CPT Code 00140: Anesthesia for Eye Procedures – Complete Billing & Coding Guide

CPT code 00140 describes anesthesia services furnished for surgical procedures on the eye — excluding procedures specifically involving the lens. Anesthesiologists, CRNAs, and the billing teams who support them must understand its precise boundaries, because this code sits in a family of closely related ophthalmic anesthesia codes where a single documentation gap or miscoded procedure type is one of the most common triggers for claim denial or payer audit in this specialty.


What Does CPT Code 00140 Mean?

CPT code 00140 is defined under the AMA CPT code set as anesthesia for procedures on the eye, not otherwise specified. It falls within the anesthesia code range 00100–00222, which covers procedures on the head, and specifically applies to non-lens ophthalmic surgical cases.

Key attributes of this code:

  • Billable status: Active; valid for 2025 and 2026 per the AMA CPT code set
  • Applicable setting: Hospital inpatient, hospital outpatient, and ambulatory surgery center (ASC)
  • Provider types: Anesthesiologist (AA), CRNA under medical direction (QX/QY), CRNA without medical direction (QZ), medically directing anesthesiologist (QK)
  • Service category: Anesthesia / surgical support
  • Base units: 5 (per the ASA Crosswalk / CMS anesthesia base unit schedule)
  • Reimbursement method: Time- and unit-based (not the RVU/conversion factor model used for E&M and surgical codes)

What Procedures Does CPT 00140 Cover?

CPT 00140 applies broadly to ophthalmic surgery that does not involve the lens or other structures assigned their own specific anesthesia code. Procedures that appropriately fall under 00140 include:

  • Surgical repair of retinal detachment (scleral buckle, pneumatic retinopexy)
  • Glaucoma filtering procedures (trabeculectomy, tube-shunt implantation such as Ahmed or Baerveldt valve repair)
  • Strabismus (ocular muscle) surgery
  • Enucleation of the eye (note: enucleation carries a separate higher-unit code; confirm the surgical approach with the operative note)
  • Orbital or eyelid procedures not assigned to CPT 00103 (blepharoplasty)
  • Biopsy of ocular or periorbital structures
  • Foreign body removal not covered by a more specific code
  • Repair of laceration of the eye or orbit

What Does CPT 00140 Specifically Exclude?

The following procedures have dedicated anesthesia codes and must not be reported under 00140:

  • Lens surgery / cataract extraction with IOL implantation → Use CPT 00142
  • Corneal transplant (keratoplasty) → Use CPT 00144
  • Vitreoretinal surgery → Use CPT 00145
  • Iridectomy → Use CPT 00147
  • Eye examination under anesthesia → Use CPT 00148
  • Blepharoplasty → Use CPT 00103

In practice, coders frequently encounter operative notes that describe “eye surgery” without specifying the anatomical structure or surgical approach. Do not default to 00140 as a catch-all; the operative note must confirm the structure treated before code selection is finalized.


When Is CPT 00140 the Right Code to Use?

Selecting 00140 requires confirming both what the surgeon did and what the anesthesia provider did. Use the following decision sequence:

  1. Confirm the surgical procedure involved the eye and not an adjacent structure (orbit, lacrimal system, or eyelid) that carries a different anesthesia code.
  2. Confirm no lens involvement. If the operative note mentions phacoemulsification, lens extraction, or intraocular lens (IOL) insertion, reassign to CPT 00142.
  3. Confirm no corneal grafting. Any penetrating or lamellar keratoplasty belongs under CPT 00144.
  4. Confirm no vitreous surgery. Pars plana vitrectomy or vitreous body removal belongs under CPT 00145.
  5. Confirm no iridectomy was performed as the primary procedure. If so, reassign to CPT 00147.
  6. Verify anesthesia time is documented in the anesthesia record, including start and stop times — required for time-based billing.
  7. Assign the appropriate physical status modifier (P1–P6) based on the anesthesiologist’s preoperative assessment.

How Does CPT 00140 Differ From CPT 00142, 00144, and 00145?

CodeProcedure CoveredBase UnitsKey Differentiator
00140Eye procedures, NOS (non-lens, non-cornea, non-vitreous)5Broadest ophthalmic anesthesia code; use when no more specific code applies
00142Lens surgery / cataract extraction with IOL5Any procedure involving the lens, including phacoemulsification
00144Corneal transplant (keratoplasty)7Higher base units reflect increased complexity of donor cornea procedures
00145Vitreoretinal surgery8Highest base units in the ophthalmic range; requires specific documentation of vitreous involvement

What Documentation Is Required to Support CPT 00140?

