Effective Date:
a) This policy will apply to all services performed on or after the above revision date which will become the new effective date.
b) For all services referred to in this policy that were performed before the revision date, contact customer service for the rules that would apply.
In August 2001, the FDA cleared for marketing a swallowable capsule containing a small camera that snaps pictures twice a second as it passes through the small intestine. The capsule has a clear end that allows the camera to view the lining of the small intestine. In addition to the camera, the wireless capsule, about the size of a grape, contains a lighting system and a transmitter that will send images from inside the intestine to video monitors, allowing doctors to detect sources of bleeding in the small intestine.
This technology is not meant as a replacement for more traditional methods of intestinal examination as it cannot be used to do biopsies and the pictures are frequently not as clear as those obtained through a scope.
Capsule endoscopy is considered medically necessary for the following indications: (HAYES C)
Capsule endoscopy is contraindicated in persons with known or suspected gastrointestinal obstruction, strictures, or fistulae
Codes Used In This BI:
91110 – Capsule endoscopy
Capsule endoscopy is considered experimental and investigational for all other indications, including
· Use as a routine/preventive screening test
· Use as an initial test in diagnosing gastrointestinal bleeding
· Use in confirming pathology identified by other diagnostic means
· Follow up of persons with known small bowel disease
· Use in investigating suspected irritable bowel syndrome, Celiac sprue, small bowel neoplasm, or intestinal polyposis syndrome.
Capsule endoscopy is considered experimental and investigational for evaluation of diseases involving the esophagus.