Generic IV Chemotherapy — 18-drug billing & coding rollup

Cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide / mesna, 5-FU, methotrexate, cytarabine, vincristine, anthracyclines & more · CHOP / AC / ABVD / FOLFOX / BEAM regimens · Anchored on J9070 (cyclophosphamide)

A single coding reference for the long-tail generic IV chemotherapy agents that drive the workhorse oncology regimens but don't justify their own dedicated CareCost page. Covers cyclophosphamide J9070, ifosfamide J9208 + mesna J9209, 5-fluorouracil J9190, methotrexate IV J9250 / J9260, cytarabine J9100, leucovorin J0640, vincristine J9370, vinblastine J9360, the conventional anthracyclines (daunorubicin J9151, idarubicin J9211, epirubicin J9178, mitoxantrone J9293), dacarbazine J9130, mitomycin J9280, bleomycin J9040, and goserelin J9202. Most are commodity generics with low ASP, multi-dose vial JW/JZ exclusions, and NCCN-driven payer policy. Q2 2026 ASP live-bound per code.

ASP data:Q2 2026 (live, per code)
NCCN guidelines:verified May 2026
JW / JZ rule:CMS CR 12056 current
FDA labels:current 2026
Page reviewed:

Instant Answer — the 5 things you need to bill long-tail generic chemo

Anchor HCPCS
J9070
Cyclophosphamide, per 100 mg
Drugs covered
18
Long-tail generic IV chemo
Primary admin
96413
+96415 each addl hr (chemo IV)
CIVI pump (5-FU)
96416
Portable pump, NOT 96417
Top denial
JW on MDV
Multi-dose vial JW/JZ excluded
Scope
Long-tail generic IV chemotherapy agents that drive the most-cited oncology regimens (CHOP / R-CHOP, AC / AC-T, ABVD, BEACOPP, BEAM, FOLFOX / FOLFIRI / FOLFIRINOX backbone components, 7+3, HiDAC consolidation, EC, ICE, DHAP, Nigro) but do not warrant their own dedicated CareCost page. Drugs with their own pages (carboplatin, cisplatin, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, paclitaxel, Abraxane, Doxil, doxorubicin conventional, gemcitabine, pemetrexed, bendamustine / Bendeka, Onivyde) are cross-linked below.
Anchor drug
Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan)J9070 "Cyclophosphamide injection, 100 mg" Permanent — the alkylating-agent backbone in AC / EC (breast), CHOP / R-CHOP (NHL), high-dose conditioning regimens (BEAM, BU-CY), and many lupus / vasculitis off-label uses. CMS ASP data for J9070 is not currently published (commodity generic with multiple manufacturers and stable, low pricing) — coders typically invoice at acquisition cost + handling per MAC.
Class families on this page
Alkylating agents (cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, dacarbazine); uroprotectant (mesna); conventional anthracyclines (daunorubicin, idarubicin, epirubicin, mitoxantrone); antimetabolites (5-FU, methotrexate IV, cytarabine); folate rescue / 5-FU modulator (leucovorin); vinca alkaloids (vinblastine, vincristine); LHRH agonist (goserelin); antitumor antibiotics (mitomycin, bleomycin)
Primary admin code
96413 (chemotherapy IV infusion, up to 1 hr) + 96415 (each additional hour). 96409 for IV push chemo (vincristine, leucovorin push). 96416 for portable / implantable pump (5-FU CIVI 46-hr). 96402 for SC / IM hormonal anti-neoplastic (goserelin).
Modifier rule
JW / JZ excluded for multi-dose vial presentations per CMS CR 12056 — affects 5-FU MDV, methotrexate MDV, bleomycin, mitomycin MDV. SDV presentations of cyclophosphamide / ifosfamide / cytarabine / leucovorin require JZ (no waste) or JW + separate waste line. Verify dispensed NDC presentation before locking modifier.
PA gating
NCCN Category 1 / 2A regimens auto-approve at most major payers; Category 2B requires regimen citation; off-label requires biomarker / molecular justification. Cumulative-dose tracking for anthracyclines (LV ejection-fraction monitoring) and bleomycin (pulmonary).
Top denial reasons
(1) JW / JZ applied to multi-dose vial line (2) 96416 vs 96417 confusion on CIVI 5-FU (3) Missing mesna on ifosfamide claim (4) Wrong J-code between J9250 vs J9260 methotrexate (5) Leucovorin J0640 vs levoleucovorin J0641 mix-up (6) NCCN-non-compliant regimen without documented rationale
⚠️
The single biggest denial driver in this category: applying JW or JZ to a multi-dose vial line. 5-FU 50 mg/mL multi-dose vials, methotrexate sodium 25 mg/mL multi-dose vials, bleomycin 15-unit MDVs, and mitomycin certain presentations are MDV — CMS CR 12056 excludes them from both JW and JZ. Verify the dispensed NDC presentation before locking the modifier. See modifiers for the full SDV-vs-MDV matrix.
ℹ️
This is a multi-drug rollup, not a per-drug deep dive. Each drug below has its own HCPCS, ASP, and label-driven dosing rules. Drugs with their own dedicated CareCost pages are cross-linked in the next section: carboplatin, cisplatin, oxaliplatin, irinotecan, paclitaxel, Abraxane, doxorubicin, Doxil, gemcitabine, pemetrexed, Bendeka, Onivyde. Always verify the current quarter ASP and the dispensed NDC before posting the claim.
Phase 1 Identify what you're billing Confirm the regimen, the per-drug J-code, and whether the dispensed presentation is SDV or MDV.

Category overview — long-tail generic IV chemo in 2026 Reviewed May 2026

Why a rollup: shared admin code infrastructure, shared NCCN PA logic, but per-drug HCPCS and per-drug NDC-driven modifier rules.

The long-tail generic IV chemotherapy market is the quiet workhorse of medical-oncology billing. Cyclophosphamide (the "C" in CHOP / R-CHOP), 5-fluorouracil (the spine of every FOLFOX / FOLFIRI infusion), cytarabine and daunorubicin or idarubicin (the 7+3 AML induction), doxorubicin / cyclophosphamide (AC for breast), and the ABVD components for Hodgkin lymphoma are all old, off-patent, low-ASP commodities. They do not generate the per-page SEO volume of a Keytruda or an Enhertu, but they ride on every oncology claim and they share a characteristic billing pattern: low per-mg ASP, multi-dose vial presentations that scramble the JW / JZ modifier story, NCCN-driven payer policy with auto-approval for Category 1 / 2A regimens, foundation-only patient assistance (no manufacturer copay cards because the drugs are commodity generics), and high-volume claim throughput where small per-line errors compound into material AR.

