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OHIO Medicare Bulletin A service of CGS Ohio General Release NOVEMBER 2012 HOT TOPIC MM8021 - Healthcare Provider Taxonomy Codes (HPTC) Update, October 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 SE1221 - Phase 2 of Ordering/Referring Requirement . . . . 76 INSIDE THIS ISSUE 3rd Quarter Update Part B Not Otherwise Classified Drug Fee Schedule 2012 Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) Drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 4th Quarter Update Part B Not Otherwise Classified Drug Fee Schedule 2012 Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) Drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 INSERT TOPICS CR 8059 - Implementation of the Award for the Jurisdiction 5 Part A and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractor (J5 A/B MAC) Reprocurment Including a New Workload Number for the Remaining WPS Legacy Workload . . . . . . 19 General Part B Erythropoiesis Stimulating Agents (ESA) L31867 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Local Carrier Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Drugs . . . . . .30 Local Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Drugs . . . . . . . . . . .34 REACHING OUT TO THE MEDICARE COMMUNITY WWW.CGSMEDICARE.COM MM7791 - Contractor and Common Working File (CWF) Additional Instructions Related to Change Request (CR) 7633 - Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care to Reduce Alcohol Misuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 MM7806 - Extracorporeal Photopheresis (ICD-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 PA RT B KY • OH MM7818 - International Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition (ICD)-10 Conversion from (ICD-9) and Related Code Infrastructure of the Medicare Shared Systems as They Relate to CMS National Coverage Determinations (NCDs) (CR 1 of 3) (ICD-10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 MM7881 - Expiration of 2012 Therapy Cap Revisions and User-Controlled Mechanism to Identify Legislative Effective Dates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 MM7883 - 2013 Annual Update for the Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) Bonus Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 MM7890 - Ordering and Certifying Documentation - Maintenance Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 MM7897 - National Coverage Determination (NCD) for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 MM8021 - Healthcare Provider Taxonomy Codes (HPTC) Update, October 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 MM8032 - October 2012 Update of the Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment System (ASC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Bold, italicized material is excerpted from the American Medical Association Current Procedural Terminology CPT codes. Descriptions and other data only are copyrighted 2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS apply. MM8036 - Manual Medical Review of Therapy Services . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 OHIO Medicare Bulletin REACHING OUT TO THE MEDICARE COMMUNITY WWW.CGSMEDICARE.COM A service of CGS Ohio General Release NOVEMBER 2012 MM8037 - 2013 Annual Update of Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Consolidated Billing (CB) Update . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 MM8045 - Claim Status Category and Claim Status Codes Update . . . . . . 58 MM8047 - Influenza Vaccine Payment Allowances - Annual Update for 20122013 Season . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 MM8049 - Annual Clotting Factor Furnishing Fee Update 2013 . . . . . . . . . 61 MM8054 - New Waived Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 PA RT B KY • OH MOHs Micrographic Surgery L31877 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 OVA1 or ROMA for Ovarian Cancer Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Rescinded: MM7819 - Coding Changes to Ultrasound Diagnostic Procedures for Transesophageal Doppler Monitoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Results of Kentucky Progressive Corrective Action (PCA) for New Patient Office Visit Code 99205© . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 REVISED: MM8017 - October Update to the Calendar Year (CY) 2012 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Database (MPFSDB) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Revised: SE1011 - Edits on the Ordering/Referring Providers in Medicare Part B, DME and Part A HHA Claims (Change Requests 6417, 6421, 6696, and 6856) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68 Revised: SE1201 - Important Reminder for Providers and Suppliers Who Provide Services and Items Ordered or Referred by Other Providers and Suppliers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 SE1221 - Phase 2 of Ordering/Referring Requirement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 SE1234 - Important Information Concerning the Medicare Crossover Process and State Medicaid Agency Requirements for National Drug Codes (NDCs) Associated with Physician-Administered Part B Drugs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 SE1236 - Documenting Medical Necessity for Major Joint Replacement (Hip and knee) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 SE1238 - Claim Modifier Did Not Prevent Medicare from Paying Millions in Unallowable Claims for Selected Durable Medical Equipment . . . . . . . . . 84 SE1239 - Updated ICD-10 Implementation Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89 Bold, italicized material is excerpted from the American Medical Association Current Procedural Terminology CPT codes. Descriptions and other data only are copyrighted 2009 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS apply. SE1240 - Partial Code Freeze Prior to ICD-10 Implementation . . . . . . . . . 94 Skin Substitute- Apligraf Update . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 Small Provider and Medicare Update Workshops: Free! . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96 3rd Quarter Update Part B Not Otherwise Classified Drug Fee Schedule 2012 Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) Drugs Effective July 1, 2012 through September 30, 2012 Revised: 09/20/2012 Name of Drug and EXACT Dosage Given MUST be in Block 19 (paper), as an Attachement, or Narrative Field (EMC) NOTE 1: Payment allowance limits subject to the ASP methodology are based on 1Q11 ASP data. NOTE 2: Providers should contact their local Medicare contractor processing the claim for the most appropriate unlisted/unclassified HCPCS code to use in reporting these drugs to Medicare. NOTE 3: The absence or presence of a HCPCS code and the payment allowance limits in this table does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug. Similarly, the inclusion of a payment allowance limit within a specific column does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug in that specific category. These determinations shall be made by the local Medicare contractor processing the claim. Note 4: ** - Carrier Priced Changes In Bold DRUG NAME DOSAGE Abatacept (Orencia) The subcutaneous form of abatacept is considered self-administered Actemra (see Tocilizumab) Adcetris (see Brentuximab Vedotin) Alfentanil Hydrochloride (Alfenta) Alglucosidase Alfa (Myozyme) Allopurinol Sodium (Aloprim) ICD-9’s 274.9 or 790.6 plus the ICD-9 for the neoplasm. Need name of chemotherapy agent causing the elevation of uric acid and a statement as to why patient can not tolerate oral form of the drug. Afinitor (see Everolimus) Aflibercept (see EYLEA) Amidate (see Etomidate) Amino Acid Amino Acid Aminocaproic Acid Antihemophilic Factor (Recomb) Plasma/ Albumin-Free (Xyntha) Arformoterol Tartrate (Brovana) Arginine Hydrochloride (R-Gene 10) Arzerra (see Ofatumumab) ** Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C) Non-covered by Carrier ** Atenolol (Tenormin) ICD-9’s = 401.0 - 429.9 Atropine Sulfate / Edrophonium Chloride Avastin (See Bevacizumab) Aztreonam (Azactam) ** Bacitracin (Bacim) Belimumab (Benlysta) Covered ICD-9: 710.0 500 mcg/5 ml Current PAR Current NON-PAR $1.626 $1.545 $336.086 $319.282 2 mg vial $1,961.000 $1,862.950 500 ml 1000 ml 250 mg $21.110 $35.190 $0.058 $20.055 $33.431 $0.055 300 ml $11.225 $10.664 0.5 mg / ml 10 mg $0.800 $1.651 $0.760 $1.568 500 mg 50,000 U $13.934 $10.170 $13.237 $9.662 10 mg 500 mg/SDV 1 IU 15 mcg 10 mg Notes increase Code for 2012: J0221 decrease Added December 2011 increase Code for 2011: J7185 Code for 2011: J7605 decreased Code for 2012: J0490 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 3 - November 2012 Beltatacept (Nulojix) Covered indications: V420 and 075 or 996.52 Bendamustine Hydrochloride (Treanda) Covered indications: 204.10 - lymphoid leukemia, chronic, without mention of remission or 204.11 - lymphoid leukemia, chronic, in remission Benlysta (see Belimumab) Berinert (see C1 Esterase Inhibitor) Bevacizumab (Avastin) CPT 67028 must be on claim or in history; allow if billed with J3490 or J3590 and the ICD-9 requirements from one of the following codes: 115.02, 115.12, 115.92, 362.01 - 362.07 (any), 362.16, 362.35 - 362.37 (any), 362.42, 362.52 or 362.83. Brentuximab Vedotin (Adcetris) Covered indications 200.60-200.68 or 201.00-201.98 Bretylium Tosylate (Bretylol) Brevibloc (see Esmolol Hydrochloride) Brovana (see Arformoterol Tartrate) Bumetanide (Bumex) Bupivacaine Hcl, 0.25%, 2 ml (Considered Part of Procedure) Bupivacaine Hcl, 0.50%, 2 ml (Considered Part of Procedure) Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.25%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.50%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.75%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. C1 Esterase Inhibitor (Berinert) - For the treatment of acute abdominal or facial attacks of hereditary angioedema in adult and adolescent patients (277.6) Cabazitaxel (Jevtana®) Calciferol (see Ergocalciferol D2) Calcium Chloride Canakinumab (Ilaris) - For Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes Capsaicin 8% Patch (Qutenza) - Must be administered under provider supervision. Cardizem IV (see Diltiazem Hydrochloride) Carfilzomib (Kyprolis) covered ICD-9 203.00 or 203.02 250 mg. $978.380 $929.461 Code for 2011: J9033 1 mg Updated ICD-9 Coverage Effective: 01/01/2011 New Unit Price Per Carrier Medical Director Effective: 05/01/2011 effective 7/1/2012 new dosage and unit price N/A $60.000 $57.000 1mg $95.400 $90.630 5 mg $0.175 $0.166 0.25 mg $0.129 $0.123 decrease 0.25% - 1 ml $0.058 $0.055 decrease 0.50% - 1 ml $0.058 $0.055 decrease 0.75% - 1 ml $0.058 $0.055 decrease Code for 2011: J0597 10 units 1 mg 100 mg / ml Code for 2012: J9043 $0.169 1 mg 10 sq cm 60 mg $1,669.606 $0.161 decrease Code for 2011: J0638 Code for 2011: J7335 Added September 2012 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 4 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 ** Cefamanadole Nafate (Mandol) ** Cefoperazone Sodium (Cefobid) Cefotetan Disodium (Cefotan) Certolizumab Pegol (Cimzia) Chirocaine (see Levobupivacaine Hydrochloride) Cimetidine Hcl. (Tagamet) Cimzia (see Certolizumab Pegol) Clavulanate Potassium / Ticarcillin Disodium Clevidipine Butyrate Clindamycin Phosphate (Cleocin) Clorpactin WCS-90 (see Oxychlorosene Sodium) Collagenase Clostridium Histolyticum (Xiaflex) Covered for Contracture of palmar fascia (Dupuytren’s concracture) ICD-9 728.6. Copper Sulfate Cosyntropin IV Cystografin (see Diatrizoate Meglumine) Dantrolene Sodium Degarelix (Firmagon) Depacon (see Valproate Sodium) Denileukin Difitox (Ontak) (For 300 mcg, use code J9160) Denosumab (Prolia ™ or Xgeva) If Prolia ™, covered ICD-9 = 733.01; if Xgeva, covered ICD9 = 198.5. Dexamethasone Intravitreal Implant (Ozurdex) If billed under J3490 or J3590, with CPT code 67028 & 1 of the following ICD-9 combinations: 1) 362.83 plus 362.35 or 362.36; or 2) 362.30 Dextrose 2.5% Dextrose 5% Dextrose 10% Dextrose 50% ** Dextrose / Nitroglycerin 5%-20 mg/ 100 ml/250 ml ** Dextrose 5% / Sodium Chloride Diatrizoate Meglumine (Cystografin) Diltiazem Hydrochloride (Cardizem IV) Diprivan (see Propofol) Doripenem (Doribax) Doxapram Hydrochloride (Dopram) Doxycycline Hyclate Ecallantide (Kalbitor) Covered Indications 277.6 (accute attack of hereditary angioedema) Eculizumab (Soliris) Edecrin Sodium (see Ethacrynate Sodium) Edrophonium Chloride (Tensilon) (Allow for ICD9 - 358.0) Elaprase (see Idursulfase) 1 gm 1 gm 1 gm $8.610 $16.380 $11.376 $8.180 $15.561 $10.807 Code for 2011: J0718 1 mg 150 mg $1.064 $1.011 0.1 - 3 gm 1 mg 150 mg $10.933 $2.964 $1.488 $10.386 $2.816 $1.414 Code for 2011: J0775 0.1 mg 0.4 mg $0.116 $0.110 $78.800 $74.860 0.25 mg 20 mg increase Code for 2011: J0833 Code for 2011: J9155 1 mg 150 mcg increase decrease decrease $595.430 $565.659 1 mg Code for 2012: J0897 0.1 mg Code for 2011: J7312 2.50% 5% 500 ml 50 ml 20 mg/100 ml/250 ml 1000 ml 10 ml 5 mg $7.680 $7.860 $10.000 $0.101 $7.296 $7.467 $9.500 $0.096 $6.320 $6.004 $11.220 $2.10 $0.156 $10.659 $2.00 $0.148 10 mg 20 mg 100 mg $2.212 $10.990 $2.101 $10.441 $2.420 $2.299 1 mg 10 mg 10 mg Effective 05/01/2011 decrease Code for 2011: J1267 increase decrease Code for 2011: J1290 Code for 2011: J1300 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 5 - November 2012 Emend for Injection (see Fosaprepitant Dimeglumine) Enalaprilat (Vasotec IV) Eovist (see Gadoxetate Disodium) Ergocalciferol D2 (Calciferol) ICD-9’s = 579.8 or 579.9 Allowed when administered in physician’s office Eribulin Mesylate (Halaven) - Covered ICD-9’s = 174.0 - 174.9 Esmolol Hydrochloride (Brevibloc) Covered ICD-9 = 427.89 (Dosage change from 100 mg to 10 mg.) Esomeprazole Sodium (Nexium IV) Covered ICD-9’s = 530.10 - 530.19 or 530.81 when administered in the physician’s office. Estradiol ** Estradiol Pellets Ethacrynate Sodium (Edecrin Sodium) ** Ethiodized Oil (Ethiodol) Etomidate (Amidate) Everolimus (Afinitor / Zortress) - Non-Covered; Oral drug considered as self-administered. EYLEA (see Aflibercept) Famotidine (Pepcid) Ferumoxytol (Feraheme) 1.25 mg $1.640 $1.558 500,000 IU/ 1ml $29.840 $28.348 Code for 2012 J9179 0.1 mg 10 mg $0.722 $0.686 decrease 20 MG $3.938 $3.741 increase 1 gram Per Pellet 50 mg 1 ml 2 mg $13.300 Invoice $19.040 $8.060 $0.584 $12.635 Invoice $18.088 $7.657 $0.555 10 mg $0.373 $0.354 1 mg Fibrinogen Concentrate Human (RiaSTAP) Firazyr (see Icantibant) Firmagon (see Degarelix) Flagyl IV (see Metronidazole In Nacl.) Floxin IV (see Ofloxacin) Fludarabine phosphate, oral - Not Covered by Part B Flumazenil (Mazicon, Romazicon) Flumazenil (Mazicon, Romazicon) Folic Acid Folotyn (see Pralatrexate) Fosaprepitant Dimeglumine (Emend) Allowed when billed on the same day as chemotherapy. Fospropofol Disodium injection (Lusedra) Gadoxetate Disodium (Eovist) Gammaked injection Gammaplex (see Human Immune Globulin Intravenous) Glycopyrrolate (Robinul) Graftjacket Gel Halaven (see Eribulin Mesylate) ** Heparin Sodium Hetastarch Sodium Cl., 6 gm/500 ml Hexaminolevulinate Hydrochloride - Covered for ICD-9’s 188.0 through 188.9 Hizentra (see Immune Globulin Subcutaneous) decrease 10 mg 0.1 mg 0.5 mg 5 mg $0.841 $42.830 $1.729 $0.799 $40.689 $1.643 $0.201 increase $0.191 1 ml 500 mg $37.484 $35.610 0.2 mg $0.317 $0.301 $0.032 $23.040 $0.030 $21.888 $623.280 $592.116 1 cc 100 units 6 gm 100 mg, per study dose Code for 2011: J8562 increase Code for 2011: J1453 1 mg 35 mg increase Code for 2012: J8561 Added December 2011 decrease Codes for 2011: Q0138 (non-esrd) & Q0139 (esrd) Code for 2011: J1680 Code for 2011: A9581 Added October 2011 decrease Code for 2011: Q4113 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 6 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Human Immune Globulin Intravenous (Gammaplex) Hydroxocobalamin - Covered when billed with J9305. Hylan G-F 20 (Synvisc-One) Icantibant (Firazyr) - Usually considered selfadministered Idursulfase (Elaprase) Code for 2012: J1557 IV 1000 mcg/ml $1.212 $1.151 Effective 06/01/2011 48 mg Code for 2011: J7325 1 mg Code for 2011: J1743 100 mg Code for 2011: J0597 Ilaris (see Canakinumab) Immune Globulin Subcutaneous (Hizentra) ** Inamrinone Lactate IncobotulinumtoxinA (Xeomin) - Covered for the treatment of Genetic torsion dystonia (333.6) and Blepharospasm (333.81) INTEGRA™ Bilayer Matrix Wound Dressing Covered Indications = 757.39, 941.20-941.21, 941.24-941.31, 941.34-941.41, 941.44-941.51, 941.54-941.59, 942.20-942.59, 943.20-943.59, 944.20-944.58, 945.20-945.59, 946.2-946.5, 948.00-948.99 Invega® Sustenna® (see Paliperidone Palmitate injection) Ipilimumab (Yervoy) - Covered for unresectable or metastatic melanoma. Isoproterenol Hydrochloride (Isuprel) Isoptin IV (see Verapamil Hydrochloride) Istodax (see Romidepsin) Isuprel (see Isoproterenol Hydrochloride) Ixabepilone (Ixempra) Covered for metastatic or locally advanced breast cancer (ICD-9 codes 174.0 - 175.9) Jevtana® (see Cabazitaxel) Kalbitor (see Ecallantide) Kenalog (see Triamcinolone Acetonide) Keppra intraveneous (see Levetiracetam) Ketamine Hydrochloride (Ketalar) Allowed when billed on same day as 20550-20610, 62289, 62298, 62368, 95990, or 96530. Kyprolis (see Carfilzomib) Krystexxa (see Pegloticase) Labetalol Hydrochloride (Trandate, Normodyne) Covered if given IV in the office for control of BP in severe hypertension. Patient is normally switched to oral for maintainance doses. 5 mg $4.050 $3.848 New Code for 2012: J0588 1 Unit 1 sq cm $19.391 $18.421 Code for 2012: J9228 1mg 0.2 mg $2.250 $2.138 Code for 2011: J9207 1 mg 10 mg increase $0.067 $0.064 Added September 2012 5 mg Lanreotide (Somatuline Depot) 1 mg Levetiracetam (Keppra intraveneous) ** Levobupivacaine Hydrochloride (Chirocaine) Allowed separately when billed on same day as 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505-64530, 76003, 95990, or 96530. Not payable separately when billed with any other procedures ** Levophed Bitartrate (see Norepinephrine Bitartrate) 10 mg 2.5 mg/ml $0.248 $0.236 decrease Code for 2011: J1930 Code for 2011: J1953 $0.310 $0.295 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 7 - November 2012 ** Levothyroxine Sodium (Synthroid) Need statemnt on claim as to why patient can’t take oral form of drug. Lexiscan (see Regadenoson) Lidocaine - Allowed separately when billed on same day as 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77033, 95990, or 96530. Not payable when billed with any other procedure. Lopressor (see Metoprolol Tartrate) Lucentis (see Ranibizumab) Lusedra (see Fospropofol Disodium injection) Mandol (see Cefamanadole Nafate) Marqibo (see Vincristine sulfate Liposome) Mazicon (see Flumazenil) Methylnaltrexone Bromide (Relistor) Noncovered by carrier. Metoprolol Tartrate (Lopressor) Covered when given IV with Dobutamine J1250 during Dobutamine Stress Test. Metronidazole Hcl. (Flagyl IV) IV in the office. Covered for ICD-9’s= 001.0-009.3, 040.0041.9, 481-482.9, 567.0-567.9, 599.0-599.9, 615.0-615.9. Miconazole (Monistat IV) 10 mg Minocycline Hydrochloride (Non-covered oral drug) Monistat IV (see Miconazole) Morrhuate Sodium Myozyme (see Alglucoside Alfa) Nafcillin Sodium (Nallpen) (Dosage Change from 500 mg to 1 gm) Nalmefene Hydrochloride (Revex) Netilmicin Sulfate (Netromycin), 150 mg Nexium IV (see Esomeprazole Sodium) Nitroglycerin IV – Allowed in emergency situations. Nodolo & Tusal (see Sodium Thiosalicylate) ** Norepinephrine Bitartrate (Levophed Bitartrate) Allow in emergency situations. Norcuron (see Vecuronium Bromide) Normal Saline (Sterile Water) Normodyne (see Labetalol Hydrochloride) Nplate™ (see Romiplostim) Nulojix (see Beltatacept) Ofatumumab (Arzerra) Covered indications 204.10 or 204.12 Ofloxacin (Floxin IV), 20 mg Olanzapine long-acting intramuscular injection Covered indications = 295.00 - 295.95 or 296.40 - 296.66 when administered in the physicians office. Olanzapine short-acting intramuscular injection (Zyprexa IM) Covered indications = 295.01 - 295.84 when administered in the physicians office. Ontak (see Denileukin Difitox) Optison 0.5 mg $62.010 $58.910 1 ml $0.143 $0.136 Added September 2012 1 mg $0.160 $0.152 increase 500 mg $1.056 $1.003 increase Invoice Invoice Code for 2012: J2265 50 mg $2.105 $2.000 1 gm $8.058 $7.655 10 mcg $0.276 Invoice $0.262 Invoice 5 mg $0.337 $0.320 1 mg $2.161 $2.053 50 ml $1.430 $1.359 decrease Code for 2011: J9302 10 mg Invoice Invoice Code for 2011: J2358 1 mg 0.5 mg increase $1.703 $1.618 Invoice Invoice decrease This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 8 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Orencia (see Abatacept) ** Oxychlorosene Sodium (Clorpactin WCS-90) Ozurdex (see Dexamethasone Intravitreal Implant) Paliperidone Palmitate injection (Invega® Sustenna®) Covered indications: 295.00295.95, 296.40-296.46, 296.50-296.56, or 296.60-296.66 Panitumumab (Vectibix) Covered indications-153.0-154.8 Pantoprazole Sodium, IV (Protonix IV) Need statement as to why patient is not able to take oral form. ** Peginterferon Alfa-2A/Isopropyl Alchol (Pegasys®) Covered indication 070.54 when administered in the office. Peginterferon Alfa-2B (PEG-Intron) 50 mcg Covered indication 070.54 when administered in the office. ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 80mcg ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 120mcg ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 150mcg Pegloticase (Krystexxa) When billed with J3490 or J3590, covered for chronic gout, ICD-9’s 274.00 through 274.03 ** Pegvisomant for Injection (Somavert) Considered Usually Self-Administered Pepcid (see Famotidine) Perjeta (see Pertuzumab) Pertuzumab (Perjeta) Covered ICD-9 174.0 175.9 in combination with Trastuzumab J9355 and Docetaxel J9171 Potassium Acetate Potassium Phosphate Pralatrexate (Folotyn) - Covered indications: 202.70 - 202.78 Prednisolone Acetate Procaine Hydrochloride Procaine Hydrochloride Prolia ™ (see Denosumab) Propofol (Diprivan) Protonix IV (see Pantoprazole Sodium) Provenge (see Sipuleucel-T) Qutenza (see Capsaicin 8% Patch) ** R-Gene 10 (see Arginine Hcl.) Ranibizumab Injection (Lucentis) Regadenoson (Lexiscan) Relistor (see Methylnaltrexone Bromide) Revex (see Nalmefene Hydrochloride) Rexolate & Arthrolate (see Sodium Thiosalicylate) RiaSTAP (see Fibrinogen Concentrate Human) Rifampin Robinul (see Glycopyrrolate) Romazicon (see Flumazenil) 1 gm $1.850 $1.758 1 mg Code for 2011: J2426 10 mg Code for 2011: J9303 40 mg $4.511 $4.285 180mcg/ml $480.273 $456.259 50 mcg $320.610 $304.580 80 mcg 120 mcg 150 mcg $336.600 $353.460 $371.120 $319.770 $335.787 $352.564 Code for 2012: J2507 1mg Added September 2012 1mg/ml $9.704 $9.219 2 meq 3 mmol $0.027 $0.043 $0.026 $0.041 Code for 2011: J9307 Code for 2010: J2650 1 mg 1 ml 1% 2% $2.360 $3.400 $2.242 $3.230 10 mg $0.103 $0.098 decrease Code for 2011: J2778 Code for 2011: J2785 1 mcg 0.1 mg 600 mg Added September 2012 $31.692 $30.107 decrease This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 9 - November 2012 Romidepsin (Istodax) Covered indications: 202.70 - 202.78 Romiplostim (Nplate™) Sarracenia Purpura Non-covered by Carrier Secretin (SecreFlo) Used in secretin stimulation testing Sensorcaine, Sterile (see Bupivicaine, Sterile) Sipuleucel-T (Provenge) ICD-9 = 185 Sodium Acetate ** Sodium Bicarbonate, PF (NACH03) Sodium Bicarbonate, 8.4% (NACH03) Sodium Chloride, Hypertonic ** Sodium Tetradecyl Sulfate (Sotradecol) ** Sodium Thiosalicylate (Rexolate & Arthrolate, Nodolo & Tusal) Sodium Thiosulfate Soliris (see Eculizumab) Somatuline Depot (see Lanreotide) ** Somavert (see Pegvisomant for Injection) Stelara (see Ustekinumab) Sterile Saline / Water ** Sterile Saline / Water, 1000 ml ** Sufentanil Citrate (Sufenta) Separate payment allowed when billed with 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 76005, 95990, or 96530. If billed with any other procedures, it will be considered part of the procedure and separate payment will not be allowed. Sulfamethoxazole/Trimethoprim (SMZTMP) Documentation as to why the patient needs to be on IV infusion instead of oral medication, must be in block 19 or as an attachment for paper claims or in the notepad for EMC claims. SurgiMend Synthroid (see Levothyroxine Sodium) Synvisc-One (see Hylan G-F 20) Tagamet (see Cimetidine Hydrochloride) Telavancin Injection (VIBATIV™) Temsirolimus (Torisel) Covered indication is for the treatment of advanced renal cell carcinoma (189.0 Malignant neoplasm of kidney, except pelvis). Tenormin (see Atenolol) Tensilon (see Edrophonium Chloride) Testosterone ** Testosterone Pellets (Testopel) Tetanus Toxoid (use codes 90702, 90703, or 90718) Tetracycline Tocilizumab (Actemra) Covered Indications: 714.0, 714.1 or 714.2. Torisel (see Temsirolimus) Trandate (see Labetalol Hydrochloride) Treanda (see Bendamustine Hydrochloride) Code for 2011: J9315 Code for 2011: J2796 1 mg 10 mcg Code for 2011: J2850 1 mcg Per infusion (minimum 50 million cells) 2 meq 7.5%/50 ml 50 ml 250 cc New Code for 2012: Q2043 $0.037 $2.730 $0.122 $0.683 Invoice $0.035 $2.594 $0.116 $0.649 Invoice 50 mg $0.970 $0.922 100 mg $0.155 $0.147 5 cc $0.052 $0.049 1000 ml 50mcg/ml $5.640 $9.810 $5.358 $9.320 400 - 80 mg $0.221 $0.210 decrease 0.5 sq cm $11.874 $11.280 increase decrease 10 mg Code for 2011: J3095 1 mg Code for 2011: J9330 37.5 mg Per Pellet 1 mg $0.110 Invoice $0.105 Invoice Invoice Invoice Code for 2011: J3262 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 10 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Treprostinil inhalation (Tyvaso) - If administered in-office, considered part of service performed. If administered at-home, not covered by Part B. Triamcinolone Acetonide, Preservative Free Triamcinolone Acetonide (Kenalog) Truxton (see Prednisolone Acetate) Tyvaso (see Treprostinil inhalation) Ustekinumab (Stelara) - For the treatment of adults (18+) with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis who are candidates for phototherapy or systemic therapy (696.1) Vaccinia IVIG (see Human Immune Globulin Intravenous) Valproate Sodium (Depacon) IV, Covered ICD9’s = 345.00 - 345.91, Allowed when administered IV, in the physician’s office. (Dosage change from 500 mg to 100 mg) Vasopressin Vasotec IV (see Enalaprilat) Vectibix (see Panitumumab) Vecuronium Bromide (Norcuron) Velaglucerase alfa for injection (VPRIV™) Verapamil Hydrochloride (Isoptin IV) VIBATIV™ (see Telavancin Injection) Vincristine Sulfate Liposome (Marquibo) covered ICD-9: 204.00-204.02 ** Vitamin B Complex (Follow B-12 guidelines) ** Vitamin C (see Ascorbic Acid) Non-covered by Carrier Vivaglobin (see Immune Globulin Subcutaneous) VPRIV™ (see Velaglucerase alfa for injection) Wilate (Human coagulation factor VIII (FVIII) and von Willebrand factor (VWF) powder and solvent for solution for injection) Covered ICD9: 286.4 Xeomin (see IncobotulinumtoxinA) Xgeva (see Denosumab) Xiaflex (see Collagenase Clostridum Histolyticum) Xyntha (see Antihemophilic Factor (Recomb) Plasma/Albumin-Free) Yervoy (see Ipilimumab) Zaltrap (see Ziv-Aflibercept) Ziv-Aflibercept (Zaltrap) covered ICD-9 153.0 153.7 or 154.0 - 154.2 Zortress (see Everolimus) Zyprexa IM (see Olanzapine) HOCM <= 149 MG/ML HOCM 200 - 249 MG/ML HOCM 250 - 299 MG/ML HOCM 300 - 349 MG/ML HOCM 350 - 399 MG/ML HOCM >= 400 MG/ML Code for 2011: J7686 1.74 mg Code for 2011: J3300 Code for 2011: J3301 1 mg 10 mg Code for 2011: J3357 1 mg 100 mg $0.558 $0.530 20 units $2.251 $2.138 increase 1 mg $0.535 $0.508 decrease Code for 2011: J3385 2.5 mg $3.167 $3.009 2.25 mg. Invoice Up to 3 ml $0.930 100 units Added September 2012 $0.884 New Code for 2012: J7183 1 IU VWF:RCO 100 mg. 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml Added September 2012 Added September 2012 $1,611.200 $0.041 $0.093 $0.100 $0.104 $0.107 $0.191 $0.039 $0.088 $0.095 $0.099 $0.102 $0.181 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 11 - November 2012 4th Quarter Update Part B Not Otherwise Classified Drug Fee Schedule 2012 Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) Drugs Effective October 1, 2012 through December 31, 2012 Revised: 09/20/2012 Name of Drug and EXACT Dosage Given MUST be in Block 19 (paper), as an Attachement, or Narrative Field (EMC) NOTE 1: Payment allowance limits subject to the ASP methodology are based on 2Q12 ASP data. NOTE 2: Providers should contact their local Medicare contractor processing the claim for the most appropriate unlisted/unclassified HCPCS code to use in reporting these drugs to Medicare. NOTE 3: The absence or presence of a HCPCS code and the payment allowance limits in this table does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug. Similarly, the inclusion of a payment allowance limit within a specific column does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug in that specific category. These determinations shall be made by the local Medicare contractor processing the claim. Note 4: ** - Carrier Priced Changes In Bold DRUG NAME DOSAGE Current PAR Current NON-PAR Notes Abatacept (Orencia) The subcutaneous form of abatacept is considered self-administered Actemra (see Tocilizumab) Adcetris (see Brentuximab Vedotin) Alfentanil Hydrochloride (Alfenta) Alglucosidase Alfa (Myozyme) 500 mcg/5 ml 10 mg $1.809 $1.719 500 mg/SDV $328.177 $311.768 Increase Code for 2012: J0221 Decrease 2 mg vial $1,961.000 $1,862.950 500 ml 1000 ml 250 mg 300 ml $21.110 $35.190 $0.049 $11.225 $20.055 $33.431 $0.047 $10.664 0.5 mg / ml 10 mg $0.800 $1.651 $0.760 $1.568 500 mg 50,000 U 10 mg $13.997 $10.170 $13.297 $9.662 250 mg. $978.380 Allopurinol Sodium (Aloprim) ICD-9’s 274.9 or 790.6 plus the ICD-9 for the neoplasm. Need name of chemotherapy agent causing the elevation of uric acid and a statement as to why patient can not tolerate oral form of the drug. Afinitor (see Everolimus) Aflibercept (see EYLEA) Amidate (see Etomidate) Amino Acid Amino Acid Aminocaproic Acid Arginine Hydrochloride (R-Gene 10) Arzerra (see Ofatumumab) ** Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C) Non-covered by Carrier ** Atenolol (Tenormin) ICD-9’s = 401.0 - 429.9 Atropine Sulfate / Edrophonium Chloride Avastin (See Bevacizumab) Aztreonam (Azactam) ** Bacitracin (Bacim) Belimumab (Benlysta) Covered ICD-9: 710.0 Beltatacept (Nulojix) Covered indications: V420 and 075 or 996.52 Benlysta (see Belimumab) Berinert (see C1 Esterase Inhibitor) Decrease Increase Code for 2012: J0490 $929.461 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 12 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Bevacizumab (Avastin) CPT 67028 must be on claim or in history; allow if billed with J3490 or J3590 and the ICD-9 requirements from one of the following codes: 115.02, 115.12, 115.92, 362.01 - 362.07 (any), 362.16, 362.35 - 362.37 (any), 362.42, 362.52 or 362.83. N/A $60.000 $57.000 Brentuximab Vedotin (Adcetris) Covered indications 200.60-200.68 or 201.00-201.98 1mg $95.400 $90.630 Bretylium Tosylate (Bretylol) Brevibloc (see Esmolol Hydrochloride) Brovana (see Arformoterol Tartrate) Bumetanide (Bumex) Bupivacaine Hcl, 0.25%, 2 ml (Considered Part of Procedure) Bupivacaine Hcl, 0.50%, 2 ml (Considered Part of Procedure) Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.25%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.50%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. Bupivacaine, Sterile, 0.75%/10ml (Sensorcaine, Sterile) Allowed when billed with 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77003, 95990, or 96530. When billed with other procedures, considered part of procedure performed. Cabazitaxel (Jevtana®) 5 mg $0.175 $0.166 0.25 mg $0.182 $0.173 Increase 0.25% - 1 ml $0.091 $0.086 Increase 0.50% - 1 ml $0.091 $0.086 Increase 0.75% - 1 ml $0.091 $0.086 Increase Calciferol (see Ergocalciferol D2) Calcium Chloride Cardizem IV (see Diltiazem Hydrochloride) Carfilzomib (Kyprolis) covered ICD-9 203.00 or 203.02 ** Cefamanadole Nafate (Mandol) ** Cefoperazone Sodium (Cefobid) Cefotetan Disodium (Cefotan) Chirocaine (see Levobupivacaine Hydrochloride) Cimetidine Hcl. (Tagamet) Cimzia (see Certolizumab Pegol) Clavulanate Potassium / Ticarcillin Disodium Clevidipine Butyrate Clindamycin Phosphate (Cleocin) Clorpactin WCS-90 (see Oxychlorosene Sodium) Copper Sulfate Cystografin (see Diatrizoate Meglumine) Dantrolene Sodium Depacon (see Valproate Sodium) Denileukin Difitox (Ontak) (For 300 mcg, use code J9160) 1 mg Updated ICD9 Coverage Effective: 01 /01/2011 New Unit Price Per Carrier Medical Director Effective: 05/01/2011 Code for 2012: J9043 $0.151 Decrease 100 mg / ml $0.159 60 mg $1,669.606 1 gm 1 gm 1 gm $8.610 $16.380 $11.376 $8.180 $15.561 $10.807 150 mg $1.064 $1.011 0.1 - 3 gm 1 mg 150 mg $11.704 $2.958 $2.009 $11.119 $2.810 $1.909 Increase Decrease Increase 0.4 mg $0.111 $0.105 Decrease 20 mg $78.800 $74.860 150 mcg $595.430 $565.659 Added September 2012 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 13 - November 2012 Denosumab (Prolia ™ or Xgeva) If Prolia ™, covered ICD-9 = 733.01; if Xgeva, covered ICD-9 = 198.5. Dextrose 2.5% Dextrose 5% Dextrose 10% Dextrose 50% ** Dextrose / Nitroglycerin 5%-20 mg/ 100 ml/250 ml 1 mg ** Dextrose 5% / Sodium Chloride Diatrizoate Meglumine (Cystografin) Diltiazem Hydrochloride (Cardizem IV) Diprivan (see Propofol) Doxapram Hydrochloride (Dopram) Doxycycline Hyclate Edecrin Sodium (see Ethacrynate Sodium) Edrophonium Chloride (Tensilon) (Allow for ICD9 358.0) Elaprase (see Idursulfase) Emend for Injection (see Fosaprepitant Dimeglumine) Enalaprilat (Vasotec IV) Eovist (see Gadoxetate Disodium) Ergocalciferol D2 (Calciferol) ICD-9’s = 579.8 or 579.9 Allowed when administered in physician’s office Eribulin Mesylate (Halaven) - Covered ICD-9’s = 174.0 - 174.9 Esmolol Hydrochloride (Brevibloc) Covered ICD-9 = 427.89 (Dosage change from 100 mg to 10 mg.) Esomeprazole Sodium (Nexium IV) Covered ICD-9’s = 530.10 - 530.19 or 530.81 when administered in the physician’s office. Estradiol ** Estradiol Pellets Ethacrynate Sodium (Edecrin Sodium) ** Ethiodized Oil (Ethiodol) Etomidate (Amidate) Everolimus (Afinitor / Zortress) - Non-Covered; Oral drug considered as self-administered. EYLEA (see Aflibercept) Famotidine (Pepcid) Firazyr (see Icantibant) Firmagon (see Degarelix) Flagyl IV (see Metronidazole In Nacl.) Floxin IV (see Ofloxacin) Flumazenil (Mazicon, Romazicon) Flumazenil (Mazicon, Romazicon) Folic Acid Folotyn (see Pralatrexate) Fospropofol Disodium injection (Lusedra) Gammaked injection Gammaplex (see Human Immune Globulin Intravenous) Glycopyrrolate (Robinul) Halaven (see Eribulin Mesylate) ** Heparin Sodium Hetastarch Sodium Cl., 6 gm/500 ml Code for 2012: J0897 2.50% 5% 500 ml 50 ml 20 mg/100 ml/250 ml 1000 ml 10 ml 5 mg $7.680 $7.860 $10.000 $0.101 $6.320 $7.296 $7.467 $9.500 $0.096 $6.004 $11.220 $2.10 $0.167 $10.659 $2.00 $0.159 Increase 20 mg 100 mg $1.695 $10.885 $1.610 $10.341 Decrease Decrease 10 mg $2.420 $2.299 1.25 mg $1.142 $1.085 500,000 IU/ 1ml 0.1 mg $29.840 $28.348 10 mg $0.778 $0.739 Code for 2012: J9179 Increase 20 MG $1.904 $1.809 Decrease 1 gram Per Pellet 50 mg 1 ml 2 mg $13.300 Invoice $19.040 $8.060 $0.699 $12.635 Invoice $18.088 $7.657 $0.664 10 mg $0.446 $0.424 Increase 0.1 mg 0.5 mg 5 mg $2.005 $42.830 $2.179 $1.905 $40.689 $2.070 Increase 35 mg 500 mg $1.048 $37.484 $0.996 $35.610 Increase 0.2 mg $0.614 $0.583 Increase 100 units 6 gm $0.032 $23.040 $0.030 $21.888 Decrease Increase Code for 2012: J8561 Increase This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 14 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Hexaminolevulinate Hydrochloride - Covered for ICD9’s 188.0 through 188.9 Hizentra (see Immune Globulin Subcutaneous) Human Immune Globulin Intravenous (Gammaplex) 100 mg, per study dose $660.677 $627.643 IV Hydroxocobalamin - Covered when billed with J9305. Icantibant (Firazyr) - Usually considered selfadministered Ilaris (see Canakinumab) ** Inamrinone Lactate IncobotulinumtoxinA (Xeomin) - Covered for the treatment of Genetic torsion dystonia (333.6) and Blepharospasm (333.81) INTEGRA™ Bilayer Matrix Wound Dressing Covered Indications = 757.39, 941.20-941.21, 941.24-941.31, 941.34-941.41, 941.44-941.51, 941.54-941.59, 942.20-942.59, 943.20-943.59, 944.20-944.58, 945.20-945.59, 946.2-946.5, 948.00948.99 Invega® Sustenna® (see Paliperidone Palmitate injection) Ipilimumab (Yervoy) - Covered for unresectable or metastatic melanoma. Isoproterenol Hydrochloride (Isuprel) Isoptin IV (see Verapamil Hydrochloride) Istodax (see Romidepsin) Isuprel (see Isoproterenol Hydrochloride) Jevtana® (see Cabazitaxel) Kalbitor (see Ecallantide) Kenalog (see Triamcinolone Acetonide) Keppra intraveneous (see Levetiracetam) Ketamine Hydrochloride (Ketalar) Allowed when billed on same day as 20550-20610, 62289, 62298, 62368, 95990, or 96530. Kyprolis (see Carfilzomib) Krystexxa (see Pegloticase) Labetalol Hydrochloride (Trandate, Normodyne) Covered if given IV in the office for control of BP in severe hypertension. Patient is normally switched to oral for maintainance doses. ** Levobupivacaine Hydrochloride (Chirocaine) Allowed separately when billed on same day as 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505-64530, 76003, 95990, or 96530. Not payable separately when billed with any other procedures ** Levophed Bitartrate (see Norepinephrine Bitartrate) ** Levothyroxine Sodium (Synthroid) Need statemnt on claim as to why patient can’t take oral form of drug. Lexiscan (see Regadenoson) Lidocaine - Allowed separately when billed on same day as 51700, 51720, 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 62368, 64400 - 64484, 64505 - 64530, 77033, 95990, or 96530. Not payable when billed with any other procedure. Lopressor (see Metoprolol Tartrate) Lucentis (see Ranibizumab) Lusedra (see Fospropofol Disodium injection) Increase Code for 2012: J1557 1000 mcg/ml $1.212 $1.151 5 mg 1 Unit $4.050 $3.848 1 sq cm $24.147 New Code for 2012: J0588 $22.940 1mg Increase Code for 2012: J9228 0.2 mg $2.250 $2.138 10 mg $0.067 $0.064 Added September 2012 5 mg $0.240 $0.228 2.5 mg/ml $0.310 $0.295 0.5 mg $62.010 $58.910 1 ml $0.143 $0.136 Decrease This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 15 - November 2012 Mandol (see Cefamanadole Nafate) Marqibo (see Vincristine sulfate Liposome) Mazicon (see Flumazenil) Methylnaltrexone Bromide (Relistor) Non-covered by carrier. Metoprolol Tartrate (Lopressor) Covered when given IV with Dobutamine J1250 during Dobutamine Stress Test. Metronidazole Hcl. (Flagyl IV) IV in the office. Covered for ICD-9’s= 001.0-009.3, 040.0-041.9, 481482.9, 567.0-567.9, 599.0-599.9, 615.0-615.9. Miconazole (Monistat IV) 10 mg Minocycline Hydrochloride (Non-covered oral drug) Monistat IV (see Miconazole) Morrhuate Sodium Myozyme (see Alglucoside Alfa) Nafcillin Sodium (Nallpen) (Dosage Change from 500 mg to 1 gm) Nalmefene Hydrochloride (Revex) Netilmicin Sulfate (Netromycin), 150 mg Nexium IV (see Esomeprazole Sodium) Nitroglycerin IV – Allowed in emergency situations. Nodolo & Tusal (see Sodium Thiosalicylate) ** Norepinephrine Bitartrate (Levophed Bitartrate) Allow in emergency situations. Norcuron (see Vecuronium Bromide) Normal Saline (Sterile Water) Normodyne (see Labetalol Hydrochloride) Nplate™ (see Romiplostim) Nulojix (see Beltatacept) Ofloxacin (Floxin IV), 20 mg Olanzapine short-acting intramuscular injection (Zyprexa IM) Covered indications = 295.01 - 295.84 when administered in the physicians office. Ontak (see Denileukin Difitox) Optison Orencia (see Abatacept) ** Oxychlorosene Sodium (Clorpactin WCS-90) Ozurdex (see Dexamethasone Intravitreal Implant) Pantoprazole Sodium, IV (Protonix IV) Need statement as to why patient is not able to take oral form. ** Peginterferon Alfa-2A/Isopropyl Alchol (Pegasys®) Covered indication 070.54 when administered in the office. Peginterferon Alfa-2B (PEG-Intron) 50 mcg Covered indication 070.54 when administered in the office. ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 80mcg ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 120mcg ** Peginterferon Alfa-2B, 150mcg Pegloticase (Krystexxa) When billed with J3490 or J3590, covered for chronic gout, ICD-9’s 274.00 through 274.03 ** Pegvisomant for Injection (Somavert) Considered Usually Self-Administered Pepcid (see Famotidine) Added September 2012 1 mg $0.163 $0.155 Increase 500 mg $1.069 $1.016 Increase Invoice Invoice Code for 2012: J2265 50 mg $2.105 $2.000 1 gm $8.058 $7.655 10 mcg $0.276 Invoice $0.262 Invoice 5 mg $0.345 $0.328 1 mg $2.161 $2.053 50 ml $1.430 $1.359 0.5 mg Invoice $1.705 Invoice $1.620 Invoice Invoice 1 gm $1.850 $1.758 40 mg $4.511 $4.285 180mcg/ml $480.273 $456.259 50 mcg $320.610 $304.580 80 mcg 120 mcg 150 mcg 1mg $336.600 $353.460 $371.120 $319.770 $335.787 $352.564 Increase Increase Code for 2012: J2507 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 16 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Perjeta (see Pertuzumab) Pertuzumab (Perjeta) Covered ICD-9 174.0 175.9 in combination with Trastuzumab J9355 and Docetaxel J9171 Potassium Acetate Potassium Phosphate Procaine Hydrochloride Procaine Hydrochloride Prolia ™ (see Denosumab) Propofol (Diprivan) Protonix IV (see Pantoprazole Sodium) Provenge (see Sipuleucel-T) Qutenza (see Capsaicin 8% Patch) ** R-Gene 10 (see Arginine Hcl.) Relistor (see Methylnaltrexone Bromide) Revex (see Nalmefene Hydrochloride) Rexolate & Arthrolate (see Sodium Thiosalicylate) RiaSTAP (see Fibrinogen Concentrate Human) Rifampin Robinul (see Glycopyrrolate) Romazicon (see Flumazenil) Sarracenia Purpura Non-covered by Carrier Sensorcaine, Sterile (see Bupivicaine, Sterile) Sipuleucel-T (Provenge) ICD-9 = 185 Sodium Acetate ** Sodium Bicarbonate, PF (NACH03) Sodium Bicarbonate, 8.4% (NACH03) Sodium Chloride, Hypertonic ** Sodium Tetradecyl Sulfate (Sotradecol) ** Sodium Thiosalicylate (Rexolate & Arthrolate, Nodolo & Tusal) Sodium Thiosulfate Soliris (see Eculizumab) Somatuline Depot (see Lanreotide) ** Somavert (see Pegvisomant for Injection) Stelara (see Ustekinumab) Sterile Saline / Water ** Sterile Saline / Water, 1000 ml ** Sufentanil Citrate (Sufenta) Separate payment allowed when billed with 62310, 62311, 62318, 62319, 76005, 95990, or 96530. If billed with any other procedures, it will be considered part of the procedure and separate payment will not be allowed. Sulfamethoxazole/Trimethoprim (SMZ-TMP) Documentation as to why the patient needs to be on IV infusion instead of oral medication, must be in block 19 or as an attachment for paper claims or in the notepad for EMC claims. SurgiMend Synthroid (see Levothyroxine Sodium) Synvisc-One (see Hylan G-F 20) Tagamet (see Cimetidine Hydrochloride) Tenormin (see Atenolol) Tensilon (see Edrophonium Chloride) 1mg/ml $9.704 $9.219 2 meq 3 mmol 1% 2% $0.027 $0.043 $2.360 $3.400 $0.026 $0.041 $2.242 $3.230 10 mg $0.103 $0.098 600 mg $32.776 $31.137 Per infusion (minimum 50 million cells) 2 meq 7.5%/50 ml 50 ml 250 cc Added September 2012 Added September 2012 Increase New Code for 2012: Q2043 Decrease 50 mg $0.031 $2.730 $0.122 $0.708 Invoice $0.970 $0.029 $2.594 $0.116 $0.673 Invoice $0.922 100 mg $0.155 $0.147 5 cc $0.052 $0.049 1000 ml 50mcg/ml $5.640 $9.810 $5.358 $9.320 400 - 80 mg $0.276 $0.262 Increase 0.5 sq cm $12.026 $11.425 Increase Increase This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 17 - November 2012 Testosterone ** Testosterone Pellets (Testopel) Tetanus Toxoid (use codes 90702, 90703, or 90718) Tetracycline Torisel (see Temsirolimus) Trandate (see Labetalol Hydrochloride) Treanda (see Bendamustine Hydrochloride) Truxton (see Prednisolone Acetate) Tyvaso (see Treprostinil inhalation) Vaccinia IVIG (see Human Immune Globulin Intravenous) Valproate Sodium (Depacon) IV, Covered ICD9’s = 345.00 - 345.91, Allowed when administered IV, in the physician’s office. (Dosage change from 500 mg to 100 mg) Vasopressin Vasotec IV (see Enalaprilat) Vectibix (see Panitumumab) Vecuronium Bromide (Norcuron) Verapamil Hydrochloride (Isoptin IV) VIBATIV™ (see Telavancin Injection) Vincristine Sulfate Liposome (Marquibo) covered ICD9: 204.00-204.02 ** Vitamin B Complex (Follow B-12 guidelines) ** Vitamin C (see Ascorbic Acid) Non-covered by Carrier Vivaglobin (see Immune Globulin Subcutaneous) VPRIV™ (see Velaglucerase alfa for injection) Wilate (Human coagulation factor VIII (FVIII) and von Willebrand factor (VWF) powder and solvent for solution for injection) Covered ICD-9: 286.4 Xeomin (see IncobotulinumtoxinA) Xgeva (see Denosumab) Xiaflex (see Collagenase Clostridum Histolyticum) Xyntha (see Antihemophilic Factor (Recomb) Plasma/ Albumin-Free) Yervoy (see Ipilimumab) Zaltrap (see Ziv-Aflibercept) Ziv-Aflibercept (Zaltrap) covered ICD-9 153.0 - 153.7 or 154.0 - 154.2 Zortress (see Everolimus) Zyprexa IM (see Olanzapine) HOCM <= 149 MG/ML HOCM 200 - 249 MG/ML HOCM 250 - 299 MG/ML HOCM 300 - 349 MG/ML HOCM 350 - 399 MG/ML HOCM >= 400 MG/ML 37.5 mg Per Pellet $0.110 Invoice $0.105 Invoice Invoice Invoice 100 mg $0.558 $0.530 20 units $2.310 $2.195 Increase 1 mg 2.5 mg $0.499 $3.167 $0.474 $3.009 Decrease 2.25 mg. Invoice Up to 3 ml $0.930 Added September 2012 $0.884 1 IU VWF:RCO New Code for 2012: J7183 100 mg. $1,611.200 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml 1 ml $0.041 $0.093 $0.100 $0.104 $0.107 $0.191 Added September 2012 Added September 2012 $0.039 $0.088 $0.095 $0.099 $0.102 $0.181 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 18 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 CR 8059 - Implementation of the Award for the Jurisdiction 5 Part A and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractor (J5 A/B MAC) Reprocurment Including a New Workload Number for the Remaining WPS Legacy Workload Pub 100-20 One-Time Notification Transmittal 1119 Department of Health & Human Services (DHHS) Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Date: September 14, 2012 Change Request 8059 SUBJECT: Implementation of the Award for the Jurisdiction 5 Part A and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractor (J5 A/B MAC) Reprocurment Including a New Workload Number for the Remaining WPS Legacy Workload I. SUMMARY OF CHANGES: The Centers for Medicare &Medicaid Services (CMS) is required to compete the A/B MAC workloads at least once every 5 years. It recently did so for the Jurisdiction 5 A/B MAC workload as well as the Title 18 legacy workload being processed by Wisconsin Physicians Service (WPS) under its Medicare Title 18 contract. CMS awarded this workload to WPS, the incumbent contractor for all of these workloads. CMS has determined that it will not need to change the current Jurisdiction 5 workload numbers when this new contract is implemented. CMS will need to change the workload numbers for the Part A WPS legacy workload. This change is being made because CMS needs to identify each MAC workload using a standardized numbering system. EFFECTIVE DATE: October 22, 2012 IMPLEMENTATION DATE: October 22, 2012 Disclaimer for manual changes only: The revision date and transmittal number apply only to red italicized material. Any other material was previously published and remains unchanged. However, if this revision contains a table of contents, you will receive the new/revised information only, and not the entire table of contents. II. CHANGES IN MANUAL INSTRUCTIONS: (N/A if manual is not updated) R=REVISED, N=NEW, D=DELETED-Only One Per Row. R/N/D N/A CHAPTER / SECTION / SUBSECTION / TITLE III. FUNDING: For Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs) and/or Carriers: Funding or implementation activities will be provided to contractors through the regular budget process For Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs): The Medicare Administrative Contractor is hereby advised that this constitutes technical direction as defined in your contract. CMS does not construe this as a change to the MAC statement of Work. The contractor is not obliged to incur costs in excess of the amounts allotted in your contract unless and until specifically authorized by the Contracting Officer. If the contractor considers anything provided, as described above, to be outside the current scope of work, the contractor shall withhold performance on the part(s) in question and immediately notify the Contracting Officer, in writing or by e-mail, and request formal directions regarding continued performance requirements. IV. ATTACHMENTS: This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 19 - November 2012 One-Time Notification *Unless otherwise specified, the effective date is the date of service. Attachment - One-Time Notification Pub. 100-20 Transmittal: 1119 Date: September 14, 2012 Change Request: 8059 SUBJECT: Implementation of the Award for the Jurisdiction 5 Part A and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractor (J5 A/B MAC) Reprocurment Including a New Workload Number for the Remaining WPS Legacy Workload EFFECTIVE DATE: October 22, 2012 IMPLEMENTATION DATE: October 22, 2012 I. GENERAL INFORMATION A. Background: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) is required to compete each A/B MAC workload at least once every 5 years. It recently did so for the J5 A/B MAC workload as well as the Title 18 legacy workload being processed by Wisconsin Physicians Service (WPS) under its Medicare Title 18 contract. CMS awarded this workload to WPS, the incumbent contractor for all of these workloads. WPS address is: Wisconsin Physicians Service 1751 West Broadway Madison, WI 53713 CMS has determined that it will not need to change the current J5 A/B MAC workload numbers when the new contract is implemented. However, the reprocurement also included an existing Title 18 workload whose contractor workload number will need to be changed. This change is being made because CMS needs to identify each MAC workload using a standardized numbering system. The workload number shall be changed and the WPS Legacy Title 18 workload shall be transitioned to the J5 A/B MAC as indicated below. Workload Description WPS Legacy MAC Workload Number 05901 Effective Date 10/22/2012 Current Contractor Workload No. 52280 The following applications or business owners shall continue to accept the current J5 A/B MAC workload number as well as the new J5 A/B workload number once the above cited workload is transitioned to the J5 A/B MAC. • CMS Analysis, Reporting and Tracking System (CMS ARTS), • Contractor Administrative, Budget and Cost Reporting System (CAFM), • Comprehensive Error Rate Testing System (CERT), • Contractor Management Information System (CMIS), • CMS Baltimore Data Center • Coordination of Benefits Agreement program (COBA), • Coordination of Benefits Contractor (COBC), • Contractor Reporting of Operational Workload Data System (CROWD), • Common Working File (CWF), • CWF Part B Eligibility and Security Maintenance (CWF ELGE) • Customer Service Assessment and Management System (CSAMS), • Debt Collection System (DCS), This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 20 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • B. II. Electronic Correspondence Referral System (ECRS) Electronic Health Records Incentive Program (EHR), Enterprise Data Centers (EDCs) Expert Claims Processing System (ECPS), Fiscal Intermediary Shared System (FISS), Health Care Information System (HCIS), Healthcare Integrated General Ledger Accounting System (HIGLAS), Health Insurance Master Record (HIMR), Intern and Resident Information System (IRIS), Local Coverage Determination Database (LCD), Medicare Secondary Payer Recovery Contractor (MSPRC), Multi-Carrier System (MCS), National Data Warehouse (NDW), National Level Repository (NLR), National Part B Pricing Files, National Provider Identifier Crosswalk (NPI), Next Generation Desktop (NGD), Part B Analytics Reporting System (PBAR), Physician/Supplier Overpayment report (PSOR), Production Performance Monitoring System (PULSE), Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS), Provider Customer Service Program Contractor Information Database (PCID), Provider Inquiry Evaluation System (PIES), Program Integrity Management Reporting System (PIMR), Program Safeguard Contractor (PSC), Provider Overpayment Reporting System (PORS), Provider Statistical and Reimbursement System (PS and R), Quality Improvement Evaluation System (QIES), Recovery Auditors (RA), Recover Management and Accounting System (REMAS), Renal Management Information System (REMIS), System Tracking for Audit and Reimbursement (STAR), Zip Code File, and Zoned Program Integrity Contractors (ZPICs). Policy: N/A BUSINESS REQUIREMENTS TABLE Use “Shall” to denote a mandatory requirement. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 21 - November 2012 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F 8059.1 The Jurisdiction 5 A/B MAC workloads shall continue to be processed under their current MAC workload numbers of 05101 (Part A Iowa), 05201 (Part A Kansas), 05301 (Part A Missouri) 05401 (Part A Nebraska), 05102 (Part B Iowa), 05202 (Part B Kansas), 05302 (Part B Missouri), and 05402 (Part B Nebraska) when its new contract becomes effective. J5 A/B MAC; Hewlett Packard (HP) EDC 8059.1.1 The Part A IA, KS, MO and NE customer information control system (CICS) region shall continue to use FISS rollup number 05001 for claims processing. J5 A/B MAC; Hewlett Packard (HP) EDC 8059.1.2 All shared systems, applications and business owners listed in the background section of this CR shall continue to accept the J5 A/B MAC workload numbers as per 8059.1 and shall accept the new MAC workload number of 05901 as per 8059.2. All shared systems, application s, and business owners listed in the background section of this CR 8059.1.3 Following the expiration of its current contract, the J5 A/B MAC shall track and charge all costs related to that contract to the appropriate Contract Line Item Number (CLIN) as instructed by CMS. J5 A/B MAC 8059.1.3.1 Once its new contract reflecting the J5 A/B MAC reprocurement becomes effective, the J5 A/B MAC shall track and charge all costs related to that contract to the appropriate CLIN as instructed by CMS. J5 A/B MAC 8059.2 The workload number for the Part A WPS Legacy workload (workload number 52280) shall be changed to MAC workload number 05901 in accordance with the effective date in the background section of this Change Request (CR). 8059.2.1 The J5 A/B MAC shall provide project management, testing, and any other services necessary to achieve the transition of the Title 18 Part A workload currently processed under contractor workload number 52280 to MAC workload number 05901. This shall include (but not be limited to) working with the FISS maintainer, the HP EDC, and all other entities as applicable to ensure the success of the MAC workload number transition. October 2012 - page 22 - X J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC J5 A/B MAC Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-10 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A Other SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S C W F 8059.2.2 The HP EDC and the HP FISS maintainer shall provide all of the support necessary to successfully transition the Part A workload currently processed under contractor workload number 52280 to MAC workload number 05901, including (but not limited to) production support, testing, and coordination. X 8059.2.3 FISS shall supply the software needed to change the legacy workload numbers to the new MAC workload numbers in accordance with 8059.2 X 8059.2.4 The HP EDC, the J5 A/B MAC, CWF, FISS, and the Medicare applications or entities listed in the background section of this CR shall perform the modifications needed to accommodate the new MAC workload number of 05901 (WPS Legacy) as of the effective date listed in the background section. X X J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC, all Medicare application s or entities listed in background section 8059.2.4.1 The J5 A/B MAC, FISS, CWF, PECOS, and all entities listed in this CR shall associate all providers whose claims are currently processed under contractor workload number 52280 with MAC workload number 05901 (WPS Legacy) as of the effective date of that workloads MAC transition. X X J5 A/B MAC, PECOS 8059.2.5 The J5 A/B MAC shall utilize the existing Part A WPS Legacy production and user acceptance testing (UAT) CICS region to accomplish the transition of the WPS Legacy to the J5 A/B MAC. X J5 A/B MAC, WPS, HP EDC 8059.2.5.1 WPS, the legacy contractor for the Part A WPS Legacy workload shall work with the J5 A/B MAC, FISS, the HP EDC, and all other entities as necessary to ensure the success of the transition of the WPS Legacy workload to the J5 A/B MAC environment. X WPS, J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC X WPS, J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC 8059.2.5.1.1 WPS shall turn over to the J5 A/B MAC control of its Part A WPS Legacy UAT region no later than three weeks prior to the transition date of that workload as per the Background section of this CR. The Part A WPS Legacy UAT region shall be utilized by the J5 A/B MAC, FISS and the HP EDC to facilitate the transition of the Part A WPS Legacy workload to MAC workload number 05901. 8059.2.5.1.2 WPS shall provide the J5 A/B MAC with the information and documentation it needs to process claims utilizing the current WPS Legacy CICS region. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-10 - page 23 - HP EDC WPS, J5 A/B MAC October 2012 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F 8059.3 CWF shall read the contractor workload number in history for the informational unsolicited response (IUR) and the CWF reports processes. X 8059.3.1 Where a providers claims are currently being processed under contractor workload number 52280, CWF shall direct any associated IURs and reports to MAC workload number 05901. X 8059.4 WPS shall be prepared to provide information about which providers are assigned to legacy workload number 52280 to any of the contractors, maintainers, shared systems, applications, or CMS business owners listed in this CR. If any such entity requires this information, it should contact the CMS. The CMS contact information is listed in this CR following the business requirements (BRs). WPS 8059.4.1 At least 2 weeks prior to the MAC transition of each workload, the J5 A/B MAC shall request CMS to drop out of service area (OSA) processing during the transition period for the transitioning workload. The J5 A/B MAC shall use the language in 8059.4.1.1. The request shall be sent to J5 A/B MAC, CWF Host 8059.4.1.1 The following language shall be used by the J5 A/B MAC to request the dropping of OSA processing as per 8059.4.1. X J5 A/B MAC “ This OSA drop request is associated with CR 8059. The J5 A/B MAC requests that CMS authorizes the dropping of OSA transactions for the WPS Legacy workload (Contractor Workload No. 52280) which is being transitioned to the J5 A/B MAC. The OSA drop date should be Oct. 15, 2012. Cutover weekend for this workload is October 20 and 21, 2012 and the first shared system batch cycle is scheduled for Oct. 22, 2012, which should be the OSA restart date. The last cycle at the outgoing contractor is scheduled to be sent to the CWF Host on (insert month, day and year). This last file received should be returned to the outgoing contractor. The first cycle at the new contractor is scheduled to be sent to the CWF Host on Oct. 22, 2012. The first file received should be returned to the new contractor.” This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 24 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F 8059.5 FISS, CWF, PECOS, the J5 A/B MAC, the HP EDC, and the CMS shared systems, applications or business owners listed in Background section of this CR shall be able to implement the new MAC workload number by the effective date listed in this CR for that workload for the purpose of ongoing production. In the event the transition needs to be delayed, these applications shall be able to accommodate the delay within five business days of receiving notification from CMS. X X 8059.6 CWF and FISS shall make system changes (if any are required) so that any claims or adjustments associated with contractor workload number 52280 can continue to be processed (when appropriate) following the effective date of the WPS Legacy MAC implementation. X X 8059.7 Where practical, CWF, FISS, and all of the CMS shared systems, applications or business owners listed in Background section of the CR shall be able to implement the new WPS Legacy MAC workload number at least 3 weeks prior to the effective date of that workload transition as listed in the Background section of this CR for the purpose of testing with the Medicare contractor. X X 8059.8 CMS ARTS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. CMS ARTS 8059.9 CAFM shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. CAFM 8059.14 CSAMS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. CSAMS 8059.15 The CMS Debt Collection System (DCS) shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. The J5 A/B MAC shall manually adjust the DCS to reflect those providers whose contractor workload number has been changed. If this change was not made, any updates (collection or recall) would be sent to the original contractor workload number. ECRS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. DCS 8059.15.1 8059.16 J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC, all CMS shared systems, application s or business owners listed in the Background section of this CR. All of the CMS shared systems, application s or business owners listed in Backgroun d section of the CR J5 A/B MAC ECRS 8059.17 The NDW shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. NDW 8059.18 The NGD shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. NGD 8059.19 The NPI Crosswalk shall be modified to accept the new MAC workload number. NPI Crosswalk This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 25 - November 2012 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F 8059.19.1 WPS, the J5 A/B MAC, and the HP EDC shall work together to contact the CMS Baltimore Data Center (Donald Dimitriou) to set up file transfer protocols (where necessary) in accordance with the CMS Enterprise File Transfer (EFT) Infrastructure standard so that crosswalk files can be received by the HP EDC and the J5 A/B MAC for the new MAC workload number. When this file transfer process is in place, the contractor currently processing the workload covered by this CR shall send in a complete master provider file containing the new MAC workload number to the NPI crosswalk. The NPI crosswalk shall send back a file with the NPI to legacy crosswalk. Then daily files shall be sent and returned. The contractor using the new number shall also set up file transfers to send files correctly as described in JSM-06545. (Refer to CR 5040, 5041) WPS, J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC, BDC, NPI Crosswalk 8059.20 PIMR shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PIMR 8059.21 PSOR shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PULSE shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PSOR 8059.22 PULSE 8059.23 REMAS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. REMAS 8059.24 REMIS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. REMIS 8059.25 The PSCs and ZPICs shall make any necessary modifications to reflect the new MAC workload number. STAR shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PSCs, ZPICs 8059.26 8059.27 8059.28 8059.29 8059.29.1 8059.29.2 HCIS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PBAR shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. The J5 A/B MAC shall make any changes necessary to ensure its non-base jobs, applications and reports support the new MAC workload number. The J5 A/B MAC shall modify any electronic claims billing or other software it provides to suppliers, providers or submitters to reflect the MAC workload number. The J5 A/B MAC shall also modify its Medicare website and electronic portal to reflect the new MAC workload number. The J5 A/B MAC shall obtain approval from the CMS Non-Base Workgroup for any non- base applications it wants to run at the HP EDC as well as for any data files it wants to request from the EDC. STAR HCIS PBAR J5 A/B MAC J5 A/B MAC J5 A/B MAC Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A 8059.30 The national Part B pricing files shall be updated to X reflect the new MAC workload number. Contractors shall utilize the updated file whenever it is received. 8059.31 PECOS shall create a nightly extract file for MAC workload number 05901. The HP EDC shall arrange to pick up this file after the CMS PECOS business owner (Meena Patel) grants the HP EDC access to the file. Any user at the J5 A/B MAC who wants access to the new MAC workload number shall submit an application as per the instructions in the on line Help (FAQ) section of PECOS as soon as possible following the issuance of this CR. The application shall be sent to Alisha Banks ([email protected]. gov) and Meena.Patel ([email protected]). The user must do this in order to have access to the enrollments under these MAC number. 8059.31.1 8059.31.2 PECOS shall be modified to reflect the new MAC workload number. The PECOS team shall make all internal code changes to the PECOS Administrative Interface (AI) and the PECOS Provider Interface (PI) in order to accommodate the new MAC workload number of 05901. X X X SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F National Part B Pricing Files PECOS, HP EDC J5 A/B MAC PECOS PECOS shall delete all reference to the old contractor IDs. PECOS shall remove all users from the old contractor IDs. PECOS shall delete the old nightly export file names and access rights. 8059.31.2.1 PECOS shall move all providers currently associated with workload number 52280 to MAC workload number 05901 as of the effective date of that transition as per the background section of this CR. 8059.31.2.1.1 The J5 A/B MAC shall be responsible for manually correcting any enrollment record that fails to move systematically to the new contractor number due to a PECOS audit issue. This may require revalidation of the provider. PECOS J5 A/B MAC The J5 A/B MAC shall be responsible for manually correcting any enrollment that fails to process due to a PECOS audit issue after completion of the move to the new contractor number. This may require revalidation of the provider. 8059.32 QIES shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. QIES 8059.33 PORS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PORS 8059.34 The PS and R shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. PS and R This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 27 - November 2012 Number Requirements Responsibility A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A SharedSystem Maintainers F I S S M C S V M S Other C W F 8059.34.1 The J5 A/B MAC shall transition the legacy PS and R data to reflect the new workload number following the MAC transition. J5 A/B MAC 8059.35 IRIS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. IRIS 8059.36 The CWF ELGE module shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. CWF ELGE 8059.37 The CMS Baltimore Data Center shall modify its records to reflect the new MAC workload number. CMS Baltimore Data Center 8059.38 ECPS shall be modified (as necessary) to reflect the new MAC workload number. FISS shall work with the CWF and the HP EDC to ensure history files can be cross- referred to the new MAC workload number dating back at least 27 months. 8059.39 X X CWF, HP EDC 8059.40 The Local Coverage Determination (LCD) Database shall be updated to reflect the new MAC workload number. LCD 8059.40.1 The J5 A/B MAC shall advise the CMS LCD database CMS business owner of the policies it will be using to adjudicate claims once the legacy workloads have been transitioned to the MAC. The LCD database CMS business owner shall use this information to populate its database. J5 A/B MAC, LCD Database 8059.41 The J5 A/B MAC shall apply the LCDs of the legacy contractor as applicable to claims for services rendered by the transitioning providers with a date of service prior to the effective date of that workloads transition to the MAC. J5 A/B MAC 8059.42 HIGLAS shall rename the existing 52280 HIGLAS Organization as of the date of the transition of that workload to the J5 A/B MAC. HIGLAS 8059.42.1 WPS, the J5 A/B MAC and the HP EDC shall assist HIGLAS as necesary to support the rename of the 52280 workload as per 8059.43. 8059.43 The EHR program shall make whatever modifications are necessary to support the new MAC workload number. WPS, J5 A/B MAC, HP EDC, HIGLAS EHR 8059.44 The HIMR system shall be modified (if necessary) to ensure the J5 MAC will be able to access it. The MSPRC shall make any changes necessary to accommodate the new MAC workload number. 8059.45 HIMR MSPRC 8059.46 The NLR shall make whatever modifications are necessary to support the new MAC workload number. NLR 8059.47 PIES shall make any changes necessary to accommodate the new MAC workload number. PIES November 2012 - page 28 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Number Requirements Responsibility Other SharedSystem Maintainers A/B D F C R MA C M E I A R H RI HI ER MA P P C ar art t B A F I S S M C S V M S C W F 8059.48 The Recovery Auditors (RA) interfacing with the J5 A/B MAC shall make whatever modifications are necessary to support the new MAC workload number RA 8059.48.1 The RAs shall use the appropriate MAC workload number when submitting adjustment requests to the J5 A/B MAC. RA The HIGLAS Organization number does not need to be synchronized with the MAC workload number. The RAs shall take that into account when submitting adjustment request to the J5 A/B MAC. The PCID shall make whatever modifications are necessary to support the new MAC workload number. The Zip Code file shall be updated to reflect the new MAC workload number. Contractors shall utilize the updated zip code file whenever it is received. 8059.49 8059.50 III. X X X Zip Code File PROVIDER EDUCATION TABLE Number 8059.51 IV. PCID Requirement Responsibility FI C A/B MAC D A M R E R I M P P E A a a R C r r t t A B X CR as Provider Education: Contractors shall post this entire instruction, or a direct link to this instruction, on their Web sites and include information about it in a listserv message within 1 week of the release of this instruction. In addition, the entire instruction must be included in the contractor’s next regularly scheduled bulletin. Contractors are free to supplement it with localized information that would benefit their provider community in billing and administering the Medicare program correctly. X X R H H I Other X SUPPORTING INFORMATION Section A: Recommendations and supporting information associated with listed requirements: N/A Use “Should” to denote a recommendation. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 29 - November 2012 X-Ref Requirement Number Recommendations or other supporting information: Section B: All other recommendations and supporting information: N/A V. CONTACTS Pre-Implementation Contact(s): Amber Trujillo, [email protected], Scott Levine, 347-5010837 or [email protected] Post-Implementation Contact(s): Contact your Contracting Officer’s Representative (COR) or Contractor Manager, as applicable. VI. FUNDING Section A: For Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs), and/ or Carriers: Funding or implementation activities will be provided to contractors through the regular budget process Section B: For Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs): The Medicare Administrative Contractor is hereby advised that this constitutes technical direction as defined in your contract. CMS do not construe this as a change to the MAC Statement of Work. The contractor is not obligated to incur costs in excess of the amounts allotted in your contract unless and until specifically authorized by the Contracting Officer. If the contractor considers anything provided, as described above, to be outside the current scope of work, the contractor shall withhold performance on the part(s) in question and immediately notify the Contracting Officer, in writing or by e-mail, and request formal directions regarding continued performance requirements. Erythropoiesis Stimulating Agents (ESA) L31867 The Erythropoiesis Stimulating Agent (ESA) LCD L31867 has been updated to include new FDA approved drug Omantys ®, HCPCS code Q2047, effective March 27, 2012. This is covered when billed with both of the following ICD-9 –CM 285.21 and 585.6. Local Carrier Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Drugs Effective July 1, 2012 through September 30, 2012 Note 1: The complete ASP Payment Allowance Limits list can be accessed at the following link: http://www.cms.gov/McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/01a18_2011ASPFiles.asp#TopOfPage Note 2: Payment allowance limits subject to the ASP methodology are based on 1Q11 ASP data. Note 3: The absence or presence of a HCPCS code and the payment allowance limits in this table does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug. Similarly, the inclusion of a payment allowance limit within a specific column does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug in that specific category. These determinations shall be made by the local Medicare contractor processing the claim. Note 4: ** - Carrier-priced HCPCS Code Short Description HCPCS Code Dosage Payment Limit Notes 90396** 90396** varicella-zoster immune globulin varicella-zoster immune globulin 125 U /1.25 ML 625 U / 6.25 ML Invoice Invoice This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 30 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 A9505 Flu vaccine, derived from cell cultures, subunit Thallium TI201 Per Carrier Medical Director not covered by Part B. Invoice J0135** J0200** J0270** J0275** J0364** J0380** J0390** J0395** Adalimumab, 20 MG Alatrofloxacin mesylate Alprostadil, 1.25 MCG Alprostadil Urethral Suppository Apomorphine / Hydrochloride metaraminol bitartrate, inj Chloroquine injection Arbutamine HCl injection Considered self-administered. 