Key Takeaways
CPT Code 37799 is the unlisted procedure code for vascular surgery when no specific CPT code exists for the service performed.
Payers require a detailed operative report, medical necessity letter, and a comparable listed code whenever 37799 is submitted.
Common uses include intravascular lithotripsy (IVL), fewer than 10 stab phlebectomies, and arteriovenous malformation excision.
Reimbursement is not standardised; each payer prices 37799 individually, and prior authorization is often required before the procedure.
Unlisted procedure codes get denied more often than any other code category in vascular surgery billing. The reason is rarely clinical. It comes down to documentation. When a vascular surgeon performs a procedure that has no matching CPT descriptor, the claim for CPT Code 37799 lands on a human reviewer’s desk rather than an automated adjudicator, and what that reviewer finds in the record determines whether reimbursement follows. This guide covers when to use CPT Code 37799, what documentation payers require, how modifiers apply, and where this code fits against specific vascular alternatives.
Vascular and interventional practices encounter this code far more frequently than most specialties because the field advances faster than the CPT update cycle. New devices and techniques regularly outpace the AMA’s annual code revisions, leaving coders to reach for 37799 as an interim solution. Understanding its boundaries protects revenue and reduces audit exposure.
CPT Code 37799: Definition and Official Description
CPT Code 37799 carries the official descriptor “Unlisted procedure, vascular surgery.” It is the final code in the CPT surgical procedures on arteries and veins range (34001-37799), maintained by the American Medical Association (AMA). As a HCPCS Level I code, it falls under the same administrative code set compliance requirements as all other CPT codes under HIPAA.
The code is intentionally open-ended. It applies whenever a vascular surgery procedure does not have its own five-digit CPT code and does not fit any existing descriptor closely enough for accurate reporting. Using a code that approximates the procedure rather than 37799 constitutes upcoding or improper code assignment, both of which carry compliance risk.
Category III CPT codes (temporary technology codes) overlap with 37799 in some situations. According to American College of Surgeons coding guidance, Medicare does not assign an RVU value to Category III codes, and unlisted codes like 37799 also require individual payer pricing. When a relevant Category III code exists, coders should use it in preference to 37799. Check the CMS Physician Fee Schedule to confirm whether a newer specific code has been assigned before defaulting to 37799.
Procedures Commonly Billed Under 37799
Several vascular procedures regularly reach coders without a matching specific code, making 37799 the practical default. Each scenario below reflects verified guidance from payer policy documents and specialty society sources. Coders handling related procedure codes in surgical settings will recognise the same dynamic: technology and technique evolve ahead of code adoption.
IVL and Subclavian Artery Procedures
Intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) uses acoustic shockwaves to fracture calcified arterial plaque. No standalone CPT code currently exists for IVL. Per the Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) coding Q&A, when subclavian artery IVL is performed alongside angioplasty, the correct approach is to report CPT 37246 for the angioplasty component and 37799 for the IVL component. Billing 37799 alone without 37246 in this scenario misrepresents the services rendered.
For lower extremity IVL, physicians should not report HCPCS facility codes C9764-C9767. KZA Coding Coaches (October 2025) guidance indicates that 37799 should be used and compared to an angioplasty code for the same vessel when documenting reimbursement rationale to payers.
Stab Phlebectomy Under 10 Incisions
CPT 37765 covers stab phlebectomy of varicose veins with 10 to 20 stab incisions per extremity. When a surgeon performs fewer than 10 incisions, no specific code captures the reduced service. According to CMS Medicare Coverage Database article A56914, CPT 37799 is the appropriate code in this circumstance. Providence Health Plan’s medical policy MP187 confirms the same instruction. Coders should document the exact number of incisions in the operative note to support the unlisted code submission.
Mechanochemical Treatment (ClariVein)
Prior to January 1, 2017, mechanochemical treatment devices (including the ClariVein device) had no dedicated CPT code. Noridian Medicare recommended reporting these services with CPT 36299, while some carriers accepted 37799. From January 1, 2017 onward, CPT 36473 applies to the initial vein treated and CPT 36474 to each subsequent vein. Practices still encountering pre-2017 ClariVein claims in audits or appeals should reference the Medicare Advantage Policy Manual M-SUR104 for the historical coding rationale.
Arteriovenous Malformation (AVM) Excision
Surgical excision of superficial arteriovenous malformations, particularly those adjacent to muscles, does not have a dedicated vascular CPT code. Coders have consistently used 37799 for AVM procedures when the lesion is vascular in nature and the approach is surgical rather than endovascular. The operative report should specify the anatomical location, lesion dimensions, and technique to distinguish the service from related neurovascular or dermatologic procedures.
