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Quick reference

  • Definition: CPT 77002 is an add-on code for fluoroscopic guidance (real-time X-ray imaging) used to guide needle placement for procedures such as biopsies, aspirations, injections, and localization device placement. It must be reported in addition to an appropriate primary procedure code and cannot be billed as a standalone service .
  • When it is correct: Use 77002 only when (1) fluoroscopy was actually used to guide needle placement, (2) permanent images were obtained and retained, and (3) the primary procedure code does not already include fluoroscopic/CT guidance in its descriptor or CPT instructions .
  • Modifier use: Use modifier 26 (Professional Component) or TC (Technical Component) when billing is split between physician and facility. Do not use modifier 59 (or X-modifiers) to “force” payment when guidance is already bundled in the primary procedure; Medicare contractors explicitly warn against this misuse . Use 59/XS/XE only when there is a truly distinct, separately reportable guided service (separate anatomic site or separate encounter) and documentation supports it .
  • Payment reality: Under Medicare facility payment systems, fluoroscopic guidance is often packaged (no separate facility payment), though the physician may bill the professional work when appropriate . Confirm payer policy and document medical necessity; inadequate documentation (no saved images, no interpretation) is a common denial/audit driver .

1. Definition and Clinical Use of CPT 77002

CPT 77002 is defined as

Fluoroscopic guidance for needle placement (e.g., biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device),”

and is reported separately in addition to the primary procedure code .

In practical terms, the code represents the physician work of using live fluoroscopy to guide a needle (or needle-like device) into a specific target, with the expectation that the guidance is medically necessary for accuracy and safety.

Fluoroscopy is not simply “an image was taken.” It is a real-time guidance technique that can include patient positioning, image acquisition and interpretation during needle advancement, and confirmation of final needle position (often with contrast when clinically appropriate). In many procedural settings, fluoroscopy reduces misplacement risk and can improve diagnostic yield for biopsies, as well as precision for intra-articular injections or aspirations where landmarks are unreliable.

CPT 77002 is commonly used by interventional radiology, orthopedics, PM&R/pain medicine, surgery, and other procedural specialties for non-spinal needle placement in the chest, abdomen, pelvis, and extremities. Typical categories include:

  • Injections into deep joints (hip, shoulder) when landmark guidance is inadequate
  • Aspirations of fluid collections or cystic structures when ultrasound is limited
  • Biopsies of lesions where fluoroscopy provides adequate targeting (sometimes in musculoskeletal or thoracic use)
  • Localization of a lesion or device position when fluoroscopy is the chosen modality A core compliance requirement is that permanent images are obtained and retained, and that there is a documented interpretation of the fluoroscopic guidance process (needle position confirmation, contrast pattern, target confirmation).

Coding and reimbursement guidance emphasizes that fluoroscopy needs to be documented in the record; if fluoroscopy was used but no images were saved and no interpretation is recorded, the service is difficult to support under review .

Finally, remember that 77002 is an add-on code. It is not payable by itself and must be paired with a qualifying primary procedure on the same claim. If your billing system ever produces a claim line with 77002 but no primary procedure, that claim is structurally vulnerable to denial as an add-on misuse .

2. Comparison to Related Guidance Codes (77001 & 77003)

Correct guidance-code selection depends on clinical context (what is being guided) and anatomic region.

Confusing 77002 with neighboring codes is a common cause of denials, particularly in pain management where spinal guidance is frequent.

  • CPT 77001 – Fluoroscopic guidance for central venous access devices: This code is used for fluoroscopy related to central venous access device procedures (ports, tunneled catheters, etc.).

It is not a general needle guidance code; it is tied to the central venous access workflow and documentation of catheter position .

  • CPT 77002 – Fluoroscopic guidance for non-spinal needle placement: This is the “general” fluoroscopic guidance add-on for needles outside the spine/paraspinal region—biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device

in the trunk (non-spine) and extremities .

  • CPT 77003 – Fluoroscopic guidance for spinal or paraspinous injections: Use 77003 when the needle/catheter guidance is for procedures in the spine or paraspinal region (for diagnostic/therapeutic injections and related services),

consistent with CPT’s radiology guidance structure .

