Need help choosing the right code?
Ask CasePilot about procedures, modifiers, bundling, and coding guidance.
Try CasePilotLast Updated: January 2026 | Verified for 2026 AMA, CPT & CMS Guidelines
Definition: Surgical replacement of the knee joint (distal femur condyles and proximal tibia plateau) involving both medial and lateral compartments, with or without resurfacing the patella (a “total” knee replacement).
Global Period: 90 days. Routine post-op care is bundled. Work commonly performed as part of the arthroplasty (synovectomy, osteophyte removal, debridement, meniscectomy, lateral release, ligament/capsular balancing) is generally not separately reportable.
Surgical Setting: Medicare removed TKA from the inpatient-only list in 2018 and added it to the ASC covered procedures list in 2020 for appropriately selected beneficiaries. Confirm payer rules for admission status and site-of-service.
Bilateral Procedures: Same-session bilateral TKA is typically reported as 27447-50 or as payer-directed RT/LT line items. Many payers reimburse about 150% of the unilateral allowance for a bilateral primary TKA.
Related Codes: 27446 partial/unicompartmental ; 27486 revision (one component) ; 27487 revision (femoral + tibial components) ; 27488 explant with/without spacer. Converting a partial knee to total knee has no dedicated “conversion” code; apply established guidance (see Scenario 3) and document component removal clearly.
CPT 27447 is the core code for a primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA). It describes replacement of the tibiofemoral joint surfaces in both compartments using prosthetic components, and it includes typical intra-operative steps needed to implant the prosthesis and restore alignment, stability, and motion. Because TKA is high volume and high cost, payer edits and audits are common; clean coding depends on accurate reading of the operative report, correct diagnosis selection, and appropriate modifier use.
Two patterns drive many denials. First, a procedure documented as unicompartmental arthroplasty is sometimes miscoded as 27447; payers expect 27446 when only one compartment is replaced. Second, coders sometimes “unbundle” routine knee work (meniscectomy, chondroplasty, synovial work) even though such services are typically included in the TKA package. The safest approach is to treat 27447 as the single comprehensive code for the operative event unless a truly separate service is performed. These principles reduce denials, speed payment, and support defensible orthopedic documentation.
flowchart TD
A[Knee Arthroplasty<br/>Procedure] --> B{Primary or revision?}
B -->|Primary| C{How many compartments<br/>replaced?}
C -->|One - medial OR<br/>lateral only| D[CPT 27446<br/>Unicompartmental]
C -->|Both medial AND lateral| E[CPT 27447<br/>Total Knee Arthroplasty]
E --> F{Bilateral<br/>same session?}
F -->|Yes| G[27447-50 or<br/>RT/LT per payer]
F -->|No| H[Append RT or LT]
B -->|Revision| I{Scope of revision?}
I -->|One component| J[CPT 27486]
I -->|Both femoral + tibial| K[CPT 27487]
I -->|Explant with or<br/>without spacer| L[CPT 27488]
I -->|Partial to total<br/>conversion| M[27487-52]
E --> N{During global period<br/>of prior TKA?}
N -->|Planned staged| O[Modifier -58]
N -->|Unplanned complication| P[Modifier -78]
N -->|Unrelated procedure| Q[Modifier -79]
style E fill:#2563eb,color:#fff,stroke:#1e40af
style D fill:#16a34a,color:#fff,stroke:#15803d
style J fill:#f59e0b,color:#fff,stroke:#d97706
style K fill:#f59e0b,color:#fff,stroke:#d97706
Total knee arthroplasty replaces diseased articular surfaces of the distal femur and proximal tibia with prosthetic components (femoral component, tibial baseplate and insert, and optional patellar resurfacing). CPT 27447 signifies that both medial and lateral tibiofemoral compartments are addressed; patella resurfacing is optional within the same code descriptor.
Confirm “total” versus “partial.” Operative documentation should explicitly support a bicompartment tibiofemoral replacement. If the report describes only a medial or lateral compartment implant (unicondylar/partial), report 27446 rather than 27447. This distinction is clinically and financially significant and is a common target of payer review.
