CPT code 00222 is a neuroanesthesia code assigned to anesthesia services provided during intracranial procedures involving the electrocoagulation of an intracranial nerve. It sits at the end of the intracranial anesthesia subsection (00210–00222) within the broader head anesthesia range (00100–00222) and carries a 6-unit base value established by CMS. Correct application requires the anesthesia provider to cross-walk the surgical procedure code to this specific descriptor and confirm that the operative service involves intracranial nerve destruction, coagulation, or ablation — not simply any intracranial access.
What Does CPT Code 00222 Mean?
CPT 00222 describes anesthesia administered in support of intracranial procedures where the primary surgical objective involves electrocoagulation of an intracranial nerve. The full AMA CPT descriptor reads: Anesthesia for intracranial procedures; electrocoagulation of intracranial nerve. This code is a standalone, non-add-on anesthesia code, meaning it is reported as the primary anesthesia service for the session — not in addition to another anesthesia code.
Key attributes of CPT 00222:
- Code type: Standalone anesthesia CPT code (not an add-on)
- Anatomical region: Intracranial (within the skull)
- Procedure category: Intracranial nerve electrocoagulation/ablation
- CMS base units: 6
- Applicable setting: Hospital inpatient operating room, hospital outpatient surgical department; not typically reported in ambulatory surgery center settings for true intracranial access procedures
- Billable provider types: Anesthesiologist (MD/DO), Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA), Anesthesiologist Assistant (AA)
- Reported with time: Yes — anesthesia time is reported in addition to base units
What Procedures Does CPT 00222 Cover?
CPT 00222 applies when the surgical CPT code cross-walks to anesthesia for intracranial nerve electrocoagulation. This is a deliberately narrow descriptor — not every intracranial procedure maps here.
Procedures typically covered under CPT 00222 include:
- Percutaneous rhizotomy of the trigeminal nerve (e.g., surgical CPT 61790 — rhizotomy/neurolysis, percutaneous approach, gasserian ganglion)
- Radiofrequency ablation of the Gasserian ganglion for trigeminal neuralgia where intracranial access via skull base foramen is used
- Electrocoagulation of cranial nerve roots accessed intracranially
- Percutaneous thermocoagulation procedures targeting the trigeminal nerve at the level of the skull base (Foramen ovale approach)
- Intracranial nerve destruction procedures using heat-based energy delivery to cranial nerve tissue
In practice, coders frequently encounter CPT 00222 when billing for anesthesia alongside neurosurgical CPT codes in the 61790–61795 range. The ASA Crosswalk (or CMS crosswalk) is the authoritative tool used to map the surgical CPT to the appropriate anesthesia code — and for percutaneous trigeminal nerve procedures, 00222 is the correct landing point.
What Does CPT 00222 Specifically Exclude?
CPT 00222 does not apply to the following, even when the operative field is intracranial:
- General intracranial surgery without nerve-specific electrocoagulation → use 00210 (NOS intracranial surgery)
- CSF shunting procedures → use 00220
- Vascular intracranial procedures → use 00216
- Craniotomy for hematoma evacuation → use 00211
- Procedures in sitting position → use 00218
- Neuromodulation procedures involving electrode placement (not ablation) → use 00210 with appropriate surgical crosswalk
- Skull base procedures where the nerve work is extracranial in approach
Bundling note: CPT 00222 is not reported alongside 00210 for the same anesthesia session. When multiple intracranial procedures occur during one anesthesia event, report only the single code with the highest base unit value (per ASA Relative Value Guide reporting rules).
When Is CPT 00222 the Right Anesthesia Code to Use?
Correct code selection for anesthesia begins not with the anesthesia code itself — but with the surgical procedure being performed. The anesthesia provider’s record must match the operative report to validate code selection.
Follow this sequence to confirm CPT 00222 is appropriate:
- Obtain the surgical CPT code from the operative report or surgeon’s billing submission.
- Run the surgical CPT through the ASA Crosswalk (available in the ASA Relative Value Guide) or CMS anesthesia crosswalk tables to identify the paired anesthesia code.
- Confirm the surgical CPT code involves intracranial nerve electrocoagulation — such as CPT 61790 (rhizotomy, gasserian ganglion, percutaneous approach) or similar nerve ablation procedures.
