This Billing and Coding Article provides billing and coding guidance for Local Coverage Determination (LCD) L39760 Skin Substitute Grafts/Cellular and Tissue-Based Products for the Treatment of Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Venous Leg Ulcers. Please refer to the LCD for reasonable and necessary requirements.
Notice: It is not appropriate to bill Medicare for services that are not covered (as described by the entire LCD) as if they are covered. When billing for non-covered services, use the appropriate modifier (GA, GX, GY, or GZ). For Part A use the GX modifier when issuing a voluntary ABN for a service that is not covered because it is statutorily excluded or is not a Medicare benefit. For part B, use the GY modifier when the item or service is statutorily excluded or does not meet the definition of any Medicare benefit. Use the GA modifier when the waiver of liability statement was issued as required and the item or service is expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary. Use the GZ modifier when the notice of liability was not issued, and the item or service is expected to be denied as not reasonable and necessary.
Per the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codebook definition, skin substitute grafts include non-autologous human skin (dermal or epidermal, cellular, and acellular) grafts (e.g., homograft, allograft), non-human skin substitute grafts (i.e., xenograft), and biological products that form a sheet scaffolding for skin growth. Skin substitute graft application codes are not to be reported for application of non-graft wound dressings (e.g., gel, powder, ointment, foam, liquid) or injected skin substitutes.
Do not report non-graft wound dressings or injected skin substitute HCPCS codes with skin substitute grafts/cellular and/or tissue-based products (CTP) and HCPCS application codes as this would be considered incorrect coding. Such products are bundled into other standard management procedures if medically necessary and are not separately payable.
Removal of a current graft and/or simple cleansing of the wound and other surgical preparation services are included in the skin substitute grafts/CTP and HCPCS application codes. Active wound care management (CPT code 97602 Removal of devitalized tissue from wound(s), non-selective debridement, without anesthesia [e.g., wet-to-moist dressings, enzymatic, abrasion, larval therapy], including topical application(s), wound assessment, and instruction(s) for ongoing care, per session) procedures should never be reported with skin substitute grafts/CTP and HCPCS application codes.
An evaluation and management (E/M) service should only be reported with a skin replacement therapy (application of skin substitute grafts/CTP) if the patient required a service that was separate and distinct from the skin replacement service.
If reporting a skin substitute product with HCPCS code Q4100 (Skin substitute, not otherwise specified) or A4100 (Skin substitute, FDA cleared as a device, not otherwise specified code), the claim will be returned to the provider/rejected.
For Part A Claims:
Line Level Remarks for 837I Electronic Claim: 837I 2400 SV202-7
Claim Level Remarks for 837I Electronic Claim: 837I 2300 NTE*ADD
Block 80 for the UB04 claim form
“REMARKS” field for a DDE claim
For Part B Claims:
Loop 2400 or SV101-7 for the 5010A1 837P
Box 19 for paper claim
- The name of the product, HCPCS code, size, and the amount used must appear in the Documentation Field.
- If the charge matches the actual invoice cost, note "Actual Invoice Cost" in the Documentation Field. You are not required to submit invoice information with the claim; however, it must be available if requested.
- If you are submitting a charge greater than the actual invoice cost, please include the following information in the Documentation Field, using these abbreviations:
- Des = Description/Name of skin substitute grafts/product
- QS = Quantity shipped (e.g., QS=3 boxes)
- TA = Total amount charged for quantity shipped (e.g., TA=$437.50)
- UP = Unit Price (e.g., UP = $17.50 per 5X5 cm) (Optional)
- DG = Amount used (e.g., 25 cm)
The appropriate CPT or HCPCS application code must be reported on the same claim as the skin substitute grafts/CTP HCPCS code. The claim will be returned to provider or rejected if the application code and skin substitute grafts/CTP code are not submitted on the same claim. When the skin substitute grafts/CTP HCPCS code is denied, the related application code will also be denied.
Utilization Parameters
- A maximum of 8 skin substitute grafts/CTP applications per ulcer will be allowed for the episode of skin replacement surgery (defined as 12 to 16 weeks from the first application of a skin substitute grafts/CTP). Product change within the episode of skin replacement surgery may be appropriate. When more than 1 specific product is used during the 12–16-week period, the total number of applications or treatments must not exceed 8.
Modifier -KX
Modifier -KX must be used as an attestation by the practitioner and/or provider of the service that documentation is on file verifying that the patient meets the requirements for additional applications of skin substitute grafts/CTP. Consistent with the LCD more than 4 applications of a skin substitute grafts/CTP in a 12–16-week period must be appended with a -KX modifier. Failure to apply the -KX modifier for applications greater than 4 will result in return of claim or claim denial. Aberrant or consistent use of the -KX modifier may trigger focused medical review.
- Documentation must support medical necessity for the use of additional applications or extended episode of treatment time and include:
- Explanation of why extended time or additional applications is medically necessary for the specific patient.
- The current treatment plan resulting in wound healing with the expectation the wound will continue to heal with this plan. Documentation should include estimated time of extended treatment, number of additional applications anticipated, and plan of care if healing is not achieved as planned.
- Modifiable risk factors (e.g., metabolic, vascular, external irritation) are being addressed to improve likelihood of healing.
- Appropriate consultation for the diagnosis and management of venous related ulceration of the lower extremity.
