Lorio Delaine, Twetten Matthew, Golish S Raymond, Lorio Morgan P
University of Edinburgh Business School, Edinburgh, Scotland.
International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery, Wheaton, Illinois.
Int J Spine Surg. 2021 Feb;15(1):1-11. doi: 10.14444/8026. Epub 2021 Feb 18.
Effective January 1, 2017, open surgical decompression and interlaminar stabilization (ILS) received a Category I (CPT®) code 22867. The current work relative value units (wRVUs) assigned to the procedure of 13.5 are not reflective of the amount of work involved. During the survey process, CPT® 22867 was erroneously assessed with a percutaneous "sister" code (CPT® 22869), which is performed with no decompression (but within the same new "family") and primarily by nonsurgeons. However, similar CPT® code descriptors assigned to each of these new codes undermined their procedural differences during the survey process and generated confusion among physician survey responders, the American Medical Association/Specialty Society Relative Value Scale Update Committee (RUC), and ultimately the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) regarding the value of ILS. The resulting physician payment determination for the ILS procedure has had severe deleterious effects on this procedure being offered to lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) patients. Our independent society-driven survey presents new data that assess the accuracy of the assigned wRVUs for CPT® 22867.
An independent survey was driven by the International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery (ISASS) in November 2018 and sent to 58 US surgeons with experience performing open decompression with ILS (CPT® 22867) and without financial conflicts of interest as analogous to RUC survey financial disclosure requests. Respondents were asked to compare CPT® 22867 with a list of 10 other comparator CPT® codes reflective of common spine surgeries. The survey presented each comparator CPT® code with its code descriptor and corresponding wRVUs alongside the code descriptor for CPT® 22867. A patient vignette was also provided that describes a typical clinical scenario for the surveyed procedure. Respondents were then asked to indicate which comparator CPT® code on the reference list is most similar to the survey code descriptor and typical patient/service vignette provided, as well as specify estimated wRVUs for CPT® 22867 relative to their selected comparator CPT® code. The surgeons' responses were analyzed to determine comparator CPT® codes and estimated wRVUs.
Among the 28 surgeons who responded to the survey, both open decompression codes (57.1%) and fusion codes (42.9%) were chosen as most similar to the typical patient/service for CPT® 22867. Furthermore, the laminectomy procedure (CPT® 63047) was chosen as the surveyed surgeons' model response for a reference procedure in terms of similar work intensity and time for CPT® 22867. After calculating the difference between the selected comparator codes and estimated wRVUs, nearly all respondents had a positive calculated difference, indicating that surgeons selected wRVUs lower than they deemed appropriate as a result of the listed CPT® codes they were required to use. In the spirit of the Rasch analysis, the regression analysis estimated wRVUs for CPT® 22867 that are greater than its assigned wRVUs (13.5) and its most comparable procedure (CPT® 63047; reference wRVUs: 15.37).
The survey results indicate that the wRVUs assigned to CPT® 22867 are significantly undervalued at 13.50 and have directly resulted in the underreimbursement for surgeons performing the ILS procedure. This misvaluation of the code has created a supply-and-demand anomaly in which the rate of ILS procedures has flatlined despite increasing rates of fusion procedures and an increasing older population. This anomaly is a cause of concern for policy makers and the health care community for the future of safeguarding patient welfare and procedural innovation. Therefore, understanding the clinical economic impact and appropriately addressing potential misvalued codes, such as the ILS procedure, are critical to protecting the future of patient care.
自2017年1月1日起,开放性手术减压及椎板间稳定术(ILS)被赋予了一个I类(现行程序术语®,CPT®)编码22867。目前分配给该手术的工作相对价值单位(wRVU)为13.5,这并不能反映其所涉及的工作量。在调查过程中,CPT® 22867被错误地与经皮“姐妹”编码(CPT® 22869)进行评估,后者在不进行减压的情况下实施(但属于同一个新“类别”),且主要由非外科医生操作。然而,分配给这些新编码的类似CPT®编码描述符在调查过程中掩盖了它们在手术操作上的差异,并在参与调查的医生、美国医学协会/专科协会相对价值比例更新委员会(RUC)以及最终的医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)之间就ILS的价值产生了混淆。由此导致的针对ILS手术的医生支付决定对向腰椎管狭窄症(LSS)患者提供该手术产生了严重的有害影响。我们由协会主导的独立调查提供了新数据,以评估分配给CPT® 22867的wRVU的准确性。
2018年11月,国际脊柱手术进展协会(ISASS)发起了一项独立调查,并发送给58位有实施开放性减压联合ILS(CPT® 22867)经验且无财务利益冲突的美国外科医生,这与RUC调查的财务披露要求类似。受访者被要求将CPT® 22867与反映常见脊柱手术的其他10个对照CPT®编码列表进行比较。调查在呈现CPT® 22867的编码描述符的同时,还展示了每个对照CPT®编码的编码描述符及其相应的wRVU。还提供了一个患者案例,描述了所调查手术的典型临床场景。然后要求受访者指出参考列表中的哪个对照CPT®编码与所提供的调查编码描述符和典型患者/服务案例最相似,并指定相对于其选择的对照CPT®编码的CPT® 22867的估计wRVU。对外科医生的回答进行分析,以确定对照CPT®编码和估计的wRVU。
在回复调查的28位外科医生中,开放性减压编码(57.1%)和融合编码(42.9%)均被选为与CPT® 22867的典型患者/服务最相似。此外,椎板切除术(CPT® 63047)被选为接受调查的外科医生对于CPT® 22867在工作强度和时间方面相似的参考手术的典型回答。在计算所选对照编码与估计wRVU之间的差异后,几乎所有受访者的计算差异均为正值,这表明由于他们被要求使用的列出的CPT®编码,外科医生选择的wRVU低于他们认为合适的水平。本着拉施分析的精神,回归分析估计CPT® 22867的wRVU大于其分配的wRVU(13.5)及其最具可比性的手术(CPT® 63047;参考wRVU:15.37)。
调查结果表明,分配给CPT® 22867的wRVU被严重低估,仅为13.50,这直接导致了实施ILS手术的外科医生报销不足。该编码的这种错误估值造成了一种供需异常情况,尽管融合手术的发生率不断上升且老年人口不断增加,但ILS手术的发生率却趋于平稳。这种异常情况引起了政策制定者和医疗保健界对保障患者福利和手术创新未来的关注。因此,了解临床经济影响并适当解决潜在的估值错误编码,如ILS手术,对于保护患者护理的未来至关重要。