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CPT 75893 · Radiology · Diagnostic Imaging

Venous sampling by catheter

Venous blood sampling through catheter procedures show a potential cost difference of $5,303 between Medicare facility rates ($102) and hospital outpatient settings ($5,406), making bill verification essential.

By Kevin Nyk , Medical Billing Analyst · ·
Data from CMS files published FY 2024 CMS IPPS. Refreshed weekly.
About the analyst

Kevin Nyk analyzes hospital pricing data at BillRazor Research. He specializes in Medicare reimbursement patterns and chargemaster pricing across U.S. hospitals. Expertise: hospital pricing, Medicare rates, chargemaster analysis.

Medicare + CMS benchmark data
Publicly available pricing
Updated 2026-04-03
Rate comparison — Venous sampling by catheter
Non-facility$3Medicare facility$102Hospital outpatient$5.4K$5.4K difference between lowest and highest rate
$102
Medicare facility rate
$3
Non-facility rate

Code 75893 covers venous blood sampling through a catheter during radiological procedures, where blood is drawn from veins via an already-placed catheter for diagnostic testing. This procedure typically accompanies patients undergoing interventional radiology procedures who need blood samples collected during their imaging study. Billing requires documentation of the catheter insertion site and the medical necessity for venous sampling during the radiological intervention.

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Compare by care setting
The same procedure costs different amounts depending on where you receive care.
$5,406
Hospital Outpatient rate for Venous sampling by catheter
Medicare facility benchmark: $102

Common billing errors

Common radiology billing errors include incorrect bundling of imaging procedures, where facilities separately bill components that should be included in comprehensive codes. CT and MRI studies frequently show charges above the benchmark when contrast administration (codes 36000-36299) is billed separately despite being included in the primary imaging code. Duplicate billing occurs when both screening and diagnostic mammography codes are submitted for the same visit, or when bilateral imaging procedures are coded as two separate unilateral studies rather than using appropriate bilateral modifiers. Another frequent error involves confusion between similar imaging codes, such as billing high-resolution CT scans when standard chest CT was performed, creating potential differences of several hundred dollars. Patients should verify that contrast injections aren't separately itemized for procedures already including contrast, confirm bilateral studies use proper coding rather than duplicate unilateral charges, and ensure screening versus diagnostic imaging codes match the actual clinical indication documented in their medical records.

What to check on your bill

When reviewing your radiology bill, first verify the CPT codes match the actual procedures performed—common codes include 70450-70470 for CT scans, 72100-72170 for spine X-rays, and 73000-73700 for extremity imaging. Check that technical and professional components are billed correctly; you should see modifier -TC for the technical component (equipment/technologist) and -26 for professional component (radiologist interpretation), or no modifier if both are included. Confirm the anatomical site and laterality modifiers are accurate—modifier -RT for right side, -LT for left side, and -50 for bilateral procedures when applicable. Review facility fees separately from physician fees, as these appear as distinct line items. Compare your charges against Medicare fee schedules or regional benchmarks, as charges above the benchmark may indicate potential differences worth investigating with your insurance provider or facility billing department.

Regional rate comparison — Venous sampling by catheter
Top 5 lowest and highest localities by Medicare facility rate
National avg $102REST OF ILLINOIS, IL$118DETROIT, MI$124QUEENS, NY$126MIAMI, FL$155CHICAGO, IL$147NYC SUBURBS/LONG ISLAND, NY$140

Facility rate

$102

National Medicare benchmark

Non-facility rate

$3

Office setting benchmark

Data sources

3

23 data points

Key insights for CPT 75893

Facility vs office setting

$99 difference

Non-facility setting is less expensive for this procedure

What this procedure costs across different settings

The same procedure can cost very different amounts depending on where it's performed. These are the Medicare-allowed amounts — what hospitals actually charge can be 3-10x higher.

SettingMedicare ratevs lowest
Facility (physician office)$102+3307%
Non-facility (office)$3Lowest
Outpatient (APC)$5,406+180090%

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About this data

Rates shown are from the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, Hospital Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS), Ambulatory Surgery Center Payment System, Clinical Laboratory Fee Schedule, Durable Medical Equipment Fee Schedule, and CMS Inpatient Prospective Payment System (DRG weights). Regional adjustments use CMS Geographic Practice Cost Indices (GPCI). Hospital charges are from CMS Hospital Price Transparency machine-readable files. All data is publicly available under federal law (45 CFR Part 180).

This data is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or financial advice. Actual costs depend on insurance coverage, negotiated rates, and individual circumstances.

Related procedures

Rates shown are from the 2026 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule and CMS IPPS. BillRazor compares your bill against these data sources. See how it works →

Related pricing data

Data: Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, CMS Inpatient PPS (IPPS), Outpatient PPS (OPPS), ASC Payment System, Clinical Lab Fee Schedule (CLFS), National Average Drug Acquisition Cost (NADAC). FY 2024 data. All publicly available from CMS.

Methodology: Facility rate applies when the procedure is performed in a hospital or ASC. Non-facility rate applies in a physician office. GPCI adjustments reflect regional cost-of-living differences.

This information is for educational purposes only and is not medical, financial, or legal advice. Actual costs depend on your insurance and provider. We recommend verifying costs directly with your provider. Full methodology · Terms of use

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