- Verify intracranial access — the procedure must involve nerve tissue within the cranium or at the skull base via an intracranial approach, not a purely peripheral nerve block or extracranial injection.
- Check that no higher-base-unit intracranial code applies — if additional intracranial procedures were performed concurrently, compare base units across all applicable codes and report the one with the highest value for the session.
- Confirm the setting supports intracranial anesthesia coding — this is a hospital-based procedure requiring neuroanesthesia capability; it is not an office or outpatient clinic anesthesia code.
How Does CPT 00222 Differ From 00210 and 00220?
These three codes cover related intracranial anesthesia scenarios but are distinguished by the type of procedure being supported:
| Code | Descriptor (Short) | Base Units | Primary Procedure Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 00210 | Intracranial surgery, NOS | 10 | General cranial surgery not classified elsewhere |
| 00220 | CSF shunting procedures | 10 | Cerebrospinal fluid diversion/shunting |
| 00222 | Electrocoagulation of intracranial nerve | 6 | Nerve ablation/coagulation (e.g., trigeminal rhizotomy) |
The critical distinction: 00210 carries 10 base units vs. 00222’s 6 base units, reflecting the greater complexity and risk of open craniotomy procedures compared to the percutaneous, less invasive nerve ablation procedures that typically map to 00222. Reporting 00210 when the procedure is a percutaneous nerve electrocoagulation constitutes upcoding and carries significant audit risk.
What Documentation Is Required to Support CPT 00222?
Anesthesia record documentation for CPT 00222 must establish medical necessity for the anesthesia service, accurately capture anesthesia time, and cross-validate with the surgical procedure described in the operative note.
What Must the Anesthesia Record Include for CPT 00222?
The following elements are required in the anesthesia record to support a clean claim for CPT 00222:
- Anesthesia start time — the moment the anesthesiologist begins preparing the patient for induction (per CMS definition; see Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, Section 50)
- Anesthesia stop time — when the anesthesiologist transfers care to post-anesthesia personnel
- Total anesthesia time in minutes (converted to time units at 15 minutes = 1 unit)
- Physical status modifier (P1–P6) — documented based on the patient’s preoperative health classification per ASA Physical Status Classification System
- Pre-anesthesia evaluation note — including review of the patient’s neurological history, medications (especially anticoagulants, anticonvulsants), and airway assessment
- Intraoperative monitoring record — vital signs, ventilatory parameters, administered agents, and doses
- Post-anesthesia care note — patient status at transfer to PACU or equivalent
- Identification of the performing provider — anesthesiologist, CRNA, or AA, with appropriate supervision modifiers appended
- Confirmation of surgical procedure — the operative report or header must identify the neurosurgical procedure being performed, validating the crosswalk to 00222
What Are the Documentation Standards for Facility vs. Non-Facility Settings?
| Setting | Typical Setting for 00222 | Documentation Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Hospital inpatient OR | Primary setting | Full anesthesia record required; hospital anesthesia record plus pre/post notes |
| Hospital outpatient (HOPD) | Possible for select percutaneous procedures | Full anesthesia record; same documentation requirements as inpatient |
| Ambulatory Surgery Center (ASC) | Uncommon; verify ASC capability for intracranial access | Same record requirements; ASC must be equipped and licensed for the procedure level |
| Office/clinic | Not appropriate | CPT 00222 is not an office-based anesthesia code |
How Does CPT 00222 Affect Anesthesia Billing and Reimbursement?
Anesthesia reimbursement under CPT 00222 follows the base unit + time unit formula used across all anesthesia codes, multiplied by a locality-adjusted anesthesia conversion factor. Unlike standard RVU-based billing (work RVU + practice expense RVU + malpractice RVU), anesthesia uses a distinct payment methodology.
