Coding Ahead
CasePilot
Medical Coding Assistant
CaseConsultant
Instant Email Coding Consultant
Case2Code
Search and Code Lookup Tool
CareerCenter
Medical Coding Job Board
Log in Register free account

Need help choosing the right code?

Ask CasePilot about procedures, modifiers, bundling, and coding guidance.

Try CasePilot

Quick Reference

  • Code definition: CPT 93350 covers transthoracic echocardiography performed at rest and during cardiovascular stress (treadmill, bicycle, or pharmacologic), with real-time 2D imaging, M-mode recording when performed, interpretation, and report. The code captures the echo component only; it does not include continuous ECG monitoring or physician supervision of the stress portion.
  • Key billing rule: MUE = 1; only one unit per beneficiary per date of service. PC/TC Indicator = 1 applies, meaning Modifier 26 and TC splits are both valid and commonly required in facility settings.
  • Modifier essentials: Modifier 26 when the cardiologist interprets only (facility setting); TC when the entity bills equipment and staff only; Modifier 59 with extreme caution when a distinct resting study is separately medically necessary on the same date.
  • Documentation must-have: The report must document stress modality (treadmill protocol with METs achieved, bicycle watts, or pharmacologic agent with dosing), hemodynamic response at rest and peak, and a wall motion comparison between rest and stress phases with quantified ejection fraction.
  • Top confusion point: Using 93350 when the interpreting physician also supervised continuous ECG monitoring during the stress. That scenario requires 93351, not 93350. Reporting 93350 in that setting undercodes the service and leaves revenue uncaptured.
  • Bundling alert: Resting echo codes (93306, 93307, 93308) are NCCI-bundled into 93350 on the same date. Separate billing of these requires a distinct clinical indication with independent documentation, which is uncommon and audit-prone.
  • Multiple procedures reduction: Multiple Procedures Indicator = 6 triggers special cardiovascular diagnostic payment reduction rules on the technical component when multiple diagnostic cardiovascular services are billed on the same date [1].

When to Use This Code

Clinical Indications

93350 is appropriate when a cardiologist or other qualified health care professional (QHP) performs and interprets the echocardiographic study but does NOT supervise continuous ECG monitoring during the stress portion. Clinically, this code applies to:

  • Evaluation of known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD), where new or worsening regional wall motion abnormalities during stress indicate myocardial ischemia
  • Assessment of myocardial viability in patients with prior infarction or suspected hibernating/stunned myocardium
  • Hemodynamic evaluation of valvular heart disease under stress (particularly aortic stenosis with low gradient, and mitral regurgitation severity during exertion)
  • Risk stratification prior to intermediate or high-risk non-cardiac surgery when resting evaluation is insufficient per ACC/AHA criteria [6]
  • Evaluation of exertional symptoms (chest pain, dyspnea, syncope, palpitations) when resting echo and ECG are inconclusive
  • Post-revascularization assessment of procedural success and residual ischemia

Scope and Setting

The stress modality captured by this code includes treadmill exercise, bicycle ergometry, or pharmacologically induced stress (typically dobutamine for patients unable to exercise). Both modalities are reported with the same code.

93350 applies regardless of whether Doppler components are documented during the stress study. Since the 2023 CPT restructuring, Doppler analysis performed as part of the stress protocol is considered integral to the study and is not separately billable [7].

Place of service affects how the code is billed rather than which code applies. In the physician office (POS 11), the cardiologist who owns the equipment, performs the study, and interprets it bills globally with no modifier. In hospital outpatient (POS 22) or off-campus HOD (POS 19) settings, the physician bills with Modifier 26 and the facility bills TC.


Code Differentiation Table

Code Description When to Use Instead
93350 Stress echo with interpretation and report; echo component only Echocardiographer interprets echo only; ECG stress monitoring performed by a different provider or not separately supervised
93351 Stress echo with continuous ECG monitoring, supervision by physician or QHP Same physician performs AND supervises continuous ECG monitoring during stress; includes what 93016 and 93017 cover
93306 Transthoracic echo complete, with spectral and color flow Doppler, at rest Resting study only; no stress component ordered or performed
93015 Cardiovascular stress test; global (supervision, tracing, interpretation and report) Stress ECG only, no echo performed; or separately billable when a different provider handles all stress ECG components alongside 93350
93016 Cardiovascular stress test; supervision only Component-level billing when a separate physician supervises the stress ECG alongside a 93350 reported by a different interpreting physician

