: Use RT/LT for unilateral injections and follow payer instructions for bilateral reporting (often modifier 50 or two lines with RT/LT). Clear laterality prevents duplicate denials for multiple joints of the same CPT code on the same date.
  • Documentation drives payment: Payers focus on joint/site, indication, conservative therapy history (when relevant), medication injected (if any), and whether imaging guidance was used. Documentation must make the billed code auditable.
  • Coverage varies by injected substance: For hyaluronan (viscosupplementation), many coverage rules are more restrictive than for corticosteroid injections; Medicare coverage is implemented via CMS coverage articles and payer policies vary (including some plans ending coverage). CPT 20605 is the primary code for arthrocentesis (aspiration and/or injection) of an intermediate-sized joint or bursa when performed without ultrasound guidance. In 2026, the main payment and audit risks for 20605 are predictable: (1) choosing the wrong joint-size code (20600 vs 20605 vs 20610), (2) billing 20605 when ultrasound guidance was actually used (or vice versa), (3) unbundling aspiration and injection in the same joint, and (4) failing to signal distinct joints/laterality when multiple injections are performed on the same date. This article provides a payer-realistic, documentation-forward approach to billing 20605 defensibly in 2026.

1. Definition and Procedure Scope

CPT 20605 describes arthrocentesis of an intermediate joint or bursa performed without ultrasound guidance. Arthrocentesis includes aspiration (removal of synovial or bursal fluid) and/or injection (delivery of medication into the joint or bursa). The “and/or” language is operationally important: aspiration alone, injection alone, or aspiration followed by injection into the same joint during the same session is still reported as one unit of 20605 per joint.

Intermediate joint examples commonly cited in coding references include the wrist, elbow, ankle, temporomandibular joint (TMJ), acromioclavicular (AC) joint, and olecranon bursa. These examples are not merely educational; they are central to choosing the correct code when payers compare the billed CPT to the documented anatomy.

Clinically, 20605 is used for two main categories of service:

  • Diagnostic arthrocentesis: aspiration of fluid for diagnostic evaluation (e.g., suspected crystal arthropathy, inflammatory arthritis flare, or possible infection evaluation when clinically appropriate). The procedural code captures the aspiration; laboratory analysis of aspirated fluid is reported separately as applicable.
  • Therapeutic arthrocentesis/injection: injection of medication such as corticosteroid or anesthetic into an intermediate joint/bursa to reduce pain and inflammation and improve function. The medication itself is billed separately when appropriate (for example, HCPCS drug codes when supplied by the billing entity). Compliance boundary: 20605 is the procedure (needle entry and aspiration/injection service). It is not a proxy for the medication. If a substance is injected and separately payable, the drug is billed on its own line according to payer rules and site-of-service responsibility.

2. Joint Classification: 20600 vs 20605 vs 20610

The most common technical error with arthrocentesis coding is selecting the wrong joint-size family code. CPT divides arthrocentesis into three joint-size categories and a parallel set of “with ultrasound” codes. For 20605, accurate joint classification is non-negotiable because payers may treat “wrong joint-size code” as incorrect coding even when the service was clinically appropriate.

CPT Code Joint Size Category Common Examples Key Practical Risk
20600 Small joint/bursa Typically fingers/toes (small joints) Undercoding or miscoding when used for wrist/ankle/elbow
20605 Intermediate joint/bursa Wrist, elbow, ankle, TMJ, AC joint, olecranon bursa Confusing AC joint vs shoulder (glenohumeral) or billing the wrong size category
20610 Major joint/bursa Shoulder (glenohumeral), hip, knee Upcoding AC joint injections as 20610; payers may recoup when anatomy is clearly AC joint

A frequent real-world confusion is shoulder-region injections. The acromioclavicular (AC) joint is an intermediate joint (20605), while the glenohumeral joint is a major joint (20610). When documentation states “AC joint injection,” billing 20610 is a mismatch that can trigger downcoding or post-payment audit risk.