The key distinction is straightforward: 77002 = non-spinal, 77003 = spinal/paraspinal.

Selecting the wrong code can trigger payer edits because many payers expect 77003 with spinal injection families and will deny 77002 in that setting.

Conversely, using 77003 for an extremity joint injection is mismatched to code intent and increases audit friction.

Another modern reality is that many injection codes have been revised to include imaging guidance within the primary code descriptor.

When guidance is bundled into the primary procedure, you do not separately report 77002/77003—this is reinforced in CPT corrections/errata and in NCCI policy concepts

that discourage separate billing of integral guidance .

3. Medicare and Commercial Payer Billing Rules

CPT 77002 has an add-on global status (often described as “ZZZ” in Medicare physician-fee-schedule logic), meaning it inherits the global period of the primary procedure.

Its billing success depends heavily on place of service, payer bundling logic, and whether the primary code already includes guidance.

Site-of-service differences

  • Physician office (non-facility): If the physician/practice provides both the fluoroscopy equipment/technical resources and the interpretation, the service may be billed globally (no 26/TC split). In this setting, reimbursement may reflect both professional work and practice expense, depending on payer fee schedules .
  • Hospital outpatient department / ASC (facility): Medicare facility payment systems frequently package fluoroscopic guidance into the primary procedure. In these settings, the facility may not receive separate payment for 77002, even though the code can still appear on a claim for tracking/completeness .

Physicians may still bill the professional component (modifier 26) when they provided the supervision/interpretation and documentation supports it .

  • Inpatient: Facility reimbursement is generally bundled under DRG logic; the physician professional component may still be billed when appropriate, depending on payer rules and who performed/documented the interpretation.

Medicare example: SI joint injection packaging concept

Medicare policy discussions around SI joint injection coding illustrate the broader theme: imaging guidance can be required for the service, but facility payment may still be packaged. Noridian’s contractor Q&A emphasizes documentation that fluoroscopic or CT guidance was used and notes that separate facility payment is not made when guidance is packaged into the primary HCPCS service; the guidance code may be reported to specify modality .

The takeaway generalizes: if the payer defines guidance as integral/packaged, correct reporting is still necessary for compliance and audit defense, but you should not expect separate facility reimbursement.

Commercial payer variation

Many commercial payers mirror Medicare bundling logic, but contracts can vary. Some plans reimburse guidance separately in certain settings, while others bundle aggressively.

Regardless of payer, the most common denial pattern is when a provider bills 77002 alongside a primary code whose descriptor already includes fluoroscopic or CT guidance (or whose CPT instructions/edits prohibit separate guidance). In those cases, the denial is often correct, and the fix is to remove 77002 rather than append a modifier.

4. ICD-10 Diagnostic Pairing Examples

CPT 77002 is ancillary; the medical necessity is primarily established by the indication for the primary procedure.

That said, payers still evaluate whether diagnoses are consistent with the site and clinical purpose of the guided intervention.

Medicare contractor guidance on nerve blockade services, for example, stresses that documentation must support the selected diagnosis code(s) and the service performed .

Examples of diagnosis categories that commonly support fluoroscopy-guided needle placement include:

  • Deep joint pathology: osteoarthritis of hip/knee, labral pathology workups, inflammatory arthropathies where accurate intra-articular placement matters. Fluoroscopy is often chosen when ultrasound windows are limited (body habitus, deep joint, or required contrast confirmation).
  • Suspected lesions requiring biopsy: diagnosis codes reflecting masses, lesions, nodules, or malignancy suspicion when fluoroscopy is a reasonable targeting modality. Ensure laterality and site specificity match the procedure location.
  • Fluid collections/cysts: abscesses, symptomatic cysts, or post-surgical collections where aspiration/drainage is performed with imaging for safe access. A practical coding rule: the diagnosis must “fit” the anatomic site. A hip injection with a shoulder pain diagnosis invites denial because it appears internally inconsistent.

If the condition is systemic (e.g., inflammatory arthritis), still include a site-specific pain/arthritis code when available.