The regimen landscape is what justifies grouping these drugs on one page. Hematologic malignancies depend on cyclophosphamide (CHOP, R-CHOP, hyper-CVAD, BEAM conditioning), cytarabine (7+3, HiDAC consolidation, R-DHAP / R-ICE salvage), conventional anthracyclines (daunorubicin or idarubicin in 7+3, mitoxantrone in relapsed AML or BV-AVD-historical), bleomycin (the "B" in ABVD), vincristine (CHOP, hyper-CVAD, R-CHOP-21), and methotrexate (HD-MTX for CNS lymphoma, intrathecal protocols). Solid tumors depend on 5-fluorouracil (the colon / rectal / pancreatic / gastric / head-and-neck backbone, including the 46-hour CIVI in FOLFOX / FOLFIRI / FOLFIRINOX), epirubicin (EC for breast in some pathways), and the older alkylators (dacarbazine in metastatic melanoma historical, ifosfamide + mesna in sarcoma and germ-cell, mitomycin in Nigro for anal squamous-cell). Hormone-sensitive malignancies use goserelin (prostate ADT, breast hormone deprivation, fertility preservation).

For revenue cycle, the failure modes cluster in four places. First, JW / JZ modifier errors on multi-dose vial lines (5-FU MDV, methotrexate MDV, bleomycin, certain mitomycin presentations) — the JW / JZ exclusion is one of the highest-volume audit findings on chemo claims. Second, 96416 vs 96417 confusion on portable-pump 5-FU CIVI — 96416 is the correct code for the pump setup, 96417 is the same-day additional-drug add-on for sequential drugs and is a frequent miscode. Third, missing the mesna line on ifosfamide claims — mesna is the FDA-required uroprotectant and bills on a separate line; coders who forget it leave revenue on the table and produce an incomplete claim record. Fourth, NCCN-compliance documentation — major payers now auto-approve Category 1 / 2A regimens with the regimen citation, but Category 2B and off-label use need biomarker / molecular / case-by-case documentation. This page maps each of those touchpoints.

Cross-links to dedicated drug pages — not on this rollup Reviewed May 2026

If you came here looking for one of these, you want the dedicated page. We cross-link to avoid duplicating coverage.

IV chemotherapy agents with their own dedicated CareCost pages; this rollup does NOT cover them.
DrugHCPCSClassDedicated page
Carboplatin (Paraplatin)J9045Platinum/drugs/carboplatin
Cisplatin (Platinol)J9060Platinum/drugs/cisplatin
Oxaliplatin (Eloxatin)J9263Platinum/drugs/oxaliplatin
Irinotecan (Camptosar)J9206Topoisomerase I/drugs/irinotecan
Onivyde (irinotecan liposome)J9205Topoisomerase I (liposomal)/drugs/onivyde
Paclitaxel (Taxol)J9267Taxane/drugs/paclitaxel
Abraxane (nab-paclitaxel)J9264Taxane (albumin-bound)/drugs/abraxane
Doxorubicin (Adriamycin) — conventionalJ9000Anthracycline/drugs/doxorubicin
Doxil / Lipodox (liposomal doxorubicin)Q2050Anthracycline (liposomal)/drugs/doxil
Gemcitabine (Gemzar)J9201Antimetabolite (pyrimidine)/drugs/gemcitabine
Pemetrexed (Alimta)J9305Antimetabolite (multi-target antifolate)/drugs/pemetrexed
Bendeka (bendamustine)J9034Alkylating/drugs/bendeka
What IS on this rollup: cyclophosphamide (J9070), ifosfamide (J9208), mesna (J9209), dacarbazine (J9130), daunorubicin (J9151), idarubicin (J9211), epirubicin (J9178), mitoxantrone (J9293), 5-fluorouracil (J9190), methotrexate IV (J9250 + J9260), cytarabine (J9100), leucovorin (J0640), vinblastine (J9360), vincristine (J9370), goserelin (J9202), mitomycin (J9280), and bleomycin (J9040). Vincristine is on this rollup despite being broadly cited — the volume does not justify a standalone page.

Per-drug regimen & dosing matrix Reviewed May 2026

Standard dosing per the most-cited regimen for each agent. Verify against NCCN, institutional protocol, and the FDA label for the specific indication.

Per-drug regimen and dosing matrix for the 18 generic IV chemo agents on this rollup.
Drug (HCPCS)Most-cited regimenStandard doseRoute & duration
Cyclophosphamide (J9070)AC / AC-T (breast); CHOP / R-CHOP (NHL); BEAM conditioning600 mg/m² (AC); 750 mg/m² (CHOP); 200 mg/kg total (BEAM)IV infusion 30–60 min (96413 + 96415)
Ifosfamide (J9208)VIP (germ-cell); ICE (lymphoma); MAID (sarcoma)1.2–2.0 g/m²/day × 3–5 daysIV infusion 1–2 hr per dose (96413 + 96415)
Mesna (J9209)Uroprotectant with ifosfamide / HD-cyclophosphamide60% of ifosfamide dose, split 3 doses (0 / +4h / +8h)IV push or short infusion (96409 or 96413)
Dacarbazine (J9130)ABVD (Hodgkin); historical melanoma375 mg/m² (ABVD); 250 mg/m²/day × 5 (melanoma)IV infusion 15–30 min (96413)
Daunorubicin (J9151)7+3 AML induction60–90 mg/m²/day × 3 daysIV push or short infusion (96409 / 96413)
Idarubicin (J9211)7+3 AML induction (alternative to daunorubicin)12 mg/m²/day × 3 daysIV push 10–15 min (96409)
Epirubicin (J9178)EC (breast); FEC (breast historical)90–100 mg/m² (EC); 75 mg/m² (FEC)IV push 3–5 min (96409)
Mitoxantrone (J9293)AML reinduction; MS (historical); prostate (historical)10–12 mg/m²/day × 2–3 days (AML)IV infusion 5–15 min (96413)
5-Fluorouracil (J9190)FOLFOX / FOLFIRI / FOLFIRINOX (CIVI); 5-FU + LV bolus400 mg/m² bolus + 2400 mg/m² over 46 hr (CIVI)Bolus IV push (96409) + CIVI portable pump (96416)
Methotrexate IV low-dose (J9250)Various; intrathecal protocols (separate route code)5–15 mg/m² typical low-dose IVIV push or short infusion (96409 / 96413)
Methotrexate IV high-dose (J9260)HD-MTX (CNS lymphoma, ALL CNS prophylaxis, osteosarcoma)3–12 g/m² over 4–24 hr with leucovorin rescueIV infusion 4–24 hr (96413 + 96415 multiple)
Cytarabine (J9100)7+3 AML induction (SD); HiDAC consolidation100–200 mg/m²/day CIVI × 7 (SD); 1–3 g/m² q12h × 6–12 doses (HiDAC)SD: CIVI 24 hr (96413+96415); HiDAC: 3-hr infusion (96413+96415)
Leucovorin (J0640)FOLFOX / FOLFIRI 5-FU modulator; HD-MTX rescue400 mg/m² (FOLFOX); 15 mg q6h × 8–12 doses (MTX rescue)IV push (96409) or short infusion (96413)
Vinblastine (J9360)ABVD (Hodgkin); VBM (Hodgkin alternative); historical other6 mg/m² (ABVD)IV push 1–2 min (96409)
Vincristine (J9370)CHOP / R-CHOP; hyper-CVAD; ALL maintenance1.4 mg/m² (capped at 2 mg total)IV push or minibag (96409 or 96413)
Goserelin (J9202)Prostate ADT; breast hormone deprivation; fertility preservation3.6 mg q28d or 10.8 mg q12wk depotSC depot implant (96402 chemo SC hormonal)
Mitomycin (J9280)Nigro (anal SCC); intravesical bladder; gastric / cervical historical10–15 mg/m² (systemic); 20–40 mg (intravesical)IV push 5–10 min (96409) or intravesical (51720)
Bleomycin (J9040)ABVD (Hodgkin); BEP (testicular germ-cell)10 units/m² (ABVD); 30 units flat (BEP)IV push or short infusion (96409 / 96413)
Methotrexate J9250 vs J9260: J9250 is "methotrexate sodium, 5 mg" (per 5 mg billing unit); J9260 is "methotrexate sodium, 50 mg" (per 50 mg billing unit). The CMS payment files report on the 50 mg unit (J9260) for current quarters; the 5 mg J9250 is less commonly published. Use the J-code that matches your dispensed NDC's unit basis. Some MACs prefer J9260 with units scaling. Verify per-MAC current preferred code mapping.