3. Documentation Standards and Required Elements

Documentation is the main determinant of whether 20605 is defensible in medical necessity review. Auditors and payers typically test two questions:

(1) Was arthrocentesis clinically justified? and

(2) Does the documentation support the exact code billed (joint category and imaging guidance status)?

Practical documentation expectations are summarized in physician-facing coding guidance, with emphasis on an auditable procedure note and clarity on ultrasound use.

3.1 Minimum documentation elements

  • Anatomic site (joint/bursa): Specify the exact joint or bursa treated (e.g., “left ankle joint,” “right olecranon bursa”).
  • Laterality: Right vs left must be explicit when applicable to support RT/LT or bilateral reporting.
  • Indication and medical necessity: Symptoms and findings that justify the procedure (e.g., swelling/effusion, pain limiting function, suspected bursitis, inflammatory flare).
  • Conservative therapy history when relevant: For some treatment pathways (especially viscosupplementation), payers frequently expect documentation of prior conservative management and/or prior steroid injection.
  • What was performed: Aspiration, injection, or aspiration + injection. If aspiration, note whether fluid was obtained and volume/appearance when clinically relevant.
  • Medication injected: Name and dose (and sometimes concentration), especially for steroid/anesthetic injections. Medication documentation should reconcile with drug billing where applicable.
  • Guidance statement: Explicitly state whether ultrasound guidance was used. If none was used, documenting “no ultrasound guidance” reduces ambiguity and supports 20605.
  • Patient response/complications: Any immediate tolerance issues or adverse events; this becomes important if a discontinued procedure modifier is used. Practical audit-proofing tip: When multiple arthrocenteses occur on the same date, the procedure note should read like separate, clearly delineated services (distinct joint/site + laterality + separate indications or clearly separate anatomic targets). This supports separate line reporting and any distinctness modifiers when required.

3.2 “One unit per joint” and why unbundling fails

The language “aspiration and/or injection” is a built-in bundling rule for the same joint in the same session. If a clinician aspirates an elbow effusion and then injects corticosteroid into that same elbow during the same encounter, the correct reporting is one unit of 20605 for that elbow, not separate aspiration and injection codes. This is a common overcoding pattern and is difficult to defend because the bundling is explicit in the descriptor family logic.

4. Ultrasound Guidance Rules and When 20605 Is Not Appropriate

The single most important technical branch point is whether ultrasound guidance was used and documented in a manner consistent with CPT requirements. When ultrasound guidance is performed for an intermediate joint arthrocentesis and properly documented, the appropriate arthrocentesis code is the “with US” version rather than 20605. Ultrasound guidance is incorporated into the “with US” arthrocentesis code and is not reported separately in that context.

If the clinician used ultrasound but did not meet documentation requirements typically associated with ultrasound-guided procedures (including image retention and documentation of guidance), payers may deny the “with ultrasound” arthrocentesis code on medical record review. In those circumstances, billing may be forced back to the non-ultrasound code family, but the safest operational approach is to align the claim with what the record can support.

Documentation reality: Payers do not adjudicate based on what was “probably done.” They adjudicate based on what is documented and auditable. If ultrasound guidance is used routinely in a practice, standardize documentation templates to reliably support the correct code family.

5. Medicare and Commercial Coverage Realities (Including Viscosupplementation)

Coverage for the procedure (arthrocentesis) is generally broad when medically necessary. However, coverage for the injected substance (particularly hyaluronan viscosupplementation) is often substantially more restrictive and highly policy-driven. In practice, many denials attributed to “20605” are actually driven by the drug policy and the diagnosis/coverage pathway associated with the injected product rather than the needle service itself.

5.1 Medicare: CMS coverage articles and the documentation/interval logic

For Medicare, local and operational rules for intra-articular hyaluronan injections are commonly implemented through CMS coverage articles that specify coding and billing expectations (including interval logic and series concepts). These materials frequently control claim outcomes when hyaluronan products are billed and should be treated as primary operational references for claims teams that bill viscosupplementation.

Even when arthrocentesis itself is covered, Medicare and Medicare Advantage plans may scrutinize repeated injections, clinical rationale, and whether the diagnosis supports the billed therapy. If the record does not support ongoing benefit, repeat injections can become vulnerable to “not reasonable and necessary” determinations.

