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Quick Reference:

  • What CPT 29827 means: Arthroscopic (scope-based) surgical repair of a torn rotator cuff tendon. CPT guidance commonly treats this as repair of one, two, or three tendons as part of the same arthroscopic repair service.
  • Diagnostic arthroscopy is bundled: A diagnostic shoulder arthroscopy performed during the same session is not separately reportable when a surgical arthroscopy is performed; the diagnostic work is considered inherent to the surgical arthroscopy service.
  • Debridement bundling is a top audit issue: Limited debridement is typically considered integral to the primary arthroscopic repair. Separate reporting of debridement requires clear documentation of distinct, medically necessary work consistent with NCCI principles and correct code selection for the actual scope/extent of debridement.
  • 90-day global period (major surgery): CPT 29827 is commonly treated as a 90-day global procedure, meaning routine post-op visits and typical post-op management are included in the global package.
  • Modifier 22 requires exceptional documentation: When work is substantially greater than typical (e.g., documented biologic augmentation or unusually complex tear pattern/repair complexity), modifier 22 may be appropriate only with a specific, quantifiable operative narrative. AAOS coding guidance emphasizes documenting the additional work to support the modifier.
  • Medical necessity is payer-driven: Many payers require imaging-confirmed tear, functional limitation, and a documented course of conservative care (unless an acute, repairable full-thickness tear with compelling timing is present). A published Medicare Advantage coverage policy illustrates typical criteria patterns (acute vs chronic, conservative therapy duration).

1. Definition and Procedure Scope

CPT 29827 is reported for arthroscopic shoulder surgery with rotator cuff repair. The core concept is that an endoscopic camera (arthroscope) and working instruments are introduced through portals to visualize the glenohumeral joint and/or subacromial space and perform a formal tendon repair using standard arthroscopic repair methods (e.g., suture anchors, tendon mobilization, fixation constructs).

A key coding principle is that 29827 is not a “symptom treatment” code and not a “partial tear cleanup” code; it requires that a repair is performed. CPT interpretive guidance commonly emphasizes that this code represents repair work and includes the standard arthroscopic access and portal creation needed to complete the repair, including additional arthroscopic portals used for tendon access.

Practical boundary: If the operative record does not clearly describe a rotator cuff tear and the steps of a repair (mobilization, preparation of footprint, anchor placement, passage of sutures, knot tying or knotless fixation), the claim becomes vulnerable. In audit terms, payers frequently interpret missing repair detail as “debridement only,” which is a different code pathway.

1.1 What “rotator cuff repair” means operationally

In operative documentation, “repair” should be expressed as a defined set of actions with a clear endpoint:

  • Tear characterization: tendon(s) involved (e.g., supraspinatus), thickness (partial vs full), size (small/medium/large/massive), and tissue quality.
  • Preparation: debridement of footprint to bleeding bone, releases for mobilization when required.
  • Fixation: anchors, suture configuration, number of fixation points, and confirmation of stability of final construct.

2. Clinical Indications and When Repair Is Appropriate

Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair is typically considered when a patient has symptomatic rotator cuff pathology with a structural tear that correlates with functional limitation and fails an appropriate course of conservative therapy, or when the clinical scenario supports earlier surgical intervention (for example, acute full-thickness tear with substantial weakness).

Patient-facing clinical guidance from an orthopedic specialty institution describes the standard clinical pathway: non-operative management is often attempted first, and surgery becomes a consideration when pain and functional impairment persist or when tear characteristics and symptoms justify operative repair.

2.1 Common repair indications (coding-relevant framing)

  • Imaging-confirmed tear (MRI or ultrasound) with a tear pattern amenable to repair.
  • Functional deficit (weakness, loss of elevation/abduction, limitations in work/ADLs) consistent with tear mechanics.
  • Failed conservative therapy (documented structured physical therapy, anti-inflammatory strategy, activity modification, and/or injection as clinically appropriate).
  • Acute traumatic tear with substantial weakness and repairable tissue, where timing may influence outcome and payer approval logic.

Medical necessity pitfall: If the record shows “pain only” without functional limitation, no imaging confirmation, or no documented conservative care (when expected by the payer), prior authorization and post-payment review risk rises even when the surgery was clinically reasonable.

