CPT Code 00212: Anesthesia for Intracranial Procedures – Subdural Taps Complete Billing & Coding Guide

CPT code 00212 describes anesthesia services furnished during intracranial procedures specifically involving subdural taps — a minimally invasive procedure in which a needle is inserted into the subdural space to drain accumulated fluid or blood compressing the brain. This code sits within the anesthesia-for-head-procedures range (00100–00222) and carries 5 base units under the CMS anesthesia base unit schedule. Because subdural taps are coded as a distinct service from more invasive intracranial procedures, correct code selection requires understanding where 00212 begins and where related codes such as 00210, 00211, and 00214 take over.


What Does CPT Code 00212 Mean?

CPT 00212 — Anesthesia for intracranial procedures; subdural taps — is the correct anesthesia code when an anesthesiologist or CRNA provides anesthetic management for a subdural tap procedure. The surgical provider accesses the subdural space (the potential space between the dura mater and the arachnoid membrane) to aspirate excess fluid or blood, most commonly in cases of subdural hematoma or subdural hygroma.

Key attributes of this code at a glance:

  • Code type: Standalone anesthesia CPT code (not an add-on code)
  • AMA code range: Anesthesia for Procedures on the Head (00100–00222)
  • CMS base units: 5
  • Typical clinical setting: Inpatient hospital or specialized neurointerventional suite
  • Provider types: Anesthesiologist (MD/DO), CRNA, Anesthesiologist Assistant (AA) under supervision
  • Reimbursement formula: Base units + time units × payer conversion factor

What Procedures Does CPT 00212 Cover?

CPT 00212 covers the complete anesthetic management episode associated with a subdural tap, from pre-anesthetic evaluation through emergence and handoff to post-anesthesia care. Clinically, the code applies when:

  • The operative or procedural diagnosis involves subdural hematoma (traumatic or nontraumatic), subdural hygroma, or pathologic fluid accumulation in the subdural compartment
  • The surgeon performs needle aspiration of the subdural space without the creation of a formal burr hole or craniotomy
  • Anesthesia is required because the patient cannot cooperate, the procedure demands neurophysiologic stability, or the clinical scenario carries significant intracranial pressure risk

What Does CPT 00212 Specifically Exclude?

CPT 00212 does not apply when:

  • The procedure involves drilling a burr hole — report 00214 instead
  • The procedure is a craniotomy or craniectomy for hematoma evacuation — report 00211
  • A formal cerebrospinal fluid shunting procedure is performed — report 00220
  • Anesthesia is for a vascular intracranial procedure — report 00216
  • No specific intracranial procedure descriptor applies — report 00210 (not otherwise specified)

When Is CPT 00212 the Right Code to Use?

Selecting 00212 over other codes in the 00210–00222 family hinges on the specific procedure being performed, not the diagnosis alone. Follow this decision sequence:

  1. Confirm the surgical procedure code documented in the operative record is for a subdural tap (e.g., CPT 61000 — subdural tap through fontanelle, or CPT 61020 — ventricular puncture through fontanelle).
  2. Verify the procedure does not involve burr-hole drilling, formal craniotomy, or placement of a shunt.
  3. Confirm that a qualified anesthesia professional provided anesthesia services — not just monitoring — during the procedure.
  4. Confirm the service was performed in a covered facility setting (inpatient hospital or outpatient surgical suite).
  5. Assign 00212 with the appropriate anesthesia provider modifier (AA, QK, QX, etc.) and physical status modifier.

How Does CPT 00212 Differ From 00210 and 00214?

CodeDescriptorBase UnitsKey Distinction
00210Anesthesia, intracranial procedures; not otherwise specified11Catch-all for intracranial procedures not described by 00211–00222
00212Anesthesia, intracranial procedures; subdural taps5Specific to needle aspiration of subdural space — no burr hole or craniotomy
00214Anesthesia, intracranial procedures; burr holes, including ventriculography9Requires surgical creation of a burr hole through the skull
00211Anesthesia, intracranial procedures; craniotomy/craniectomy for evacuation of hematoma10Requires open cranial surgery

In practice, coders frequently encounter the temptation to default to 00210 (NOS) when the documentation does not clearly describe the operative technique. This is one of the most common errors on intracranial anesthesia claims: always query the anesthesiologist or review the surgical operative note to confirm needle-only access before assigning 00212.


