Coding Challenge: Prior Cancerous Biopsy, But No Residual Tumor
Posted on 29. Jul, 2009 by Editor in Coding Challenge
Question: We received a mastectomy specimen based on a prior cancerous biopsy but find no residual tumor. How should we code the mastectomy (procedure and diagnosis)?
Answer: The final diagnosis for a mastectomy specimen doesn’t change your procedure coding. You don’t mention lymph nodes, so you should report the pathologist’s mastectomy examination as 88307 (Level V –Surgical pathology, gross and microscopic examination, breast, mastectomy – partial/ simple), regardless of the final diagnosis.
Diagnosis coding rules require you to report the most specific diagnosis available at the time. Here’s 3 steps that ensure you do just that:
1.If you have the pathologist’s report and it includes a definitive diagnosis, you should use that diagnosis.
2. If the pathologist hasn’t reached a definitive diagnosis, you should report the signs, symptoms, or conditions that prompted the ordering physician to request the service.
3. If the pathology report indicates no residual tumor and doesn’t describe any pathology that’s reportable to an ICD-9 code, you should revert to the ordering diagnosis. ICD-9 does not provide a code for “normal tissue,” so you should list the condition that prompted the mastectomy. In other words, you should report the initial biopsy cancer diagnosis.
If you've already signed in and are still seeing this screen, click here to refresh the page.
- Free updates on CPT, ICD-9, HCPCS, Medicare, NCCI edits, and ICD-10.
- Discounts on 3rd party offers
