Start New EnglishEspañol中文РусскийالعربيةTiếng ViệtFrançaisDeutsch한국어Tagalog Library Performance
BETA v.3.0

2025 CPT code 22112

Partial excision of a thoracic vertebral body for an intrinsic bony lesion, without spinal cord or nerve root decompression.

Refer to the most current CPT manual and payer guidelines for detailed coding instructions.

Modifiers 51 (multiple procedures), 62 (two surgeons), and 76 (repeat procedure) may be applicable depending on the specific circumstances of the case. Consult the most current CPT manual and payer-specific guidelines for proper modifier usage.

Medical necessity for this procedure is established when a patient presents with a symptomatic intrinsic bony lesion of the thoracic vertebra that causes significant pain or instability, and where the lesion is amenable to partial excision without compromising spinal cord or nerve root integrity.

The surgeon's responsibilities include preparing the patient, making an incision, dissecting to the vertebra, removing the diseased bone, irrigating the wound, and closing the incision.Preoperative and postoperative care may be coded separately, depending on the extent of services rendered.

IMPORTANT:For bone biopsy, see codes 20220-20251. For soft tissue biopsy of the back or flank, see codes 21920-21925. For needle biopsy of soft tissue, use code 20206. For excision of a soft tissue tumor of the back or flank, use code 21930.If spinal cord decompression is also performed, code 63085 (Vertebral corpectomy) should be reported in addition.

In simple words: The doctor removes a part of a bone in the upper back (thoracic vertebra) to treat a problem within the bone itself.This doesn't involve relieving pressure on the spinal cord or nerves.

This CPT code, 22112, represents the surgical procedure of partially excising (removing a portion of) a single thoracic vertebral body.The excision is performed to address an intrinsic bony lesion (a damaged or diseased area within the bone itself).This procedure specifically excludes any decompression of the spinal cord or nerve roots. The surgical approach involves an incision over the affected vertebra, dissection to the bone surface, muscle stripping, excision of the diseased bone portion, wound irrigation, and layered closure.

Example 1: A 55-year-old patient presents with a benign tumor within a thoracic vertebra causing localized pain.A partial excision of the vertebral body is performed to remove the tumor. , A 60-year-old patient with osteoporosis experiences a compression fracture of a thoracic vertebra. A partial vertebrectomy is performed to remove unstable bone fragments, stabilizing the vertebra. , A 70-year-old patient presents with a metastatic lesion in a thoracic vertebra. Partial vertebrectomy is performed to debulk the lesion and alleviate pain, but full decompression is not necessary.

* Preoperative imaging (X-rays, CT scans, MRI) showing the location and extent of the lesion.* Operative report detailing the surgical approach, the extent of bone removed, and any complications.* Postoperative imaging to assess the surgical outcome.* Pathology report confirming the nature of the excised tissue.

** Always refer to the most recent CPT coding manual and payer-specific guidelines for complete and up-to-date information on coding and reimbursement.

** Only Enterprise users with EHR integration can access case-specific answers. Click here to request access.

Discover what matters.

iFrame™ AI's knowledge is aligned with and limited to the materials uploaded by users and should not be interpreted as medical, legal, or any other form of advice by iFrame™.