Background: Adult acquired buried penis (ABP) is a heterogenous condition and surgical treatment typically includes several steps. Additionally, there is no consensus on which current procedural terminology (CPT) codes to utilize for these steps. Our objective is to characterize the variability in CPT codes reported for ABP surgeries. We hypothesize that the heterogeneous disease process combined with a lack of consensus on appropriate CPT codes will result in marked variability in CPT codes reported during surgery for ABP.
Methods: Data was collected from American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) between 2007-2020. We included adults undergoing surgery for ABP. All CPT codes were grouped into different anatomic categories: penile procedures, scrotal procedures, pannus-related procedures, urethral procedures, tissue transfers, and skin grafts. Codes not fitting these categories were labeled "Other".
Results: Our study included 146 patients. There were 413 total CPT codes reported with 82 unique codes in our cohort. The average number of codes per patient was 2.8, with a range from 1 to 9. There were many unique codes in each anatomic category: 18 different codes within penile procedures, 7 within pannus procedures, 8 within skin grafting, 4 within scrotal procedures, 7 within tissue transfers, and 19 within urethral. There was marked variability in individual code use with each code being reported anywhere from 1 to 58 times. Urologists were the primary surgeons in 69% (n=101).
Conclusions: We found marked variability in CPT codes reported during surgery for ABP. This suggests the need for our stakeholder organizations to support efforts that would allow consensus on which codes should be utilized for this increasingly recognized condition.
Keywords: Current procedural terminology (CPT); adipose tissue; penile diseases.
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