The single most critical differentiator is ECG supervision. If the physician signing the echo report also supervised the continuous ECG during stress, 93351 is required. If someone else handled ECG supervision, or if no continuous ECG monitoring was supervised, 93350 is correct. These two codes are mutually exclusive; never report them together [1].

flowchart TD
    A[Stress echo performed] --> B{Did interpreting physician supervise continuous ECG monitoring?}
    B -- Yes --> C[Use 93351]
    B -- No --> D{Was ECG stress component performed by a separate provider?}
    D -- Yes, separately billable --> E[93350 + 93016/93017/93018 as applicable]
    D -- No ECG supervision billed --> F[93350 only]
    C --> G{Echocardiographic contrast used?}
    F --> G
    E --> G
    G -- Yes --> H[Add 93352]
    G -- No --> I[Done]

Billing and Modifier Rules

PC/TC Component Billing

PC/TC Indicator = 1 means 93350 follows standard diagnostic test splitting rules [1]:

  • Global (no modifier): One provider or group owns the equipment, performs the study, and provides the interpretation. Common in private cardiology offices.
  • Modifier 26: Physician provides interpretation and written report only. The facility or another entity owns the equipment and bills TC. Required when a cardiologist reads a study performed at a hospital or another facility's equipment.
  • TC: Entity (hospital, outpatient facility) bills for equipment, technologist, and overhead only. No interpretation included.

Modifiers 26 and TC are mutually exclusive on the same claim line.

Add-On Codes

Add-On Code Description When to Report
93352 Echocardiographic contrast agent during stress echo When contrast agent administered to improve endocardial border visualization; always reported in addition to 93350 or 93351; PC/TC Indicator = 0 (no TC split)
93320 Doppler echo, pulsed and/or continuous wave, complete May be reported with 93350 when complete Doppler assessment is separately performed and documented
93321 Doppler echo, pulsed and/or continuous wave, follow-up or limited Same as above; follow-up or limited Doppler
93325 Color flow velocity mapping May be reported with 93350 when color flow Doppler separately documented
93356 Myocardial strain imaging, speckle tracking When speckle tracking strain assessment is performed and separately documented

NCCI Bundling and MUE

  • 93350 + 93306/93307/93308: NCCI bundles the resting echo codes as component services. Do not separately bill the resting phase of a stress study. Modifier 59 applies only when a genuinely separate, complete resting study is performed for a distinct clinical indication with independent documentation. This scenario is rare and carries significant audit risk.
  • 93351 + 93016 or 93017: These component stress test codes are bundled into 93351. Never separately bill them alongside 93351.
  • 93350 + 93015: When 93350 is reported and a separate physician performs all components of the stress ECG (supervision, tracing, interpretation), 93015 may be separately billable. NCCI interaction depends on provider relationship; verify current PTP edit files [4].
  • MUE = 1: One stress echo per beneficiary per date of service. A second study on the same date requires a distinct clinical indication and is unlikely to pass medical necessity review.

Documentation Essentials

Required Elements

Every stress echo report must contain:

  • Clinical indication linked to a specific ICD-10-CM code; the diagnosis must appear in the ordering documentation and the interpreting report
  • Stress modality and protocol: treadmill protocol name (e.g., Bruce), stage achieved, METs reached; bicycle ergometry watts achieved; or pharmacologic agent (e.g., dobutamine), dosing, infusion rate, and patient response
  • Hemodynamic data: resting and peak heart rate, blood pressure at each stage, percentage of maximum predicted heart rate achieved, and reason for termination
  • Resting echocardiographic findings: baseline wall motion by segment, quantified ejection fraction (numeric percentage, not a range descriptor), chamber dimensions, and valvular assessment
  • Stress echocardiographic findings: wall motion at peak stress compared segment by segment to rest, notation of any new or worsening regional wall motion abnormalities, and EF at peak stress
  • Image quality statement: if contrast (93352) was administered, the report must document which segments were inadequately visualized without contrast and confirm the number of affected segments
  • Physician signature on the final interpretation; attestation language is required in teaching settings

If 93351 is being considered instead of 93350, the record must also contain the continuous ECG tracing, rhythm interpretation, and ST-segment analysis from the stress portion.

