Mountain State Medical Policy Bulletin |
Section: | Radiation Therapy & Nuclear Medicine |
Number: | R-16 |
Topic: | PET/CT Fusion Imaging |
Effective Date: | October 1, 2007 |
Issued Date: | December 3, 2007 |
Date Last Reviewed: | 11/2007 |
Indications and Limitations of Coverage
All eligibility criteria and coverage guidelines that apply to PET studies will also apply to PET/CT fusion imaging based on the anatomic area imaged. This policy focuses on PET/CT fusion imaging in diagnosing and treating various malignancies. For information on PET imaging as the sole imaging modality for oncologic applications, refer to Medical Policy Bulletin R-9. All eligible diagnosis codes for covered PET studies will also apply to PET/CT fusion imaging. PET/CT fusion imaging reported with a diagnosis code other than those listed as eligible will be denied as not medically necessary. A participating, preferred, or network provider cannot bill the member for the denied service. Codes 78814-78816 represent the concurrent acquisition of PET and CT imaging data on a hybrid scanner. The CT component of these codes refers to limited CT acquisition for attenuation correction and anatomic localization. As such, the CT component of the test is considered to be of non-diagnostic quality. Separate diagnostic CT studies should not be reported with the PET/CT codes (78814-78816) unless medically necessary and ordered by the referring physician. Similarly, if a PET scan is performed with a full diagnostic quality CT scan, both services may be reported separately, using the appropriate PET and CT codes. Guidelines for PET/CT performed with or without a separate distinct diagnostic CT
Example A: Example B: Example C: Description Multi-modality image co-registration (also known as fusion or co-registered imaging) is useful in certain clinical situations because data acquired from CT and PET studies yields complementary information. In PET/CT fusion imaging, the anatomic information from the CT images is combined or "fused" with the physiologic information obtained from the PET images to localize tumors or lesions especially in regions of complex anatomy, such as in the head, neck, chest, abdomen and pelvis. There are two methods of PET/CT co-registered or fusion imaging. One method involves the use of special computer software that combines or "fuses" the anatomic information from previously acquired CT images with the physiologic or functional information obtained from a separate PET study. This software fusion method is more labor intensive and at times unsuccessful, because the patient is imaged by two different modalities during two different imaging sessions. The patient is not in the same position or alignment for both studies or patient movement is different during two separate imaging sessions, including the involuntary and uncontrollable motion of internal organs. The other method uses a hybrid PET/CT scanner that takes both PET and CT images at the same imaging session. When compared to PET studies performed alone, the co-registered images of a single combined PET/CT study improves lesion classification and staging performance and reduces scanning time. In this situation, the patient remains positioned on the same bed for both imaging modalities, minimizing both temporal motion and spatial differences between the images acquired. In addition, using the hybrid PET/CT scanning system for both modalities makes the images available for viewing while the patient is still in the scanner. See Glossary for definitions of PET/CT related terms. For additional information on CT scans, refer to Medical Policy Bulletin X-3. For additional information on PET tumor localization, refer to Medical Policy Bulletin R-9. |
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78814 | 78815 | 78816 |
This medical policy may not apply to FEP. Medical policy is not an authorization, certification, explanation of benefits, or a contract. Benefits are determined by the Federal Employee Program. |
PET/CT Fusion Proves Its Value, Diagnostic Imaging, Vol. 24, No. 6, June 2002 Staging of Non-small Cell Lung Cancer with Integrated Positron-Emission Tomography and Computed Tomography, The New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 348, No. 25, June 2003 PET/CT Today and Tomorrow, The Journal of Nuclear Medicine, Vol. 45, No.1 (Suppl), January 2004 Head and neck cancer: clinical usefulness and accuracy of PET/CT image fusion, Radiology, Vol. 231, No. 1, April 2004 Radiology Rounds: A Newsletter for Referring Physicians Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Radiology, Vol. 2, No. 5, May 2004 PET and PET-CT for evaluation of colorectal carcinoma, Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, Vol. 34, No. 3, July 2004 Image-guided cancer therapy using PET/CT, The Cancer Journal, Vol. 10, No. 4, July-August 2004 Positron emission tomography/computerized tomography functional imaging of esophageal and colorectal cancer, The Cancer Journal, Vol. 10, No. 4, July-August 2004 PET-CT fusion imaging in differentiating physiologic from pathologic FDG uptake, Radiographics, Vol. 24, No. 5, September-October 2004 |
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Eligible Diagnosis Codes by Anatomic Area Brain
Breast
Colorectal
Esophageal
Gynecological
Head & Neck
Lung
Lymphoma
Melanoma
Pancreas
Thyroid
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Term | Description |
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Co-Registration | The immediate and automatic overlaying of PET and CT imaging data on a hybrid scanner during the same imaging session. This term may be used interchangeably with the term "fusion." |
Fusion |
The delayed overlaying or "fusion" of separately acquired PET and CT imaging data on an independent workstation. This term may be used interchangeably with the term "co-registration." |
Attenuation |
A form of image quality improvement. Attenuation refers to the computerized mathematical correction of imaging information based on the density of the anatomic structures (e.g., bone or soft tissue) through which an x-ray beam passes. For example, bone attenuates an x-ray beam to a greater degree than soft tissue. CT attenuation is the process of compensating for these differences and is automated in the software of the hybrid PET/CT scanners. |
Staging and Restaging |
Staging refers to the determination of a disease state or phase (e.g., Stage I, II, III or IV malignancy). Restaging is performed after a course of treatment. It is used to detect residual malignancy or persistent recurrent or suspected recurrent disease, including the determination of the extent of a known recurrence. |