Sunday, June 5, 2011

CLIA required MA 120, 130, CO B7 denial code and action

CLIA Certification Number Required - Denial Code MA120, MA130


Remark Code/ Message Number:

MA120: Missing/incomplete/invalid CLIA certification number

MA130: Your claim contains incomplete and/or invalid information, and no appeal rights are afforded because the claim is unprocessable. Please submit a new claim with the complete/correct information.

Resolution

• Entities that perform clinical laboratory tests must obtain certification through the state department of health. This is known as Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1998 (CLIA) certification.

• Your CLIA number must be submitted on claims for clinical laboratory tests, including tests that are classified as 'CLIA-waived.' Submit this information in Loop 2300 or 2400, REF/X4, 02 for electronic claims. For paper claims, submit the CLIA certification number in Item 23 of the CMS-1500 claim form.

      o Some clinical laboratory tests must also be submitted with HCPCS modifier QW. The Food and Drug Administration     (FDA) determines which laboratory tests are waived. Please note that not all CLIA-waived tests require HCPCS modifier QW.

• Determine if the CPT code is a waived test by accessing the CMS CLIA Web page

• Palmetto GBA will publish information on tests newly classified as 'waived' on our Web site

• Submit your corrected claim as a new claim. Claims that are missing required CLIA certification numbers are rejected as 'billing errors' and must be submitted as new claims.

CLIA Background:

• The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) regulates laboratory testing through CLIA. The primary objective of the CLIA program is to ensure quality laboratory testing. CLIA regulations require facilities to be appropriately certified for each test they perform.

• CLIA requires all facilities that perform even one test, including waived tests, on materials derived from the human body for the purpose of providing information for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of human beings to meet certain Federal requirements

• Any facility that performs tests for these purposes, including physician office laboratories, are considered laboratories under CLIA and must apply for and obtain a certificate from the CLIA program

• New waived tests are approved by the FDA on a flow basis, and the tests are valid as soon as they are approved


CLIA: Laboratory Tests


Denial Reason, Reason/Remark Code(s):

CO-B7: This provider was not certified/eligible to be paid for this procedure/service on this date of service CPT codes include 82947 and 85610


Resolution

HCPCS modifier QW must be submitted with certain clinical laboratory tests that are waived from the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 (CLIA) list. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) determines which laboratory tests are waived.


Note: Not all CLIA-waived tests require HCPCS modifier QW

Determine if the CPT code is a waived test by accessing the CMS CLIA web page

Palmetto GBA will publish information on tests newly classified as 'waived' on our website. Please note, the list of CLIA-waived procedures is updated as often as quarterly.

The CLIA certificate number is also required on claims for CLIA waived tests. Submit this information in Loop 2300 or 2400, REF/X4, 02 for electronic claims. For paper claims, submit the CLIA certification number in Item 23 of the CMS-1500 claim form.

Access complete instructions for correctly submitting HCPCS modifier QW in the Palmetto GBA Modifier Lookup tool.

Generally, CLIA certification is required for each location where testing is performed. There are exceptions for laboratories that are not at a fixed location and laboratories within a hospital. Refer to CMS CLIA Brochure #5 named How to Obtain a CLIA Certificate for more details about exceptions to the 'location rule'




How does CLIA define a “laboratory”?


The CLIA regulations define a laboratory to be “a facility for the biological, microbiological,serological, chemical, immunohematological, hematological, biophysical, cytological,pathological, or other examination of materials derived from the human body for the purposes of providing information for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings. These examinations also include procedures to determine, measure, or otherwise describe the presence or absence of various substances or organisms in the body” (42 C.F.R. § 493.2 (definition of “laboratory”).

How does the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) determine CLIA applicability?

CLIA applicability is determined using the regulatory definition of “laboratory” quoted above.Specifically, CLIA applies when: (1) patient-specific results are reported from the laboratory to another entity; AND (2) the results are made available “for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings.” As stated above, whether a test service is billed to Medicare has no bearing on CLIA applicability. Therefore, if a facility performs tests for the above-stated purposes, it is considered a laboratory under CLIA and must obtain a certificate from the CLIA program that corresponds to the highest complexity of tests performed.



What facilities need to have a CLIA certificate?

CLIA requires all facilities that perform even one test, including waived tests, on “materials derived from the human body for the purposes of providing information for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings” to obtain a CLIA certificate and meet CLIA regulatory requirements.

What facilities are exempt from needing a CLIA certificate?

Facilities that only perform testing for forensic purposes are excepted from the CLIA regulatory scheme.

Depending on the circumstances, research testing can be either excepted from CLIA or subject to CLIA. Specifically, testing facilities may qualify to be excepted from CLIA certification if they meet the description of “research laboratories” provided by the CLIA regulations at 42 C.F.R.§ 493.3(b)(2). In accordance with that regulation, only those facilities performing research testing on human specimens that do not report patient-specific results may qualify to be excepted from CLIA certification. An example of a non-patient-specific result would be “10 out of 30 participants were positive for gene X.” The result in this example is a summary of the group data, and is not indicative of an individual’s health. An example of a patient-specific result would be “participant A was positive for gene X” in which the result is specific to participant A.

What types of research testing are subject to CLIA?

In most cases, research testing where patient-specific results are reported from the laboratory,and those results will be or could be used “for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings” are presumed to be subject to CLIA absent evidence to the contrary.In cases where patient-specific test results are maintained by a statistical research center for possible use by investigators in which the results are not reported out as patient-specific and could not be used “for the diagnosis, prevention, or treatment of any disease or impairment of, or the assessment of the health of, human beings,” CLIA would not apply.

What if the research testing has Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval?

IRBs do not generally assess whether or not CLIA would apply to a given testing situation, and they do not have authority to determine CLIA applicability on behalf of the CLIA program. The Federal regulations that govern human research subject protection are unrelated to the CLIA requirements, and the IRBs that consider human research subject protection considerations would not be expected to consider the applicability of the CLIA regulations. And, even if they did, IRBs would have no authority to authoritatively opine on the applicability of those CLIA provisions.

What CLIA requirements apply to research testing?

As stated above, CLIA regulatory requirements vary according to the kind of test(s) each laboratory conducts, and whether the results are made available in such a way as to make that testing facility a “laboratory” under the CLIA regulations.

Tests are categorized as waived, moderate complexity or high complexity. If a laboratory test system, assay or examination does not appear on the lists of tests in the Federal Register notices,it is considered to be a test of high complexity until such time as the test system is reviewed and assigned a categorization in accordance with the CLIA regulations. Thus, if a research testing system is not categorized, and test results will be reported out, it would be considered a high complexity test system that is subject to the CLIA regulations for laboratories performing high complexity tests.

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