(479) 552-5346
|
info@paramedbilling.com
|
Northgate Drive, Sherwood, AR 72120, USA
(479) 552-5346
ParaMed Billing Solutions - Navigation
Make Payment
Cardiology Billing | ParaMed Billing Solutions
SpecialtiesCardiology Billing
Cardiology & Interventional Billing

Cardiology Billing
Built for Every
Beat, Every Procedure,
Every Dollar

Cardiology generates the highest per-encounter reimbursement values in all of outpatient medicine — and the most technically complex billing requirements. From 93-series diagnostic testing to interventional cath lab procedures, electrophysiology studies, structural heart interventions, and device implantations, each procedure carries unique CPT rules, modifier logic, and payer coverage criteria. ParaMed's cardiology billing specialists ensure every claim pays at full value — every time.

98%
Clean Claims
-43%
Denial Rate
$0
Setup Fee
48hr
Onboarding
500+
Practices
Today's Claims — Live Status
93306 + 93320
Echo with Doppler — Complete Study
$1,240
Paid ✓
📋
92928 + 92929
PCI — Stent Placement, 2 Vessels
$18,400
Paid ✓
93656 + 93655
Afib Ablation — PVI + Additional
$24,800
Submitted
🔢
33249 + L8687
ICD Implant — Dual Chamber + Device
$31,200
Submitted
⚼️
0345T + 0318T
TAVR — Structural Heart Intervention
$42,500
In Review
Diagnostic Testing & Echocardiography
Interventional Cardiology / Cath Lab
Electrophysiology & Ablation
Structural Heart (TAVR / MitraClip)
Device Implantation (ICD / Pacemaker)
Nuclear Cardiology & Imaging
🔒HIPAA Compliant
🎉AAPC Certified Coders
🏥️500+ Practices Served
Cardiology Billing Specialists
🚫No Setup Fees
48hr Onboarding
☰ Procedure Revenue Matrix

Cardiology Generates the Highest Per-Encounter Revenue in Outpatient Medicine — Every Code Must Be Captured Perfectly

Each cell represents a major cardiology procedure category. The tier indicates average case value — Tier 1 procedures represent $10,000+ per case. A single coding error on a Tier 1 procedure can mean $15,000–$40,000 in denied or underpaid revenue from one claim.

Tier 1 — $10,000+ per case
Tier 2 — $2,000–$10,000 per case
Tier 3 — Under $2,000 per visit
Structural

TAVR

$42,500
0345T + 0318T
Tier 1
Device

ICD Implant

$31,200
33249 + L8687
Tier 1
EP / Ablation

Afib Ablation (PVI)

$24,800
93656 + 93655
Tier 1
Interventional

PCI — Multi-vessel

$18,400
92928 + 92929
Tier 1
Structural

MitraClip

$38,000
0345T + 0483T
Tier 1
Device

CRT-D Implant

$29,600
33249 + 33225
Tier 1
Interventional

Diagnostic Cath

$8,200
93454 / 93455
Tier 2
EP / Device

Pacemaker Implant

$11,400
33208 + L8686
Tier 2
EP

VT Ablation

$16,800
93653 + 93662
Tier 2
Imaging

Nuclear Stress Test

$2,800
78451 + 93015
Tier 2
Diagnostic

Echo — Complete

$1,240
93306 + 93320
Tier 3
Diagnostic

Holter Monitor 48hr

$680
93243 / 93244
Tier 3
Member B
$210K+
Avg Annual Revenue Recovered Per Cardiologist
🏆

Cardiology ranks #1 in per-procedure revenue complexity among all outpatient specialties.

🔬 Why Precision Matters

What Makes Cardiology Billing Different from Every Other Specialty

Cardiology practices operate across six entirely distinct billing domains simultaneously — each with its own CPT coding system, modifier logic, PA requirements, and payer coverage rules. A single cardiologist may move from an echocardiogram to a diagnostic cath to an ICD check to a TAVR consultation in the same clinic day. Each requires a different coder's expertise to bill correctly. Generalist billers applying standard E&M logic to interventional cardiology claims produce systemic underpayment that compounds invisibly over time.

1

The 93-Series Diagnostic Ladder Is As Complex as Any Endoscopic Ladder

Cardiology diagnostic codes — 93303–93351 for echo, 93017–93018 for exercise testing, 93224–93272 for monitoring — form an intricate ladder where billing the wrong combination triggers NCCI edits silently. ParaMed's cardiology coders know every edit pair in the 93-series.

2

Interventional Device HCPCS Is the Highest-Dollar Missed Revenue in Cardiology

Coronary stents, ICD generators, pacemaker leads, TAVR valves — each is billed separately from the surgical procedure code using HCPCS codes with invoice-based pricing. Missing device HCPCS on a single ICD implant means $12,000–$22,000 in uncaptured device revenue per case.

