Specialty Billing

Pain Management Billing Services

Pain management billing lives and dies on injection coding, prior authorization, and LCD frequency limits. One missed modifier 50 or an unbundled fluoroscopy charge can stall an entire day of procedures. MedTaskly's AAPC-certified coders handle it end to end, so you get paid faster with fewer denials.

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Quick Answer

Why do pain management practices need a specialized billing company?

Pain management practices need specialized billing because interventional procedures follow strict, code-specific payer rules that general billers routinely miss. Epidural steroid injections (62321-62327) and facet joint procedures (64490-64495) already include fluoroscopic guidance, so billing imaging separately triggers automatic denials. Add LCD frequency limits, prior authorization requirements, and bilateral modifier 50 rules, and pain management billing demands coders who work these claims daily.

Why It Matters

Why Pain Management Practices Lose Revenue on Every Injection Claim

Bundled guidance, frequency limits, and prior auth gaps quietly drain interventional revenue.

Interventional pain billing is built on code families that payers scrutinize line by line. Epidural steroid injections bill under 62321-62327 depending on spinal level and imaging, while facet joint injections use 64490-64495 and radiofrequency ablation uses 64633-64636. Fluoroscopic guidance is bundled into most of these codes, so reporting it separately triggers instant denials. Miss the bilateral modifier 50 on a two-sided facet procedure and you leave half the reimbursement on the table, or invite a payer audit for incorrect units.

Then come the gatekeepers. Most commercial payers require prior authorization before every injection series, and Medicare LCDs cap how many facet or epidural sessions are payable per year, per region. Exceed a frequency limit or start a procedure without auth on file, and the claim is dead on arrival. MedTaskly's AAPC-certified coders manage the codes, the auths, and the limits for you, delivering a 98% clean-claim rate so your injections turn into revenue, not rework.

What We Handle

End-to-end pain management billing revenue cycle

Interventional Procedure Coding
AAPC-certified coding for epidurals (62321-62327), facet injections, and RFA (64633-64636), with correct levels, units, and modifier 50.
Prior Authorization Management
We secure payer approval before every injection series and track expirations, so procedures are never performed without auth on file.
Eligibility and Benefits Verification
Coverage, injection benefits, and remaining visit limits confirmed before the patient reaches your procedure suite.
Denial Management and Appeals
We correct bundling, frequency, and medical-necessity denials fast, then appeal with documentation payers actually accept.
Provider Credentialing and Enrollment
Enrollment with Medicare and commercial payers for physicians and CRNAs, keeping every rendering provider billable.
LCD Frequency Limit Tracking
We monitor Medicare LCD session caps for facet and epidural procedures, flagging patients approaching limits before you schedule.
FAQ

Pain Management Billing Services — questions answered

What CPT codes are used for pain management billing?
Core pain management CPT codes include 62321-62327 for epidural steroid injections by spinal level, 64490-64495 for facet joint injections, and 64633-64636 for facet radiofrequency ablation. Code selection depends on spinal region, number of levels, and whether imaging guidance applies. Fluoroscopic guidance is bundled into most of these codes and should not be billed separately.
Why do pain management claims get denied so often?
The most common causes are missing prior authorization, exceeding LCD frequency limits on injections, unbundling fluoroscopic guidance that is already included in codes like 62321-62327, and incorrect bilateral billing. Payers also deny for insufficient documentation of conservative treatment before interventional procedures. Each of these is preventable with specialty-trained coding and front-end auth checks.
How does modifier 50 work for bilateral facet joint injections?
Modifier 50 tells the payer a facet injection (64490-64495) was performed on both sides of the spine at the same level. Most payers reimburse bilateral procedures at 150% of the unilateral rate, though some require RT and LT modifiers on separate lines instead. Billing it wrong either forfeits revenue or creates overpayment risk.
Do pain management injections require prior authorization?
Yes, most commercial payers require prior authorization for epidural steroid injections, facet injections, and radiofrequency ablation, and many now route these through third-party review programs. Medicare does not require prior auth for most office-based injections but enforces LCD frequency limits instead. Performing a procedure without a required auth almost always results in an unpayable claim.

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