3. Included vs Not Included Services (Bundling Basics)

Many denials and downcodes in shoulder arthroscopy happen because claims attempt to separately report services that are treated as inherent to a primary arthroscopic repair. The NCCI policy framework is the most important compliance anchor for “what is bundled” in arthroscopy families.

3.1 Diagnostic arthroscopy is typically included

NCCI policy states that when a surgical arthroscopy is performed, the diagnostic arthroscopy is not separately reportable because the diagnostic work is considered integral to the procedure performed. In shoulder cases, this principle drives the common rule that a diagnostic arthroscopy code is not billed in addition to 29827 in the same session.

3.2 Debridement: why the operative note matters

Debridement is frequently performed during rotator cuff repair (bursectomy, synovitis cleanup, frayed tendon edge trimming, minor labral fraying). From a payer perspective, “routine cleanup” is commonly treated as part of the primary service. Separate reporting becomes defensible only when documentation supports that debridement was extensive, clinically necessary, and performed in a way that meets the requirements of the separate code and is not simply inherent to the repair workflow. NCCI bundling principles are the baseline rationale payers use when they reject debridement add-ons.

3.3 What is not “rotator cuff repair” for CPT 29827 purposes

If the service performed does not involve repairing a rotator cuff tendon tear (for example, certain instability procedures that do not repair a cuff tear), CPT 29827 is not the correct code. In such cases, code selection must reflect the actual primary service performed. CPT interpretive discussion used in coding education emphasizes accurate mapping of procedure intent to the correct arthroscopic code family.

4. Documentation Standards (Audit-Proof Operative Note)

For CPT 29827, documentation must answer the questions auditors and claims reviewers ask:

(1) Was there a rotator cuff tear?

(2) Was a repair actually performed?

(3) If additional procedures are billed, are they distinct and medically necessary?

4.1 Minimum operative note elements

  • Tear description: tendon(s) involved, thickness, size, retraction, tissue quality.
  • Repair technique: footprint preparation, number/type of anchors, suture pattern, fixation construct.
  • Intraoperative findings: correlate imaging with arthroscopic findings (e.g., “full-thickness supraspinatus tear confirmed”).
  • Distinct additional work: if billing separate debridement or other procedures, document location, extent, and medical necessity clearly enough that an independent reviewer can see it is not routine cleanup.
  • Laterality: right vs left shoulder must be explicit for claim integrity.

4.2 Modifier 22 documentation expectations (biologic augmentation and substantially greater work)

AAOS coding guidance emphasizes that if a surgeon believes modifier 22 is warranted—such as when a rotator cuff repair is augmented with biologic material or the work is substantially greater than typical—the operative note should quantify the additional work: additional time, additional technical steps, extra fixation, increased complexity, unusual anatomy, or abnormal pathology. The guidance’s key message is that “extra work” must be clearly articulated, not implied.

High-yield compliance tip: “Augmentation used” is not enough. Document (a) what was implanted/used, (b) why it was necessary, and (c) what additional steps were required compared to a standard repair.

5. Coding and Billing Rules (NCCI, Global, Multiple Procedures)

5.1 NCCI and arthroscopy family logic

The NCCI Policy Manual is the primary CMS reference that explains why diagnostic arthroscopy is bundled into surgical arthroscopy and why certain arthroscopy combinations are treated as components of a more comprehensive service. The practical takeaway for 29827 is that code combinations must be supported by documentation demonstrating that separately billed work is not integral to completing the primary repair.

5.2 Global period considerations

CPT 29827 is commonly treated as a 90-day global procedure. During the global period, routine post-operative care associated with the surgical procedure is included and is not separately billable as an office visit solely for normal recovery management. A published payer-facing global surgical days resource illustrates how global periods are operationalized in billing systems and is frequently used by billing staff as a reference point.

In practice, global-package concepts mean:

  • Routine follow-up visits related to the repair are included.
  • Typical post-op management (wound checks, sling instructions, standard rehab guidance) is included.
  • New, unrelated conditions may be separately billable (with appropriate modifier use), but documentation must show the new problem is distinct from routine post-op care.

5.3 Multiple procedures in the same session

Rotator cuff repair is often performed with additional shoulder procedures (for example, biceps work, decompression, distal clavicle resection, labral procedures). When multiple procedures are legitimately performed, coding must follow payer rules for multiple procedures and bundling edits. In many systems, modifier 51 (multiple procedures) may apply to secondary procedures when required by the payer, but code selection must be correct first (i.e., do not use modifiers to “force separate pay” for bundled work). NCCI principles remain the controlling compliance framework.