3

Electrophysiology Studies Require Separate Mapping, Ablation, and Add-On Codes

EP procedures involve a hierarchy of primary procedure codes (93620, 93653, 93656), intracardiac echo add-ons (93662), mapping add-ons (93613), and ablation add-ons (93655, 93657). Each requires individual documentation and is separately payable — but most generalist billers treat EP studies as single-code events.

4

Global Period Management for Interventional Procedures

Cardiac catheterizations, PCI, and device procedures carry 90-day global periods. All follow-up visits, device checks, wound care, and complication management within that window require correct modifier application or they are automatically denied as “included in the procedure.” ParaMed maintains real-time global period tracking for every interventional patient.

5

TAVR and Structural Heart Procedures Use Category III Codes With Limited Coverage

Structural heart interventions including TAVR (0345T), LAAO (0281T), MitraClip (0483T), and WATCHMAN device (0281T) use Category III CPT codes with payer-specific coverage policies that change annually. Many require evidence-based clinical criteria for PA approval — criteria that differ between Medicare Advantage, commercial, and traditional Medicare.

💻 CPT Code Deep-Dive

Cardiology Billing Rules by Category — Click Any Category to Expand

The exact coding rules, common billing traps, and how ParaMed ensures every claim in every cardiology sub-category is billed at full reimbursement value — without triggering NCCI edits, modifier errors, or PA-based denials.

Diagnostic Testing — Echocardiography, Monitoring & Stress Testing

93-series: echo, Holter, event monitors, exercise stress, pharmacologic stress
9330693320930159324393351

☰ Billing Rules & Code Logic

  • 93306 = complete transthoracic echo with spectral Doppler — requires 2D imaging + all Doppler modes documented in report
  • 93320 = add-on Doppler echo — can be billed with 93303–93307; NOT separately with 93306 (already included)
  • 93351 = stress echo — includes 93306 component; do NOT bill 93306 separately on same date
  • 93015 = exercise stress test — professional component only; 93017 = technical component if equipment separately owned
  • Holter monitoring duration determines code: 93241/93242 (24hr), 93243/93244 (25–48hr), 93245/93246 (49–72hr)
  • TC/26 modifiers apply when interpretation provided by different physician than the technician performing the test

⚠ Top Denial & Underpayment Triggers

  • 93320 billed with 93306 — Doppler already included in complete echo; automatic bundle denial
  • 93306 billed same day as 93351 — stress echo includes resting echo component; cannot bill both
  • Holter duration not documented — claim uses wrong code bracket; underpayment detected at audit
  • Missing -26 modifier when interpretation-only — claim denied as duplicate of technical component
  • Stress test result not signed by interpreting physician — missing provider signature triggers documentation denial
Diagnostic testing is the highest-volume category in cardiology. A systematic 93320 bundling error on a practice running 80 echos/month represents $8,000–$12,000 in monthly invisible payment reductions.
📋

Cardiac Catheterization — Diagnostic & Right Heart

Coronary angiography, left/right heart cath, congenital cath, hemodynamic study
9345493458934609353093561

☰ Billing Rules & Code Logic

  • 93454 = coronary angiography only (no left heart cath); 93458 adds left heart cath; 93460 adds right heart cath
  • 93455 / 93457 / 93459 / 93461 = versions with bypass graft imaging — must document graft anatomy in cath report
  • 93530 = right heart cath only — distinct from combined left/right (93460/93461); approach and anatomy documented
  • 93561 = indicator dilution study — add-on to cath codes; requires separate CO/CI measurement documentation
  • Conscious sedation (99152) billed separately if not included in facility fee — verify ASC vs. cath lab rules
  • Professional fee vs. facility fee separation — cardiologist bills CPT for professional; cath lab bills facility separately

⚠ Top Denial Triggers

  • Wrong cath code family — 93454 vs 93458 depends on whether left heart catheterization was performed
  • Graft imaging not documented — using bypass graft codes (93455/93457) without graft anatomy in report
  • Right heart cath billed without pressure measurements — hemodynamic data must appear in interpretation
  • PA not obtained for elective diagnostic cath — most commercial carriers require authorization
  • Facility vs. professional fee confusion — billing both on same claim triggers duplicate denial
Diagnostic cath generates $7,000–$12,000 per case in professional fees alone. A wrong code family selection (93454 vs 93460) represents a $2,000–$4,000 reimbursement difference per case — compounding to $80,000–$150,000 annually in a high-volume cath lab.
🏥

Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (PCI) — Stenting & Balloon

Single/multi-vessel stent, PTCA, atherectomy, FFR/IVUS, complex PCI
92928929299293392978C9600

☰ Billing Rules & Code Logic

  • 92928 = PCI with stent — major coronary artery (primary); 92929 = add-on for each additional major vessel
  • 92933 = PCI with atherectomy; 92934 = add-on — cannot bill atherectomy + stent on same vessel (highest code wins)
  • 92978 = FFR (fractional flow reserve) — add-on per vessel; requires FFR wire pullback documentation
  • 92979 = IVUS — add-on; document IVUS catheter use and interpretation in cath report separately
  • C9600 / C9601 = drug-eluting stent device HCPCS — billed separately from procedure; stent count per note
  • Vessel definition critical: LAD, RCA, LCX, diagonal, obtuse marginal = distinct vessels; each allows separate billing

