Reimbursement News

Provider Groups Band Together to End Cigna’s Modifier 25 Policy

Cigna recently told network providers that it would deny payment for E/M services reported with a modifier 25 if it doesn't receive records documenting a separately identifiable service.

AMA and over 100 other groups urge Cigna to rescind modifier 25 policy

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By Jacqueline LaPointe

- The American Medical Association (AMA) and more than 100 other provider trade associations have taken issue with a new policy from The Cigna Group regarding claims with modifier 25.

Cigna recently notified network providers that it will dent payment for evaluation and management (E/M) services reported with modifier 25 if records documenting a significant and separately identifiable service are not submitted with the claim. Modifier 25 records and bills for E/M service on the same day of another service or procedure when it is performed by the same physician or provider.

The groups wrote in a letter to Cigna CEO David Cordani last week that the new policy is burdensome for providers even though they understand inappropriate use of modifier 25 should be prevented.

“We urge Cigna to reconsider this policy due to its negative impact on practice administrative costs and burdens across medical specialties and geographic regions, as well as its potential negative effect on patients, and instead partner with our organizations on a collaborative educational initiative to ensure correct use of modifier 25,” they wrote in the letter.

The groups also said they questioned the standards or guidelines Cigna used to craft the new modifier 25 policy since the Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) description states that modifier 25 enables reporting of a significant, separately identifiable E/M service by the same physician or other healthcare professional on the same day of a procedure or other service. The CPT code set was developed by the AMA.

CMS and CPT guidelines also indicate that an E/M service reported with a modifier 25 does not need a different diagnosis than what was reported for the concurrent procedure, which Cigna misinterpreted in its current modifier 25 policy, according to the letter.

Failing to rescind the policy would result in an enormous amount of office notes being sent with claims, which not only burdens network providers but also the insurer.

“Indeed, Cigna previously advised medical societies that only a small percentage (i.e., 10 percent) of submitted documentation would be reviewed under this program,” the groups explained. “This troubling admission demonstrates Cigna’s awareness of the unmanageable volume of records in question and, more importantly, highlights the pointless administrative waste created by the policy.”

Adding to data submission burdens is the lack of an electronic standard for clinical record exchange, the letter continued.

“All of these concerns underscore that Cigna’s policy is extremely ill-timed and will further hamper health care professionals already grappling with clinician burnout, workforce shortages, recovery from the COVID-19 public health emergency, and rising practice expenses due to inflation,” the groups wrote.

The groups said they are willing to collaborate with Cigna to ensure the appropriate use of modifier 25, including doing targeted outreach and coding education. They also advised the insurer to limit documentation so that only network providers with consistent miscoding have to send office notes along with their claims.