6. Modifier Use (22, 51, 59, 78, 79, LT/RT/50)

Modifiers are not simply claim formatting; they communicate clinical relationships between services and drive claims editing. For shoulder arthroscopy, the highest-risk patterns are inappropriate “unbundling modifiers” applied to services that are integral to the primary procedure under NCCI principles.

  • Modifier 22 (Increased procedural services):

Use only when work is substantially greater than typical and the operative note quantifies the additional complexity (e.g., detailed documentation of biologic augmentation steps, unusual tear mobilization, markedly increased time/effort). AAOS guidance emphasizes documentation specificity for 22 claims.

  • Modifier 51 (Multiple procedures):

May apply when multiple distinct procedures are performed in the same session and payer requires reporting it on secondary procedures. Ensure that procedures are truly distinct and not bundled by NCCI logic.

  • Modifier 59 (Distinct procedural service):

Should be used cautiously. NCCI principles and payer edits often treat the shoulder as a single anatomic site for arthroscopy services; “separate portals” do not automatically justify 59. If a payer accepts 59 for distinct services, documentation must demonstrate a truly separate, non-integral service (for example, separate anatomic region or separate encounter logic when applicable under payer policy).

  • Modifier 78 (Unplanned return to the operating room, related):

For a return to the OR during the global period for a complication or related condition stemming from the original procedure.

  • Modifier 79 (Unrelated procedure during post-op period):

For a new, unrelated procedure performed during the global period. Documentation must show the problem is unrelated to the post-op course and not a normal sequela of the original repair.

  • LT/RT and Modifier 50 (Laterality and bilateral):

Use LT/RT to indicate the side on claims when required. If both shoulders are operated in the same session and payer requires bilateral reporting logic, modifier 50 may apply per payer rules.

Documentation rule for modifiers: Modifiers rarely solve a documentation problem. If the operative note does not clearly separate additional work from routine repair steps, modifiers (especially 59 and 22) become high-risk.

7. ICD-10-CM Diagnosis Coding (Traumatic vs Non-Traumatic Tears)

Diagnosis coding must support medical necessity and align with the clinical scenario. For rotator cuff pathology, the critical distinction is whether the tear is coded as non-traumatic (degenerative/attritional) or traumatic (acute injury mechanism). Many payers assess necessity and timing differently for acute traumatic tears than for chronic degenerative tears.

7.1 Non-traumatic rotator cuff tears

Non-traumatic rotator cuff tear/rupture coding is commonly represented in the ICD-10-CM rotator cuff tear category (e.g., the M75.1 family). ICD-10 code reference guidance emphasizes correct selection within the rotator cuff tear category and accurate documentation of the condition being “not specified as traumatic.”

7.2 Traumatic rotator cuff tears

For acute traumatic tears, traumatic injury coding (e.g., injury of rotator cuff categories) may be appropriate. Documentation should include the mechanism of injury, timing, and whether the tear is acute and repairable. Accurate traumatic vs non-traumatic classification helps avoid diagnosis-code mismatches that can trigger denial logic in payer coverage systems.

7.3 Laterality and specificity

Always capture laterality (right/left) consistently in the note and on the claim. If imaging supports specific tendon involvement, reflect that detail in the operative narrative even when ICD-10 coding is at the shoulder/tear category level.

8. Payer Coverage and Medical Necessity Strategy

There is no single national Medicare coverage determination that functions as a dedicated, universal rulebook for 29827. Instead, payer approval and post-payment review commonly depend on a medical necessity narrative consistent with orthopedic practice standards and payer clinical coverage criteria.

8.1 Typical payer expectations (authorization and post-payment review)

A published Medicare Advantage clinical coverage criteria document illustrates common payer logic: it differentiates criteria for acute full-thickness tears (often time-sensitive) versus chronic tears (often requiring a defined conservative care trial, functional impairment documentation, and imaging confirmation). While every payer differs, this policy structure is representative of what utilization management teams request in authorization packets.