What Documentation Is Required to Support CPT 00212?

What Must the Anesthesia Provider Document in the Anesthesia Record?

The anesthesia record must substantiate all billable components of the anesthesia service. For CPT 00212, required documentation elements include:

  1. Pre-anesthetic evaluation — performed and documented by the anesthesia provider prior to induction, including ASA physical status assignment
  2. Procedure name corresponding to subdural tap (confirm with the surgical operative report or procedure note)
  3. Anesthesia start time — the moment the anesthesia provider begins preparing the patient
  4. Anesthesia end time — the moment the patient is released to post-anesthesia care
  5. Total anesthesia time in minutes — required for time unit calculation; most payers require 1-minute precision
  6. Anesthesia type administered (general, monitored anesthesia care, etc.)
  7. Provider identity and role — anesthesiologist personally performing (AA modifier), medically directing a CRNA (QK or QY modifier), or CRNA with/without supervision (QX or QZ modifier)
  8. Physical status modifier rationale — the patient’s ASA classification (P1–P6) must be supported by the pre-anesthetic evaluation note
  9. Qualifying circumstance justification (if applicable) — patient age under 1 or over 70 (99100), emergency status (99140), or use of controlled hypotension (99135)
  10. Post-anesthesia note or handoff documentation

Documentation Standards for Facility vs. Non-Facility Settings

ElementInpatient / Hospital (Facility)Ambulatory Surgical Center (Non-Facility)
Operative report requirementRequired from surgical providerRequired from surgical provider
Anesthesia record locationHospital EHR / anesthesia moduleASC anesthesia record
Physical status documentationPre-op anesthesia note in chartSame requirement
Time capture1-minute increments per CMSSame requirement
Payer-specific formsCMS-1500 / institutional claimCMS-1500

How Does CPT 00212 Affect Medical Billing and Reimbursement?

Anesthesia reimbursement does not use the standard RVU-based physician fee schedule formula. Instead, payment is calculated as:

(Base Units + Time Units + Qualifying Circumstance Units + Physical Status Units) × Payer Conversion Factor = Allowed Amount

For CPT 00212:

ComponentValue
Base units (CMS)5
Time units1 unit per 15 minutes (CMS standard); some payers use 1-minute increments
Physical status units (P3)+1 unit (commercial payers; Medicare does not add units for physical status)
Physical status units (P4)+2 units (commercial payers only)
Qualifying circumstance 99100+1 unit (patient under age 1 or over age 70; most commercial payers; Medicare bundles this)
Qualifying circumstance 99140+2 units (emergency; document in Block 19 of CMS-1500)

For reference, the CMS Medicare conversion factor for anesthesia is updated annually via the CMS Physician Fee Schedule. Commercial payers negotiate their own conversion factors, which vary significantly by contract and geography.

Billing teams in multi-specialty practices often ask whether the low base unit value of 00212 (5 units) merits the same documentation rigor as higher-complexity codes like 00216 (15 units). The answer is unambiguous: documentation requirements are identical regardless of base unit value. Under-documented 00212 claims are just as vulnerable to audit recoupment as higher-value intracranial codes.

What Modifiers Are Commonly Used With CPT 00212?

ModifierDescriptionWho Reports ItReimbursement Impact
AAAnesthesia personally performed by anesthesiologistAnesthesiologist100% of allowed amount
QKMedical direction of 2–4 concurrent procedures involving qualified individualsAnesthesiologist50% of allowed amount
QYMedical direction of one CRNA by an anesthesiologistAnesthesiologist50% of allowed amount
ADSupervision of more than 4 concurrent proceduresAnesthesiologist3 base units per procedure
QXCRNA service under medical directionCRNA / AA50% of allowed amount
QZCRNA service without medical directionCRNA100% of allowed amount (where recognized)
QSMonitored anesthesia careAnesthesiologist or CRNAVaries; must document MAC justification

For Medicare medical direction (QK/QY/QX), the anesthesiologist must satisfy all seven steps of medical direction as defined by CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, including performing the pre-anesthetic exam, being present at induction, and being immediately available throughout.

