Summary & Overview
CPT 3330F: Clinical Performance Measure
CPT code 3330F is a CPT Category II entry used to record a clinical performance measure; the specific measure text was not provided. Category II codes support quality reporting and tracking of clinical processes and outcomes across care settings. These codes matter nationally because they standardize reporting, enable quality benchmarking, and inform pay-for-performance and value-based care initiatives.
This analysis covers major national payers: Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna Health, UnitedHealthcare, and Medicare. Readers will find an overview of the code’s purpose, typical sites of service (outpatient clinics, physician offices, hospital outpatient departments), and the role Category II codes play in reporting and quality programs. The publication summarizes available benchmarks and reporting use cases, outlines relevant policy and program update considerations for national payers, and provides clinical context for how performance measures integrate with care delivery.
Data not available in the input for the code’s specific measure text, common modifiers, associated taxonomies, ICD-10 mappings, related codes, and service line.
Billing Code Overview
CPT code 3330F represents a performance or measurement-related entry in the CPT Category II series. The description provided for this code is: No Summary found for this code. Based on the CPT Category II structure, the service type is a performance measure used for tracking clinical quality or outcomes. The typical site of service for CPT Category II entries is any clinical setting where quality measures are recorded, including outpatient clinics, physician offices, and hospital-based outpatient departments.
Data not available in the input.
Clinical & Coding Specifications
Clinical Context
A typical patient is an adult with advanced valvular heart disease, most commonly severe aortic stenosis, who presents with exertional dyspnea, syncope, or heart failure symptoms and is referred for transcatheter or surgical valve intervention. The clinical workflow begins with cardiology evaluation, risk stratification including echocardiography and coronary angiography, multidisciplinary heart team review, and informed consent. On the day of the procedure the patient undergoes preoperative checks, general anesthesia or monitored anesthesia care, intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography guidance as needed, and placement of the prosthetic valve via open surgical or transcatheter approach. Post-procedure care includes monitoring in a cardiac recovery unit, post-procedure imaging to confirm valve position and function, anticoagulation management if indicated, and discharge planning with outpatient follow-up for wound care, device surveillance, and optimization of heart failure therapies.
Coding Specifications
| Modifier | Description | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
26 | Professional component | Use when reporting only the physician interpretation portion of a diagnostic or imaging service associated with the procedure. |
50 | Bilateral procedure |