5. Documentation Requirements for Fluoroscopy

Documentation is the primary defense for 77002 under audit because it proves (a) fluoroscopy was used for guidance, (b) the provider interpreted images to direct needle placement, and (c) images were saved. Reimbursement FAQs and payer guidance repeatedly focus on these core elements .

Minimum recommended elements for a compliant note/report:

  • Explicit statement of fluoroscopic guidance: “Procedure performed under fluoroscopic guidance…”
  • Needle path and target confirmation: describe how fluoroscopy was used to direct placement; if contrast was used, document the confirmation pattern
  • Interpretation language: confirm final position (e.g., intra-articular placement confirmed; needle tip at intended target)
  • Permanent images saved: “Images saved to PACS/EMR” or equivalent archiving statement Fluoroscopy time and number of spot images are not universally required by CPT text for every scenario, but documenting them is a strong practice for completeness and radiation recordkeeping.

If your institution requires it (many do), include total fluoroscopy time and images acquired.

One of the most frequent reasons 77002 fails in review is not that fluoroscopy wasn’t used, but that the record reads like a landmark procedure with no guidance described.

Templates help: a dedicated “Imaging Guidance” section with modality, findings, image retention, and confirmation language can reduce denials and post-payment recoupments.

6. Modifier Usage (26, TC, 59, XE/XS)

Correct modifier use is essential for clean claims. Most modifier errors are component-splitting mistakes (26/TC) or inappropriate attempts to bypass bundling edits (59/X modifiers).

  • Modifier 26 (Professional Component): Use -26 when billing only the physician’s supervision/interpretation (common in facility settings). This communicates that the technical resources (equipment, technologist, supplies) were provided by the facility.
  • Modifier TC (Technical Component): Use -TC when billing only the technical component (typically by facilities or entities providing equipment/technical staff). Under Medicare outpatient packaging, technical payment may still be packaged, but reporting can still be required for tracking .
  • Modifier 59 / XS / XE (Distinct service logic): Use only when there is a truly distinct separately reportable service that would otherwise be denied as duplicate/bundled. Medicare contractors warn against using 59 to unbundle guidance from a procedure that already includes guidance in its definition .

If two separate encounters occur the same day, XE may be conceptually cleaner than 59; if two separate anatomic structures are treated, XS is often appropriate.

Documentation must explicitly support the separation (time/encounter or distinct anatomic site).

If the primary code descriptor already includes fluoroscopic guidance, do not append modifiers to 77002 to “make it pay.”

The compliant action is to remove 77002 and ensure documentation matches the bundled guidance expectation .

7. Common Procedure Pairings with CPT 77002

CPT 77002 is most often paired with needle procedures whose primary codes do not include imaging guidance. While CPT includes extensive parenthetical pairing guidance, the practical approach is to confirm: (1) the base code is “without imaging guidance” or does not specify guidance, and (2) no CPT/NCCI instruction prohibits separate reporting.

High-frequency, high-impact pairings

  • Joint aspiration/injection (without ultrasound guidance): Fluoroscopy is common for deep joints (especially hip) where contrast confirmation is useful. Guidance for joint aspiration/injection coding supports reporting fluoroscopic guidance separately when the injection/aspiration code is the “without ultrasound guidance” version .
  • Tendon sheath / ligament injections: Some tendon sheath or deep soft tissue injections may use fluoroscopy when ultrasound is not feasible. Ensure the primary code does not already include imaging, and document the guidance details.
  • Biopsies and aspirations where fluoroscopy is the chosen modality: While CT/ultrasound are frequent in many biopsy categories, fluoroscopy may be appropriate in select settings. If fluoroscopy was the modality used for needle guidance and permanent images are saved, 77002 may be appropriate when not otherwise bundled.

Unit-of-service concept (do not overcount)

A frequent billing error is reporting multiple units of 77002 because multiple needles were placed or multiple targets were accessed in the same continuous session.

Medicare NCCI policy explains that certain imaging guidance codes are reported only once per encounter, regardless of the number of needle placements .

Even when several injections are performed in one continuous fluoroscopy-guided encounter, 77002 is generally still a single unit unless there is a truly distinct session/encounter.

