Code is covered without prior authorization (high confidence)
Medicare Pricing
Work RVU
10.70
Facility
$671.36
Non-Facility
$899.82
Documentation Required
For NB-UVB: documentation of phototherapy course, frequency (2–3 times per week) and cumulative number of treatments (UpToDate cited up to 200 treatments for some courses).
For excimer laser: documentation of treatment frequency and number of sessions (typically twice weekly; up to 60 treatments may generally be medically necessary for excimer laser).
Documentation of diagnosis: ICD-10 L80 (vitiligo) when submitting claims for covered therapies.
No explicit documentation requirements are specified in the provided document text (selection criteria are referenced but not detailed in this excerpt)
Key Coverage Criteria
Surgical epidermal grafting / epidermal harvesting techniques (including automated suction blister epidermal graft [SBEG] devices and other epidermal harvesting systems) have been used for stable localized vitiligo and may be effective in patients with stable vitiligo unresponsive to standard therapies.
Fractional CO2 laser in combination with topical tacrolimus may be an effective adjunctive therapy for some patients (especially progressing disease per the cited preliminary studies).
Combination therapies with NB-UVB plus adjuncts (e.g., topical tacrolimus, needling/micro-needling, Er:YAG laser + topical 5% 5-FU, betamethasone intramuscular injection, carboxytherapy, certain Chinese herbal compounds) have been reported to be more effective than NB-UVB alone in some trials / meta-analyses.
ICD-10 diagnosis covered if selection criteria are met: L80 (Vitiligo).
Treatment of vitiligo using the following established methods: Excimer laser (e.g., XTRAC, PhotoMedex, Radnor, PA; EX-308, Ra Medical Systems, Inc., Carlsbad, CA).
Treatment of vitiligo using Narrow-band ultraviolet B (NB-UVB).
Ask Verity about documentation requirements, denial risks, or coverage in your state.
For surgical grafting/epidermal transplantation: documentation of stability of disease (e.g., stable vitiligo), failure or intolerance of standard/medical therapies, and informed consent; evidence in the text specifies surgical techniques are effective in stable cases and that epidermal grafting is used in "stable localized vitiligo unresponsive to standard therapies."
For home-based phototherapy: documentation of patient training, device used, adherence, and monitoring for adverse effects (because safety/effectiveness evidence is limited and adverse events may be higher).