NDC & manufacturer reference Reviewed May 2026

Representative NDCs for the most-billed presentations. These are commodity generics with many manufacturers — the table is illustrative; verify the dispensed NDC per claim.

Representative NDC and manufacturer reference for the 18 generic IV chemo agents on this rollup.
DrugRepresentative presentationRepresentative NDCManufacturers
Cyclophosphamide500 mg / 1 g / 2 g lyophilized vials; 200 mg/mL solution0143-9136 (Hikma 500 mg); 0143-9137 (1 g)Baxter (originator), Hospira/Pfizer, Sandoz, Teva, Accord, Mylan, Hikma
Ifosfamide (Ifex)1 g / 3 g vials0143-9226 (Hikma 1 g); 0143-9227 (3 g)Baxter (originator), Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Teva
Mesna (Mesnex)1 g / 10 mL multi-dose vial (100 mg/mL)0703-4641 (Teva); 0143-9304 (Hikma)Baxter (originator), Hospira, Hikma, Teva
Dacarbazine (DTIC)100 mg / 200 mg vials0143-9220 (Hikma 200 mg)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Teva, Accord
Daunorubicin20 mg / 5 mg/mL solution vials0143-9268 (Hikma); 16729-0258 (Accord)Hospira/Pfizer (Cerubidine), Hikma, Accord
Idarubicin (Idamycin PFS)5 mg / 10 mg / 20 mg solution vials0703-4156 (Teva); 0143-9272 (Hikma)Pfizer (originator), Hikma, Teva, Sandoz
Epirubicin (Ellence)50 mg / 200 mg solution vials0143-9229 (Hikma 50 mg)Pfizer (Ellence), Sandoz, Hikma, Accord
Mitoxantrone20 mg / 25 mg / 30 mg solution vials0143-9285 (Hikma 20 mg)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Sandoz, Teva
5-Fluorouracil500 mg / 1 g / 2.5 g / 5 g multi-dose vials (50 mg/mL); also SDV0143-9145 (Hikma 5 g MDV); 63323-0117 (Fresenius Kabi)Fresenius Kabi, Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord, Teva
Methotrexate sodium50 mg / 100 mg / 250 mg / 1 g vials; some multi-dose 25 mg/mL0143-9180 (Hikma); 0517-0901 (American Regent MDV)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord, Mylan, American Regent
Cytarabine100 mg / 500 mg / 1 g / 2 g vials0143-9131 (Hikma 1 g); 16729-0107 (Accord)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord, Sandoz, Teva
Leucovorin calcium50 mg / 100 mg / 200 mg / 350 mg / 500 mg vials0143-9167 (Hikma 200 mg)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Sandoz, Teva, Accord
Vinblastine10 mg lyophilized vial; 1 mg/mL solution0143-9352 (Hikma); 16729-0123 (Accord)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord
Vincristine1 mg / 2 mg / 5 mg solution vials (1 mg/mL)0143-9355 (Hikma); 16729-0122 (Accord)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord, Sandoz
Goserelin (Zoladex)3.6 mg or 10.8 mg pre-filled SC implant0310-0960 (TerSera 3.6 mg); 0310-0961 (10.8 mg)TerSera Therapeutics (Zoladex)
Mitomycin5 mg / 20 mg / 40 mg vials0143-9278 (Hikma 20 mg); 16729-0114 (Accord)Hikma, Accord, Teva, Hospira/Pfizer
Bleomycin sulfate15 unit / 30 unit multi-dose vials0143-9143 (Hikma 15U MDV); 16729-0124 (Accord)Hospira/Pfizer, Hikma, Accord, Teva
Phase 2 Code the claim CPT admin codes, JW / JZ modifiers (with the MDV exclusion), ICD-10 by regimen, and place of service.

Administration codes — 96413, 96415, 96416 vs 96417, 96409, 96402 Reviewed May 2026

The chemo administration ladder; the 46-hour CIVI 5-FU pump rule; and the goserelin SC hormonal exception.

Chemotherapy administration CPT codes used across the 18 drugs on this rollup.
CPTWhat it coversWhen to use itCommon pitfall
96413Chemotherapy IV infusion, up to 1 hour, single or initial substanceMost short / intermediate IV chemo infusions (cyclophosphamide, dacarbazine, mitoxantrone, methotrexate, cytarabine SD or HiDAC, vincristine minibag, etc.)Billing 96365 (non-chemo IV infusion) for chemo — downcoded
96415Chemotherapy IV infusion, each additional hourAdd-on for any 96413 infusion lasting beyond 1 hour (HD-MTX 4–24 hr, HiDAC 3 hr, etc.). Reports per hour beyond the first.Under-coding 96415 units on long infusions
96416Chemotherapy IV infusion, requiring use of portable or implantable pump, initiationThe CIVI 5-FU 46-hour pump in FOLFOX / FOLFIRI / FOLFIRINOX. Reported once per encounter for the pump initiation; pump removal is part of the global service.Billing 96417 instead — top error pattern
96417Chemotherapy IV infusion, each additional sequential infusion (different substance/drug), up to 1 hourAdd-on for sequential different chemo drugs on the same day. NOT for the same drug continuing on a pump.Confusing 96417 with 96416 — check the descriptor carefully
96409Chemotherapy IV push, single or initial substanceTrue IV push chemo: vincristine (typical), vinblastine, daunorubicin, idarubicin, epirubicin, mitomycin, leucovorin push, mesna push.Billing 96374 (non-chemo IV push) for chemo — downcoded
96411Chemotherapy IV push, each additional substanceAdd-on for additional IV-push chemo drugs on the same day.Often missed when multiple push agents are given
96402Chemotherapy administration, subcutaneous or intramuscular; hormonal anti-neoplasticGoserelin SC depot implant; lupron IM depot (separate page).Billing 96401 (non-hormonal SC chemo) for goserelin — wrong code class
96401Chemotherapy administration, subcutaneous or intramuscular; non-hormonalNon-hormonal SC / IM chemo (rare on this rollup — SC bortezomib on dedicated Velcade page; SC methotrexate maintenance ALL)Used wrong when the drug is hormonal (use 96402 instead)
51720Bladder instillation of anticarcinogenic agentIntravesical mitomycin (and BCG); single procedure code for the instillation episode.Billing 96413 for an intravesical instillation — wrong route entirely

The 46-hour CIVI 5-FU pump — mapped carefully

Correct mapping for FOLFOX / FOLFIRI day-1 administration:
  • 96409 — bolus 5-FU 400 mg/m² IV push (initial substance, push)
  • 96411 — leucovorin push (additional substance, push) or use the leucovorin infusion code if given as infusion (paired with 96413 logic)
  • 96413 — oxaliplatin (in FOLFOX) or irinotecan (in FOLFIRI) 2-hr infusion as the initial infused substance
  • 96415 — each additional hour of the 2-hr infusion above
  • 96416the 46-hour CIVI 5-FU pump initiation, reported ONCE for the encounter
Some institutions also code the pump return / removal visit; per CMS, the pump removal is included in the global 96416 service and is not separately reported.