Physical Status and Qualifying Circumstance Modifiers for CPT 00212

Modifier / CodeDescriptionAdditional UnitsMedicare Recognition
P1Normal healthy patient0N/A
P2Mild systemic disease0No additional payment
P3Severe systemic disease+1 unitCommercial payers only
P4Severe disease, constant threat to life+2 unitsCommercial payers only
P5Moribund patient+3 unitsCommercial payers only
+99100Extreme age (under 1 or over 70)+1 unitNot separately paid by Medicare
+99140Emergency conditions+2 unitsNot separately paid by Medicare
+99135Controlled hypotension+5 unitsNot separately paid by Medicare

Are There Prior Authorization, Coverage Restrictions, or LCD Requirements?

  • Medical necessity is the primary coverage trigger. Payers require documentation of a clinically appropriate indication (subdural hematoma, hygroma, or elevated intracranial pressure requiring immediate intervention) to cover the procedure and associated anesthesia.
  • No national coverage determination (NCD) restricts CPT 00212 directly, but payers may apply local coverage determinations (LCDs) governing intracranial procedures.
  • Global period considerations: CPT 00212 is an anesthesia code and does not carry a surgical global period — global period rules apply to the surgical procedure code, not the anesthesia code.
  • Per NCCI / CCI editing guidelines, the anesthesia code is inclusive of all routine monitoring and pre/post-anesthetic care; these services cannot be separately billed.

What CPT Codes Are Commonly Billed Alongside CPT 00212?

The surgical procedure code drives the claim pairing. Common code combinations include:

Associated CodeDescriptionTypical Pairing ContextBundling Risk
CPT 61000Subdural tap through fontanelleNeonatal/infant subdural hygromaNo — separate surgical procedure
CPT 61020Ventricular puncture through fontanelle or sutureInfant hydrocephalus or hygromaNo — separate surgical procedure
99100Qualifying circumstance: extreme agePatient under 1 year (common with 61000/61020)No — add-on, not subject to same NCCI edits
99140Qualifying circumstance: emergencyEmergency subdural decompressionNo — add-on
CPT 36620Arterial catheter placement for monitoringComplex cases requiring invasive BP monitoringNo — separately billable per ASA RVG
CPT 00210Intracranial anesthesia, NOSShould NOT be reported with 00212 for same caseYes — mutually exclusive

Which Code Combinations Trigger Bundling Concerns?

  • 00212 with 00210: Never report both codes for the same anesthesia episode. These are mutually exclusive intracranial anesthesia codes. Per ASA Relative Value Guide and payer policy, when multiple intracranial procedures occur in the same anesthetic episode, report only the single anesthesia code with the highest base unit value.
  • 00212 with routine monitoring CPT codes (e.g., 93041, 93005): These are bundled into the anesthesia base unit value and cannot be separately billed for the same encounter.
  • Modifier 47 (anesthesia by surgeon): Appending modifier 47 to a surgical code does not replace the use of 00212. If a separate anesthesia provider performed the anesthesia, 00212 is the correct reporting vehicle, not a surgical code with modifier 47.

What Coding Errors Should You Avoid With CPT 00212?

The low claim volume for 00212 does not reduce audit risk — intracranial anesthesia codes are subject to payer scrutiny precisely because of their clinical complexity. The most frequently observed errors, ranked by compliance impact, are:

  1. Reporting 00210 (NOS) instead of 00212 when the operative note clearly documents a subdural tap without burr hole creation — this results in over-reporting of base units (11 vs. 5)
  2. Failing to document total anesthesia time in minutes on the claim and in the anesthesia record — a common reason for commercial payer denial
  3. Appending physical status modifier P3 or P4 without supporting documentation in the pre-anesthetic evaluation note
  4. Billing qualifying circumstance add-on code 99100 to Medicare — Medicare considers this value bundled into base units and will deny the line item
  5. Omitting provider modifier (AA, QK, QX, etc.) — many payers return these claims unprocessed; modifier is required on all anesthesia claims
  6. Reporting 00212 when a burr hole was created — once the skull is drilled, 00214 (9 base units) is the correct code regardless of how the primary surgeon characterized the procedure informally

What Do Auditors and RAC Reviewers Look for on CPT 00212 Claims?