5.2 Aetna and UnitedHealthcare: typical step-therapy posture for hyaluronan

Large commercial payers commonly require evidence of osteoarthritis and prior conservative management before approving hyaluronan products. Aetna’s clinical policy bulletin for viscosupplementation is a canonical example of step-therapy logic and coverage narrowing around these products.

UnitedHealthcare’s sodium hyaluronate policy similarly describes coverage in defined scenarios and characterizes other uses as not medically necessary under its policy framework. These drug policies frequently drive whether the associated injection encounter is cleanly paid or becomes a denial/appeal workflow.

5.3 Blue Cross policy shifts: why payer volatility matters in 2026

In 2026 planning, practices should explicitly account for payer volatility regarding viscosupplementation. Some plans have announced coverage changes that may eliminate benefits for viscosupplementation for osteoarthritis for certain member populations. When such a policy change applies, even flawless procedural coding and documentation will not convert a non-covered benefit into a covered one; the workflow needs patient counseling, benefit verification, and financial policy alignment.

5.4 TMJ considerations and “intermediate joint” implications

The TMJ is frequently treated as an intermediate joint for arthrocentesis coding purposes, but payer coverage for TMJ-related interventions can be complex and sometimes restrictive depending on the specific service and diagnosis category. For teams dealing with TMJ disorder interventions, it is common to need payer-specific medical policy review when services extend beyond straightforward arthrocentesis/injection and enter procedural TMJ surgery or other covered/non-covered categories.

6. Modifier Usage: 25, 59/X{E,S,U,P}, RT/LT, 50

Most arthrocentesis denials in otherwise-covered cases are technical: missing modifier 25 for a separately billable E/M, missing laterality, or failing to distinguish multiple joints billed with the same CPT code on the same date. Physician-facing coding guidance emphasizes the practical use of these modifiers and the underlying documentation logic that must support them.

6.1 Modifier 25 (on the E/M code, not on 20605)

Use modifier 25 on the E/M service when a significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service occurs on the same date as the arthrocentesis. The E/M documentation should show work beyond the inherent pre-procedure assessment. If the visit is solely for a planned injection with minimal additional evaluation, billing a separate E/M is typically not supportable.

6.2 RT/LT and bilateral reporting (modifier 50 when required)

Laterality modifiers (RT/LT) are a high-yield denial-prevention tool. For bilateral intermediate joint injections (e.g., both wrists), payers often require a bilateral reporting method (commonly modifier 50 or two-line RT/LT reporting, depending on payer). The claim must unambiguously communicate laterality to prevent the second line from denying as a duplicate.

6.3 Modifier 59 and X-modifiers for multiple distinct joints on the same date

When multiple arthrocenteses are performed on the same date using the same CPT code (e.g., left wrist and left ankle, both intermediate joints), some payer systems treat the second line as a duplicate unless a distinctness modifier is applied. In those cases, modifier 59 (or an appropriate X-modifier where accepted) may be required to identify a distinct anatomic site/structure. Documentation must support distinct joints/structures; modifiers should not be used to bypass the “one unit per joint per session” rule.

Modifier integrity rule: Modifiers communicate clinical reality. If the note does not clearly support distinct joints or distinct encounters, modifier use becomes indefensible in audit.

7. Facility vs Office Workflows and Claim Hygiene

Arthrocentesis claims are often cleanest when the billing workflow matches the site-of-service economics and responsibility for supplies/medications:

  • Office (non-facility): The practice typically bills the procedure and, when applicable, the medication administered (subject to payer rules and correct units). Documentation should reconcile to inventory and medication selection.
  • Facility (hospital outpatient/ASC): The facility often bills supplies and drug, while the clinician bills the professional service. Splitting responsibilities incorrectly can cause denials (duplicate billing) or compliance risk. Because payer drug policies (especially for hyaluronan) frequently drive approvals/denials, many organizations treat injection visits as a two-step process: (1) benefit and policy validation, then (2) scheduling and delivery with standardized documentation. This reduces avoidable denials and patient dissatisfaction when a drug is non-covered under plan policy.

8. Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: Olecranon bursitis aspiration and steroid injection (same bursa)

Setting: Physician office

Service: Aspiration of olecranon bursa fluid followed by corticosteroid injection into the same bursa during the same encounter, without ultrasound guidance.

Coding logic: Report 20605 once for the bursa (aspiration and/or injection is one unit per joint/bursa per session). Bill the steroid drug code separately if supplied by the practice and payable under the payer’s rules.

Documentation tip: Specify “olecranon bursa,” laterality, whether fluid was obtained, medication/dose injected, and explicitly note “no ultrasound guidance.”

Scenario 2: Two intermediate joints on the same side (wrist and ankle)

Setting: Office or outpatient clinic

Service: Left wrist injection and left ankle injection on the same date (both intermediate joints), without ultrasound guidance.

Coding logic: Two lines of 20605 with appropriate laterality, and apply a distinctness modifier (e.g., 59 or payer-accepted X-modifier) to the second line if the payer treats the second line as a duplicate absent a distinctness signal.

Documentation tip: Separate site statements and clearly delineated procedure elements for each joint are essential to support distinct billing.

Scenario 3: AC joint injection vs glenohumeral shoulder injection

Setting: Orthopedic clinic

Service: Injection documented as “AC joint injection” without ultrasound guidance.

Coding logic: AC joint is an intermediate joint, supporting 20605 rather than 20610. Selecting 20610 when the record clearly states AC joint creates mismatch risk.

Documentation tip: Avoid ambiguous shorthand (“shoulder injection”) when AC joint is intended; specify AC joint explicitly to align clinical record and code selection.

Scenario 4: Hyaluronan injection encounter (policy-driven risk)

Setting: Outpatient orthopedic practice

Service: Intra-articular hyaluronan injection series for osteoarthritis (payer-dependent coverage).

Coding logic: The arthrocentesis code (20605/20610 depending on joint size; many viscosupplementation series involve major joints such as knee) must be paired with drug policy compliance and interval logic as applicable. Coverage is frequently contingent on documented conservative therapy and payer-specific criteria.

Operational tip: Verify benefit coverage and policy prerequisites before scheduling series injections; payer policies may characterize some uses as not medically necessary or end coverage for certain populations.

9. High-Frequency Errors and Denial Patterns

  • Unbundling aspiration + injection in the same joint: Billing separate services when the descriptor already bundles aspiration and/or injection for the same joint/session is a classic overcoding failure point.
  • Wrong joint-size code: AC joint miscoded as major joint (20610) is a common mismatch; documentation that clearly states AC joint makes the miscoding conspicuous.
  • Ultrasound used but billed as “without ultrasound” (or vice versa): If ultrasound is used, billing should align with the correct code family and documentation requirements; otherwise, medical record review can drive recoupment or denial.
  • Missing laterality or distinctness signaling: Multiple 20605 lines on the same date often need RT/LT and sometimes a distinctness modifier to avoid duplicate denial logic in claims systems.
  • Policy mismatch for viscosupplementation: Denials frequently arise from drug coverage criteria rather than the arthrocentesis itself; payer criteria and benefit changes can control outcomes even with correct procedural coding. Best defensive posture in 2026: Standardize arthrocentesis documentation templates (site, laterality, guidance statement, medication/dose), implement payer policy checks for injected substances when relevant, and train staff on joint-size coding (especially AC joint vs shoulder joint).

Official Description

Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, intermediate joint or bursa (eg, temporomandibular, acromioclavicular, wrist, elbow or ankle, olecranon bursa); without ultrasound guidance