100 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 10 MG Invoice 250 MG Invoice 1 MG Invoice J0520** Bethanechol chloride inject Oral drug considered part of procedure in physician’s office. J0620** J0630** J0715** J1060** J1324** J1438** J1590** J1595** J1675** J1680** J1700** J1710** J1725** J1830** J1890** J1960** J1990** J2170** J2278KD** J2320** J2354** J2513** J2650** J2670** J2940** J2941** J3030** J3110** J3140** J3150** J3265** J3280** J7130** J7191** J7500** J7502** J7506** J7507** J7509** J7510** Calcium glycerophosphate/Calcium lactate Calcitonin Salmon Ceftizoxime sodium / 500 MG Testosterone cypionate 1 ML Enfuvirtide Etanercept Gatifloxacin injection Injection glatiramer acetate Histrelin Acetate fibrinogen concentrate human Hydrocortisone acetate inj Hydrocortisone sodium ph inj Hydroxyprogesterone Caporate Interferon beta-1b / .25 MG Cephalothin sodium injection Levorphanol tartrate Chlordiazepoxide injection Mecasermin Ziconotide injection Nandrolone decanoate 50 MG Octreotide Acetate Pentastarch 10% solution Prednisolone acetate Tolazoline hcl injection Somatrem injection Somatropin injection Sumatriptan Succinate Teriparatide injection Testosterone suspension Testosterone propionate Injection torsemide 10 mg/ml Thiethylperazine maleate, inj Hypertonic saline solution Factor viii (porcine) Azathioprine oral 50 mg Cyclosporine oral 100 mg Prednisone oral Tacrolimus oral per 1 MG Methylprednisolone oral Prednisolone oral per 5 mg 10 ML Invoice Considered self-administered. 500 MG Invoice 1 ML Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 100 MG $ 103.550 25 MG $ 0.360 50 MG Invoice 1 MG Invoice Not covered by carrier. 1G Invoice 2 MG $ 3.765 100 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. 1 MCG Invoice 50 MG $ 4.452 Considered self-administered. 10% Invoice 1 ML $ 0.342 25 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 50 MG $ 0.420 100 MG $ 0.798 10 MG $ 4.000 10 MG Invoice 20 CC Invoice 1 IU Invoice Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC 90661** added March 2012 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 31 - November 2012 J7515** J7517** J7518** J7520** Cyclosporine oral 25 mg Mycophenolate mofetil oral Mycophenolic acid Sirolimus, oral J7604** Acetylcystein J7605** Arformoterol non-comp unit J7606** Formoterol fumarate, inh J7608** Acetylcystein non-comp unit J7611** Albuterol non-comp con J7612** Levalbuterol non-comp con J7613** Albuterol non-comp unit J7614** Levalbuterol non-comp unit J7620** Albuterol ipratrop non-comp J7622** Beclomethasone inhalation sol J7624** Betamethasone inhalation sol J7626** Budesonide non-comp unit J7628** Bitolterol mes inhal sol con J7629** Bitolterol mes inh sol u d J7631** Cromolyn sodium non-comp unit J7633** Budesonide concentrated sol J7639** Dornase alfa non-comp unit J7641** Flunisolide, inhalation sol J7644** Ipratropium bromide non-comp J7648** Isoetharine hcl inh sol con J7649** Isoetharine hcl inh sol u d J7658** Isoproterenol hcl inh sol con J7659** Isoproterenol hcl inh sol ud J7668** Metaproterenol inh sol con J7669** Metaproterenol non-comp unit J7674** Methacholine chloride, neb J7680** Terbutaline so4 inh sol con J7681** Terbutaline so4 inh sol u d J7682** Tobramycin non-comp unit J7683** Triamcinolone inh sol con J7684** Triamcinolone inh sol u d J7686** Treprostinil non-comp unit J8501** J8510** J8520** J8521** J8530** J8540** Oral aprepitant Oral busulfan Capecitabine, oral 150 mg Capecitabine, oral 500 mg Cyclophosphamide oral 25 MG Oral dexamethasone Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 32 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 J8560** J8562** J8600** J8610** J8700** J8705** J9165** J9213** J9215** J9218** J9270** J9600** Q0163** Q0164** Q0165** Q0166** Q0167** Q0168** Q0169** Q0170** Q0174** Q0179** Q0180** Q4074** Etoposide oral 50 MG Oral fludarabine phosphate Melphalan oral 2 MG Methotrexate oral 2.5 MG Temozolomide Topotecan oral Diethylstilbestrol diphosphate injection Interferon alfa-2a inj Interferon, alfa-n3 Leuprolide Acetate Plicamycin (mithramycin) inj Porfimer Sodium injection Diphenhydramine HCI 50 mg Prochlorperazine maleate 5 mg Prochlorperazine maleate 10 mg Granisetron hcl 1 mg oral Dronabinol 2.5 mg oral Dronabinol 5 mg oral Promethazine HCI 12.5 mg oral Promethazine HCI 25 mg oral Thiethylperazine maleate, 10mg Ondansetron hcl 9 mg oral Dolasetron mesylate oral Unspecified oral dosage form, FDA approved presription anti-emetic Radiesse injection Sculptra injection Agriflu Not Otherwise Classified flu vacc, 3 yrs & >, im Iloprost non-comp unit dose Q4118** Q4119** Q4122** Q4124** Q4125** Q4126** Q4127** Q4128** Q4129** Q4130** Q9955** Matristem Micromatrix Matristem Micromatrix Dermacell Oasis Ultra Tri-Layer Wound Matrix Arthroflex Memoderm Talymed Flex HD or Allopatch HD Unite Biomatrix Strattice TM Inj perflexane lip micros, ml Q0181** Q2026** Q2027** Q2034** Q2039** Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. 250 MG Invoice 3 MIL UNITS Invoice 250,000 IU $ 23.834 Considered self-administered. 2.5 MG Invoice 75 MG $ 3,004.740 Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. 0.1 ML 0.1 ML .05 ML Invoice Invoice Invoice 0.5 ML $ 12.375 Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. 1 MG $ 2.433 1 SQ CM $ 2.470 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM $ 11.400 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 ML Invoice This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 33 - November 2012 Local Payment Allowance Limits for Medicare Part B Drugs Effective October 1, 2012 through December 31, 2012 Note 1: The complete ASP Payment Allowance Limits list can be accessed at the following link: http://www.cms.gov/McrPartBDrugAvgSalesPrice/01a18_2011ASPFiles.asp#TopOfPage Note 2: Payment allowance limits subject to the ASP methodology are based on 2Q12 ASP data. Note 3: The absence or presence of a HCPCS code and the payment allowance limits in this table does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug. Similarly, the inclusion of a payment allowance limit within a specific column does not indicate Medicare coverage of the drug in that specific category. These determinations shall be made by the local Medicare contractor processing the claim. Note 4: ** - Carrier-priced HCPCS Code 90396** 90396** Short Description HCPCS Code Dosage J0135** J0200** J0270** J0275** J0364** J0380** J0390** J0395** varicella-zoster immune globulin varicella-zoster immune globulin Flu vaccine, derived from cell cultures, subunit Adalimumab, 20 MG Alatrofloxacin mesylate Alprostadil, 1.25 MCG Alprostadil Urethral Suppository Apomorphine / Hydrochloride metaraminol bitartrate, inj Chloroquine injection Arbutamine HCl injection 125 U / 1.25 ML Invoice 625 U / 6.25 ML Invoice Per Carrier Medical Director not covered by Part B. Considered self-administered. 100 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 10 MG Invoice 250 MG Invoice 1 MG Invoice J0520** Bethanechol chloride inject Oral drug considered part of procedure in physician’s office. J0620** J0630** J0715** J1060** J1324** J1438** J1590** J1595** J1675** J1680** J1700** J1710** J1725** J1830** J1890** J1960** J1990** J2170** J2265** J2278KD** J2320** J2354** Calcium glycerophosphate/Calcium lactate Calcitonin Salmon Ceftizoxime sodium / 500 MG Testosterone cypionate 1 ML Enfuvirtide Etanercept Gatifloxacin injection Injection glatiramer acetate Histrelin Acetate fibrinogen concentrate human Hydrocortisone acetate inj Hydrocortisone sodium ph inj Hydroxyprogesterone Caporate Interferon beta-1b / .25 MG Cephalothin sodium injection Levorphanol tartrate Chlordiazepoxide injection Mecasermin Minocycline Hydrochloride Ziconotide injection Nandrolone decanoate 50 MG Octreotide Acetate 10 ML Invoice Considered self-administered. 500 MG Invoice 1 ML Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 100 MG $ 103.550 25 MG $ 0.360 50 MG Invoice 1 MG Invoice Not covered by carrier. 1G Invoice 2 MG $ 3.765 100 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 1 MCG Invoice 50 MG $ 4.452 Considered self-administered. 90661** Payment Limit Notes This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 34 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 J2513** J2650** J2670** J2940** J2941** J3030** J3110** J3140** J3150** J3265** J3280** J7130** J7180** J7191** J7500** J7502** J7506** J7507** J7509** J7510** J7515** J7517** J7518** J7520** Pentastarch 10% solution Prednisolone acetate Tolazoline hcl injection Somatrem injection Somatropin injection Sumatriptan Succinate Teriparatide injection Testosterone suspension Testosterone propionate Injection torsemide 10 mg/ml Thiethylperazine maleate, inj Hypertonic saline solution Factor XIII Factor viii (porcine) Azathioprine oral 50 mg Cyclosporine oral 100 mg Prednisone oral Tacrolimus oral per 1 MG Methylprednisolone oral Prednisolone oral per 5 mg Cyclosporine oral 25 mg Mycophenolate mofetil oral Mycophenolic acid Sirolimus, oral J7604** Acetylcystein J7605** Arformoterol non-comp unit J7606** Formoterol fumarate, inh J7608** Acetylcystein non-comp unit J7611** Albuterol non-comp con J7612** Levalbuterol non-comp con J7613** Albuterol non-comp unit J7614** Levalbuterol non-comp unit J7620** Albuterol ipratrop non-comp J7622** Beclomethasone inhalation sol J7624** Betamethasone inhalation sol J7626** Budesonide non-comp unit J7628** Bitolterol mes inhal sol con J7629** Bitolterol mes inh sol u d J7631** Cromolyn sodium non-comp unit J7633** Budesonide concentrated sol 10% Invoice 1 ML $ 25 MG Invoice Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. Considered self-administered. 50 MG $ 100 MG $ 10 MG $ 10 MG Invoice 20 CC Invoice 1 I.U. Invoice 1 IU Invoice Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Should be billed to DMAC Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. 0.342 0.420 0.798 4.000 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 35 - November 2012 J7639** Dornase alfa non-comp unit J7641** Flunisolide, inhalation sol J7644** Ipratropium bromide non-comp J7648** Isoetharine hcl inh sol con J7649** Isoetharine hcl inh sol u d J7658** Isoproterenol hcl inh sol con J7659** Isoproterenol hcl inh sol ud J7665** Mannitol inh sol J7668** Metaproterenol inh sol con J7669** Metaproterenol non-comp unit J7674** Methacholine chloride, neb J7680** Terbutaline so4 inh sol con J7681** Terbutaline so4 inh sol u d J7682** Tobramycin non-comp unit J7683** Triamcinolone inh sol con J7684** Triamcinolone inh sol u d J7686** Treprostinil non-comp unit J8501** J8510** J8520** J8521** J8530** J8540** J8560** J8561** J8562** J8600** J8610** J8700** J8705** J9165** J9213** J9215** J9218** J9270** J9600** Q0163** Q0164** Q0165** Q0166** Oral aprepitant Oral busulfan Capecitabine, oral 150 mg Capecitabine, oral 500 mg Cyclophosphamide oral 25 MG Oral dexamethasone Etoposide oral 50 MG Everolimus, 0.25 MG Oral fludarabine phosphate Melphalan oral 2 MG Methotrexate oral 2.5 MG Temozolomide Topotecan oral Diethylstilbestrol diphosphate injection Interferon alfa-2a inj Interferon, alfa-n3 Leuprolide Acetate Plicamycin (mithramycin) inj Porfimer Sodium injection Diphenhydramine HCI 50 mg Prochlorperazine maleate 5 mg Prochlorperazine maleate 10 mg Granisetron hcl 1 mg oral Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. 250 MG Invoice 3 MIL UNITS Invoice 250,000 IU $ 23.834 Considered self-administered. 2.5 MG Invoice 75 MG $ 3,004.740 Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 36 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Q0167** Q0168** Q0169** Q0170** Q0174** Q0179** Q0180** Q4074** Dronabinol 2.5 mg oral Dronabinol 5 mg oral Promethazine HCI 12.5 mg oral Promethazine HCI 25 mg oral Thiethylperazine maleate, 10mg Ondansetron hcl 9 mg oral Dolasetron mesylate oral Unspecified oral dosage form, FDA approved presription anti-emetic Radiesse injection Sculptra injection Agriflu Not Otherwise Classified flu vacc, 3 yrs & >, im Iloprost non-comp unit dose Q4118** Q4119** Q4122** Q4123** Q4124** Q4125** Q4126** Q4127** Q4128** Q4129** Q4130** Q9955** Matristem Micromatrix Matristem Micromatrix Dermacell Alloskin RT Oasis Ultra Tri-Layer Wound Matrix Arthroflex Memoderm Talymed Flex HD or Allopatch HD Unite Biomatrix Strattice TM Inj perflexane lip micros, ml Q0181** Q2026** Q2027** Q2034** Q2039** Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. Should be billed to DMAC. 0.1 ML 0.1 ML 0.05 ML Invoice Invoice Invoice 0.5 ML $ 12.375 Considered part of procedure in physician’s office. 1 MG $ 2.433 1 SQ CM $ 2.470 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM $ 13.372 1 SQ CM $ 11.400 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 SQ CM Invoice 1 ML Invoice MM7791 - Contractor and Common Working File (CWF) Additional Instructions Related to Change Request (CR) 7633 - Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care to Reduce Alcohol Misuse DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Medicare is denying an increasing number of claims, because providers are not identifying the correct primary payer prior to claims submission. Medicare would like to remind providers, physicians, and suppliers that they have the responsibility to bill correctly and to ensure claims are submitted to the appropriate primary payer. Please refer to the “Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) Manual,” Chapter 3, and MLN Matters® Article SE1217 for additional guidance. Note: This article was revised on September 17, 2012, to reflect a revised CR7791 issued on September 13. The CR transmittal number, release date, and the Web address for accessing the CR have been changed. All other information is the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, providers and suppliers submitting claims to Fiscal Intermediaries (FI), carriers and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MAC) for screening and behavioral counseling services provided to Medicare beneficiaries. What You Need to Know If a claim is submitted by a provider for G0443 (Brief face-to-face behavioral counseling for alcohol misuse, 15 minutes) when there are no claims for G0442 (Annual alcohol misuse screening, 15 minutes) This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 37 - November 2012 in Medicare’s claims history within a prior 12 month period, CR 7791 requires contractors to deny these claims. Be sure to inform your staff of these changes. Background Pursuant to section 1861(ddd) of the Social Security Act, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) may add coverage of “additional preventive services” through the National Coverage Determination (NCD) process if all of the following criteria are met. They must be: (1) reasonable and necessary for the prevention or early detection of illness or disability, (2) recommended with a grade of A or B by the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), and, (3) appropriate for individuals entitled to benefits under Part A or enrolled under Part B of the Medicare Program. CMS reviewed the USPSTF’s “B” recommendation and supporting evidence for “Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care to Reduce Alcohol Misuse” preventive services and determined that all three criteria were met. According to the USPSTF (2004), alcohol misuse includes risky/hazardous and harmful drinking which place individuals at risk for future problems; and in the general adult population, risky or hazardous drinking is defined as >7 drinks per week or >3 drinks per occasion for women, and >14 drinks per week or >4 drinks per occasion for men. Harmful drinking describes those persons currently experiencing physical, social or psychological harm from alcohol use, but who do not meet criteria for dependence. In the Medicare population, Saitz (2005) defined risky use as >7 standard drinks per week or >3 drinks per occasion for women and persons >65 years of age, and >14 standard drinks per week or >4 drinks per occasion for men ≤65 years of age. Importantly, Saitz included the caveat that such thresholds do not apply to pregnant women for whom the healthiest choice is generally abstinence. The 2005 “Clinician’s Guide” from the National Institutes of Health National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism also stated that clinicians recommend lower limits or abstinence for patients taking medication that interacts with alcohol, or who engage in activities that require attention, skill, or coordination (e.g., driving), or who have a medical condition exacerbated by alcohol (e.g., gastritis). CR 7791 adds further instructions for contractors if a claim is submitted by a provider for G0443 (Brief face-to-face behavioral counseling for alcohol misuse, 15 minutes) when there are no claims for G0442 (Annual alcohol misuse screening, 15 minutes) in claims history within a prior 12 month period. It requires contractors to deny such claims with the following specific messages: • Claim Adjustment Reason Code (CARC) B15 – This service/procedure requires that a qualifying service/procedure be received and covered. The qualifying other service/procedure has not been received/adjudicated. NOTE: Refer to the 835 Healthcare Policy Identification Segment (loop 2110 Service Payment Information REF), if present. • Remittance Advice Remark Code (RARC) M16 – Alert: Please see our web site, mailings, or bulletins for more details concerning this policy/procedure/decision. • Group Code PR (Patient Responsibility) assigning financial liability to the beneficiary, if a claim is received with a modifier indicating a signed Advanced Beneficiary Notice (ABN) is on file. • Group code CO (Contractual Obligation) assigning financial liability to the provider, if a claim is received without a modifier indicating no signed ABN is on file. Also, remember that Medicare will only pay for up to four G0443 services within a 12 month period. Claims for G0443 that exceed that four session limit in a 12 month period will be rejected. In addition, Medicare will continue to reject incoming claims when G0442 (PROF) and G0443 (PROF) are billed on the same day on types of bills 71X, 77X, and 85X with revenue codes 096X, 097X, and 098X. Additional Information The official instruction, CR 7791, issued to your FI, carrier, and A/B MAC regarding this change, may be viewed at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2544CP. pdf on the CMS website. The MLN Matters® Article MM7663, entitled, “Screening and Behavioral Counseling Interventions in Primary Care to Reduce Alcohol Misuse,” may be viewed at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-andEducation/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM7633.pdf on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 38 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 If you have any questions, please contact your FI, carrier, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM7806 - Extracorporeal Photopheresis (ICD-10) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – In response to shortage of liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil), the Food and Drug Administration is permitting the temporary importation of Lipodox, a brand of liposomal doxorubicin hydrochloride. Visit http://www.FDA.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm292658.htm for additional information. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Quarterly Update includes two new codes (Q2048 and Q2049) for liposomal doxorubicin that will become effective Sunday, July 1, 2012. The code descriptors are worded in a manner that distinguishes Lipodox and Doxil. As of Sunday, July 1, 2012, HCPCS code J9001 will not be used for Medicare billing. CMS will release a Change Request (CR) with additional instructions in the near future. Note: This article was revised on September 25, 2012, to reflect the revised CR7806 issued on September 24, 2012. The CR release date, transmittal number, and the Web address for accessing CR7806 were revised. All other information is the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians and other providers who bill Medicare Carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), or Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs) for providing extracorporeal photopheresis procedures for the treatment of Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome (BOS) following lung allograft transplantation. Provider Action Needed Effective for claims with dates of service on and after April 30, 2012, Medicare will cover extracorporeal photopheresis for the treatment of Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome (BOS) following lung allograft transplantation, but only when provided under an approved clinical research study that meets specific requirements to assess the effect of extracorporeal photopheresis for the treatment of BOS following lung allograft transplantation. You should make sure that your billing staffs are aware of the expanded coverage provided in this NCD. Background Extracorporeal photopheresis is a second-line treatment for a variety of oncological and autoimmune disorders that is performed in the hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, and Critical Access Hospital (CAH) settings. In the procedure, some of a patient’s removed white blood cells are exposed first to the drug 8-methoxypsoralen (8-MOP) and then to ultraviolet A (UVA) light. After UVA light exposure, the treated white blood cells are re-infused into the patient, stimulating their immune system in a series of cascading reactions. This activation of the immune system then impacts the illness being treated. Currently, Medicare covers extracorporeal photopheresis for the following indications: • Palliative treatment of skin manifestations of CTCL that has not responded to other therapy; • Patients with acute cardiac allograft rejection whose disease is refractory to standard immunosuppressive drug treatment; and • Patients with chronic graft versus host disease whose disease is refractory to standard immunosuppressive drug treatment. On August 4, 2011, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) accepted a formal request for a reconsideration to add coverage for extracorporeal photopheresis treatment for patients who have received lung allografts and then developed progressive Bronchiolitis Obliterans Syndrome (BOS) refractory to immunosuppressive drug treatment. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 39 - November 2012 As a result of the reconsideration, effective for claims with dates of service on and after April 30, 2012, Medicare will begin to cover extracorporeal photopheresis for the treatment of BOS following lung allograft transplantation; but only when provided under a clinical research study that meets specific requirements to assess its effect in the treatment of BOS following lung allograft transplantation. NCD Clinical Research Study Requirements This is a National Coverage Determination (NCD). In keeping with this NCD, any clinical research study that includes Medicare coverage of extracorporeal photopheresis for the treatment of BOS following lung allograft transplantation must be approved by meeting the requirements listed below. Additionally, consistent with section 1142 of the Social Security Act, AHRQ supports clinical research studies that CMS determines meet these standards and address the research questions. An approved clinical research study: 1. Must address one or more aspects of the following question: Prospectively, do Medicare beneficiaries who have received lung allografts, developed BOS refractory to standard immunosuppressive therapy, and received extracorporeal photopheresis, experience improved patient-centered health outcomes as indicated by: a. Improved Forced Expiratory Volume in One Second (FEV1); b. Improved survival after transplant; and/or c. Improved quality of life? 2. Must adhere to the following standards of scientific integrity and relevance to the Medicare population: a. Its principal purpose is to test whether extracorporeal photopheresis potentially improves the participants’ health outcomes; b. It is well supported by available scientific and medical information or it is intended to clarify or establish the health outcomes of interventions already in common clinical use; c. It does not unjustifiably duplicate existing studies; d. Its design is appropriate to answer the research question being asked in the study; e. It is sponsored by an organization or individual capable of successfully executing the proposed study; f. It is in compliance with all applicable Federal regulations concerning the protection of human subjects found at 45 Code of Federal Regulations CFR Part 46. If a study is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), it must also be in compliance with a. 21 CFR parts 50 and 56; g. All of its aspects are conducted according to appropriate standards of scientific integrity (see http://www.icmje.org); h. It has a written protocol that clearly addresses, or incorporates by reference, the standards listed here as Medicare requirements for Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) coverage; i. It is not designed to exclusively test toxicity or disease pathophysiology in healthy individuals. Trials of all medical technologies measuring therapeutic outcomes as one of the objectives meet this standard only if the disease or condition being studied is life threatening as defined in 21 CFR Section 312.81(a) and the patient has no other viable treatment options; j. It is registered on the ClinicalTrials.gov website (http://clinicaltrials.gov) by the principal sponsor/investigator prior to the enrollment of the first study subject; k. Its protocol specifies the method and timing of public release of all prespecified outcomes to be measured including release of outcomes if outcomes are negative or study is terminated early. The results must be made public within 24 months of the end of data collection. If a report is planned to be published in a peer reviewed journal, then that initial release may be an abstract that meets the requirements of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (http:// www.icmje.org). l. It explicitly discusses subpopulations affected by the treatment under investigation, particularly traditionally underrepresented groups in clinical studies, how the inclusion and exclusion criteria effect enrollment of these populations, and a plan for the retention and reporting of said populations on the trial. If the inclusion and exclusion criteria are expected to have a negative effect on the recruitment or retention of underrepresented populations, the protocol must discuss why these criteria are necessary This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 40 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 m. Its study protocol explicitly discusses how the results are or are not expected to be generalizable to the Medicare population to infer whether Medicare patients may benefit from the intervention. Separate discussions in the protocol may be necessary for populations eligible for Medicare due to age, disability or Medicaid eligibility. Note: Any clinical study in which there is coverage of extracorporeal photopheresis for this indication under this NCD must be approved by April 30, 2014 (two years from the effective date of this NCD). If there are no approved clinical studies by this date, this NCD will expire and coverage of extracorporeal photopheresis for BOS will revert to the coverage policy in effect prior to the issuance of its Final Decision Memorandum (DM) on April 30, 2012. Billing Requirements Effective for claims with dates of service on and after April 30, 2012, your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC will accept and pay for hospital outpatient and physician claims containing Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) procedure code 36522 along with one of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-9-CM or ICD-10) diagnosis codes displayed in the following table. ICD 9 CM ICD 9 CM Description ICD-10 ICD-10 Description 491.20 Obstructive chronic bronchitis without exacerbation J44.9 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, unspecified 491.21 Obstructive chronic bronchitis with (acute) exacerbation J44.1 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with (acute) exacerbation 491.9 Unspecified chronic bronchitis J42 Unspecified chronic bronchitis 496 Chronic airway obstruction, not elsewhere classified J44.9 Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, unspecified 996.84 Complications of transplanted lung T86.810 Lung transplant rejection 996.84 Complications of transplanted lung T86.811 Lung transplant failure 996.84 Complications of transplanted lung T86.812 Lung transplant infection (not recommended for ECP coverage) 996.84 Complications of transplanted lung T86.818 Other complications of lung transplant 996.84 Complications of transplanted lung T86.819 Unspecified complication of lung transplant V70.7 Examination of participant in clinical trial Z00.6 Encounter for examination for normal comparison and control in clinical research program (needed for CED) Please note that your claims will only be paid when they also contain all of the following: • Diagnosis code V70.7 (as secondary diagnosis) (ICD-10 Z00.6); • Condition code 30 (institutional claims only); • Clinical trial modifier Q0 (Investigational clinical service provided in a clinical research study that is in an approved research study); and • Value Code D4 with an 8-digit clinical trial number (optional)(FIs only). Additionally, should your Medicare contractor return your claims as unprocessable because they are missing: 1) Diagnosis code V70.7 (as secondary diagnosis), 2) Condition code 30 (Institutional claims only), 3) Clinical trial modifier Q0 (Institutional claims only), and 4) Value Code D4 with an 8-digit clinical trial number (optional) (FIs only); they will use the following messages: • CARC 4 – The procedure code is inconsistent with the modifier used or a required modifier is missing. Note: Refer to the 835 Healthcare Policy Identification Segment (loop 2110 Service This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 41 - November 2012 • • Payment Information REF), if present. RARC MA 130 – Your claim contains incomplete and/or invalid information, and no appeal rights are afforded because the claim is unprocessable. Please submit a new claim with the complete/correct information. RARC M16 – Alert: Please see our web site, mailings, or bulletins for more details concerning this policy/procedure/decision. Please keep in mind that your contractor will not retroactively adjust claims from April 30, 2012, processed prior to implementation of CR7806. However, they may adjust claims that you bring to their attention. Additional Information The official instruction, CR7806, was issued in two transmittals. The first updates to the “Medicare National Coverage Determinations Manual” are available at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R143NCD.pdf on the CMS website. The second updates the “Medicare Claims Processing Manual” and it is at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations- and-Guidance/ Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2551CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM7818 - International Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition (ICD)10 Conversion from (ICD-9) and Related Code Infrastructure of the Medicare Shared Systems as They Relate to CMS National Coverage Determinations (NCDs) (CR 1 of 3) (ICD-10) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – NEW products from the Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) • “Cardiovascular Disease Services,” Booklet, ICN 907784, Downloadable • “Screening Pap Tests,” Booklet, ICN 907791, Downloadable Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article for Change Request (CR) 7818 is intended for physicians, other providers, and suppliers who submit claims to Medicare contractors (carriers and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs)) for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed This article is based on Change Request (CR) 7818 which creates and updates National Coverage Determination (NCD) hard-coded Medicare shared system edits that contain ICD-9 diagnosis codes with comparable ICD-10 diagnosis codes. The requirements described in CR7818 reflect the operational changes that are necessary to implement the conversion of the Medicare shared system diagnosis codes specific to numerous Medicare NCDs, which are identified in an attachment to CR7818. In order to be prepared to meet the timeline to implement the new ICD-10 diagnosis codes on October 1, 2014, the Medicare shared systems will begin implementation of the necessary changes to the NCDs in the January 2013 systems release. No DME MAC edits are included in this CR but will be addressed in subsequent CRs. All remaining changes to the Medicare shared systems, as they relate to Medicare NCDs, will be made in subsequent releases. See the Background and Additional Information Sections of this article for further details regarding these changes and be sure that you are ready for ICD-10 implementation. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 42 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Background On October 1, 2014, all Medicare claims submissions will convert from the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Edition (ICD-9) to the 10th Edition (ICD-10). The transition will require business and systems changes throughout the health care industry. All covered entities, as defined by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), must adhere to the conversion. In accordance with HIPAA, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services adopts standard medical data code sets for use in standard transactions adopted under this law. According to the ICD-10 Final Rule, published in the Federal Register of January 16, 2009 (see http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-2009-01-16/ pdf/E9-743.pdf on the Internet), the Secretary adopts the ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS code sets for use in appropriate HIPAA standard transactions. Entities covered under HIPAA (which include Medicare and its providers submitting claims electronically) are bound by these requirements and must comply. Medicare will also require submitters of paper claims to use ICD-10 codes on their claims according to the same compliance date. The purpose of CR7818 is to both create and update NCD hard-coded Medicare shared system edits that contain ICD-9 diagnosis codes with comparable ICD-10 diagnosis codes, plus all associated editing such as procedure codes, HCPCS/CPT codes, denial messages, frequency edits, Place of Service (POS)/Type of Bill (TOB)/provider specialty editing, etc. The requirements described in CR7818 reflect the operational changes that are necessary to implement the conversion of the Medicare shared system diagnosis codes specific to the Medicare NCDs listed as an attachment to CR7818. Note: This exercise is in no way intended to expand, restrict, or alter existing Medicare national coverage. Also, it is not intended to minimize the authority granted to Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) in their discretionary implementation of NCDs or Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs). However, where hard-coded edits were not initially implemented due to time and/or resource constraints, doing so at this time will better serve the intent and integrity of national coverage and the Medicare Program overall. Additional Information The official instruction, CR7818 issued to your carrier or A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R1122OTN. pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. News Flash - Influenza Season is Around the Corner - As your patients age, their immune systems may weaken. This weakening can make seniors more susceptible to complications from seasonal influenza (flu). Now is the perfect time to remind your patients that seasonal influenza vaccination is the best defense against the flu. Medicare provides coverage for one flu vaccine and its administration per influenza season for seniors and other Medicare beneficiaries with no co-pay or deductible. Talk with your Medicare patients about their risk for getting the flu and start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012-2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. And, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – Influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. Influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. And, while some providers may offer the flu vaccine, others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 43 - November 2012 MM7881 - Expiration of 2012 Therapy Cap Revisions and User-Controlled Mechanism to Identify Legislative Effective Dates DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Are you billing correctly for ordered/referred services? Will you be impacted when the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) turns on the edits for these services? See the revised MLN Matters® articles SE1221, SE1011, and MLN fact sheets “Medicare Enrollment Guidelines for Ordering/Referring Providers” and “The Basics of Medicare Enrollment for Physicians Who Infrequently Receive Medicare Reimbursement” to learn what you need to do. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, other providers, and suppliers who submit claims to Medicare contractors (carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs), and/or Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs)) for therapy services provided to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed This article is informational in nature and is based on Change Request (CR) 7881 which implements the statutory expiration date of certain provisions affecting claims for therapy services, to which the therapy caps apply. Provisions relating to therapy caps are among a number of legislative changes that may be extended from year to year or for portions of a year. These changes may currently require a non-recurring CR to change hard coded edits in Medicare systems. Frequently, these CRs cannot be implemented quickly enough to meet the changing effective dates. Therefore, CR7881 creates a mechanism that MACs can use to extend the effective dates of certain policies in urgent situations. See the Background and Additional Information Sections of this article for further details regarding these changes. Background The Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (MCTRJCA, Section 3005; see http:// www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-112publ96/pdf/PLAW-112publ96.pdf on the Internet) extended the therapy caps exceptions process through December 31, 2012, and made several changes affecting the processing of claims for therapy services. Previously, therapy services furnished in an outpatient hospital setting had been exempt from the application of the therapy caps. However, MCTRJCA required Original Medicare to apply the therapy caps temporarily to the therapy services furnished in an outpatient hospital on/after October 1, 2012, and on/before December 31, 2012. Although claims processing requirements associated with the cap are only applicable to hospitals on/ after October 1, 2012, claims paid for hospital outpatient therapy services since January 1, 2012, are included in calculating the cap beginning October 1, 2012. MCTRJCA also required a manual review process for those exceptions where the beneficiary therapy services for the year reach a threshold of $3,700. The separate thresholds triggering manual medical reviews build upon the separate therapy caps - one for Physical Therapy (PT) and Speech-Language Pathology (SLP) services combined and one for Occupational Therapy (OT) services. The count of services to which these thresholds apply began on January 1, 2012. Unless Congressional action is taken, all of these provisions expire for dates of service after December 31, 2012. Provisions relating to the therapy caps are among a number of legislative changes that may be extended from year to year, or for portions of a year. Medicare systems currently lack the flexibility to apply policies to claims based on frequently changing effective dates. These changes may currently require a non-recurring Change Request (CR) to change hard coded edits in Medicare systems, and often, these CRs cannot be implemented quickly enough to meet the changing effective dates. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 44 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Therefore, CR7881 creates a mechanism that MACs can use to extend the effective dates of certain policies based in urgent situations. This mechanism will be first used to set the expiration dates of the MCTRJCA (Section 3005) therapy provisions. Additional Information The official instruction, CR7881 issued to your carriers, FIs, A/B MACs, and RHHIs regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/ Downloads/R2537CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carriers, FIs, A/B MACs, and RHHIs at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM7883 - 2013 Annual Update for the Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) Bonus Payments DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – NEW product from the Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) • “Safeguarding Your Medical Identity,” Web-based Training (WBT) Course Continuing education credits are available to learners who successfully complete this course. See course description for more information. To access the WBT, go to Web-Based Training, and click on ‘Web-Based Training Courses’ under ‘Related Links’ at the bottom of the web page. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, hospitals, and other providers who bill Medicare contractors (Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), carriers, or Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs)) for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries in Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs). Provider Action Needed Change Request (CR) 7883, from which this article is taken, alerts you that the annual HPSA bonus payment file for 2013 will be made available by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) to your Medicare contractor and will be used for HPSA bonus payments on applicable claims with dates of service on or after January 1, 2013, through December 31, 2013. These files will be posted tothe internet on or about December 1, 2012. You should review http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-forService-Payment/HPSAPSAPhysicianBonuses/index.html on the CMS website each year to determine whether you need to add the AQ modifier to their claim in order to receive the bonus payment, or to see if the ZIP code area in which you rendered services will automatically receive the HPSA bonus payment. Note that Medicare contractors will continue to accept the AQ modifier for partially designated HPSA claims. Please be sure that your staffs are aware of this update. Background The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) (Section 413(b)) mandated an annual update to the automated HPSA bonus payment file. CMS creates a new automated HPSA bonus payment file and provides it to your Medicare contractors each year. Contractors use this file for the automated bonus payment for claims with dates of service on or after January 1, 2013, through December 31, 2013. Contractors will continue to accept the AQ modifier for partially designated HPSA claims. Additional Information The official instruction, CR 7883, issued to your FI, carrier, or A/B MAC regarding this change, may be viewed at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2526CP. pdf on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 45 - November 2012 You will find annual HPSA files (as they become available) and other important HPSA information at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Fee-for-Service- Payment/HPSAPSAPhysicianBonuses/index. html on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your FI, carrier or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM7890 - Ordering and Certifying Documentation - Maintenance Requirements DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Looking for the latest new and revised MLN Matters® articles? Subscribe to the MLN Matters® electronic mailing list! For more information about MLN Matters® and how to register for this service, go to http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/ MLNProducts/downloads/What_Is_MLNMatters.pdf and start receiving updates immediately! Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, non-physician practitioners, Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics and Supplies (DMEPOS) suppliers and Home Health Agencies (HHAs) submitting claims to Medicare contractors (Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs), carriers, and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs)) for services to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You This article, based on Change Request (CR) 7890, informs you of instructions to Medicare contractors regarding the implementation of ordering and certifying documentation and maintenance requirements found in 42 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) 424.516(f). CAUTION – What You Need to Know A provider or supplier that furnishes covered ordered items of DMEPOS, clinical laboratory, imaging services, or covered ordered/certified home health services is required to: • Maintain documentation for 7 years from the date of service, and • Provide access to that documentation upon the request of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) or a Medicare contractor. A physician who orders/certifies home health services and a physician or, when permitted, other eligible professional, who orders items of DMEPOS or clinical laboratory or imaging services is required to: • Maintain the documentation for 7 years from the date of service, and • Provide access to that documentation upon the request of CMS or a Medicare contractor. If the provider, supplier, physician or eligible professional (as applicable) fails to maintain this documentation or to furnish this documentation upon request, the contractor may revoke the party’s Medicare billing privileges under 42 CFR 424.535(a)(10). GO – What You Need to Do Review the description of documentation to be maintained in the Background section below. Make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these requirements for documentation. Background Under 42 CFR 424.516(f)(1), a provider or supplier that furnishes covered ordered items of DMEPOS, clinical laboratory, imaging services, or covered ordered/certified home health services is required to This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 46 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 (1) maintain documentation (see next paragraph) for 7 years from the date of service, and (2) provide access to that documentation upon the request of CMS or a Medicare contractor. The documentation to be maintained includes written and electronic documents (including the National Provider Identifier (NPI) of the physician who ordered/certified the home health services and the NPI of the physician or, when permitted, other eligible professional who ordered items of DMEPOS or clinical laboratory or imaging services) relating to written orders and certifications and requests for payments for items of DMEPOS and clinical laboratory, imaging, and home health services. In addition, under 424.516(f)(2), a physician who orders/certifies home health services and the physician or, when permitted, other eligible professional, who orders items of DMEPOS or clinical laboratory or imaging services is required to maintain the documentation described in the previous paragraph for 7 years from the date of service and to provide access to that documentation pursuant to a CMS or Medicare contractor request. If the provider, supplier, physician, or eligible professional (as applicable) fails to maintain this documentation or to furnish this documentation upon request, the contractor may revoke the party’s Medicare billing privileges under 42 CFR 424.535(a)(10). The CMS policy states that, absent a CMS directive to the contrary, the Medicare contractor will request the documentation described above if it has reason to believe that the provider, supplier, physician or eligible professional (hereinafter collectively referred to as “provider”) is not maintaining the documentation in accordance with Section 424.516(f)(1) or (2). Examples of when a request might be appropriate include, but are not limited to, the following: • The contractor has detected an unusually high number of denied claims involving the provider, or the Fraud Prevention System has otherwise generated an alert with respect to the provider. • The provider has been the subject of a recent Zone Program Integrity Contractor referral. • The provider maintains an elevated surety bond amount. If a provider fails to respond to a letter request for documentation within 30 days of the Medicare contractor’s request, the contractor may revoke the provider’s Medicare billing privileges and impose a 1-year re-enrollment bar. Additional Information The official instruction, CR7890 issued to your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R431PI.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM7897 - National Coverage Determination (NCD) for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Looking for the latest new and revised MLN Matters® articles? Subscribe to the MLN Matters® electronic mailing list! For more information about MLN Matters® and how to register for this service, go to http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/ MLNProducts/downloads/What_Is_MLNMatters.pdf and start receiving updates immediately! Note: This article was revised on September 25, 2012, to reflect the revised CR7897 issued on September 24. In this article, the CR release date, transmittal numbers, and the Web addresses This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 47 - November 2012 for accessing the transmittals have been changed. All other information remains the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians and hospitals who provide Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) services to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You Effective for claims with dates of service on and after May 1, 2012, Medicare Carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), and Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs) will reimburse for Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR) under Coverage with Evidence Development (CED). CAUTION – What You Need to Know Change Request (CR) 7897, from which this article is taken, announces that on May 1, 2012, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a National Coverage Determination (NCD) covering TAVR under CED and CR7897 details requirements that must be met when claims are submitted to Medicare for these services. GO – What You Need to Do You should make sure that your billing staffs are aware of this decision and its requirements which are summarized in the Background section below. Background Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement (TAVR - also known as TAVI or Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation) is a new technology for use in treating certain patients with aortic stenosis. A bioprosthetic valve is inserted percutaneously using a catheter and implanted in the orifice of the native aortic valve. CR7879, from which this article is taken announces that on May 1, 2012, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a National Coverage Determination (NCD) covering TAVR under Coverage with Evidence Development (CED) and only when specific requirements are met. CED Coverage Conditions with Registry Participation CMS covers TAVR for the treatment of symptomatic aortic valve stenosis under CED with the following conditions: 1. It is furnished according to a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved indication and when all of the following conditions are met: a. It is furnished with a complete aortic valve and implantation system that has received FDA Premarket Approval (PMA) for that system’s FDA approved indication; b. Two cardiac surgeons have independently examined the patient face-to-face and evaluated the patient’s suitability for open Aortic Valve Replacement (AVR) surgery; and both surgeons have documented the rationale for their clinical judgment, and this rationale is available to the heart team; c. The patient (preoperatively and postoperatively) is under the care of a heart team: a cohesive, multi-disciplinary, team of medical professionals that embodies collaboration and dedication across medical specialties to offer optimal patient-centered care; d. It is furnished in a hospital with the appropriate infrastructure that includes (but is not limited to): o On-site heart valve surgery program; o Cardiac catheterization lab or hybrid operating room/catheterization lab equipped with a fixed radiographic imaging system with flat-panel fluoroscopy, offering quality imaging;• Non-invasive imaging such as echocardiography, vascular ultrasound, Computed Tomography (CT) and Magnetic Resonance (MR); o Sufficient space, in a sterile environment, to accommodate necessary equipment for cases with and without complications; o Post-procedure intensive care facility with personnel experienced in managing patients who have undergone open-heart valve procedures; and o Appropriate volume requirements per the applicable qualifications (specifically, for This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 48 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 hospitals without TAVR experience and for those with experience performing the procedure), which follow. 2. Required qualifications for the hospitals and heart teams performing the procedure. Hospitals without TAVR experience must have the following qualifications to begin a TAVR program: a. ≥ 50 total AVRs in the previous year prior to TAVR, including ≥ 10 high-risk patients; b. ≥ Two physicians with cardiac surgery privileges; and c. ≥ 1000 catheterizations per year, including ≥ 400 Percutaneous Coronary Interventions (PCIs) per year. Heart Teams without TAVR experience must include the following to begin a TAVR program: a. A cardiovascular surgeon with: 1) ≥ 100 career AVRs including 10 high-risk patients; or, 2) ≥ 25 AVRs in one year; or, 3) ≥ 50 AVRs in 2 years; and which include at least 20 AVRs in the last year prior to TAVR initiation; and, b. An interventional cardiologist with: 1) Professional experience with 100 structural heart disease procedures lifetime; or, 2) 30 left-sided structural procedures per year of which 60% should be Balloon Aortic Valvuloplasty (BAV). Atrial septal defect and patent foramen ovale closure are not considered left-sided procedures; as well as c. Additional members of the heart team such as echocardiographers, imaging specialists, heart failure specialists, cardiac anesthesiologists, intensivists, nurses, and social workers; and, d. Device-specific training as required by the manufacturer. Hospital programs with TAVR experience must have the following qualifications: a. Maintain ≥ 2 physicians with cardiac surgery privileges; b. Perform ≥ 20 AVRs per year or ≥ 40 AVRs every 2 years; and c. Perform ≥ 1000 catheterizations per year, including ≥ 400 Percutaneous Coronary Interventions (PCIs) per year. Heart teams with TAVR experience must have the following qualifications: a. Include a cardiovascular surgeon and an interventional cardiologist whose combined experience maintains: 1) ≥ 20 TAVR procedures in the prior year, or 2) ≥ 40 TAVR procedures in the prior 2 years; b. Include additional members of the heart team such as echocardiographers, imaging specialists, heart failure specialists, cardiac anesthesiologists, intensivists, nurses, and social workers; and c. The interventional cardiologist(s) and cardiac surgeon(s) must jointly participate in the intraoperative technical aspects of TAVR. In addition, the heart team and hospital must be participating in a prospective, national, audited registry. The complete list of requirements for a qualifying registry can be found in the NCD, which is available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R147NCD.pdf on the CMS website. To date, CMS has approved one registry, the Transcatheter Valve Therapy Registry operated by the Society of Thoracic Surgeons and the American College of Cardiology. CED Coverage Conditions with Clinical Studies For indications that are not approved by the FDA, CMS covers TAVR under CED when patients are enrolled in qualifying clinical studies. The clinical study requirements are available in the NCD, which is available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R147NCD.pdf on the CMS website. Approved studies are listed at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ Coverage/Coverage-with-EvidenceDevelopment/Transcatheter-Aortic-Valve-Replacement-TAVR-.html on the CMS website. Note: TAVR is not covered for patients in whom existing co-morbidities would preclude the expected benefit from correction of the aortic stenosis. Coding Requirements -Professional Claims This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 49 - November 2012 For TAVR services furnished on or after May 1, 2012, you should bill with the appropriate temporary level III Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) code: • 0256T: Implantation of catheter-delivered prosthetic aortic heart valve; endovascular approach; • 0257T: Implantation of catheter-delivered prosthetic aortic heart valve; open thoracic approach (eg, transapical, transventricular); • 0258T: Transthoracic cardiac exposure (i.e. sternotomy, thoracotomy, subxiphoid) for catheterdelivered aortic valve replacement; without cardiopulmonary bypass; and • 0259T: Transthoracic cardiac exposure (i.e. sternotomy, thoracotomy, subxiphoid) for catheterdelivered aortic valve replacement; with cardiopulmonary bypass. Beginning January 1, 2013, CMS anticipates permanent CPT level 1 codes will replace the above 4 codes for processing TAVR claims, and will issue instructions for the permanent CPT level 1 codes in a future CR. You should be aware that, on or after May 1, 2012, your carrier or A/B MAC will only reimburse your professional claims for TAVR services (for CPT codes 0256T, 0257T, 0258T, and 0259T) when used with Place of Service (POS) code 21 (Inpatient Hospital). They will deny all other POS codes. Should they deny your claim because of an incorrect POS, they will use the following messages: This article was prepared as a service to the public and is not intended to grant rights or impose obligations. This article may contain references or links to statutes, regulations, or other policy materials. The information provided is only intended to be a general summary. It is not intended to take the place of either the written law or regulations. We encourage readers to review the specific statutes, regulations and other interpretive materials for a full and accurate statement of their contents. CPT only copyright 2011 American Medical Association. • Claim Adjustment Reason Code (CARC) 58: “Treatment was deemed by the payer to have been rendered in an inappropriate or invalid place of service. Note: Refer to the 835 • Healthcare Policy Identification Segment (loop 2110 Service Payment Information REF), if present;” • Remittance advice remark code (RARC) N428: “Not covered when performed in this place of service;” and • Group Code: Contractual Obligation (CO). Similarly, Medicare will only pay claim lines with these TAVR CPT codes when billed with modifier 62 (two surgeons/co-surgeons). They will return all others as unprocessable. Should they return such claims, they will use: • CARC 4: “The procedure code is inconsistent with the modifier used or a required modifier is missing. Note: Refer to the 835 Healthcare Policy Identification Segment (loop 2110 Service Payment Information REF), if present;” • RARC N29: “Missing documentation/orders/notes/summary/report/chart;” and • Group Code: Contractual Obligation (CO). Medicare will only pay claim lines for these codes in a clinical trial when billed with modifier Q0 (zero). For TAVR services, use of modifier Q0 signifies CED participation (qualified registry or qualified clinical study).They will return such claims billed without modifier Q0 as unprocessable using: • CARC 4: “The procedure code is inconsistent with the modifier used or a required modifier is missing. Note: Refer to the 835 Healthcare Policy Identification Segment (loop 2110 Service Payment Information REF), if present; ” • RACR N29: “Missing documentation/orders/notes/summary/report/chart,” and • Group Code: Contractual Obligation (CO). Medicare will only pay claims for these codes in a clinical trial when billed with International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) secondary diagnosis code V70.7 (routine general medical examination at a health care facility) (ICD-10 = Z00.6 -- encounter for examination for normal comparison and control in clinical research program). For TAVR services, use of V70.7 signifies CED participation (qualified registry or qualified clinical study).They will return claim lines billed without secondary diagnosis code V70.7 as unprocessable, using: • CARC 16: “Claim/service lacks information which is needed for adjudication. At least one Remark Code must be provided (may be comprised of either the NCPDP Reject Reason Code, or Remittance Advice Remark Code that is not an ALERT);” • RARC N29: “Missing documentation/orders/notes/summary/report/chart;” and This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 50 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • Group Code Contractual Obligation (CO). Coding Requirements - Inpatient Hospital Claims Hospitals should bill for TAVR services on an 11X Type of Bill (TOB), effective for discharges on or after May 1, 2012. Your FI or A/B MAC will reimburse such claims containing ICD-9 procedure codes 35.05 (Endovascular replacement of aortic valve) or 35.06 (Transapical replacement of aortic valve) only when billed with secondary diagnosis code V70.7 (Examination of participant in clinical trial) and condition code 30 (qualifying clinical trial). For TAVR services, use of the latter two codes signifies CED participation (qualified registry or qualified clinical study). Claims from hospitals without those latter two codes will be rejected using: • CARC: 50: “These are non-covered services because this is not deemed a “medical necessity” by the payer;” • RARC N386: “This decision was based on a National Coverage Determination (NCD). An NCD provides a coverage determination as to whether a particular item or service is covered. A copy of this policy is available at www.cms.hhs.gov/mcd/search.asp. If you do not have web access, you may contact the contractor to request a copy of the NCD;” and • Group Code: Contractual Obligation (CO). The following are the ICD-10 procedure codes applicable for TAVR: TAVR ICD-9 Procedure Codes TAVR ICD-10 Procedure Codes 35.05 02RF37Z 02RF38Z 02RF3JZ 02RF3KZ 02RF37H 02RF38H 02RF3JH 02RF3KH 35.06 Additional Information CR7897 was issued to your Medicare contractor in two transmittals. The first transmittal modifies the “Medicare National Coverage Determinations Manual” and it is available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/ Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R147NCD.pdf on the CMS website. The second transmittal updates the “Medicare Claims Processing Manual” and it is available at http:// www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2552CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM8021 - Healthcare Provider Taxonomy Codes (HPTC) Update, October 2012 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – When billing Medicare, Home Health Agencies (HHAs) must use the individual National Provider Identifier (NPI) of the physician who orders/refers services, not the NPI of the physician’s group practice. If an HHA asks for your NPI, be sure to provide your individual NPI. Don’t know your individual NPI? You may verify your NPI on the NPI Registry on the CMS website. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for providers submitting claims to Medicare contractors (carriers This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 51 - November 2012 and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractors (B MACs)) for services to Medicare beneficiaries. What You Need to Know The HPTC set is maintained by the National Uniform Claim Committee (NUCC) for standardized classification of health care providers. The NUCC updates the code set twice a year with changes effective April 1 and October 1. The HPTC set is available for view or for download from the Washington Publishing Company (WPC) Web site at http://www.wpc-edi.com/codes on the Internet. CR 8021 implements the NUCC HPTC code set that is effective on October 1, 2012. The changes for October consist of the addition of two new HPTCs, both under the Individual Section, for Dental Provider types: • 125J00000X Dental Therapist Classification; and • 125K00000X Advanced Practice Dental Therapist Classification. There are no other changes to the October 2012 code set. Medicare does not use HPTCs to adjudicate its claims. It would not expect to see these codes on a Medicare claim. However, currently, it validates any HPTC that a provider happens to supply against the NUCC HPTC code set. Additional Information The official instruction, CR 8021 issued to your carrier or B MAC regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/R2534CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier or B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM8032 - October 2012 Update of the Ambulatory Surgical Center Payment System (ASC) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – The Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) Product Ordering System was recently upgraded to add new enhancements. You can now view an image of the product and access its downloadable version, if available, before placing your order. To access a new or revised product available for order in hard copy format, go to MLN Products and click on “MLN Product Ordering Page” under “Related Links” at the bottom of the web page. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, other providers, and suppliers submitting claims to Medicare contractors (carriers and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs)) for services to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed This article is based on Change Request (CR) 8032 which informs Medicare contractors about the changes to and billing instructions for various payment policies implemented in the October 2012 Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) update. CR8032 applies to Chapter 14, Section 10 of the “Medicare Claims Processing Manual.” Make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these changes. Background The key changes in CR8032 are as follows: Drugs and Biologicals with Payments Based on Average Sales Price (ASP) Effective October 1, 2012 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 52 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Payment for separately payable drugs and biologicals based on the ASPs are updated on a quarterly basis as later quarter ASP submissions become available. In cases where adjustments to payment rates are necessary based on the most recent ASP submissions, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) incorporates changes to the payment rates in the October 2012 release of the ASC DRUG file. The updated payment rates, effective October 1, 2012, will be included in the October 2012 update of the ASC Payment system Addendum BB, which will be posted at http://www.cms.gov/ Medicare/Medicare-Feefor-Service-Payment/ASCPayment/11_Addenda_Updates.html CMS website. New HCPCS Codes for Drugs and Biologicals Separately Payable under the ASC Payment System Effective October 1, 2012. Two drugs and biologicals have been granted ASC payment status effective October 1, 2012. These items, along with their descriptors and payment indicators, are identified in Table 1. Table 1 – New Separately Payable Drugs and Biologicals Effective October 1, 2012 HCPCS Code Long Descriptor Short Descriptor ASC PI C9292 Injection, pertuzumab, 10 mg Injection, pertuzumab K2 C9293 Injection, , glucarpidase, 10 units Injection, , glucarpidase K2 Updated Payment Rates for Certain Drugs and Biologicals HCPCS Codes Effective July 1, 2012 through September 30, 2012 The payment rates for three HCPCS codes were incorrect in the July 2012 ASC Drug File. The corrected payment rates are listed in Table 2 and have been included in the revised July 2012 ASC Drug File, effective for services furnished on July 1, 2012, through implementation of the October 2012 update. Suppliers who have received an incorrect payment for dates of service from July 1, 2012, through September 30, 2012, may request contractor adjustment of the previously processed claims. Table 2 – Updated Payment Rates for Certain Drugs and Biologicals HCPCS Codes Effective July 1, 2012, through September 30, 2012 HCPCS Code Short Descriptor ASC PI Corrected Payment Rate C9368 Grafix core K2 $160.66 C9369 Grafix prime K2 $51.84 Q2045 Human fibrinogen conc inj K2 $0.89 Additional Information The official instruction, CR8032 issued to your carrier and A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R2525CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. To review MM7854, the July 2012 Update to the ASC Payment System, you may go to https://www. cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/ MM7854.pdf on the CMS website. To review the Ambulatory Surgical Center Fee Schedule Fact Sheet you may go to https://www. cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNProducts/downloads/ AmbSurgCtrFeepymtfctsht508-09.pdf on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 53 - November 2012 MM8036 - Manual Medical Review of Therapy Services DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Want to stay connected about the latest new and revised Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) products and services? Subscribe to the MLN Educational Products electronic mailing list! For more information about the MLN and how to register for this service, visit http://www.cms.gov/Outreachand-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNProducts/downloads//MLNProducts_listserv.pdf and start receiving updates immediately! Note: This article was revised on September 28, 2012, to reflect the revised CR8036 issued on September 25. In the article, the CR release date, transmittal number, and the Web address for accessing the CR were revised. All other information remains the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for occupational therapists, speech language therapists, physical therapists, physicians, other practitioners, in certain provider settings submitting claims to Medicare contractors (Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs), carriers, and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs)) for therapy services to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You All requests for therapy services above $3,700 provided by speech language therapists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and physicians must be approved in advance. This includes services in these settings: Part B Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs), Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (CORFs), rehabilitation agencies (Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (ORFs), private practices, home health agencies (TOB 34X), and hospital outpatient departments. CAUTION – What You Need to Know You must send a request for approval to the MAC or legacy contractor, i.e., FI, RHHI, or carrier, in advance of providing service. There are no automatic exceptions. Your MAC or legacy contractor will provide a fax number and mailing address where requests for pre-claim review can be submitted. GO – What You Need to Do Please read the Background and the Additional Information sections for details. Make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these changes. Background The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 enacted financial limitations on outpatient physical therapy, occupational therapy, and speech-language pathology services in all settings except outpatient hospital. Exceptions to the limits were enacted by the Deficit Reduction Act, and have been extended by legislation several times. Section 3005 of the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (MCTRJCA) extended the therapy caps exceptions process through December 31, 2012, and made several changes affecting the processing of claims for therapy services. Suppliers and providers will continue to use the KX modifier to request an exception to the therapy cap on claims that are over the 2012 cap amounts -- $1,880 for occupational therapy services and $1,880 for the combined services for physical therapy and speechlanguage pathology. Use of the KX modifier indicates that the services are reasonable and necessary and that there is documentation of medical necessity in the patient’s medical record. MCTRJCA also established a requirement for manual medical review of claims over $3,700. In midSeptember 2012, CMS will mail a letter to beneficiaries who have received therapy services in Calendar Year (CY) 2012 over $1,700. The CMS letter will inform them of the $1,880 therapy cap, the exceptions process and that, if services over the cap do not qualify for the exception as medically necessary, that they will be responsible for the charges. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 54 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Request for Approval and Review Process You must send a request for approval to the MAC or legacy contractor in advance of providing service. The MAC or legacy contractor will provide a mailing address and may provide a fax number where requests for pre-claim review can be submitted. Pre-claim reviews will not be reviewed any sooner than 15 days before the start of each Phase for providers within that phase. The request must contain the following information: • Beneficiary Last Name; • Beneficiary First Name; • Beneficiary Middle Initial; • Beneficiary Medicare Claim Number (HICN); • Beneficiary Date of Birth; • Beneficiary Address and Telephone Number; • Name of Provider Certifying Plan of Care; • Address of Provider Certifying Plan of Care; • Telephone and Fax Number of Provider Certifying Plan of Care; • Provider Number (National Provider Identifier (NPI)) of Physician/NPP Certifying Plan of Care; • Name of Performing Provider; • Address of Performing Provider; • Performing Provider Number (NPI); • Telephone and Fax Number of Performing Provider; • Number of treatment days requested; • Expected date range of services; and • Date of Submission. A cover/transmittal sheet containing the following information and documentation must be sent: • Cover sheet; • Justification; • Evaluation or reevaluation(s) for Plan(s) of Care; • Certification(s) of the plan(s) of care, where available; • Objectives and measurable goals and any other documentation requirements of the Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs); • Progress reports; • Treatment notes; • Any orders, if applicable, for the additional therapy services; and • Any additional information requested by the Medicare contractor. You may request preapproval of up to 20 treatment days of services. The contractor will make a decision and inform (by telephone, fax, or letter (if by letter, the letter must be postmarked by the 10th day)) the provider and beneficiary within 10 business days of receipt of all requested documentation. If the contractor cannot make a decision with 10 days, the therapy will be considered approved. The letter will indicate that the approval was made because of time constraints and not on the information provided to the contractor. The contractors will use the coverage and payment policy requirements contained in the “Medicare Benefit Policy Manual,” Chapter 15, Section 220 (available at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-andGuidance/Guidance/Manuals/Downloads/bp102c15.pdf) and any applicable local coverage decision policies when making decisions as to whether a service will be preapproved. If the decision is non-affirmative, the letter communicating the decision will be detailed. If the request was non-approved, you may submit additional requests and provide additional information for consideration. Contractors shall develop a methodology to identify preapproval requests that have been submitted for pre-approval and match them to submitted claims for specific periods of time. Contractor shall inform the provider of the tracking mechanism being used for preapproval requests (either approved or denied) and instructions on how to submit the claim. Contractors shall use the tracking mechanism to identify that the claims were preapproved or non-approved. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 55 - November 2012 Pre-authorization itself is not a guarantee of payment. Retrospective reviews of claims receiving preapproval may still be performed. Any claims submitted without the pre-approval notice from providers in the respective Phase will be subject to pre-payment review. If you or the beneficiary wishes to appeal a decision, you may provide the service.The MAC or legacy contractor will, upon receipt of the claim, deny the claim. Then you or the beneficiary may file an appeal. CMS will notify beneficiaries when they reach the $1,700 level by September 1, 2012 by letter. Phased Implementation Implementation will occur in three phases. The requirement for pre-approval of all therapy services shall apply to specifically identified providers on the effective date determined by CMS for the phase. CMS will publish the list of providers (by NPI number only) and the Phase to which they are assigned. If CMS publishes a list and a provider is not on the list, then that provider shall be deemed to be in Phase III. Contractors will post the list of NPI numbers CMS provides on their websites. CMS will publish a list of providers and the respective phases in which they are placed. In addition, CMS shall send a mailing to every provider subject to the therapy manual medical review threshold notifying them of the respective phase they have been placed into. CMS is implementing this process in phases in order to ensure a smooth transition to the new process. Effective dates for the phases are: • Phase I: October 1, 2012 – December 31, 2012 • Phase II: November 1, 2012 – December 31, 2012 • Phase III: December 1, 2012 – December 31, 2012 Claims suspended because of the cap will be automatically approved unless the provider is being reviewed in Phase I, Phase II, or Phase III. Contractors will notify providers by posting on their website when they have stopped doing the reviews. Out of Sequence Claim s – Post Pay Review Not Required Medicare has a 12 months claims filing limitation. Therefore, claims may be received and processed in a sequence different than that of the services provided. When this occurs, a contractor is not required to conduct post payment review on claims that would have been subjected to the $3,700 manual medical review threshold had the claims been received and processed in the order provided. For example, a beneficiary was in a SNF and exhausted their SNF benefit days under Part A. The beneficiary continued to receive therapy services under Part B totaling $3,600 (all dates of service before 10/1/2012). The beneficiary was then discharged from the SNF and received therapy services from an independently practicing PT totaling $1,800. The independent PT billed in November 2012 for services provided after 10/1/2012. The MAC received the claims and processed them. After these claims were processed the MAC received the SNF Part B claims totaling $3,600 and processed them. Had these claims been received in advance of the independent PT services, the independent PT would have been required to have the services approved in advance. In circumstances such as this example, the contractor is not required to perform post payment review on the $1,800 provided by the independent therapist. Additional Information The official instruction, CR8036, issued to your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R1124OTN.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 56 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 MM8037 - 2013 Annual Update of Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Consolidated Billing (CB) Update DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – REVISED products from the Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) • “The Basics of Internet-based Provider Enrollment, Chain and Ownership System (PECOS) for Provider and Supplier Organizations,” Fact Sheet, ICN 903767, Downloadable only 2013 Annual Update of Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) Consolidated Billing (CB) Update Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, other providers, and suppliers submitting claims to Medicare contractors (carriers, Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractors (DME MACs), Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), and/or A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs)) for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries who are in a Part A covered Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) stay. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You If you provide services to Medicare beneficiaries in a Part A covered SNF stay, information in CR8037 could impact your payments. CAUTION – What You Need to Know This article is based on Change Request (CR) 8037 which provides the 2013 annual update of Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Codes for Skilled Nursing Facility Consolidated Billing (SNF CB) and how the updates affect edits in Medicare claims processing systems. By the first week in December 2012: • Physicians and other providers/suppliers who bill carriers, DME MACs, or A/B MACs are advised that new code files (entitled 2013 Carrier/A/B MAC Update) will be posted at http://www.cms. gov/Medicare/Billing/SNFConsolidatedBilling/index.html on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) website; and • Providers who bill Fiscal Intermediaries or A/B MACs are advised that new Excel and PDF files (entitled 2013 FI/A/B MAC Update) will be posted to http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Billing/ SNFConsolidatedBilling/index.html on the CMS website. GO – What You Need to Do It is important and necessary for you to read the “General Explanation of the Major Categories” PDF file located at the bottom of each year’s FI/A/B MAC update in order to understand the Major Categories, including additional exclusions not driven by HCPCS codes. Background Medicare’s claims processing systems currently have edits in place for claims received for beneficiaries in a Part A covered SNF stay, as well as for beneficiaries in a non-covered stay. Changes to HCPCS codes and Medicare Physician Fee Schedule designations are used to revise these edits to allow carriers, A/B MACs, DME MACs, and FIs to make appropriate payments in accordance with policy for Skilled Nursing Facility Consolidated Billing (SNF CB) contained in the “Medicare Claims Processing Manual,” Chapter 6 (SNF Inpatient Part A Billing and SNF Consolidated Billing), Section 110.4.1 (Annual Update Process) for carriers and A/B MACs, and Section 20.6 (SNF CB Annual Update Process for Fiscal Intermediaries) for FI and A/B MACs. You can find this manual at http://www.cms.gov/Regulationsand- Guidance/Guidance/Manuals/downloads/clm104c06.pdf on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 57 - November 2012 Please note that these edits only allow services that are excluded from CB to be separately paid by Medicare contractors. Additional Information The official instruction, CR8037 issued to your carrier, FI, A/B MAC, or DME MAC regarding this change may be viewed http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R2542CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, A/B MAC, or DME MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and- Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. MM8045 - Claim Status Category and Claim Status Codes Update DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – The Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) Product Ordering System was recently upgraded to add new enhancements. You can now view an image of the product and access its downloadable version, if available, before placing your order. To access a new or revised product available for order in hard copy format, go to MLN Products and click on “MLN Product Ordering Page” under “Related Links” at the bottom of the web page. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for all physicians, providers, and suppliers submitting claims to Medicare contractors (Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs), carriers, A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) and Durable Medical Equipment (DME) MACs) for Medicare beneficiaries are affected. Provider Action Needed This article, based on Change request (CR) 8045, explains that Claim Status and Claim Status Category Codes for use by Medicare contractors with the Health Care Claim Status Request and Response ASC X12N 276/277, Health Care Claim Acknowledgement ASC X12N 277 are updated three times per year at the national Code Maintenance Committee meetings. These codes explain the status of submitted claim(s). Proprietary codes may not be used in the X12 276/277 to report claim status. The national Code Maintenance Committee meets at the beginning of each X12 trimester meeting (February, June, and October) and makes decisions about additions, modifications, and retirement of existing codes. The codes sets are available at http://www.wpc-edi.com/reference/codelists/ healthcare/claim-status-category-codes/ or http://www.wpc-edi.com/reference/codelists/healthcare/claimstatus-codes/ on the Internet. Make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these updates. Background The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requires all health care benefit payers to use only Claim Status Category Codes and Claim Status Codes approved by the national Code Maintenance Committee in the X12 276/277 Health Care Claim Status Request and Response format adopted as the standard for national use. All code changes approved during the June 2012 committee meeting will be posted on the Internet on or about July 1, 2012. Additional Information The official instruction, CR8045, issued to your Medicare contractor regarding this change, may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R2547CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your FI, carrier, RHHI, A/B MAC, or DME MAC at their toll- free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and- Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 58 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 News Flash - Influenza Season is Around the Corner - As your patients age, their immune systems may weaken. This weakening can make seniors more susceptible to complications from seasonal influenza (flu). Now is the perfect time to remind your patients that seasonal influenza vaccination is the best defense against the flu. Medicare provides coverage for one flu vaccine and its administration per influenza season for seniors and other Medicare beneficiaries with no co-pay or deductible. Talk with your Medicare patients about their risk for getting the flu and start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012-2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. Also, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – Influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. Influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. While some providers may offer the flu vaccine, others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. MM8047 - Influenza Vaccine Payment Allowances - Annual Update for 2012-2013 Season DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – NEW product from the Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) “Communicating With Your Medicare Patients”, Fact Sheet, ICN 908063, Downloadable Note: This article was revised on October 4, 2012, to reflect a revised Change Request (CR) 8047 that was released on October 3, 2012. The revised CR changed the implementation date to “No later than December 28, 2012.” The Transmittal Number, CR date and the web link to the CR was also changed. All other information remains unchanged. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians and providers submitting claims to Medicare contractors (carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), and Part A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs)) for influenza vaccines provided to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued Change Request (CR) 8047 in order to update payment allowances, effective August 1, 2012, for seasonal influenza virus vaccines when payment is based on 95 percent of the Average Wholesale Price (AWP). Be sure your billing staffs are aware of this update. Background CR8047 provides payment allowances for the following seasonal influenza virus vaccine codes when payment is based on 95 percent of the AWP (except for when payment is based on reasonable cost where the vaccine is furnished in a hospital outpatient department, a Rural Health Clinic, or a Federally Qualified Health Center): • Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes 90654, 90655, 90656, 90657, 90660, and 90662; and • Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes Q2034, Q2035, Q2036, Q2037, and Q2038. Effective for dates of service on or after August 1, 2012, the Medicare Part B payment allowance for: • CPT 90655 is $16.456 • CPT 90656 is $12.398 • CPT 90657 is $6.023 This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 59 - November 2012 • • • • HCPCS Q2035 (Afluria®) is $11.543 HCPCS Q2036 (Flulaval®) is $9.833 HCPCS Q2037 (Fluvirin®) is $14.051 HCPCS Q2038 (Fluzone®) is $12.046 Note: The Medicare Part B payment allowance for HCPCS Q2034 (Agriflu®) and HCPCS Q2039 (Flu Vaccine Adult - Not Otherwise Classified) will be determined by the local claims processing contractor. Payment for the following may be made if the local claims processing contractor determines its use is medically reasonable and necessary for the beneficiary: • CPT 90654 (Flu vaccine, Intradermal, Preservative free (Fluzone ID®)); • CPT 90660 (FluMist®, a nasal influenza vaccine); or • CPT 90662 (Fluzone High-Dose®). Effective for dates of service on or after August 1, 2012, when payment is based on 95 percent of the AWP, the Medicare Part B payment allowance for: • CPT 90654 is $18.981 • CPT 90660 is $23.456 • CPT 90662 is $30.923 The payment allowances for pneumococcal vaccines are based on 95 percent of the AWP and are updated on a quarterly basis via the Quarterly Average Sales Price (ASP) Drug Pricing Files. Note: Annual Part B deductible and coinsurance amounts do not apply. All physicians, non-physician practitioners and suppliers who administer the influenza virus vaccination and the pneumococcal vaccination must take assignment on the claim for the vaccine. Medicare contractors will not search their files to either retract payment for claims already paid or to retroactively pay claims. However, contractors will adjust claims brought to their attention. Additional Information The official instruction, CR8047, issued to your Medicare contractor (carrier, (FI), and A/B MAC) regarding this change, may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/ Transmittals/Downloads/R2562CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, (FI), or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring-Programs/ provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. News Flash - Vaccination is the Best Protection Against the Flu – Each office visit is an opportunity to check your patients’ seasonal influenza (flu) and pneumonia immunization status and to start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012–2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. Ninety percent of flu-related deaths and more than half of flu-related hospitalizations occur in people age 65 and older. Seniors also have an increased risk of getting pneumonia, a complication of the flu. Remind your patients that seasonal flu vaccinations and a pneumococcal vaccination are recommended for optimal protection. Medicare provides coverage for one seasonal influenza virus vaccine per influenza season for all Medicare beneficiaries. Medicare generally provides coverage of pneumococcal vaccination and its administration once in a lifetime for all Medicare beneficiaries. Medicare may provide coverage of additional pneumococcal vaccinations based on risk or uncertainty of beneficiary pneumococcal vaccination status. Medicare provides coverage for these vaccines and their administration with no copay or deductible. Also, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – Influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. Influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. While some providers may offer the flu vaccine, This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 60 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. MM8049 - Annual Clotting Factor Furnishing Fee Update 2013 DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – The ICD-10-related implementation date is now October 1, 2014, as announced in final rule CMS-0040-F issued on August 24, 2012. This final rule is available at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ Coding/ICD10/Statute_Regulations.html on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) website. The switch to the new code set will affect every aspect of how your organization provides care, but with adequate planning and preparation, you can ensure a smooth transition for your practice. Keep Up to Date on ICD-10. Please visit the ICD-10 website for the latest news and resources to help you prepare. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians and other providers billing Medicare Carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), Part A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), or Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs) for services related to the administration of clotting factors to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed This article is based on Change Request (CR) 8049 and announces that for Calendar Year 2013, the clotting factor furnishing fee of $0.188 per unit is included in the published payment limit for clotting factors. For dates of service in 2013, the clotting factor furnishing fee of $0.188 per unit is added to the payment when no payment limit for the clotting factor is included in the Average Sales Price (ASP) or Not Otherwise Classified (NOC) drug pricing files. Please be sure your billing staffs are aware of this fee update. Background Section 1842(o)(5)(C) of the Social Security Act (added by the Medicare Modernization Act Section 303(e)(1)) requires, beginning January 1, 2005, that a clotting factor furnishing fee be paid separately if you furnish clotting factor; unless the costs associated with furnishing the clotting factor are paid through another payment system. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) includes the clotting factor furnishing fee in the published national payment limits for clotting factor billing codes. When the national payment limit for a clotting factor is not included on the ASP Medicare Part B Drug Pricing File, or the NOC Pricing File; your carrier, FI, RHHI, or A/B MAC must make payment for the clotting factor as well as make payment for the furnishing fee. The clotting factor furnishing fees applicable for dates of service in each Calendar Year (CY) are listed below: Clotting Factor Furnishing Fee CY 2005 $0.140 per unit CY 2006 $0.146 per unit CY 2007 $0.152 per unit CY 2008 $0.158 per unit CY 2009 $0.164 per unit CY 2010 $0.170 per unit CY 2011 $0.176 per unit CY 2012 $0.181 per unit CY2013 $0.188 per unit This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 61 - November 2012 Additional Information The official instruction, CR 8049 issued to your Medicare Carrier, FI, RHHI, or A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/ Downloads/R2554CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, RHHI, or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. News Flash - As your patients age, their immune systems may weaken. This weakening can make seniors more susceptible to complications from seasonal influenza (flu). Now is the perfect time to remind your patients that seasonal influenza vaccination is the best defense against the flu. Medicare provides coverage for one flu vaccine and its administration per influenza season for seniors and other Medicare beneficiaries with no co-pay or deductible. Talk with your Medicare patients about their risk for getting the flu and start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012-2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. Also, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – The influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. The influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. While some providers may offer the flu vaccine, others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. MM8054 - New Waived Tests DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – On August 24, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced a final rule that will save time and money for physicians and other health care providers by establishing a unique Health Plan Identifier (HPID). The rule is one of a series of changes required by the Affordable Care Act to cut red tape in the health care system and will save up to $6 billion over ten years. Currently, when a health care provider bills a health plan, that plan may use a wide range of different identifiers that do not have a standard format. As a result, health care providers run into a number of time-consuming problems, such as misrouting of transactions, rejection of transactions due to insurance identification errors, and difficulty determining patient eligibility. The change announced on August 24 will greatly simplify these processes. For more information, see the Fact Sheet related to this final rule. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for clinical diagnostic laboratories submitting claims to Medicare contractors (carriers and A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs)) for services to Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You This article is based on Change Request (CR) 8054 which informs Medicare contractors that there are 36 newly added waived tests. In addition, the new CPT code, 86803QW, was assigned for the hepatitis C antibody test performed using the OraQuick HCV Rapid Antibody Test and OraQuick Visual Reference Panel. CAUTION – What You Need to Know CLIA requires that for each test it performs, a laboratory facility must be appropriately certified. The This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 62 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 CPT codes that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) considers to be laboratory tests under CLIA (and thus requiring certification) change each year. CR 8054, from which this article is taken, informs carriers and MACs about the latest new CPT codes that are subject to CLIA edits. GO – What You Need to Do Make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these changes. See the Background and Additional Information Sections of this article for further details regarding these changes. Background The Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) regulations require a facility to be appropriately certified for each test performed. To ensure that Medicare & Medicaid only pay for laboratory tests categorized as waived complexity under CLIA in facilities with a CLIA certificate of waiver, laboratory claims are currently edited at the CLIA certificate level. If you do not have a valid, current Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1998 (CLIA) certificate and submit a claim to your Medicare Carrier or A/B MAC for a Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) code that is considered to be a laboratory test requiring a CLIA certificate, your Medicare payment may be impacted. Listed below are the latest tests approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as waived tests under CLIA. The CPT codes for the following new tests must have the modifier QW to be recognized as a waived test. (However, the tests mentioned on the first page of the list attached to CR8054 (i.e., CPT codes 81002, 81025, 82270, 82272, 82962, 83026, 84830, 85013, and 85651) do not require a QW modifier to be recognized as a waived test.) CPT Code Effective Date Description 86803QW November 29, 2011 OraQuick HCV Rapid Antibody Test and OraQuick Visual Reference Panel 87809QW April 24, 2012 AdenoPlus (human eye fluid) 81003QW May 8, 2012 McKesson 120 Urine Analyzer 81003QW May 11, 2012 Acon Laboratories, Inc. Foresight U120 Urine Analyzer 86294QW May 15, 2012 LifeSign Status BTA 82055QW May 25, 2012 Alere Toxicology Services, iScreen Saliva Alcohol Test Strip 82055QW May 25, 2012 American Screening Corporation, Reveal Saliva Alcohol Test Strip G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Cassette G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Cassette Amp/Amphetamine G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Secobarbital Cassette G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Oxazepam Cassette G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Strip This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 63 - November 2012 CPT Code Effective Date Description G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Strip Amp/Amphetamine G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Secobarbital Strip G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Oxazepam Strip G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (COC/Cocaine){Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MET/Methamphetamine){Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MDMA/ Methylenedioxymethamphetamine) {C up format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MOP/Morphine) {Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MTD/Methadone) {Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Morphine (2000) {Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (PCP/ Phencyclidine){Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Notriptyline {Cup format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (COC/Cocaine) {Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MET/ Methamphetamine){Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MDMA/ Methylenedioxymethamphetamine){D ip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MOP/Morphine) {Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (MTD/Methadone) {Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Morphine (2000) {Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test (PCP/ Phencyclidine){Dip card format} G0434QW May 29, 2012 BTNX Inc Rapid Response X-Press Drug Test Notriptyline {Dip card format} This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 64 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 83036QW May 30, 2012 Bayer AICNow+ Professional Use 87880QW June 7, 2012 Mooremedical Strep A Rapid Test - Dipstick G0434QW July 13, 2012 Ultimate Analysis Cup UA Cups 86701QW July 20, 2012 bioLytical INSTI HIV-1 Antibody Test {Fingerstick Whole Blood} G0433QW July 20, 2012 OraSure Technologies OraQuick In-Home HIV Test {Oral Fluid} The new CPT code, 86803QW, has been assigned for the hepatitis C antibody test performed using the OraQuick HCV Rapid Antibody Test and OraQuick Visual Reference Panel. Additional Information The official instruction, CR 8054 issued to your carrier and A/B MAC regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Regulations-and- Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R2553CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your carrier or A/B MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. News Flash - Influenza Season is Around the Corner - As your patients age, their immune systems may weaken. This weakening can make seniors more susceptible to complications from seasonal influenza (flu). Now is the perfect time to remind your patients that seasonal influenza vaccination is the best defense against the flu. Medicare provides coverage for one flu vaccine and its administration per influenza season for seniors and other Medicare beneficiaries with no co-pay or deductible. Talk with your Medicare patients about their risk for getting the flu and start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012-2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. Also, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – The influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. The influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. While some providers may offer the flu vaccine, others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. MOHs Micrographic Surgery L31877 CGS updated the MOHs LCD L31877 to correct the first asterisk section under the ICD-9 codes that support medical necessity for diagnosis 173.50-173.52, 173.59, 173.60-173.62, 173.69, 73.70173.72, and 173.79 should only be used when the surgery is done on the trunk, arms, or legs for one of the indications listed under “Basal cell carcinomas, squamous cell carcinomas, or basal squamous carcinomas that have one or more of the following features” or “Squamous cell carcinoma exhibiting any of the following”. This change is effective July 1, 2012. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 65 - November 2012 OVA1 or ROMA for Ovarian Cancer Screening OVA1 has been FDA cleared for use in women who meet the following criteria: • Over 18 years of age • Have an ovarian adnexal mass • Have surgery planned • Have not yet been referred to a gynecologic oncologist; and • Have not had cancer in the past five years OVA1 is not intended to be a screening test or to determine whether a patient should proceed to surgery. It can, however, be used as a tool by the patient’s primary physician to decide if the referral for treatment of a mass should go to a gynecologist or a gyn-oncologist. OVA1 will not be approved in conjunction with other screening testing for ovarian cancer, including the following CPT codes: • 86304: CA- 125 • 80418, 80426, 83001: Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) • 80418, 80426, 83002: Luteinizing Hormone (LH) Submit CPT code 84999 for OVA 1 and ROMA testing for ovarian cancer. CGS will review the supporting documentation for individual claims to determine if the medical need is established. Rescinded: MM7819 - Coding Changes to Ultrasound Diagnostic Procedures for Transesophageal Doppler Monitoring DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Over the last year, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has listened to your feedback about the Medicare online enrollment system, Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System (PECOS). As a result, we’ve made upgrades in order to reduce data entry time and increase access to information. Providers and staff using internet-based PECOS will now be able to digitally sign and certify your application and to see more information such as whether a request for revalidation has been sent to you by your Medicare contractor. You will be able to switch from Topic View to Fast Track View to review all of your enrollment information in a single screen. Overall, the system will be easier for you to use. Learn more about PECOS at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and- Certification/MedicareProviderSupEnroll/ InternetbasedPECOS.html and be on the look-out for more enhancements in the coming months! Note: This article was rescinded because the related CR7819 was rescinded. Results of Kentucky Progressive Corrective Action (PCA) for New Patient Office Visit Code 99205© Focus on Code 99205© - Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of a new patient, which requires these 3 key components: • A comprehensive history; • A comprehensive examination; • Medical decision making of high complexity Provider specific probes were conducted for code 99205. The findings consist of the following: • The components of code 99205 were not met. Services were down coded to the lower level codes 99202, 99203 and 99204 • Records submitted did not support the services billed • No records were submitted This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 66 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Based on the claims reviewed, 20 claims were allowed, 236 were reduced and 24 claims were denied. The overall average overpayment was over 50%. Please take a moment to review the following references and take advantage of our E&M checklists that are provided to help you optimize your coding, billing and documentation process. CGS website: http://www.cgsmedicare.com/kyb/coverage/mr/index.html CGS Checklist: http://www.cgsmedicare.com/kyb/coverage/mr/Checklists.html CMS website - http://www.cms.gov/ Documentation Guidelines for Evaluation and Management Services https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNEdWebGuide/ EMDOC.html https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNProducts/ downloads//eval_mgmt_serv_guide-ICN006764.pdf Medicare Claims Processing Manual http://www.cms.gov/manuals/downloads/clm104c12.pdf • Chapter 12 of the Claims Processing Manual includes guidelines for many topics that involve evaluation and management services. Please peruse the entire table of contents and chapter. E/M Coding: Volume of Documentation versus Medical Necessity http://www.cgsmedicare.com/kyb/coverage/mr/articles/em_volume.html Medical Necessity for Evaluation and Management Services http://www.cgsmedicare.com/kyb/claims/cert/articles/045.html REVISED: MM8017 - October Update to the Calendar Year (CY) 2012 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Database (MPFSDB) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – The 2013 ICD-10-PCS files have been posted on the 2013 ICD-10 PCS and GEMs web page. This includes the 2013 Index and Tabular files, guidelines, code titles, addendum to reference manual, and slides. The 2013 ICD-10-PCS files contain information on the new procedure coding system, ICD-10-PCS, that is being developed as a replacement for ICD-9-CM, Volume 3. The 2013 General Equivalent Mappings (GEMs), Reimbursement Mappings, and Reference Manual will be posted at a later date. Note: This article was revised on October 1, 2012, to reflect a revised Change Request (CR). The CR changes include additional instructions clarifying the effective date for HCPCS code 43775, which is June 27, 2012. The CR number, transmittal number and link to the CR are also changed. All other information is unchanged. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, other providers, and suppliers who submit claims to Medicare contractors (carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (A/B MACs), and/or Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs)) for services that are paid under the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS). Provider Action Needed This article is based on CR 8017 which informs Medicare contractors that, in order to reflect appropriate payment policy in line with the Calendar Year (CY) 2012 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Final This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 67 - November 2012 Rule, the MPFS Data Base (MPFSDB) has been updated effective October 1, 2012, and new payment files have been created. CR8017 instructs Medicare contractors to retrieve and implement the revised payment files when they are notified that these files are available for retrieval. Contractors will also give providers 30 days notice before implementing the changes identified in CR8017. Changes will be retroactive to January 1, 2012, unless otherwise stated in CR8017. CR8017 also points out that the Office of Clinical Standards and Quality (OCSQ-CMS) has updated their National Coverage Determination (NCD) concerning Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code 43775 (Lap sleeve gastrectomy). This HCPCS code was previously a Non- covered Service (N), and CR8017 now instructs that it will be Carrier Priced (C). Background The Social Security Act (Section 1848(c)(4); see http://www.ssa.gov/OP_Home/ssact/title18/1848. htm on the Internet) authorizes the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to establish ancillary policies necessary to implement relative values for the services of physicians. In order to reflect appropriate payment policy in line with the Calendar Year (CY) 2012 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (MPFS) Final Rule, the MPFS Data Base (MPFSDB) has been updated effective October 1, 2012. On December 23, 2011, the Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 (TPTCCA; see http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-112publ78/pdf/PLAW-112publ78.pdf on the Internet) became law and suspended the automatic negative update that would have taken effect with current law. The TPTCCA temporarily allowed for a zero percent update to the MPFS from January 1, 2012, until February 29, 2012. On February 22, 2012, the TPTCCA was signed into law and extended the zero percent update to the end of the calendar year, to December 31, 2012. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) updated these payment files in July through CR7844. You can review the MLN Matters® article, MM7844, which corresponds to CR7844 at https:// www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/ Downloads/MM7844.pdf on the CMS website. CR8017 constitutes the October amendment to those payment files, and unless otherwise stated in CR8017, changes will be retroactive to January 1, 2012. Additional Information The official instruction, CR8017 issued to your carrier, FI, A/B MAC, or RHHI regarding this change may be viewed at http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Transmittals/Downloads/ R2559CP.pdf on the CMS website. If you have any questions, please contact your Medicare contractor at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website Revised: SE1011 - Edits on the Ordering/Referring Providers in Medicare Part B, DME and Part A HHA Claims (Change Requests 6417, 6421, 6696, and 6856) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Did you know that Medicare provider enrollment application forms can be completed on your computer? This means that you can fill out the information required by typing into the open fields while the form is displayed on your computer monitor. Filling out the forms this way before printing, signing, and mailing means more easily-readable information – which means fewer mistakes, questions, and delays when your application is processed. Be sure to make a copy of the signed form for your records before mailing. You can find the Medicare provider enrollment application forms at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and-Certification/ MedicareProviderSupEnroll/index.html on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 68 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Note: This MLN Matters® Article was revised on September 17, 2012, to change the reference to Certified Clinical Nurse Specialist on page 3 to say Clinical Nurse Specialist. Also, we have added a reference to MLN Matters® Article SE1221 in the Additional Information section of the article. All other information remains the same. Provider Types Affected This Special Edition MLN Matters® Article is intended for physicians, non-physician practitioners (including interns, residents, fellows, and also those who are employed by the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) or the Public Health Service (PHS)) who order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries, Part B providers and suppliers who submit claims to carriers, Part B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), Part A Regional Home Health Intermediaries, Fiscal Intermediaries who still have a Home Health Agency (HHA) workload and DME MACs for items or services that they furnished as the result of an order or a referral should be aware of this information. Provider Action Needed If you order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries and you do not have a Medicare enrollment record, you need to submit an enrollment application to Medicare.. You can do this using Internet-based PECOS or by completing the paper enrollment application (CMS-855O). Review the background and additional information below and make sure that your billing staffs are aware of these updates. What Providers Need to Know Phase 1: Beginning October 5, 2009, if the billed Part B service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not reported on the claim, the claim will not be paid. If the ordering/ referring provider is reported on the claim, but does not have a current enrollment record in PECOS or is not of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer, the claim will be paid and the billing provider will receive an informational message in the remittance indicating that the claim failed the ordering/referring provider edits. Phase 2: CMS has not announced a date when the edits for Phase 2 will become active. CMS will give the provider community at least 60 days notice prior to turning on these edits. During Phase 2, Medicare will deny Part B, DME and Part A HHA claims that fail the ordering/referring provider edits. Physicians and others who are eligible to order and refer items or services need to establish their Medicare enrollment record and must be of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer. Enrollment applications must be processed in accordance with existing Medicare instructions. It is possible that it could take 45-60 days, sometimes longer, for Medicare enrollment contractors to process enrollment applications. All enrollment applications, including those submitted over the web, require verification of the information reported. Sometimes, Medicare enrollment contractors may request additional information in order to process the enrollment application. Waiting too late to begin this process could mean that your enrollment application will not be able to be processed prior to the implementation date of Phase 2 of the ordering/referring provider edits. Background The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has implemented edits on ordering and referring providers when they are required to be identified in Part B, DME and Part A HHA claims from Medicare providers or suppliers who furnished items or services as a result of orders or referrals. Below are examples of some of these types of claims: • Claims from laboratories for ordered tests; • Claims from imaging centers for ordered imaging procedures; and • Claims from suppliers of durable medical equipment, prosthetics, orthotics and supplies (DMEPOS) for ordered DMEPOS. • Only physicians and certain types of non-physician practitioners are eligible to order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. They are as follows: • Physician (doctor of medicine or osteopathy, doctor of dental medicine, doctor of dental surgery, doctor of podiatric medicine, doctor of optometry), • Physician Assistant, This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 69 - November 2012 • • • • • • Clinical Nurse Specialist, Nurse Practitioner, Clinical Psychologist, Interns, Residents, and Fellows, Certified Nurse Midwife, and Clinical Social Worker. Questions and Answers Relating to the Edits 1. What will the edits do? The edits will determine if the Ordering/Referring Provider (when required to be identified in Part B, DME, and Part A HHA claims) (1) has a current Medicare enrollment record and it contains a valid National Provider Identifier (NPI) (the name and NPI must match), and (2) is of a provider type that is eligible to order or refer for Medicare beneficiaries (see list above). 2. Why did Medicare implement these edits? These edits help protect Medicare beneficiaries and the integrity of the Medicare program. 3. How and when will these edits be implemented? These edits are being implemented in two phases: • Phase 1: Beginning October 5, 2009, if the billed Part B service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not reported on the claim, the claim is not paid. If the ordering/referring provider is reported on the claim, but does not have a current Medicare enrollment record or is not of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer, the claim was paid, but the billing provider received an informational message1 in the Medicare Remittance Advice2 indicating that the claim failed the ordering/referring provider edits. 1 The informational messages vary depending on the claims processing system. 2 DMEPOS suppliers who submit paper claims will not receive an informational message on the Remittance Advice. The informational message will indicate that the identification of the ordering/referring provider is missing, incomplete, or invalid, or that the ordering/referring provider is not eligible to order or refer. The informational message on an adjustment claim that does not pass the edits will indicate that the claim/ service lacks information that is needed for adjudication. The informational messages are identified below: For Part B providers and suppliers who submit claims to carriers: N264 Missing/incomplete/invalid ordering physician provider name N265 Missing/incomplete/invalid ordering physician primary identifier For adjusted claims CARC code 45 along with RARC codes N264 and N265 will be used. DME suppliers who submit claims to carriers (applicable to 5010 edits): N544 Alert: Although this was paid, you have billed with a referring/ordering provider that does not match our system record. Unless, corrected, this will not be paid in the future For Part A HHA providers who order and refer, the claims system shall initially process the claim and add the following remark message: N272 Missing/incomplete/invalid other payer attending provider identifier For adjusted claims the CARC code 16 and/or the RARC code N272 shall be used. Note: if the billed service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not on the claim, the claim will not be paid. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 70 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • Phase 2 CMS has not announced a date when the edits for Phase 2 will become active. CMS will give the provider community at least 60 days notice prior to turning on these edits. In Phase 2, if the Ordering/Referring Provider does not pass the edits, the claim will be denied. This means that the billing provider will not be paid for the items or services that were furnished based on the order or referral. The denial edits are identified below: Below are the denial edits for Part B providers and suppliers who submit claims to carriers including DME: 254D Referring/Ordering Provider Not Allowed To Refer 255D Referring/Ordering Provider Mismatch 289D Referring/Ordering Provider NPI Required CARC code 16 and/or the RARC code N264 and N265 shall be used for denied or adjusted claims. Below are the denial edits for Part A HHA providers who submit claims: 37236 – • This reason code will assign • when: • The statement “From” date on the claim is on or after the date the phase 2 edits are turned on. 37237 • This reason code will assign • when: • The statement “From” date on the claim is on or after the date the phase 2 edits are turned on. • The type of bill is ‘32’ or ‘33’ Covered charges or provider reimbursement is greater than zero but the attending physician NPI on the claim is not present in the eligible attending physician file from PECOS or the attending physician NPI on the claim is present in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS but the name does not match the NPI record in the eligible attending physician files from EPCOS or the specialty code is not a valid eligible code The type of bill is ‘32’ or ‘33’ The type of bill frequency code is ‘7’ or ‘F-P’ Covered charges or provider reimbursement is greater than zero but the attending physician NPI on the claim is not present in the eligible attending physician file from PECOS or the attending physician NPI on the claims is present in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS but the name does not match the NPI record in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS or the specialty code is not a valid eligible code CMS has taken actions to reduce the number of informational messages. In December 2009, CMS added the NPIs to more than 200,000 PECOS enrollment records of physicians and non-physician practitioners who are eligible to order and refer but who had not updated their PECOS enrollment records with their NPIs.3 On January 28, 2010, CMS made available to the public, via the Downloads section of the “Ordering Referring Report” page on the Medicare provider/supplier enrollment website, a file containing the NPIs and the names of physicians and non-physician practitioners who have current enrollment records in PECOS and are of a type/specialty that is eligible to order and refer. The file, called the 3 NPIs were added only when the matching criteria verified the NPI. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 71 - November 2012 Ordering Referring Report, lists, in alphabetical order based on last name, the NPI and the name (last name, first name) of the physician or non-physician practitioner. To keep the available information up to date, CMS will replace the Report on a bi-weekly basis. At any given time, only one Report (the most current) will be available for downloading. To learn more about the Report, and to download it, go to http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and- Certification/MedicareProviderSupEnroll/index. html; click on “Ordering Referring Report” (on the left). Information about the Report will be displayed. Effect of Edits on Providers A. I order and refer. How will I know if I need to take any sort of action with respect to these two edits? In order for the claim from the billing provider (the provider who furnished the item or service) to be paid by Medicare for furnishing the item or service that you ordered or referred, you—the Ordering/ Referring Provider—need to ensure that: 1. You have a current Medicare enrollment record. • If you are not sure you are enrolled in Medicare, you may: (1) check the Ordering Referring Report mentioned above, and if you are on that report, you have a current enrollment record in Medicare and it contains your NPI; (2) contact your designated Medicare enrollment contractor and ask if you have an enrollment record in Medicare and it contains the NPI; or (3) use Internetbased PECOS to look for your Medicare enrollment record (if no record is displayed, you do not have an enrollment record in Medicare). If you choose (3), please read the information on the Medicare provider/supplier enrollment web page about Internet-based PECOS before you begin. • If you do not have an enrollment record in Medicare: • You need to submit an enrollment application to Medicare in one of two ways: a. Use Internet-based PECOS to submit your enrollment application over the Internet to your designated Medicare enrollment contractor. You will have to either e-sign the certification statement or mail a printed, signed, and dated Certification Statement and any required supporting paper documentation, to your designated Medicare enrollment contractor. The designated enrollment contractor cannot begin working on your application until it has received the signed and dated Certification Statement. If you will be using Internet-based PECOS, please visit the Medicare provider/supplier enrollment web page to learn more about the web-based system before you attempt to use it. Go to http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ProviderEnrollment-and- Certification/MedicareProviderSupEnroll/index.html, click on “Internet-based PECOS” on the left-hand side, and read the information that has been posted there. Download and read the documents in the Downloads Section on that page that relate to physicians and non-physician practitioners. A link to Internet-based PECOS is included on that web page. b. Submit an electronic application through the use of internet-based PECOS or obtain a paper enrollment application, fill it out, sign and date it, and mail it, along with any required supporting paper documentation, to your designated Medicare enrollment contractor. If you order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries and you do not have a Medicare enrollment record, you need to submit an enrollment application to Medicare. You can do this using Internet-based PECOS or by completing the paper enrollment application (CMS-855O). Enrollment applications are available via internet-based PECOS or .pdf for downloading from the CMS forms page (http://www. cms.gov/Medicare/CMS-Forms/CMS-Forms/index.html). NOTE about physicians/non-physician practitioners who have opted-out of Medicare but who order and refer: Physicians and non-physician practitioners who have opted out of Medicare may order items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. Their opt-out information must be current (an affidavit must be completed every 2 years, and the NPI is required on the affidavit). 2. You are of a type/specialty that can order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. When you enrolled in Medicare, you indicated your Medicare specialty. Any physician specialty (Chiropractors are excluded) and only the non-physician practitioner specialties listed above in this article are eligible to order or refer in the Medicare program. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 72 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 B. I bill Medicare for items and services that were ordered or referred. How can I be sure that my claims for these items and services will pass the Ordering/Referring Provider edits? As the Billing Provider, you need to ensure that your Medicare claims for items or services that you furnished based on orders or referrals will pass the edits on the Ordering/Referring Provider so that you will not receive informational messages in Phase 1 and so that your claims will be paid in Phase 2. You need to use due diligence to ensure that the physicians and non-physician practitioners from whom you accept orders and referrals have current Medicare enrollment records (i.e., they have Medicare enrollment records that contain their NPIs) and are of a type/specialty that is eligible to order or refer in the Medicare program. If you are not sure that the physician or non-physician practitioner who is ordering or referring items or services meets those criteria, it is recommended that you check the Ordering Referring Report described earlier in this article. Ensure you are correctly spelling the Ordering/Referring Provider’s name. If you furnished items or services from an order or referral from someone on the Ordering Referring Report, your claim should pass the Ordering/Referring Provider edits. Keep in mind that this Ordering Referring Report will be replaced bi-weekly to ensure it is current. It is possible, therefore, that you may receive an order or a referral from a physician or non-physician practitioner who is not listed in the Ordering Referring Report but who may be listed on the next Report. You may appeal a claim that did not initially pass the Ordering/Referring provider edits. Make sure your claims are properly completed. Do not use “nicknames” on the claim, as their use could cause the claim to fail the edits. Do not enter a credential (e.g., “Dr.”) in a name field. On paper claims (CMS-1500), in item 17, you should enter the Ordering/Referring Provider’s first name first, and last name second (e.g., John Smith). Ensure that the name and the NPI you enter for the Ordering/ Referring Provider belong to a physician or non-physician practitioner and not to an organization, such as a group practice that employs the physician or non-physician practitioner who generated the order or referral. Make sure that the qualifier in the electronic claim (X12N 837P 4010A1) 2310A NM102 loop is a 1 (person). Organizations (qualifier 2) cannot order and refer. If there are additional questions about the informational messages, Billing Providers should contact their local carrier, A/B MAC, or DME MAC. Billing Providers should be aware that claims that are denied because they failed the Ordering/Referring Provider would expose the Medicare beneficiary to liability. Therefore, an Advance Beneficiary Notice is not appropriate. Additional Guidance 1. A note on terminology: Part B claims use the term “ordering/referring provider” to denote the person who ordered, referred or certified an item or service reported in that claim. The final rule uses technically correct terms: 1) a provider “orders” non physician items or services for the beneficiary, such as DMEPOS, clinical laboratory services, or imaging services and 2) a provider “certifies” home health services to a beneficiary. The terms “ordered” “referred” and “certified” are often used interchangeably within the health care industry. Since it would be cumbersome to be technically correct, CMS will continue to use the term “ordered/referred” in materials directed to a broad provider audience. 2. Orders or referrals by interns or residents. The IFC mandated that all interns and residents who order and refer specify the name and NPI of a teaching physician (i.e., the name and NPI of the teaching physician would have been required on the claim for service(s)). The final rule states that State-licensed residents may enroll to order and/or refer and may be listed on claims. Claims for covered items and services from un-licensed interns and residents must still specify the name and NPI of the teaching physician. However, if States provide provisional licenses or otherwise permit residents to order and refer services, CMS will allow interns and residents to enroll to order and refer, consistent with State law. 3. Orders or referrals by physicians and non-physician practitioners who are of a type/specialty that is eligible to order and refer who work for the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA), the Public Health Service (PHS), or the Department of Defense(DoD)/Tricare. These physicians and non-physician practitioners will need to enroll in Medicare in order to continue to order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. They may do so by filling out the paper CMS-855O or they may This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 73 - November 2012 use Internet-based PECOS. They will not be submitting claims to Medicare for services they furnish to Medicare beneficiaries. 4. Orders or referrals by dentists. Most dental services are not covered by Medicare; therefore, most dentists do not enroll in Medicare. Dentists are a specialty that is eligible to order and refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries (e.g., to send specimens to a laboratory for testing). To do so, they must be enrolled in Medicare. They may enroll by filling out the paper CMS-855O or they may use Internet-based PECOS. They will not be submitting claims to Medicare for services they furnish to Medicare beneficiaries. Additional Information You may want to review MLN Matters® Article SE1201 (http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and- Education/ Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE1201.pdf) and SE1221 (http://www. cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/ SE1221.pdf) for important reminders on the requirements for Ordering and Referring Physicians. If you have questions, please contact your Medicare Carrier, Part A/B MAC, or DME MAC, at their toll- free numbers, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and- Systems/ Monitoring-Programs/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. Revised: SE1201 - Important Reminder for Providers and Suppliers Who Provide Services and Items Ordered or Referred by Other Providers and Suppliers DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – On November 17, 2011, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Office of EHealth Standards and Services (OESS) announced that it would not initiate enforcement with respect to any Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) covered entity that is not in compliance on January 1, 2012, with the ASC X12 Version 5010 (Version 5010), National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP) Telecom D.0 (NCPDP D.0) and NCPDP Medicaid Subrogation 3.0 (NCPDP 3.0) standards until March 31, 2012. Notwithstanding OESS’ discretionary application of its enforcement authority, the compliance date for use of these new standards remains January 1, 2012. (Small health plans have until January 1, 2013, to comply with NCPDP 3.0.) Note: This article was revised on September 19, 2012, to add a statement at the top of page 3 regarding Optometrists. The article also now contains a reference to MLN Matters® Article SE1221 and all Web addresses have been updated. All other information remains the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Special Edition Article is intended for providers and suppliers (including residents, fellows, and also those who are employed by the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) or the Public Health Service (PHS)) who order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You Medicare will only pay for items or services for Medicare beneficiaries that have been ordered by a physician or eligible professional who is enrolled in Medicare and their individual National Provider Identifier (NPI) has been provided on the claim. The ordering provider or supplier (physician or eligible professional) must also be enrolled with a specialty type that is eligible (per Medicare statute and regulation) to order and refer those particular items or services. CAUTION – What You Need to Know Make sure you follow Medicare directives when providing services ordered for the services outlined below. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 74 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 GO – What You Need to Do You should ensure that any items or services submitted on Medicare claims are referred or ordered by Medicare-enrolled providers of a specialty type authorized to order or refer the same. You must also place the ordering or referring provider or supplier’s NPI on the claim you submit to Medicare for the service or item you provide. Background CMS emphasizes that generally Medicare will only reimburse for specific items or services when those items or services are ordered or referred by providers or suppliers authorized by Medicare statute and regulation to do so. Claims that a billing provider or supplier submits in which the ordering/referring provider or supplier is not authorized by statute and regulation will be denied as a non-covered service. The denial will be based on the fact that neither statute nor regulation allows coverage of certain services when ordered or referred by the identified supplier or provider specialty. CMS would like to highlight the following limitations: • Chiropractors are not eligible to order or refer supplies or services for Medicare beneficiaries. All services ordered or referred by a chiropractor will be denied. • Home Health Agency (HHA) services may only be ordered or referred by a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.), Doctor of Osteopathy (D.O.) or Doctor of Podiatric Medicine (DPM). Claims for HHA services ordered by any other practitioner specialty will be denied. • Portable X-Ray services may only be ordered by a Doctor of Medicine or Doctor of Osteopathy. Portable X-Ray services ordered by any other practitioners will be denied. • Optometrists may only order and refer laboratory and X-Ray services. MLN Matters® Special Edition Articles SE1011 and SE1221 provide further details about edits on the ordering/referring provider information on claims. SE1011 is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreachand-Education/Medicare-Learning- Network-MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE1011.pdf and SE1212 is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning- Network-MLN/ MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/SE1221.pdf on the CMS website. Additional Information For more information about the Medicare enrollment process, visit http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ Provider-Enrollment-and- Certification/MedicareProviderSupEnroll/index.html or contact the designated Medicare contractor for your State. Medicare provider enrollment contact information for each State can be found at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider- Enrollment-and- Certification/ MedicareProviderSupEnroll/downloads/Contact_list.pdf on the CMS website. The Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) fact sheet titled, “Medicare Enrollment Guidelines for Ordering/ Referring Provider,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-LearningNetwork- MLN/MLNProducts/downloads/MedEnroll_OrderReferProv_factSheet_ICN906223.pdf on the CMS website. MLN Matters® Article MM7097, “Eligible Physicians and Non-Physician Practitioners Who Need to Enroll in the Medicare Program for the Sole Purpose of Ordering and Referring Items and Services for Medicare Beneficiaries,“ is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-LearningNetwork- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM7097.pdf on the CMS website. MLN Matters® Article MM6417, “Expansion of the Current Scope of Editing for Ordering/Referring Providers for Claims Processed by Medicare Carriers and Part B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs),” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/ MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM6417.pdf on the CMS website. MLN Matters® Article MM6421, “Expansion of the Current Scope of Editing for Ordering/Referring Providers for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Suppliers’ Claims Processed by Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractors (DME MACs),” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/ Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM6421.pdf on the CMS website; This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 75 - November 2012 MLN Matters® Article MM6129, “New Requirement for Ordering/Referring Information on Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Claims for Diagnostic Services,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreachand-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/MM6129.pdf on the CMS website. SE1221 - Phase 2 of Ordering/Referring Requirement DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – In response to shortage of liposomal doxorubicin (Doxil), the Food and Drug Administration is permitting the temporary importation of Lipodox, a brand of liposomal doxorubicin hydrochloride. Visit http://www.FDA.gov/NewsEvents/Newsroom/PressAnnouncements/ucm292658.htm for additional information. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Quarterly Update includes two new codes (Q2048 and Q2049) for liposomal doxorubicin that will become effective Sunday, July 1, 2012. The code descriptors are worded in a manner that distinguishes Lipodox and Doxil. As of Sunday, July 1, 2012, HCPCS code J9001 will not be used for Medicare billing. CMS will release a Change Request (CR) with additional instructions in the near future. Note: This article was revised on September 17, 2012, to remove the word “Certified” from in front of Clinical Nurse Specialist on Page 3. All other information remains the same. