Summary & Overview
CPT 6015F: Unspecified Clinical Service
CPT code 6015F is reported without an accompanying description in the provided source. As a CPT code, it is part of the Current Procedural Terminology system used nationally to classify medical procedures and services. The absence of a summary limits direct interpretation of the clinical action or measure the code represents, but the code remains a discrete identifier that payers and providers can reference in claims and records.
Key payers relevant to national billing considerations include Aetna, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Cigna Health, UnitedHealthcare, and Medicare. Readers will find in this publication a concise overview of the code's current documentation status, what information is missing, and guidance on where to locate authoritative clinical and billing definitions (for example, CPT codebooks and payer-specific fee schedules). The report also outlines typical elements that would accompany a complete code entry — service description, site of service, applicable modifiers, associated taxonomies, and common ICD-10 diagnoses — and notes which of those elements are not available in the input data.
This summary serves as a factual briefing to inform coding, billing, and policy teams that further reference to CPT resources or payer guidance is required to establish clinical context and reimbursement treatment for 6015F.
Billing Code Overview
CPT code 6015F — No Summary found for this code
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Service type: Data not available in the input.
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Typical site of service: Data not available in the input.
CPT code 6015F is listed without a descriptive summary in the source information. The entry provides only the code identifier and lacks details about the clinical action, procedure, or measurement it represents. Data not available in the input for additional fields such as common modifiers, associated taxonomies, ICD-10 diagnoses, related codes, and service line.
Clinical & Coding Specifications
Clinical Context
A typical patient is an adult undergoing evaluation for breast disease who has had a screening or diagnostic mammogram showing a suspicious lesion or a palpable abnormality. The patient is referred to breast imaging for image-guided core needle biopsy of the lesion. Clinical workflow: the patient checks in to an outpatient radiology clinic or breast center, medical history and consent are obtained, local anesthesia is administered, ultrasound or stereotactic guidance is used to target the lesion, core tissue samples are obtained, hemostasis is achieved, and post-biopsy imaging or dressings are applied. The procedure commonly occurs in an outpatient radiology suite, ambulatory surgical center, or hospital outpatient department. Typical presenting indications include a suspicious mammographic mass, focal asymmetry, architectural distortion, or a clinically palpable breast mass requiring histologic diagnosis prior to treatment planning.
Coding Specifications
| Modifier | Description | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
26 | Professional component | Use when reporting only the physician interpretation component separate from technical component |
TC | Technical component | Use when reporting only the technical component (equipment, technologist) of the service |