Modifiers — JW / JZ with the multi-dose vial exclusion Reviewed May 2026

CMS CR 12056 is the source of truth. SDV / single-use packaging only.

Per CMS Change Request 12056 (JZ mandatory effective July 1, 2023), the JW (drug discarded) and JZ (no discarded amount) modifiers apply only to single-dose containers (SDV) and single-use packaging. Multi-dose vial (MDV) presentations are excluded because the leftover drug is preserved for subsequent doses — nothing is discarded at the patient level. Several agents on this rollup have common MDV presentations and require the modifier-exclusion logic:

JW / JZ modifier matrix for the 18 generic IV chemo agents.
DrugCommon presentationJW / JZ applies?Notes
CyclophosphamideSDV lyophilized vials (500 mg / 1 g / 2 g)Yes — JZ if fully used; JW + waste line if discardedSingle-dose presentation; standard JW / JZ rules apply
IfosfamideSDV (1 g / 3 g)YesSDV; standard rules
MesnaMDV 1 g / 10 mL (100 mg/mL)No — MDV excludedMesnex MDV is the most common presentation; do NOT append JW / JZ
DacarbazineSDV (100 mg / 200 mg)YesSDV; standard rules
Daunorubicin / IdarubicinSDV solutionYesSDV; standard rules
EpirubicinSDV solutionYesSDV; standard rules
MitoxantroneSDV solutionYesSDV; standard rules
5-FluorouracilMostly MDV (50 mg/mL MDV in 500 mg / 1 g / 2.5 g / 5 g; some SDV presentations exist)Depends on NDC — MDV: no; SDV: yesVerify dispensed NDC. The most common acquisition is MDV — JW / JZ excluded
Methotrexate IVSDV + some MDV 25 mg/mL preservative-containing presentationsDepends on NDCHD-MTX uses preservative-free SDV only; intrathecal MUST be preservative-free
CytarabineSDV solution + lyophilized vialsYes (most presentations)Intrathecal cytarabine is a separate product (DepoCyt / J9098, not on this rollup)
LeucovorinSDV lyophilized + solution vialsYesSDV; standard rules
Vinblastine / VincristineSDV solution (vincristine 1 mg/mL)YesSDV; standard rules. Vincristine is fatal-if-intrathecal — route documentation critical
GoserelinPre-filled SC implant device (single-use)Yes — single-use; JZ if administeredPre-filled syringe / implant; entirely consumed at administration
MitomycinSDV vials (most); some MDV presentations exist historicallyYes (most current presentations)Verify the dispensed NDC
Bleomycin sulfateMDV 15 unit / 30 unit vialsNo — MDV excludedStandard presentation is MDV; do NOT append JW / JZ
The single highest-volume modifier-error pattern on chemo claims is appending JW or JZ to a multi-dose vial line. Auditors look for this. The MDV exclusion is in the CR 12056 plain text. If the dispensed NDC is MDV (mesna, bleomycin always; 5-FU and methotrexate sodium often), the line carries the J-code with units and no JW / JZ modifier.

Other modifiers seen on chemo claims

  • 59 / X{E,S,P,U} — distinct procedural service; used when admin code pairs would otherwise be bundled (e.g., 96413 with 96365 on the same day for a non-chemo hydration).
  • 25 — significant separately identifiable E/M on the same day as the chemo administration; applied to the office visit, not the drug or admin line.
  • SY / TH / GA — payer-specific modifiers; verify per-payer LCD / commercial policy.
  • GA — ABN on file (Medicare); occasionally used on off-label or non-NCCN-compliant chemo lines as a defensive measure.

ICD-10 anchors by regimen / cancer Reviewed May 2026

Every chemo line needs Z51.11 (encounter for antineoplastic chemo) plus the malignancy code.

ICD-10 anchors by regimen for the 18 generic IV chemo agents on this rollup.
RegimenDrugs on this rollupICD-10 anchorsCommon comorbidity / supporting codes
CHOP / R-CHOPCyclophosphamide, vincristine (+ doxorubicin separate page)C83.3x DLBCL; C82.x FL; C85.x other NHL; C91.4 BurkittZ51.11; R59.0–.9 lymphadenopathy; D70 neutropenia post-cycle
AC / AC-T (breast)Cyclophosphamide (+ doxorubicin separate page)C50.0–.9 breast cancer (laterality and quadrant); C77.3 axillary node metsZ51.11; Z17.0 ER+ / Z17.1 ER−; HER2 status
EC (breast historical / European)Epirubicin (+ cyclophosphamide)C50.0–.9Z51.11; biomarker status
ABVD (Hodgkin)Bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine (+ doxorubicin separate page)C81.0–.9 Hodgkin lymphoma (subtype + stage)Z51.11; cumulative bleomycin dose tracked
BEACOPP / escalated BEACOPPBleomycin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, dacarbazine (+ etoposide + doxorubicin + procarbazine + prednisone)C81.x advanced-stage HodgkinZ51.11; granulocyte support docs (G-CSF)
BEAM conditioning (auto-HSCT)Cyclophosphamide (some variants); cytarabine (+ carmustine + etoposide + melphalan)C81.x / C83.x / C85.x relapsed lymphoma; C92.x AML conditioningZ51.11; Z94.84 stem-cell transplant status
7+3 AML inductionCytarabine + daunorubicin OR idarubicinC92.0 AML without remission; C92.01 in remission; C92.02 in relapseZ51.11; D72.1 eosinophilia; D69.6 thrombocytopenia
HiDAC consolidation (AML)Cytarabine high-doseC92.0 AML in remission (C92.01)Z51.11; cerebellar-toxicity monitoring
FOLFOX / FOLFIRI / FOLFIRINOX5-FU + leucovorin (+ oxaliplatin / irinotecan separate pages)C18.0–.9 colon; C19 rectosigmoid; C20 rectum; C25.x pancreasZ51.11; biomarker (KRAS, NRAS, BRAF, MSI); Z85.038 personal hx
R-ICE / DHAP / GVD (lymphoma salvage)Ifosfamide + mesna; cytarabine (DHAP); etoposide separateC83.x / C85.x relapsed lymphomaZ51.11; auto-HSCT planning
BEP (testicular germ-cell)Bleomycin (+ etoposide + cisplatin separate pages)C62.x testicular germ-cell tumorZ51.11; cumulative bleomycin dose tracked
VAC / VIE (sarcoma)Vincristine, cyclophosphamide, ifosfamideC49.x soft-tissue sarcoma; C40.x / C41.x bone sarcomaZ51.11
Nigro regimen (anal SCC)Mitomycin + 5-FU + concurrent radiationC21.0–.8 anal canal SCCZ51.11; Z51.0 radiotherapy
HD-MTX (CNS / osteosarcoma / ALL CNS)Methotrexate (J9260 typically) + leucovorin rescueC71.x brain / CNS; C40.x osteosarcoma; C91.0 ALLZ51.11; renal-function tracking
Intravesical bladderMitomycinC67.0–.9 bladder cancer (non-muscle-invasive)Z51.11; Z85.51 personal hx bladder Ca
Prostate ADT / breast hormone deprivationGoserelinC61 prostate; C50.x breast (premenopausal)Z51.11; PSA / hormone-receptor status