Anesthesia claims for CPT 00140 are scrutinized for both the surgical justification (what the surgeon performed) and the anesthesia record (what the anesthesia team documented). Missing either element is a leading cause of denial.

What Must the Provider Document in the Anesthesia Record and Clinical Notes?

  1. Pre-anesthesia evaluation — must include ASA physical status classification (P1–P6) documented by the anesthesia provider before induction
  2. Anesthesia start and stop time — required for time unit calculation; ambiguous time documentation is an audit red flag
  3. Type of anesthesia administered — general, monitored anesthesia care (MAC), or regional (retrobulbar or peribulbar block); each affects modifier selection
  4. Surgical procedure confirmation — the anesthesia record must cross-reference the surgeon’s operative note; the structure operated on must be identifiable
  5. Intraoperative monitoring — continuous documentation of patient vitals supports medical necessity
  6. Post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) notes — required for complete episode-of-care documentation and supports medical necessity of the anesthesia level provided
  7. Qualifying circumstances, if applicable — documented emergency status or unusual patient condition supports add-on code 99140 or 99100

What Are the Documentation Standards for Facility vs. Non-Facility Settings?

Documentation ElementHospital/Inpatient SettingASC / Outpatient Setting
Pre-anesthesia evaluationRequired; often integrated into hospital H&PRequired; must be a separate anesthesia-specific pre-op note
Anesthesia timeOn integrated anesthesia recordOn anesthesia record attached to ASC surgical chart
Physical status modifierRequiredRequired; Medicare denials for MAC cases in ASC settings if P-modifier missing
Operative note cross-referenceSurgeon’s note in hospital chartSurgeon’s note in ASC chart; must be accessible for claim review
PACU documentationStandard hospital nursing notesRequired as separate ASC PACU record

How Does CPT 00140 Affect Medical Billing and Reimbursement?

Unlike surgical CPT codes that reimburse based on an RVU × conversion factor calculation, anesthesia codes — including 00140 — are reimbursed using a unit-based formula:

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

Anesthesia Unit Breakdown for CPT 00140

ComponentValue / Rule
Base units5 (assigned by CMS/ASA for CPT 00140)
Time units1 unit per 15 minutes of documented anesthesia time
Physical status unitsP1 = 0; P2 = 0; P3 = 1; P4 = 2; P5 = 3; P6 = 0
Qualifying circumstance add-on99100 (+1 unit, age <1 or >70); 99140 (+2 units, emergency); 99135 (+5 units, controlled hypotension)
Medicare anesthesia conversion factorLocality-specific; national average approximately $22–$26 per unit (CMS locality data)
CMS 2025 PFS conversion factor$32.35 (applies to non-anesthesia codes; anesthesia uses separate locality conversion factors)

Worked example: A 72-year-old patient (ASA P2, qualifies for 99100) undergoes strabismus repair under general anesthesia with 45 minutes of documented anesthesia time.

  • Base units: 5
  • Time units: 45 ÷ 15 = 3
  • Physical status (P2): 0
  • Qualifying circumstance (99100, age >70): 1
  • Total units: 9 × locality conversion factor

According to the CMS Medicare Claims Processing Manual, Chapter 12, Section 50, Medicare’s anesthesia payment methodology requires separate documentation of start and stop times; estimated times are not acceptable.

What Modifiers Are Commonly Used With CPT 00140?

ModifierDescriptionWhen to ApplyBilling Impact
AAAnesthesia personally performed by anesthesiologistAnesthesiologist provides the anesthesia without CRNA involvementFull allowable for the anesthesiologist
QKMedical direction of 2–4 CRNAs by one anesthesiologistAnesthesiologist directs multiple concurrent casesAnesthesiologist and each CRNA bill at 50% of AA rate
QXCRNA service under medical direction of a physicianCRNA in a medically directed casePaired with QK on anesthesiologist’s claim
QYMedical direction of one CRNA by one anesthesiologistOne-to-one medical direction scenarioAnesthesiologist bills QY; CRNA bills QX
QZCRNA service without medical directionCRNA practicing independently (opt-out states)CRNA bills 100% of allowable independently
QSMonitored anesthesia care (MAC) serviceMAC provided instead of general or regional anesthesiaRequired for MAC claims; absence triggers Medicare denial
P1–P6ASA physical statusRequired on every anesthesia claimP3–P5 add modifying units; P6 (brain-dead donor) typically results in denial
23Unusual anesthesiaProcedure normally requiring local/no anesthesia that requires general due to patient factorsDocuments medical necessity for general anesthesia where MAC or local would otherwise suffice
99140Qualifying circumstance: emergencyDocumented emergency requiring immediate surgeryAdds 2 qualifying circumstance units to total unit count

