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Quick Reference

  • Code definition: CPT 47563 captures laparoscopic removal of the gallbladder when intraoperative cholangiography (IOC) is performed during the same operative session, including the surgeon's performance and interpretation of the cholangiographic imaging.
  • Key billing rule: IOC performed by the operating surgeon is integral to 47563; the cholangiography component is captured in the code selection itself. Separately billing 74300 by the same surgeon is unbundling and an OIG compliance risk.
  • Global period: 90-day major surgery global. All related post-operative care within 90 days is included in the surgical payment; do not separately bill routine follow-up E/M visits.
  • Documentation must-have: The operative report must explicitly state that IOC was performed, including catheter placement into the cystic duct, contrast injection volume, fluoroscopic imaging, and the surgeon's interpretation of findings. Without this documentation, 47562 (without cholangiography) is the correct code.
  • Top confusion point: Upcoding 47562 to 47563 when cholangiography was not performed or not documented is among the most common audit findings for this procedure family. The code selection is binary: IOC performed and documented = 47563; IOC not performed or not documented = 47562.
  • MUE: 1 unit per date of service. A second cholecystectomy cannot be billed on the same date.
  • ASC approved: 47563 is Medicare-approved for ambulatory surgery center (ASC) settings, with payment based on OPPS relative payment weight.

When to Use This Code

Clinical Indications

47563 applies when laparoscopic cholecystectomy is performed and the surgeon also performs intraoperative cholangiography. The clinical indication is for gallbladder removal; the IOC is an adjunct technique. Common surgical indications include:

  • Symptomatic cholelithiasis (biliary colic with ultrasound-confirmed gallstones)
  • Acute or chronic cholecystitis (K81.0, K81.1)
  • Biliary dyskinesia with documented low ejection fraction on HIDA scan and symptomatic presentation (K82.8)
  • Choledocholithiasis or suspected common bile duct stones, where IOC is used to evaluate ductal anatomy before concluding the case (K80.30 to K80.67)
  • Gallstone pancreatitis after resolution of the acute phase (K85.10 to K85.12)
  • Acalculous cholecystitis

IOC serves three specific purposes the operative report should reflect: confirming the critical view of safety to prevent bile duct injury, detecting unsuspected choledocholithiasis, and delineating biliary anatomy in complex dissections. When IOC is performed solely as a safety measure with normal findings, the code remains 47563 as long as the procedure is documented.

Scope Boundaries

47563 covers the complete laparoscopic cholecystectomy plus the IOC performed by the operating surgeon. It does not include exploration or instrumentation of the common bile duct; when the duct is actually explored or a stone retrieved, 47564 (laparoscopic cholecystectomy with exploration of common duct) applies. 47563 does not cover open cholecystectomy; if the procedure is converted to open, report only the open code (47605 if IOC was performed).

Provider and Setting Context

47563 is a physician service code (PC/TC Indicator 0); the full fee schedule payment applies to the professional component regardless of setting. The procedure is payable in hospital outpatient (POS 22), ASC (POS 24), and inpatient (POS 21) settings. The OPPS APC Status Indicator confirms 47563 is paid through a comprehensive APC at hospital outpatient facilities, meaning associated packaged services receive no separate facility payment.


Code Differentiation Table

Code Description When to Use Instead
47563 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography IOC performed and documented by operating surgeon
47562 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (without cholangiography) No IOC performed, or IOC not documented in operative report
47564 Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with exploration of common duct Common duct physically explored or instrumented beyond cholangiography; stone retrieval attempted or performed
47600 Cholecystectomy, open (without cholangiography) Open surgical approach used (conversion or planned); Inpatient-Only under OPPS
47605 Cholecystectomy, open, with cholangiography Open approach with IOC documented; Inpatient-Only under OPPS
47610 Cholecystectomy, open, with common duct exploration Open approach with common duct exploration; Inpatient-Only under OPPS

The critical differentiator between 47563 and 47562 is a single binary documentation element: did the surgeon insert a catheter into the cystic duct, inject contrast, and obtain fluoroscopic images? That fact must appear explicitly in the operative report. Between 47563 and 47564, the distinction is whether the common duct was passively visualized (IOC = 47563) versus actively explored or instrumented (common duct exploration = 47564).