Every chemo administration line should also pair with Z51.11 (encounter for antineoplastic chemotherapy) as either primary or secondary diagnosis. Documentation should support the cancer ICD-10 with pathology / staging / biomarker as appropriate. NCCN-compliant regimens auto-approve at most major commercial payers; non-NCCN-compliant or Category 2B regimens need additional documentation in the chart and the PA submission.

Site of care — HOPD vs freestanding vs oncology office vs home Reviewed May 2026

Most generic IV chemo is given in HOPD (POS 22), freestanding infusion (POS 49), or oncology office (POS 11). The 46-hour CIVI 5-FU pump goes home with the patient.

  • HOPD (POS 22) — hospital outpatient infusion suite; most-common setting for in-suite chemo (96413 + 96415 + 96416 / 96417 ladder). OPPS-paid; ASP+6% drug payment.
  • Freestanding ambulatory infusion (POS 49) — same coding structure; PFS-paid; the high-volume site for FOLFOX / FOLFIRI in community oncology.
  • Oncology office (POS 11) — physician office buy-and-bill; same admin codes; sequestration cuts (currently 1% effective Part B cut) apply on the drug payment.
  • Home (POS 12) — for the 46-hour CIVI 5-FU pump after initiation in suite, the patient wears the pump home. The pump removal at return visit is bundled into the global 96416 service per CMS.
  • Inpatient (POS 21) — 7+3 AML induction is typically inpatient; the chemo cost is bundled into the DRG payment, not separately billed. Daunorubicin / idarubicin / cytarabine on inpatient claims do NOT carry separate J-code reimbursement.
  • SNF (POS 31 / 32) — rare for buy-and-bill chemo; if administered in an SNF Part A stay, the chemo is bundled in the SNF PPS rate. Outside Part A consolidated billing, drug J-code may be separately payable.

HOPD vs freestanding payment differential

For commodity generic chemo with low per-mg ASP, the OPPS (HOPD) vs PFS (freestanding) drug payment differential is largely the admin-code packaging logic, not the drug. Both pay drug at ASP+6% (minus sequestration). The admin code packaging in OPPS is generally separately payable at OPPS-specific rates; PFS pays at PFS facility / non-facility rates. For high-volume community oncology, freestanding AIC is typically the lowest-cost site for the payer and the highest-margin site for the practice; HOPD adds facility-fee uplift but is increasingly under site-neutral payment pressure.

Claim form fields — CMS-1500 example Reviewed May 2026

Example for a single-day FOLFOX cycle (5-FU bolus + leucovorin push + oxaliplatin infusion + 46-hr 5-FU CIVI pump).

CMS-1500 line-by-line example for a FOLFOX day-1 chemotherapy administration.
LineCPT / HCPCSUnitsModifierICD pointerNotes
1964091A (C18.x + Z51.11)5-FU bolus IV push (initial substance, push)
2964111ALeucovorin push (additional substance, push)
3964131AOxaliplatin infusion (initial infusion drug)
4964151AEach additional hour of oxaliplatin infusion (2-hr total)
5964161ACIVI 5-FU 46-hr pump initiation (reported ONCE)
6J9190 (5-FU)per 500 mg unitsNo JW/JZ if MDVATotal mg delivered / 500 = units; verify dispensed NDC SDV vs MDV
7J0640 (leucovorin)per 50 mg unitsJZ (SDV)AStandard SDV
8J9263 (oxaliplatin — dedicated page)per 0.5 mg unitsJZASee oxaliplatin page

Place of service: 22 (HOPD), 49 (freestanding AIC), or 11 (office). Rendering provider NPI / billing practitioner NPI on each line. ICD-10 in Block 21 with the cancer code (C18.x) and Z51.11 referenced via the diagnosis pointer in Block 24E.

Phase 3 Get paid NCCN-driven payer policy, Medicare ASP reimbursement, and foundation-only patient assistance.

Payer policies — NCCN compliance is the unifying gate Reviewed May 2026

UHC, Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, and Humana auto-approve NCCN Category 1 / 2A regimens. Category 2B and off-label need biomarker / molecular / case rationale.

Major payer policy summary for NCCN-driven chemotherapy regimen approval.
PayerNCCN reliancePA thresholdCommon documentation
UnitedHealthcare (UHC)Strong; OncoHealth / Optum specialty managementPA via OncoHealth portal for most chemo claimsPathology, stage, biomarker, regimen citation (NCCN ID), prior-line therapy summary
AetnaStrong; uses eviCore / NIAPA via eviCore for most outpatient infusion chemoSame documentation set; NCCN regimen ID acceptable for Cat 1 / 2A
BCBS plansPlan-dependent; many use AIM / Evolent specialty managementPA varies by plan; check the specific BCBS LCD / commercial policyDocumentation aligned with the specific plan's policy; AIM-managed plans use the AIM oncology PathPoint
CignaStrong; uses eviCore for oncologyPA via eviCore for most chemoPathology, biomarker, NCCN regimen citation, prior-line summary
HumanaStrong; uses NIA / CoherePA via NIA / Cohere oncology platformSame documentation set
Medicare FFSNCD / LCD; no upfront PA for most chemo (post-pay audit possible)None upfront; provider attestation to NCCN / off-label compendia for off-label useOff-label use must be supported by NCCN, AHFS-DI, Micromedex, or DRUGDEX compendia

NCCN Category levels — what they mean for PA

  • Category 1 — high-level evidence + uniform NCCN consensus. Auto-approves at most major payers.
  • Category 2A — lower-level evidence but uniform consensus. Auto-approves at most major payers.
  • Category 2B — lower-level evidence with some consensus disagreement. Often requires additional documentation; biomarker / molecular / case-by-case support strengthens the PA.
  • Category 3 — major disagreement on appropriateness. Rarely seen; usually requires medical-director peer-to-peer.

Medicare reimbursement — Q2 2026 ASP per code Reviewed May 2026

CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File, Q2 2026. ASP+6% (with sequestration adjustment) is the buy-and-bill payment.