Payment formula: (Base Units + Time Units + Qualifying Circumstance Units) × Anesthesia Conversion Factor = Payment
For CPT 00222 specifically:
| Component | Value/Source |
|---|---|
| CMS Base Units | 6 (per CMS/VA Anesthesia Crosswalk) |
| Time Units | 1 unit per 15 minutes of anesthesia time |
| Physical Status Unit (commercial only) | P3 = +1 unit; P4 = +2 units; P5 = +3 units (Medicare does not recognize) |
| Qualifying Circumstance Units | +1 unit per applicable code (99100, 99116, 99135, 99140 — commercial payers; Medicare does not recognize separately) |
| Medicare Anesthesia CF (2022) | $21.5623/unit (nationally; geographically adjusted) |
| Median Commercial CF (2022) | ~$78.00/unit (per ASA commercial CF survey) |
Example calculation (illustrative): A 74-year-old patient (qualifies for +99100) undergoes percutaneous trigeminal rhizotomy with anesthesia time of 75 minutes (5 time units). Under a commercial payer using the 2022 median CF: (6 base + 5 time + 1 qualifying circumstance) × $78.00 = $936.00 gross payment before adjustments. The same case billed to Medicare would yield: 11 units × $21.5623 = approximately $237.19 — illustrating the well-documented gap between Medicare and commercial anesthesia reimbursement.
Billing teams in neurosurgical practices often ask whether the 6-base-unit value for 00222 is negotiable with commercial payers. The base unit reflects CMS-established complexity weighting and should align with the ASA Relative Value Guide; however, the conversion factor applied to those units is contractually negotiable with commercial payers.
What Modifiers Are Commonly Used With CPT 00222?
| Modifier | Description | When to Apply | Billing Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| AA | Anesthesia personally performed by anesthesiologist | Anesthesiologist present and personally administering throughout | 100% of allowable |
| QK | Medical direction of 2–4 CRNAs by physician | Anesthesiologist directing multiple concurrent cases | 50% of allowable (Medicare) |
| QX | CRNA service, medically directed by physician | CRNA under anesthesiologist supervision | 50% of allowable (Medicare) |
| QZ | CRNA service, no medical direction | CRNA operating independently | 100% of CRNA allowable |
| QY | Medical direction of one CRNA by anesthesiologist | Single CRNA case with physician supervision | 50% of allowable (Medicare) |
| P1–P6 | Physical status modifiers | Appended to reflect patient’s ASA physical status | Add units for P3–P5 (commercial payers only) |
| AD | Medical supervision of more than 4 cases | Anesthesiologist supervising more than 4 concurrent cases | 3 base units only (Medicare) |
Are There Prior Authorization, Coverage Restrictions, or LCD Requirements?
- Medicare: No specific LCD governs CPT 00222 independently — coverage follows medical necessity for the underlying surgical procedure. Anesthesia services are covered when the surgical procedure itself is medically necessary and reimbursable under Part B.
- Physical status modifiers (P1–P6): Medicare and Medicaid do not separately reimburse these; commercial payers vary. Append them for documentation purposes regardless.
- Qualifying circumstance codes (99100, 99116, 99135, 99140): These add-on codes are not recognized by Medicare or most Medicaid programs as separately payable. Most commercial payers will reimburse them, but policies differ. Verify with each payer before including on claims.
- Prior authorization: Typically triggered by the surgical procedure, not the anesthesia code. Confirm PA requirements with the surgeon’s office before the day of service; anesthesia claims tied to unauthorized surgical procedures will deny at the payer level.
- NCCI/MUE: CPT 00222 carries a Medically Unlikely Edit (MUE) of 1 per day per provider — reporting it more than once per encounter requires documentation and potential modifier -59 justification.
What CPT or Add-On Codes Are Commonly Billed Alongside CPT 00222?
Anesthesia claims for intracranial nerve procedures often involve associated billing by the surgical team and, in some cases, additional billable anesthesia services that are not bundled into the 00222 base units.
| Associated Code | Description | Typical Pairing Context | Bundling Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| 61790 | Rhizotomy/neurolysis, gasserian ganglion, percutaneous | Surgical CPT most commonly crossed to 00222 | No — separate surgeon claim |
| 61791 | Rhizotomy/neurolysis, percutaneous trigeminal | Alternative surgical code; check crosswalk | No — separate surgeon claim |
| +99100 | Qualifying circumstance: extreme age | Patient under 1 or over 70 years old | No (add-on, not subject to NCCI with 00222) |
| +99116 | Total body hypothermia | Deliberate hypothermia used | No (add-on) |
| +99135 | Controlled hypotension | Deliberate hypotension employed | No (add-on) |
| +99140 | Emergency conditions | Emergency circumstances present | No (add-on) |
| 36620 | Arterial catheterization | Invasive monitoring placed separately | Low — separately billable per ASA RVG guidance |
| 93503 | Pulmonary artery catheter placement | Complex monitoring; not in 00222 base units | Low — separately billable |
Which Code Combinations Trigger NCCI or CCI Edits With CPT 00222?