flowchart TD
    A[Cholecystectomy performed] --> B{Laparoscopic or open?}
    B -->|Open| C{IOC performed?}
    C -->|No| D[47600]
    C -->|Yes| E{Common duct explored?}
    E -->|No| F[47605]
    E -->|Yes| G[47610]
    B -->|Laparoscopic| H{IOC performed\nand documented?}
    H -->|No| I[47562]
    H -->|Yes| J{Common duct\nexplored?}
    J -->|No| K[47563]
    J -->|Yes| L[47564]

Billing and Modifier Rules

Modifier Usage

  • Modifier 22 (Increased Procedural Services): Appropriate when the procedure requires substantially greater work than typically expected, such as severe adhesions from prior abdominal surgery, acute gangrenous cholecystitis, Mirizzi syndrome, or significant obesity complicating critical view dissection. Attach the operative report; expect payer scrutiny and possible audit. The documentation must specify the additional findings and time required, not merely assert complexity.
  • Modifier 51 (Multiple Procedures): 47563 carries Multiple Procedure Indicator 2, meaning standard 50% payment reduction applies to secondary procedures on the same date. Do not append modifier 51 to 47563 itself; append it to the lower-valued secondary procedure.
  • Modifier 52 (Reduced Services): Use when cholangiography was attempted but could not be completed as documented; supports a reduced payment request with documentation explaining why the service was incomplete.
  • Modifier 53 (Discontinued Procedure): Applies when the procedure was discontinued after initiation due to patient risk, such as an anesthetic complication. Do not use modifier 53 for planned conversions to open approach.
  • Modifier 59 (Distinct Procedural Service): Use when needed to identify separately identifiable services on the same date; required in specific NCCI override situations, not as a routine add-on.
  • Modifier 78 (Unplanned Return to OR, Related Procedure): For unplanned return to the operating room during the 90-day global period for a related complication, such as reoperation for bile leak or hemorrhage.
  • Modifier 79 (Unrelated Procedure During Postoperative Period): When 47563 is performed during the global period of a prior unrelated surgery, modifier 79 identifies it as distinct from the earlier procedure's global. Without it, the claim will likely be denied as bundled.
  • Modifier 80/82 (Assistant Surgeon): Assistant surgeon payment restriction does not apply to 47563; assistants at surgery can be billed. Document medical necessity for the assistant, particularly complexity factors or patient body habitus.
  • Modifier 62 (Co-Surgeons): Co-surgeons could be paid with supporting documentation per the database indicators; uncommon for standard cholecystectomy but applicable when two surgeons of different specialties each perform distinct portions.

Bundling Alerts and NCCI

  • 47562 and 47563 are mutually exclusive: Select one based on whether IOC was performed. Billing both on the same date of service is an NCCI error.
  • 49320 (Diagnostic Laparoscopy): Bundled into 47563. Diagnostic laparoscopy is inherent to any laparoscopic surgical procedure; separately billing 49320 on the same date as 47563 is unbundling.
  • 74300 (IOC, Radiological S&I): Bundled for the operating surgeon. A separately participating radiologist who independently interprets the IOC images and issues a written report may bill 74300; the surgeon still bills 47563 and does not also bill 74300. At the facility level under OPPS and in ASC settings, 74300 is packaged with no separate payment regardless of who bills it.
  • MUE: 1 unit per date of service. A second cholecystectomy on the same day cannot be billed.
  • Open approach codes (47600, 47605, 47610): Mutually exclusive with 47563 on the same date; select the approach actually performed.

Global Period

47563 carries a 90-day (090) major surgery global period. Routine post-operative E/M visits within the 90-day window are included in the surgical payment. Modifier 24 (Unrelated E/M During Postoperative Period) is required for unrelated post-op visits. Modifier 57 (Decision for Surgery) applies to pre-operative E/M services on the day of or day before surgery when documenting the decision for the procedure.