Current-quarter ASP — live-bound from /medicare-asp.js

Q2 2026 Medicare ASP+6% per HCPCS billing unit for the 18 generic IV chemo agents.
DrugHCPCSBilling unitASP+6% (Q2 2026)
CyclophosphamideJ9070per 100 mgNo current CMS ASP entry — invoice at acquisition + handling per MAC
IfosfamideJ9208per 1 g$24.682
MesnaJ9209per 200 mg$1.334
DacarbazineJ9130per 100 mg$3.852
DaunorubicinJ9151per 10 mgNo current CMS ASP entry — invoice at acquisition + handling per MAC
IdarubicinJ9211per 5 mg$39.756
EpirubicinJ9178per 2 mg$1.767
MitoxantroneJ9293per 5 mg$38.614
5-FluorouracilJ9190per 500 mg$2.056
Methotrexate (low)J9250per 5 mgNo current entry — use J9260 with units scaling
Methotrexate (high)J9260per 50 mg$2.677
CytarabineJ9100per 100 mg$0.799
LeucovorinJ0640per 50 mg$3.591
VinblastineJ9360per 1 mg$5.152
VincristineJ9370per 1 mg$8.113
Goserelin (3.6 mg implant)J9202per 3.6 mg$777.502 (Q1 2026 fallback — verify current quarter)
MitomycinJ9280per 5 mg$28.459
BleomycinJ9040per 15 units$16.598

ASP values reflect ASP+6% per billing unit for the current CMS quarter where a current-quarter entry exists. Codes without a current-quarter ASP entry (J9070 cyclophosphamide, J9151 daunorubicin, J9250 methotrexate 5 mg) should be billed at acquisition + handling per MAC convention; J9202 goserelin falls back to the most recent available quarter (Q1 2026 at last refresh). Sequestration (currently 1%) is applied at payment.

Why so many codes have low ASP

Most agents on this rollup are decades-old commodity generics with many manufacturers competing on per-mg acquisition cost. ASP+6% on a per-mg basis is often less than $5 per administered dose — the revenue model for these drugs is volume across many cycles, not per-cycle margin. The high-cost outliers on this page are idarubicin (J9211, $39.756 per 5 mg), mitoxantrone (J9293, $38.614 per 5 mg), mitomycin (J9280, $28.459 per 5 mg), ifosfamide (J9208, $24.682 per 1 g), bleomycin (J9040, $16.598 per 15 units), and goserelin (J9202, $777.502 per 3.6 mg implant — an outlier because it's a depot device, not commodity injectable).

Patient assistance — foundations only Reviewed May 2026

Commodity generics don't have manufacturer copay cards. Foundation PAP (CancerCare, PAN, HealthWell, LLS, BMS Foundation) is the source of patient assistance.

Because the agents on this rollup are commodity generics with stable, low ASP, the originator manufacturers long ago discontinued any branded patient-assistance programs — there are no Cytoxan, Adriamycin, or Cosmegen copay cards in 2026. The patient-assistance pathway is foundation-based, indication-driven (not drug-driven), and works the same way across most of the rollup:

Foundation-based patient assistance options for generic chemotherapy.
FoundationIndication scopeWhat it coversNotes
CancerCare Co-Payment AssistanceMultiple cancer types (NHL, breast, colorectal, AML, sarcoma, others as funds open)Insurance copays for chemotherapy, biologics, supportive careFunds open / close by diagnosis; check current open-fund list at cancercare.org/copayfoundation
PAN FoundationMultiple cancer types (CRC, breast, lymphoma, AML, melanoma, sarcoma)Insurance copays, premiums, supportive care, transportationFund-specific eligibility; open / close on rolling basis at panfoundation.org
HealthWell FoundationMultiple oncology funds (CRC, breast, NHL, AML, others)Insurance copays, premiums, deductiblesIndication-specific funds; rolling open / close at healthwellfoundation.org
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) Co-Pay ProgramBlood cancers (NHL, Hodgkin, leukemia incl. AML, ALL, CLL, CML, MDS, MPN, MM)Insurance copays for chemo + supportive careDisease-specific funds at lls.org/copay
BMS Foundation / Patient Access NetworkMultiple cancers (BMS-supported but supports beyond BMS products)Insurance copays, supportive careCross-referenced with PAN Foundation funds
Good Days (Chronic Disease Fund)Multiple cancer typesInsurance copays, travel, premium supportDisease-specific funds at mygooddays.org
Patient Advocate Foundation Co-Pay ReliefMultiple cancer types; underinsured focusInsurance copaysIndication-specific funds at copays.org

Workflow for assistance enrollment

  • Patient income and insurance verification (most foundations require ≤ 400–500% FPL).
  • Diagnosis confirmation (pathology or clinic note with ICD-10).
  • Insurance EOB or claim showing the copay obligation (some foundations require this; others enroll first).
  • Foundation portal enrollment; approval typically within 24–48 hours when funds are open.
  • Reauthorization annually or per fund cycle.
There are no manufacturer copay cards for these drugs. Coders / financial-counseling teams should not search for "cyclophosphamide copay card" or "5-FU copay card" — they don't exist. The patient assistance pathway is exclusively foundation PAP, and it's indication-driven (the patient's cancer ICD-10), not drug-driven.
Phase 4 Fix problems The top denial patterns on generic chemo claims and how to remediate each.

Top denials — the six recurring patterns Reviewed May 2026

Each row is a recurring denial pattern, the root cause, and the fix-and-resubmit workflow.

Top denial patterns for generic IV chemotherapy claims.
Denial patternRoot causeFix / resubmitPrevention
JW / JZ on multi-dose vial lineModifier applied to MDV presentation in violation of CMS CR 12056 (MDV excluded)Remove modifier; resubmit corrected claimNDC-to-modifier mapping table in pharmacy / billing system; flag MDV NDCs to block JW / JZ at entry
96416 vs 96417 mix-up on CIVI 5-FU96417 (sequential additional drug) billed instead of 96416 (portable pump)Correct CPT; resubmitPump-flag at order entry that auto-routes to 96416; training on the descriptor difference
Wrong methotrexate J-code (J9250 vs J9260)Mismatch between dispensed NDC unit basis and J-code billing unitVerify NDC; align J-code to current MAC preferred code; resubmitNDC-to-J-code crosswalk; verify each dispense
Leucovorin J0640 vs levoleucovorin J0641 mix-upCoder used the wrong product J-code — J0640 racemic vs J0641 levo isomer (half-dose)Verify dispensed product NDC; correct J-code; resubmit (unit count may also need correction)Pharmacy dispense label clearly states leucovorin vs levoleucovorin; lock J-code at dispense
Missing mesna line on ifosfamide claimCoder forgot to add the mesna separate lineAdd the J9209 line; ensure ICD-10 anchor; resubmitOrder-set tied claim builder: ifosfamide orderset auto-generates mesna claim lines
NCCN-non-compliant regimen denied without rationaleCategory 2B / off-label regimen without supporting biomarker / molecular / case documentationAppend supporting compendia citation + clinical rationale; peer-to-peer if neededNCCN regimen ID auto-populated at order entry; flag Category 2B for additional documentation review pre-submission
Missing Z51.11 on chemo admin lineICD-10 includes only the cancer code without the encounter-for-chemo Z codeAdd Z51.11 to the dx list; align diagnosis pointer; resubmitClaim scrubber rule: any 96409 / 96411 / 96413 / 96415 / 96416 / 96417 / 96401 / 96402 line requires Z51.11
Wrong place-of-service for inpatient AML induction7+3 inpatient chemo billed as POS 22 / 49 instead of bundled in DRG (POS 21)Withdraw the J-code line; the chemo is DRG-bundled and not separately billable on Part BPOS check at submission for AML / inpatient regimens

FAQ Reviewed May 2026

Twelve recurring questions from billers / coders working long-tail generic chemo claims.

