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Bladder Tumor Resection and Ureteral Stent placement

Can someone please offer guidance?
My provider performed transurethral resection of bladder tumor that invaded the ureteric orifice. He inserted a stent to "facilitate drainage".
NCCI Edits bundle the two procedures together, is it appropriate to unbundle them in this scenario?

"The patient had a large, approximately 3-4 cm papillary bladder tumor on his right lateral wall, obscuring the identification of his right ureteral orifice. This was resected sequentially down to muscle. The right ureteral orifice was identified and it was not the source of the tumor, but did appear to have some involvement of papillary tumor at the orifice. The right ureteral orifice was resected and sent as a separate pathologic specimen. Given the resection, we placed a ureteral stent on this side to facilitate drainage and also assist future resections."

52332-59-RT
52335

Thanks in advance…

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Stent Exchange Diagnosis Codes

We do a number of ureteral stent exchanges in our ASC. The ICD-10 diagnoses I assign are T19.1XXA, Z46.6 with the 3rd one being the reason for the stent to begin with … with hydronephrosis being the most common. My question is two-fold.

1. Does it matter what sequence the codes are in?
2. For those patients that have the stent permanently and return for an exchange every 6 months or so…should the 7 character to a D?

Thanks for any assistance you can provide.

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Three Pointers To Help You Avoid Common Stent Coding Mistakes

When your urologist places a stent after a ureteroscopic procedure (say for instance stone removal, the coding is not always cut and dry. You will need to dig into the documentation details to ensure you select the proper code for the clinical circumstances.

Here are three pointers which will help you stay away from the most common stent coding mistakes.

Get to know when the stent is not really a stent

Not each and every mention of stent’ in your urologist’s documentation means you can report a stent code such as 52332 (Cystourethroscopy, with insertion of indwelling ureteral stent [e.g., Gibbons or double-J type]).

Here’s the reason: There are two types of stents your urologist will make use of temporary and permanent and the first one is not really a true stent. A temporary stent is in actuality a ureteral catheter, placed at surgery to assist during surgery. The urologist then removes the catheter post surgery before the patient leaves the operating room. In this situation, you should not report stent code 52332. Instead, use 52005 (Cystourethroscopy, with ureteral catheterization, with or without irrigation, instillation, or ureteropyelography, exclusive of radiological service).

For postoperative drainage stents, stick with 52332

The second type of stent is a permanent stent. These types of stents are placed after surgery for drainage, and are indwelling and self retaining. The patient goes away from the operative room with the stent in place, and the stent will be removed at a later date.

Whereas temporary stents that are often placed as part of an endoscopic procedure (52320-52355) can’t be reported in addition to the primary procedure, an indwelling stent, which is placed during the procedure to keep the ureter open and to aid recovery after the procedure can be billed separately.

Here’s how: When your urologist documents that he placed a double-J stent for postoperative drainage, you should use 52332.

Bilateral coding: If your urologist places bilateral double-J stents for postop drainage, your exact coding will depend on the payer. For Medicare, use 52332 with modifier 50 (Bilateral procedure) appended. Private payers may also want 52332-50 or they may request you use 52332-LT (Left side) and 52332-50-RT (Right side) on two lines.

In many instances, report stent placement separately

If your urologist places a stent during the same session in which he also carries out another ureteroscopic procedure, most likely you can report both procedures.

When the patient has a large ureteral stone which the urologist removes ureteroscopically, there may follow a significant amount of ureteral swelling. In order to avoid complete ureteral obstruction, an indwelling ureteral stent may be placed to keep the ureter open.”

In this situation, bill the ureteroscopy code (52352, Cystourethroscopy, with ureteroscopy and/or pyeloscopy; with removal or manipulation of calculus [ureteral catheterization is included]) and 52332. For some payers you may need to add modifier 51 (multiple procedures) to 52332 to indicate that you have carried out a secondary procedure. You don’t need to add modifier 59 (Distinct procedural service) as because 52332 is no longer bundled with 52320-52355.