To reduce denial risk, build the chart and authorization packet so that an external reviewer can confirm:

  • Symptoms: pain plus functional limitation (weakness, loss of motion, work/ADL impairment).
  • Exam findings: objective weakness tests, motion deficits, impingement signs, functional assessment.
  • Imaging: MRI/US describing tear type and size; surgeon interpretation consistent with report.
  • Conservative care: dates and components of physical therapy and other nonoperative measures, unless acute scenario supports earlier repair.

8.2 Why clinical narrative matters even when surgery is appropriate

Many denials are not “clinical disagreement” denials; they are documentation denials. A clinical institution’s patient guidance on conservative-versus-surgical decision-making illustrates that many patients undergo non-operative care prior to surgery, which aligns with how many payers structure their criteria. Linking your documentation to that real-world pathway (symptoms, failure of conservative care) makes payer review easier and reduces “insufficient documentation” outcomes.

9. Comparison Table: 29827 vs Related Shoulder Arthroscopy Codes

Code Service Concept Typical Use Key Compliance Notes
29827 Arthroscopic rotator cuff repair Repair of torn cuff tendon(s) with fixation Requires documented tear and repair steps. Diagnostic arthroscopy generally bundled into surgical arthroscopy.
Debridement codes (varies) Arthroscopic debridement work Removal of diseased tissue; may occur with cuff pathology Routine cleanup is commonly treated as integral to primary repair; separate reporting requires clear, distinct documentation consistent with NCCI principles.
Diagnostic arthroscopy (family concept) Scope examination only Diagnosis without a definitive surgical arthroscopy performed When a surgical arthroscopy is performed, diagnostic arthroscopy is not separately reportable under NCCI principles.
Unlisted arthroscopy (family concept) Procedure not described by existing CPT code Rare/novel arthroscopic procedures not fitting defined codes Used when the procedure performed does not match an existing code descriptor; requires operative report and comparison code rationale for pricing.

Important: Do not “upcode by intent.” If the surgeon intended to repair but did not complete a repair (e.g., irreparable tear with debridement only), code the service performed, not the planned service.

10. Real-World Coding Scenarios

Scenario 1: Chronic degenerative tear, failed PT, arthroscopic repair performed

Setting: Outpatient surgery center.

Clinical story: Persistent pain and weakness; MRI confirms full-thickness supraspinatus tear; documented PT trial.

Coding logic: Report 29827 for arthroscopic repair. Diagnostic scope is inherent to the surgical arthroscopy under NCCI principles.

Documentation tip: Operative note should list tear size, tendon, anchors, and fixation steps; chart should reflect conservative care.

Scenario 2: Acute traumatic tear with early repair request

Setting: Hospital outpatient.

Clinical story: Acute injury with weakness; imaging shows repairable full-thickness tear; payer authorization depends on acute criteria logic.

Coding logic: Report 29827 if repair performed. Ensure diagnosis coding reflects traumatic mechanism when appropriate and documentation supports the acute pathway.

Payer strategy: Include mechanism, time from injury, functional deficit, and imaging. A Medicare Advantage policy illustrates acute vs chronic criteria patterns.

Scenario 3: “Repair planned,” but tear is irreparable; debridement performed

Setting: ASC.

Clinical story: Intraoperatively, tendon is irreparable; surgeon performs debridement and other palliative measures.

Coding logic: Do not report 29827 unless a repair was actually performed. Select code(s) that represent the work completed; diagnostic arthroscopy is not separately reportable when surgical arthroscopy is performed under NCCI principles.

Documentation tip: Operative note should clearly state irreparability and what was done instead (extent and location of debridement, rationale).

Scenario 4: Rotator cuff repair with biologic augmentation; considering modifier 22

Setting: Hospital outpatient department.

Clinical story: Repair performed with augmentation material due to poor tissue quality; surgeon believes work is substantially greater than typical.

Coding logic: Report 29827. Modifier 22 may be considered only if the operative note quantifies additional work (extra time, extra fixation steps, added complexity) consistent with AAOS documentation expectations.

Audit tip: Provide a short claim narrative summarizing the added work and reference the operative note section where details appear.

Scenario 5: Post-op return to OR within global period

Setting: Hospital.

Clinical story: Unplanned return to OR for a related complication within the global period.

Coding logic: Use modifier 78 for the related return to OR during the post-op period, consistent with global surgery conventions. Global period references commonly identify 29827 as a 90-day global procedure.