8. Unit-of-Service, Global Period Conflicts & NCCI Edits

77002 is heavily influenced by edit logic. Two principles drive most compliance decisions:

  • guidance is not separately reported when it is already included in the primary code, and;
  • guidance is usually reported once per session rather than per needle or per target.

NCCI bundling principle

NCCI policy concepts and CPT updates reinforce that if a procedure code descriptor includes radiologic guidance, you should not separately report 77002 for that same service .

This is increasingly relevant as newer injection codes incorporate imaging guidance directly into the primary code definition.

Unit-of-service (MUE-like) practical behavior

Even when a payer does not publish an explicit daily limit to the clinician, claim processing logic often treats 77002 as a single-session code.

If two guided sessions truly occur on the same date, you need separate documentation showing distinct encounters (or clearly distinct anatomic structures) and the appropriate modifier strategy.

Global period interactions

Because 77002 inherits the global period of the primary procedure, the real global-period question is usually about the primary code.

If a primary procedure is performed during the global period of another surgery, you may need modifiers on the primary procedure (e.g., unrelated, staged, return for complication),

and 77002 “rides along” as the add-on. If the primary procedure is denied as global-inclusive due to missing modifiers, the guidance code will also fail.

9. Audit Risk & Best Practices

CPT 77002 is audit-sensitive mainly because it is easy to misuse. Payers and auditors focus on whether guidance was truly performed, properly documented, and not unbundled from a primary code that already includes it.

Medicare contractor guidance explicitly cautions against inappropriate modifier use to unbundle fluoroscopy from inherently-guided nerve blockade services .

Top audit triggers

  • Unbundling: billing 77002 with a primary code that includes fluoroscopic/CT guidance, then appending 59 to override edits. This pattern is high-risk because it suggests billing intent rather than clinical necessity .
  • Insufficient documentation: no saved images, no interpretation language, or a procedure note that does not mention fluoroscopy at all .
  • Overcounting units: billing multiple 77002 units for multiple needle passes in one session, contrary to once-per-encounter logic .
  • Component errors: missing -26 in facility settings or inappropriate -TC billing arrangements that do not match who provided the technical resources.

Best practices that reduce denials and recoupments

  • Template the imaging section: include modality, findings/confirmation, and “images saved” language every time.
  • Train to the “includes guidance” rule: if the primary code says “with imaging,” remove 77002 and avoid modifier workarounds.
  • Monitor utilization patterns: unusually high guidance use compared with peers can trigger focused review; be ready to justify why fluoroscopy (vs ultrasound or no imaging) is clinically appropriate.
  • Align coding to payer specifics: Medicare contractor instructions for certain services may affect which primary code is billed and whether guidance is packaged . When coded and documented correctly, 77002 appropriately represents the added physician work of real-time fluoroscopic needle guidance.

The compliance mantra is simple: code what you did (fluoroscopy guidance), and document what you coded (saved images + interpretation), while respecting bundling rules and unit-of-service expectations.

Official Description

Fluoroscopic guidance for needle placement (eg, biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device) (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

This code, CPT® 77002, pertains to the use of fluoroscopic guidance for the precise placement of needles during various medical procedures, including biopsy, aspiration, injection, or the placement of localization devices. Fluoroscopy is a specialized imaging technique that utilizes a continuous X-ray beam, which is directed through the area of interest in the patient's body. This beam is then projected onto a monitor, allowing healthcare professionals to visualize real-time images, akin to a moving X-ray film. This method provides a dynamic view of the internal structures, enabling the identification and localization of specific organs, tumors, or foreign bodies. It is important to note that fluoroscopy involves a higher level of radiation exposure compared to standard X-ray imaging, making it essential for practitioners to use this technique judiciously. During the procedure, the targeted area is first identified using fluoroscopic imaging, and local anesthesia is typically administered to minimize discomfort. Following this, the appropriate needle is carefully inserted under the guidance of the fluoroscopic images. This technique is crucial for accurately performing procedures such as obtaining tissue samples for biopsy, aspirating fluids, injecting therapeutic agents, or localizing masses for further evaluation. The primary procedural code associated with this service will detail the specific type of procedure performed and the anatomical location involved, while CPT® 77002 is reported separately to account for the fluoroscopic guidance utilized in the needle placement process.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