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

Arthrocentesis, commonly referred to as aspiration, is a medical procedure that involves the removal of fluid from a joint or bursa. This procedure is primarily performed to diagnose the underlying cause of joint effusion, which is the accumulation of excess fluid in the joint space, and to alleviate pain associated with this condition. During the arthrocentesis, a healthcare professional may also inject medication into the joint or bursa to reduce inflammation and provide relief from discomfort. Typically, anti-inflammatory medications, such as corticosteroids, are used for this purpose. The procedure begins with the cleansing of the skin over the targeted joint to minimize the risk of infection. If necessary, a local anesthetic is administered to ensure patient comfort during the procedure. A needle attached to a syringe is then carefully inserted into the affected joint or bursa to withdraw the fluid, which is subsequently sent for laboratory analysis to aid in diagnosis. In cases where an injection is performed, it follows the aspiration step. It is important to note that CPT® Code 20605 is specifically designated for arthrocentesis of intermediate joints or bursae, including the temporomandibular joint, acromioclavicular joint, wrist, elbow, ankle joint, or olecranon bursa, and is applicable when ultrasound guidance is not utilized for needle placement. For procedures that involve ultrasound guidance and a permanent recording, CPT® Code 20606 should be reported instead.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

Arthrocentesis is indicated for various clinical scenarios where fluid accumulation in a joint or bursa is suspected. The following conditions may warrant the performance of this procedure:

  • Joint Effusion The presence of excess fluid in a joint, which may be due to injury, infection, or underlying medical conditions.
  • Inflammatory Conditions Conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis or gout that lead to inflammation and swelling in the joints.
  • Diagnostic Purposes To obtain synovial fluid for laboratory analysis to determine the cause of joint pain or swelling.
  • Therapeutic Relief To relieve pain and pressure caused by the accumulation of fluid in the joint or bursa.

2. Procedure

The procedure of arthrocentesis involves several key steps that ensure its effectiveness and safety. The following outlines the procedural steps:

  • Step 1: Preparation The healthcare provider begins by preparing the patient and the procedure site. The skin over the joint or bursa is thoroughly cleansed with an antiseptic solution to reduce the risk of infection.
  • Step 2: Anesthesia If necessary, a local anesthetic is administered to numb the area around the joint or bursa, ensuring that the patient experiences minimal discomfort during the procedure.
  • Step 3: Aspiration A sterile needle attached to a syringe is carefully inserted into the joint or bursa. The provider aspirates the fluid, withdrawing it into the syringe. This fluid is then sent for laboratory analysis to assist in diagnosing the underlying condition.
  • Step 4: Injection (if applicable) Following the aspiration, if indicated, the provider may inject a therapeutic medication, such as a corticosteroid, into the joint or bursa to reduce inflammation and alleviate pain.
  • Step 5: Post-Procedure Care After the procedure, the needle is removed, and a sterile dressing may be applied to the site. The patient is monitored for any immediate complications, and instructions for post-procedure care are provided.

3. Post-Procedure

Post-procedure care following arthrocentesis is essential for ensuring patient safety and comfort. Patients are typically advised to rest the affected joint and may be instructed to apply ice to reduce swelling and discomfort. It is important to monitor the site for any signs of infection, such as increased redness, swelling, or discharge. Patients should also be informed about potential side effects from the injection, such as temporary pain or swelling at the injection site. Follow-up appointments may be scheduled to review laboratory results and assess the effectiveness of the treatment provided during the procedure.

Short Descr DRAIN/INJ JOINT/BURSA W/O US
Medium Descr ARTHROCENTESIS ASPIR&/INJ INTERM JT/BURS W/O US
Long Descr Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, intermediate joint or bursa (eg, temporomandibular, acromioclavicular, wrist, elbow or ankle, olecranon bursa); without ultrasound guidance
Status Code Active Code
Global Days 000 - Endoscopic or Minor Procedure
PC/TC Indicator (26, TC) 0 - Physician Service Code
Multiple Procedures (51) 2 - Standard payment adjustment rules for multiple procedures apply.
Bilateral Surgery (50) 1 - 150% payment adjustment for bilateral procedures applies.
Physician Supervisions 09 - Concept does not apply.
Assistant Surgeon (80, 82) 1 - Statutory payment restriction for assistants at surgery applies to this procedure...
Co-Surgeons (62) 0 - Co-surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Team Surgery (66) 0 - Team surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Diagnostic Imaging Family 99 - Concept Does Not Apply
APC Status Indicator Procedure or Service, Multiple Reduction Applies
ASC Payment Indicator Office-based surgical procedure added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later with MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs; payment based on MPFS nonfacility PE RVUs.
Type of Service (TOS) 2 - Surgery
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) P6B - Minor procedures - musculoskeletal
MUE 2
CCS Clinical Classification 155 - Arthrocentesis

This is a primary code that can be used with these additional add-on codes.

