$151,000 recovered from MIST therapy code correction (97597 → 97610) and $38,000 from add-on unit implementation (97598 units restored for qualifying encounters). Both streams are now captured on every eligible visit going forward.
The Wrong Code at Every Visit: How XMB Recovered $189,000 in Annual Wound Care Revenue
A wound care clinic had been performing MIST ultrasound therapy and billing it as standard selective debridement — collecting $52 per session for a procedure worth $397. On top of that, they were ignoring add-on units for every wound larger than 20 sq cm. Two errors. Compounding. Every single visit.
Client Profile
About the Practice
A dedicated outpatient wound care clinic treating a predominantly Medicare population with chronic, complex wounds — including diabetic foot ulcers, venous stasis ulcers, and pressure injuries. The clinic had invested in MIST ultrasound therapy equipment and was actively using it across the majority of visits. Their biller had general medical billing experience but no wound care specialty training, and the practice had never undergone a procedure-level billing audit.
The engagement began with XMB's free wound care practice assessment. During the initial claim review, XMB's certified coders flagged a pattern: CPT 97597 was appearing on nearly every encounter, yet the clinical notes consistently described low-frequency ultrasound application — a distinct technology from selective sharp or waterjet debridement. A secondary review confirmed that 97598 add-on units were absent from every multi-wound and large-wound session, regardless of documented wound dimensions.
XMB Wound Care Medical Billing Services
Full-service wound care RCM — debridement depth coding, MIST therapy billing, add-on unit accuracy, NPWT, skin substitutes, and OIG audit-ready documentation.
Revenue Snapshot — Before Audit
Per-session revenue vs. what should have been collected
Baseline Metrics
Audit Findings
Two Billing Failures — Compounding on Every Visit
XMB's procedure-level coding audit reviewed 60 days of submitted claims against clinical notes and operative documentation. Two distinct, high-impact errors were identified — both rooted in the same underlying gap: a biller who did not know what the clinical staff was actually doing.
The clinic had been performing MIST therapy — a non-contact, low-frequency ultrasound technology applied through a saline mist to stimulate wound healing — on the majority of its patient population. MIST therapy is a distinct and separately reimbursable procedure billed under CPT 97610, with a Medicare allowable of approximately $397 per session.
The biller was submitting CPT 97597 (selective debridement, first 20 sq cm) on every visit that involved wound treatment — not because the clinical record described sharp or waterjet debridement of devitalized tissue, but because 97597 was the code she recognized for "wound treatment." The clinical notes clearly described ultrasound device application, saline delivery, treatment duration, and wound dimensions — all hallmarks of MIST therapy, not selective debridement. Yet the wrong code was submitted on every session.
At a volume of approximately 68 MIST sessions per week, this single code substitution was costing the practice roughly $23,460 per week in uncaptured Medicare reimbursement. The error was not a case of upcoding or fraud risk — it was a legitimate, documented, higher-value procedure being systematically downgraded to a lower code by a biller who did not recognize the distinction.
In addition to the primary code error, XMB's audit found that the practice was billing only a single unit per encounter — regardless of how many wounds were treated or how large those wounds were. A review of wound measurement documentation revealed that a significant majority of patients presented with wounds exceeding 20 sq cm in total debrided surface area, and many patients had multiple wounds treated per visit.
CPT 97598 is the add-on code for selective debridement beyond the first 20 sq cm — billed once for each additional 20 sq cm increment. The biller was entirely unaware this add-on code existed. In 60 days of reviewed claims, CPT 97598 appeared zero times. Not once.
📋 Worked Example — Actual Patient Visit from Audit
Across the 60-day audit window, XMB identified 312 encounters with documented wound dimensions or multi-wound treatment that would have supported at least one 97598 add-on unit. The average unbilled add-on revenue per qualifying encounter was $62. Annualized, this failure alone represented approximately $38,000 in forfeited revenue — on top of the MIST therapy mismatch.
