CST Profile

A 57-year-old female with chronic right-sided sacroiliac joint pain for approximately 2 years, worsened by activity and interfering with sleep and daily function. Prior conservative treatments include physical therapy, home exercise, NSAIDs, acetaminophen, chiropractic care, and SI belt trial without sufficient relief. Physical exam shows multiple positive right SI joint provocative tests. Two diagnostic SI joint injections yielded approximately 82-88% pain relief. Therapeutic SI joint injection provided temporary improvement. Imaging (MRI lumbar spine and CT pelvis) shows degenerative changes of the right SI joint without fracture, infection, tumor, or alternative pathology. Assessment confirms chronic right SI joint dysfunction and failure of conservative care. Plan is to proceed with minimally invasive right SI joint fusion using transfixation device placement.

CST Score Guide

CST Score: 95/100 Ready

Likely passable for peer-review and billing support if the underlying facts are accurate.

This is a documentation match/readiness score against the source snippet and linked CPT/ICD/HCPCS criteria. It is not a payer approval guarantee.

CST Peer Review

The submitted documentation closely aligns with the source snippet for minimally invasive sacroiliac joint arthrodesis (CPT 27279 / HCPCS A59695). It includes a detailed history of chronic right-sided sacroiliac joint pain refractory to extensive conservative management, positive provocative physical exam maneuvers, diagnostic SI joint injections with greater than 75% pain relief, and imaging excluding alternative diagnoses. The assessment and plan support proceeding with minimally invasive SIJ fusion using a transfixation device, consistent with the source criteria. The documentation is comprehensive, medically necessary, and supports billing readiness with minimal gaps.

Supports

Chronic right-sided SI joint pain >6 weeks; extensive conservative treatment including physical therapy and injections; positive provocative SI joint tests (FABER, Gaenslen, compression, distraction); diagnostic SI joint injections with >75% pain relief; therapeutic SI joint injection with temporary relief; imaging excluding fracture, tumor, infection; assessment and plan consistent with minimally invasive SIJ fusion using transfixation device.

Gaps

No explicit documentation of exclusion of inflammatory arthropathy or detailed functional limitation scores; no mention of home exercise program engagement beyond physical therapy; pain scores before and after therapeutic injection not quantified; laterality clearly stated but bilateral involvement not discussed (not applicable here).

Risks

Potential denial if documentation lacks explicit exclusion of inflammatory arthropathy or if therapeutic injection pain relief is not quantified; incomplete functional limitation details may raise questions; absence of documented home exercise program engagement could be queried.

Objections

Payers may question adequacy of conservative care duration or completeness; may request more detailed functional impairment or pain score documentation post-therapeutic injection; possible scrutiny on imaging interpretation completeness regarding inflammatory conditions.

Suggestions

Include explicit documentation of home exercise program adherence; quantify pain relief from therapeutic SI joint injection; document functional limitation scores or impact on activities of daily living more precisely; explicitly state exclusion of inflammatory arthropathy or other alternative diagnoses in imaging report; consider adding post-procedure follow-up plans and expected outcomes for completeness.

Learning

Minimally invasive sacroiliac joint arthrodesis is indicated for patients with chronic SI joint pain unresponsive to conservative therapies, confirmed by diagnostic blocks showing significant pain relief and supported by positive physical exam findings and imaging excluding other causes. Documentation should include symptom duration, prior treatments, diagnostic and therapeutic injection responses, physical exam findings, imaging results, and a clear assessment and plan supporting fusion with transfixation device placement.

Handout

This document explains the importance of thorough documentation when planning minimally invasive sacroiliac joint fusion surgery. It highlights the need to show chronic pain despite conservative treatments, positive physical exam tests, diagnostic injections confirming the SI joint as the pain source, and imaging ruling out other causes. Clear documentation supports medical necessity and helps ensure appropriate insurance coverage for the procedure.