Primary TKA requires exposure, bone preparation, balancing, and joint cleanup. Coding guidance commonly treats osteophyte removal, synovial debridement/partial synovectomy, meniscal debridement, patellar tracking maneuvers (including lateral release when performed to complete the arthroplasty), and routine ligament/capsular balancing as integral to the arthroplasty. These steps may be documented in detail, but they ordinarily do not create separately billable codes on the same knee and date.
Use of computer navigation or robotics does not change the primary arthroplasty CPT. Practices sometimes report add-on navigation code 20985 or Category III navigation codes, but payer payment is inconsistent and many plans treat these services as inclusive or non-covered in TKA. If your payer allows the add-on, ensure documentation describes the navigation work performed and verify any required modifiers or claim notes.
Medical necessity documentation is often the deciding factor in whether a TKA claim is paid, especially for commercial plans with prior authorization and for Medicare contractors conducting post-payment review. A Medicare contractor bulletin identifies insufficient documentation as a major denial reason for TKA and emphasizes that records must demonstrate why surgery was reasonable and necessary.
Conservative treatment history: Document therapies tried (PT, medications, injections, bracing, activity modification) and response. Many payer criteria expect meaningful conservative treatment attempts before elective arthroplasty, unless contraindicated.
Objective severity: Include imaging (X-ray/MRI reports) and correlate to exam findings (ROM limits, crepitus, effusion, deformity, instability). Commercial criteria commonly require imaging evidence of advanced disease plus functional impairment.
Functional impact: Record ADL limitations (walking distance, stairs, sleep disruption, need for assistive device) and pain severity, ideally with time course and progression.
Decision-making note: The preoperative assessment should document that risks, benefits, and alternatives were discussed and that arthroplasty was chosen after failed nonoperative care. If the decision for major surgery is made in an E/M visit immediately before surgery, modifier -57 may apply to that E/M per payer policy.
Operative note clarity: Ensure laterality and total-compartment replacement are explicit; list components implanted and any unusual additional work if you anticipate modifier 22.
Documentation should be internally consistent: diagnosis laterality must match operative laterality, and the chart should support the etiology you code (primary OA versus inflammatory arthritis versus osteonecrosis). When a payer requests records, provide the consult note, imaging reports, and evidence of conservative therapy to align with typical coverage criteria.
The procedure code remains 27447 across diagnoses, but ICD-10 coding supports coverage. Use the most specific, laterality-correct code that reflects the condition driving the replacement.
M17.0, M17.11, M17.12: Primary knee osteoarthritis (bilateral, right, left). OA is the most common indication. For unilateral arthroplasty, use laterality-specific codes and avoid bilateral codes unless documentation supports bilateral disease in the clinical record.
M17.4 and other secondary OA codes: Post-traumatic or secondary OA when prior injury or other cause is documented.
M05.761/M05.762 and M06.861/M06.862: Rheumatoid arthritis affecting the knee, with laterality and serostatus distinctions. Ensure the chart documents inflammatory arthritis as the driver of joint destruction.
Osteonecrosis/AVN codes: Use knee-appropriate osteonecrosis codes (e.g., M87 series when applicable) when imaging supports collapse or advanced structural compromise.
Z96.651/Z96.652: Presence of artificial knee joint. These status codes are typically more relevant for follow-up or revision claims, but they can help contextualize revision services.
Many payers publish medical-necessity criteria that explicitly reference arthritis diagnoses, imaging severity, and functional limitation requirements. Accurate ICD-10 selection improves initial claim adjudication and strengthens appeals when denials occur.
Setting rules affect admission status and patient cost-sharing, so they matter to surgeons and facilities even though the surgeon’s CPT remains 27447. CMS removed TKA from the inpatient-only list in 2018, permitting hospital inpatient or outpatient performance based on patient needs and documented expectation of care. CMS later added TKA to the ASC covered procedures list in 2020, allowing select low-risk beneficiaries to receive TKA in an ASC.
Commercial insurers generally cover primary TKA when criteria are met, but many require prior authorization. Policies typically require imaging evidence of advanced joint disease, functional impairment, and documented conservative therapy attempts. Medicare Advantage plans may require authorization for both the procedure and the admission type and may encourage outpatient pathways. For revision and infection cases, payers expect documentation of failure mode (loosening, instability, infection) and the clinical plan.
