Hi Guest!
Thank you for the kind words, we're so happy this forum has been helpful to you!
And great question. Based on what you described, here is what I would suggest:
Go ahead and list 41899 just twice on the claim - 1 will represent the 3 D6051's, and 1 will represent the 3 D6085's.
Instead of using it for each tooth, use it for the service and combine the fees for the 3 instances of it (for three teeth) onto one line item.
Then, you can indicate the "supplemental information" that each code is being used for three different instances on different teeth, which will explain the increase fee for that line item.
So, here's how you indicate teeth numbers on the medical claim:
In the "supplemental information" area of the line item (the red shaded line that is typically left blank), you will enter "JP" followed by the tooth numbers, and "ZZ" followed by a short description of what services that code is being used to represent.
ZZ means "narrative description to follow", and "JP" means "tooth number(s)"
So it would look something like this (i'm making up the tooth number, so be sure you put in the correct ones!)
JP10 11 12 ZZinterim implant abutment
Examples of how this would look on the medical claim can be found in the NUCC's CMS 1500 claim form manual here, starting on page 46-48:
https://nucc.org/images/stories/PDF/1500_claim_form_instruction_manual_2020_07-v8.pdf Hope this helps!