The use of CPT® 77002 is indicated for various medical scenarios where precise needle placement is required. The following conditions or procedures may necessitate the use of fluoroscopic guidance:

  • Biopsy - To obtain tissue samples from suspicious lesions or masses for diagnostic purposes.
  • Aspiration - To remove fluid from cysts or other abnormal collections within the body.
  • Injection - To administer therapeutic or diagnostic substances directly into a specific area, such as corticosteroids for inflammation or contrast agents for imaging studies.
  • Localization Device Placement - To accurately position devices that assist in the identification of tumors or other structures during subsequent surgical procedures.

2. Procedure

The procedure utilizing CPT® 77002 involves several critical steps to ensure accurate needle placement under fluoroscopic guidance. The following outlines the procedural steps:

  • Step 1: Patient Preparation - The patient is positioned appropriately for the procedure, and the area of interest is identified. The skin is cleaned and sterilized to reduce the risk of infection.
  • Step 2: Anesthesia Administration - Local anesthesia is administered to the targeted area to minimize discomfort during the needle insertion process.
  • Step 3: Fluoroscopic Imaging - Fluoroscopy is employed to visualize the internal structures in real-time. The physician uses the fluoroscopic images to locate the precise area for needle insertion.
  • Step 4: Needle Insertion - The appropriate needle is carefully inserted into the identified area under continuous fluoroscopic guidance. This ensures that the needle is accurately placed for the intended procedure.
  • Step 5: Procedure Execution - Depending on the purpose of the needle placement, the physician may perform a biopsy, aspiration, injection, or place a localization device as indicated.
  • Step 6: Post-Procedure Imaging - Additional fluoroscopic images may be taken to confirm the correct placement of the needle or device and to assess the outcome of the procedure.

3. Post-Procedure

After the completion of the procedure, the patient is monitored for any immediate complications or adverse reactions. The site of needle insertion may be bandaged, and instructions for care at home are provided. Patients are typically advised to avoid strenuous activities for a specified period and to report any unusual symptoms, such as excessive pain, swelling, or signs of infection. Follow-up appointments may be scheduled to review the results of the biopsy or to assess the effectiveness of the injection or other interventions performed during the procedure.

Short Descr NEEDLE LOCALIZATION BY XRAY
Medium Descr FLUOROSCOPIC GUIDANCE NEEDLE PLACEMENT ADD ON
Long Descr Fluoroscopic guidance for needle placement (eg, biopsy, aspiration, injection, localization device) (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
Status Code Active Code
Global Days ZZZ - Code Related to Another Service
PC/TC Indicator (26, TC) 1 - Diagnostic Tests for Radiology Services
Multiple Procedures (51) 0 - No 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) 0 - Payment restriction for assistants at surgery applies to this procedure...
Co-Surgeons (62) 0 - Co-surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Team Surgery (66) 0 - Team surgeons not permitted for this procedure.
Diagnostic Imaging Family 99 - Concept Does Not Apply
APC Status Indicator Items and Services Packaged into APC Rates
ASC Payment Indicator Packaged service/item; no separate payment made.
Type of Service (TOS) 4 - Diagnostic Radiology
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) I4B - Imaging/procedure - other
MUE 1
CCS Clinical Classification 226 - Other diagnostic radiology and related techniques

This is an add-on code that must be used in conjunction with one of these primary codes.