Audit Red Flags

Auditors flag these documentation patterns specifically for stress echo claims:

  • Ejection fraction described qualitatively ("normal," "mildly reduced") rather than quantified numerically
  • Wall motion assessment limited to a global statement rather than segmental analysis comparing rest to stress
  • No documented reason for termination of stress (critical for demonstrating the study reached diagnostic adequacy or appropriate endpoint)
  • Contrast use (93352) billed without documentation of suboptimal image quality; the record must name specific segments that could not be adequately visualized
  • Repeat stress echo within a short interval without a documented change in clinical status, symptoms, or a new cardiac event

Medicare, Commercial, and Medicaid Payer Rules

Medicare

93350 is covered under Medicare Part B as a diagnostic cardiac imaging service. Coverage requires medical necessity supported by the clinical indication in the medical record [5].

Multiple MACs maintain LCDs governing stress echocardiography and cardiovascular stress testing. LCD coverage criteria are jurisdiction-specific; verify the applicable LCD for your MAC (Novitas, CGS, Noridian, NGS, WPS, Palmetto GBA, First Coast) via the CMS Medicare Coverage Database [5]. Typical medical necessity criteria include: exertional symptoms (chest pain, dyspnea, palpitations, syncope) with an intermediate pretest probability for CAD; known CAD with change in clinical status; pre-operative cardiovascular risk stratification in patients with intermediate or high surgical risk per ACC/AHA criteria; and stress assessment of valvular hemodynamics.

Multiple Procedures Indicator = 6 means the technical component of 93350 is subject to special cardiovascular diagnostic payment reduction when billed on the same date as other diagnostic cardiovascular imaging services (e.g., nuclear stress test). Verify current CMS reduction percentages, as they update annually [1].

Site-of-service payment differentials apply. Non-facility (office) RVUs are higher than facility RVUs for physician payment, because the practice expense component shifts to the facility when the service is provided in a hospital outpatient setting.

Commercial Payers

Prior authorization requirements vary by payer and plan. Stress echo is often subject to prior authorization for non-urgent indications at major commercial payers, particularly when performed in an outpatient setting. Verify authorization requirements before scheduling elective studies.

Some commercial payers apply automated bundling edits that deny 93306 or 93308 billed on the same date as 93350, consistent with NCCI logic. Others may auto-downcode 93351 to 93350 when documentation does not explicitly support physician supervision of continuous ECG monitoring; review remittance advice carefully for these adjustments.

Medicaid

Coverage and medical necessity criteria for stress echocardiography vary substantially by state and managed Medicaid plan. Verify prior authorization and frequency requirements with the applicable state Medicaid agency or managed care organization before service.


Common Denials and Prevention

93351 billed when 93350 is correct (or vice versa) Payers deny claims when the documentation does not support the billed code. If 93351 is billed but the record shows the cardiologist only interpreted the echo and did not supervise continuous ECG monitoring, the claim will be adjusted to 93350 or denied. Conversely, if the cardiologist supervised the ECG stress but 93350 was submitted, the facility's TC claim and the supervising physician's 93016 claim will conflict.

Prevention: Establish a documentation workflow that captures ECG supervision separately from echo interpretation. The interpreting physician's report should explicitly state whether they supervised the stress ECG monitoring.

93306 or 93308 denied as bundled NCCI edits automatically deny resting echo codes billed on the same date as 93350 or 93351. This is a high-volume denial pattern in cardiology practices that have not updated their charge capture rules [4].

Prevention: Remove 93306, 93307, and 93308 from same-day charge triggers when 93350 or 93351 is billed. If a genuinely distinct resting study was performed, attach Modifier 59 with supporting documentation that demonstrates the separate clinical indication and independent documentation. Prepare for payer scrutiny; consider proactive documentation in the report.

93352 denied for missing contrast justification Payers require documentation that echocardiographic contrast was medically necessary, typically requiring that two or more myocardial segments were not adequately visualized without contrast [1].

Prevention: The interpreting report must name the specific segments affected and state the contrast indication before describing contrast-enhanced findings. A generic "contrast used to improve image quality" statement is insufficient.

Modifier 26 missing in facility setting When a cardiologist interprets a study performed at a hospital or outpatient facility but bills 93350 globally, the hospital's TC claim creates a duplicate billing conflict and the physician's claim may be denied or adjusted.

Prevention: Billing systems serving cardiologists who read studies at facility-owned equipment must automatically append Modifier 26 when POS is hospital outpatient, ED, or similar facility settings.

Frequency limitation denial Medicare and many commercial payers will deny a repeat stress echo performed within a short interval (often 12 months) without documented clinical justification for repeat testing.

Prevention: The order and the report must document the specific clinical change (new symptoms, post-revascularization, clinical deterioration) that justifies repeat testing. Reference the prior study date and explain why results are no longer representative of the patient's current status.