Coding Decision Pathway

flowchart TD
    A[Rotator Cuff Pathology Identified] --> B{Was a repair actually performed?}
    B -->|Yes| C{How many tendons repaired?}
    B -->|No - Irreparable| D[Do NOT report 29827<br>Code the service performed<br>e.g., debridement]
    C -->|1, 2, or 3 tendons| E[Report CPT 29827]
    E --> F{Additional procedures<br>performed?}
    F -->|No| G[29827 only<br>Diagnostic scope is bundled]
    F -->|Yes| H{Is additional work<br>distinct per NCCI?}
    H -->|Yes - Documented| I[Report additional code<br>with appropriate modifier<br>51, 59 if supported]
    H -->|No - Integral| J[Do not separately report<br>Bundled into 29827]
    E --> K{Work substantially<br>greater than typical?}
    K -->|Yes - Documented| L[Consider Modifier 22<br>Quantify additional work]
    K -->|No| M[Standard reporting]

Official Description

Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; with rotator cuff repair

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

The procedure described by CPT® Code 29827 refers to an arthroscopic surgical intervention on the shoulder, specifically aimed at repairing a rotator cuff tear. The rotator cuff is a critical structure in the shoulder, composed of a group of muscles and tendons, including the supraspinatus, infraspinatus, subscapularis, and teres minor. These components work together to stabilize the shoulder joint and facilitate a wide range of motion. In this procedure, the patient is typically positioned either in a lateral decubitus position, where they lie on their side with the affected arm suspended, or in a beach chair position, which allows for better access to the shoulder. During the surgery, skin traction is applied to the arm to enhance visibility and access to the shoulder joint. The surgeon makes incisions at anterior and posterior portals to access the joint space. A sterile saline solution is then introduced into the joint to expand it, allowing for better visualization and access. The initial step involves a diagnostic arthroscopy, where the surgeon inspects the joint and the subacromial bursa, a fluid-filled sac that reduces friction between the shoulder bones. If a rotator cuff tear is identified, the surgeon evaluates its size and pattern, determining the best approach for repair. The procedure may involve removing damaged portions of the rotator cuff, followed by either direct tendon-to-tendon repair or tendon-to-bone repair, depending on the nature of the tear. The use of specialized instruments, such as a motorized burr and shaver, facilitates the smoothing of the acromion and the preparation of the rotator cuff for repair. The final steps include securing the repaired tendon to the bone using metallic anchors and sutures, ensuring a stable and effective repair. This minimally invasive approach aims to restore function and alleviate pain in patients suffering from rotator cuff injuries.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

The procedure described by CPT® Code 29827 is indicated for patients presenting with specific conditions related to the rotator cuff. These indications include:

  • Rotator Cuff Tear: A tear in the rotator cuff, which may be partial or full thickness, leading to pain and functional impairment.
  • Shoulder Pain: Chronic shoulder pain that has not responded to conservative treatments, such as physical therapy or medication.
  • Loss of Range of Motion: Significant limitations in shoulder movement due to rotator cuff pathology.
  • Subacromial Impingement: Symptoms related to the impingement of the rotator cuff tendons under the acromion, often associated with inflammation or degeneration.

2. Procedure

The procedure for CPT® Code 29827 involves several critical steps to ensure effective repair of the rotator cuff. The following outlines the procedural steps:

  • Step 1: Patient Positioning The patient is positioned in either a lateral decubitus position or a beach chair position to provide optimal access to the shoulder joint. Skin traction is applied to the arm to enhance visibility and facilitate the surgical approach.
  • Step 2: Portal Incisions Anterior and posterior portal incisions are made over the shoulder joint to create access points for the arthroscopic instruments. These incisions are strategically placed to minimize tissue damage while allowing for effective visualization and manipulation of the joint.
  • Step 3: Joint Distension A sterile saline solution is pumped into the shoulder joint to expand the joint space, which aids in the visualization of the internal structures during the procedure.
  • Step 4: Diagnostic Arthroscopy The surgeon performs a diagnostic arthroscopy, inspecting the joint and the subacromial bursa (bursoscopy) to assess the condition of the rotator cuff and identify any tears or damage.
  • Step 5: Additional Portal Incisions If necessary, additional portal incisions are made to introduce further surgical tools and gain access to the site of the rotator cuff tear.
  • Step 6: Acromion Smoothing The underside of the acromion is flattened and smoothed using a motorized burr and shaver, which helps to alleviate any impingement on the rotator cuff tendons.
  • Step 7: Evaluation of the Tear The rotator cuff is visualized, and the size and pattern of the tear are evaluated. This assessment is crucial for determining the appropriate repair technique.
  • Step 8: Debridement of Damaged Tissue Thin or fragmented portions of the rotator cuff are removed to prepare the tissue for repair.
  • Step 9: Repair Technique Selection Depending on the nature of the tear, the surgeon may perform a direct tendon-to-tendon repair by suturing the proximal and distal portions of the ruptured tendon together, or a tendon-to-bone repair, where the site for reattachment is debrided.
  • Step 10: Closure of Defects For large defects, side-to-side stitches may be used to initiate closure. A stitch passer and grasper are introduced to pass stitches through the tendon ends, which are then secured using a knot tying instrument.
  • Step 11: Anchor Placement Metallic anchors with sutures are placed in the humerus at the site where the tendon will be reattached. These anchors are recessed below the bone surface, with only the sutures exposed for the repair.
  • Step 12: Finalizing the Repair The sutures are passed through the tendon and tied, effectively pulling the tendon down to the prepared bone surface, ensuring a secure attachment.
  • Step 13: Instrument Removal and Closure Once the procedure is complete, the instruments are removed, excess fluid is drained from the joint, the incisions are closed, and a dressing is applied to protect the surgical site.

3. Post-Procedure

After the completion of the arthroscopic rotator cuff repair, patients typically undergo a recovery process that may include pain management, physical therapy, and follow-up appointments to monitor healing. Post-procedure care often involves immobilization of the shoulder in a sling to protect the repair and allow for initial healing. Patients are usually advised to avoid lifting heavy objects or engaging in strenuous activities for a specified period. Rehabilitation exercises may be introduced gradually, focusing on restoring range of motion and strength as healing progresses. The overall recovery timeline can vary based on the extent of the repair and individual patient factors, but adherence to post-operative instructions is crucial for optimal outcomes.

Short Descr SHO ARTHRS SRG RT8TR CUF RPR
Medium Descr SURGICAL ARTHROSCOPY SHOULDER W/ROTATOR CUFF RPR
Long Descr Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; with rotator cuff repair
Status Code Active Code
Global Days 090 - Major Surgery
PC/TC Indicator (26, TC) 0 - Physician Service Code
Multiple Procedures (51) 3 - Special payment adjustment rules for multiple endoscopic 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.
Endoscopic Base Code 29805  Arthroscopy, shoulder, diagnostic, with or without synovial biopsy (separate procedure)
Diagnostic Imaging Family 99 - Concept Does Not Apply
APC Status Indicator Hospital Part B services paid through a comprehensive APC
ASC Payment Indicator Surgical procedure on ASC list in CY 2007; payment based on OPPS relative payment weight.
Type of Service (TOS) 2 - Surgery
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) P8A - Endoscopy - arthroscopy
MUE 1
CCS Clinical Classification 160 - Other therapeutic procedures on muscles and tendons

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

29826 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 CPT Assistant Article Arthroscopy, shoulder, surgical; decompression of subacromial space with partial acromioplasty, with coracoacromial ligament (ie, arch) release, when performed (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
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
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).
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.
80 Assistant surgeon: surgical assistant services may be identified by adding modifier 80 to the usual procedure number(s).
SG Ambulatory surgical center (asc) facility service
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).
81 Minimum assistant surgeon: minimum surgical assistant services are identified by adding modifier 81 to the usual procedure number.
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.)
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
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.
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).
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.)
A1 Dressing for one wound
AF Specialty physician
AG Primary physician
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
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
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
GA Waiver of liability statement issued as required by payer policy, individual case
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
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
KX Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met
PA Surgical or other invasive procedure on wrong body part
Q1 Routine clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study
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
TA Left foot, great toe
TU Special payment rate, overtime
TV Special payment rates, holidays/weekends
XE Separate encounter, a service that is distinct because it occurred during a separate encounter
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
2021-01-01 Changed Short and medium descriptions changed.
2003-01-01 Added First appearance in code book in 2003.
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