Anesthesia claims including intracranial codes receive heightened scrutiny during audit. Key red flags include:

  • Mismatch between the anesthesia code and surgical procedure code — the surgical CPT (e.g., 61000) must be consistent with the anesthesia code descriptor
  • Time unit inflation — anesthesia time on the claim significantly exceeds documented start and end times in the anesthesia record
  • Concurrent procedure reporting errors — billing 00212 alongside a higher-value intracranial anesthesia code for the same operative session
  • Unsubstantiated emergency modifier (99140) without explicit “emergency” notation in the anesthesia or surgical record
  • CRNA billing without appropriate supervision documentation for payers requiring seven-step medical direction compliance

How Does CPT 00212 Relate to Other Intracranial Anesthesia Codes?

Related CodeRelationship to 00212Base UnitsKey Distinction
00210Mutually exclusive / catch-all11Use only when no specific intracranial code applies
00211Distinct — higher complexity10Craniotomy or craniectomy for hematoma evacuation
00212This code5Subdural tap — needle aspiration only
00214Distinct — higher complexity9Burr hole drilling with or without ventriculography
00216Distinct — highest complexity in range15Intracranial vascular procedures
00218Distinct — positional complexity13Any intracranial procedure performed in sitting position
00220Distinct — shunting10CSF shunting procedures

What Is the Correct Code Sequencing When CPT 00212 Appears With Other Codes?

  1. Single intracranial procedure per anesthetic episode: Report 00212 with the appropriate anesthesia provider modifier and physical status modifier. Report any qualifying circumstance add-on codes (99100, 99140) as separate line items.
  2. Multiple intracranial procedures in one anesthetic episode: Per ASA and payer policy, report only the one anesthesia code with the highest base unit value. If a burr hole (00214, 9 units) was also created in the same session as a subdural tap (00212, 5 units), report 00214 only, with total combined time.
  3. Separately billable ancillary services (e.g., arterial catheter placement 36620): Bill on a separate line from the anesthesia code with the appropriate procedure modifier.

Real-World Coding Scenario — How CPT 00212 Is Applied in Practice

Clinical scenario: A 14-month-old patient presents with an expanding subdural hygroma causing increased intracranial pressure. The neurosurgeon performs a percutaneous subdural tap via a needle through the anterior fontanelle (CPT 61000). An anesthesiologist personally administers general anesthesia. Total documented anesthesia time: 45 minutes. The patient has no systemic disease (P1), but is under age 2, qualifying for the extreme-age add-on.

Correct Code Application

  • CPT 00212-AA — Anesthesia for subdural tap, personally performed by anesthesiologist (AA = 100% reimbursement)
  • Physical status modifier P1 — appended to 00212 (normal healthy infant aside from the acute presentation)
  • +99100 — Qualifying circumstance: patient under 1 year (14 months does not qualify — verify age cutoff; the code applies to patients younger than 1 year; this patient is 14 months, so 99100 would not apply)
  • Time units: 45 minutes ÷ 15 = 3 time units
  • Total billable units: 5 (base) + 3 (time) = 8 units × conversion factor

Note: The 14-month-old does not qualify for 99100 because the code requires the patient to be younger than 1 year or older than 70. This is a frequent miscoding error — coders sometimes assume any pediatric patient qualifies.

Common Mistake in This Scenario

  • Incorrect: Reporting CPT 00210-AA-P1 (NOS intracranial anesthesia, 11 base units) instead of 00212 — inflates base units by 6 units
  • Why it fails: The operative note clearly specifies needle aspiration through the fontanelle (61000), which maps directly to 00212. Using 00210 would misrepresent the complexity level of the anesthesia service and expose the claim to recoupment on audit
  • Also incorrect: Appending +99100 for a 14-month-old — the qualifying circumstance applies only to patients under 12 months or over 70 years

Frequently Asked Questions About CPT Code 00212

Is CPT Code 00212 Still Valid for Use in 2025 and 2026?