⚠ Top Denial Triggers

  • Stent HCPCS (C9600) not billed — drug-eluting stent represents $3,000–$5,000 per stent missed per case
  • Atherectomy + stent on same vessel — NCCI bundles these; only highest-complexity code payable per vessel
  • Wrong vessel designation — LAD vs diagonal vs obtuse marginal determines add-on code eligibility
  • FFR wire not documented — 92978 denied if pullback data not in cath report interpretation
  • PA not current — PCI authorization frequently expires; expired PA = complete claim denial
Drug-eluting stent HCPCS codes (C9600) are the single most commonly missed revenue item in interventional cardiology. At $3,000–$5,000 per stent and 2–3 stents per PCI case, a practice doing 15 PCIs/month loses $90,000–$225,000 annually by missing device HCPCS alone.

Electrophysiology Studies & Catheter Ablation

EPS, SVT ablation, Afib ablation (PVI), VT ablation, intracardiac echo, mapping
9362093653936569365593662

☰ EP Billing Rules & Code Logic

  • 93620 = comprehensive EPS without ablation — includes programmed stimulation, recordings, interpretation
  • 93653 = SVT ablation (comprehensive EPS included); 93656 = Afib ablation (PVI) — do NOT bill 93620 with 93653 or 93656
  • 93655 = additional ablation of distinct arrhythmia — add-on to 93653 or 93656; documents second arrhythmia mechanism
  • 93657 = additional linear or focal ablation — add-on to 93656 for additional lines beyond PVI (roof line, mitral isthmus)
  • 93662 = intracardiac echo (ICE) — add-on to any EP procedure; requires documentation of ICE catheter use
  • 93613 = intracardiac 3D mapping — add-on; CARTO/NavX system documentation required

⚠ Top Denial Triggers

  • 93620 billed with ablation codes — EPS is included in all ablation codes; separate billing triggers bundle denial
  • 93655 used for same arrhythmia — add-on requires documentation of a SECOND distinct mechanism or location
  • ICE (93662) without catheter documentation — add-on denied when ICE use not mentioned in EP report
  • Afib ablation PA failure — 93656 requires specific PA criteria (AAD failure, LA size, EF, duration of Afib) at most payers
  • 3D mapping (93613) without system name — CARTO or NavX system must be identified in the EP report
An Afib ablation case (93656 + 93655 + 93657 + 93662 + 93613) correctly coded generates $24,000–$32,000. The same case coded without add-on codes generates $8,000–$10,000. The difference is $14,000–$22,000 per case from missing add-on documentation.
🔢

Device Implantation — Pacemaker, ICD, CRT, Loop Recorder

Single/dual/biventricular pacing, defibrillator, CIED, remote monitoring HCPCS
332083324933225L8686L8687

☰ Device Billing Rules & Code Logic

  • 33206/33207/33208 = pacemaker implant — single/dual/biventricular; number of leads determines correct code
  • 33249 = ICD implant with dual leads; 33240 = single-lead ICD — lead count must match device type in OR report
  • 33225 = LV lead add-on for CRT — billed separately from 33208 or 33249; requires LV lead placement documentation
  • L8686 = pacemaker generator HCPCS (rechargeable); L8687 = ICD generator — billed separately with invoice
  • Lead HCPCS (L8691/L8692/L8694/L8695) billed per lead separately from generator and procedure code
  • Remote monitoring (99091/99457) billable monthly after device implant — often entirely missed by generalist billers

⚠ Top Denial Triggers

  • Generator HCPCS not billed — ICD generator represents $12,000–$22,000 separately billable per case
  • Lead count mismatch — 33208 (dual) billed when single lead placed triggers medical necessity review
  • 33225 LV lead not documented — CRT add-on denied when LV lead placement not specifically described
  • Remote monitoring codes never initiated — 99457 billable $50–$150/month per device patient; most practices miss entirely
  • Upgrade vs. new implant coding wrong — generator replacement (33228/33262) vs. new implant (33208/33249) has strict documentation requirements
Device HCPCS (generator + leads) represents the highest-dollar missed billing category in cardiology. A single ICD case without device HCPCS loses $18,000–$28,000 in separately billable revenue. For a practice implanting 8 devices/month, that's $144,000–$224,000/month in uncaptured device revenue.
⚼️

Structural Heart Interventions — TAVR, MitraClip, WATCHMAN

Transcatheter valve replacement/repair, LAAO device, ASD/PFO closure
0345T0483T0281T3399993355