Which IV chemo drugs are on this rollup vs a dedicated page?

This rollup covers the long-tail generic IV chemotherapy agents that do not have their own dedicated CareCost page: cyclophosphamide (J9070), ifosfamide (J9208) with mesna (J9209), dacarbazine (J9130), daunorubicin (J9151), idarubicin (J9211), epirubicin (J9178), mitoxantrone (J9293), 5-fluorouracil (J9190), methotrexate IV (J9250 / J9260), cytarabine (J9100), leucovorin (J0640), vinblastine (J9360), vincristine (J9370), goserelin (J9202), mitomycin (J9280), and bleomycin (J9040). Drugs with their own dedicated CareCost pages are: carboplatin (J9045), cisplatin (J9060), oxaliplatin (J9263), irinotecan (J9206), paclitaxel (J9267), Abraxane / nab-paclitaxel (J9264), Doxil / Lipodox (Q2050), doxorubicin conventional (J9000), gemcitabine (J9201), pemetrexed (J9305), Bendeka / bendamustine (J9034), and Onivyde liposomal irinotecan (J9205).

Why is JW / JZ excluded for multi-dose vial chemo drugs?

Per CMS Change Request 12056 (effective July 1, 2023 for JZ, with JW longstanding), the JW (drug discarded) and JZ (no discarded amount) modifiers apply only to single-dose containers (SDV) and single-use packages. Multi-dose vials (MDV) are excluded from both modifiers because the leftover drug is preserved for subsequent doses, not discarded. Several agents on this page are commonly available in MDV presentations — 5-fluorouracil (50 mg/mL MDV in 500 mg / 1 g / 2.5 g / 5 g sizes), methotrexate sodium (25 mg/mL MDV), bleomycin (15 unit MDV), and mesna (1 g / 10 mL MDV at 100 mg/mL). Coders must verify the dispensed NDC against the FDA presentation: if MDV, no JW / JZ; if SDV, JZ when fully used, JW + a separate waste line when discarded.

How do I bill 46-hour continuous-infusion 5-FU?

Continuous-infusion 5-FU (CIVI) over 46 hours is the backbone of FOLFOX, FOLFIRI, and FOLFIRINOX regimens for colorectal and pancreatic cancer. Standard delivery is via a portable elastomeric infusion pump (e.g., Baxter Intermate / Easypump / Eclipse) that the patient wears home and returns at the end of the infusion. The drug J-code stays J9190 (5-fluorouracil, per 500 mg) and units reflect the total mg delivered. The administration code is 96416 (chemotherapy administration, IV infusion, requiring use of portable or implantable pump) for the prolonged-infusion setup — NOT 96417, which is the same-day additional-drug add-on for sequential drugs. The 96416 code is reported once per encounter regardless of pump duration.

When do I bill mesna alongside ifosfamide?

Mesna (Mesnex, J9209, per 200 mg) is the uroprotectant required to prevent hemorrhagic cystitis from ifosfamide (J9208) and high-dose cyclophosphamide. The standard dosing ratio is mesna at 60% of the ifosfamide dose split across three doses (start / +4h / +8h). Mesna and ifosfamide are billed on separate claim lines with their own J-codes — they are not bundled. Both lines need the appropriate cancer ICD-10 anchor. Mesna without ifosfamide (or documented high-dose cyclophosphamide) will be denied as not medically necessary.

What's the difference between daunorubicin (J9151) and idarubicin (J9211)?

Both are anthracycline IV chemotherapy agents primarily used in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) induction (the "7+3" cytarabine-anthracycline backbone). Daunorubicin (Cerubidine, J9151, per 10 mg) is the original conventional formulation dosed at 60–90 mg/m² IV daily × 3 days as part of 7+3. Idarubicin (Idamycin PFS, J9211, per 5 mg) is a more lipophilic analog dosed at 12 mg/m² IV daily × 3 days. Both have similar cardiotoxicity profiles. Note: liposomal daunorubicin-cytarabine (Vyxeos, J9153) is a separate fixed-ratio product and is NOT on this rollup.

Cytarabine high-dose (HiDAC) vs standard dose — same J-code?

Yes — cytarabine is always J9100 (Cytosar-U / Ara-C, per 100 mg) regardless of dose. Standard-dose cytarabine is 100–200 mg/m²/day continuous infusion × 7 days in the 7+3 AML induction backbone. High-dose cytarabine (HiDAC) is 1–3 g/m² every 12 hours × 6–12 doses, typically as consolidation in AML, lymphoma salvage, or CNS prophylaxis. Units billed scale with mg delivered; the J-code does not change. Liposomal cytarabine (DepoCyt, intrathecal) is a separate product with HCPCS J9098 and is not on this rollup.

Vincristine — NEVER intrathecal warning impact on billing?

Vincristine (J9370, per 1 mg) carries an FDA-mandated boxed warning that it is FATAL if administered intrathecally and is for IV use only. From a billing standpoint, every vincristine dispense should be in a syringe labeled "FOR INTRAVENOUS USE ONLY," and pharmacy SOPs require dispense in a minibag (50 mL) rather than syringe in many institutions per the 2018 ISMP / ASHP / ASCO joint recommendations. The administration code is 96409 (IV push) for the traditional push delivery, or 96413 if given as a minibag infusion. Route documentation must specifically state intravenous. Vincristine sulfate liposome (Marqibo, J9371) is a separate product, not on this rollup.

Leucovorin vs levoleucovorin — same drug?

No — two distinct products. Leucovorin calcium (folinic acid, J0640, per 50 mg) is the racemic dl-leucovorin used as methotrexate rescue and 5-FU modulator. Levoleucovorin (Fusilev / Khapzory, J0641, per 0.5 mg) is the pharmacologically active l-isomer alone, half the dose. Verify the dispensed NDC. Mixing them up on the claim produces immediate denials.

Goserelin (Zoladex) on a chemo rollup — why?

Goserelin (J9202, per 3.6 mg) is an LHRH agonist, not a cytotoxic chemotherapy, but it lives on this rollup because it is administered as a deep SC depot implant in oncology offices on the same chemo billing infrastructure for prostate cancer (C61) and breast cancer (C50.x) hormone-deprivation indications. The 10.8 mg three-month depot is also J9202 (units reflect mg). Administration is via 96402 (chemo SC / IM hormonal anti-neoplastic). For Lupron see the dedicated lupron-depot page; for Firmagon (degarelix) see firmagon.