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

  • Medicare: No formal LCD exists exclusively for CPT 00140, but medical necessity is established through the surgical procedure being performed; the underlying diagnosis (e.g., ICD-10 H33.xx for retinal detachment, H40.xx for glaucoma) must support the surgical intervention
  • MAC claims in ASC settings: Medicare requires the QS modifier on MAC claims; omission is the most common denial reason for ophthalmic anesthesia in ASC settings, per AAPC coding forum documentation
  • Medicaid: Coverage and documentation requirements vary significantly by state; some state Medicaid programs require prior authorization for elective ophthalmic procedures
  • Commercial payers: May require operative reports on pre-payment review; some payers apply contract-specific conversion factors that differ substantially from Medicare locality rates
  • Global surgical period: Anesthesia codes carry a 0-day global period; post-operative pain management is billed separately if provided

What CPT or HCPCS Codes Are Commonly Billed Alongside CPT 00140?

Anesthesia for ophthalmic surgery often involves add-on codes, qualifying circumstance codes, and separately reportable services. The following pairings are typical and appropriate:

Associated CodeDescriptionTypical Pairing ContextBundling Risk
99100Qualifying circumstance: extreme agePatient under 1 year or over 70No — reportable as add-on
99140Qualifying circumstance: emergencyDocumented emergency surgeryNo — reportable as add-on
99135Qualifying circumstance: controlled hypotensionDeliberate hypotensive technique usedNo — reportable as add-on
01996Daily management, epidural/subarachnoid drug adminPost-op pain management (uncommon in ophthalmic cases)No — separate service
64400Injection, trigeminal nerve; any divisionNerve block used as anesthetic adjunctYes — verify payer policy; some bundle with 00140
92018 / 92019Ophthalmological examination under anesthesiaSurgeon’s exam code; distinct from anesthesia claimNo — surgeon bills separately

Which Code Combinations Trigger NCCI or CCI Edits?

  • CPT 00140 + CPT 00142 cannot be billed together for the same encounter; each describes anesthesia for a distinct ophthalmic procedure, and only one anesthesia code is reported per operative session
  • CPT 00140 + CPT 00144 similarly cannot be reported concurrently — a corneal transplant requires 00144, not 00140
  • Nerve block codes (e.g., 64400) may be bundled with 00140 by commercial payers if billed as the primary anesthetic rather than as a separate adjunct; document the clinical rationale when both are reported
  • The CMS National Correct Coding Initiative (NCCI) policy manual, Chapter 2, governs anesthesia code bundling; always verify current quarter edits via the CMS NCCI Policy Manual before billing adjunct injection codes with any anesthesia code

What Coding Errors Should You Avoid With CPT 00140?

Auditors reviewing ophthalmic anesthesia claims identify the following errors with high frequency:

  1. Defaulting to 00140 for all eye cases — Coders unfamiliar with the ophthalmic anesthesia code family use 00140 as a catch-all; always confirm the specific anatomical structure in the operative note
  2. Billing 00140 for cataract surgery — Lens procedures require CPT 00142; this substitution is one of the most common denial triggers in ophthalmology ASC billing
  3. Omitting the QS modifier for MAC cases — Medicare requires QS on all monitored anesthesia care claims; its absence is interpreted as a claim for general anesthesia services not actually rendered
  4. Incorrect physical status modifier — Assigning P1 to a patient documented as having a severe systemic disease understates unit count and misrepresents the clinical record
  5. Missing or estimated anesthesia times — Medicare explicitly rejects estimated time documentation; anesthesia start and stop times must be exact and recorded contemporaneously
  6. Billing qualifying circumstance codes without documentation — Codes 99100 and 99140 require clinical documentation supporting the qualifying condition; routine use without documentation is an audit trigger
  7. Incorrect provider modifier pairing — Filing AA when QK/QX should apply (or vice versa) misrepresents the supervision arrangement and may constitute a compliance violation

What Do Auditors and RAC Reviewers Look for When Reviewing Claims With CPT 00140?

