The Clinical Laboratory Billing Cycle
Clinical laboratory billing is a volume-driven operation. A mid-size reference laboratory processes 5,000 to 20,000 tests daily across hundreds of ordering physicians and dozens of payers. The billing cycle must be automated and exception-based because manual review of every claim is impossible at laboratory volumes. The workflow focuses on clean order intake, automated code assignment, medical necessity checking, claim scrubbing, and batch submission. Errors that occur at the intake stage propagate through the entire workflow, so the order entry and verification process is the most critical control point.
Step 1: Order Intake and Verification
Laboratory orders arrive from physician offices via electronic order interfaces, fax, or printed requisitions. Each order must contain: patient demographics, insurance information, ordering physician NPI, the specific tests ordered, and the clinical diagnosis supporting each test. Missing diagnosis codes are the most common order intake error. Without a diagnosis, the laboratory cannot verify medical necessity or submit a clean claim. Implement a process to capture diagnosis codes at the time of order. Electronic interfaces should require a diagnosis code before the order is transmitted.
Step 2: Medical Necessity Checking (ABN Process)
Medicare requires laboratories to check medical necessity for every test before performing it. The Medicare National Coverage Determinations (NCDs) and Local Coverage Determinations (LCDs) specify which diagnosis codes support each test. If the ordering diagnosis does not meet medical necessity criteria, the laboratory must issue an Advance Beneficiary Notice (ABN) to the patient before performing the test. The ABN informs the patient that Medicare may not pay and gives the patient the option to proceed (accepting financial responsibility) or decline the test.
Automated ABN checking compares the ordered test CPT code against the LCD-approved diagnosis codes in real time. When a mismatch is detected, the system generates an ABN form before the specimen is processed. Running ABN checks after the test is performed provides no protection because the ABN must be signed before the service is rendered. Without a valid ABN, the laboratory cannot bill the patient for Medicare-denied tests.
Step 3: Test Coding and Panel Logic
Convert ordered tests into billable CPT codes using automated coding logic. Panel optimization is essential: when the individual tests ordered match the components of a defined panel, bill the panel code (which typically reimburses at a slight discount compared to the sum of individual components, but is the correct coding). When tests exceed panel components, bill the panel plus individual add-on codes. Never manually “unbundle” a panel into individual component codes to increase reimbursement. This is a compliance violation that triggers audits and penalties.
Step 4: Claim Submission and Payer Routing
Submit claims within 24 hours of test completion. Laboratory claims use the CMS-1500 form (professional) or UB-04 (institutional) depending on the laboratory setting. Each claim requires: the CPT code for each test, the ICD-10 diagnosis code supporting medical necessity, the ordering physician NPI, the laboratory CLIA number, the date of service (date the specimen was collected, not the date the test was run), and the appropriate place of service code (81 for independent laboratory, 11 for physician office laboratory). Route claims to the correct payer based on the patient primary insurance. For reference laboratory billing, confirm whether to bill the ordering physician practice or the patient insurance directly based on the arrangement.
Step 5: Reference Laboratory Billing Rules
When a physician office sends specimens to a reference laboratory, the billing arrangement determines who bills the payer. Under the “direct billing” model, the reference lab bills the patient insurance directly. Under the “client billing” model, the reference lab bills the ordering physician practice, which then bills the patient insurance. Medicare requires direct billing for most outpatient laboratory services: the reference lab must bill Medicare directly and cannot bill the ordering physician. Violating this rule is a compliance issue. For commercial payers, the arrangement is governed by the contract between the reference lab and the ordering practice.
Step 6: Payment Reconciliation and Underpayment Detection
Reconcile every payment against the expected amount from the Medicare CLFS or the contracted commercial rate. At laboratory volumes, underpayments of $1 to $3 per test aggregate quickly. A systematic underpayment of $2 on a test performed 500 times per month costs $12,000 annually on a single test code. Automate underpayment detection by comparing the paid amount to the expected amount for each CPT code and payer combination. Flag any payment that falls below 95% of the expected rate for manual review and potential appeal.