Modifiers are most critical when (1) both knees are treated, (2) a second procedure occurs within the global period, or (3) postoperative care is transferred. AAPC guidance on global surgical modifiers provides practical rules for choosing -58, -78, and -79 in orthopedic cases.
For same-session bilateral TKAs, many payers accept a single line of 27447 with modifier 50; others require two lines with RT and LT. Follow payer instructions and ensure the op note clearly documents bilateral work. Bilateral reimbursement is commonly around 150% of the unilateral amount.
-58 is for planned/staged or more extensive related procedures and generally restarts the global period from the later date. -78 is for an unplanned return to the operating room for a related complication; payment is commonly limited to the intraoperative portion and the original global period continues. -79 is for unrelated procedures during the global, including contralateral knee arthroplasty, and typically allows full payment and a new global period.
Append -22 only when work is substantially greater than typical and your operative report explains the additional complexity (e.g., unusual deformity, major bone loss, or unusually prolonged operative time). Expect payer requests for op notes and variable additional payment.
Use -54 for surgical care only and -55 for postoperative management only when care is formally transferred between providers, with the transfer documented. Orthopedic coding discussions of the TKA global package describe this split-billing approach when appropriate.
With a 90-day global period, routine post-op visits and typical recovery management are bundled. The global package also includes many knee-related tasks that might be separately reportable in other contexts. Guidance describing knee replacement coding warns against billing additional knee procedures that are performed as part of achieving a stable, functional arthroplasty (for example meniscus debridement or synovial work). Separate billing is generally reserved for unrelated services or qualifying return-to-OR procedures.
Don’t “Unbundle” Routine Knee Procedures:
When coding 27447, do not add arthroscopy, meniscectomy, chondroplasty, or debridement codes solely because the op note mentions them. These steps are typically integral to the arthroplasty and are included in the surgical package.
| Code | Description | Typical Use Case / Scenario |
|---|---|---|
| 27446 | Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and plateau; medial OR lateral compartment | Unicompartmental (partial) replacement for isolated compartment degeneration. |
| 27447 | Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and plateau; medial AND lateral compartments, with or without patella resurfacing | Primary total knee replacement addressing both tibiofemoral compartments. |
| 27486 | Revision of total knee arthroplasty, 1 component | Revision exchanging only femoral or tibial component while the other remains. |
| 27487 | Revision of total knee arthroplasty, femoral AND tibial components | Complete revision of both main components, including stems/augments when used. |
| 27488 | Removal of prosthesis with or without spacer | Explant for infection or other indications when definitive reimplant is not done the same session. |
| 27599 | Unlisted procedure, femur or knee | Procedures without a specific CPT descriptor; requires narrative and comparison code for pricing. |
Conversion of a unicompartmental knee to a total knee is frequently coded using a revision framework (often 27487-52) rather than coding a primary TKA, consistent with published guidance discussed in coding resources.
Patient: Severe bilateral knee OA. Both knees replaced during one anesthesia.
Coding: 27447-50 (or payer-required RT/LT reporting).
Rationale: -50 communicates bilaterality; reimbursement is commonly ~150% of unilateral and the global covers routine follow-up for both knees.
Patient: Deep periprosthetic infection identified within the global of a recent TKA.
Stage 1: Explant + spacer. Coding: 27488-78 (unplanned return to OR for related complication).
Stage 2: Reimplant after infection control. Coding: 27487-58 (staged, planned procedure).
Rationale: -78 does not restart global; -58 typically restarts global from the reimplant date.
Patient: Prior unicompartmental implant with progression to multicompartment disease; surgeon removes the partial components and implants a total knee prosthesis.
Coding: 27487-52 is often recommended to reflect revision-like work with reduced scope relative to full TKA-to-TKA revision.
Rationale: No dedicated conversion code exists; clear op documentation of component removal and new implant placement is essential.
Patient: Falls one month after TKA; distal femur fracture above the implant repaired with ORIF; implant retained.
Coding: Fracture fixation code (e.g., 27507) with modifier 78 for Medicare when treated as related return to OR in the operative region.