  • Mismatch between anesthesia code and surgical CPT code: The anesthesia code must be consistent with the surgical procedure billed by the operating surgeon on the same date of service
  • Missing pre-anesthesia evaluation note: RAC reviewers specifically check for a pre-procedure ASA classification documented by the anesthesia provider
  • Concurrent case overbilling: In medically directed cases, anesthesiologists may not direct more than four concurrent CRNA cases; QK use in a five-case concurrent scenario is a False Claims Act risk area per the OIG Work Plan
  • Outlier time units: Anesthesia time significantly longer than typical for a given procedure triggers prepayment review at some Medicare Administrative Contractors (MACs)

How Does CPT 00140 Relate to Other CPT Codes?

Understanding the full ophthalmic anesthesia code family prevents miscoding and supports accurate reimbursement for the anesthesia team.

Related CodeRelationship TypeKey Distinction
00103Distinct standaloneBlepharoplasty; lid surgery coded here, not under 00140
00142Mutually exclusiveLens/cataract surgery; higher-specificity code, takes precedence
00144Mutually exclusiveCorneal transplant; 7 base units vs. 00140’s 5
00145Mutually exclusiveVitreoretinal surgery; 8 base units; most complex ophthalmic anesthesia code
00147Mutually exclusiveIridectomy as primary procedure
00148Mutually exclusiveEye examination under anesthesia (no surgical intervention)
99100Add-on qualifying circumstanceReported alongside 00140 for extreme age; not a standalone code
99140Add-on qualifying circumstanceReported alongside 00140 for emergency status

What Is the Correct Code Sequencing When CPT 00140 Appears With Other Codes?

  1. Report the primary anesthesia code (00140) first on the claim line
  2. Append the appropriate provider-type modifier (AA, QK, QX, QY, QZ)
  3. Append the physical status modifier (P1–P5) as a second modifier
  4. Report qualifying circumstance codes (99100, 99140, 99135) as separate line items on the same claim — they are not appended as modifiers
  5. Report any separately billable nerve blocks or pain management services on independent claim lines with appropriate CPT codes and anatomical modifiers

Real-World Coding Scenario — How CPT 00140 Is Applied in Practice

Scenario: A 74-year-old patient with controlled hypertension and Type 2 diabetes (ASA P3) presents to an ASC for elective surgical repair of a retinal detachment using scleral buckling technique. The anesthesiologist personally performs general anesthesia with documented start time of 8:14 AM and end time of 9:29 AM (75 minutes). The post-anesthesia care unit note is completed.

Correct Code Application

  • CPT 00140-AA-P3 — Anesthesia for eye procedure, personally performed by anesthesiologist, ASA physical status 3
  • CPT 99100 — Qualifying circumstance: patient age >70 (74 years old)
  • Unit calculation: 5 (base) + 5 (time: 75 ÷ 15) + 1 (P3 physical status) + 1 (99100 qualifying circumstance) = 12 total units

Common Mistake in This Scenario

  • Incorrect: CPT 00145-AA-P3 — A coder unfamiliar with ophthalmic anesthesia coding selects 00145 (vitreoretinal surgery) because the operative note mentions the retina. However, scleral buckling is an external approach that does not involve entry into the vitreous cavity; 00145 requires documented vitreoretinal intervention. Using 00145 overstates complexity and base units (8 vs. 5), creating an upcoding risk.
  • Also incorrect: Omitting 99100 — Failing to report the qualifying circumstance for a patient age >70 results in under-reporting total billable units and represents lost reimbursement for a legitimate, documented service.

Frequently Asked Questions About CPT Code 00140

Is CPT Code 00140 Still Valid for Use in 2025 and 2026?

CPT code 00140 remains a valid, active code with no descriptor changes in the AMA CPT 2025 or 2026 code sets. Anesthesia teams should verify the current ASA base unit value annually through the ASA Crosswalk and confirm applicable Medicare locality conversion factors through the CMS Physician Fee Schedule lookup tool for their geographic area.