77002 CPT Add On MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Physician Quality Reporting CPT Assistant Article Fluoroscopic guidance for needle placement (eg, biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device) (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
LT Left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body)
RT Right side (used to identify procedures performed on the right side of the body)
51 Multiple procedures: when multiple procedures, other than e/m services, physical medicine and rehabilitation services or provision of supplies (eg, vaccines), are performed at the same session by the same individual, the primary procedure or service may be reported as listed. the additional procedure(s) or service(s) may be identified by appending modifier 51 to the additional procedure or service code(s). note: this modifier should not be appended to designated "add-on" codes (see appendix d).
50 Bilateral procedure: unless otherwise identified in the listings, bilateral procedures that are performed at the same session, should be identified by adding modifier 50 to the appropriate 5 digit code. note: this modifier should not be appended to designated "add-on" codes (see appendix d).
59 Distinct procedural service: under certain circumstances, it may be necessary to indicate that a procedure or service was distinct or independent from other non-e/m services performed on the same day. modifier 59 is used to identify procedures/services, other than e/m services, that are not normally reported together, but are appropriate under the circumstances. documentation must support a different session, different procedure or surgery, different site or organ system, separate incision/excision, separate lesion, or separate injury (or area of injury in extensive injuries) not ordinarily encountered or performed on the same day by the same individual. however, when another already established modifier is appropriate it should be used rather than modifier 59. only if no more descriptive modifier is available, and the use of modifier 59 best explains the circumstances, should modifier 59 be used. note: modifier 59 should not be appended to an e/m service. to report a separate and distinct e/m service with a non-e/m service performed on the same date, see modifier 25.
XS Separate structure, a service that is distinct because it was performed on a separate organ/structure
79 Unrelated procedure or service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional during the postoperative period: the individual may need to indicate that the performance of a procedure or service during the postoperative period was unrelated to the original procedure. this circumstance may be reported by using modifier 79. (for repeat procedures on the same day, see modifier 76.)
GC This service has been performed in part by a resident under the direction of a teaching physician
F5 Right hand, thumb
58 Staged or related procedure or service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional during the postoperative period: it may be necessary to indicate that the performance of a procedure or service during the postoperative period was: (a) planned or anticipated (staged); (b) more extensive than the original procedure; or (c) for therapy following a surgical procedure. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 58 to the staged or related procedure. note: for treatment of a problem that requires a return to the operating/procedure room (eg, unanticipated clinical condition), see modifier 78.
FA Left hand, thumb
X4 Episodic/focused services: for reporting services by clinicians who provide focused care on particular types of treatment limited to a defined period and circumstance; the patient has a problem, acute or chronic, that will be treated with surgery, radiation, or some other type of generally time-limited intervention; reporting clinician service examples include but are not limited to, the orthopedic surgeon performing a knee replacement and seeing the patient through the postoperative period
XU Unusual non-overlapping service, the use of a service that is distinct because it does not overlap usual components of the main service
GA Waiver of liability statement issued as required by payer policy, individual case
GW Service not related to the hospice patient's terminal condition
76 Repeat procedure or service by same physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a procedure or service was repeated by the same physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 76 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
X5 Diagnostic services requested by another clinician: for reporting services by a clinician who furnishes care to the patient only as requested by another clinician or subsequent and related services requested by another clinician; this modifier is reported for patient relationships that may not be adequately captured by the above alternative categories; reporting clinician service examples include but are not limited to, the radiologist's interpretation of an imaging study requested by another clinician
KX Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met
PN Non-excepted service provided at an off-campus, outpatient, provider-based department of a hospital
SG Ambulatory surgical center (asc) facility service
T1 Left foot, second digit
X2 Continuous/focused services: for reporting services by clinicians whose expertise is needed for the ongoing management of a chronic disease or a condition that needs to be managed and followed with no planned endpoint to the relationship; reporting clinician service examples include but are not limited to: a rheumatologist taking care of the patient's rheumatoid arthritis longitudinally but not providing general primary care services