Revenue Leakage Breakdown
Where the $189,000 was being lost annually
By Failure Category
Per-Session Impact
XMB Intervention
Corrections Implemented — Code by Code, Visit by Visit
Following the audit, XMB corrected both coding failures prospectively and worked retroactively on open, within-filing-limit claims. The intervention addressed procedure identification, code accuracy, add-on unit calculation, documentation completeness, and ICD-10 specificity.
| Issue Identified | Category | XMB Correction Applied | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| MIST therapy (CPT 97610) submitted as selective debridement (CPT 97597) — $345 per session under-collected | CPT Code | XMB performed a procedure-to-code mapping review of all active visit note templates. MIST sessions now coded exclusively under CPT 97610. Billing staff trained to identify MIST device documentation (treatment duration, saline delivery, wound dimensions without tissue removal) as the trigger for 97610, not 97597. | ✓ Fixed |
| Retroactive correction of open claims within filing window — 97597 claims where notes confirm MIST therapy | CPT Code | All open 97597 claims within the timely filing window where visit notes confirmed MIST therapy were identified and resubmitted with CPT 97610. Supporting documentation attached and explanatory note included. Recovery initiated on all eligible encounters. | ✓ Fixed |
| CPT 97598 (add-on per additional 20 sq cm) never billed — zero units submitted in entire reviewed period | CPT / Units | Surface-area verification step implemented for every wound debridement claim. Visit notes reviewed for documented wound dimensions before coding. Total debrided area is calculated, and 97598 add-on units applied for every 20 sq cm beyond the first, per session, across all wounds treated. | ✓ Fixed |
| Multi-wound visits not identified — add-on units for second and third wounds consistently omitted | CPT / Units | Multi-wound visit checklist introduced to the claim preparation workflow. When a note documents two or more distinct wound sites treated in the same session, each wound's surface area is logged, totaled, and converted to primary + add-on unit counts before submission. | ✓ Fixed |
| MIST visit notes missing treatment duration and device documentation — medical necessity vulnerability | Documentation | XMB issued MIST-specific documentation requirements to treating providers: treatment duration in minutes, device used, wound dimensions (L × W), wound location with laterality, and clinical rationale for MIST. These elements are now reviewed on every MIST claim before submission. | ✓ Fixed |
| Wound measurement documentation inconsistent — some notes recorded dimensions descriptively rather than in cm | Documentation | Wound measurement documentation template introduced requiring L × W × D in centimeters at every visit. XMB's pre-submission review flags any note with non-numeric or absent measurements. Numerical surface area documentation is now a billing prerequisite for every debridement and MIST claim. | ✓ Fixed |
| ICD-10 codes non-specific (unspecified ulcer codes) on several claims — LCD non-compliance risk | Documentation | ICD-10 mapping review conducted against CMS 2026 codes. All wound claims now coded with site-specific, laterality-specific, and depth-specific ICD-10 codes. Diabetic ulcer claims sequenced with E11.621 as first-listed code per CMS requirements. Retired codes removed from the billing workflow. | ✓ Fixed |
Outcomes
Practice Performance — 60 Days Post-Intervention
Financial and operational metrics measured across the 60-day period following XMB's full implementation, compared to the equivalent pre-intervention period. All revenue figures represent actual collected Medicare reimbursement, not charges.
The $345-per-session gap between what was billed and what was owed is now closed. Every MIST therapy session is identified from the visit note, coded to 97610, and supported by complete procedural documentation before transmission.
312 encounters in the 60-day audit window had documented wound dimensions supporting at least one 97598 add-on unit — all previously billed at single-unit revenue. Every qualifying encounter is now coded with the correct unit count based on total documented surface area.
Additional Outcomes
What Else Changed in 60 Days
Beyond the $189K recovery, the engagement established clinical documentation and coding infrastructure the practice had never had.
99.99% Clean Claim Rate
All new MIST and debridement claims now pass procedure identification, surface area verification, and documentation review before transmission. First-pass acceptance rate at 99.99%.
48-Hour Denial Turnaround
Every denial is identified, worked, and resubmitted within 48 hours. Retroactive recovery was initiated simultaneously on all open MIST claims within the timely filing window.
LCD-Compliant Documentation
MIST documentation requirements, numerical wound measurements, and site-specific ICD-10 codes are now enforced on every claim. The practice's claim file is now defensible against ADR requests and OIG audits.