Pro Tip
Before submitting CPT Code 37799, verify whether a Category III code or a newly issued specific CPT code covers the procedure. The AMA releases annual CPT updates each January. A code that required 37799 in 2024 may have a dedicated descriptor by 2026. Check the current CPT codebook or the CMS fee schedule before finalising the claim.
Documentation Requirements for 37799 Submissions
Unlisted procedure claims fail at a higher rate than standard surgical claims because payers cannot auto-adjudicate them. Every 37799 submission needs to give the reviewer enough information to price and approve the service without seeking additional records. Effective practice management software can help standardise this documentation workflow across vascular teams.
The documentation package for a typical 37799 claim includes four elements:
- Operative report: Complete description of the procedure, approach, anatomical location, devices used, and clinical findings. Vague notes like “vascular procedure performed” are insufficient. The report must make the service identifiable to a reviewer unfamiliar with the specific technique.
- Medical necessity letter: A narrative explaining why the procedure was required, why no specific CPT code exists, and why the unlisted code is the most accurate representation. This letter should reference the diagnosis, treatment rationale, and any prior conservative measures attempted.
- Comparable listed CPT code: Most payers, including Medicare, price 37799 by comparing it to a listed code with similar clinical complexity, time, and resources. Identify the closest comparable code and include it in the submission with a brief explanation of how the billed procedure differs.
- Supporting clinical literature: For newer techniques such as IVL, attaching peer-reviewed references or specialty society guidance strengthens the medical necessity argument and demonstrates that the procedure meets accepted clinical standards.
Submitting 37799 without this package virtually guarantees a request for additional documentation or an outright denial. Build the package at the time of documentation, not after the denial arrives.
Modifiers, Medicare Reimbursement, and Payer Policies
CPT Code 37799 accepts the full range of standard surgical modifiers. Applying the wrong modifier, or omitting one that applies, is one of the most common reasons for claims management delays on unlisted vascular procedure submissions.
Modifier Usage for 37799
- Modifier 22 (Increased Procedural Services): Append when the procedure required substantially greater effort than typically expected. Document the added complexity in the operative note. This modifier supports a higher reimbursement request but requires strong documentation justification.
- Modifier 51 (Multiple Procedures): Apply when 37799 is reported with another surgical code on the same operative session. The secondary procedure is typically reimbursed at a reduced rate.
- Modifier 59 (Distinct Procedural Service): Use when 37799 is reported alongside a procedure that would normally be considered bundled, but a distinct and separate service was performed. NCCI edit compliance is required before applying Modifier 59 to avoid improper unbundling.
- Modifier 52 (Reduced Services): When the procedure was performed in a limited or partial manner relative to the described service, Modifier 52 signals this to the payer and prevents the claim from appearing inflated.
Medicare and Commercial Payer Rates
Medicare does not assign a national fee schedule rate to CPT 37799. Because no RVU value exists, each Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) prices the code individually based on the comparable listed code submitted with the claim. Reimbursement rates therefore vary by MAC locality and by the comparable code identified. Use FastRVU’s RVU lookup tool to identify the RVU values for the comparable code you plan to reference, which helps estimate expected reimbursement before submitting.
Commercial payers follow similar logic. Blue Cross NC, Providence Health Plan, and Noridian each have separate local coverage determinations (LCDs) or medical policies governing unlisted vascular procedure reimbursement. Contact each payer’s provider relations team to confirm current policy before the procedure date. Payer policies change independently of CPT updates, so a policy that applied in 2024 may not reflect 2026 coverage rules.
Prior Authorization Considerations
Many commercial payers require prior authorization specifically for unlisted procedure codes. Because 37799 cannot be auto-adjudicated, some plans flag it for pre-service review regardless of the clinical indication. Obtain prior authorization before performing elective procedures that will be billed under 37799. Document the authorization number in the claim and in the patient record. Retroactive authorization is rarely granted for unlisted codes.
Reduce Claim Delays on Complex Vascular Procedures
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CPT Code 37799 vs. Specific Vascular Codes
Choosing between CPT Code 37799 and a specific vascular code is not discretionary. Coders must use the most accurate code available. Using 37799 when a specific code applies constitutes undercoding (if the comparable code reimburses higher) or potentially improper billing (if the unlisted submission inflates payment). The codes most often confused with or considered alongside 37799 include:
The NCCI (National Correct Coding Initiative) edits govern which codes may be billed together and which are considered bundled. Before reporting 37799 alongside any specific vascular code, verify that no NCCI edit prohibits the combination or requires a modifier override. Coding guidance for unlisted CPT codes across specialties follows the same NCCI compliance logic.