☰ Structural Heart Billing Rules

  • 0345T = TAVR (aortic) via transfemoral approach; 0318T = transapical; approach documented determines code
  • 0483T / 0484T = MitraClip transcatheter mitral valve repair — distinct from surgical repair; requires hybrid OR documentation
  • 0281T = LAAO (WATCHMAN) device — Category III code; payer-specific coverage varies significantly
  • 93355 = TEE guidance for structural intervention — add-on; TEE physician bills separately if different from operator
  • Device HCPCS for TAVR valve (C9608), WATCHMAN (C9764), MitraClip (C9756) — billed separately with invoice
  • Structural heart procedures typically require multidisciplinary heart team documentation for PA approval

⚠ Top Denial Triggers

  • Category III coverage not verified — 0345T/0483T/0281T coverage varies enormously between payers and plans
  • TAVR valve device HCPCS (C9608) not billed — valve device represents $25,000–$35,000 separately billable
  • TEE (93355) billed by operator — if structural cardiologist performed both procedure and TEE, 93355 not separately payable
  • Heart team documentation missing — most payers require evidence of multidisciplinary heart team evaluation for TAVR PA
  • Approach documented incorrectly — 0345T (transfemoral) vs 0318T (transapical) has different PA criteria at many payers
TAVR cases average $42,000–$65,000 in total professional fee + device billing. Without device HCPCS and correct Category III code verification, a single TAVR case can lose $25,000–$40,000 in reimbursement. These cases demand the highest level of specialty billing expertise.
☷ What's Included

Everything in ParaMed's Cardiology Billing Program

End-to-end cardiology revenue cycle management — handled exclusively by certified cardiology billing specialists who work in no other specialty and know every code, every modifier, and every payer rule in every cardiology sub-discipline.

📄

Complex Prior Authorization

Cardiology PA is among the most documentation-intensive in medicine. A failed PCI, TAVR, or ablation PA can mean $18,000–$42,000 in denied revenue per case. ParaMed manages the complete PA lifecycle from scheduling through procedure date.

  • PA initiated within 24 hours of procedure scheduling
  • Cardiology-specific clinical packages — EF, anatomy, prior treatments
  • Heart team documentation compiled for structural heart PAs
  • Peer-to-peer review coordination with the operating cardiologist
  • PA tracking, expiration monitoring, and renewal management
💻

Precision Cardiology Coding

93-series diagnostic ladder, interventional add-on codes, EP hierarchy, device lead counts, structural heart Category III codes — every claim coded by a specialist who knows cardiology exclusively.

  • Complete 93-series echo/monitoring bundle review — no NCCI errors
  • EP add-on codes captured (93655, 93657, 93662, 93613)
  • PCI vessel designation — LAD vs diagonal vs OM vs RCA managed correctly
  • Device lead count cross-referenced against OR report per claim
  • Category III structural heart code coverage verified pre-claim
🔢

Device & Implant HCPCS Billing

Coronary stents, pacemaker generators, ICD leads, TAVR valves, WATCHMAN devices — each is separately billable and represents the highest-dollar line item on every interventional and device claim.

  • Drug-eluting stent HCPCS (C9600/C9601) captured per vessel per case
  • ICD generator (L8687) and pacemaker (L8686) HCPCS with invoice docs
  • Lead HCPCS (L8691–L8695) billed per lead placed
  • TAVR valve (C9608), WATCHMAN (C9764), MitraClip (C9756) device billing
  • Invoice-based pricing documentation compiled for every device claim
🔍

High-Value Denial Appeals

Cardiology denials carry the highest dollar values in outpatient medicine. ParaMed writes appeals with the exact clinical language that gets these specific claims paid — not generic templates.

  • All denials identified, categorized, and actioned within 48 hours
  • Cardiology-specific appeal letters for every denial category
  • Device HCPCS appeals with invoice and operative note documentation
  • EP add-on appeals with mapping and catheter documentation
  • PA retroactive review coordination for urgent/emergent denials
🏥️

Cath Lab & Hospital Billing

Cardiology procedures split between office, ASC, cath lab, and hospital settings — each with different billing forms, fee schedules, and payment rules that must be correctly managed.

  • Cath lab professional fee vs. facility fee separation managed correctly
  • Hospital outpatient OPPS billing with correct APC assignment
  • Inpatient DRG billing for complex cardiac procedures
  • Hybrid OR facility billing for structural heart procedures
  • Global period tracking — 90-day modifier management per patient
📊

Remote Monitoring & Follow-Up Billing

Device remote monitoring, cardiac rehab, and post-procedure follow-up represent significant recurring revenue that most cardiology practices systematically under-bill or miss entirely.

  • Remote monitoring (99091/99457/99458) initiated for every device patient
  • Device clinic check codes (93279–93299) captured per visit type
  • Cardiac rehab (93797/93798) billing initiated at discharge
  • Transitional care management (99495/99496) for complex discharges
  • Annual wellness and preventive cardiology visit billing

Real-Time Cardiology Revenue Analytics Dashboard

Cardiology generates revenue across 6 sub-disciplines simultaneously with the highest per-case dollar values in outpatient medicine. ParaMed's analytics dashboard gives your practice real-time visibility into every claim, every device case, every PA status, and every denial — organized by procedure category and payer.