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Special Edition Article is intended for: • Physicians and non-physician practitioners (including interns, residents, fellows, and those who are employed by the Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) or the Public Health Service (PHS)) who order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries, • Part B providers (including Portable X-Ray services) and suppliers of Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) who submit claims to carriers, Part A/B Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs), and DME MACs for items or services that they furnished as the result of an order or a referral, and • Part A Home Health Agency (HHA) services who submit claims to RHHIs, Fiscal Intermediaries (who still maintain an HHA workload), and Part A/B MACs. Provider Action Needed STOP – Impact to You CMS will soon begin denying Part B, DME, and Part A HHA claims that fail the Ordering/Referring Provider edits. These edits ensure that physicians and others who are eligible to order and refer items or services have established their Medicare enrollment records and are of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer. CMS will provide 60 day advanced notice prior to turning on the Ordering/Referring edits. CMS does not have a date at this time. CAUTION – What You Need to Know CMS shall authorize A/B MACs and DME MACs to begin editing Medicare claims with Phase 2 Ordering/ Referring edits. This means that the Billing Provider will not be paid for the items or services that were furnished based on the order or referral from a provider who does not have a Medicare enrollment record. GO – What You Need to Do If you order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries and you do not have a Medicare enrollment record, you need to submit an enrollment application to Medicare. You can do this using Internet-based PECOS or by completing the paper enrollment application (CMS-855O). Background The Social Security Act (the Act) requires that all physicians and non-physician practitioners be uniquely identified for all claims for services that are ordered or referred. Effective January 1, 1992, a physician This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 76 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 or supplier that bills Medicare for a service or item must show the name and unique identifier of the attending physician on the claim if that service or item was the result of an order or referral. Effective May 23, 2008, the unique identifier was determined to be the National Provider Identifier (NPI). CMS began expanding the claims editing to meet the Act’s requirements for ordering and referring providers as follows: • Phase 1: Beginning October 5, 2009, if the billed Part B service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not reported on the claim, the claim is not paid. If the ordering/referring provider is reported on the claim, but does not havea current Medicare enrollment record or is not of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer, the claim was paid, but the billing provider received an informational message in the remittance advice indicating that the claim failed the ordering/referring provider edits. Only physicians and certain types of non-physician practitioners are eligible to order or refer items or services for Medicare beneficiaries. They are as follows: o Physician (doctor of medicine or osteopathy, doctor of dental medicine, doctor of dental surgery, doctor of podiatric medicine, doctor of optometry), o Physician Assistant, o Clinical Nurse Specialist, o Nurse Practitioner, o Clinical Psychologist, o Interns, Residents, and Fellows o Certified Nurse Midwife, and o Clinical Social Worker. The informational message will indicate that the identification of the Ordering/Referring provider is missing, incomplete, or invalid, or that the Ordering/Referring Provider is not eligible to order or refer. The informational message on an adjustment claim that does not pass the edits will indicate that the claim/ service lacks information that is needed for adjudication. The informational messages are identified below: For Part B providers and suppliers who submit claims to carriers: N264 Missing/incomplete/invalid ordering physician provider name N265 Missing/incomplete/invalid ordering physician primary identifier For adjusted claims CARC code 45 along with RARC codes N264 and N265 will be used. DME suppliers who submit claims to carriers (applicable to 5010 edits): N544 Alert: Although this was paid, you have billed with a referring/ordering provider that does not match our system record. Unless, corrected, this will not be paid in the future For Part A HHA providers who order and refer, the claims system shall initially process the claim and add the following remark message: N272 Missing/incomplete/invalid other payer attending provider identifier For adjusted claims the CARC code 16 and/or the RARC code N272 shall be used. Note: if the billed service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not on the claim, the claim will not be paid. Phase 2: CMS has not announced a date when the edits for Phase 2 will become active. CMS will give the provider community at least 60 days notice prior to turning on these edits. During Phase 2, Medicare will deny Part B, DME and Part A HHA claims that fail the ordering/referring provider This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 77 - November 2012 edits. Physicians and others who are eligible to order and refer items or services need to be enrolled in Medicare and must be of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer. If the billed service requires an ordering/referring provider and the ordering/referring provider is not on the claim, the claim will not be paid. If the ordering/referring provider is on the claim, but is not enrolled in Medicare, the claim will not be paid. In addition, if the ordering/referring provider is on the claim, but is not of a specialty that is eligible to order and refer, the claim will not be paid. Below are the denial edits for Part B providers and suppliers who submit claims to carriers including DME: 254D Referring/Ordering Provider Not Allowed To Refer 255D Referring/Ordering Provider Mismatch 289D Referring/Ordering Provider NPI Required CARC code 16 and/or the RARC code N264 and N265 shall be used for denied or adjusted claims. Below are the denial edits for Part A HHA providers who submit claims: 37236 – • This reason code will assign • when: • The statement “From” date on the claim is on or after the date the phase 2 edits are turned on. 37237 • This reason code will assign • when: • The statement “From” date on the claim is on or after the date the phase 2 edits are turned on. • The type of bill is ‘32’ or ‘33’ Covered charges or provider reimbursement is greater than zero but the attending physician NPI on the claim is not present in the eligible attending physician file from PECOS or the attending physician NPI on the claim is present in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS but the name does not match the NPI record in the eligible attending physician files from EPCOS or the specialty code is not a valid eligible code The type of bill is ‘32’ or ‘33’ The type of bill frequency code is ‘7’ or ‘F-P’ Covered charges or provider reimbursement is greater than zero but the attending physician NPI on the claim is not present in the eligible attending physician file from PECOS or the attending physician NPI on the claims is present in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS but the name does not match the NPI record in the eligible attending physician files from PECOS or the specialty code is not a valid eligible code CMS published the final rule, CMS-6010-F, RIN 0938-AQ01, “Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Changes in Provider and Supplier Enrollment, Ordering and Referring, and Documentation Requirements; and Changes in Provider Agreements,” on April 24, 2012, permitting Phase 2 edits to be implemented. CMS will announce the date via an updated article when it shall authorize Part A/B and DME MACs and Part A RHHIs to implement Phase 2 edits. Additional Information A note on terminology: Part B claims use the term “ordering/referring provider” to denote the person who ordered, referred or certified an item or service reported in that claim. CMS has used this term on its website and in educational products. The final rule uses technically correct terms: 1) a provider “orders” non physician items or services for the beneficiary, such as DMEPOS, clinical laboratory services, or imaging services and 2) a provider “certifies” home health services for a beneficiary. The terms “ordered” “referred” and “certified” are often used interchangeably within the health care industry. Since it would be This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 78 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 cumbersome to be technically correct, CMS will continue to use the term “ordered/referred” in materials directed to a broad provider audience. For more information about the Medicare enrollment process, visit http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ Provider-Enrollment-and- Certification/MedicareProviderSupEnroll/index.html, or contact the designated Medicare contractor for your State. Medicare provider enrollment contact information for each State can be found at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Provider-Enrollment-and- Certification/ MedicareProviderSupEnroll/downloads/Contact_list.pdf on the CMS website. The Medicare Learning Network® fact sheet, “Medicare Enrollment Guidelines for Ordering/Referring Providers” provides information about the requirements for eligible ordering/referring providers and is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/ MLNProducts/downloads/MedEnroll_OrderReferProv_FactSheet_ICN906223.pdf on the CMS website. You may find the following articles helpful in understanding this matter: • MLN Matters® Article MM6417, “Expansion of the Current Scope of Editing for Ordering/Referring Providers for Claims Processed by Medicare Carriers and Part B MedicareAdministrative Contractors (MACs),” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and- Education/MedicareLearning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM6417.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Article MM6421, “Expansion of the Current Scope of Editing for Ordering/Referring Providers for Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Suppliers’ Claims Processed by Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractors (DME MACs),” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-NetworkMLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM6421.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Article MM6856, “Expansion of the Current Scope of Editing for Attending Physician Providers for free-standing and provider-based Home Health Agency (HHA) claims processed by Medicare Regional Home Health Intermediaries (RHHIs)”, is available at http://www.cms.gov/ Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/ MM6856.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Article MM7097, “Eligible Physicians and Non-Physician Practitioners Who Need to Enroll in the Medicare Program for the Sole Purpose of Ordering and Referring Items and Services for Medicare Beneficiaries,“ is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and- Education/MedicareLearning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM7097.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Article MM6129, “New Requirement for Ordering/Referring Information on Ambulatory Surgical Center (ASC) Claims for Diagnostic Services,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreachand-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM6129.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Special Edition Article SE1011, “Edits on the Ordering/Referring Providers in Medicare Part B Claims (Change Requests 6417, 6421, and 6696),” is available at http://www.cms. gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/ SE1011.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Article Special Edition Article SE1201 “Important Reminder for Providers and Suppliers Who Provide Services and Items Ordered or Referred by Other Providers and Suppliers” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare- Learning-Network-MLN/ MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE1201.pdf on the CMS website. • MLN Matters® Special Edition Article SE1208, “855-O Medicare Enrollment Application Ordering and Referring Physicians or Other Eligible Professionals,” is available at https://www.cms.gov/Outreachand-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/SE1208.pdf on the CMS website. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 79 - November 2012 • If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, Part A/B MAC, RHHI, Fiscal Intermediary, or DME MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research- Statistics-Data-andSystems/Monitoring-Programs/provider-compliance-interactive- map/index.html on the CMS website. SE1234 - Important Information Concerning the Medicare Crossover Process and State Medicaid Agency Requirements for National Drug Codes (NDCs) Associated with Physician-Administered Part B Drugs DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – On August 24, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced a final rule that will save time and money for physicians and other health care providers by establishing a unique health plan identifier (HPID). The rule is one of a series of changes required by the Affordable Care Act to cut red tape in the health care system and will save up to $6 billion over ten years. Currently, when a health care provider bills a health plan, that plan may use a wide range of different identifiers that do not have a standard format. As a result, health care providers run into a number of time-consuming problems, such as misrouting of transactions, rejection of transactions due to insurance identification errors, and difficulty determining patient eligibility. The change announced on August 24 will greatly simplify these processes. For more information, see the Fact Sheet related to this final rule. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Special Edition (SE) Article is intended for physicians, hospitals, clinics, other providers, their billing vendors or clearinghouses that regularly include line-item billing for physicianadministered drugs as part of the claims that they send to Medicare contractors (carriers, Fiscal Intermediaries (FIs), or Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs)). Provider Action Needed In this article, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) outlines guidance to help reduce the amount of claims being denied and/or not accepted by State Medicaid Agencies in conjunction with the national Coordination of Benefits Agreement (COBA) Medicare claims crossover process. CMS is providing this guidance in an effort to improve the effectiveness of the Medicare claims crossover process. Background Currently, many payers use both the 11 digit National Drug Code (NDC), reported in the 5-4-2 format, and the associated Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) code for claims adjudication that include billing for physician-administered drugs. In accordance with the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 and its subsequent implementing regulation, as found in 42 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) 447 Section 520, State Medicaid Agencies must include information on individual NDCs directly related to physician-administered drugs when sending their billing to drug manufacturers to claim drug rebates under the Title XIX program. Such information is normally available to State Medicaid Agencies through the national COBA Medicare Claims Crossover Process, by which Medicare automatically transfers fully-adjudicated Medicare claims to Title XIX Medicaid agencies for their supplemental, or tertiary, payment consideration. Through ongoing discussions with Title XIX Medicaid agencies, CMS has determined that physician offices, outpatient hospital departments, and outpatient clinics do not always include a one-to-one reporting of an NDC for each Part B drug HCPCS (e.g., J3140) code reported on incoming Medicare claims. This trend was found mostly on multi-line claims. Consequently, the Medicaid agencies are either denying the COBA Medicare crossover claims that report Part B drug HCPCS codes without corresponding NDCs, or developing the required information with physicians and outpatient hospital and clinic providers. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 80 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Key Points Billing of NDCs on Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) 837 Institutional Claims Sent to Medicare When physician billing offices and hospital outpatient departments and outpatient clinic billing offices determine that their patients are: 1) dually entitled to Medicare and Medicaid, and 2) have received physician-administered drugs as part of a medical encounter, they should bill the physician-administered drug(s) on the resulting claims to Medicare as follows: • For each line level reporting of a Part B physician-administered drug, continue to report the associated HCPCS (e.g., J3140) in 2400 SV202-2, with SV202-1=HC; and • For each Part B drug HCPCS reported in 2400 SV202-2, complete the required associated • 2410 LIN and CPT04 segments as follows: • Include the NDC in 2410 LIN03, with LIN02=N4; • Include the quantity/unit count in 2410 CPT04; and • Input the needed information in 2410 CPT05 and CPT05-1. Billing NDCs on Incoming CMS-1500 or UB04 Hard Copy Claims to Medicare • Most physicians and providers may realize that Medicare transforms incoming CMS-1500 or UB04 hard copy claims into their electronic equivalent HIPAA 837 professional and institutional formats as part of the Medicare claims crossover process. CMS previously issued guidance to physicians and providers about the reporting of NDCs and associated information (i.e., qualifier for NDC and qualifier for quantity/units, as well as reporting of quantity/unit count, including fractional units) on hard copy CMS-1500 and UB04 claim formats during 2008. These directions, which remain unchanged, may be reviewed in: • MLN Matters® Article MM5930, “Medicare Shared Systems Modifications Necessary to Capture and Crossover Medicaid Drug Rebate Data Submitted on Form UB 04 Paper Claims and Direct Data Entry (DDE) Claims,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/MedicareLearning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM5950.pdf; and • MLN Matters® Article MM5835, “Medicare Shared Systems Modifications Necessary to Accept and Crossover to Medicaid National Drug Codes (NDC) and Corresponding Quantities Submitted on CMS-1500 Paper Claims,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/MedicareLearning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/downloads/MM5835.pdf on the CMS website. Billing of NDCs via Direct Data Entry (DDE) Claims Screen • Outpatient hospital departments and outpatient clinics that bill via DDE and are experiencing nonacceptance and/or denial of Medicare crossover claims by State Medicaid Agencies due to missing NDCs should contact their designated MAC or FI for assistance. Additional Information If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, FI, or MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- Programs/providercompliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. SE1236-Documenting Medical Necessity for Major Joint Replacement (Hip and knee) DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – On August 24, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced a final rule that will save time and money for physicians and other health care providers by establishing a unique health plan identifier (HPID). The rule is one of a series of changes required by the Affordable Care Act to cut red tape in the health care system and will save up to $6 billion over ten years. Currently, when a healthcare provider bills a health plan, that plan may use a wide range of different identifiers that do not have a standard format. As a result, health care providers run into a number of time-consuming problems, This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 81 - November 2012 such as misrouting of transactions, rejection of transactions due to insurance identification errors, and difficulty determining patient eligibility. The change announced on August 24 will greatly simplify these processes. For more information, see the Fact Sheet related to this final rule. This MLN Matters® Special Edition (SE) is intended for physicians who perform major joint replacement (hip and knee) surgery on Medicare beneficiaries. This article may also be of interest to hospitals, multispecialty clinics, and accountable care organizations. What You Need to Know The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is publishing this article as an educational guide to improve compliance with documentation requirements for major joint replacement surgery. The article presents suggestions for documenting medical necessity to avoid denial of Medicare Fee-For- Service (FFS) claims. The use of this guide is not mandatory and does not guarantee payment. Background In 2010, the President announced the goals for cutting the Medicare FFS improper payment rate by half and reducing overall payment errors by $50 billion. Medicare has initiated a number of auditing projects with the intention of reaching those goals. Multiple auditing entities including the Recovery Audit Contractors, Comprehensive Error Rate Testing (CERT) Contractors, and Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs) have demonstrated very high paid claim error rates among both hospital and professional claims associated with major joint replacement surgery. Key Points Document Medical Necessity to Avoid Denial of Claims CMS recognizes that joint replacement surgery is reserved for patients whose symptoms have not responded to other treatments. To avoid denial of claims for major joint replacement surgery, the medical records should contain enough detailed information to support the determination that major joint replacement surgery was reasonable and necessary for the patient. Progress notes consisting of only conclusive statements should be avoided. Consequently, the medical record must specifically document a complete description of the patients’ historical and clinical findings. Examples of such information may include: History: • Description of the pain (onset, duration, character, aggravating, and relieving factors); • Limitation of Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) – specify; • Safety issues (e.g. falls); • Contraindications to non-surgical treatments; • Listing and description of failed non-surgical treatments such as: · Trial of medications (e.g. NSAIDs); · Weight loss; · Physical therapy; · Intra-articular injections; · Braces, orthotics or assistive devices. Physical Examination: • Deformity; • Range of motion; • Crepitus; • Effusions; • Tenderness; • Gait description (with/without mobility aides). Investigations: • Results of applicable investigations (e.g. plain radiographs). This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 82 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Clinical Judgment: • Reasons for deviating from a stepped-care approach. Examples of Medical Documentation The following examples show portions of a medical record that either support or do not support the medical necessity of the joint replacement. Please note these examples do not describe all of necessary documentation required for a joint replacement surgery or all the clinical situations that require major joint surgery. These examples are solely for educational purposes. Example of Documentation Demonstrating Medical Necessity for Joint Replacement Surgery A. The hospital record for the preoperative joint replacement surgical patient includes: History: • • • • Present illness from onset until the present; Current symptoms and functional limitations; Outcomes of nonsurgical treatments, such as; · Medications e.g., Anti-inflammatory medication, Analgesics; · Intra-articular injections; · Physical Therapy and/or home exercise plans; · Assistive devices e.g., cane, walker, braces (specify type of brace), orthotics; Comorbidities. Physical Examination: • Joint examination with detailed objective findings. Investigations: • Preoperative imaging studies. The hospital record for the joint replacement surgical patient includes documentation of specific conditions. For example: • Osteoarthritis (mild, moderate, severe); • Inflammatory arthritis (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis); • Failure of previous osteotomy; • Malignancy of distal femur, proximal tibia, knee joint, soft tissues; • Failure of previous unicompartmental knee replacement; • Avascular necrosis of knee; • Malignancy of the pelvis or proximal femur or soft tissues of the hip; • Avascular necrosis of the femoral head; • Fractures (e.g., distal femur, femoral neck, acetabulum); • Nonunion, malunion, or failure of previous hip fracture surgery; and • Osteonecrosis. B. The hospital record for the postoperative joint replacement surgical patient includes: • Operative report for the procedure, including observed pathology; • Daily progress notes for inpatients; and • Discharge plan and discharge orders. Example of a medical record that may result in a DENIED claim Mrs. Smith is a female, age 70, with chronic right knee pain. She states she is unable to walk without pain and pain meds do not work. Therefore, she needs a total right knee replacement. Example of a medical record with more detail and support of medical necessity This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 83 - November 2012 History: Mrs. Smith is a 70-year-old female who is suffering from end-stage Osteoarthritis (OA) of her right knee, worsening gradually over the past 10 years. Treatment has included NSAIDs which have not effectively relieved her pain/ inflammation and which have recently begun to cause her gastric distress. She has also participated in an exercise program/physical therapy for the past 3 months without functional improvement. Sometimes the pain keeps her awake at night. She is using a cane and is no longer able to climb the five steps to her front door. Personal safety is compromised as she had falls x 3 in attempting the stairs to her home entrance. Her knee pain and stiffness limit her ability to perform ADLs. She cannot walk from her bedroom to her kitchen without stopping to rest. Physical Examination: Vital Signs: 140/90, Heart rate 78, RR 18. Physical exam: Bilateral varus knee deformity consistent with severe osteoarthritis. Right knee extension reduced to minus 15 degrees and flexion to less than 100 degrees. Unable to rise from chair unassisted. Full motion of the right hip, no calf tenderness or ankle edema. Antalgic gait noted. Investigations: X-ray (7/2/11): right knee shows joint space narrowing along with marginal osteophytes. Impression: Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) indicated. Plan/Orders: Discussed risks and benefits of total joint replacement with patient. Patient understands both. Admit to inpatient care for right TKA. Forward a copy of this note to include in patients chart along with a copy of the patient’s x-ray reports. Additional Information If you have any questions, please contact your carrier, Fiscal Intermediary, or MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and- Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. For additional information and educational materials related to provider compliance, visit http://www.cms. gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNProducts/ProviderCompliance.html on the CMS website. SE1238 - Claim Modifier Did Not Prevent Medicare from Paying Millions in Unallowable Claims for Selected Durable Medical Equipment DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – Registration is now open to all suppliers interested in participating in the Round 1 Recompete of the Medicare Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS) Competitive Bidding Program. In order to submit a bid for the Round 1 Recompete, you must first register in the Individuals Authorized Access to the CMS Computer Services (IACS) online application. Once you have registered in IACS, you will receive a user ID and password to access the online DMEPOS Bidding System (DBidS).You must register even if you registered during a previous round of competition (Round 1 Rebid, Round 2, or the national mail-order competition). Only suppliers who have a user ID and password will be able to access DBidS; suppliers that do not register will not be able to bid. Registration for the recompete will close on Friday, October 19, 2012 at 9pm prevailing Eastern Time. To register, go to the Competitive Bidding Implementation Contractor (CBIC) website, http://www.dmecompetitivebid.com click on Round 1 Recompete, and then click on “REGISTRATION IS OPEN” above the Registration clock. If you have any questions about the registration process, please contact the CBIC Customer Service Center at877-577-5331 between 9am and 9pm prevailing Eastern Time, Monday through Friday. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 84 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Special Edition (SE) Article is intended for providers and suppliers who submit claims to Durable Medical Equipment Medicare Administrative Contractors (DME MACs) for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries. What You Need to Know This article highlights the April 2012 report from the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) titled “Claim Modifier Did Not Prevent Medicare from Paying Millions in Unallowable Claims for Selected Durable Medical Equipment.” The article also focuses on the Medicare policy regarding the required documentation suppliers must have on file. The objective of this OIG study was to determine whether the KX modifier was effective in ensuring that DMEPOS suppliers who submitted Medicare claims had the required supporting documentation on file. The study included individual reviews of the four contractors that processed the DMEPOS claims for Jurisdictions A through D with ndates of service in 2007. The OIG report focused on the following four categories of DMEPOS claims containing the KX modifier for Calendar Year (CY) 2007: 1. therapeutic shoes for diabetics, 2. continuous positive airway pressure systems, 3. respiratory assist devices, and 4. pressure reducing support surfaces (groups 1 and 2). Background Medicare providers and suppliers have a vital role in helping the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) effectively manage Medicare resources. CMS acknowledges the daily challenges providers and suppliers face in serving Medicare beneficiaries and the complex process involved in obtaining and receiving the required documentation. For certain DMEPOS, suppliers must use the KX modifier. The KX modifier indicates that the claim meets Medicare coverage criteria and the supplier has the required documentation on file. While suppliers must have a written physician’s order and proof of delivery for all DMEPOS, suppliers must have additional documentation on file for items requiring the KX modifier. For example, therapeutic shoes also require that a certifying physician’s statement be on file before the supplier bills Medicare. OIG Findings The report found that in CY 2007: 1. 60% of the sampled 400 claims, suppliers did not have the required documentation on file; 2. 37% of the claims were missing the physician orders; 3. 21% were missing proof of delivery; 4. 25% were missing use or complaint use follow-up statements; and 5. 2% were missing sleep studies. The Key Points section below reviews Medicare policy for coverage of therapeutic shoes for diabetics, continuous positive airway pressure systems, respiratory assist devices, and pressure reducing support surfaces (groups 1 and 2). Each DMEPOS has similar requirements that will be listed first. For additional document requirements, each DMEPOS will be listed thereafter. Key Points CMS reminds physicians that in order for these items to be reimbursed for their patients, the DME supplier must collect medical documentation. This includes copies of the initial evaluation and any other reports needed to comply with coverage criteria specific to: 1. therapeutic shoes for diabetics; 2. continuous positive airway pressure systems; 3. respiratory assist devices; and 4. pressure reducing support surfaces (groups 1 and 2). Cooperation and coordination between physicians and suppliers is necessary to meet Medicare coverage documentation requirements and deliver effective and efficient healthcare to beneficiaries. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 85 - November 2012 The Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) for all four DME MACs require suppliers to have the same documentation on file for the categories of DMEPOS and dates of service included in this OIG audit. Additional coverage and payment rules for therapeutic shoes for diabetics, continuous positive airway pressure systems, respiratory assist devices, and pressure reducing support surfaces (groups 1 and 2) may be found in the LCDs for the applicable DME MAC. See the Additional Information section below to find websites for all four contractors. The complete medical policy is posted on individual DME MAC websites, or in the CMS Medicare Coverage Database. The database is available at http://www.cms.gov/medicare-coverage- database/ overview-and-quick-search.aspx on the CMS website. Each category of DMEPOS in this study requires the following documentation: 1) Valid written order that contains: • Beneficiary’s name; • Treating physician’s signature; • Date the treating physician signed the order, and • Start date of the order. 2) Proof of delivery. Additional documentation requirements for each category of DMEPOS are also listed as follows: Therapeutic Shoes 1) Signed statement from the certifying physician (must be MD or DO) who is treating the patient’s systemic diabetes condition; • Patient has diabetes mellitus; and • Patient has one of the following: a. Previous amputation of the other foot, or part of either foot; or b. History of previous foot ulceration of either foot; or c. History of pre-ulcerative calluses of either foot; or d. Peripheral neuropathy with evidence of callus formation of either foot; or e. Foot deformity of either foot; or f. Poor circulation in either foot. Certify that the above two indications are met and that he/she is treating the patient under a comprehensive plan of care for his/her diabetes; and the patient needs diabetic shoes. 2) Documentation of an in-person evaluation of the patient by the certifying physician who is managing the patient’s systemic diabetes condition within 6 months specifying: a. The patient has diabetes mellitus; b. Has one of the conditions 2a-2f listed in Policy Article A37076; c. Is being treated under a comprehensive plan of care for his/her diabetes, and d. Requires diabetic shoes. 3) Documentation of an in-person evaluation of the patient by the supplier prior to selection of the items billed that included: a. An examination of the patient’s feet with a description of the abnormalities that will need to be accommodated by the shoes/inserts/modifications. b. For all shoes, taking measurements of the patient’s feet. c. For custom molded shoes and inserts, taking impressions, making casts, or obtaining CAD-CAM images of the patient’s feet that will be used in creating positive models of the feet. 4) Medical records supporting that the patient has diabetes mellitus and at least one of the conditions noted above. 5) Documentation of an in-person visit with the patient by the supplier at the time of delivery must be conducted with the patient wearing the shoes and inserts and must document that the shoes/inserts/ modifications fit properly. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 86 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Note: Please refer to the basic coverage criteria specified in the Therapeutic Shoes LCD for your DME MAC for further guidance. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Systems 1) Documentation of a verbal order (if item is dispensed based on a verbal order) that contains: a. Description of the item; b. Name of the beneficiary; c. Name of the physician, and d. Start date of the order. 2) Valid written order that contains: a. Beneficiary’s name b. Treating physician’s signature c. Date the treating physician signed the order d. Start date of the order-if the start date differs from the signature date. e. Order for PAP with pressure setting. 3) Beneficiary Authorization. 4) Proof of Delivery. 5) Face-to-Face clinical evaluation by the physician prior to the sleep test to assess the patient for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) containing the following elements: a. Sleep history and symptoms which may be caused by OSA; b. Epworth Sleepiness Scale (a standardized patient questionnaire which helps to assess the likelihood of sleep apnea) or other validated sleep inventory, and c. Pertinent physical examination – e.g., body mass index, neck circumference, upper airway exam, and cardiopulmonary exam. 6) Medicare-covered sleep test that meets either of the following criteria: a. Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI) or Respiratory Disturbance Index (RDI) greater than or equal to15 events per hour with a minimum of 30 events; OR b. AHI or RDI greater than or equal to 5 and less than or equal to 14 events per hour with a minimum of 10 events and documentation of: i. Excessive daytime sleepiness, impaired cognition, mood disorders, or insomnia, OR ii. ii. Hypertension, ischemic heart disease, or history of stroke. 7) Documentation that the patient and/or caregiver received instruction from the supplier of the Positive Airway Pressure (PAP) device and accessories in the proper use and care of the equipment. 8) To continue coverage for the PAP device (Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) or Respiratory Assist Device (RAD)) beyond an initial 3-month trial period, there must be: a. A face-to-face visit with the physician during the second or third month of the trial that documents an improvement of the beneficiary’s symptoms; and b. A data report from the PAP device which documents use of the PAP device for at least 4 hours per night on 70% of nights for a 30 consecutive day period during the trial. 9) For beneficiaries who received a PAP device prior to Fee-For-Service (FFS) Medicare enrollment and are now enrolled in Medicare and are seeking a new PAP device and/or accessories, both of the following coverage requirements must be met: a. Sleep test – There must be documentation that the beneficiary had a sleep test, prior to FFS Medicare enrollment, that meets the FFS Medicare AHI/RDI coverage criteria in effect at the time that the beneficiary seeks a replacement PAP device and/or accessories, and, b. Clinical Evaluation – Following enrollment in FFS Medicare, the beneficiary must have a face-toface evaluation by their treating physician who documents in the beneficiary’s medical record that: i. The beneficiary has a diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea; and, ii. The beneficiary continues to use the PAP device. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 87 - November 2012 Note: Please refer to the basic coverage criteria specified in the PAP LCD by your DME MAC contractor for further guidance. Respiratory Assist Devices 1) Documentation of a verbal order (if item is dispensed based on a verbal order) that contains: a. Description of the item; b. Name of the beneficiary; c. Name of the physician, and d. Start date of the order. 2) Valid written order that contains: a. Beneficiary’s name b. Item to be dispensed c. Pressure setting with or without backup rate d. Treating physician’s signature e. Date the treating physician signed the order f. Start date of the order if the start date differs from the signature date. 3) Beneficiary Authorization. 4) Proof of Delivery. 5) Medical records documenting: a. Symptoms characteristic of sleep-associated hypoventilation. b. Patient has one of the following disorders and meets all coverage criteria for that disorder: i. Restrictive Thoracic Disorder, or ii. Severe COPD, or iii. Central Sleep or Complex Sleep Apnea, or iv. Hypoventilation Syndrome. Note: Please refer to the basic coverage criteria specified in the RAD LCD by your DME MAC contractor for further guidance. Pressure Reducing Support Surfaces (groups 1 and 2). 1) Valid written order that contains: a. Beneficiary’s name b. Treating physician’s signature c. Date the treating physician signed the order d. Start date of the order if the start date differs from the signature date. e. Clear, detailed description of the type of support surface the physician is ordering. 2) Beneficiary Authorization. 3) Signed statement from the treating physician indicating what, if any, payment criteria the patient meets. 4) Medical records supporting patient meets the basic coverage criteria specified in the Pressure Reducing Support Surfaces- Group 1 and 2 LCD. Note: Please refer to the basic coverage criteria specified in the Pressure Reducing Support Surfaces- Group 1 and 2 LCDs by your DME MAC contractor for further guidance. Additional Information For questions about documentation requirements, please contact your DME MAC at their toll-free number, which may be found at http://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and- Systems/MonitoringPrograms/provider-compliance-interactive-map/index.html on the CMS website. The OIG report titled “Claim Modifier Did Not Prevent Medicare from Paying Millions in Unallowable Claims for Selected Durable Medical Equipment” is available at http://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/ region4/41004004.pdf on the OIG website. The Medicare Learning Network® (MLN) fact sheet titled “Durable Medical Equipment, Prosthetics, Orthotics, and Supplies (DMEPOS)Quality Standards,” is available at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach-andThis newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 88 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Education/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNProducts/downloads/DMEPOS_Qual_Stand_Booklet_ ICN905709.pdf on the CMS website. The DME MAC websites are available as follows: • Cigna Government Services • National Government Services • National Heritage Insurance Company (NHIC) • Noridian Administrative Services News Flash - Influenza Season is Around the Corner - As your patients age, their immune systems may weaken. This weakening can make seniors more susceptible to complications from seasonal influenza (flu). Now is the perfect time to remind your patients that seasonal influenza vaccination is the best defense against the flu. Medicare provides coverage for one flu vaccine and its administration per influenza season for seniors and other Medicare beneficiaries with no co-pay or deductible. Talk with your Medicare patients about their risk for getting the flu and start protecting your patients as soon as your 2012-2013 seasonal flu vaccine arrives. Also, don’t forget to immunize yourself and your staff. Know what to do about the flu. Remember – The influenza vaccine plus its administration is a covered Part B benefit. The influenza vaccine is NOT a Part D covered drug. CMS will provide information and a link to the 2012-2013 Influenza Vaccine prices when they are available. For more information on coverage and billing of the flu vaccine and its administration, please visit the CMS Medicare Learning Network® Preventive Services Educational Products and CMS Immunizations web pages. While some providers may offer the flu vaccine, others can help their patients locate a vaccine provider within their local community. HealthMap Vaccine Finder is a free, online service where users can search for locations offering flu vaccines. SE1239 - Updated ICD-10 Implementation Information DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash –The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has posted an updated Medicare FFS Version 5010 835 Health Care Claim Payment/Advice Companion Guide to the Medicare FFS Companion Guides web page. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Article is intended for all physicians, providers, suppliers, and other covered entities who submit claims to Medicare contractors for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries in any health care setting. What You Need to Know This MLN Matters® special edition article replaces article SE1019 and provides updated information about the implementation of the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Edition, Clinical Modification and Procedure Coding System (ICD-10-CM/ICD-10-PCS) code sets to help you better understand (and prepare for) the United States health care industry’s change from ICD-9-CM to ICD10 for medical diagnosis and inpatient hospital procedure coding. The ICD-10-related implementation date is now October 1, 2014, as announced in final rule CMS0040-F issued on August 24, 2012. This final rule is available at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ ICD10/Statute_Regulations.html on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) website. Thus, on October 1, 2014, medical coding in U.S. health care settings will change from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10. The transition will require business and systems changes throughout the health care industry. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 89 - November 2012 Everyone who is covered by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) must make the transition, not just those who submit Medicare or Medicaid claims. The compliance dates are firm and not subject to change. If you are not ready, your claims will not be paid. Preparing now can help you avoid potential reimbursement issues. Background ICD-1 0 Implementation Com pliance Date On October 1, 2014, CMS will implement the ICD-10-CM (diagnoses) and ICD-10-PCS (inpatient procedures), replacing the ICD-9-CM diagnosis and procedure code sets. • ICD-10-CM diagnoses codes will be used by all providers in every health care setting. • ICD-10-PCS procedure codes will be used only for hospital claims for inpatient hospital procedures. • The compliance dates are firm and not subject to change. o There will be no delays. o There will be no grace period for implementation. Important, please be aware: • ICD-9-CM codes will not be accepted for services provided on or after October 1, 2014. • ICD-10 codes will not be accepted for services prior to October 1, 2014. You must begin using the ICD-10-CM codes to report diagnoses from all ambulatory and physician services on claims with dates of service on or after October 1, 2014, and for all diagnoses on claims for inpatient settings with dates of discharge that occur on or after October 1, 2014. Additionally, you must begin using the ICD-10-PCS (procedure codes) for all hospital claims for inpatient procedures on claims with dates of discharge that occur on or after October 1, 2014. Note: Only ICD-10-CM, not ICD-10-PCS, will affect physicians. ICD-10-PCS will only be implemented for facility inpatient reporting of procedures – it will not be used for physician reporting. There will be no impact on Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) and Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes. You should continue to use these codes for physician, outpatient, and ambulatory services. Physician claims for services provided to inpatient patients will continue to report CPT and HCPCS codes. What are the Differences Betw een the ICD-10-CM/ICD-1 0-P CS and ICD-9-CM Code Sets? The differences between the ICD-10 code sets and the ICD-9 code sets are primarily in the overall number of codes, their organization and structure, code composition, and level of detail. There are approximately 70,000 ICD-10-CM codes compared to approximately 14,000 ICD-9-CM diagnosis codes, and approximately 70,000 ICD-10-PCS codes compared to approximately 4,000 ICD-9-CM procedure codes. In addition, ICD-10 codes are longer and use more alpha characters, which enable them to provide greater clinical detail and specificity in describing diagnoses and procedures. Also, terminology and disease classification have been updated to be consistent with current clinical practice. Finally, system changes are also required to accommodate the ICD-10 codes. What are Benefits of the ICD-1 0 Codin g System ? The new, up-to-date classification system will provide much better data needed to: • Measure the quality, safety, and efficacy of care • Reduce the need for attachments to explain the patient’s condition • Design payment systems and process claims for reimbursement • Conduct research, epidemiological studies, and clinical trials • Set health policy • Support operational and strategic planning • Design health care delivery systems • Monitor resource utilization • Improve clinical, financial, and administrative performance This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 90 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • • Prevent and detect health care fraud and abuse Track public health and risks ICD-10-CM Code Use an d Structure The ICD-10-CM (diagnoses) codes are to be used by all providers in all health care settings. Each ICD10-CM code is 3 to 7 characters, the first being an alpha character (all letters except U are used), the second character is numeric, and characters 3-7 are either alpha or numeric (alpha characters are not case sensitive), with a decimal after the third character. Examples of ICD-10-CM codes follow: • A78 – Q fever • A69.21 – Meningitis due to Lyme disease • O9A.311 – Physical abuse complicating pregnancy, first trimester • S52.131A – Displaced fracture of neck of right radius, initial encounter for closed fracture Additionally, the ICD-10-CM coding system has the following new features: 1) Laterality (left, right, bilateral) For example: • C50.511 – Malignant neoplasm of lower-outer quadrant of right female breast • H16.013 – Central corneal ulcer, bilateral • L89.022 – Pressure ulcer of left elbow, stage II 2) Combination codes for certain conditions and common associated symptoms and manifestations For example: • K57.21 – Diverticulitis of large intestine with perforation and abscess with bleeding • E11.341 – Type 2 diabetes mellitus with severe nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy with macular edema • I25.110 – Atherosclerotic heart disease of native coronary artery with unstable angina pectoris 3) Combination codes for poisonings and their associated external cause For example: • T42.3x2S – Poisoning by barbiturates, intentional self-harm, sequela 4) Obstetric codes identify trimester instead of episode of care For example: • O26.02 – Excessive weight gain in pregnancy, second trimester 5) Character “x” is used as a 5th character placeholder in certain 6 character codes to allow for future expansion and to fill in other empty characters (e.g., character 5 and/or 6) when a code that is less than 6 characters in length requires a 7th character For example: • T46.1x5A – Adverse effect of calcium-channel blockers, initial encounter • T15.02xD – Foreign body in cornea, left eye, subsequent encounter 6) Two types of Excludes notes Excludes 1 – Indicates that the code excluded should never be used with the code where the note is located (do not report both codes). For example: • Q03 – Congenital hydrocephalus (Excludes1: Acquired hydrocephalus (G91.-) Excludes 2 – Indicates that the condition excluded is not part of the condition represented by the code but a patient may have both conditions at the same time, in which case both codes may be assigned together (both codes can be reported to capture both conditions). • L27.2 – Dermatitis due to ingested food (Excludes 2: Dermatitis due to food in contact with skin (L23.6, L24.6, L25.4) This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 91 - November 2012 7) Inclusion of clinical concepts that do not exist in ICD-9-CM (e.g., underdosing, blood type, blood alcohol level) For example: • T45.526D – Underdosing of antithrombotic drugs, subsequent encounter • Z67.40 – Type O blood, Rh positive • Y90.6 – Blood alcohol level of 120–199 mg/100 ml 8) A number of codes have been significantly expanded (e.g., injuries, diabetes, substance abuse, postoperative complications) For example: • E10.610 – Type 1 diabetes mellitus with diabetic neuropathic arthropathy • F10.182 – Alcohol abuse with alcohol-induced sleep disorder • T82.02xA – Displacement of heart valve prosthesis, initial encounter 9) Codes for postoperative complications have been expanded and a distinction made between intraoperative complications and postprocedural disorders For example: • D78.01 – Intraoperative hemorrhage and hematoma of spleen complicating a procedure on the spleen • D78.21 – Postprocedural hemorrhage and hematoma of spleen following a procedure on the spleen Finally, there are additional changes in ICD-10-CM, to include: • Injuries are grouped by anatomical site rather than by type of injury • Category restructuring and code reorganization have occurred in a number of ICD-10-CM chapters, resulting in the classification of certain diseases and disorders that are different from ICD-9-CM • Certain diseases have been reclassified to different chapters or sections in order to reflect current medical knowledge • New code definitions (e.g., definition of acute myocardial infarction is now 4 weeks rather than 8 weeks) • The codes corresponding to ICD-9-CM V codes (Factors Influencing Health Status and Contact with Health Services) and E codes (External Causes of Injury and Poisoning) are incorporated into the main classification rather than separated into supplementary classifications as they were in ICD-9-CM. To learn more about the ICD-10-CM coding structure you may review “Basic Introduction to ICD-10- CM” audio or written transcripts from the March 23, 2010 provider outreach conference call, which is available at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html on the CMS website. ICD -1 0-PCS Code Use and Structure The ICD-10-PCS codes are for use only on hospital claims for inpatient procedures. ICD-10-PCS codes are not to be used on any type of physician claims for physician services provided to hospitalized patients. These codes differ from the ICD-9-CM procedure codes in that they have 7 characters that can be either alpha (non-case sensitive) or numeric. The numbers 0 - 9 are used (letters O and I are not used to avoid confusion with numbers 0 and 1), and they do not contain decimals. For example: • 0FB03ZX - Excision of liver, percutaneous approach, diagnostic • 0DQ10ZZ - Repair, upper esophagus, open approach Help with Converting Codes The General Equivalence Mappings (GEMs) are a tool that can be used to convert data from ICD-9- CM to ICD-10-CM/PCS and vice versa. Mapping from ICD-10-CM/PCS codes back to ICD-9-CM codes is referred to as backward mapping. Mapping from ICD-9-CM codes to ICD-10-CM/PCS codes is referred to as forward mapping. The GEMs are a comprehensive translation dictionary that can be used to accurately and effectively translate any ICD-9-CM-based data, including data for: This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 92 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • • • • Tracking quality Recording morbidity/mortality Calculating reimbursement Converting any ICD-9-CM-based application to ICD-10-CM/PCS The GEMs can be used by anyone who wants to convert coded data, including: • All payers • All providers • Medical researchers • Informatics professionals • Coding professionals—to convert large data sets • Software vendors—to use within their own products; • Organizations—to make mappings that suit their internal purposes or that are based on their own historical data • Others who use coded data The GEMs are not a substitute for learning how to use the ICD-10 codes. More information about GEMs and their use can be found on the CMS website at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html (select from the left side of the web page ICD-10-CM or ICD-10-PCS to find the most recent GEMs). Additional information about GEMs was provided on the following CMS sponsored conference call - May 19, 2009, “ICD-10 Implementation and General Equivalence Mappings” (http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/ Coding/ICD10/index.html on the CMS website). What to do Now in Preparation for ICD-10 Implementation ? If you have not already done so, here are the steps you need to consider to implement ICD-10: • Learn about the structure, organization, and unique features of ICD-10-CM - all provider types. • Learn about the structure, organization, and unique features of ICD-10-PCS - inpatient hospital claims. • Learn about system impact and 5010. • Use assessment tools to identify areas of strength/weakness in medical terminology and medical record documentation. • Review and refresh knowledge of medical terminology as needed based on the assessment results. • Provide additional training to refresh or expand knowledge in the biomedical sciences • (anatomy, physiology, pathophysiology, pharmacology, and medical terminology). • Plan to provide intensive coder training approximately 6 -9 months prior to implementation. • Allocating 16 hours of ICD-10-CM training will likely be adequate for most coders, and very proficient ICD-9-CM coders may not need that much. Additional Information To find additional information about ICD-10, visit http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index. html on the CMS website. In addition, CMS makes the following resources available to assist in your transition to ICD-10: • Medicare Fee-for-Service Provider Resources Web Page -This site links Medicare feefor- service (FFS) providers to information and educational resources that are useful for all providers to implement and transition to ICD-10 medical coding in a 5010 environment. As educational materials become available specifically for Medicare FFS providers, they will be posted to this web page. Bookmark http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html and check back regularly for access to ICD-10 implementation information of importance to you. Note: Use the links on the left side of the web page to navigate to ICD-10 and 5010 information applicable to your specific interest. • CMS Sponsored National Provider Conference Calls - During the ICD-10 implementation period, CMS will periodically host national provider conference calls focused on various topics related to the implementation of ICD-10. Calls will include a question and answer session that will allow participants to ask questions of CMS subject matter experts. These conference calls are offered free of charge and require advance registration. Continuing This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 93 - November 2012 • • • education credits may be awarded for participation in CMS national provider conference calls. For more information, including announcements and registration information for upcoming calls, presentation materials and written and audio transcripts of previous calls, please visit http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html on the CMS website. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - To access FAQs related to ICD-10, please visit the CMS ICD-10 web page at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html, select the Medicare Fee-for-Service Provider Resources link from the menu on the left side of the page, scroll down the page to the “Related Links Inside CMS” section and select “ICD-10 FAQs”. Please check the ICD-10 FAQ section regularly for newly posted or updated ICD-10 FAQs. See MLN Matters® Special Edition Article, SE1240, at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach- andEducation/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/SE1240.pdf for a discussion of a partial freeze on ICD-10 code set prior to implementation. The following organizations offer providers and others ICD-10 resources: • Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI) http://www.wedi.org; and • Health Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) http://www.himss.org/ icd10 on the Internet. SE1240 - Partial Code Freeze Prior to ICD-10 Implementation DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services News Flash – On August 24, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced a final rule that will save time and money for physicians and other health care providers by establishing a unique Health Plan Identifier (HPID). The rule is one of a series of changes required by the Affordable Care Act to cut red tape in the health care system and will save up to $6 billion over ten years. Currently, when a health care provider bills a health plan, that plan may use a wide range of different identifiers that do not have a standard format. As a result, health care providers run into a number of time-consuming problems, such as misrouting of transactions, rejection of transactions due to insurance identification errors, and difficulty determining patient eligibility. The change announced on August 24 will greatly simplify these processes. For more information, see the Fact Sheet related to this final rule. Provider Types Affected This MLN Matters® Special Edition Article affects all Medicare Fee-For-Service (FFS) physicians, providers, suppliers, and other entities who submit claims to Medicare contractors for services provided to Medicare beneficiaries in any health setting. What You Need to Know At a meeting on September 14, 2011, the ICD-9-CM Coordination & Maintenance (C&M) Committee implemented a partial freeze of the ICD-9-CM and ICD-10 (ICD-10-CM and ICD-10-PCS) codes prior to the implementation of ICD-10 which would end one year after the implementation of ICD-10. The implementation of ICD-10 was delayed from October 1, 2013 to October 1, 2014 by final rule CMS0040-F issued on August 24, 2012. This final rule is available at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ ICD10/Statute_Regulations.html on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) website. There was considerable support for this partial freeze. The partial freeze will be implemented as follows: • The last regular, annual updates to both ICD-9-CM and ICD-10 code sets were made on October 1, 2011. • On October 1, 2012 and October 1, 2013 there will be only limited code updates to both the ICD-9-CM and ICD-10 code sets to capture new technologies and diseases as required by section 503(a) of Pub. L. 108-173. • On October 1, 2014, there will be only limited code updates to ICD-10 code sets to capture new technologies and diagnoses as required by section 503(a) of Pub. L. 108-173. There will This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 94 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 • be no updates to ICD-9-CM, as it will no longer be used for reporting. On October 1, 2015, regular updates to ICD-10 will begin. The ICD-9-CM Coordination and Maintenance Committee will continue to meet twice a year during the partial freeze. At these meetings, the public will be asked to comment on whether or not requests for new diagnosis or procedure codes should be created based on the criteria of the need to capture a new technology or disease. Any code requests that do not meet the criteria will be evaluated for implementation within ICD-10 on and after October 1, 2015 once the partial freeze has ended. The code freeze was initially discussed at the September 15, 2010, meeting of the committee. To view the transcript of that meeting, go to: http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/index.html on the CMS website. From there, select the September 1516, 2010, meeting documents and transcripts from the Downloads section, and then from the ZIP files, select the ‘091510_Morning_Transcript’ file. This section appears on page 4 of the 78-page document. To view the Summary Report of the meeting, go to: http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ ICD9ProviderDiagnosticCodes/index.html on the CMS website. From there, select the September 15-16, 2010, meeting documents and transcripts from the Downloads section, and then from the ZIP files, select the ‘091510_ICD9_Meeting_Summary_report.pdf’ file. Information on the Code Freeze begins on page 5. Additional Information CMS has developed a variety of educational resources to help Medicare FFS providers understand and prepare for the transition to ICD-10. General information about ICD-10 is available at http://www.cms. gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html on the CMS website. In addition, the following CMS resources are available to assist in your transition to ICD-10: • Medicare Fee-for-Service Provider Resources Web Page -This site links Medicare FeeFor-Service (FFS) providers to information and educational resources that are useful for all providers to implement and transition to ICD-10 medical coding in a 5010 environment. As educational materials become available specifically for Medicare FFS providers, they will be posted to this web page. Bookmark http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html and check back regularly for access to ICD-10 implementation information of importance to you. Note: Use the links on the left side of the web page to navigate to ICD-10 and 5010 information applicable to your specific interest. • CMS Sponsored National Provider Conference Calls - During the ICD-10 implementation period, CMS will periodically host national provider conference calls focused on various topics related to the implementation of ICD-10. Calls will include a question and answer session that will allow participants to ask questions of CMS subject matter experts. These conference calls are offered free of charge and require advance registration. Continuing education credits may be awarded for participation in CMS national provider conference calls. For more information, including announcements and registration information for upcoming calls, presentation materials and written and audio transcripts of previous calls, please visit http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html on the CMS website. • See MLN Matters® Special Edition Article, SE1239, at http://www.cms.gov/Outreach- andEducation/Medicare-Learning-Network- MLN/MLNMattersArticles/Downloads/SE1239.pdf for an overview of what is needed to implement ICD-10. • Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - To access FAQs related to ICD-10, please visit the CMS ICD-10 web page at http://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Coding/ICD10/index.html, select the Medicare Fee-for-Service Provider Resources link from the menu on the left side of the page, scroll down the page to the “Related Links Inside CMS” section and select “ICD10 FAQs”. Please check the ICD-10 FAQ section regularly for newly posted or updated ICD-10 FAQs. The following organizations offer providers and others ICD-10 resources: • Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange (WEDI) http://www.wedi.org; and • Health Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) http://www.himss.org/icd10 on the Internet. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 95 - November 2012 Skin Substitute - Apligraf Update CGS has updated the Apligraf article A50691 to allow a maximum of five applications within no more than twelve weeks for any ulcer, effective October 1, 2012. This article is attached to the Biologic Products for Wound Treatment and Surgical Interventions LCD L31853. Small Provider and Medicare Update Workshops: Free! Small Provider Workshops: CGS is pleased to offer a series of upcoming Small Provider Workshops. A “small provider” is defined as a practice with ten or fewer full-time equivalent (FTE) employees. These workshops are tailored to address issues that directly affect this provider population. We will be adding additional dates and locations over the coming months, so continue to monitor our ListServ for additional opportunities as they become available. Although these workshops are primarily designed for staff at small provider offices and practices, all providers and staff members are welcome to attend. These workshops will feature the following topics: • • • • • • • Self-Service Technology Options Electronic vs. Paper Billing Medicare Incentive Programs Preventive Services Top Claim Denials, and Denial Resolution Resources Offsets, Overpayments, and Claim Adjustments Provider Enrollment Revalidation Scheduled dates for CGS Small Provider Workshops: Date Thursday, October 18, 2012 Wednesday, October 24, 2012 Thursday, October 25, 2012 Tuesday, October 30, 2012 Location City Willoughby Hills Community Center 35400 Chardon Road Willoughby Hills, OH 44094 NOTE: Limit = 50 Mercer County District Public Library 303 North Main Street Celina, OH 45822 NOTE: Limit =25 Cuyahoga Falls Library 2015 Third Street Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio 44221 NOTE: Limit =30 Mansfield/Richland County Public Library Main Branch 43 West Third Street Mansfield, OH 44902 NOTE: Limit =40 Times Registration: 9:30 a.m. ET Workshop: 10:00 a.m. – 12 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/15/12 Registration: 10 a.m. ET Workshop: 10:30 a.m. – 12 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/22/12 Registration: 9:30 a.m. ET Workshop: 10:00 a.m. – 12 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/22/12 Registration: 10:30 a.m. ET Workshop: 11 a.m. -12:30 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/26/12 Cost Free FREE Free FREE This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 96 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Date Friday, November 2, 2012 Friday, December 7, 2012 Location Guernsey County District Public Library Crossroads Branch 63500 Byesville Rd. Cambridge, OH 43725 NOTE: Limit =40 Upper Sandusky Community Library 301 N. Sandusky Ave. Upper Sandusky, OH 43351 NOTE: Limit =50 Times Registration: 10 a.m. ET Workshop: 10:30 a.m. -12 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/30/12 Cost FREE Registration: 10 a.m. ET Workshop: 10:30 a.m. -12 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 12/04/12 Free Medicare Update Workshops: CGS is also hosting Medicare Update workshops to provide you with information on the latest changes to the Medicare program. We will be adding additional dates and locations over the coming months, so continue to monitor our ListServ for additional opportunities as they become available. Medicare Update Workshops will be held on the same dates and in the same locations as Small Provider Workshops. You are welcome to attend both, although we recommend that you choose either the Small Provider Workshop or the Medicare Update Workshop that is the best fit for you. These workshops will feature the following topics: • • • • • • 2013 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule Proposed Rule Part B Outpatient Therapy Cap and Manual Review Electronic Submission of Medical Documentation (esMD) Medicare Claim Review Programs Top “problem areas” and tips to help myCGS Scheduled Dates for the CGS Medicare Updates Workshops: Date Thursday, October 18, 2012 Location City Willoughby Hills Community Center, 35400 Chardon Road, Willoughby Hills, OH 44094 NOTE: Limit =50 Wednesday, October 24, 2012 Mercer County District Public Library 303 North Main Street Celina, OH 45822 NOTE: Limit =25 Cuyahoga Falls Library 2015 Third Street Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio 44221 NOTE: Limit =30 Thursday, October 25, 2012 Times Registration: 1:30 p.m. ET Workshop: 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/15/12 Registration: 1 p.m. ET Workshop: 1:30 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/22/12 Registration: 1:30 p.m. ET Workshop: 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/22/12 Cost Free FREE Free This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 97 - November 2012 Date Tuesday, October 30, 2012 Friday, November 2, 2012 Friday, December 7, 2012 Location Mansfield/Richland County Public Library Main Branch 43 West Third Street Mansfield, OH 44902 NOTE: Limit =40 Guernsey County District Public Library Crossroads Branch 63500 Byesville Rd. Cambridge, OH 43725 NOTE: Limit =40 Upper Sandusky Community Library 301 N. Sandusky Ave. Upper Sandusky, OH 43351 NOTE: Limit =50 Times Registration: 1:30 p.m. ET Workshop: 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/26/12 Cost FREE Registration: 1:30 p.m. ET Workshop: 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 10/30/12 FREE Registration: 1:30 p.m. ET Workshop: 2 p.m. - 4 p.m. ET NOTE: Registration end date = 12/04/12 Free Can’t attend one of these workshops? CGS will be offering more of these workshops over the coming months. Stay tuned to our ListServ and Calendar of Events for additional educational opportunities. This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 98 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 Join the CGS ListServ By joining the CGS electronic mailing list, you can get immediate updates on Medicare information, including: • Medicare publications • Important updates • Workshops • Medical Review information To join the ListServ follow this link: https://www.cgsmedicare.com/medicare_ dynamic/ls/001.asp This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 - page 99 - November 2012 Overpayment Refunds Personal provider checks sent to us for any reason should be sent to the following address (if you are submitting a refund due to Medicare Secondary Payer, include “MSP” on the envelope or correspondence): Kentucky and Ohio Providers CGS – J15 Part B Kentucky and Ohio PO Box 957065 St. Louis, MO 63195-7065 Personal provider checks should never be sent to our Nashville operations as this will create processing delays. For example, in situations where you have received a letter of notification regarding a Medicare overpayment, these delays can result in payment offset and/or interest accrual. Checks issued by CGS that need to be returned to us should be sent to the following address: Kentucky and Ohio Providers CGS – J15 Part B Kentucky and Ohio PO Box 957065 St. Louis, MO 63195-7065 Medicare Bulletin . . . a service of CGS Two Vantage Way Nashville, TN 37228 The CGS website (www.cgsmedicare.com) provides formal notification for all notices developed and distributed by CGS, including the Part B Medicare Bulletin. Providers/suppliers are obligated and responsible for remaining updated on current Medicare issues and legislation as it is posted to the website. Please note that for LCDs listed on the website, the start of the notice period may be different than the date it is posted to the website. Please abide by the notice period dates on the document, not the posting date. A quarterly CD-ROM, which includes the Medicare Bulletin and other additional resources, is mailed to the same location as Medicare checks. Provider groups will receive one copy of the CD-ROM. Each individual provider in that group will not receive their own copy for his/her individual provider identification number (PIN). This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our website at www.cgsmedicare.com. November 2012 - page 100 - Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 OHIO This newsletter should be shared with all health care practitioners and managerial members of the provider/supplier staff. Newsletters issued after January 1997 are available at no cost from our Web site at www.cgsmedicare.com. Medicare Bulletin – GR 2012-11 OH Insert, page 101 NOVEMBER 2012