CPT 00212 remains a valid, active code with no descriptor changes as of the current AMA CPT code set. Coders should verify annually against the AMA CPT Professional Edition and the CMS Physician Fee Schedule lookup tool to confirm base unit values and coverage status have not been revised.

How Many Base Units Does CPT 00212 Have?

CPT 00212 carries 5 base units under the CMS anesthesia base unit schedule. This is among the lower base unit values in the intracranial anesthesia code range, reflecting the relatively limited invasiveness of a subdural tap compared to burr holes (9 units), hematoma craniotomy (10 units), or vascular intracranial procedures (15 units).

What Is the Difference Between CPT 00212 and CPT 00210?

CPT 00212 is procedure-specific — it describes anesthesia for subdural taps only — while CPT 00210 is an “NOS” (not otherwise specified) catch-all for intracranial procedures that don’t fit a more specific descriptor. Because 00210 carries 11 base units and 00212 carries only 5, reporting 00210 when 00212 is appropriate constitutes upcoding and creates significant audit risk.

Does Medicare Pay Separately for Physical Status Modifiers on CPT 00212?

Medicare does not recognize physical status modifiers (P1–P6) for additional payment — their value is considered bundled into the base unit. Commercial payers vary in their approach: most recognize P3 (+1 unit), P4 (+2 units), and P5 (+3 units) for additional reimbursement when substantiated by pre-anesthetic documentation. Always verify individual payer contracts.

When Should I Report Add-On Code 99100 With CPT 00212?

Add-on code 99100 (extreme age) may be reported with 00212 when the patient is either under 1 year of age or over 70 years of age at the time of the procedure. For commercial payers, this typically adds 1 unit to the total claim value. Medicare does not separately reimburse 99100 — it is considered bundled. Note that patients ages 1–70 do not qualify, regardless of how young or elderly they may seem clinically.

What Modifier Is Required When a CRNA Performs Anesthesia for CPT 00212?

A CRNA performing anesthesia for a subdural tap must append modifier QX (CRNA service with medical direction) when an anesthesiologist is medically directing the case, or modifier QZ (CRNA service without medical direction) when no physician is directing. The supervising anesthesiologist simultaneously reports 00212 with modifier QK (directing 2–4 concurrent procedures) or QY (directing one CRNA). Both parties bill the same anesthesia CPT code; the modifiers differentiate their roles and trigger the 50/50 payment split.

Can CPT 00212 Be Reported With CPT 00214 on the Same Date of Service?

No. When both a subdural tap and a burr hole are performed during the same anesthetic episode, only the code with the highest base unit value is reported for the anesthesia service — in this case, 00214 (9 base units). The time units should reflect the combined total anesthesia time for the full operative session. Reporting both codes for the same encounter constitutes a bundling error under ASA guidelines and payer policy.


Key Takeaways for Billing and Coding CPT 00212

  • CPT 00212 is specific to anesthesia for subdural tap procedures (needle aspiration only) — it does not apply when a burr hole, craniotomy, or shunt is involved
  • The code carries 5 base units under CMS — the lowest among specific intracranial anesthesia descriptors; always verify the surgical technique before selecting this code over 00210, 00211, 00214, or 00216
  • Reimbursement = (5 base units + time units + physical status units + qualifying circumstance units) × conversion factor — every billable unit must be substantiated in the anesthesia record
  • A provider modifier is required on every anesthesia claim (AA, QK, QX, QZ, QY, or AD) — claims submitted without a modifier will be returned or denied
  • Medicare does not separately reimburse physical status modifiers or most qualifying circumstance codes — these add units only for commercial payers with appropriate contract language
  • When multiple intracranial procedures occur in one anesthetic episode, report only the single code with the highest base unit value, with combined total time
  • Audit risk centers on code specificity (00212 vs. 00210 upcoding) and time unit accuracy — always cross-reference the anesthesia record against claim submission

For additional guidance on anesthesia billing documentation requirements, modifier billing rules, and revenue cycle compliance related to intracranial procedures, consult the ASA Relative Value Guide and the CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, which govern anesthesia payment policy for Medicare fee-for-service.

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