📊 See Our Dashboard
🔋

Live Claim Status

Every claim tracked by category, payer, and procedure value

🔢

Device Case Tracker

Every device claim — HCPCS status, invoice documentation, payment

🔔

PA Expiry Alerts

All authorizations monitored live with advance expiry warnings

High-Value Denial Queue

Tier 1 denials ($10K+) flagged immediately for priority action

❤ Revenue Flatline vs Pulse

Without Cardiology Specialists, Your Revenue Flatlines — With ParaMed, It Pulses

The difference between a generalist billing team and ParaMed's cardiology specialists is not a few percentage points — it's the difference between a flatline and a heartbeat on your monthly revenue chart. These are real outcomes from real cardiology practices.

Without ParaMed

Generalist billing team applying standard E&M logic to cardiology

Device HCPCS Never Billed

ICD generators, stents, pacemaker leads billed as part of procedure

↓ $180,000–$360,000 missed annually per interventionalist

EP Add-On Codes Missed

93655, 93657, 93662, 93613 not captured — Afib ablation under-billed as single code

↓ $14,000–$22,000 lost per Afib ablation case

93-Series NCCI Bundles Triggered

93320 billed with 93306, or 93306 billed same day as stress echo

↓ $8,000–$12,000 invisible monthly reduction

PA Failures on Tier 1 Procedures

PCI, TAVR, device implants denied post-service — retroactive PA denied

↓ $18,000–$42,000 per complete denial

Remote Monitoring Revenue Zero

99091/99457 never initiated — monthly device monitoring never billed

↓ $600–$1,500/month per device patient permanently lost
VS

With ParaMed

Certified cardiology billing specialists — every domain mastered

Every Device HCPCS Captured

Stents, ICD generators, pacemaker leads, TAVR valves — all billed separately

↑ 100% device HCPCS capture rate on every case

All EP Add-On Codes Filed

93655, 93657, 93662, 93613 captured when documented — every ablation case fully coded

↑ Full reimbursement on every EP procedure

Zero NCCI Bundle Errors

93-series reviewed per claim — no 93306+93320 stacking, no stress echo duplicates

↑ 98% first-pass clean claim rate

PA Confirmed Before Every Procedure

All Tier 1 procedures screened at scheduling — PA active before any case proceeds

↑ Zero post-service elective PA denials

Monthly Remote Monitoring Billed

99091/99457 initiated for all device patients and billed every eligible month

↑ $600–$1,500 captured monthly per device patient
⚠ Cardiology Denial Intelligence

The 6 Highest-Risk Cardiology Billing Denial Categories — And How We Eliminate Them

Cardiology has the highest average denial dollar value of any outpatient specialty. A single Tier 1 cardiology denial represents more revenue than an entire week of family medicine billing. These six categories account for 78% of all cardiology claim denials by dollar value.

Industry Data: The average cardiology practice loses $240,000–$480,000 annually to preventable billing errors across these six denial categories. Practices with generalist billing teams report denial rates of 18–26% in interventional cardiology — compared to 2–4% with specialty-certified teams.

❗ HIGH RISK

Device HCPCS Not Filed

Coronary stents, ICD generators, pacemaker leads, and TAVR valves are NOT included in the surgical procedure CPT code and must be billed separately. Most generalist billers either don't know this or don't have access to the device invoices required to bill correctly.

✓ ParaMed Fix

We request device invoices directly from the cath lab at scheduling, capture all HCPCS codes (C9600, L8687, C9608, etc.) with invoice pricing, and attach them to every device claim automatically.

❗ HIGH RISK

EP Add-On Codes Missing

Afib ablation (93656) alone generates ~$8,000. The same case with all add-on codes (93655, 93657, 93662, 93613) generates $24,000–$32,000. EP add-on codes require specific documentation of intracardiac echo, additional ablation lines, and 3D mapping — documentation most generalist billers don't know to review.

✓ ParaMed Fix

Every EP report reviewed for ICE catheter documentation (93662), additional ablation line notes (93657), mapping system name (93613), and second arrhythmia mechanism (93655) before coding any ablation case.

❗ HIGH RISK

Structural Heart Category III Coverage Failures

TAVR, MitraClip, and WATCHMAN use Category III CPT codes with payer-specific coverage policies. Some commercial payers do not cover TAVR for bicuspid aortic valve disease. WATCHMAN is not covered by some Medicare Advantage plans. Category III code claims denied at adjudication are among the hardest to reverse after the fact.

✓ ParaMed Fix

Every structural heart case verified for payer-specific Category III coverage before the procedure. For commercial payers, written pre-authorization confirmation obtained specifying the Category III code. Non-covered payers flagged for out-of-pocket patient financial counseling before scheduling.

⚠ MED RISK

93-Series NCCI Bundle Denials

The 93-series echocardiography and stress testing codes contain 40+ NCCI bundle edit pairs. The most common: 93320 billed alongside 93306 (Doppler included in complete echo), and 93306 billed same day as 93351 (stress echo includes resting echo). These don't generate denial letters — they silently reduce payment.

