🎓 Expert Commentary / Peer Perspective
Coding gaps from residency and fellowship training create compliance and reimbursement risk for early-career ophthalmologists across all subspecialties. Experts from retina, glaucoma, and cornea outline the documentation and billing fundamentals most likely to affect daily practice.
Professional Impact
- Retina surgeons must distinguish Modifier 58 (planned escalating care), 78 (unplanned post-op procedure), and 79 (unrelated post-op procedure) to avoid claim denials
- Bundled surgical codes present billing traps: CPT 67108 includes focal endolaser and cannot be combined with CPT 67039
- Glaucoma E/M coding: CPT 99204/99214 reimburses more than 92004/92014, which outperforms 99203/99213 when documentation supports it; G2211 modifier adds 0.33 work RVU for longitudinal care
- Corneal topography (CPT 92025) requires documented medical necessity tied to a specific diagnosis; “rule out” or “routine screening” language does not meet reimbursement criteria
Action Items
- Review modifier usage protocols with your billing team before post-op claims submission
- Audit surgical code pairing for bundling conflicts specific to your subspecialty
- Document magnitude and axis of astigmatism from imaging before billing toric IOL or LRI procedures
- Evaluate glaucoma ancillary codes (gonioscopy 92020, pachymetry 76514, corneal hysteresis 92145) for appropriate interval use across your patient panel
PATIENT EDUCATION
OBESITY/WEIGHT MANAGEMENT
EXERCISE/TRAINING
LEGAL MATTERS
GUIDELINES/RECOMMENDATIONS