Pulmonology CPT codes connect respiratory evaluation, diagnostic testing, procedures, and treatment documentation to payer reimbursement. A pulmonology claim may include an E/M visit, spirometry, full pulmonary function testing, bronchoscopy, sleep study interpretation, oxygen qualification, or medication management. Each service needs a clinical reason, signed interpretation when applicable, and diagnosis support that matches payer medical necessity rules.
TL;DR: Pulmonology CPT coding depends on service type, test result, interpretation, units, and diagnosis support. PFT, bronchoscopy, sleep, and oxygen claims should be checked before submission.
- Pulmonology CPT attribute: service value equals E/M, spirometry, PFT, bronchoscopy, sleep testing, or oxygen assessment.
- Medical necessity attribute: diagnosis value must support why the respiratory service was ordered.
- Interpretation attribute: report value must include findings, impression, and physician signature.
- Authorization attribute: payer value may require approval for sleep testing, oxygen, or advanced procedures.
- Modifier attribute: same-day visit value may require modifier 25 when separate evaluation is documented.
Pulmonology E/M Code Attribute
Pulmonology office visits often use established patient codes 99213, 99214, and 99215 or new patient codes 99203, 99204, and 99205. The code should reflect medical decision making or time, but respiratory documentation must still explain symptoms, exam findings, test review, medication changes, oxygen needs, and follow-up planning. COPD, asthma, pulmonary fibrosis, sleep apnea, and pulmonary hypertension visits usually require different documentation detail.
Spirometry and PFT Code Attribute
CPT code 94010 covers basic spirometry. CPT code 94060 covers spirometry with bronchodilator responsiveness. Full pulmonary function testing may involve lung volumes and diffusion capacity codes such as 94726 and 94729. The report should show the reason for testing, values measured, interpretation, and physician signature. Billing before the report is complete creates avoidable denial risk.
Bronchoscopy Procedure Attribute
Bronchoscopy coding depends on exactly what was performed. Diagnostic bronchoscopy, bronchoalveolar lavage, biopsy, brushing, foreign body removal, and therapeutic work use different codes. The operative note should identify anatomic site, specimen collection, findings, sedation details when relevant, and any pathology or microbiology workflow tied to the service.
Sleep and Oxygen Attribute
Pulmonology groups that support sleep medicine or oxygen qualification need clean payer documentation. Sleep studies require symptoms, comorbidity support, test type, interpretation, and payer criteria. Oxygen claims need qualifying saturation data, diagnosis, order detail, and equipment pathway rules. These services connect closely with claims management for payer documentation.
MMBS Pulmonology Coding Review
MMBS supports pulmonology billing with a 98.2% clean claim rate by reviewing CPT selection, ICD-10 support, PFT reports, bronchoscopy notes, oxygen qualification, authorization status, and modifier use before claim release. This keeps respiratory testing and procedure revenue from getting stuck in preventable rework.