Documentation Essentials

Required Elements for 47563

The operative report must include the following to support 47563 specifically:

  • IOC documentation (distinguishing element): Explicit statement that intraoperative cholangiography was performed, with documentation of: catheter placement into the cystic duct, contrast dye volume instilled (typically 10 to 20 mL), fluoroscopic imaging obtained, and the surgeon's interpretation of findings (e.g., no filling defects, ductal caliber, contrast flow into duodenum, whether any pathology was identified).
  • Triangle of Calot dissection: Documentation of the critical view of safety (CVS) per SAGES guidelines, including identification of the cystic duct and cystic artery as the only structures entering the gallbladder. CVS documentation supports safe practice standards and appropriate billing.
  • Pre-operative record: Documented symptoms establishing medical necessity (biliary colic, right upper quadrant pain, nausea, vomiting), pre-op imaging confirming the indication (typically abdominal ultrasound), H&P, and informed consent.
  • Diagnosis support: The ICD-10-CM code assigned must be supported by documented clinical findings; asymptomatic cholelithiasis without documented symptoms is a common denial trigger.

Audit Red Flags

Auditors specifically flag 47563 claims when:

  • The operative report does not explicitly describe IOC (cholangiography described only in the operative header or preoperative plan, but absent from the body of the report)
  • 47563 is billed but the claim also includes 74300 from the same surgeon, suggesting unbundling
  • Modifier 22 is appended without operative report documentation of specific complexity factors and additional time
  • The diagnosis is coded as asymptomatic cholelithiasis without documented patient symptoms to support surgical medical necessity
  • ICD-10-CM is coded to unspecified level (K81.9) when the record supports a more specific code (K81.0 or K81.1)

Medicare, Commercial and Medicaid Payer Rules

Medicare

There is no National Coverage Determination (NCD) specifically for laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Coverage is governed by MAC-level Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs). Common covered ICD-10-CM indications across MACs include K80.00 to K80.21 (cholelithiasis), K81.0 to K81.2 (cholecystitis), K80.30 to K80.67 (choledocholithiasis and combination), K82.8 (biliary dyskinesia, requiring HIDA scan with ejection fraction below 35% and documented symptoms), and K85.10 to K85.12 (biliary pancreatitis). Verify the current applicable LCD at the CMS Medicare Coverage Database [1].

47563 is payable in ASC settings; the ASC Payment Indicator confirms payment based on OPPS relative payment weight. The open cholecystectomy codes (47600, 47605, 47610) are Inpatient-Only under OPPS; if conversion to open occurs in a Medicare outpatient setting, hospital payment requires inpatient admission. Verify current APC assignment and payment rates in the annual CMS OPPS Addendum B [2].

The physician fee schedule rate for 47563 applies standard multiple procedure reduction rules. If billed alongside another surgical procedure on the same date, the lower-value procedure is subject to 50% reduction. Verify current 2026 RVUs at the CMS PFS Look-Up Tool [3]. NCCI PTP edits and MUEs are updated quarterly; confirm current edit pairs at the CMS NCCI portal [4].

Commercial Payers

Commercial payer policies generally follow CPT guidelines for the 47562/47563 distinction, but prior authorization requirements vary. For elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy, many commercial payers require pre-authorization; verify payer-specific requirements before scheduling. Some commercial payers apply automated bundling logic that may incorrectly deny 47563 when 74300 appears on the same claim from a different rendering provider (the radiologist); include documentation of the separate participation when appealing these denials.


Common Denials and Prevention

Denial: Insufficient documentation for 47563 (downcode to 47562) Payers audit for explicit IOC documentation. If the operative report does not describe catheter placement, contrast injection, and fluoroscopic interpretation, the claim is downcoded to 47562. Prevention: Ensure the dictated operative report includes the IOC steps in the body of the procedure narrative, not just the preoperative plan or procedure title. A dedicated paragraph describing the cholangiography findings is best practice.

Denial: Unbundling (surgeon bills 47563 + 74300) The cholangiography S&I is included in 47563 when the surgeon performs IOC. Billing both triggers NCCI edit denial. Prevention: Remove 74300 from the surgeon's claim. 74300 is only separately reportable by a radiologist who independently participated with a separate written interpretation.