✓ ParaMed Fix

All echo and stress test claims run through our 93-series NCCI edit checker before submission. Only the highest-complexity applicable code is billed per session. No stack billing. No silent reductions.

⚠ MED RISK

Global Period Modifier Failures

Cardiac catheterizations, PCIs, and device procedures carry 90-day global periods. Any follow-up visit, wound care, device check, or complication management within that window must have a modifier (-24, -25, -57, -78, or -79) to be separately billable. Without modifiers, every follow-up visit in the 90-day window is automatically denied as “included in the procedure.”

✓ ParaMed Fix

Real-time 90-day global period tracker maintained for every interventional patient. Every visit within the global period auto-flagged for modifier review. No visit denied for missing modifier. Zero lost follow-up revenue.

❗ HIGH RISK

Remote Monitoring Never Initiated

Every patient with an implanted device (pacemaker, ICD, CRT, loop recorder) is eligible for monthly remote monitoring billing under 99091 or 99457/99458 — generating $50–$150 per patient per month. This recurring revenue stream is completely invisible to generalist billers who don't specialize in device management billing.

✓ ParaMed Fix

Remote monitoring enrollment initiated for every new device implant patient at discharge. Monthly 99457 billing triggered automatically each month per patient. Cumulative remote monitoring revenue tracked per practice — most practices add $8,000–$25,000/month within 90 days.

📋 Key Procedures We Bill

Every Major Cardiology Procedure — Billed at Full Value

These are the procedures your practice performs most frequently and that carry the highest reimbursement risk. ParaMed's cardiology team has billed each of these thousands of times — we know every code, every modifier, every device HCPCS, and every payer quirk for each one.

Echocardiography

Complete 2D echo with spectral and color Doppler — the most-billed procedure in cardiology. Correct 93-series code selection, TC/26 modifier management, and NCCI edit compliance on every study.

93306933079332093351
📋

Cardiac Catheterization

Diagnostic left/right heart cath with coronary angiography. Correct code family selection (93454–93461), conscious sedation billing, and professional vs. facility fee management.

93454934589346093561
🏥

PCI — Stent Placement

Single and multi-vessel percutaneous coronary intervention. Correct vessel designation, drug-eluting stent HCPCS (C9600) captured per vessel, FFR/IVUS add-on codes documented and billed.

929289292992978C9600

Afib Ablation (PVI)

Pulmonary vein isolation with intracardiac echo, 3D mapping, and additional ablation lines. All add-on codes (93655, 93657, 93662, 93613) captured when documented.

93656936559365793662
🔢

ICD Implantation

Dual-chamber ICD with generator and lead HCPCS billed separately. Lead count cross-referenced against OR note. Generator (L8687) and lead (L8691) HCPCS filed with invoice documentation.

3324933225L8687L8691
⚼️

TAVR

Transcatheter aortic valve replacement via transfemoral approach. Category III code coverage verified pre-procedure. Valve device HCPCS (C9608) billed with invoice. Heart team PA documentation compiled.

0345T93355C9608

How ParaMed Processes Every Cardiology Claim

From the moment a cardiology procedure is scheduled to the moment payment posts — here's exactly what happens

📅
Scheduling Screen
PA initiated within 24hr, device invoice requested, global period checked
📄
Documentation Review
Op report, cath report, or EP study reviewed for all billable elements
💻
Expert Coding
CPT codes, add-ons, device HCPCS, modifiers selected by cardiology specialist
✈️
Clean Claim Submission
NCCI edit check, payer rule validation, 98% first-pass rate
💰
Payment Posted
ERA posted, underpayments flagged, denials actioned within 48hr
📋 Payer Rules by Type

Cardiology Payer Rules Change by Carrier — We Know Them All

TAVR covered under traditional Medicare may not be covered by the same patient's Medicare Advantage plan. EP ablation PA criteria differ between every major commercial carrier. ParaMed maintains current, payer-specific cardiology billing rules for every major carrier in every state.

Traditional Medicare (CMS)

Part B outpatient + hospital inpatient billing

CMS sets the baseline coverage policy for cardiology procedures. TAVR, MitraClip, and WATCHMAN have specific NCD (National Coverage Determination) requirements that must be documented. Remote monitoring is fully covered under 99091/99457 for all implanted cardiac devices.

  • TAVR NCD requires multidisciplinary heart team documentation + STS risk score
  • WATCHMAN NCD requires non-valvular Afib + contraindication to long-term anticoagulation
  • Device remote monitoring (99457) covered monthly for all CIED patients
  • Global period management critical — 90-day global for all major cardiac procedures
  • NCCI edits enforced at claims processing — no exceptions without correct modifier
📋

Medicare Advantage Plans

Part C — additional PA requirements vs. traditional Medicare

Medicare Advantage plans can impose authorization requirements that do NOT apply under traditional Medicare. Many MA plans require PA for cardiac cath, PCI, and device implantation even when CMS does not — and their clinical criteria frequently differ from NCD standards.