Auditors and claims editors regularly scrutinize the following patterns when CPT 00222 appears on a claim:
- Reporting 00222 alongside any other primary anesthesia code (e.g., 00210) for the same session is a direct NCCI violation. Only the highest base unit anesthesia code is reported when multiple procedures occur under one anesthesia administration.
- Billing 00222 when the surgical code maps to a different anesthesia descriptor — for example, reporting 00222 when the surgical CPT is a craniotomy (which maps to 00210) — creates a crosswalk mismatch that payers and post-payment reviewers will flag.
- Appending modifier -22 to 00222 without clear operative documentation of unusual complexity; anesthesia complexity is captured through time units and qualifying circumstances, not Modifier 22, which is a surgical modifier — its use on anesthesia codes requires specific payer guidance.
What Coding Errors Should You Avoid With CPT 00222?
Billing teams in neurosurgical and neuroanesthesia practices encounter predictable, recurring errors with this code. Ranked by audit and denial risk:
- Using 00210 instead of 00222 — the most common upcode error. Surgeons performing trigeminal rhizotomy procedures are often billed under 00210 (10 base units, NOS intracranial) when the correct crosswalk leads to 00222 (6 base units). While this results in higher reimbursement, it misrepresents the procedure complexity and is an audit target.
- Failing to document anesthesia start and stop times — without accurate times, time unit calculation cannot be validated, and payers may default to a lower time estimate or deny the claim entirely.
- Not appending a physical status modifier — while Medicare does not pay separately for P1–P6, these modifiers are required for claim completeness and commercial reimbursement. Omitting them on commercial claims leaves reimbursement on the table.
- Reporting qualifying circumstance codes (99100, 99116, 99135) on Medicare claims — Medicare does not recognize these codes as separately payable; including them without payer verification commonly results in bundling denials or claim edits.
- Selecting 00222 without confirming the surgical code crosswalk — anesthesia coders must cross-reference the surgical CPT before finalizing the anesthesia code. Choosing 00222 based on a general description of “intracranial nerve work” without a crosswalk validation creates compliance exposure.
- Billing arterial line placement (36620) as bundled when it is separately billable — per ASA Relative Value Guide guidance, arterial catheter placement for invasive monitoring is not included in the anesthesia base units and may be billed separately with appropriate documentation.
What Do Auditors and RAC Reviewers Look for When Reviewing CPT 00222 Claims?
RAC reviewers and internal coding auditors typically examine the following when this code appears on a claim:
- Crosswalk validation: Does the surgical CPT code on the claim actually map to 00222, or does the ASA/CMS crosswalk point to a different anesthesia code?
- Anesthesia time documentation: Are start and stop times recorded in the anesthesia record with specificity?
- Provider identity and supervision level: Is the performing provider appropriately identified with the correct modifier (AA, QK, QX, QZ)?
- Medical direction ratios: If QK is reported (medical direction of 2–4 CRNAs), were all four conditions of medical direction documented for the concurrent cases?
- Qualifying circumstance support: If 99116 or 99135 is billed to a commercial payer, does the anesthesia record document deliberate, intentional hypothermia or hypotension — not incidental physiological changes?
- Duplicate billing: Is 00222 the only primary anesthesia code for the session, or is another intracranial anesthesia code also present on the same date of service?
How Does CPT 00222 Relate to Other Intracranial Anesthesia Codes?