Rationale: -78 supports intraoperative payment while the original TKA global continues.
Across these examples, the operative note and postoperative timeline are the key billing “facts.” If the chart clearly states what was done, why it was necessary, and whether a later procedure was planned or complication-driven, correct coding usually follows directly.
© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
The CPT® Code 27447 refers to a total knee arthroplasty, which is a surgical procedure aimed at replacing the knee joint. This procedure involves the replacement of both the medial and lateral compartments of the knee, and it may also include resurfacing of the patella, depending on the condition of the joint. The surgery is typically indicated for patients suffering from severe knee pain and dysfunction due to conditions such as osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, or post-traumatic arthritis. During the procedure, an incision is made over the front of the knee to access the joint. The surgeon inspects the knee joint, removes any bone spurs and damaged soft tissues, and prepares the bone surfaces for the implantation of artificial components. The goal of the surgery is to relieve pain, restore function, and improve the overall quality of life for patients with debilitating knee conditions. Total knee arthroplasty is a complex procedure that requires careful planning and execution to ensure proper alignment and stability of the new joint components.
© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.
The total knee arthroplasty procedure, represented by CPT® Code 27447, is indicated for patients experiencing significant knee pain and functional impairment due to various degenerative conditions. The following conditions are explicitly recognized as indications for this procedure:
The total knee arthroplasty procedure involves several critical steps to ensure successful implantation of the artificial knee components. The following procedural steps are outlined:
After the total knee arthroplasty procedure, patients typically undergo a recovery period that may involve physical therapy to regain strength and mobility in the knee. Post-operative care includes monitoring for any complications, managing pain, and ensuring proper healing of the surgical site. Patients are often advised on weight-bearing restrictions and rehabilitation exercises to facilitate recovery. The expected recovery time can vary, but many patients begin to see improvements in function and pain relief within weeks following the surgery. Regular follow-up appointments are essential to assess the healing process and the performance of the knee prosthesis.
| Short Descr | TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY | Medium Descr | ARTHRP KNE CONDYLE&PLATU MEDIAL&LAT COMPARTMENTS | Long Descr | Arthroplasty, knee, condyle and plateau; medial AND lateral compartments with or without patella resurfacing (total knee arthroplasty) | Status Code | Active Code | Global Days | 090 - Major Surgery | 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) | 2 - Payment restriction for assistants at surgery does not apply to this procedure... | Co-Surgeons (62) | 1 - Co-surgeons could be paid, though supporting documentation is required... | Team Surgery (66) | 0 - Team surgeons not permitted for this procedure. | Diagnostic Imaging Family | 99 - Concept Does Not Apply | APC Status Indicator | Hospital Part B services paid through a comprehensive APC | ASC Payment Indicator | Device-intensive procedure added to ASC list in CY 2008 or later; paid at adjusted rate. | Type of Service (TOS) | 2 - Surgery | Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) | P3C - Major procedure, orthopedic - Knee replacement | MUE | 1 | CCS Clinical Classification | 152 - Arthroplasty knee |
| RT | Right side (used to identify procedures performed on the right side of the body) | LT | Left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body) | AS | Physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist services for assistant at surgery | 80 | Assistant surgeon: surgical assistant services may be identified by adding modifier 80 to the usual procedure number(s). | GC | This service has been performed in part by a resident under the direction of a teaching physician | 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). | 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. | 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.) | 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). | SG | Ambulatory surgical center (asc) facility service | 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. | 81 | Minimum assistant surgeon: minimum surgical assistant services are identified by adding modifier 81 to the usual procedure number. | CR | Catastrophe/disaster related | 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 | 54 | Surgical care only: when 1 physician or other qualified health care professional performs a surgical procedure and another provides preoperative and/or postoperative management, surgical services may be identified by adding modifier 54 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. | 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. | AQ | Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa) | Q1 | Routine clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study | QK | Medical direction of two, three, or four concurrent anesthesia procedures involving qualified individuals | 27 | Multiple outpatient hospital e/m encounters on the same date: for hospital outpatient reporting purposes, utilization of hospital resources related to separate and distinct e/m encounters performed in multiple outpatient hospital settings on the same date may be reported by adding modifier 27 to each appropriate level outpatient and/or emergency department e/m code(s). this