Coding Scenarios

Scenario 1 (Office, global billing): A 62-year-old with stable angina (I20.8) presents to a private cardiology practice. The cardiologist performs a treadmill exercise stress echo, supervises continuous ECG monitoring throughout, and provides the written interpretation. The practice owns the ultrasound equipment.

Correct coding: 93351, no modifier, primary diagnosis I20.8

Why: The physician performed the echo AND supervised continuous ECG monitoring. 93351 captures both components globally. Using 93350 here would undercode the service and miss the ECG supervision component.

Scenario 2 (Hospital outpatient, split billing): A 68-year-old with known atherosclerotic heart disease (I25.10) undergoes dobutamine stress echo in the hospital outpatient department. A hospital sonographer performs the technical portion; the cardiologist interprets remotely and provides the written report. The cardiologist did not supervise the dobutamine infusion or ECG monitoring.

Correct coding: Physician: 93350-26 with I25.10. Hospital: 93350-TC with I25.10.

Why: The cardiologist interpreted the echo study only; the hospital supervised the stress and owns the equipment. 93350 (not 93351) applies because the physician did not supervise continuous ECG monitoring. Both parties bill 93350 with their respective component modifier.

Scenario 3 (Contrast addition): A 58-year-old with exertional dyspnea (R06.09) undergoes exercise stress echo. At rest, the anterolateral and inferolateral walls cannot be adequately visualized. Definity contrast is administered; the report documents that two segments were non-diagnostic without contrast and names them specifically.

Correct coding: 93350 (or 93351 if ECG supervision applies) + 93352, primary diagnosis R06.09

Why: 93352 is an add-on code always listed in addition to the primary stress echo code. The report's explicit documentation of non-visualized segments supports the add-on; a claim without this documentation will be denied.

Scenario 4 (Pre-operative, medical necessity nuance): A 74-year-old scheduled for elective hip replacement undergoes dobutamine stress echo ordered for pre-operative cardiovascular clearance. Primary diagnosis: Z01.810. The cardiologist performs echo and supervises ECG monitoring in the outpatient cardiology clinic.

Correct coding: 93351 globally (office/clinic), primary diagnosis Z01.810

Why: The cardiologist performs all components. Pre-operative indications are covered when ACC/AHA criteria for intermediate or high surgical risk are met [6]. Verify coverage under applicable MAC LCD before billing; not all pre-operative stress tests are automatically covered without documented guideline-based indications in the medical record.


Related Codes

  • 93351: Stress echo with continuous ECG monitoring and physician supervision; use when interpreting physician supervises the stress ECG component
  • 93352: Contrast agent add-on for stress echo; always paired with 93350 or 93351 when contrast administered
  • 93306: Complete resting transthoracic echo with Doppler; NCCI-bundled with 93350 on same date
  • 93015: Cardiovascular stress test, global; stress ECG service that may be separately billable when a different provider performs all ECG components alongside 93350
  • 93016: Cardiovascular stress test, supervision only; component-level billing with 93350 when different physician supervises ECG stress
  • 93356: Myocardial strain imaging, speckle tracking; add-on when speckle tracking performed and documented with 93350 or 93351
  • 0439T: Myocardial contrast perfusion echocardiography; add-on for perfusion assessment, distinct from 93352 (endocardial border contrast)

Sources

  1. CPT Code 93350 Official Description and CMS PFS Indicators — CMS Physician Fee Schedule; verified via local CPT database: active code, MUE=1, PC/TC Indicator=1, Multiple Procedures Indicator=6
  2. CPT Code 93351 Official Description and CMS PFS Indicators — CMS Physician Fee Schedule; active code, MUE=1, PC/TC Indicator=1
  3. CPT Code 93352 Official Description and CMS PFS Indicators — CMS Physician Fee Schedule; active add-on code, MUE=1, PC/TC Indicator=0
  4. CMS NCCI Policy Manual, Medicine Chapter — CMS; bundling rules for cardiovascular diagnostic services; verify current quarterly PTP edit files
  5. CMS Medicare Coverage Database, Stress Echocardiography LCDs — CMS and MAC contractors; medical necessity criteria vary by jurisdiction
  6. ACC/AHA Guideline on the Evaluation and Diagnosis of Chest Pain — ACC/AHA, 2021; clinical indications for stress echocardiography including pre-operative risk stratification
  7. AMA CPT Assistant, Echocardiography Guidance — AMA (subscription required); 93350/93351 component reporting and 2023 echocardiography code restructuring; verify via AMA CPT Assistant subscription