Denial: Medical necessity, asymptomatic cholelithiasis K80.20 alone (gallstones without cholecystitis, without obstruction) may be denied when the clinical record does not document patient symptoms. Payers treating the indication as elective and unsupported will deny on medical necessity grounds. Prevention: Ensure the pre-operative record documents symptoms (biliary colic episodes, duration, frequency, impact on activities) and pre-op imaging. If the patient had prior attacks resolved by the time of surgery, document symptom history in the H&P.

Denial: Bundled into global period of prior surgery When 47563 is performed within the global period of a prior unrelated surgery, the claim may be denied as part of the earlier global. Prevention: Append modifier 79 (Unrelated Procedure During Postoperative Period) and document in the operative record that the cholecystectomy is unrelated to the earlier procedure. Submit with documentation supporting the unrelated nature of the conditions.

Denial: Incorrect approach (laparoscopic billed, open conversion) Billing 47563 (laparoscopic) when the procedure was converted to open results in claim conflict with facility codes reflecting open approach. Prevention: Report only the completed (open) procedure: 47600 or 47605 if IOC was documented prior to or during the open phase. The operative report must reflect the conversion and the reason for it.


Coding Scenarios

Scenario 1: A 45-year-old female with symptomatic cholelithiasis confirmed by ultrasound undergoes elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy in an ASC. The surgeon performs IOC; the cholangiogram shows patent biliary ducts with no filling defects and contrast flowing freely into the duodenum. The gallbladder is removed without complication.

Correct coding: 47563 + K80.20

Why: IOC is explicitly performed and documented, selecting 47563 over 47562. The surgeon does not separately bill 74300; it is included in 47563.

Scenario 2: A 60-year-old male with acute cholecystitis undergoes urgent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Due to severe pericholecystic inflammation, the surgeon elects not to perform cholangiography and proceeds directly to gallbladder removal after achieving critical view of safety. No IOC is performed.

Correct coding: 47562 + K81.0

Why: IOC was not performed; billing 47563 would be upcoding. The clinical decision not to perform IOC is not a coding error; the code must reflect what was actually done.

Scenario 3: A 55-year-old female with suspected choledocholithiasis based on preoperative labs (elevated alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin) undergoes laparoscopic cholecystectomy with IOC. A radiologist stationed in the OR provides real-time fluoroscopic guidance and issues a separate written report identifying a 5mm filling defect in the common bile duct. The common duct is not explored intraoperatively; the stone finding is referred for post-operative ERCP.

Correct coding: Surgeon: 47563 + K80.50 + K80.20. Radiologist: 74300 + same diagnoses.

Why: The radiologist's independent participation with a separate written report supports 74300 from the radiologist only. The surgeon bills 47563 as the procedure performed; the radiologist bills 74300 for the professional component of the S&I. At the facility level, 74300 is packaged under OPPS with no separate facility payment.

Scenario 4: A 70-year-old male with acute gangrenous cholecystitis undergoes attempted laparoscopic cholecystectomy. IOC is begun laparoscopically and cholangiographic images are obtained and documented before dense adhesions requiring conversion to open cholecystectomy. The procedure is completed as an open cholecystectomy without common duct exploration.

Correct coding: 47605 + modifier 22 + K81.0

Why: Report the completed procedure only; 47563 (laparoscopic) is not billed when the procedure ended as open. IOC findings were documented prior to conversion, supporting 47605 (open with cholangiography) over 47600. Modifier 22 captures the substantially increased work from gangrenous tissue and adhesions requiring conversion. Note: 47605 is Inpatient-Only under OPPS; Medicare coverage requires inpatient admission for this open procedure.