How Many Base Units Does CPT 00140 Carry?

CPT 00140 carries 5 base units per the ASA Relative Value Guide, which CMS adopts for Medicare anesthesia reimbursement. Base units reflect the inherent complexity and risk of the anesthesia service independent of time, and 5 units places 00140 among the lower-complexity anesthesia codes — consistent with the generally controlled operative field in non-emergent ophthalmic surgery.

What Is the Difference Between CPT 00140 and CPT 00142?

CPT 00140 covers anesthesia for eye procedures not otherwise specified, while CPT 00142 is used exclusively for lens surgery, including cataract extraction with or without intraocular lens implantation. Both codes carry 5 base units, but 00142 is required any time the operative note documents lens involvement; using 00140 for a cataract case results in a code-to-procedure mismatch that is a common ASC denial trigger.

Can a CRNA Bill CPT 00140 Without Physician Oversight?

A CRNA may bill CPT 00140 independently in states that have opted out of the Medicare physician supervision requirement and when the CRNA is practicing without medical direction. In that scenario, the QZ modifier is appended and the CRNA bills 100% of the applicable allowable. In all other scenarios, the appropriate QX, QY, or team-billing modifier arrangement must be used. State scope-of-practice laws and individual payer contracts also govern CRNA independent billing rights and should be verified before claim submission.

Does CPT 00140 Require Prior Authorization?

Medicare does not require prior authorization for CPT 00140 as a standalone code; however, some commercial payers and Medicaid programs require pre-authorization for the underlying surgical procedure, which effectively controls anesthesia coverage as well. Additionally, certain high-cost ophthalmologic procedures may be subject to pre-certification requirements that affect claim adjudication for both the surgical and anesthesia components.

What Is a Qualifying Circumstance and When Does It Apply to CPT 00140?

A qualifying circumstance is an add-on code that describes conditions making anesthesia services significantly more difficult than typically required. For CPT 00140 cases, the most commonly applicable qualifying circumstance is 99100 (patient of extreme age, under 1 year or over 70 years), which is relevant given that a significant proportion of ophthalmic surgery patients — particularly those undergoing glaucoma or retinal procedures — are elderly. Code 99140 (emergency anesthesia) applies when surgery cannot be delayed without serious risk of harm. These codes are reported separately on the claim, not as modifiers.

What Happens If I Report CPT 00140 for a Cataract Case?

Reporting CPT 00140 for a cataract extraction or lens replacement procedure will result in a code-to-procedure mismatch if the claim is cross-referenced against the surgeon’s claim for CPT 66984 or 66982. This mismatch is flagged during automated claims review and is a primary reason for anesthesia claim denials in high-volume ophthalmology ASCs. Always confirm the surgical CPT code being reported by the operating surgeon before finalizing the anesthesia claim.


Key Takeaways for Billing and Coding CPT 00140

  • CPT 00140 is a non-lens ophthalmic anesthesia code with 5 base units; it covers glaucoma, retinal, strabismus, and other non-specific eye procedures
  • Never use 00140 as a default for all eye cases — confirm the specific anatomical structure and cross-reference against the surgeon’s CPT code
  • Anesthesia reimbursement is unit-based, not RVU-based; total units = base + time + physical status + qualifying circumstance units multiplied by the locality conversion factor
  • The QS modifier is required for all MAC claims; its omission is the leading denial cause for ophthalmic anesthesia in ASC settings under Medicare
  • Physical status modifiers P1–P6 are required on every claim and directly affect reimbursement through modifying unit additions for P3, P4, and P5 patients
  • Qualifying circumstance codes 99100 and 99140 are legitimate, separately billable add-ons when supported by documentation — not reporting them represents real revenue leakage
  • Verify annually: confirm base unit values via the ASA Crosswalk and locality conversion factors through the CMS Physician Fee Schedule to ensure reimbursement calculations reflect current-year data

For revenue cycle teams managing high-volume anesthesia practices, staying current with CMS NCCI Policy Manual Chapter 2 updates and MAC-specific anesthesia billing policies is essential to maintaining both compliance and clean claim rates.


This article is intended for educational purposes for medical coding and billing professionals. CPT code descriptions are the property of the American Medical Association. Verify all codes, modifiers, and coverage policies against the current-year AMA CPT code set, CMS Physician Fee Schedule, and applicable payer contracts before claim submission.

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