Multiple Wounds
To determine the surface area for application of skin substitute grafts for multiple wounds, all wound areas within the same anatomic site described by the skin application code descriptors, should be summarized for a composite total surface area applied to that site. If the skin substitute graft is applied to wounds on different anatomic sites, the corresponding application code for each anatomical site should be billed with the composite wound surface area for each site, for each date of service (DOS). Skin substitute graft application codes are appropriately coded based upon total surface area of anatomical locations and not by number of ulcers.
Do not code modifier -59 on skin substitute graft application, or skin substitute product codes.
Modifier -50 and modifiers -LT and -RT are not appropriately appended to skin substitute codes. Coding for skin substitute graft application is based upon total surface area of the ulcers; therefore, Modifiers -50, -LT, and -RT are not required for proper claim adjudication.
JW and JZ Modifiers
When billing for Part B drugs and biologicals (except those provided under a competitive acquisition program [CAP]), the use of the JW modifier to identify unused drugs or biologicals from single use vials or packages, appropriately discarded, is required. The discarded amount shall be billed on a separate claim line using the JW modifier. Providers are required to document the discarded drug or biological in the patient’s medical record with identifying serial or product number code.
Any amount wasted must be clearly documented in the medical record and should include the date and time, amount of medication wasted, and the reason for the wastage.
The use of the JZ modifier (attesting to no discarded amount) is required on claims to report no discarded amounts of unused drugs or biologicals from single use vials or single use packages.
Claims for drugs separately payable under Medicare Part B from single-dose containers are required to report either the JW or JZ modifier to identify any discarded product or to attest to no portion of product discarded, respectively. Part B claims for these products submitted without the JW or JZ modifier appended will be rejected.
- The JW and JZ modifier policy does not apply for drugs that are not separately payable, such as packaged OPPS or ASC drugs, or drugs administered in the FQHC or RHC setting.
The JW and JZ modifiers do not apply to drugs assigned status indicator N (Items and Services Packaged into APC Rates) under the OPPS. Similarly, the JW and JZ modifiers do not apply to drugs assigned payment indicator “N1” (ASC).
Documentation Requirements
- All documentation must be maintained in the patient’s medical record and made available to the contractor upon request.
- Every page of the record must be legible and include appropriate patient identification information (e.g., complete name, dates of service[s]). The documentation must include the legible signature of the physician or non-physician practitioner responsible for and providing the care to the patient.
- The submitted medical record must support the use of the selected ICD-10-CM code(s). The submitted CPT/HCPCS code must describe the service performed.
- The medical record documentation must specifically address the circumstances of stalled ulcer healing with standard ulcer care treatment of greater than 4 weeks and reference the specific interventions having failed. The record must include an updated medication history, review of pertinent medical problems since the previous ulcer evaluation, and explanation of the planned skin replacement therapy with choice of skin substitute graft or CTP product. The procedure risks and complications must also be reviewed and documented.
- The medical record must clearly document the provisions of the LCD have been met, as well as the appropriate diagnosis and response to treatment. Description of the ulcer(s) must be documented at baseline (prior to beginning standard of care treatment) including size, location, stage, duration, and presence of infection, in addition to the type of standard of care treatment given and the response. This information must be updated in the medical record throughout the patient’s treatment. It is expected that the response of the ulcer to treatment will be documented in the medical record at least once every 4 weeks. The ulcer description must also be documented pre- and post- treatment with the skin substitute grafts/CTP being used. The reason(s) for any repeat application should be specifically addressed in the medical record, including whether the current treatment plan has resulted in wound healing and expectation that the wound will continue to heal with this plan. Documentation should include estimated time for extended treatment, number of additional applications anticipated and plan of care if healing is not achieved as planned.
- Documentation must include an assessment outlining the plan for skin replacement therapy and the choice of skin substitute grafts/CTP for the 12-to-16-week period as well as any anticipated repeat applications within the 12-to-16-week period.
- Documentation that modifiable risk factors are being addressed to improve likelihood of healing. For venous leg ulcers, it is expected that appropriate consultation and management for the diagnosis of venous related disease will be documented.
- An operative note must support the procedure (e.g., application of skin substitute grafts/CTPs) for the relevant date of service (first application starts the 12-to 16-week episode of care) and include the reason for the procedure and a complete description of the procedure including product used with identifying package label or manufacturer's product identification.
- Graphic evidence of ulcer size, depth, and characteristics of the ulcer or photo documentation of the ulcer at baseline and follow-up, with measurements of wound including size and depth should be part of the medical record.
- Any amount of wasted skin substitute grafts/CTP must be clearly documented in the procedure note with ALL the following information (at a minimum):
- Date, time, and location of ulcer(s) treated.
- Name of skin substitute grafts/CTP, package size and manufacturer's identification.
- Approximate amount of product unit used.
- Approximate amount of product unit discarded.
- Reason for the wastage (including the reason for using a package size larger than was necessary for the size of the ulcer, if applicable).
- Manufacturer’s serial/lot/batch or other unit identification number of grafts/CTP material. When the manufacturer does not supply unit identification, the record must document such. The amount billed as wastage cannot exceed the price of the package.
- The HCPCS code of the applicable skin substitute grafts/CTP and the units billed must be consistent with the medical record regarding wound description and size.