Related Codes

Official Description

Echocardiography, transthoracic, real-time with image documentation (2D), includes M-mode recording, when performed, during rest and cardiovascular stress test using treadmill, bicycle exercise and/or pharmacologically induced stress, with interpretation and report;

© Copyright 2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

Common Language Description

The CPT® Code 93350 refers to a specific echocardiography procedure known as transthoracic echocardiography, which is performed in real-time and includes image documentation in two dimensions (2D). This procedure is comprehensive, as it encompasses M-mode recording when necessary, and is conducted both at rest and during a cardiovascular stress test. The stress test can be induced through various methods, including exercise on a treadmill or bicycle, or through pharmacological means. The primary goal of this echocardiography is to evaluate the heart's structure and function, providing critical insights into cardiac dynamics. During the procedure, a baseline echocardiogram is first obtained while the patient is at rest, allowing for a thorough assessment of the heart's anatomy and performance. The physician or qualified healthcare professional utilizes a series of real-time tomographic images, which are recorded digitally or on videotape, to analyze various aspects of cardiac health, including ventricular function, chamber sizes, wall thickness, motion, aortic roots, and the condition of cardiac valves. The procedure may require multiple transducer positions to capture images from different cardiac windows, ensuring a comprehensive evaluation. Following the resting phase, the exercise component is initiated, during which the patient's heart rate and blood pressure are closely monitored. The physician may also employ a continuous ECG to track the heart's electrical activity throughout the stress test. The procedure is designed to continue until the patient reaches a target heart rate or is unable to proceed due to fatigue or other factors. After the stress component, images of the left ventricular wall motion are captured, and these images are subsequently organized for review and interpretation. The physician compares the current study with any previous cardiac evaluations to identify changes and abnormalities, ultimately providing a detailed interpretation and written report of the findings.

© Copyright 2026 Coding Ahead. All rights reserved.

1. Indications

The echocardiography procedure described by CPT® Code 93350 is indicated for various clinical scenarios where assessment of cardiac structure and function is necessary. The following conditions may warrant this procedure:

  • Evaluation of Cardiac Function: This procedure is performed to assess the overall function of the heart, including ventricular performance and wall motion abnormalities.
  • Assessment of Cardiac Valves: It is indicated for evaluating the condition and functionality of the heart valves, which may be affected by various cardiac diseases.
  • Monitoring of Known Cardiac Conditions: Patients with pre-existing cardiac conditions may require this echocardiography to monitor changes over time.
  • Investigation of Symptoms: It is indicated for patients presenting with symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath, or unexplained fatigue, where cardiac evaluation is necessary.

2. Procedure

The procedure for CPT® Code 93350 involves several critical steps to ensure a comprehensive evaluation of the heart. The first step is the placement of a three-lead ECG if gating is required. Following this, a baseline echocardiogram is obtained while the patient is at rest. This initial phase allows for the evaluation of cardiac structure and dynamics through a series of real-time tomographic images, which are recorded either digitally or on videotape. During this phase, M-mode recordings may be utilized to facilitate dimensional measurements of the heart's chambers and walls. The physician assesses various parameters, including ventricular function, chamber sizes, wall thickness, motion, aortic roots, and the condition of cardiac valves. To achieve a thorough assessment, multiple transducer positions or orientations may be necessary to capture images from different cardiac windows. After the resting phase, the exercise component of the study is initiated. The patient's heart rate and blood pressure are continuously monitored throughout this phase. A staged stress protocol is employed, and the patient's response to the stress is carefully observed. Unless contraindicated, the exercise or pharmacological stress continues until the patient reaches the target heart rate or is unable to continue due to fatigue. Immediately following the completion of the stress component, images of the left ventricular wall motion are obtained. These images are then organized and submitted for review and interpretation. The physician evaluates any abnormalities in cardiac structure or dynamics, quantifying the findings as necessary. Previous cardiac studies are compared to the current evaluation to identify any changes. Finally, the physician or qualified healthcare professional provides an interpretation of the ECG and compiles a written report detailing the findings.

3. Post-Procedure

After the completion of the echocardiography procedure, the patient is monitored until their heart rate returns to normal levels. The intravenous catheter, if used for administering contrast agents during the stress component, is removed. The physician or qualified healthcare professional then reviews and interprets the contrast-enhanced images, if applicable, and provides a comprehensive written report of the findings. This report includes an assessment of any abnormalities noted during the procedure and may also include recommendations for further evaluation or management based on the results obtained.