Related Codes

  • 47562 (CPT): Laparoscopic cholecystectomy without cholangiography; mutually exclusive alternative when IOC not performed
  • 47564 (CPT): Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with exploration of common duct; use when duct is actively instrumented, not just visualized by IOC
  • 47600 (CPT): Open cholecystectomy without cholangiography; Inpatient-Only under OPPS
  • 47605 (CPT): Open cholecystectomy with cholangiography; Inpatient-Only; report after laparoscopic-to-open conversion with IOC documentation
  • 74300 (CPT): Intraoperative cholangiography, radiological S&I; separately reportable by a participating radiologist only; packaged under OPPS/ASC
  • 74301 (CPT): Intraoperative cholangiography, additional image set (add-on to 74300)
  • 49327 (CPT): Laparoscopic placement of interstitial device(s) for radiation therapy guidance; add-on code reportable in addition to primary laparoscopic procedure
  • K80.20 (ICD-10-CM): Calculus of gallbladder without cholecystitis, without obstruction; primary diagnosis for elective cholecystectomy
  • K81.0 (ICD-10-CM): Acute cholecystitis; primary diagnosis for urgent/emergent cholecystectomy

Sources {#sources}

  1. CMS Medicare Coverage Database — Search "cholecystectomy" for MAC-specific LCDs and covered ICD-10-CM indications.
  2. CMS OPPS Prospective Payment System — Annual Addendum B for APC assignment and payment weights for 47563.
  3. CMS Physician Fee Schedule Look-Up Tool — Verify current RVUs, global days, and status indicators for CPT 47563.
  4. CMS NCCI Edits — Quarterly PTP edit files and MUE tables; confirm current bundling pairs for 47563.
  5. HHS OIG Work Plan — Search "cholecystectomy" and "laparoscopic" for current audit priorities relevant to 47563 billing patterns.
  6. AMA CPT Code Set — Official CPT descriptors and parenthetical notes for 47562 to 47564 and 74300 to 74301.
  7. AHA Coding Clinic Advisor — Official ICD-10-CM sequencing guidance for cholecystitis with and without cholelithiasis.

Related Codes

Official Description

Laparoscopy, surgical; cholecystectomy with cholangiography

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

The procedure described by CPT® Code 47563 refers to a laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography, which is a minimally invasive surgical technique used to remove the gallbladder. In this procedure, the surgeon makes a small incision at the navel to insert a trocar, which allows for the introduction of a laparoscope—a thin tube equipped with a camera that provides a visual feed of the abdominal cavity. The abdomen is inflated with carbon dioxide to create a working space for the surgeon. Additional small incisions are made to insert other trocars, which hold surgical instruments necessary for the operation. The gallbladder is then located, and if it is distended, a needle may be used to drain bile to facilitate its removal. The surgical team identifies key anatomical structures, including the Hartmann's pouch and the triangle of Calot, which contains the cystic artery and cystic duct. The cystic duct is carefully dissected and cut, while the cystic artery is ligated and divided to prevent bleeding. Electrocautery is employed to detach the gallbladder from the liver bed. Once the gallbladder is freed, it is placed in an extraction sac and removed through one of the small incisions. If intraoperative cholangiography is performed, a catheter is inserted into the cystic duct, and a contrast dye is injected to visualize the bile ducts using fluoroscopy, ensuring that there are no obstructions or complications. This comprehensive approach allows for effective gallbladder removal while minimizing recovery time and surgical trauma.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

The laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography (CPT® Code 47563) is indicated for several conditions related to the gallbladder. These include:

  • Cholelithiasis The presence of gallstones in the gallbladder, which can cause pain, inflammation, or infection.
  • Cholecystitis Inflammation of the gallbladder, often due to obstruction by gallstones, leading to severe abdominal pain and potential complications.
  • Biliary colic Episodes of severe pain caused by gallstones temporarily blocking the bile ducts.
  • Pancreatitis Inflammation of the pancreas that may be associated with gallstones obstructing the pancreatic duct.
  • Gallbladder dysfunction Conditions where the gallbladder does not function properly, leading to symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, and abdominal discomfort.