Mitomycin (J9280) — still used in 2026?

Yes — mitomycin remains in use for intravesical instillation in non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (with companion thermochemotherapy or Jelmyto for upper-tract urothelial), as part of the Nigro regimen (mitomycin + 5-FU + concurrent radiation) for anal canal squamous cell carcinoma, and occasional use in cervical / pancreatic / gastric protocols. Cumulative-dose nephrotoxicity (mitomycin-HUS) is the recognized late toxicity. Pyelocalyceal mitomycin (Jelmyto) is a separate product and not on this rollup.

Bleomycin (J9040) cumulative dose tracking — billing implication?

Bleomycin (J9040, per 15 units) is the "B" in ABVD (Hodgkin) and a component of BEP (testicular germ-cell). The recognized cumulative-dose pulmonary toxicity (bleomycin pneumonitis / interstitial fibrosis) typically emerges above 400 units total lifetime exposure. The billing implication is that the chart needs lifetime cumulative-dose tracking across treatment settings — a documented running total strengthens the medical-necessity record for continuing therapy at higher exposure.

What ICD-10 anchors does a generic chemo claim need?

Every chemotherapy administration line needs Z51.11 (encounter for antineoplastic chemotherapy) as either primary or secondary, paired with the malignancy ICD-10. Common anchors: C50.x (breast for AC, EC), C61 (prostate for goserelin), C18.x / C19 / C20 (CRC for FOLFOX / FOLFIRI), C25.x (pancreas for FOLFIRINOX), C92.0 (AML for 7+3 with cytarabine + daunorubicin / idarubicin), C81.x (Hodgkin for ABVD / BEACOPP), C83.x / C85.x (NHL / DLBCL for CHOP / R-CHOP), C21.x (anal canal for Nigro mitomycin), C67.x (bladder for intravesical mitomycin), C62.x (testicular for BEP bleomycin). Document the NCCN regimen citation in the chart.

Source documents

Primary sources cited inline above. This list is for verification audit.

  • NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (B-Cell Lymphomas, Hodgkin Lymphoma, AML, Breast, Colon, Rectal, Pancreatic, Testicular, Bladder, Anal, Soft Tissue Sarcoma, Bone Sarcoma) — nccn.org/guidelines. Cancer-type-specific regimen recommendations and category levels used for payer auto-approval logic.
  • FDA Prescribing Information (current labels) for cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide (Ifex), mesna (Mesnex), dacarbazine, daunorubicin (Cerubidine), idarubicin (Idamycin PFS), epirubicin (Ellence), mitoxantrone, 5-fluorouracil, methotrexate sodium, cytarabine, leucovorin calcium, vinblastine, vincristine, goserelin (Zoladex), mitomycin, and bleomycin sulfate — FDA Drugs@FDA. Dosing, route, boxed warnings (vincristine, bleomycin pulmonary, anthracycline cardiotoxicity, etc.), and approved indications.
  • CMS Change Request 12056 — JW / JZ modifier policy effective July 1, 2023; multi-dose vial exclusion language. CMS R12056. Authoritative source for the MDV JW / JZ exclusion logic.
  • CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File (Q2 2026) — cms.gov ASP pricing files. Source of truth for ASP+6% per-HCPCS payment.
  • CMS MLN Booklets — "Discarded Drugs and Biologicals (JW and JZ Modifiers)" MLN MM12667; chemotherapy administration coding MLN guidance. CMS MLN catalog.
  • AMA CPT® Codebook 2026 — chemotherapy administration code section (96401–96549). ama-assn.org/practice-management/cpt. Authoritative source for 96409 / 96411 / 96413 / 96415 / 96416 / 96417 / 96401 / 96402 descriptors.
  • ISMP / ASHP / ASCO 2018 vincristine minibag safety recommendations — standardization of vincristine dispense in minibag rather than syringe to prevent intrathecal misadministration. ismp.org.
  • ASCO / ONS Chemotherapy Administration Safety Standards (2016 update) — institutional policy framework. asco.org/practice-policy.
  • Foundation patient assistance directories — CancerCare, PAN Foundation, HealthWell, LLS, BMS Foundation / PAN, Good Days, Patient Advocate Foundation. URLs in the patient-assistance section above.
  • NDC Directory (FDA)FDA NDC Directory. Verification of dispensed NDC presentations and SDV / MDV classification.

About this page

We maintain this rollup as a living reference for billers and coders working long-tail generic IV chemotherapy claims. Medicare ASP pricing is bound to our underlying CareCost data layer and refreshes automatically when CMS publishes new quarterly files. Coding and policy content is reviewed at least quarterly and updated whenever a source document changes.

Why a rollup? Per-drug standalone pages for every long-tail generic chemo agent produce lower per-page SEO value than category-level reference pages with clear per-drug subsections. The rollup format also matches how billers actually work the claim — a CHOP or AC or FOLFOX cycle covers multiple drugs in one encounter, not one drug at a time.

Found an error? Email hello@carecostestimate.com.

Refresh cadence

ElementCadenceHow it's refreshed
Medicare ASP pricingQuarterlyAuto-bound to CareCost ASP layer; updates on CMS file release.
Payer policies (UHC, Aetna, BCBS, Cigna, Humana)Semi-annualManual review against published payer policy documents.
HCPCS / CPT / modifier rulesAnnualReviewed against CMS HCPCS quarterly files and AMA CPT releases.
FDA labels, dosing, indicationsEvent-drivenTied to label revision dates across all 18 agents.
NCCN guideline citationsEvent-drivenReviewed when new guideline editions publish across covered cancer types.

Reviewer

Pending SME review. This page is staff-authored from primary sources (FDA, CMS, NCCN, AMA CPT, manufacturer documents, payer policies — all linked above). Editorial review by an oncology pharmacist / certified coding specialist in progress. Until that review is complete, treat this as a draft reference and verify each cited source for high-stakes claims.

Change log

  • — Initial publication. 18 long-tail generic IV chemotherapy agents across alkylators (cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, dacarbazine) + uroprotectant (mesna) + conventional anthracyclines (daunorubicin, idarubicin, epirubicin, mitoxantrone) + antimetabolites (5-FU, methotrexate, cytarabine, leucovorin) + vinca alkaloids (vinblastine, vincristine) + LHRH agonist (goserelin) + antitumor antibiotics (mitomycin, bleomycin). ASP data: Q2 2026 where current-quarter CMS entries exist; J9070 / J9151 / J9250 have no current entry and bill at acquisition + handling. Wave 8 commodity rollup format.

Methodology

Every claim on this page is sourced inline. Pricing reflects the current CMS Part B Drug ASP Pricing File where a current-quarter entry exists; codes without current-quarter entries (J9070 cyclophosphamide, J9151 daunorubicin, J9250 methotrexate 5 mg, J9202 goserelin Q1-fallback) are flagged. Payer policies are read directly from each payer's published medical / pharmacy policy documents. Indication lists, dosing, boxed-warning content, and cumulative-dose tracking are verified against the current FDA label revision and the relevant NCCN guideline. We do not paraphrase from billing-software vendor blogs.

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