CPT 00222 occupies a specific, narrow position at the end of the intracranial anesthesia subsection. Understanding its relationship to neighboring codes is essential for accurate crosswalk application.
| Related Code | Descriptor (Short) | Relationship to 00222 | Key Distinction |
|---|---|---|---|
| 00210 | Intracranial surgery, NOS | Same subsection; standalone | 10 base units; general intracranial surgery not captured elsewhere |
| 00211 | Craniotomy/craniectomy for hematoma | Same subsection; standalone | 10 base units; hematoma evacuation specifically |
| 00212 | Subdural taps | Same subsection; standalone | 5 base units; less complex access |
| 00214 | Burr holes, including ventriculography | Same subsection; standalone | 5 base units; minimally invasive access |
| 00215 | Cranioplasty/elevation of skull fracture | Same subsection; standalone | 7 base units; repair procedures |
| 00216 | Intracranial vascular procedures | Same subsection; standalone | 15 base units; highest complexity |
| 00218 | Procedures in sitting position | Same subsection; standalone | 10 base units; position modifier |
| 00220 | CSF shunting | Same subsection; standalone | 10 base units; shunting only |
| 00222 | Electrocoagulation of intracranial nerve | This code | 6 base units; nerve ablation/coagulation |
What Is the Correct Reporting Order When CPT 00222 Appears With Other Codes?
- Report only one primary anesthesia code per session — if multiple intracranial procedures were performed under a single anesthesia administration, identify the code with the highest base units and report that code for the full session time.
- Report add-on qualifying circumstance codes (99100, 99116, 99135, 99140) after the primary anesthesia code — these are listed separately on the claim and reference the primary anesthesia CPT.
- Report separately billable monitoring procedures (e.g., arterial line, CVP catheter) on separate claim lines with appropriate procedure codes and documentation supporting medical necessity.
- Crosswalk the surgical CPT code to the anesthesia code before finalizing the claim — never select 00222 without first verifying the surgical procedure using the most current ASA Relative Value Guide or CMS anesthesia crosswalk tables available on the CMS Physician Fee Schedule lookup tool.
Real-World Coding Scenario — How CPT 00222 Is Applied in Practice
Clinical Scenario: A 72-year-old female with medically refractory trigeminal neuralgia (ICD-10: G50.0) is scheduled for a percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy of the left trigeminal nerve via a foramen ovale approach. The neurosurgeon reports CPT 61790. The patient is classified as ASA Physical Status P2 (mild systemic disease — well-controlled hypertension). General anesthesia is administered. Anesthesia start time: 7:42 AM. Anesthesia stop time: 9:12 AM. Total anesthesia time: 90 minutes (6 time units).
Correct Code Application
- Primary anesthesia code: CPT 00222 (crosswalk from surgical CPT 61790 per ASA/CMS crosswalk)
- Modifier: AA (anesthesiologist personally performed)
- Physical status modifier: P2 (appended; informational for most payers, adds units for applicable commercial payers)
- Qualifying circumstance: +99100 — patient is 72 years old; qualifies as “extreme age, older than 70”
- Claim calculation (commercial, illustrative): (6 base + 6 time + 1 QC for 99100) × commercial CF = 13 units × payer-negotiated CF
- Supporting documentation: Anesthesia record with 7:42–9:12 time stamps, pre-anesthesia evaluation note, physical status classification with rationale, operative report confirming percutaneous trigeminal rhizotomy via foramen ovale
Common Mistake in This Scenario
- Incorrect code selection: Some coders default to CPT 00210 (intracranial surgery, NOS) for any intracranial procedure, resulting in 10 base units rather than 6 — this overcodes the service and misrepresents procedure complexity
- Why it fails audit: The ASA/CMS crosswalk for CPT 61790 maps to 00222, not 00210; a payer audit matching surgical to anesthesia codes will identify the mismatch, triggering a recoupment request
- Second common error: Omitting +99100 for this 72-year-old patient when billing a commercial payer — this leaves 1 unit of reimbursement unclaimed and is a routine revenue integrity gap in high-volume neurosurgical practices
Frequently Asked Questions About CPT Code 00222
Is CPT Code 00222 Still Valid for Use in 2025 and 2026?
CPT code 00222 remains a valid, active anesthesia code with no changes to its descriptor or base unit assignment in recent update cycles. Anesthesia coders should verify annually against the current AMA CPT Professional Edition and the CMS Physician Fee Schedule update for any revisions to base units, status indicators, or crosswalk pairings.
What Is the Base Unit Value for CPT 00222?