  • Many MA plans require PA for diagnostic cath even in ACS presentations — verify per plan
  • TAVR coverage varies: some MA plans follow CMS NCD, others add criteria
  • WATCHMAN coverage inconsistent — several large MA plans exclude LAAO
  • Remote monitoring billing rules vary — some MA plans use different CPT codes
  • Category III code coverage must be verified per plan — not assumed from CMS policy
🏢️

Commercial Insurance

BCBS, UHC, Aetna, Cigna — cardiology authorization rules

Major commercial carriers have the most aggressive PA requirements in cardiology — and clinical criteria that change annually. EP ablation for Afib typically requires documentation of at least one antiarrhythmic drug failure, left atrial size, and ejection fraction at every major commercial carrier.

  • Afib ablation PA: AAD failure, LA diameter, EF, Afib duration documentation required
  • Elective PCI requires PA with SYNTAX score documentation at most carriers
  • ICD implantation requires EF ≤35% + optimal medical therapy documentation
  • TAVR requires STS surgical risk score + heart team meeting documentation
  • Stent HCPCS (C9600) coverage varies — some carriers bundle into procedure payment
💔

Managed Medicaid

State-specific managed care cardiology rules

Managed Medicaid plans for cardiac procedures vary dramatically by state. Interventional cardiology procedures are frequently restricted to specific centers. Device implantations may require prior authorization with state-specific medical necessity criteria distinct from CMS and commercial carrier standards.

  • TAVR and MitraClip often restricted to designated structural heart centers — verify credentialing
  • ICD implantation requires state-specific Medicaid managed care PA criteria
  • EP ablation PA typically requires cardiologist letter of medical necessity + AAD failure evidence
  • Device HCPCS coverage varies by state Medicaid plan — not guaranteed at all plans
  • Enrollment and credentialing requirements for interventional procedures differ by state MCO
📊 Proven Results

The Numbers Behind ParaMed's Cardiology Billing Program

98%
First-Pass Clean Claim Rate
$210K+
Avg Annual Revenue Recovered
-43%
Denial Rate Reduction
48hr
Average Onboarding Time

Cardiology-Only Billing Team

Your practice is handled exclusively by certified cardiology billing specialists — no generalist coders, no shared teams, no “cardiology is handled by our surgical coder.”

🔢

Device HCPCS Capture Program

We request device invoices directly from your cath lab, capture all HCPCS codes, attach invoice documentation, and track device billing separately from procedure billing on every case.

EP Add-On Code Audit Protocol

Every EP report reviewed for ICE, mapping, and additional ablation line documentation before any ablation case is coded — ensuring full add-on code capture on every procedure.

📅

Real-Time PA Status Dashboard

Every authorization tracked in real time — scheduled procedure, PA status, expiration date, and clinical criteria status visible to your team and ours simultaneously.

🔍

Tier 1 Denial Priority Queue

All denials above $10,000 are automatically elevated to our senior cardiology denial team for same-day review and appeal — highest-value claims never age in a standard queue.

📊

Monthly Revenue Intelligence Report

Detailed monthly performance report by procedure category, payer, and physician — collection rates, denial trends, device billing capture rates, and remote monitoring revenue.

Complete 93-series echo and stress testing NCCI bundle management
Cardiac cath code family selection (93454–93461) reviewed per report
PCI vessel designation and drug-eluting stent HCPCS captured per vessel
EP add-on codes (93655, 93657, 93662, 93613) reviewed every ablation case
ICD and pacemaker generator + lead HCPCS billed separately with invoice
Structural heart Category III code coverage verified before every procedure
90-day global period tracker active for every interventional patient
Remote monitoring (99457) initiated and billed monthly for all device patients
★★★★★

We were leaving $280,000 a year on the table and had no idea. Our previous billing company was filing our EP ablation cases as single codes — no add-on codes, no ICE, no mapping charges. ParaMed reviewed three months of claims in the first week and found $68,000 in missed add-on codes alone. Their cardiology team knows the difference between 93656 and 93656+93655+93657+93662+93613. Nobody else we spoke to even mentioned those codes.

Dr. Michael
Cardiac Electrophysiologist, TX
+$280K
Annual Revenue
Recovered
98%
Clean Claim
Rate Achieved
-41%
Denial Rate
Reduction
👨‍⚕️
Dr. Michael
Cardiac Electrophysiologist, TX
❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Cardiology Billing Questions — Answered in Detail

The questions every cardiologist asks before switching billing companies — answered honestly, specifically, and without marketing language.