Complete Metrics — Before vs After
| Billing Metric | ⇥ Before XMB | ⇤ After XMB | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| MIST Therapy Code | 97597 (~$52) |
97610 (~$397) |
$345 additional revenue per session |
| Add-On Unit Billing (97598) | $0 — never submitted |
Applied on all qualifying encounters |
$38,000 annually restored |
| Multi-Wound Visit Coding | Single unit regardless of area |
Full surface area unit calculation |
Correct units on all multi-wound visits |
| MIST Documentation | Missing duration and device |
Duration, device, dimensions — enforced |
ADR-defensible documentation |
| ICD-10 Specificity | Non-specific / unspecified codes |
Site-specific, laterality-coded, depth-coded |
LCD compliance on every claim |
| Clean Claim Rate | Not measured (no scrubbing) |
99.99% |
Near-perfect first-pass acceptance |
| Denial Turnaround | 3–10 days (inconsistent) |
48 hours maximum |
Faster cash flow, no aged write-offs |
| Annualized Revenue Recovered | Baseline |
+$189,000 |
From two preventable, correctable errors |
Revenue Per Session — Before vs. After (MIST + Add-Ons)
Actual reimbursement collected per session type before and after XMB corrections
Recovery at a Glance
Revenue captured vs. forfeited per visit
Revenue Per MIST Session — 60-Day Recovery Trajectory
Per-session revenue improvement from audit through full implementation as corrections and retroactive resubmissions were processed
"We bought the MIST equipment, trained the staff, and were delivering the treatment on almost every patient — but we were billing for something completely different and collecting a fraction of what we were owed. Nobody caught it because our biller was doing what she knew: wound treatment equals 97597. She had no way of knowing that what we were doing had its own code that paid nearly eight times more. XMB found it in the first week."
Is Your Wound Care Practice Collecting What It Has Actually Earned?
MIST therapy miscoding and missing add-on units are two of the most common — and most invisible — revenue losses in wound care. XMB's free assessment audits your procedure-to-code accuracy and surface area calculations.
What This Case Reveals
The Wound Care Billing Knowledge Gap — and Why It Compounds
This case is not unusual. It is one of the most predictable failure modes in wound care billing — and it illustrates three principles that govern how revenue leaks in this specialty.
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1Procedure identification requires clinical knowledge, not just billing knowledgeA generalist biller who sees "wound treatment" in a note will reach for the code they recognize — 97597 — because it is the most common wound debridement code they have encountered. Identifying that a clinical note describes MIST therapy, and that it maps to 97610 at nearly eight times the reimbursement, requires knowing what MIST therapy is, what documentation it produces, and that it has a separate CPT code. Wound care billing expertise is a prerequisite, not a bonus.
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2Add-on codes are invisible to billers who don't know to look for themCPT 97598 does not appear in the claim unless someone deliberately calculates the total debrided surface area and applies it. There is no denial, no error message, and no payer rejection when an add-on code is simply omitted — the claim pays cleanly at the lower amount. This is why add-on omissions can persist indefinitely in a practice: nothing signals that revenue is being left on the table. The only way to catch it is a procedure-level coding audit by someone who knows the wound debridement code family.
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3Compounding errors suppress per-patient revenue without triggering denialsBoth of these errors share the same characteristic: they produce underpayment, not denial. The practice was getting paid — just at a fraction of the correct rate. No rejection report, no denial queue, no flagged claim. The practice could see its collections and assume they reflected normal reimbursement for wound care. Only a specialty-trained auditor comparing procedure documentation against CPT code assignments can reveal this type of systematic undercollection.
Read the Full XMB Wound Care Billing Guide
MIST therapy coding, debridement code selection by tissue removed, add-on unit accuracy, NPWT, skin substitutes, and ADR response support — all covered on our wound care billing service page.
Your Wound Care Practice Deserves Billing That Captures Every Dollar It Has Earned
MIST therapy miscoding, missing add-on units, non-specific ICD-10 codes — wound care has specialty-specific billing rules that generalist billers simply cannot be expected to know. XMB's certified wound care billing specialists catch what others miss.