10160 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Puncture aspiration of abscess, hematoma, bulla, or cyst
20206 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, muscle, percutaneous needle
20220 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, bone, trocar, or needle; superficial (eg, ilium, sternum, spinous process, ribs)
20225 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, bone, trocar, or needle; deep (eg, vertebral body, femur)
20520 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC P3 Illustration for Code Removal of foreign body in muscle or tendon sheath; simple
20525 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Illustration for Code Removal of foreign body in muscle or tendon sheath; deep or complicated
20526 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection, therapeutic (eg, local anesthetic, corticosteroid), carpal tunnel
20550 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s); single tendon sheath, or ligament, aponeurosis (eg, plantar "fascia")
20551 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s); single tendon origin/insertion
20552 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s); single or multiple trigger point(s), 1 or 2 muscle(s)
20553 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s); single or multiple trigger point(s), 3 or more muscles
20555 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC R2 CPT Assistant Article Placement of needles or catheters into muscle and/or soft tissue for subsequent interstitial radioelement application (at the time of or subsequent to the procedure)
20600 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, small joint or bursa (eg, fingers, toes); without ultrasound guidance
20605 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, intermediate joint or bursa (eg, temporomandibular, acromioclavicular, wrist, elbow or ankle, olecranon bursa); without ultrasound guidance
20610 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Arthrocentesis, aspiration and/or injection, major joint or bursa (eg, shoulder, hip, knee, subacromial bursa); without ultrasound guidance
20612 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Illustration for Code Aspiration and/or injection of ganglion cyst(s) any location
20615 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Illustration for Code Aspiration and injection for treatment of bone cyst
21116 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Injection procedure for temporomandibular joint arthrography
21550 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC G2 Biopsy, soft tissue of neck or thorax
23350 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 CPT Assistant Article Injection procedure for shoulder arthrography or enhanced CT/MRI shoulder arthrography
24220 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Illustration for Code Injection procedure for elbow arthrography
25246 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Illustration for Code Injection procedure for wrist arthrography
27093 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Illustration for Code Injection procedure for hip arthrography; without anesthesia
27095 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Illustration for Code Injection procedure for hip arthrography; with anesthesia
27369 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 Injection procedure for contrast knee arthrography or contrast enhanced CT/MRI knee arthrography
27648 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection procedure for ankle arthrography
32400 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, pleura, percutaneous needle
32553 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S ASC J8 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Placement of interstitial device(s) for radiation therapy guidance (eg, fiducial markers, dosimeter), percutaneous, intra-thoracic, single or multiple
36002 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC G2 Illustration for Code Injection procedures (eg, thrombin) for percutaneous treatment of extremity pseudoaneurysm
38220 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Diagnostic bone marrow; aspiration(s)
38221 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Diagnostic bone marrow; biopsy(ies)
38222 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC G2 Diagnostic bone marrow; biopsy(ies) and aspiration(s)
38505 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy or excision of lymph node(s); by needle, superficial (eg, cervical, inguinal, axillary)
38794 MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 PUB 100 Illustration for Code Cannulation, thoracic duct
41019 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC G2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Placement of needles, catheters, or other device(s) into the head and/or neck region (percutaneous, transoral, or transnasal) for subsequent interstitial radioelement application
42400 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Illustration for Code Biopsy of salivary gland; needle
42405 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Illustration for Code Biopsy of salivary gland; incisional
47000 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy of liver, needle; percutaneous
47001 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N ASC N1 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy of liver, needle; when done for indicated purpose at time of other major procedure (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
48102 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Physician Quality Reporting CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy of pancreas, percutaneous needle
49180 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Physician Quality Reporting CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, abdominal or retroperitoneal mass, percutaneous needle
49411 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Placement of interstitial device(s) for radiation therapy guidance (eg, fiducial markers, dosimeter), percutaneous, intra-abdominal, intra-pelvic (except prostate), and/or retroperitoneum, single or multiple
50200 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Renal biopsy; percutaneous, by trocar or needle
50390 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Aspiration and/or injection of renal cyst or pelvis by needle, percutaneous
51100 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Aspiration of bladder; by needle