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
PO Excepted service provided at an off-campus, outpatient, provider-based department of a hospital
Q6 Service furnished under a fee-for-time compensation arrangement by a substitute physician or by a substitute physical therapist furnishing outpatient physical therapy services in a health professional shortage area, a medically underserved area, or a rural area
T2 Left foot, third digit
T6 Right foot, second digit
T7 Right foot, third digit
T8 Right foot, fourth digit
XE Separate encounter, a service that is distinct because it occurred during a separate encounter
22 Increased procedural services: when the work required to provide a service is substantially greater than typically required, it may be identified by adding modifier 22 to the usual procedure code. documentation must support the substantial additional work and the reason for the additional work (ie, increased intensity, time, technical difficulty of procedure, severity of patient's condition, physical and mental effort required). note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
25 Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician or other qualified health care professional on the same day of the procedure or other service: it may be necessary to indicate that on the day a procedure or service identified by a cpt code was performed, the patient's condition required a significant, separately identifiable e/m service above and beyond the other service provided or beyond the usual preoperative and postoperative care associated with the procedure that was performed. a significant, separately identifiable e/m service is defined or substantiated by documentation that satisfies the relevant criteria for the respective e/m service to be reported (see evaluation and management services guidelines for instructions on determining level of e/m service). the e/m service may be prompted by the symptom or condition for which the procedure and/or service was provided. as such, different diagnoses are not required for reporting of the e/m services on the same date. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 25 to the appropriate level of e/m service. note: this modifier is not used to report an e/m service that resulted in a decision to perform surgery. see modifier 57 for significant, separately identifiable non-e/m services, see modifier 59.
26 Professional component: certain procedures are a combination of a physician or other qualified health care professional component and a technical component. when the physician or other qualified health care professional component is reported separately, the service may be identified by adding modifier 26 to the usual procedure number.
52 Reduced services: under certain circumstances a service or procedure is partially reduced or eliminated at the discretion of the physician or other qualified health care professional. under these circumstances the service provided can be identified by its usual procedure number and the addition of modifier 52, signifying that the service is reduced. this provides a means of reporting reduced services without disturbing the identification of the basic service. note: for hospital outpatient reporting of a previously scheduled procedure/service that is partially reduced or cancelled as a result of extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well-being of the patient prior to or after administration of anesthesia, see modifiers 73 and 74 (see modifiers approved for asc hospital outpatient use).
53 Discontinued procedure: under certain circumstances, the physician or other qualified health care professional may elect to terminate a surgical or diagnostic procedure. due to extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well being of the patient, it may be necessary to indicate that a surgical or diagnostic procedure was started but discontinued. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 53 to the code reported by the individual for the discontinued procedure. note: this modifier is not used to report the elective cancellation of a procedure prior to the patient's anesthesia induction and/or surgical preparation in the operating suite. for outpatient hospital/ambulatory surgery center (asc) reporting of a previously scheduled procedure/service that is partially reduced or cancelled as a result of extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well being of the patient prior to or after administration of anesthesia, see modifiers 73 and 74 (see modifiers approved for asc hospital outpatient use).
56 Preoperative management only: when 1 physician or other qualified health care professional performed the preoperative care and evaluation and another performed the surgical procedure, the preoperative component may be identified by adding modifier 56 to the usual procedure number.
62 Two surgeons: when 2 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.
74 Discontinued out-patient hospital/ambulatory surgery center (asc) procedure after administration of anesthesia: due to extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well being of the patient, the physician may terminate a surgical or diagnostic procedure after the administration of anesthesia (local, regional block(s), general) or after the procedure was started (incision made, intubation started, scope inserted, etc). under these circumstances, the procedure started but terminated can be reported by its usual procedure number and the addition of modifier 74. note: the elective cancellation of a service prior to the administration of anesthesia and/or surgical preparation of the patient should not be reported. for physician reporting of a discontinued procedure, see modifier 53.