2. Procedure

The laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography involves several key procedural steps:

  • Step 1: Anesthesia and Incision The patient is placed under general anesthesia to ensure comfort and immobility during the procedure. A small incision is made at the navel to insert a trocar, which serves as the entry point for the laparoscope.
  • Step 2: Insufflation Carbon dioxide is introduced into the abdominal cavity to inflate it, creating a working space that allows the surgeon to visualize and access the internal organs more easily.
  • Step 3: Additional Incisions Two to three additional small incisions are made in the abdomen, through which additional trocars are inserted. These trocars hold the surgical instruments needed for the operation.
  • Step 4: Identification of the Gallbladder The surgeon locates the gallbladder. If it is distended, a needle may be used to drain bile, which helps in the subsequent steps of the procedure.
  • Step 5: Dissection of the Cystic Duct and Artery Grasper clamps are applied to the gallbladder, and the Hartmann's pouch is identified and retracted. The triangle of Calot is exposed, allowing the surgeon to identify the cystic artery and cystic duct. The cystic duct is dissected free and transected, while the cystic artery is ligated and doubly divided to prevent bleeding.
  • Step 6: Removal of the Gallbladder Electrocautery is utilized to carefully dissect the gallbladder from the liver bed. Once detached, the gallbladder is placed in an extraction sac and removed from the abdomen through one of the small incisions.
  • Step 7: Intraoperative Cholangiography (if performed) If cholangiography is indicated, a small catheter is placed in the cystic duct, and 10-20 ml of dye is instilled. Fluoroscopy is then used to visualize the bile ducts, ensuring there are no obstructions or complications before concluding the procedure.

3. Post-Procedure

After the laparoscopic cholecystectomy with cholangiography, patients are typically monitored in a recovery area until the effects of anesthesia wear off. Post-procedure care may include pain management, instructions for wound care, and dietary recommendations. Patients are usually advised to start with a clear liquid diet and gradually reintroduce solid foods as tolerated. Follow-up appointments may be scheduled to assess recovery and address any complications. Most patients can return to normal activities within a week, although full recovery may take longer depending on individual circumstances.

Short Descr LAPARO CHOLECYSTECTOMY/GRAPH
Medium Descr LAPS SURG CHOLECYSTECTOMY W/CHOLANGIOGRAPHY
Long Descr Laparoscopy, surgical; cholecystectomy with cholangiography
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) 0 - 150% payment adjustment for bilateral procedures does NOT apply.
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 Non office-based surgical procedure added in CY 2008 or later; payment based on OPPS relative payment weight.
Type of Service (TOS) 2 - Surgery
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) P5E - Ambulatory procedures - other
MUE 1
CCS Clinical Classification 84 - Cholecystectomy and common duct exploration

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

49327 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Laparoscopy, surgical; with placement of interstitial device(s) for radiation therapy guidance (eg, fiducial markers, dosimeter), intra-abdominal, intrapelvic, and/or retroperitoneum, including imaging guidance, if performed, single or multiple (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
AS Physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist services for assistant at surgery
GC This service has been performed in part by a resident under the direction of a teaching physician
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).
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).
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).
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
81 Minimum assistant surgeon: minimum surgical assistant services are identified by adding modifier 81 to the usual procedure number.
SG Ambulatory surgical center (asc) facility 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).
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.
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.
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.
63 Procedure performed on infants less than 4 kg: procedures performed on neonates and infants up to a present body weight of 4 kg may involve significantly increased complexity and physician or other qualified health care professional work commonly associated with these patients. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 63 to the procedure number. note: unless otherwise designated, this modifier may only be appended to procedures/services listed in the 20100-69990 code series and 92920, 92928, 92953, 92960, 92986, 92987, 92990, 92997, 92998, 93312, 93313, 93314, 93315, 93316, 93317, 93318, 93452, 93505, 93563, 93564, 93568, 93569, 93573, 93574, 93575, 93580, 93581, 93582, 93590, 93591, 93592, 93593, 93594, 93595, 93596, 93597, 93598, 93615, 93616 from the medicine/ cardiovascular section. modifier 63 should not be appended to any cpt codes listed in the evaluation and management services, anesthesia, radiology, pathology and laboratory, or medicine sections (other than those identified above from the medicine/cardiovascular section).
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.)
AG Primary physician
CC Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed)
ET Emergency services
FS Split (or shared) evaluation and management visit
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
KX Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met
LT Left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body)
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
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
RT Right side (used to identify procedures performed on the right side of the body)
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
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
2000-01-01 Added First appearance in code book in 2000.
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