modifier provides a means of reporting circumstances involving evaluation and management services provided by physician(s) in more than one (multiple) outpatient hospital setting(s) (eg, hospital emergency department, clinic). note: this modifier is not to be used for physician reporting of multiple e/m services performed by the same physician on the same date. for physician reporting of all outpatient evaluation and management services provided by the same physician on the same date and performed in multiple outpatient setting(s) (eg, hospital emergency department, clinic), see evaluation and management, emergency department, or preventive medicine services codes. | 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). | 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). | 55 | Postoperative management only: when 1 physician or other qualified health care professional performed the postoperative management and another performed the surgical procedure, the postoperative component may be identified by adding modifier 55 to the usual procedure number. | 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. | 66 | Surgical team: under some circumstances, highly complex procedures (requiring the concomitant services of several physicians or other qualified health care professionals, often of different specialties, plus other highly skilled, specially trained personnel, various types of complex equipment) are carried out under the "surgical team" concept. such circumstances may be identified by each participating individual with the addition of modifier 66 to the basic procedure number used for reporting services. | 73 | Discontinued out-patient hospital/ambulatory surgery center (asc) procedure prior to the administration of anesthesia: due to extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well being of the patient, the physician may cancel a surgical or diagnostic procedure subsequent to the patient's surgical preparation (including sedation when provided, and being taken to the room where the procedure is to be performed), but prior to the administration of anesthesia (local, regional block(s) or general). under these circumstances, the intended service that is prepared for but cancelled can be reported by its usual procedure number and the addition of modifier 73. 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. | 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. | 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. | 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.) | 93 | Synchronous telemedicine service rendered via telephone or other real-time interactive audio-only telecommunications system : synchronous telemedicine service is defined as a real-time interaction between a physician or other qualified health care professional and a patient who is located away at a distant site from the physician or other qualified health care professional. the totality of the communication of information exchanged between the physician or other qualified health care professional and the patient during the course of the synchronous telemedicine service must be of an amount and nature that is sufficient to meet the key components and/or requirements of the same service when rendered via a face-to-face interaction. | AF | Specialty physician | AG | Primary physician | AI | Principal physician of record | CC | Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed) | CS | Cost-sharing waived for specified covid-19 testing-related services that result in and order for or administration of a covid-19 test and/or used for cost-sharing waived preventive services furnished via telehealth in rural health clinics and federally qualified health centers during the covid-19 public health emergency | ER | Items and services furnished by a provider-based, off-campus emergency department | ET | Emergency services | FS | Split (or shared) evaluation and management visit | GA | Waiver of liability statement issued as required by payer policy, individual case | GB | Claim being re-submitted for payment because it is no longer covered under a global payment demonstration | GV | Attending physician not employed or paid under arrangement by the patient's hospice provider | GW | Service not related to the hospice patient's terminal condition | GZ | Item or service expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary | KK | Dmepos item subject to dmepos competitive bidding program number 2 | KT | Beneficiary resides in a competitive bidding area and travels outside that competitive bidding area and receives a competitive bid item | KX | Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met | P2 | A patient with mild systemic disease | PA | Surgical or other invasive procedure on wrong body part | 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 | Q3 | Live kidney donor surgery and related services | 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 | RE | Furnished in full compliance with fda-mandated risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (rems) | SA | Nurse practitioner rendering service in collaboration with a physician | TG | Complex/high tech level of care | TV | Special payment rates, holidays/weekends | 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 | XP | Separate practitioner, a service that is distinct because it was performed by a different practitioner | XS | Separate structure, a service that is distinct because it was performed on a separate organ/structure | XU | Unusual non-overlapping service, the use of a service that is distinct because it does not overlap usual components of the main service |
|
Date
|
Action
|
Notes
|
|---|---|---|
| 2013-01-01 | Changed | Medium Descriptor changed. |
| 2002-01-01 | Changed | Code description changed. |
| Pre-1990 | Added | Code added. |
Get instant expert-level medical coding assistance.