Acute episodes, check-ups are both routine for these patients.

When migraine headache coding comes up, ICD-9 codes typically dominate the conversation.

But what about the procedure codes those complicated migraine diagnoses are attached to? There are several common situations in which a migraine patient might report to the family physician (FP). Check out the top three migraine treatment scenarios, along with expert coding advice on each situation.

Situation 1: Separate E/M and Acute Migraine Tx

One of your FP’s patients might report to the practice with symptoms, and then end up requiring treatment for an acute migraine headache. Consider this example ……  from Mari Wink RHIT, CPC, ACS-EM, an independent coding consultant in New York.

Example: An established patient reports to the FP with complaints of recurring headaches. The patient’s past medical history indicates that the FP has prescribed several pain medications to combat the headaches, with no success, during previous E/Ms. The patient has, as the FP instructed her during their last encounter, kept a “headache diary” for three months.

During a level-three E/M service, the FP diagnoses “migraine headache w/o aura, HTN.” The physician then injects 10 mg of Imitrex via subcutaneous injection, writes a prescription, and sends the patient home.

On the claim, you’d report the following:

  • 96372 (Therapeutic, prophylactic, or diagnostic injection [specify substance or drug]; subcutaneous or intramuscular) for the injection J3030 (Injection, sumatriptan succinate, 6 mg [code may be used for Medicare when drug administered under the direct supervision of a physician, not for use when drug is self-administered]) x 2 for the Imitrex supply
  • 99213 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires at least 2 of these 3 key components: an expandedproblem focused history; an expanded problem focused examination; medical decision making of low complexity …) for the E/M
  • modifier 25 (Significant, separately identifiable evaluation and management service by the same physician on the same day of the procedure or other service) appended to 99213 to show that the E/M and injection were separate services 346.10 (Migraine without aura; without mention of intractable migraine without mention of status migrainosus) appended to 99213, 96372 and J3030 to represent the patient’s migraine
  • 401.X (Essential hypertension) appended to 99213 as a secondary diagnosis, reflecting a comorbid condition.

Documentation alert: In order to prove medical necessity for the Imitrex injection, the notes should include proof that the FP did try alternate methods of treatmentbefore performing the injection. “It should read something like: ‘Patient has not responded well to past medication regimes as documented in previous office visits. Today we are going to inject Imitrex,’” recommends Wink.

Situation 2: Capture Care Plan Work in E/M Choice

After your FP diagnoses a patient with migraines, he often begins a plan of care to help the patient better manage her migraines, confirms Marvel Hammer, RN, CPC, CCS-P, PCS, ACS-PM, CHCO, owner of Denver’s MJH Consulting.

According to Hammer, a patient with a migraine diagnosis might report to the FP for:

  • diagnosis management of his migraine
  • medication management, including writing new or refilling current prescriptions
  • evaluation of efficacy of plan of care including abortive management
  • assessment of side effects associated with current treatment plan.

When the physician or nonphysician practitioner (NPP) treats migraine patients for any of the above reasons, code the appropriate E/M code or other CPT code[s].

Example: An established patient with a plan of care in place for her classic migraines reports to the FP for medication management. An NPP asks the patient how she is reacting to the medication, and if there have been any side effects. The patient reports that everything is “going fine so far.” Notes indicate a level-two E/M service.

For this condition-management E/M, you’d report 99212 (Office or other outpatient visit for the evaluation and management of an established patient, which requires at least 2 of these 3 key components: a problem focused history; a problem focused examination; straightforward medical decision making …) with 346.00 (Migraine with aura; without mention of intractable migraine without mention of status migrainosus) appended to represent the patient’s migraines.

Situation 3: ID Injections in Migraine Intervention

A patient with a plan of care in place might also have an acute migraine that requires FP intervention. When this occurs, you’ll report an E/M or injection - or both, depending on the situation. Consider this example from Hammer:

Example: An established female patient with a history of menstrual migraines presents having an acute menstrual migraine with new onset of neurological symptoms. After attempting to stop the migraine with oral pain medication, the FP injects the patient with 6 mg of Imitrex and 1 unit of Compazine. Notes indicate a level-four E/M service.

To find out what you should report on this claim, subscribe to the Family Practice Coding Alert. Editor: Chris Boucher, CPC

Sign up for the upcoming on-demand Webinar, 5 Steps to Optimize Your Office's Coding & Billing Practices, or order the CD/transcripts.

Be a hero. Sign up for Supercoder.com, and join the coding community at the Supercoder.com Facebook Fan Page.

Coding Hint: Watch for ‘add-ons’ during Remicade sessions

Question: An established patient with a plan of care in place for his Crohn’s disease of the ileum reports to the gastroenterologist for a Remicade infusion. The infusion started at 10:00 a.m. and ended at 11:42. The patient reported nausea during the infusion, so the gastroenterologist administered 200 mg of Benadryl from 10:41 to 10:52. How should I report this encounter?

Answer: This claim has a lot of moving parts; you can code for both the Remicade and the Benadryl administrations. Because your Benadryl infusion time was so short, however, you should not report an infusion code for that service.

Follow this two-step guidance on how to ethically maximize this claim:

Step 1 — Remicade: The total infusion time for the Remicade treatment was an hour and 42 minutes. Represent this time with the following:

• 96413 (Chemotherapy administration, intravenous infusion technique; up to 1 hour, single or initial substance/drug) for the first hour

• +96415 (… each additional hour [List separately in addition to code for primary procedure]) for the remaining 42 minutes

• 555.0 (Regional enteritis; small intestine) linked to 96413 and +96415 to represent the patient’s condition

• J1745 (Injection, infliximab, 10 mg) x 20 for the supply of Remicade.

Step 2 — Benadryl: Payers will allow separate codes for any antiemetics the gastroenterologist provides during Remicade infusions. Since the Benadryl infusion took less than 15 minutes, however, you should consider it a push and report +96375 (Therapeutic, prophylactic, ordiagnostic injection [specify substance or drug]; each additional sequential intravenous push of a new substance/drug [List separately in addition to code for primary procedure]) with 555.0 attached. Also, report J1200 (Injection, diphenhydramine HCl, up to 50 mg) for the Benadryl supply.

© Gastroenterology Coding Alert. Download your 2 FREE sample issues here.

Don’t let 2010 catch your practice by surprise. 2010 Gastroenterology Coding & Reimbursement Update.

Related articles:

  1. Oncology Coding Challenge: When Infusion Runs Long Question: The oncologist ordered a 90-minute chemotherapy infusion service,...
  2. CODING CHALLENGE: Is V58.11 Right for Patient Not on Chemo? Question: When you use a chemo admin code for...
  3. Gastroenterology Coding Education: Bravo Cap Placements Question: A new patient reports to the gastroenterologist with complaints...