News

Coding change may make cryopreservation more accessible


 

References

Despite the demand and removal of the experimental designation, however, Dr. Rosen has not seen more insurance companies opt to cover the procedure. Only 15 states mandate benefit coverage for certain infertility services, including cryopreservation, but the laws vary widely. Most states require coverage only after a patient has been diagnosed as infertile.

Dr. Mitchell Rosen

Dr. Mitchell Rosen

“For patients who are undergoing medical treatment that would render significant reproductive impairment, that doesn’t matter to insurance companies,” Dr. Rosen said. “This is [considered] a completely elective procedure.”

Dr. Hill said he is optimistic that the coding change could move more insurers to cover cryopreservation, especially in states that already mandate in-vitro fertilization coverage. “If more insurers companies cover the procedure, certainly, it’s going to help patients access the treatment,” he said.

Dr. Rosen is not certain if the coding difference will change how frequently the procedure is covered, but he strongly supports coverage for cryopreservation in cases in which women are likely to have significant reproductive impairment because of medical treatment.

“If it’s one step in the right direction of it ultimately being covered, then that’s great,” he said. “But I don’t know if changing the CPT code is going to make a difference.”

Meanwhile, the cryopreservation of immature oocytes remains experimental because there is insufficient clinical data to support its use in many clinical applications, according to ASRM. A new Category III CPT code (0357T) has been introduced for reporting cryopreservation of immature oocytes.

agallegos@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @legal_med

Pages

Recommended Reading

Medicare at 50: Hassles lead to doctor opt-outs, new business models
MDedge ObGyn
President’s budget would extend Medicaid pay bump, repeal SGR
MDedge ObGyn
Medicaid’s share of state budgets was nearly 26% in 2014
MDedge ObGyn
The private-academic surgeon salary gap: Would you pick academia if you stood to lose $1.3 million?
MDedge ObGyn
Study: Surgical readmissions tied to new discharge complications, not prior conditions
MDedge ObGyn
Republican-controlled House votes to repeal ACA
MDedge ObGyn
GOP lawmakers offer ACA alternative that includes tort reform
MDedge ObGyn
Expanding laborist, midwifery services lowers cesarean delivery rates
MDedge ObGyn
ICD-10: No more extensions expected – Senate panel
MDedge ObGyn
Lawmakers, experts favor October start for ICD-10
MDedge ObGyn