Some labs are being forced to make hard decisions right now.
If your lab is considering closing, scaling back, or walking away from UTI PCR because of payer pressure, audit risk, coding uncertainty, or reimbursement challenges, we would like to hear from you.
Doc Lab is working with laboratories across the country to help create a more stable path forward.
For some labs, that may mean support and supplies, with a stronger reimbursement and payer strategy.
For others, it may mean a more significant transition. If you are considering closing your lab, selling certain assets, or looking for a responsible group to help take over operations, Doc Lab is open to having that conversation.
Our goal is to help good labs preserve value where possible, reduce risk, protect clinician and patient access, and move UTI PCR toward a more responsible future.
UTI PCR does not have to disappear.
But the way it is offered, documented, coded, and supported by clinical evidence has to mature.
If your lab is trying to decide what comes next, let’s talk. Experience the Doc Lab Difference first hand.
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Medicare paid $442.5 million for CPT 87798 in 2024.
That made 87798 the highest-paid Medicare Part B laboratory test by total spending that year, according to the January 2026 HHS-OIG data snapshot. Spending on 87798 increased 51% from 2023 to 2024, with approximately 1.49 million tests paid and a median payment of $447.05 per test.
That number should get the attention of every lab, payer, and compliance team in molecular diagnostics.
For years, infectious disease PCR has lived in a difficult space: high clinical potential, inconsistent utilization, uneven payer policy, and aggressive billing strategies across the market. When one nonspecific molecular code becomes a nearly half-billion-dollar Medicare spend category, increased scrutiny is inevitable.
This is why the future of UTI PCR cannot be built on provider adoption alone.
It has to be built on:
- Appropriate use.
- Medical necessity.
- Provider education.
- Clear intended use.
- Audit-ready documentation.
- And most importantly, clinical utility data.
At Doc Lab, we believe molecular diagnostics has a strong future, but only if the industry is willing to do the hard work required to earn payer trust. That means trials, data, responsible commercialization, and payer-aligned utilization from the beginning.
Doc Lab has paved the way for partnering labs looking to create a solid foundation for their UTI PCR program backed by clinical trial. Reach out today to talk about partnering with Doc Lab and experiencing the Doc Lab Difference.