For more on this and for other specialty-specific articles to assist your urology coding, sign up for a good Medical coding resource like Coding Institute.

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Related Medical Coding Articles

Ureteroscopy with laser lithotripsy and stent placement question

I think I am correct on this, but I just want to double check.

Urologist did a cystoscopy with right ureteroscopy and laser lithotripsy, with bilateral stents placed. Am I correct to code this as 52356-RT and 52332-59LT? My reasoning is that only the stents are bilateral; the ureteroscopy and laser litho were right-sided only.

Thanks!

Medical Billing and Coding Forum

Please help!! Renal Artery stent coding??

1. Aortoiliac angiography with runoff.
2. Selective renal angiography.
3. PTCA and stenting of the left superior renal artery.
INDICATION: Resistant hypertension.
BRIEF HISTORY:
65-year-old man with significant atherosclerotic disease. He has had a resistant hypertension. His workup revealed a high-grade left superior renal artery stenosis. He has also been having bilateral lower extremity claudication. He is now referred for a left renal artery evaluation and possible stenting as well as lower extremity angiography.

PROCEDURE IN DETAIL:
Informed consent was obtained. The patient was brought to the catheterization laboratory in a fasting state. The right groin was prepped and draped in a sterile fashion. 1% Lidocaine was used for local anesthesia. Fentanyl and Versed were used for moderate sedation. A 6-French 10 cm sheath was inserted into the right common femoral artery via modified Seldinger technique. Through this, a 6-French pigtail catheter was advanced to the abdominal aorta and abdominal aortic angiography was performed. The catheter was then pulled down and aortoiliac angiography with bilateral lower extremity runoff was performed. A decision was made to intervene on the left superior renal artery. Heparin was given for anticoagulation. Using a no-touch technique, the left superior renal artery was selectively engaged with a 6-French IM guide catheter. The renal artery was wired with a BMW wire. The vessel was predilated with a 5 x 20 mm compliant balloon and inflated to nominal pressure. The vessel was then stented with a 6 x 18 mm Herculink stents deployed at nominal pressure. The ostium was flared with a stent balloon. There was about 2-mm of stent extending in to the aorta. A final angiography was performed. Prior to the intervention, a translesional gradient was assessed and was found to be approximately 65-70 millimeters of Mercury by a peak-to-peak gradient. Following the procedure, there was no appreciable gradient.

FINDINGS:
Right renal artery has approximately 50% ostial stenosis. There are 2 left renal arteries, the superior renal artery has an approximately 85% ostial stenosis, the left lower renal artery, which supplied only about a third of the renal parenchyma is patent. Abdominal aorta, there is an ulcerated plaque in the distal abdominal aorta, which appears chronic, but is not causing any lumen loss. Right lower extremity, the right common iliac artery is diffusely diseased approximately 30%, the internal iliac artery and external iliac arteries were patent. The common femoral artery is patent, the deep femoral artery is patent, the superficial femoral artery has mild disease proximally 30% in the superficial femoral artery. There is a 3-vessel runoff to the foot. Left lower extremity, the common iliac artery has a 20% mid stenosis. The external iliac and internal arteries were patent. The common femoral artery is patent. The superficial femoral artery has mild disease. The TP trunk is occluded at the ostium. There is one-vessel runoff to the foot by the anterior tibial artery.

IMPRESSION:
1. High-grade left superior renal artery stenosis.
2. Moderate atherosclerotic disease in the left lower extremity with predominantly below-the-knee disease.
3. Successful left superior renal artery stenting as noted above.
PLAN:
1. Medical therapy for atherosclerotic peripheral arterial disease.
2. Dual anti-platelet therapy for at least 1 month, but preferably 3 months.

Medical Billing and Coding

Stent Coding… codes 37218 and 36223

reading an example on Stent coding in the AAPC magazine (pg 18 Example 3) I just received and it says the codes to use are 37218 and 36223 mod 59. I look in my CPT book and it says when using the 37218 code, you cannot use the 36223. Can anyone clarify this? Thank you.

Medical Billing and Coding | AAPC Forum