Can you really bill device HCPCS separately from the surgical procedure codes?
Yes — and this is not optional, it's required for correct billing. Coronary stents (C9600/C9601), ICD generators (L8687), pacemaker generators (L8686), pacemaker and ICD leads (L8691–L8695), TAVR valves (C9608), WATCHMAN devices (C9764), and MitraClip devices (C9756) are all separately billable HCPCS codes that are NOT bundled into the surgical procedure CPT code. The surgical procedure code (92928, 33249, 0345T, etc.) covers the physician's work — the device itself is billed separately using an HCPCS code with invoice-based pricing. ParaMed requests device invoices directly from your cath lab, assigns the correct HCPCS code per device type, attaches the invoice as documentation, and files these as separate line items on every device claim. For most interventional practices, this represents $180,000–$360,000 in annually captured revenue that was previously being left uncollected.
How do you know when to bill EP add-on codes like 93655, 93657, 93662, and 93613?
Each EP add-on code requires specific documentation in the electrophysiology procedure report. Before coding any ablation case, our EP billing specialists review the full procedure report for: (1) ICE catheter documentation — intracardiac echocardiography must be specifically mentioned with catheter positioning to support 93662; (2) Additional ablation lines beyond PVI — a roof line, mitral isthmus line, or cavotricuspid isthmus ablation supports 93657; (3) Second distinct arrhythmia mechanism — documentation of both Afib and a separate SVT circuit or accessory pathway supports 93655; (4) 3D electroanatomic mapping system — the specific system name (CARTO, NavX, RHYTHMIA) must appear in the report to support 93613. If the documentation is present, we bill the add-on code. If it's not present, we flag the case for documentation clarification with your EP team before billing.
How do you handle TAVR and structural heart billing — the payer coverage rules seem incredibly complex?
Structural heart billing is the most payer-specific sub-category in cardiology. Before every structural heart procedure, ParaMed performs a payer-specific coverage verification that includes: (1) Confirming the payer's specific coverage policy for the Category III code being used (0345T for TAVR, 0483T for MitraClip, 0281T for WATCHMAN); (2) Verifying that the patient's specific plan covers the procedure — Medicare Advantage plans frequently have different TAVR coverage than traditional Medicare; (3) For commercial payers, obtaining written pre-authorization that specifically names the Category III code; (4) Compiling the heart team documentation package required for PA — STS surgical risk score, LVEF, valve anatomy, heart team meeting notes; (5) Coordinating device HCPCS pre-authorization when the payer requires it separately.
Can you handle both our cath lab professional billing and our office/clinic billing together?
Yes — and we strongly recommend integrated management of both. Cardiology practices that separate their office billing from their cath lab billing frequently create global period management gaps, where follow-up visits in the 90-day global period after a cath or PCI are denied because the office billing team doesn't know the interventional case occurred. By managing both service lines, ParaMed maintains a unified patient record that cross-references all procedures, global period dates, PA authorizations, and encounter dates — ensuring that every office visit, device check, remote monitoring claim, and follow-up visit within the global period gets the correct modifier applied automatically. We also manage the professional vs. facility fee split for cath lab procedures, ensuring the correct POS code and billing pathway is used for professional fees while the cath lab bills separately for facility costs.
How long does onboarding take for a cardiology practice?
Standard onboarding is 48 hours from contract signature to first claim submission for most cardiology practices. During onboarding, ParaMed completes: system access setup for your EHR/PM (we connect with Epic, Athena, AdvancedMD, Kareo, Modernizing Medicine, and most major cardiology-specific platforms); credentialing verification for all providers; payer enrollment status review (we identify any gaps before the first claim is submitted); cath lab invoice request protocol setup with your lab coordinator; PA initiation workflow setup with your scheduling team; and device HCPCS capture protocol establishment with your device representatives. For practices with complex multi-physician or multi-location setups, onboarding may take 3–5 business days.
What happens to our current outstanding A/R when we transition to ParaMed?
Your outstanding A/R is worked from Day 1 of the transition — not put on hold. ParaMed assigns a dedicated transition analyst who reviews your current aging A/R report in the first week, categorizes outstanding claims by payer, age, and denial reason, and begins actioning the highest-value open items immediately. For cardiology practices, this typically means device HCPCS claims that were previously not filed, EP add-on codes that were missed on prior cases, and high-value denied claims that were abandoned rather than appealed. Most transitioning cardiology practices see $40,000–$120,000 in additional collections from their existing A/R within the first 60 days — revenue that was already earned but was sitting unworked.

Stop Leaving Cardiology Revenue on the Table — Let ParaMed Capture Every Dollar You Earn

The average cardiology practice loses $240,000–$480,000 annually to preventable billing errors. Device HCPCS missing, EP add-ons uncaptured, PA failures on Tier 1 cases — our free audit identifies exactly what's being missed in your practice and how much it's costing you.

🚀 Free Cardiology Audit

Get Your Free Cardiology Billing Audit

We'll review 3 months of claims, identify every missed CPT code, device HCPCS, and EP add-on — and show you exactly how much you're leaving uncollected.

🔒HIPAA Compliant & Secure
🚫No Long-Term Contract Required
48-Hour Onboarding
$No Setup Fees — Ever

No obligation. No setup fees. We'll respond within 24 hours with audit scheduling and a pre-audit checklist.