51101 MPFS Status: Active Code APC S ASC P3 Aspiration of bladder; by trocar or intracatheter
51102 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Aspiration of bladder; with insertion of suprapubic catheter
55700 Male Edit MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy, prostate; needle or punch, single or multiple, any approach
55876 Male Edit MPFS Status: Active Code APC S ASC J8 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Placement of interstitial device(s) for radiation therapy guidance (eg, fiducial markers, dosimeter), prostate (via needle, any approach), single or multiple
60100 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Biopsy thyroid, percutaneous core needle
62268 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 Illustration for Code Percutaneous aspiration, spinal cord cyst or syrinx
62269 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Biopsy of spinal cord, percutaneous needle
64400 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; trigeminal nerve, each branch (ie, ophthalmic, maxillary, mandibular)
64405 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; greater occipital nerve
64408 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; vagus nerve
64415 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; brachial plexus, including imaging guidance, when performed
64416 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC J8 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; brachial plexus, continuous infusion by catheter (including catheter placement), including imaging guidance, when performed
64417 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; axillary nerve, including imaging guidance, when performed
64418 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; suprascapular nerve
64420 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; intercostal nerve, single level
64421 Add-on Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; intercostal nerve, each additional level (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
64425 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; ilioinguinal, iliohypogastric nerves
64430 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; pudendal nerve
64435 Female Edit MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; paracervical (uterine) nerve
64445 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; sciatic nerve, including imaging guidance, when performed
64446 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC G2 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; sciatic nerve, continuous infusion by catheter (including catheter placement), including imaging guidance, when performed
64447 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; femoral nerve, including imaging guidance, when performed
64448 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC J8 CPT Assistant Article Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; femoral nerve, continuous infusion by catheter (including catheter placement), including imaging guidance, when performed
64450 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; other peripheral nerve or branch
64455 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Illustration for Code Injection(s), anesthetic agent(s) and/or steroid; plantar common digital nerve(s) (eg, Morton's neuroma)
64505 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC P3 CPT Assistant Article Injection, anesthetic agent; sphenopalatine ganglion
64600 MPFS Status: Active Code APC T ASC A2 CPT Assistant Article Destruction by neurolytic agent, trigeminal nerve; supraorbital, infraorbital, mental, or inferior alveolar branch
64605 MPFS Status: Active Code APC J1 ASC A2 Physician Quality Reporting Destruction by neurolytic agent, trigeminal nerve; second and third division branches at foramen ovale
26 Professional component: certain procedures are a combination of a physician or other qualified health care professional component and a technical component. when the physician or other qualified health care professional component is reported separately, the service may be identified by adding modifier 26 to the usual procedure number.
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.
TC Technical component; under certain circumstances, a charge may be made for the technical component alone; under those circumstances the technical component charge is identified by adding modifier 'tc' to the usual procedure number; technical component charges are institutional charges and not billed separately by physicians; however, portable x-ray suppliers only bill for technical component and should utilize modifier tc; the charge data from portable x-ray suppliers will then be used to build customary and prevailing profiles
LT Left side (used to identify procedures performed on the left side of the body)
RT Right side (used to identify procedures performed on the right side of the body)
X5 Diagnostic services requested by another clinician: for reporting services by a clinician who furnishes care to the patient only as requested by another clinician or subsequent and related services requested by another clinician; this modifier is reported for patient relationships that may not be adequately captured by the above alternative categories; reporting clinician service examples include but are not limited to, the radiologist's interpretation of an imaging study requested by another clinician
GC This service has been performed in part by a resident under the direction of a teaching physician
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
XU Unusual non-overlapping service, the use of a service that is distinct because it does not overlap usual components of the main service
XS Separate structure, a service that is distinct because it was performed on a separate organ/structure
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
Q5 Service furnished under a reciprocal billing arrangement by a substitute physician or by a substitute physical therapist furnishing outpatient physical therapy services in a health professional shortage area, a medically underserved area, or a rural area
XE Separate encounter, a service that is distinct because it occurred during a separate encounter
GA Waiver of liability statement issued as required by payer policy, individual case
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
SG Ambulatory surgical center (asc) facility service
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
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.