CPT 00222 carries a CMS-established base unit value of 6. Base units reflect the complexity of the anesthesia service independent of time; for intracranial nerve electrocoagulation, the 6-unit value is lower than the 10-unit value assigned to general intracranial surgery (00210), reflecting the typically less complex, shorter-duration nature of percutaneous nerve ablation procedures.
What Is the Difference Between CPT 00220 and CPT 00222?
CPT 00220 covers anesthesia for cerebrospinal fluid shunting procedures and carries 10 base units, while CPT 00222 covers anesthesia for intracranial nerve electrocoagulation with 6 base units. The distinction lies entirely in the surgical procedure being supported — CSF shunting maps to 00220, and intracranial nerve ablation/coagulation procedures (such as percutaneous trigeminal rhizotomy) map to 00222.
Can a CRNA Bill CPT 00222 Without an Anesthesiologist?
Yes — a CRNA operating independently (without physician medical direction) reports CPT 00222 with modifier QZ and bills 100% of the CRNA-applicable rate. When a CRNA performs the service under physician medical direction, modifier QX is appended to the CRNA’s claim and modifier QK or QY to the anesthesiologist’s claim, with each billing at 50% of the allowable under Medicare. State scope-of-practice laws and individual payer policies govern when a CRNA may practice without medical direction.
Do Medicare Claims for CPT 00222 Accept Qualifying Circumstance Codes?
Medicare does not separately reimburse qualifying circumstance codes (99100, 99116, 99135, 99140) — these codes carry a status indicator of “B” (bundled) on the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule and will deny to provider liability if submitted on a Medicare claim. Most commercial payers do reimburse them, but individual plan policies vary; verify with each payer before including these add-on codes on non-Medicare claims.
What Documentation Supports Billing the Controlled Hypotension Code (99135) With CPT 00222?
To support +99135 on a commercial payer claim alongside CPT 00222, the anesthesia record must document intentional and deliberate induction of hypotension — not incidental hypotension occurring during the procedure. The record should specify the pharmacologic agent used to induce hypotension, the blood pressure targets maintained, the rationale for controlled hypotension (e.g., to reduce surgical field bleeding or intracranial pressure), and the duration of the hypotensive period. Routine intraoperative BP fluctuations do not meet the threshold for 99135.
How Is Anesthesia Time Calculated for CPT 00222 Claims?
Per CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual Chapter 12, anesthesia time begins when the anesthesiologist starts preparing the patient for induction of anesthesia in the operating room or equivalent area, and ends when the anesthesiologist is no longer in personal attendance — typically at transfer to PACU personnel. Time is reported in 15-minute increments (each 15 minutes = 1 time unit), and partial units are handled per payer rounding rules, which vary by contract.
Key Takeaways for Billing and Coding CPT 00222
- CPT 00222 describes anesthesia for intracranial nerve electrocoagulation — not general intracranial surgery; always confirm via surgical CPT crosswalk before reporting
- The code carries 6 CMS base units — lower than the 10-unit value for 00210 or 00220; reporting 00210 in place of 00222 for percutaneous nerve procedures is an upcoding error with significant audit risk
- Reimbursement is calculated using the base unit + time unit formula multiplied by a locality-specific anesthesia conversion factor — not the standard RVU system
- Physical status modifiers (P1–P6) should always be appended; they affect reimbursement with commercial payers even though Medicare does not recognize them separately
- Qualifying circumstance add-on codes (99100, 99135, etc.) are NOT recognized by Medicare; verify commercial payer policy before billing them
- The most commonly paired surgical CPT is 61790 (percutaneous trigeminal rhizotomy); always validate the surgical code against the current ASA Relative Value Guide crosswalk
- Only one primary anesthesia code is reported per session regardless of how many procedures are performed; use the code with the highest base unit value
- Separately billable monitoring procedures (arterial lines, pulmonary artery catheters) are not included in the 00222 base units per ASA RVG guidance and may be billed separately with documentation
For complete reimbursement rules and conversion factor data, refer to the CMS Anesthesiologists Center and the CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, Section 50. For the authoritative anesthesia base unit crosswalk, consult the ASA Relative Value Guide published annually by the American Society of Anesthesiologists. For NCCI edit verification, review the CMS National Correct Coding Initiative policy manuals.