Short Descr STRESS TTE ONLY
Medium Descr ECHO TTHRC R-T 2D W/WO M-MODE COMPLETE REST&ST
Long Descr Echocardiography, transthoracic, real-time with image documentation (2D), includes M-mode recording, when performed, during rest and cardiovascular stress test using treadmill, bicycle exercise and/or pharmacologically induced stress, with interpretation and report;
Status Code Active Code
Global Days XXX - Global Concept Does Not Apply
PC/TC Indicator (26, TC) 1 - Diagnostic Tests for Radiology Services
Multiple Procedures (51) 6 - Special payment adjustment rules on the technical component (TC) of multiple diagnostic cardiovascular services 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 Procedure or Service, Not Discounted when Multiple
Type of Service (TOS) 5 - Diagnostic Laboratory
Berenson-Eggers TOS (BETOS) T2B - Other tests - cardiovascular stress tests
MUE 1
CCS Clinical Classification 193 - Diagnostic ultrasound of heart (echocardiogram)

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

0439T Add On Code MPFS Status: Carrier Priced APC N ASC N1 Myocardial contrast perfusion echocardiography, at rest or with stress, for assessment of myocardial ischemia or viability (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
93320 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Doppler echocardiography, pulsed wave and/or continuous wave with spectral display (List separately in addition to codes for echocardiographic imaging); complete
93321 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Doppler echocardiography, pulsed wave and/or continuous wave with spectral display (List separately in addition to codes for echocardiographic imaging); follow-up or limited study (List separately in addition to codes for echocardiographic imaging)
93325 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N PUB 100 CPT Assistant Article Doppler echocardiography color flow velocity mapping (List separately in addition to codes for echocardiography)
93352 Addon Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC M CPT Assistant Article Use of echocardiographic contrast agent during stress echocardiography (List separately in addition to code for primary procedure)
93356 Add-on Code Resequenced Code MPFS Status: Active Code APC N Myocardial strain imaging using speckle tracking-derived assessment of myocardial mechanics (List separately in addition to codes for echocardiography imaging)
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.
GC This service has been performed in part by a resident under the direction of a teaching physician
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
CR Catastrophe/disaster related
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.
XU Unusual non-overlapping service, the use of a service that is distinct because it does not overlap usual components of the main service
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).
ET Emergency services
XE Separate encounter, a service that is distinct because it occurred during a separate encounter
AQ Physician providing a service in an unlisted health professional shortage area (hpsa)
GZ Item or service expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary
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).
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.
76 Repeat procedure or service by same physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a procedure or service was repeated by the same physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 76 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
77 Repeat procedure by another physician or other qualified health care professional: it may be necessary to indicate that a basic procedure or service was repeated by another physician or other qualified health care professional subsequent to the original procedure or service. this circumstance may be reported by adding modifier 77 to the repeated procedure or service. note: this modifier should not be appended to an e/m service.
93 Synchronous telemedicine service rendered via telephone or other real-time interactive audio-only telecommunications system : synchronous telemedicine service is defined as a real-time interaction between a physician or other qualified health care professional and a patient who is located away at a distant site from the physician or other qualified health care professional. the totality of the communication of information exchanged between the physician or other qualified health care professional and the patient during the course of the synchronous telemedicine service must be of an amount and nature that is sufficient to meet the key components and/or requirements of the same service when rendered via a face-to-face interaction.
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.
AM Physician, team member service
CC Procedure code change (use 'cc' when the procedure code submitted was changed either for administrative reasons or because an incorrect code was filed)
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
GX Notice of liability issued, voluntary under payer policy
GY Item or service statutorily excluded, does not meet the definition of any medicare benefit or, for non-medicare insurers, is not a contract benefit
MC Ordering professional is not required to consult a clinical decision support mechanism due to the significant hardship exception of electronic health record or clinical decision support mechanism vendor issues
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
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
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
XP Separate practitioner, a service that is distinct because it was performed by a different practitioner
XS Separate structure, a service that is distinct because it was performed on a separate organ/structure
Date
Action
Notes
2013-01-01 Changed Medium Descriptor changed.
2010-01-01 Changed Code description changed.
2009-01-01 Changed Code description changed
1990-01-01 Added First appearance in code book in 1990.
Code
Description
Code
Description
Code
Description
Code
Description
Code
Description
CasePilot

Get instant expert-level medical coding assistance.

Ask about:
CPT Codes Guidelines Modifiers Crosswalks NCCI Edits Compliance Medicare Coverage
Example: "What is CPT code 99213?" or "Guidelines for E/M services"