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Effective Date: 04/27/2006 |
Title: Strabismsu Surgery
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Revision Date: 11/01/2019
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Document: BI152:00
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CPT Code(s): 67311, 67312, 67314, 67316, 67318, 67320, 67331, 67332, 67334, 67335, 67340, 67343, 67345
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Public Statement
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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.
Strabismus surgery is designed to correct misalignment of the eyes. It is used
to treat abnormal vision caused by the eyes not being aligned. In children with
chronically misaligned eyes the brain will tend to choose one eye and ignore
(suppress) the visual input from the other eye. In time, this results in an
uncorrectable loss of vision in the ignored eye (amblyopia ex anopsia or “brain
blindness of one eye”). Strabismus surgery is done early in life (while the
visual pathways in the brain have not yet fully matured) to allow binocular
vision (both eyes look at the same object) and to prevent amblyopia.
Adults
(who already have fully mature visual pathways in the brain) cannot suppress
signals from a misaligned eye and the result is double vision or visual
confusion. Eye misalignment in
adults is often the result of an injury, stroke, or other medical condition. The
primary purpose of strabismus surgery in adults is to reestablish normal eye
alignment and eliminate double vision or visual confusion.
Small misalignments can be corrected with the use of prisms or special
lenses but large deviations require surgery.
If a
misaligned eye has little or no vision, there is no double vision or visual
confusion to eliminate and restoring binocular vision is not an option.
The purpose of strabismus surgery in this situation is to improve
appearance, not to restore visual function.
While a large, obvious deviation can be considered disfiguring and have
negative psychosocial (and mental health) consequences, small-angle strabismus
(a deviation of less than 15 degrees) or less is not disfiguring.
Therefore, if the misaligned eye has little or no vision and there is no
double vision or visual confusion a deviation of less than 15 degrees is
considered cosmetic and surgical intervention is not a covered benefit.
Strabismus surgery requires pre-authorization in patients twelve years of age or
older.
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Medical Statement
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Covered strabismus
surgery:
A.
Strabismus surgery is
covered in children less than 12 years of age diagnosed with strabismus.
B.
Strabismus surgery
requires pre-authorization for members 12 years of age and older. Strabismus
surgery will be considered when the following criteria are met:
1)
Visual defect is
documented and
2)
Visual defect is related
to the strabismus or
3)
The misaligned eye has a
deviation of 15 degrees or more.
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Non-covered
strabismus: surgery
A.
Cosmetic surgery to
correct small-angle deviations of less than 15 degrees.
Codes
Used In This BI:
67311
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Revise eye muscle
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67312
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Revise two eye muscles
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67314
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Revise eye muscle
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67316
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Revise two eye muscles
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67318
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Revise eye muscle(s)
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67320
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Revise eye muscle(s) add-on
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67331
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Eye
surgery follow-up add-on
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67332
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Re-revise eye muscles add-on
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67334
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Revise eye muscle w/suture
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67335
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Eye
suture during surgery
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67340
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Revise eye muscle add-on
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67343
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Release eye tissue
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67345
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Destroy nerve of eye muscle
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Background
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Strabismus is ocular
misalignment due to a number of different etiologies. The goals of strabismus
surgery are to obtain normal visual acuity in each eye, to obtain or improve
fusion, to eliminate any associated sensory adaptations or diplopia, and to
improve visual fields.
In adults, the sudden
onset of strabismus can result from ischemia, inflammation (such as in MS), head
trauma, intracranial hemorrhage, or tumors. Adults with new-onset strabismus
develop diplopia. Correction of strabismus in these situations should result in
fusion of images and resolution of the diploplia. Adults with congenital
strabismus, however, usually have failure of visual development (amblyopia) in
the deviating eye; correction of ocular misalignment is unlikely to achieve
stereopsis and fusion.
Visual
Confusion:
Visual confusion, the perception of two different images superimposed onto the
same space, is also a symptom of ocular misalignment. This symptom can
result from newly acquired strabismus or from change in the direction or amount
of ocular misalignment in adults with childhood strabismus. Visual confusion is
particularly debilitating when driving. The affected individual may
describe a car "crossing over the center line and coming straight at them,"
when, in fact, the brain is shifting the image of the car and superimposing it
on the road ahead. Surgical correction or reduction of the ocular
deviation will usually relieve visual confusion.
Restoration of Binocular Vision:
Whenever the eyes are not aligned, there is loss of binocular vision or fusion
(unification of images) that lets us appreciate a more refined sense of depth
perception in three dimensional spaces (stereopsis). The majority of
adults with childhood strabismus (as opposed to congenital strabismus resulting
in amlyopia) who have had surgery to correct their strabismus as adults can
regain fusion postoperatively. Even adults with long-standing sensory
deprivation (because of wearing eye patches) have been shown to regain fusion
after restoration of sight and alignment.
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Reference
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Rustein RP. Care of the Patient with
Strabismus: Exotropia and Esotropia.
St. Louis, MO:
American Consensus Panel on Care of the Patient With Strabismus; 1995:26-41.
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Gill MK, Drummond GT. Indications and
outcomes of strabismus repair in visually mature patients. Can J Ophthalmol.
1997; 32(7):436-440.
- American
Academy
of Ophthalmology (AAO). Esotropia and exotropia. Preferred Practice Pattern. San Francisco, CA:
AAO; September 2002.
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Way LW, ed. Current Surgical Diagnosis and
Treatment. Boston, MA:
Appleton & Lange; 1994.
- American
Academy
of Ophthalmology (AAO) and American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology
and Strabismus (AAPOS). Policy Statement: Adult Strabismus Surgery. A Joint
Statement of the American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and
Strabismus and the American Academy of Ophthalmology. San Francisco,
CA: AAO; April 2002. Available at:
http://www.aao.org/aao/member/policy/adult.cfm
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Ludwig IH, Brown MS. Flap tear of rectus
muscles: An underlying cause of strabismus after orbital trauma. Ophthal
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2002; 18(6):443-449; discussion 450.
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Nickerson B. Nursing care of the pediatric
patient following strabismus repair surgery. Insight. 2002; 27(3):64-65.
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Yazdani A, Traboulsi EI. Classification and
surgical management of patients with familial and sporadic forms of
congenital fibrosis of the extra ocular muscles. Ophthalmology. 2004;
111(5):1035-1042.
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Scheiman NM, et al. Randomized trial of
treatment of amblyopia in children aged 7-17 years. Arch Ophthalmol. 2005;
123(4):437-447.
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Kushner BJ and Morton GV. Postoperative
binocularity in adults with longstanding strabismus. Ophthalmology. 1992;
99(3)316-319.
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Mills MD, Coats DK, Donahue SP, and Wheeler
DT. Strabismus surgery for adults: a report by the American Academy of
Ophthalmology. Ophthalmology. 2004; 111(6):1255-1262.
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Application to Products
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This policy applies to all health plans administered by QualChoice, both those insured by QualChoice and those that are self-funded by the sponsoring employer, unless there is indication in this policy otherwise or a stated exclusion in your medical plan booklet. Consult the individual plan sponsor Summary Plan Description (SPD) for self-insured plans or the specific Evidence of Coverage (EOC) for those plans insured by QualChoice. In the event of a discrepancy between this policy and a self-insured customer’s SPD or the specific QualChoice EOC, the SPD or EOC, as applicable, will prevail. State and federal mandates will be followed as they apply.
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Changes: QualChoice reserves the right to alter, amend, change or supplement benefit interpretations as needed.
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