Denial Management for CPT Code 37799 Claims
Denials on 37799 claims fall into three predictable categories, each with a specific resolution path. Tracking denial patterns in your digital documentation workflows helps identify whether denials stem from incomplete records, payer policy misalignment, or modifier errors.
Pro Tip
Document the comparable CPT code and its rationale in the patient’s billing record at the time of coding, not during appeals. When a denial arrives weeks later, having the comparable code and its justification already recorded saves time and strengthens the appeal. Use a standard template for 37799 medical necessity letters to ensure every required element is consistently present.
- “Missing documentation” denials: The claim was submitted without the operative report, medical necessity letter, or comparable code. Resubmit with the complete documentation package and reference the original claim number. Most payers allow one resubmission within 90 to 180 days of the original denial date.
- “Procedure not covered” denials: The payer’s LCD or medical policy excludes the specific procedure type from coverage under unlisted codes. Review the applicable LCD in the CMS fee schedule database or the commercial payer’s online policy library. File a formal appeal with clinical literature supporting medical necessity if coverage should apply.
- “Comparable code not accepted” denials: The reviewer rejected the comparable code submitted as insufficiently similar. Identify a closer analogue, consult with a certified vascular coder or specialty society resources, and resubmit with revised comparable code documentation.
Persistent 37799 denials from a specific payer often signal a need to contact that payer’s provider relations team directly. Some MACs and commercial plans have informal guidance on preferred comparable codes for specific unlisted vascular procedures that is not published in their formal LCD.
Expert Picks
Need to confirm whether a specific CPT code now exists? AMA CPT Code Set Overview provides the authoritative source for current CPT descriptors and annual updates.
Looking up RVU values for a comparable code? FastRVU 2026 RVU Lookup lets you check Work, PE, and MP RVU values and estimate Medicare reimbursement by locality.
Managing claims submissions for unlisted vascular procedures? Pabau claims management software supports structured documentation workflows that reduce denial rates on complex CPT submissions.
Coding other surgical procedure codes? ADHD Screening CPT Codes and IVF CPT Codes follow similar unlisted-code principles when specific descriptors are unavailable.
Conclusion
CPT Code 37799 exists because vascular surgery evolves faster than the CPT code set. Its successful use depends entirely on preparation: the right documentation package assembled before submission, the correct comparable code identified at coding time, and modifier compliance verified against current NCCI edits. Practices that treat 37799 as a documentation challenge rather than a billing shortcut consistently see better first-pass approval rates.
Pabau’s claims management software helps vascular and interventional practices attach operative reports, track prior authorization status, and maintain documentation standards for complex CPT submissions. To see how structured billing workflows reduce unlisted code denials, book a demo.
Frequently Asked Questions
CPT Code 37799 is used to report unlisted procedures in vascular surgery when no specific CPT code accurately describes the service performed. Common examples include intravascular lithotripsy (IVL) without angioplasty, stab phlebectomy with fewer than 10 incisions, and arteriovenous malformation excision not covered by another vascular code.
Payers require a complete operative report, a medical necessity letter explaining why no specific CPT code applies, and identification of a comparable listed CPT code for reimbursement comparison. Supporting clinical literature is also recommended for newer techniques such as intravascular lithotripsy.
Medicare does not assign an RVU value to 37799. Each Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) prices the code individually based on the comparable listed code submitted. Reimbursement therefore varies by MAC locality. Prior authorization requirements also differ by MAC, so verify with the applicable contractor before performing elective procedures.
Yes. The Society for Vascular Surgery confirms that IVL has no dedicated CPT code. For subclavian artery IVL performed alongside angioplasty, report CPT 37246 for the angioplasty and 37799 for the IVL. For lower extremity IVL, use 37799 compared to an angioplasty code for the same vessel rather than facility HCPCS codes C9764-C9767.
Common modifiers include Modifier 22 for increased procedural complexity, Modifier 51 when billed alongside another surgical code in the same session, Modifier 59 for distinct procedural services where NCCI edits might otherwise bundle the codes, and Modifier 52 when a reduced or partial service was performed.
CPT 37765 covers stab phlebectomy of varicose veins when 10 to 20 stab incisions are made per extremity. When fewer than 10 incisions are performed, 37765 does not apply and 37799 should be reported instead, per CMS Medicare Coverage Database guidance and standard CPT instruction.