77 Repeat procedure by another physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a basic procedure or service was repeated by another physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 77 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
78 Unplanned return to the operating/procedure room by the same physician or other qualified health care professional following initial procedure for a related procedure during the postoperative period: it may be necessary to indicate that another procedure was performed during the postoperative period of the initial procedure (unplanned procedure following initial procedure). when this procedure is related to the first, and requires the use of an operating/procedure room, it may be reported by adding modifier 78 to the related procedure. (for repeat procedures, see modifier 76.)
80 Assistant surgeon: surgical assistant services may be identified by adding modifier 80 to the usual procedure number(s).
82 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).
99 Multiple modifiers: under certain circumstances 2 or more modifiers may be necessary to completely delineate a service. in such situations modifier 99 should be added to the basic procedure, and other applicable modifiers may be listed as part of the description of the service.
AF Specialty physician
AG Primary physician
AS Physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist services for assistant at surgery
CC Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed)
CG Policy criteria applied
EY No physician or other licensed health care provider order for this item or service
F1 Left hand, second digit
F2 Left hand, third digit
F3 Left hand, fourth digit
F4 Left hand, fifth digit
F6 Right hand, second digit
F7 Right hand, third digit
F8 Right hand, fourth digit
F9 Right hand, fifth digit
FS Split (or shared) evaluation and management visit
GB Claim being re-submitted for payment because it is no longer covered under a global payment demonstration
GF Non-physician (e.g. nurse practitioner (np), certified registered nurse anesthetist (crna), certified registered nurse (crn), clinical nurse specialist (cns), physician assistant (pa)) services in a critical access hospital
GJ "opt out" physician or practitioner emergency or urgent service
GV Attending physician not employed or paid under arrangement by the patient's hospice provider
GX Notice of liability issued, voluntary under payer policy
GY Item or service statutorily excluded, does not meet the definition of any medicare benefit or, for non-medicare insurers, is not a contract benefit
GZ Item or service expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary
JZ Zero drug amount discarded/not administered to any patient
KT Beneficiary resides in a competitive bidding area and travels outside that competitive bidding area and receives a competitive bid item
MG The order for this service does not have applicable appropriate use criteria in the qualified clinical decision support mechanism consulted by the ordering professional
MH Unknown if ordering professional consulted a clinical decision support mechanism for this service, related information was not provided to the furnishing professional or provider
PD Diagnostic or related non diagnostic item or service provided in a wholly owned or operated entity to a patient who is admitted as an inpatient within 3 days
Q5 Service furnished under a reciprocal billing arrangement by a substitute physician or by a substitute physical therapist furnishing outpatient physical therapy services in a health professional shortage area, a medically underserved area, or a rural area
Q8 Two class b findings
Q9 One class b and two class c findings
QJ Services/items provided to a prisoner or patient in state or local custody, however the state or local government, as applicable, meets the requirements in 42 cfr 411.4 (b)
SA Nurse practitioner rendering service in collaboration with a physician
T3 Left foot, fourth digit
T4 Left foot, fifth digit
T5 Right foot, great toe
T9 Right foot, fifth digit
TA Left foot, great toe
TP Medical transport, unloaded vehicle
TR School-based individualized education program (iep) services provided outside the public school district responsible for the student
U7 Medicaid level of care 7, as defined by each state
X1 Continuous/broad services: for reporting services by clinicians, who provide the principal care for a patient, with no planned endpoint of the relationship; services in this category represent comprehensive care, dealing with the entire scope of patient problems, either directly or in a care coordination role; reporting clinician service examples include, but are not limited to: primary care, and clinicians providing comprehensive care to patients in addition to specialty care
XP Separate practitioner, a service that is distinct because it was performed by a different practitioner
Date
Action
Notes
2015-01-01 Changed Description Changed
2013-01-01 Changed Medium Descriptor changed.
2011-01-01 Changed Short description changed.
2003-01-01 Changed Code description changed.
Pre-1990 Added Code added.
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Description
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