KX Requirements specified in the medical policy have been met
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).
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
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.
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
F5 Right hand, thumb
JW Drug amount discarded/not administered to any patient
Q1 Routine clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study
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.
33 Preventive services: when the primary purpose of the service is the delivery of an evidence based service in accordance with a us preventive services task force a or b rating in effect and other preventive services identified in preventive services mandates (legislative or regulatory), the service may be identified by adding 33 to the procedure. for separately reported services specifically identified as preventive, the modifier should not be used.
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).
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).
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).
74 Discontinued out-patient hospital/ambulatory surgery center (asc) procedure after administration of anesthesia: due to extenuating circumstances or those that threaten the well being of the patient, the physician may terminate a surgical or diagnostic procedure after the administration of anesthesia (local, regional block(s), general) or after the procedure was started (incision made, intubation started, scope inserted, etc). under these circumstances, the procedure started but terminated can be reported by its usual procedure number and the addition of modifier 74. note: the elective cancellation of a service prior to the administration of anesthesia and/or surgical preparation of the patient should not be reported. for physician reporting of a discontinued procedure, see modifier 53.
77 Repeat procedure by another physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a basic procedure or service was repeated by another physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 77 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
78 Unplanned return to the operating/procedure room by the same physician or other qualified health care professional following initial procedure for a related procedure during the postoperative period: it may be necessary to indicate that another procedure was performed during the postoperative period of the initial procedure (unplanned procedure following initial procedure). when this procedure is related to the first, and requires the use of an operating/procedure room, it may be reported by adding modifier 78 to the related procedure. (for repeat procedures, see modifier 76.)
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.)
95 Synchronous telemedicine service rendered via a real-time interactive audio and video 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 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 would be sufficient to meet the key components and/or requirements of the same service when rendered via a face-to-face interaction. modifier 95 may only be appended to the services listed in appendix p. appendix p is the list of cpt codes for services that are typically performed face-to-face, but may be rendered via a real-time (synchronous) interactive audio and video telecommunications system.
AS Physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or clinical nurse specialist services for assistant at surgery
CC Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed)
EJ Subsequent claims for a defined course of therapy, e.g., epo, sodium hyaluronate, infliximab
ET Emergency services
F1 Left hand, second digit
F2 Left hand, third digit
F3 Left hand, fourth digit
F6 Right hand, second digit
F7 Right hand, third digit
F9 Right hand, fifth digit
FA Left hand, thumb
FY X-ray taken using computed radiography technology/cassette-based imaging
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
GX Notice of liability issued, voluntary under payer policy
GZ Item or service expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary
JL Three month supply of drug or biological
JZ Zero drug amount discarded/not administered to any patient
KT Beneficiary resides in a competitive bidding area and travels outside that competitive bidding area and receives a competitive bid item
ME The order for this service adheres to appropriate use criteria in the clinical decision support mechanism consulted by the ordering professional
MF The order for this service does not adhere to the appropriate use criteria in the clinical decision support mechanism consulted by the ordering professional
MG The order for this service does not have applicable appropriate use criteria in the qualified clinical decision support mechanism consulted by the ordering professional
MH Unknown if ordering professional consulted a clinical decision support mechanism for this service, related information was not provided to the furnishing professional or provider
PD Diagnostic or related non diagnostic item or service provided in a wholly owned or operated entity to a patient who is admitted as an inpatient within 3 days
Q0 Investigational clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved clinical research study
QQ Ordering professional consulted a qualified clinical decision support mechanism for this service and the related data was provided to the furnishing professional
SA Nurse practitioner rendering service in collaboration with a physician
T1 Left foot, second digit
T2 Left foot, third digit
T3 Left foot, fourth digit
T5 Right foot, great toe
T6 Right foot, second digit
T7 Right foot, third digit
T9 Right foot, fifth digit
TA Left foot, great toe
TF Intermediate level of care
TP Medical transport, unloaded vehicle
TR School-based individualized education program (iep) services provided outside the public school district responsible for the student
XP Separate practitioner, a service that is distinct because it was performed by a different practitioner
Date
Action
Notes
2025-01-01 Note New guideline added per Errata and Technical Corrections dated 2024-12-02.
2021-01-01 Note Guidelines changed.
2017-01-01 Changed Long and Medium descriptions changed. Guidelines changed.
2013-01-01 Changed Guideline information changed.
2011-01-01 Changed Guideline information changed.
2007-01-01 Added First appearance in code book in 2007.
Code
Description
Code
Description
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