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Neurosurgery William Via Neurosurgery William Via

Clarification for TLIF with Contralateral Posterior Fusion Using Robotic Navigation

TLIF case using robot/navigation. Placing a posterior fusion on the contralateral side of the spine from the TLIF. He is using a the robot to plan a "false" screw then using robot to drill the opposite facet and then place bone graft into the facet. It requires additional time both before and after procedure. Would this be coded as 22612 along with 22633?

Question:

I am looking for guidance on a Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion (TLIF) case using robot/navigation. Placing a posterior fusion on the contralateral side of the spine from the TLIF. He is using the robot to plan a "false" screw then using robot to drill the opposite facet and then place bone graft into the facet. It requires additional time both before and after procedure. Would this be coded as 22612 along with 22633?

Answer:

Thank you for your question. If the contralateral posterior fusion is performed at the same level as the TLIF and is considered part of the same interspace, then CPT 22633 alone should be reported. This code already includes both the posterior interbody fusion and the posterolateral fusion at a single level. Even if robotic navigation is used to access the contralateral facet and place bone graft, it does not justify separate coding with 22612. 


*This response is based on the best information available as of 9/25/25.

 
 
 
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General Surgery, Neurosurgery William Via General Surgery, Neurosurgery William Via

Is CPT 20660 separately reportable with 61313?

My surgeon wants to bill CPT 20660 and CPT 61313. Is 20660 appropriate to report in addition?

Question:

My surgeon wants to bill CPT 20660 and CPT 61313. Is 20660 appropriate to report in addition?

Answer:

Great question! Thank you for asking KZA!

If you review the CPT descriptor for CPT 20660, this is a designated separate procedure.

First, let’s review what a “separate procedure” is:

CPT Says: “Some of the procedures or services listed in the CPT codebook that are commonly carried out as an integral component of a total service or procedure have been identified by the inclusion of the term “separate procedure.” The codes designated as “separate procedure” should not be reported in addition to the code for the total procedure or service of which it is considered an integral component.

However, when a procedure or service that is designated as a “separate procedure” is carried out independently or considered to be unrelated or distinct from other procedures, report the code in addition to other procedures/services by appending modifier 59 to the specific “separate procedure” code. This indicates that the procedure is not considered to be a component of another procedure, but is a distinct, independent procedure. This may represent a different session, different procedure or surgery, different site or organ system, separate incision/excision, separate lesion, or separate injury (or area of injury in extensive injuries).”

That said, this means in practice that if a code description includes the term “separate procedure,” if that procedure is in the same anatomic area as a more comprehensive procedure (for example, application of a headframe followed by a craniectomy), only the more comprehensive procedure, the craniectomy (61313), is reported.

*This response is based on the best information available as of 9/25/25.

 
 
 
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Neurosurgery William Via Neurosurgery William Via

Redo Laminectomy Denials (63042 & 63044)

I am having trouble coding a redo laminectomy, most get denied, and my surgeon does them all the time. CPT codes 22633 or 22612 are usually the primary codes. I'm still confused about 63042 & 63044. Thank you.

Question:

I am having trouble coding a redo laminectomy. Most get denied, and my surgeon does them all the time. CPT codes 22633 or 22612 are usually the primary codes. I'm still confused about 63042 & 63044. Thank you.

Answer:

Thank you for asking KZA!

This inquiry did not include an operative note or denial information. Without this, KZA will provide some general coding guidance.

If the diagnosis is not disc-related, codes 63042 & 63044 would not be appropriate to report with codes 22633 or 22612. Additionally, CPT code 22633 includes discectomy; it would not be appropriate to report 63042. These could be the source of the denials received.

Key Takeaways:

  • Laminectomy coding is diagnosis-driven. Generally, reviewing the pre-/postoperative diagnoses and indications will provide this detail; if not, querying the surgeon is advised for clarification.

  • There are only reexploration codes for disc (6304x). If the diagnosis is not disc, Modifier 22 could be potentially considered if the documentation reflects and supports additional procedural services.

  • Lumbar interbody fusion codes (22630-22634) – include discectomy (63030/63035 & 63042/63044).

  • Lumbar interbody fusion codes (22630-22634) have add-on codes (63052/63053) to reflect additional decompression beyond laminectomy/discectomy sufficient to prepare the interspace.


*This response is based on the best information available as of 8/28/25.

 
 
 
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Neurosurgery William Via Neurosurgery William Via

63081 or Something Else?

I received feedback from an external review and am now confused. A partial cervical corpectomy (30%) was documented and reported with CPT 63081, along with fusion and instrumentation. I’ve been informed that this is not a corpectomy. I'm looking for confirmation that this is correct feedback.

Question:

I received feedback from an external review and am now confused. A partial cervical corpectomy (30%) was documented and reported with CPT 63081, along with fusion and instrumentation. I’ve been informed that this is not a corpectomy. I'm looking for confirmation that this is correct feedback.

Answer:

Thank you for asking KZA!

CPT defines the minimum amount of bone removed for partial corpectomies—the minimum amount for the cervical spine is at least one-half (50%).

The feedback received is correct, as the documented 30% does not support reporting a partial corpectomy. Instead, this is appropriately reported as an ACDF, CPT 22551.


*This response is based on the best information available as of 8/14/25.

 
 
 
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Neurosurgery William Via Neurosurgery William Via

63266 & 63267 - Reported Together?

If the provider removed an epidural abscess from T4-T9 via one incision and then did a separate incision at L4-5, can I bill CPT 63266 and 63267?

Question:

If the provider removed an epidural abscess from T4-T9 via one incision and then did a separate incision at L4-5, can I bill CPT 63266 and 63267?

Answer:

Thank you for asking KZA!

Remember, the laminectomy for non-neoplasm code set (6326x and 6327x) are regional codes, meaning they include any number of contiguous laminectomies.

The key in the scenario is that these laminectomies were performed via two separate incisions; additionally, they are non-contiguous (T4-T9 and L4/L5). Yes, both codes (63266 & 63267) may be reported as described by the scenario in this inquiry.


*This response is based on the best information available as of 7/31/25.

 
 
 
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Neurosurgery William Via Neurosurgery William Via

LECA & Lami?

Our practice is slightly confused. In the setting of a LECA corpectomy, is a laminectomy separately reportable? Can KZA provide some clarity for our practice?

Question:

Our practice is slightly confused. In the setting of a LECA corpectomy, is a laminectomy separately reportable? Can KZA provide some clarity for our practice?

Answer:

Thank you for asking KZA!

Identifying the intent of the laminectomy is essential.

A lateral extracavitary corpectomy (LECA) includes laminectomy for access. If the laminectomy is performed just for the approach and access to the anterior spine, it should not be reported in addition to the LECA corpectomy – this is included.

In instances where a separate tumor is present, such as an extradural tumor, and a laminectomy is required to resect the posterior portion of the tumor, this may be reported separately and in addition to the lateral extracavitary corpectomy (LECA).


*This response is based on the best information available as of 7/17/25.

 
 
 
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